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J.* Vn«Rlt MU«rA CiHfehvr I
JMBB A. SBIVXMk, rrewr.eZkw |
VOLUME I.
WITHttKD XMBA
WtM*w4 rn*« invn ia an ar*
■nrywkan oar staoro* tnra,
Um Old fra tv* uxnvar a
Maa, a dalat,, parfulwd anta
Band* lose eoM osea warmly wrote.
Bl item bar* by terran.
AA : Um wanly baarta, aow noM,
Ab I tba It am ‘1 lea, awaat and old.
Thia qtMot room OlMrero
AO M warmth la ato* to-da,;
AUtßaßfa ha, yagMß awa,;
a < Masgtols Bltainwa .
Rraaa, SMtomd sow aed dasd,
AU IbaM aaoMl awaacaraa dad
wild Mir andtsl apiaador
Aa 1 band abort, I feat
A naaa ftagraeo* From thatn atm ,
Uss a mmab-y Mdar,
Os than older piaaat,nl days,
' baa M-asa a rich geMa Uaaa
UMd SxHr rbaeka to (lory
Ah ! Ox pals Maa aieaaMae <lt»|
Ab I M pain that <m must Ute
When <mr Ufa'a eweet elory
Holda no mon M golden Jo, I
Os what uae a valued toy,
When IM eham la broken t
Os oor Hie whan yoath la oWe-
Os the paal wbloh oomae no mon,
Are M*a Sowera M token.
Whea the ana baa loot hla light.
When the fall ct wlnter’a night
Our antiiraa-Me o*arran*m -
OaU we then the Mnorim ratal
Os Iboaa . aalabad mrtnanto heed
Aabea «f youth ’nroeaa.
< Aomterr'Awnmt
A HOLD BACKWOODS BOX.
Jml wag elewm years qM and httle
Ohio, hi» two S>ara younger,
lint thia ttHla|(freiit yean ago
when UieirflWgnfr. jpHkJflp, lied just
moved into* western
part of Hafts, whitft- was A-i a wild,
uniiilidbtMHpgian, eave whdft here and
there an adrenbiroux snttter hflA planted
hie little tag hat in the heWh of the
’nldemeaa, and laid bare a few aarae of
the forest as a nucleus of the •future
home of himself and thriving family—
almost always a small colony in itself.
Ah, who can tell whit homesick mo
uents and longings Mi ,ttio oftreasocia
uons our pioneer fatmte and mothers
endured, coming, as did many of them,
worn wealthy Stated and pleasant nt
ruiiwiings. There must have been a
mighty attraction in the wild, free life
of the beckwood> man and a genuine
love of the simple and homely joya of
the rough hearthstone, to have held
them in these rude homes, almost iso
lated, aa they were, from the world.
But they lived in anticipation, looking
eagerly forward to a future of plenty,
when the wilderness should become
cultivated and fruitful through their
first [leraistent and hardy efforts.
With an energy characteristic of the
first settlers, Mr. Dunlap pushed his
way on through toil, hardships and
many privations, at first felling and
clearing a patch largo enough to put up
a log cabin for his family, then by de
grees cutting farther and farther into
the primitive forest, till now quite a
large tract lay open to the sun, a part
of which wax under tolerable cultovation,
thodt-st laying black and still smoking
from recent burnings.
As before stated, Jad wan now eleven.
He was a darh4aoed, sinewy lad, tough
•» a thong, inheriting much of his
father’s pluck and endurance. What
ever he undertook to do he was pretty
sure to carry through.
In these unsettled regions wild ant
main were numerous, especirlly the wild
cat, lynx and glutton, or wolverine.
These creatures often come into the
Hearings, and their frequent depreda
tions became a great peat to the set
tlers.
There was also an abundance of
■Miler game to be had for the trapping
sad this fall Jad was anticipating no
cud of enjoyment in the warm Indian
summer days, trapping tor “ muaquaah”
(nmakrat) and mink along Kenny brook,
vhich ran past the clearing half a mile
»wsy in the woofe. His tether had
telped him make hia traps, and on his
■cry first visit he waa greatly elated by
i'xhng a sleek and glossy mink in one of
hiem. This piece of good luck had’set
Is<l half wild, for mink skins brought a
fiigh price at the “big settlement,”
twenty five miles down the country,
•here his father always went to do his
tending.
Jsd watched hie traps eagerly as a
miser watches his money bags. But
with all his vigilance, what waa his dis
m*y to find, one morning, in the trap
fsrtheat ui> stream, that a mink had Ixwn
’’snght and taken out by some wild lieast
•°‘l devoured The tail and little feath
" r ‘J clumps of fur lay scattered about
l, ‘" trap. Dtre vengeance against the
•‘■ I marauder at once posaewd his
heart.
latUe Chk. was a keen sympathi»T in
h’XroabiM. Hhs waa also hw com
p«.iou in this trapping expedition, * n
> < g -rfv r , sr- :
* siir qg * w ~ ,
which it was her tarty to carry thMail
awnetonuw a .sqiu»|jl, <dteu«r a trout
caught from the hfask. L
“ What d’you s’poMgot him?" aaked
Ohio, aa Jad -nd Ueking nMlally al
the tad, which kgfheld vbetween his
thumb and finger.u
“I don’t know,■Werw i’twas a glut
ton, or a wildcat Pa
ways nosin' rvurfS to get Oiff‘baft'oaßl
\u throat I " Mjinlaimcl,
“ rv * loo ' y-F cnwl ’nwT
‘Can't you <wlph
Jad His father
iad a steel fbx-teap. He would set Jist
anil have the (hut Ohio, he
hifttened b. Uie*Mke, gut the trap and
raOeJ b * Ck to.Jfe.L* 001 ' Tt
laat io his sat&cftt, and baited with
■ squirrel, whA had brought along
to bait his nmte-tnqvi with. He drove
a stake tha Hm, in JW
trap-ohain, sAZtaTIwHH wJßvef wm
caught
Two • rnmk had
been near, MatM bag was gone out of
the steel tnqJTa&i‘also hntii two of the
mink traps. A|th his .we psreaver
ance, Jad rebuted |hetq,and Wailed
The bait aatom out of moat of
his mmk-taa* a *g><, what W isoc «x
--asperating. Mother mink had been
caught and gMsn. r >
Jail's patiMosl now nearly gave way, >
and he was titaagtHii to t-ar hiatrapa up.
But on he resolved to try
once mor*. •*&< would baitosily thalos >
trap. ' • 1
Jail did not visit it the nert morning,
as usual, foe be was obliged to finish
Imrevsiing the potatoes. But after din
ner, his lather having gone to aaaist at
putting up a log cabin for a newly-ar
rived settler, some two miles distant,
Jad and Cido set off for the brook,
hatchet and fish jslki it.hand. (
As they mmmml pl- wha~ *■—
fox-trap WAMaeg -tt»-’ * M *«l citeins
-UnMfc. 1
“I bet my head we've got him !
kgied daaWngttirough a clamp
of ceitenv
And, sure enough, there he was. A.
Ing, round-headed wild-cat!
At Jad’s sudden apfiearauco the creat
ure bounded and lea|>ed frantically to
free himself; but the staku was a strong
one.
After cutting a stout green club three
or four feet in length, Jad stuck the
hatchet beneath the strap which ho wore
for a tiell, and going as near a* he dared
struck at the creature with all his might.
He missed, however, and the cat darted
round to the other side of the stake,
bringing up with a suildeu jerk, where
it crouched, growling low and watching
tile boy with fiery eyre and ears laid
back.
"Oh, don't go so near him, Jad!"
cautioned little Chlo, retreating across,
the brook. '' He'll fly at ye 'fore ye
know it I"
" Let 'im fly I" cried the now-axedted
Ixiy. " He's going to get his head
cracked 'fore I’m done with 'im t Take
that, ye sneakin* thief I'* he added,
venturing up and bringing doom the
club, with a quick blow, just gracing
the animal aa he again jumped to the
other aide.
Then round and round the stake they
flew, Jad thumping the ground, trap,
anvthing but the cat, which adroitly
kept out of his reach, all ths time furi
ously snarling and spitting. It was
hard telling which waa pursuer aa they
gyrated about the stake amid a perfect
whirlwind of dead leaves.
But in an unlucky moment Jad's cinb
got under the trap chain, and bringing
tl up suddenly he threw the ring over
tlie top of the stake. With a bound the
creature wim off, the chain rattling after
him and catching under nx>l» and
stones.
There was not a second to lose, and
the Ixiy gwve hot chase. They ran on
for fifty roils or more ; then, seeing Jail
so clime upon him, Ui* cat scratched up
the trunk of a hemlock, trap and all,
and frifbi the branches glared st the
jiantong and excited boy.
Jal's courage waa now up to the high
est pitch, and throwing down his club
he la-gan to climb the roogh trunk.
"Don’t go up there, Jad, for pity’s
don’t I’’ implored little Chlo, now
coming up all out of breath.
•• Tre, an' let him go << with pa's trap
on his foot, wouldn’t ye ? Just Jike a
girl—'fraid of her own ahald< r' " cned
Jal scornfully. " I toll yer, he's got to
pay for them Jrith his skin—see if
he don’t!" and he sn labor
iouslr, giving vent to his indignation in
thraata which be meant to pul into exe
cution. !-
Bi sching the loww tombs, Jad
Devot ’d thsJJWes'.s of Columbq County and ie State of Georgia.
HARLEM, OfigRGU. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15. MJBI.
gTis[»hT*d»e SaickeJ finaly, ready for aa
aasaniC* AajKbams) «lthm a van) es
th< ’xMi*toqp»'atwwvnft sta takhk.
sttimpts to leap down upon the boy’s
taesd, all the time growling flercsly.
1 litowing ths hatchet 1 "Mkijrera -Im ,
ihteilder ss far as he cAuflr tB 9
atr|ck at the tlfiMeal in the croatsh «
thd tree i'W'CT*’* hia - ibe
civhture dodgelrfche Now. H«
»ud missed ; butthwfaxt tMsfc*.
was L enough to hit the cat on
the lh« IhbW
to Il'S nMUstrmAx a moment it hy
stntinsd and motionless.
Jad slipped quickly down tha jfcint
thinking the viutory now won. tjfr
Ixiy grit, and the nqgt
moment they were engaged in a lively
tu«le, while little Ohio ran buck and
forjh shouting 4f «»sitop td
ihe woods rreouiiied' With the cad- !
Atxl medley. Jad now fouiM that Nks
must fahhM hfe,,AU<i with another
diwpcnifi be again the
<X«*W, MA be ootdd recover,
the rreolutc boy dispatched him,
propping Ujb jMtohat, Jad threw him
aelf on peartuig and
hasseadr«xdtoae-Jatlis-0U«» —~ -sam
-Aiaidly forward, trembling and i aaXiuu
'hightoned giancee at the animal, aa if
As half expected it would fijpti
le«4> upon her.
* Oh, Jad I*’ cried t|m UKle girl, sm
‘i£g the boy’s jKS “vuhAMfiiil
be awful hurt! And, oh, see your
. i.t<
•’No, I ain’t hurt, neither," declared
Jud, etonUy, sitUug up, "not much,
anyway. That’s only a little scratch !"
regarding his arm ruefully.
It was a pretty big one, however.
Binding acne birob withes firmly about
tht> creature's hind b ga, 3M, with IHtle
a|lo's aasistaqpfe dragged hits to talc
Jtaquse.
’ I" My pMiefta* alive I" cried theft
tuusaiig to the door, as ab<'
'•seight sight of the ehildren. “Jad
Itonlap! yon venturesome boy, w? re
•Iki rwr-t that MMtatab » b,
“He got info our tr»sp, an' then run
off up e tree with it, end Jud dim’ tip
after ’im," little Ohio hastened to ex
plain. " I told him not to,*' she added,
swing the gathering reproof in her
m<'tlier's eyes.
"And you got well ecratahiMl,” sai<l
Mrs. Dnnlap, turning Jad about and
eying his bleeding arm. “I guews
’twill Ireru you to let wildcats alone! ”
"H<> won’t cut any more of my mink,
anyway," muttiired Jad.
He did not get much sympathy from
his father, either, who chided him so
vx’oly for bis want of prudeuoc, and
liude hirn lie more cautions in ths. future
about attacking such animals.
IKtook a long time to heal np .Tad's
lacerated arms and shoulders, and it
was a number of days before ho got over
tlie soreness and lameness enough to
visit his traps. However, Jad wiw not
troubled again that fall, while two more
mink were added to his little pile of furs,
which he sent on his father’s load down
to the “ settlement ” not long after.
THUVGKTa ABOUT ITOMKN-BT A
JIL.TKb at AM.
Women are aadly ruled by the law of
compensation. Those who are go<xl are
never pretty ; thoae who are pretty are
never g<xxL
To u man, truth is what he knows ; to
A woman, truth u» what aha belwvea.
The only perfect woman a man aver
knows is his mother
All intimate frieudahqis among women
have the same basis, and always exist
between those who resemble each other
in figure—they can Ixirrow each other's
dresere.
Women invariably fear death—and I
don't wonder.
Thu Boiae City (Idaho) StatAaman
heard of the death of a fnend and
blicked out a half column obituary that
to re w the office devil into a fit of weep
ing and drew snch a ttoxxl of tears from
the eyes of the cam -hard sued oomposi
tors that the fltxn of the office had to be
mopped up three timre during the set
Ung in type of the article. The nett
day the editor received a oommutoca
tion from the dead r<n denying that he
had meandered up the flume aa stated,
and asking fcsr a eorrectiosi. Hia letter
was published in full in the next baue
hreded; “A Card from a Corpse " This
u Weekirn humor.
.... . , ——l
Tax Ndret German ojiera, a musical
play, composed by Johann Gottlieb Sts |
den, <4 Xu nl>erg, has been published 1
f/>r the fir»t uro* by a firm in that old !
HavanMi e.iv Sta<b-ri was organist to ;
the Grsnd Duke <4 Brandeobarg m |
UM.
DLKAJSA.VTXnCA
Stbm. fat with four letters—O B OT.
A Spikmi. bnaineM—Manutecturing
whiaky.
are educated because
tW ««®ifcbrayia.
should never be con
signed to grave.
“Tn did man eloquent "—When be
a tride off.
Tug JbQadelphte dtan thinks the
dresernsker is a pattern woman.
A aaAtbh should never burn coal.
>SeM*n .Ydong better with Coke tlian
BovtoitoM
Tas man who invented corsets was
' uh, for he might have known they
w< >nl<9ur go to waist
" Wawr melcn-choly acene," said the
small Uy when the farmer's dog ohased
Juiu stat V' ttie patch.
-<A. ■Mfßt-r young girl has the consola
tion that, if she lives to be
ID, ahtamtaH be • pretty old girl.
" tDißr like that oat; it’s got splin
ters U*iia feet," was the excuse of a 4-
throwing the kitten away.
I A MWM heat tliat can’t be beat, the
wmdaaujpeu wide ; a little breexe, a lit-
Uusucagß, and you're the doctor s pride;
|I7.ISKr ten visits.
AlLflMihltioUH young writer having
asked "what magaxinu will give me
i-igiiartpoeiUoii quickest?" was told,
"A HV r magaxiue, if you oontributj
a fiery article. ”
CablAlr, being once asked the differ
ence between a natural fool and an
'xluoeked fool, replied, "Just alrnut the
difference between you and me, I aui
pecL" The questioner wax never able
to dettaßnine what kind of fool he wax.
“ I flaw a big boy and a little fellow
quarreling over some marbles to day,"
said Mihn. " Did you ?” asked hix
father, " I hope you interfered to atop
their quarreling.” “ Yre, yes," said
John, “ I took tlie tittle fellow’s part."
An old man, with a head as destitute
u watermelon, entered an Aus
tin avenue drug store and told the clerk
he wanted a bottle of hair restorer.
“ What kind of hair restorer do you
prefer?" “I reckon I'll have to take a
bottle of red-hair restorer. That was
the color of my hair when I was a boy,”
—Tiaras Siftiugt.
HUBBY UP, SIB.
dtttoy not.
Long ha to I waited;
H'.tfhflkl for tba ooailnf
Os kiaeaa belated,
Fra«rant aa rrwebuda,
Pt ire aa tha daw;
Deareat, delay rwt,
I'm walling for you.
"Just keep your bottle of whisky in
yonr closet, and, when the girl brings
you yonr hot shaving-water in the morn
ing, you can mix your toddy quickly,
and not a soul will know a thing about
it,” eaid the M. D. The plan worked
well until the old man’s daughter
tliought he must be going insane, be
cause he wanted to shave five or six
times a day.
Or course, no newspaper can exclude
all criminal things from its columns—
that we do not propose to do. There
are criminal acts which can le classed
as news, but we do not propuse to adopt
the practice of putting out drag-nets and
hooks and grappling-irons to drag the
txittom of every foul pool, hunting for
pntrid morsels of crime. We will leave
that tor those who are fund of such
t'lisfnesa.—Louisville IVurier-Journo/.
A pulaaaht call—" Come here. Hue
brand, my love,” said a fund New Haven
mother, as her spindle legged youngster
appeared just inside the gate. “ Hilde
brand I I should say so. How earns you
to tie such a homely boy to such a high
pneed name ? ” aaked a blunt-spoken
caller. “He may be homely, but he's
mine, thank you. I didn’t have to marry
a widower with four great overgrown
boys, as you did." This treating on
corns, meapboncally, doesn’t pay.—
N«w Haven HegUtetr.
Khklst's motor is now known aa
“ the tramp," tx-cauae it won't work.
SSlv» vew's iMSsry TVeBsA
A vperiaJ from Heleaa, Ark.. OeteUer Mb, «r*
“Might before last aa attempt waa made te as
•aaalnata Bnuon HU vermao whUa on bla wav to
tbla ttlj Five ■bote wars Brad a* him from be
hied a tree, wKh so etbar rffact lean to frighten
Uie horaa rvt<tos bj Mlvsrman, which threw ita
r-ter • llbont lajartag him. It* naua* vs thia
• itew[< on Mitvarman't life is owing to lb* di»
pet* abont tb* ownarabip of the.tottwj ttehet
«luch won lb* glj.uoo pri» in th* Lo<uaiaa>
state IxHtery Company, Hilvaraaa cieimuig II
to bo Ma. and a Mr» Clark claiming that ah*
uad bought it of fhivarman, who efteraarda
porioina'l it from b*r Tbr take! waa taken
'rom him M tha inussi* of Um pastel, wd ha
baa tnelitnted an.l ffir Qm mdbay It M anp
poaad that the attempt on hla Ufa waa s>a4a to
baap tom from praaatw UM Um asM. "—Baaa
Criaana FteayMa, Oetokar 1»
IM HAM.
It bSA bean prenoosly stato>l that for
acme thirty yean subsequent to the finl
description of the capsnln by Hiltoo,
anti a>me twenty-five years after the
identification ot the paraaits itself in
maa, *ne same were looked upon as mere
harmless curiosities, and that, although
Ixudy discovered the pauwaito in the
j flash of tin? swine in 1H47, still it was
not unti| IfffiO that the connection waa
established belweeu them, appearing, as
they had, iu two totally different ajxicioe
(men and swine). The honor of thia
imjxirtant discovery belongs to Dr,
Zenker, of Dresden, Germany. The
disease waa diaooverud in a servant girl
admitted aa a typhus jxitient to the City
i Hospital in Dresden. Hhe died and her
( flesh was found to be couqdctely infested
i with trichinaa, Leuckart’a and other ex
periments have shown that a tempera
tnre of 140 degrees Fahrenheit is neces
sary to render trichium inert Direct
heat applied to the elides bolding speci
mens of trichiuoua pork, by moans of
the B.'hulta heatiug table, has demon
strated under the microecojm that a
tem|x*rature of 50 degrees centigrade
(122 degrees Fahrenheit) ia necessary to
the certain death of the trichina,. Leis
eriug's exjierimanta with tnehiuoua
iwrk, mode up into sausage moat and
cooked twenty minutes, gave positive
rreuha when fed to one rabbit and nega
tive by another. Ho sums up hla ex
periinont aa follows:
1 Tnchinm are killed by long-contin
ued salting of infected meat, and also by
subjecting the same for twenty-four
hours to the action of smoke in a heated
chamber.
2. Tl|ey ore not killed by moan* of
cold smoking for a period of throe days,
and it also appears that twenty minnU-a
cooking freshly-prepared sausage-meat
ia sufficient to kill in all cases.
The various kinds of cooking, howev
er, arc quite in their effects on
tncliinons pork. Frying and broiling,
are moat efficient, roasting coming next.
Boiling coagulates the albumen on the
outer afltot'B a»d allows theheat to m u
etrate UO? > “
t iK.rtw< teflFf..
large pieces of meat. Whether boilr.l,
broiled or fried, pork should always be
thoroughly cooked. Practically speak
ing, the cooking, salting and hot-smok
ing which pork in ita various forms re
oeives in ths United Htatre must l>o, in
the vast majority of oases, sufficient to
kill Uie tnchlnai and prevent infection
of the person consuming the meat Every
thing like those reported in Germany are
unknown here, and trichluiasix in a fatal
form ia undoubtedly a rare disease. In
the vicinity of the great pork-packing
establishments near Breton, the "ejinre
ribs," containing the intereretal mus- ,
cles. are very largely bought and eaten
by the people near by, and trichiuiasis
among them has not in a single case :
been reported, so far as I have been
able to learn. Thu cuts being thin and
well cooked, any tnchinsi in them are
quite certain to lie killed. Even when
trichinae are iutrtxluotkl into the inteati
nal canals, too, tney are sometimes ex
}>ellod by diarrbtna, and the invasion of
the system by a small number <l<xw no
harm.—American Mierotcoyical Juw
nal.
Ax ant town in the Allegheny mount
suns consist* of 1,000 or 1,700 neeto,
which ruw iu cones to a height of from
two to five feet. Thu ground is riddled
in every direction by subterranreu
passages.
Picaixo pocksta'appesra to be a favor
ite profession ui Jajian. Nearly 2,000
light-flngered gentry ply their trade in
Tokio alone, of whom over 200are hxiked
SAW MILLS, GRIST MILLS, CANS BIA«
Plantation and Mill Machinery, Engine* and Bolter*, Cotten Bern**, IteaHAM*
Pulley*, Hanger*, Journal Boi«v, MUI Gearing, Gndeom, Turteo’a Waler
Gin Gearing, Juieon'* Govern .’*, D.aaton’* Circular B»w«, Gammer* Flw,
Belting, Babbitt Metal, Braw Fitting*, Globo and Cnect Valve*, WhtwtWXMM*Bp
etc. Iren and br*M Caatinga, Gin tuba, Iron Fronts, Balconies and h*W iigtilMfg
GEO. Ft. LOMBARD A C’O.lj— . »>
FOREST CITY FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS,
1014 to 1026 FENWICK STREET, AUQJUfcTA, GA. ■><*
[lVNear the Water Tower.) 9tr Repel ring promptly dene at lowm prtela.
Bolter repair* of all bind* done promptly. dec2l-ly
OPERA HOUSE”GARDES
BEN NEISZ. PROPRIETOR
CHOICE WINKS, LIOrOILS AND
PHILADELPHIA AND CINCINNATI
RBOAUAWD BIXIN BTBBrni, ACGUNTA, OX
PNMF .«a.»aae
rTBBttS-fll** use Swrew* JS .1*
I IB AJSVAMV*
NUM BEK
: JT .W/DvA
A OHABTBB OM
fJheeee waa among thg first ;
•nd from time immemorial has Ipraed
an important part of the food <!t oUF
kind * "*•
To aay exactly in whs* fltoe,
and manner cheese was served up
tables of the most ancient (
Egyptians, Hindoos or Cliii^^isn-woud, *
lie difficult, but we have abundant Ai
tleuoe that it waa thorer ‘ a ArtflO
Os the m<xle of maunfsMflretard4M**4l
a* little, i<tal
In those days of primitive itteaa aedS
rude inatriHusnta, butter MM generally ,
churued by placing the cream in a akto ,i
which two women ebook, much iu jhp )W
same manner aa a housewita would
shake a carpet to-day, or the more wF
vanoed method waa surtiethnes rerfofkefl ’ 7
to of placing the sktuia on tlia asstie a
back and trotting the aouuak abflm
stouyroa<l. Mg*. .Uasfr
The manufacture of cheese must have
equally rude. 1 • •M
Cheess of some kind is mads ’ftf'Wf 41
countries. The Chinese from timfl'Tfl-’>»
mote have nrele and sousnawd khtaflato-fl
rnuile or | him ami beaus ttNSMf MtirotoflA.. *
intent. , . ,| (aa
In Haxony the fair-haired ruatio often
fares sumptuously on cheese made ffbtti
the jxitato, his ryu bread and jiUsifflA ' 1
lager beer. " I • 11 *1
In the green oases* <4 ArtbMhr*M|k«
islnmlsof verdare.tn jw ocean I
the nomadic tribes, the Ih *
Aral*, gather the fruit of the date palm,
that tree which they IxiHove the aff|?Mx
traii»,|x>tt*'d from paradise, whieli serves
them as food ami raiment, and, wittites ■*
addition of several ingmiienta, make 1
therefrom a cheeac which forms a
l>al article Hi tbs food trf ths esqavpAyf
who, either with their fleet horses or to*
"ship <4 the desert," wander from pace
to place m traders or thieves'. Ths 1
difference between either la not vary *
great. <* 4 ! 1 »lf*M
Heversl districts in different mumtttee to
have become noted lor their
owes ita peculiarities often to. the mill
and sometimes to the secret in the twu£’‘
uer of preparing it. “ 1 c ’ *"* •'•’’q
ffl* WenfMMter *IV«cHBMr > W
wholly from cream. • » '4«w Imm
In Holland, apart from ths 1
cheese, of oannon-lxll Ahsps, M
Gouda cheese, which owes ita
ily ot flavor to the hydrochloric
umml in its manufacture.
The flavor of the celebrated -
phalia cheese is obtained b/ illowittg'ft A
to become putrid IwftWe compressttlg te*''
Puruioxan cheese ta tatanutaateged ttm
the richest part of the Milanese
tory, and ia made wholly of akipi "PHLi.
Ornyere ia madsiu the cantoaaof ttos
Alpx in Switxerlsud, The milk of sll
the farmers is turned into k romndh 4
stock, and each receives at tits sod est
the aesson hia individual share <>4 Mm
profit
In England old Htiltdn cheese is ai
moet ax great an institution M the Nml
lieef and plum pudding. !
In Chautanqna county, N. thMa .
are at least 101) factories teguged 1Q ttwhj •
manufacture of oheoae, dot dm
But nowhere aru there better Lctorr
ire, more exceilont products, or a mors
stirring busineM than iu Ontario.—Yfr-*
ronlo Mail. 1 '
Tub beat part of one’s life 1* the pee*”
fxrmsnce of one’s daily diftfM AM
higher motives, ideate, ennnsptlTj
sMiitimenta, in a man, are st no aAwtaat t
if they do not come and siraugUMn
for the better discharge of
winch devolve upon turn Jn the
affaire of lite.
Thbm are 18,000 oystanMS in Vi?- {
ginte -MteAMi
i "—I