OCR Text |
Show . MILLIONS OF MSH. 1 1 1 IP YOU DO NOT KNOW BEANS READ AND LEARN. to-da- n. , , h- ; -t - - m, , to-da- other tubs partly Each is taken with its head in hand, the tail in s porcelain dish, the filled with water. up separately, and the strippers right the left is held over when, with a quick and expert movement of the thumb and forefinger down the sides of the fish the spawn, transparent, a golden yellow in color and resembling tiny air bubbles, is removed, the fish being returned to the water none the worse for the unnatural operation. A record is kept of the spawn taken from each fish, the count being regulated by the number of ounces, about 400 eggs to the ounce. The spawn is Immediately placed on trays and set In the troughs of running water. The time required to hatch varies, but averages eighty days. After the eggs have been in the troughs thirty days the infertile ones turn white and are removed. . white, pro duct of twenty-fiv- e ago, but a years cloudy, reddish-brow- n crystal, as if made from cheap sugar. It is not easily adulterated, and crystalization is an essentially honest process. semi-transpare- nt A Lover of Reading. 'Baker must be a great lover of reading. He tells me he often stays in his library all night." 'Yes, that's so. But did he tell you tnat tne only liorary ne nas is a folding bed fixed up to look like a bookcase?" Why er no. Building Up Their Navy. war vessels were lwenty-seve- n added to the British navy last year, exclusive oi five torpedo boats, at a cost of about $12,000,000. The record for 1895 will go even beyond this. The development of the fish in the England is enlarging her navy with ever before. In a very even more zeal than Bgg is carefully watched. few days the almost infinitesimal egg CHIEFLY CHAFF. begins to fill out; a few more days and tiny black dot i3 noticeable. This Oe AU Ui JJJk.JJX J S U KiVi a. la the embryo fish ; later the egg is was knocked xlown by a vicious ram the size of a small pea, and then the to death. She was sixty trout soon hatches. Once it looks like and butted old. the little wiggling tadpole of our boy- years BaronI am going to get married. hood days, except that under its' belly John? think of What do ..' ; .1X4. TV A LA y y j it carries a sac, on the contents of which it subsists for forty days, when the sack drops off and the little speckled beauty has to shift for itself.; This it does so successfully that when it is twelve weeks old it is about the size of and greatly resembles a ; match, and is strong to enough go witi 4,999 others of its fellow wigglers, into a can to be transported to and liberated in the head waters "of some propitious krook, where it may grow to the size, perhaps larger, but in the end, alas! to meet an ignominious death! after, no doubt, a struggle in whicIt exhibited which tried the brain and handcunning of its captor. About eighty per cent of the spawn is successfully hatched, and then sev.five enty per. cent of the youngvfish is raised to be liberated. J Hatching jars about : the- room 60,00 3,000 tomcod eggs in of incubation. It takes but thirty days' to hatch them out, they half-burne- d ten-gall- on six-in- ch I i - . con-tai- aj al-8tag- $3 being much smaller than the trout e8,gs- - The hatching jars are so arra- the fishas they are hatched and rise tto the surf ace of the are 8ipnoned out into a trough. Wifr " This is the only hatchery at which is possible to "pore obtain a full supply of salt water.' A hot-aengine, pumping constantly, keeps a reservoir above the hatchery will filled. This r supply has enabled Superintendent Mather to enrra?e in lobster propagation, and this, of all his work, has proved the most interesting. The 1394 hatch of 500,000 was from spawn ta,cen from females captured off 'Sound leach, Conn., and his success with ern has led Superintendent Mather Vjlievo that, owing to the fact that has been learned of the life and nged-that ir salt-wate- :h that, you John Delighted! I always believed I would get back the money I lent you Schoolmate wny do you never touch your piano? Miss Thumper We're buying it on installments. Tm afraid it paw should hear me play, he'd stop paying." She You must remember that ours was a summer engagement. He That means, if you see ' anyone you like better, you'll break it? rSTes." "And if Isee anyonellike better" "I'll sue yon for breach of promise." Maud that Jack I . understand proposed to you last nignt ana you refused him? Marie Yes; .although!, poor fellow; I am afraid that if he had not left me so hurriedly I might have relented and accepted him. Maud L So he told me. I would like to Mrs. Brand-Nes on etiquette. book tret a Brand-NeMr. Any particular point want to clear ud? 'Mrs. Brand to treat one's infer New Yes-ho- w You know, dear, it' is only ors. recently that we have had inferiors. I will have to leave you a TTnstpRs little while. ' What can I do for your amusement while I am out? Little Visitor I wish you would let me look at your family album. "Do you think so. you can enjoy that?" "I guess Over Mamma says everybody laughs j . . w , first-clas- w it." L.adv. to ; her husband i am grow so fat that I am beginning to feel ing oulte alarmed about it. I have just discovered that I weigh 340 pounds. Two hundred and forty pounds! And whom Aid vou tret weighed? On the Vmo'c sfal(s. Ohi then,half.calm ourself! You weigh exactly WESTERN, : AND TRAGEDY. MODEL HATCHERY. A Rejected Lover's Terrible Revenge Recalled by a Virginia Wedding:. Several Methods of Preparing the Bos-- ; tfork by j TVTiich Sportsmen Benefit Romance is not dead, and tragedy ton Vegetable How to Arrange a How the) Spawn Is Obtained Requires is sometimes as real y as in life Colonial Tea A Woman of Forty Sumon n A4erage Eighty Day to Hatch in books. A story comes from story ' AU Sorts of FUh Propagated. mersSelecting a VelH Roanoke, Va., of a marriage which was recently performed there that reDo Yon Know Beans? ' almost one f the most distressing called Probably not many of the There are a great many people who numberless disciples of Izaak Walton tragedies in the history of Botetourt would feel inclined to resent any imvicinity are aWare county Tie parties in this marriage tx New Ybrk and of want of knowledge conthat within thirty miles of New York were John W. Trout and Mrs. Lavinia putation beans, yet there are a great citv. at jCold Spring harbor, Long: K. Walton, nee Obenshain, both na- cerningvarieties of this plebeian vegisland, is 'situated the most prominent tives of Troutville, a village seven- many are etable still unknown to the that the teen miles east. of the seven fish hatcheries under y cook. commis-jioThe stranger in a In the summer of 1891 Houston every-dacontrol oj the New York fish New York grocery will be like- There are thousands of fisher- Obenshain, a brother of the bride, large men who thrash the streams of that and Horace N. Trout, a brother of the ly to notice a basket of brilliant green are the flageolets of gtate each recurring year who never groom, were each paying attention to beans. These cook. of fish French the the to a Miss Alice Richardson, pretty young They are not raised subject ?ive a thought are imported in a in this which but their for country, lady of Troutville. Obenshain resided propagation, but state from France. Their bright, baskets would be more often empty in this city, and at times was a little dry an attractive than full, fish skillfully as they might. wild. Learning of several scrapes even color makes them has eaten who and Harbor Cold which into had he anyone the Springhatchery object, The gotten himself, Delmonico's at beans in 1882, the to a woman's started father objected present young was "panaehees" huiklinc being erected in 1887. It is continuance cf his attentions, which would hardly recognize the flageolets a model of its kind, for here the very, had been so marked that it was re- as the main ingredients in the mixresults in fish culture are obtain- - ported the young couple were engaged. ture. The French cooks do not soak ed with the least possible outlay of Miss Richardson wrote Obenshain the their beans as long" as we do, and decision of her father and charged they do not always succeed m com money. The first story of the building- is that it was due to tales told of him by pletely conquering the natural toughand here Trout. Obenshain on receiving her ness oi this dried vegetable. used as a hatching-rooA flageolet is properly cooked in is the visitor usually greeted by As- letter immediately began preparations H. Charles for wreaking a terrible vengeance on the same way as the white bean, or sistant Superintendent He speedily ar as dried peas. vWash them thorWalters, who knows more fish jlore Horace N. Trout. to half men dozen in the other than any ranged his worldly anairs, nired a oughly, and put a pint of themover of cold water of in soak combined, course, three pints horse and buggy, and informed several always, country Mather, friends that he was going to Trout night. In the morning drain them, excepting Superintendent whoe name as a fish culturist heads ville to kill Trout, Miss Richardson put them over the fire in three fresh and himself, but no one naid any at pints of cold water, and let them the list. simmer very slowly, covered until to these threats. is a tention This busy spot. Thirty troughs, each fourteen feet long by eighteen Arriving at Troutville, he ascer they are very tender but entire. inches wide and twelve deep,; are tained that Trout and the young lady They must not be boiled to a porplaced crosswise in the room, and were at the house of Mr. Beyer. ridge. It will take usually from an through them there is a constant flow Thither he went, spoke pleasantly to hour and a half to two hours' cooking. of clear spring water, brought from everyone, and asked Trout to walk At the end of this time drain the living springs on the hillsides of the with him to a church close by. Trout beans again. Mix two tablespoons Jones estate, above the hatchery. consented, and when they had nearly of butter with a quarter of a cup of The average temperature of the water reached the church Obenshain drew a the water in which they have been Is about forty-fiv- e degrees. In these revolver and fired a bullet into Trout's eooked. Add two teaspoons of salt, of wire trays, head. Hi 3 victim fell to the ground, a tablespoon of chopped parsley, and on a succession troughs, is five feet placed the to receive two more balls in his body. a pinch of white pepper. Toss the deep, placed Obenshain stood over his victim a few bea'ns in this mixture over the fire spawn to hatch. This operation is most interesting. moments and calmly surveyed his for a minute or two and serve them. He started to the house where All about the grounds adjoining the work. The dried flageolet is not often used or Miss small are Richardson for but was, soup like the white Breton bean turned, reservoirs, hatchway to went a which trout where few the that contain the the red bean. The red haricote and peochurch, ponds, are kept for their spawn, about 10,000 ple had assembled, told them what he or Kidney oean is also a it rencn Dean of the varieties, brook trout, brown had done, and then went to the house that may be found in most of our gronow of and rainbow trout, being trout, Benjamin Murray. cery stores. We believe, however, 10 Just as he entered the doorway he that it is usually raised in this there. They range in age from montb.3 to 5 years, and in size from placed the muzzle of the revolver to country. To cook these red beans, soak them three to eighteen inches. The heavi- temple, pulled the trigger, and fell to est native brook trout in the ponds the floor dead. Trout lingered for over night as you do the flageolets. weighs three pounds nine ounces, a several days and died. His body was Drain them and cover them with fresh record breaker, but they have a brown buried in the same cemetery with water in the morning. Add to them a tablespoon of butter, and a small trout, 5 years old, that weighs six Obenshain's antf close by it. ounces. seven white onion in which a clove is stuck, pounds Rock Candy Is Pare. finds October for and let the beans simmer Superintendent Rock candy, which is only sugar in half an hour. Add half a slowly Mather, Assistant Walters, and Exwineglass perts Oliver V. Rogers and Peter large, hard crystals, is now produced of good red wine, if you would cook Gorman at work stripping spawn wholesale in tin buckets inclosed m the beans in pure French fashion. from the ripe females. The fish are wooden firkins. Strings are stretched Let them cook an hour longer after across and upon these buckets the carefully caught from the ponds in a adding the wine; drain them again, seine and placed in large tubs, the the crystals form. It happens often though the liquor should be nearly y is not all absorbed. Add a tablespoon of females being quickly thrown into that the rock candy of ROMANCE Our StockTalsers' column; . . Nebraska, Kansas, Oregon, WashingW. ton and New York) the existing law Thu Elxd will continue in eachjnnxabcir to publish brands under yearly contracts at is thai the fat her of a minor child has ' nominal price. ff sole legalj authority over such child The Pioneer to ; , the' ,The stockralser advantage cf famll and has the absolute right of its cuslarlzlng the public with his brand and mark are to well known to need attention.! It is te tody and jits service and, the fruits the stockman as yaluable as an advertisement thereof,' and the sole right to indent., la to the merchant. ure, except under certain circumstances. In several states . women are striving to have a change made in Of Deseret, GILES. F. ell. this ruling and in Pennsylvania 'especially there has been vigorous action Has removed to his new shop just north taken lately. The Pe nnsylvania WoRANGE I of the river bridge, where he men's Suffrage associa tion, the PennLower Serler andlv sylvania Women's C hristian TemperBlnK of Beaver. i of will do kinds all ance union, and the Civic club of Address: fki ''' Philadelphia have indorsed a set of .Utah.' Oaals, amendments wh ich are to be S presented to the leg islature to the end that hereafter married women of 'vA.;Eay. good character who are mothers shall have the same rights enjoyed by 'Square erop and lib silt in right, diagothe father under the law. Heaflparters for UDffllG IEH. nal under all t in left S. MATRONS AND MAIDS. years, they will soon be as easily cultivated as trout. IN A ARE. RAISED OW Tfrf EY i 1 BLACKSMITH ' 1 W ' THE DESERET HOUSE. i : . 5 A Colonial Tea. ear. entertainments in which City and county Newspapers from all parti children take part are always attrac- of Utah. Ore speolmens from Detroit and tive, and a colonial tea given by little people is one of the most delightful suggestions that can be offered, Every thing RESPECTABLE. L Home adies' the Journal. says A Flowing Well of Chil dren from five to ten years of PUKEST WATER ON EARTH. age should be chosen, and their costumes ought to be suited both to the Oft tie Premises. This Water Is a GUAJs colonial period and to the characters ANTEED CUBE for aQ assumed. The costumes should be true in every detai 1 to the period rep- Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder resented. If it is not possible or practicable to hire costumes, they Testimonials op Application. MRS. J. F. GIBBS, Prop. may be all, even to the wigs, designed and made without Ihe aid of, a UTAH. Church 4 U .. j"3-- - Cricket Mountains' and low-owner. Deseret, Utah. ' .it Address, , Jeo Demnnp Upper slit In right, under slit In left ear. Range: Cricket Mountains r and in irr" Lower Sevier. Address, " ml I w' Patterns Jos i IK I: " " ii Lower Sevier. iiniiftr Deseret, Utah Address, I Join Smito Horse Grower ; and Dealer; RANGE: Housa Mountains and Lower Sevier. ATTENTION! ' ' j Oasisjf Utah. Address, WiJHbte : Horned Stock, brand on t fight thigh. ! same RANGE: Lower Sevier. LAIRD. . Beranp Under slit la right, under silt in left ear. Range: Crleket Mountains and J i'i f4 Deseret, Utah. cos-tume- r.r . Desereti Address, . r-- b Orerson Brei Breeders and dealers in Short horn Darhaoxa. Horses same brand an left i. CO-O- P. . " H f for each garment DESERET, required may be ordered by mail at leading pattern stores. The special Thurman & Wormwood, features of the ente rtainment are the supper or "tea," march, music, hisATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , tory or story and tableaux vivahts. Tables, conveniently low to accommodate guests in kindergarten chairs, are spread with simple but palatable Water Right Gases a Specialty. food. A s tately squire and dame preside at each table, dispensing hos- W Booms' in First JS ational Bank" Building, pitality to their tiny colonial guests Proyo City, Utah. after the fashion of their day, small serving men and maids in costume assisting. Whil e the children are enjoying their supper their elders may be miners and Sheep Men. served in less formal fashion. After supper the children may enDON'T FORGET that I have a comgage s,in marching for fifteen or plete line of MERCHANDISE and twenty minutes, then take part in a SUPPLIES suitable for your needs. series of tableaux representing vari- SHEEP DIP a specialty. FOR TRAVous scenes in colonial life. Those ELERS I have COMFORTABLE should be selected which represent QUARTERS. MEALS AT POPULAR the fortunes of domestic life in its PRICES. Hay, Grain and Stabling. happiest moods. The following order PELTS BOUGHT. of arrangement is excellent: First, an orchestral or piano arA. M. rangement of national airs. Second, Drum Springs, Detroit Mining jDistrirt. a brief story explaining the tableaux about to be given. Third, tableaux. The stories must be simple in form, easy rhyme being preferred, spicy, amusing and well told. Thtey may be FRANK WHITEHEAD, read, but it is far better to select Manufacturer of good reciters from the colonial band, giving to each a story to be rehearsed Harness. Boots & Shoes at the proper moment. The tableaux ind the curtain, may be arranged beh Will ajso do repairing of the abore while the musical numbers and articles on short notice. butter and toss the beans over the stories are being rendered before the fixe for about five minutes. They assembled company, so that there should be served as hot as possible. be no tiresome waits between PRODUCE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE Our American method of baking may the story and the picture. the white beans seems to be the very Woman of Forty Summers. SHOP, Opp. HINCELET best method of cooking them far Full ofAoutline fair of face, better than any fricassee or stew of Swinging her fanandwith lan guid grace,. beans, though they may be cooked in White arms gleaming through folds of lace, exactly the same way as the green-hue- d A woman of forty summers. ; flageolet. It requires an intelli- No thread of white in the auburn hair, New line of age in the forehead fair, GENERAL MERCHANDISE England housekeeper, bow- - No gent A life by touch of care. ever, to know the best kind of white In unmarred spite of her forty summers. bans. Throu ghout the middle states AND PRODUCE r and children sweet, the large white kidney bean is the A husband-love- to to charm and friends greet, only white bean sold. In Boston and Pleasures Roses scattered before her feet, AT THE "down East," where the cooking of Through each of her forty summers. the white bean is an art, nothing but Summers all, for no winters bold STORE the small pea bean is used,' and the Have snatch ed her sunshine and made her DESERET CASH coarse white bean is rejected by all cold: Good3 at bottom prices for her roses and left her old; wise housekeepers. It is possibly Have killed summers. she knows but Nothing spot cash. needless to say here that it is not necessary to add pork to a dish of Nothing she knows of laden oloud, JIIO. DEWSHUP, MGR. freezing air and tempest loud, baked beans, and those who enter Of a snows weave Of for that shroud; hope tain a prejudice against the meat of Her life has been only summers. DESERET. East Main Street, a well substitute the pig may lump ' So calm she sits in the balmy air, oi Dutier. 1 No sorrows to fret, no cross to bear, acismilliis and fapn EepaWng. Measure out a quart of white pea A summer idyl, a vision fair, beans. Put them to soak over night This woman of forty summers. k At Bettom Prices for Pay Down.f in three quarts of cold water. The Yet cold and bl ast but make us strong, Will be pleased to eee all old and new etu orthodox dish to bake them in is an After the snow the robin's song: tomora. life To the fullest by right belong unglazed pipkin of earthenware, with The winters as well as summers. a handle and cover. In the morn ling drain them and rinse them thorough- And women they whom f am e shall carve in stone men would fane enthrone, The ly in clear cold water. Then put The women whom whom Q od has stamped his own, Rubber Stamps, Branding Irons. them back in the pipkin in which Live winters as well as summers, a tableJenness Miller Monthly. they have been soaking, add S. J. GRIFFIN, spoon of salt, and an even tablespoon Twenty-fift- h St., Ogden, Utah, Selecting: a Veil. of molasses, and a teaspoonful! of Rubber of and Metal 8tamp,also tfanufactiuer homewoman a make It may pretty Stencils, other of and Notarial Seals, mustard. Stir all thoroughly around if taken at haphazard, and cer- Branding Irons, etc. Also hasBadges, for sale Check ix the pot. Put a heaping tablespoon ly, a homely one if for Punches, Numbering Machines, etc., and la agent can Columbia Bicycles. of butter down in the center of jthe tainly withimprove skill. taste and Black, Oo. Safes aad bought gent for Cover them with cold water, brown, white and navy blue veils are Vault beans. f Box a, f 7. Work. Steel so that it rises two inches above them worn, but the favorite veil in Paris' is Put them in a hot oven at 8 o'clbck one of a black ground having small in the morning, and let them cook white sprays and border. A cream Bteadily till 5 in the afternoon, re- White is becoming, unless the wearer newing the water, as of ten as it boils is very pale and with off them. Let them brown down in eyes and hair. Black goes with all SALT LAKE. will the pot they hats and is very fashionaoie, qui it is , be done at 6 o'clock. 1 opinion that ,itj ages one. Gen oral Go mmissi The Guardianship ,o( Children. black-i- s more The becoming spotted ' g A dressmaker had than the plain, and if the weSrer-ha- s Dealer laid by a little money. She fell in a modicum of color she can get along love with a boy of 19, consumptive with it, "provided she uses something FRUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, and entirely penniless, and married bricrht about her dress or hat. To EST. Poultry, Game, Veal Fork ur& him largely to take care of him. Soon Others black is be coming any way, Beef, Smoked aad Fresh Flak, his health failed completely and find- and fortunate are these few; Ladies' Flour, Ha'and Grain. ing himself about to die he expressed Home Journal. you to ship your goods to no. I ft will10par a wish to make a will. This seemed 'Twas Ever Thus. ver cent, for handling and remit as okarge but the curious fancy of a dying man, She was singing vigorously the toon aa goods are sold. Cam gtre as he had absolutely nothing to leave lz hymn at church. She was eeuntxr references desired. land no money even to pay for making Opening trim and trig as possible, with one a will. To humor : him, however, the exception. Her placket, that bane of g wife sent for a lawyer woman's existence, gaped and reand paid him to draw up her. hus- vealed to those behind her a line of band's will. The husband died and white. When she sat down her . . .1 some months later a baby was born. reuJl bouxo miug t Kinaiy neignoor When the baby was but a few months in "hdT enn(irnin(rwmspe thft Ktatf of her at- orsTCJEt old strangers came to the mother tire. The woman blushed furiously, armed with the husband's will. They made a furtive grab at her skirt, was 50 W. 2nd, South, SALT LAKE CITY proved that he had bequeathed the unable to decide what was the matP. O. BOX child to his parents 'in Michigan and ter with it, and settled back, finally, took the baby away with them The to finishing the rest of her worship' i .01. 00 : Sample mother had no redress. in a position which would not re- Hand ing l. w This is oniy, one of the many; many veal of her underwear to the Iron Assay portions . ...... .... . . ; cases of bitter" injustices which are test of the J.J0 Copper Assay And then Bottla w Camples caused by t ue present law concerning the choir, incongregation, vociferous tones pud, the guardianship of children. In every sang out, "Stand""" up, stand up, for ;. tate of the union except six (Iowa Jesus." M : t' on the U. F. liy and Mills' station ni"-1--- between thigh. Cattle-Up- per slope la each ear. Range Sevier rire and mountains. ' " V, - fiT.! Leam- ington. Address, Leamington, Millard Co., Utah. n Parley Allrei Horses same brand on left thigh. Cattle-cl- ose crop in left and slit in right ear. K a n g e , Sevier. Lower Des Address, eret, Utan. I?? Josiau smit& j Until recently en I branded left ribs. &it In left ear. Range, Nertk end of Snake (Valley and east side of Snake Mt. ; also seat side of Deep Creek mountains, Address, Smith? rille, Millard county, Utah. f j' L on left thlgkf same brand on left hip of cattle. Range Willow Springs. Address, 1 - Ton left tWgb; swallow fork jin left ear. C double Range, Lower vier. Address ; Herring-Hall-JIarvl- faiht-colore- d Ctrls. Tlioiinra Utah. L- rs Same left thigh on Horses. Upper slope and one under slit in lefl ear, and two under snts In right MARTIN, ; ear. RANGJ5 :Oak Creek. onllorm Sims Walker Address, Oak City, Utah.! hard-workin- J : j hard-workin- W. Q. M STEWARD, F GIBBS, Notary and Conveyanoor - first-cla-ai Mark, slit Im right and two sliU in neft ear. Same on left brand shoalder on horse P.sN. Petersen, Address, j ilte-comm- -j Oasis Utah, Range, Low er Sevier. n e-lastLkguriand . Se- Oasis,I Millard Co. Fire-proo- O. S. Utah. j Deeds and Mortgages made out and signatures acknowledged j affidavits and depositions taken; nhning deeds and business a specialty PROMPT ATTENTION. Ofice with MILLABD pp.; BLAJOD, ,! J ( j 3r:0 , . j ; Butter Stamps Brandms IrcUkJ QUI j. ft la i St., Ogden Utah; Manufactorer of Rubber and Metal Stamps,- aim teals. Iiadges. Stencils, t Notarial and ether Also ban; for sale Check Branding Irons, etc. Machine etc., and la agent Psncbesv Numbering for Columbia Bicycles. Co, safes as Agent for ramil work. Steel boxes. 17. Twenty-flft- h - i Uerrlng-IIall-Marv- fire-pro- in of i |