According to U.S. drought monitor archives, 100% of Texas experienced at least abnormally dry conditions with almost 72% experiencing exceptional drought conditions. The 2011 drought conditions peaked in October when 88% of the state was exceptionally dry while 97% of the state was in extreme to exceptional drought.
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Almost 98% of Texas is abnormally dry, but only 46% of the state is experiencing extreme to exceptional drought and 16% of the state suffering exceptional drought, according to the drought monitor. But it is a hard sell to tell many agriculture producers and farmers across Texas that 2022 has been better.
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Dental fillings are a great way to replace tooth structure that has been lost due to decay or breakage. Over time, these fillings can become old, cracking, leaking or even falling out. Our teeth also can fatigue over time and not be able to support these fillings anymore. When that happens, your tooth may crack of even break apart.
Rainfall across Texas and cooler temperatures provided agricultural producers some relief from drought and extreme heat over recent weeks, but most areas remain in a moisture deficit, according to the Texas state climatologist and Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service agronomists.
1. You cooked something that started out frozen.Always thaw poultry or meat before you add it to the Crock-Pot. Once the crock is heated, the temperature change initiated by the frozen meat can cause it to crack. Besides, it's not a good idea to cook frozen meat in a slow cooker, since bacteria can proliferate when food spends too long in what the USDA calls the "Danger Zone", 40-140.
2. You refrigerated the food in the crock before cooking.I know it seems easier to prep the meal in the crock and stash it in the fridge overnight. But once you turn the slow cooker on, the change in temperature can cause a crack. Workaround: Mix all the recipe ingredients in a large bowl the night before, and use a rubber spatula to scrape it all into the crock in the morning.
3. You heated the crock on the stove.Your crock may be microwave or oven safe without its lid. But it will probably crack if you place it directly on a burner. Check the user guide. If it doesn't say it's safe to use on the stovetop, assume it isn't.
4. A hairline crack developed in the pot.You may not notice a minor crack in the pot until it becomes a serious crack. Hairline cracks can develop if you fill a hot crock with cold water. Wait until the crock cools down before attempting to clean it. And although you may have heard that you can repair a surface crack by boiling the pot in milk, we believe that would be a very temporary fix.
2. If you used a slow cooker liner in the cracked pot, dinner is saved. It's okay to pour the meal into a big soup pot and finish cooking it on top of the stove. The liners make for easy cleanup, so they're worth using, all the time.
November 13 - This extreme drought has many legislators and conservationists alike wondering where the water for Texas will come from considering the population boom expected in the next half century. The most valuable water resource in the state is the Trinity River, which supplies Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston's drinking water. The river has already been tapped to its capacity so plans for other resource sites are in session and are controversial. What is clear is that conservation and recycling must take priority.Matthew Tresaugue, Houston Chronicle, November 13, 2011.
November 8 - The excessive heat and drought have caused roads to crack and buckle under the shifting soils in Montgomery County. Estimates are that to completely repair the problems in the county costs could range as much as $3-4 million, but only $1.2 million in the budget. This allows for only minor repair work to get done making sure that all of the roads are still drivable.Nicklaus Lovelady, Houston Chronicle, November 8, 2011.
Drought Conditions Worsen in Lubbock and Statewide- The U.S. Drought monitor recently upgraded the Lubbock area into extreme drought as the city still suffers from long term drought.KCBD News, James Clark, September 9, 2012
Dry Soil, Heat Creates Foundation Problems for Homeowners- With the extensive drought in the Corpus Christi area foundations are starting to crack due to shrinking soil.KIII News, September 12, 2012
THAT we are a nation of shopkeepers I believe, not only on the evidence ofthe first Napoleon, but from what I see and hear every day. There are few peoplein the City who are born wealthy, compared with the number who do manage in thecourse of a successful mercantile career to win for themselves a fair share ofthis world's goods. The other night I was spending the evening at the West-Endmansion of a City millionaire. As I left, I asked a friend what was the secretof our host's success. "Why," was the answer, [-209-]"I have always understood he began life with borrowing ten shillings." If that is all, thought I to myself, it is not difficult to make a fortune,after all. Accordingly, I negotiated a loan of a sovereign, thinking that if Ifailed with ten shillings I should be sure to succeed with double that number.At present, I regret to say, the loan has not been so successful in its resultsas I anticipated, and fortune seems as far off as ever. Should it turn outotherwise, and my wild expectations be realised, I will publish a book, and letthe reader know how a sovereign became ten thousand pounds. And yet I believesuch a feat has been often accomplished in the City and by City men. Everybodyknows a man who walked up to town with twopence-halfpenny in his pocket, wholived to enjoy a nice fortune himself, and to leave his wife and family wellprovided for. I met the other day in the Gray's Inn [-210-]Road a master-builder, who told me that he was going to retire from businessand pass the evening of his days in quiet. I had known the man since he was aboy. I knew his father and his mother and all his family. If ever a fellow had achance of going to the bad that poor boy had. His father was a drunkard; thepoverty of the family was extreme; of schooling he had none whatever; yet heleft the little village in Suffolk where he was born, resolved, as he told me,to be either a man or a mouse; and fortune favoured him beyond his most sanguineexpectations. Yes, the streets of London are paved with gold, but it is noteveryone who has sense to see it or strength to pick it up. It is to be feared the large class who come into the streets to deal are notof the class who mean to rise, but who have seen better days. For instance, Ioften meet a porter selling Persian sherbet in the City, [-211-]who seems to have dropped into that situation from mere laziness. He had a fairchance of getting on in life, but he never seems to have had pluck enough tosucceed. Another man I know held a respectable situation as clerk; he appearedto me economical in his habits, he was always neatly dressed, he was never theworse for liquor, nor did he seem to keep bad company. All at once he left hissituation, and rapidly went to the dogs. For a little while he borrowed of hisfriends; but that was a precarious source of existence, and now he may be seendealing in small articles, on which it is to be hoped for his own sake theprofits are large, as I fear the demand for them is small. Then there are therestless characters who take up street-selling partly because they like togammon the public, partly because they dislike steady industry, and partlybecause I fancy they cherish expectations of another sort. These [-212-]are the men who give away gold rings, who exhibit mice that have a wonderfulway of running up and down the arms, who sell gutta-percha dolls which seem intheir hands to have a power of vocalisation which leaves them at once and forever as soon as you have purchased the puppet and paid for it and made it yourown, who deal in cement which will make an old jug better than new, who retailcorn-plasters which are an inevitable cure, and who occasionally deal inpowders which are a sure means of getting rid of certain objectionable specimensof the insect tribe. "But how do you use the powder?" asked a flat of a countryman whohad been deluded into the purchase of sixpennyworth of the invaluable powder."How do you use it ?" repeated the purchaser. "Well, you see, you catch the animal and hold him by the back of theneck, and then when his mouth opens, just [-213-]shove in the powder, and he'll die fast enough." "But," said the countryman, "I suppose I could kill the insectat once when I've caught him ? "Well," said the salesman, "of course you can, but the powderis, I repeat, fatal nevertheless." A little while ago there was an illustrated paper presumedly more fitted forthe moral atmosphere of New York than London. Its chief sale, before it wassuppressed by the law, was in the streets, where, with its doubtful engravings,it was a bit of a nuisance. Of course, the sale of Evening Hechoes, and HextraStandards, is a thing one is obliged to put up with; nevertheless, one mustoften regret that so useful a trade cannot be pushed in a quieter and lessostentatious way. The ingenious youth, who devote themselves to the sale of apaper especially devoted to the interests of matri-[-214-]mony, are a real nuisance. How they pester many a lad that passes with theirintimation that, by the purchase of their trumpery paper, they can secure anheiress with a thousand a year, as if such bargains were to be had any day,whereas, the truth is, that they are rather scarce, and that - whether withthat sum or without - matrimony is a very serious affair. Unprotected femaleshave to suffer a deal of impudence from these fellows. I saw a respectable,decently- dressed, manifest old maid, exceedingly annoyed and shocked by one ofthese fellows pursuing her half way up Cheapside, with his shouts, "Want a'usband, ma'am ?" "Here's a chance for you, ma'am," "Lots of 'usbandsto be had," and so on, in a way which she seemed to feel - and I quiteunderstood her feelings - was singularly indelicate. What an insult to supposethat any virtuous and accomplished lady is in need of a husband, when she hasonly [-215-] to raise a finger and she has, such is the chivalry of the age, a score ofadorers at her feet! The newsboys are, of course, the most prominent of our street salesmen, andthey affect the City for many reasons. In the first place, in and around theMansion House there is a finer opening for business than anywhere else; and inthe second place, a City business is often a very remunerative one. City men whohave made their thousands on the Stock Exchange or elsewhere are not particularin the matter of change; and a fourpence or a sixpence is often the reward ofthe lad who is the first to rush up to a City swell as he leaves his office witha "third hedition of the Hecho," or a special Standard with someimportant telegram. In wet weather times go very hard with these poor fellows.On the contrary, when it is fine, business is brisk. They rely much onsensational telegrams. [-216-] A war is a fine thing for them, and so is a case like that of the Claimant,or a spicy divorce case, or an atrocious murder. It is when such things as theseoccur that they flourish, and that their joy is abounding. They must make a gooddeal of money, but it goes as fast as it comes. An attempt was made to establisha newsroom for these boys, and very nice premises were taken in Gray's Inn Lane.The coffee and bread and butter were excellent, and the arrangements were allthat could be desired. Nevertheless the undertaking was a failure, because itwas not supported by the class for whose benefit it was especially intended. Thenews-boys did not like the confinement, the regular hours, the decent behaviour,the cleanliness and attention to little things required. They wanted beer and 'baccy,and other little amusements, more in accordance with their independent positionin life. As a rule I [-217-]fancy they are honest; they certainly never cheat a man if they think they willbe found out. I never had any difficulty in getting my change but once, and thenI was in an omnibus, and the chances were in the boy's favour. What is wonderfulis that they do not meet with more accidents. How they rush after omnibuses asthey urge on their wild career! Some of them are great radicals. "Allusreads The Hecho of a Saturday," said one of them to me, "to see how itpitches into the haristocracy," when the articles signed "NOBLESSEOBLIGE" were being published. It is to be wondered at now and then that theirimpertinence does not get them into grief. For instance, to the young man whohas any respect for the fair sex, how disgusting to be told of women, good-looking, amiable and accomplished, well-to-do, and apparently possessed ofevery virtue under heaven, advertising for husbands. I suppose The Matrimonial[-218-] News is a success; but, if so, certainly that is not a pleasant sign of thetimes. If people will buy it, the newsboys are not to be blamed for hawking itabout. They take up what they think the public will buy. Last year they wereretailing "The Devil," price one penny, and this year they have takenup Town Talk, and an ingenious puzzle, called, "How to find out LordBeaconsfield." I wonder some of our publishers of real good illustratedliterature do not try to push the sale of it in this way. I think it would pay.The public would then have the bane and the antidote side by side. Mr. Smithiesmight do much to increase the sale of The British Workman if he had it hawkedabout the streets. As to the costermongers, their name is legion; and that they are a realservice to the community must be evident to anyone who sees what their pricesare and what are those of the fruiterers in the shops. They [-219-]bring fruit within the reach of the community. In the summer-time we naturallyrequire fruit. It is good for grown-up men and women, it is good for littlechildren. In London they have no chance of tasting it were it not for thecostermonger who floods the streets with all that is desirable in this respect;one day he has West India pineapples for sale; another bananas or shaddocks;another grapes, and apples, and pears, and apricots, and greengages, and plums.One day he deals in strawberries and another in cherries; and then, when theautumn comes on, what a tempting display he makes of filberts, and walnuts, andchestnuts! The amount of fruit thus poured in upon the market, much of whichwould have perished had it not been sold off at once, is really prodigious; andinfinitely indebted to him are the poor clerks who lay in a pennyworth of applesor pears as they leave the office for the little ones at home. At one [-220-]time I had a prejudice against these rough and noisy dealers ; that prejudicehas vanished since I have taken to dining in the City and indulging in "apenny lot" after dinner. What I admire is the way in which they do upstrawberries, and cherries, and plums in little paper bags, which seem tocontain as much again as they really do. Occasionally a man gets cheated, butthat is when there is a woman in the case. Oh, the flower-girls of the streets, what deceiving creatures they are ! Itis not that, like the flower-girls of Paris, they spoil a romance withpecuniary views, but it is that they cheat you through thick and thin, and sellyou camellias made of turnips, and roses and azaleas equally fair to see andequally false and vain. Can I ever forget my friend Dr. R. and the little mishapthat befell him when he assisted at a little dinner - at which I had the honourto be a guest - given by a Scotch poet to Scotch poets, and press-men, [-221-]and barristers, in honour of the immortal Robert Burns? Crossing by the MansionHouse, in the dim light of a winter evening, the doctor was accosted by ahandsome lass, who offered to sell him a camellia. The lady pressed her suit,and the doctor fell. Granite in the discharge of duty, the doctor has a softplace in his heart, and that woman finds out at once. It is the old tale - the woman tempted and the doctor gave way. As he came proud and smilinginto the drawing-room, the splendour of the doctor's camellia arrested everyeye. A near scrutiny was the result, and at length the doctor had to confessthat he had been the victim of misplaced confidence in a London street flower-girl. Then there are the men who deal in what they call pineapple sweetmeat; theirbarrows are adorned with paintings representing dimly the riches and luxurianceof the East. Sunday brings with it its own peculiar[-222-] dealers and trades. One of the sights of poor neighbourhoods is that of alarge barrel, painted red, on wheels. At the top is a seat for the driver; atthe other end there is a small shelf on which are placed a tray of water and arow of glasses. Some of these glasses look like porter with a head, and areretailed at prices varying from a penny to twopence. Outside, in great giltletters, I read, "The Great Blood Purifier ;" then we have anotherline, "Sarsaparilla, Hilder, King's Road, Chelsea." Another line isdevoted to the announcement of "Dandelion and Sarsaparilla Pills."Another intimates that sarsaparilla is the "Elixir of Life." At theback, the door over the shelf contains a portrait of apparently a fine gayperson, female of course, who has received signal benefit from the ardour withwhich she has swallowed the dandelion and sarsaparilla pills; and around her, aswitnesses and approvers of [-223-] such conduct on her part, shines a row of stars. The salesman is assisted by asmall boy, who washes the glasses and places them on the rack, and in other waysmakes himself generally useful. The salesman is by no means guilty of the trickof underrating his wares. Accordingly, he lifts up his voice like a trumpet ashe deals out his pennyworths of the Elixir of Life. In some cases he isfamiliar, in others argumentative, in others bold as brass; and he gets a goodmany customers. The race of fools who rush in where angels fear to tread is byno means extinct. As I watched the poor skinny quadruped, groggy and foot-sore,I felt how hard it was that Sunday should shine no day of rest for him; but hehad a good deal more go in him than you would have imagined from his appearance.Mi at once in the far distance appeared two respected members of the Citypolice; the gentleman with the Elixir of Life closed his [-224-]door, jumped up into his seat, pulled his small boy up after him, and was offlike lightning. This Arab steed could run after all. 2ff7e9595c
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