——————— HOUSEH! CAnnrors are so wholesome that jt & pily they are not moge generally use! When cooked in salt and ‘water gol served plain they may be good, but th: cau not be said to be tempting, Th soup, however, is to be recommends Fut one pint of the red part of the es rot, grated, into a saucepan with ha! pint of boiling water, one teaspoor of boiling water, one teaspoonful of sugar and two tablespoonfuls of butter Cover closely and simpter for one hour At the end ofthis time add half pint of bread crumbs and one pint of wi stock and summer for one hour long: Then take the pan from the fire uu strain the contents though a very fi gleve, Season with sal and pepper a: add a cupful and a Belf of hot milk Set the pan with the sgained soup up- on the range and beg the yelks of two eggs with half § @pful of milk. As soon as the soup 1 the eggs and milk; lef a § boil one mun ute, stirring constantly, §hd serve wit! out delay, 1 ——— CROQUETTES of calf Wrains are re!- | ished when prepared in t's way: Soak | the brains in cold water or one ho wash them well and re: brance, being caretul 1 appearance. Put then with one quart of w: spoonfuls of white w half a teaspoonful of for halt an hour. M very fine with one boi adding one saltspoonful the yelks of two eggs, « ful of cracker dust an milk to make a thick ; paste on the ice, and, w Into croquettes; dip ther: n beaten es roll in fine crumbs and wv in hot fa Garnish with parsley an | jlices of lew- | on and serve, e the mem- | » nar their | a stewpan | two table- | egar and | simmer | the brains | weetbread, | vite pepper, | tablespoc just enor we, Set t firm, m Yash a cab- | uarters and | reakfast cop | a separa | id salted wa- t boil alw; Rice AND CABBAGE.- i bage thoroughly, cut. it in put it on to boil; takea full of rice and put iis saucepan with sufficient o ter to cover it, and let when both are cooked (the twenty minutes), strain the water dl | the cabbage, cut il up very small, aid | to it the rice, some sue pper, salt or a good lump of butter, <r all togetlier | over the (ire for a few mo: tesand serve hot. Should the rice 1 ave absorbed most of the water in wich it wa boiled pour some of it away before ing the cabbage. = sm p— cn Bees Baris. —Chop coid cored! beef evenly and quite five;put inv a | saucepam a cup of drawn butter, lav- ing for its foundation some of thé iq- | uor in which the meat was boiled, fav- | ored by stewing a little chopped duon | in it, then straining it out before addng | a great spoonful of butter rolled igaone | of browned flour; while hot stir Int \wo beaten eggs, then the minced beef.’ jea- son with pepper only if the beef ig well salted; stir all over the fire (there shuld | be about two cupfuls of the chipped meat) until very hot; sel away tf get | cold and stiff, make into round lls about an inch and a balf in diageter; roll m beaten egg, then in poinded cracker, and fry In boiling fat, Drain and dish, i i” adh BurTERED ORANGE: —Take eight eggs and the whites of four mora with four teaspoonfuls of ros water;strain through a bit of muslin or hair sieve; add three-fourths of a pound of sifted sugar, mixing well. Pui with the strained juice of a dozen oranges and as many lumps of sugar rubbed on the or- ange skins as will absorb the zest, Set it over a gentle fire an enameled sauce- pan, and when it begins to thicken stir in a tablespoonful of butter. When it | reaches the consistency of honey pour into a flat china dish. It 13 good to serve with sponge biscuits, SWEET polatdes dol are delicious for lunch are liked by many pers After boiling the pota uo I agd.glice th i of Hopi RATE wish il kl with cinnamon and sugar 80 | put tiny bits of butter here and there; | add another layer of potatoes, sprink- | ling them as before, and countiaue till all are used, putting a littie mors butter on the top of the last layer. Bakein a good oven a delicate brown and serve. | i en lI | Serarere,—Take a pig's head clean | it carefully and boil whole, util the | flesh falls from the bones, Tike out all the bones, and when the meat is cold chop it fine. Save the water the head was boiled in, sttain it, and 0 0k- en with corn meal until abou! the con- sistenoy-of mush, then stir in 'e cl0P- ped meat, and ‘cook until thom bly done, an this way igh they Or ¢ nDer, | pes them » C—O GrAvE CATSUP.—Boll grapes until soft, then press through o coarse sieve. To five pounds of grape 1 ip add three pounds of sugar, one toagpoonfi! of | cinnamon, one teaspoo: yl each of cloves, pepper and allspic. one grated nutmeg, ove quart of vinegar Doil slowly until thick as tomato catsup, then bottle, YEA Oneax Sour, nants of a reast of veal falls from the bones. SWki, ad coo The next day put on to bill wists sh of onion and one-third of 4 epiul raw rice. Let it simmer slow): fo hour. Add salt and Just before serving ed in » separate dish. Ahsan sss Browxep POTATOES the skins on; peel quickly, taki : not to break the potatoes. Tay 8 pl plate, pour halt a cupfal of od gravy over them, coat each and brown on the u grat oven, Serve in the dish, he a 0 i . no » gr dispositions which consecrate Tix longer we are eng «4 arek experimental farming the ; pe il tii te . — ful, systematic way for pn of FARM NOTES ——— How 10 HAVE Goop Burren. | Farmers and dairymen are not entirely | responsible for all the bad butter to be | found In our markets, Much that would otherwise have reached the con. | iumer ma fair cond tion is ruined in the | rrocers’ hands by being stored in badly | entilated cellars and other places, with decayed vegetables, kerosene, &c. The | ndiscriminating taste of the general | public is also a great hindrance to im- { rovement in the manufacture of but. | 'r. Some few there are who must | have really good butter, and are willing, need be, to pay a high price for it: it has been rare for an ordinary farmer 10 meet wthi such customers as I'he general run of the public do not | know high class from inferior butter, is very bad. The wha, when he got a firkin of butter, | twenty cents and the other twenty-five cents; customers tasted and looked knowing, and, generally came to the conclusion that for the sake of five cents they had better take the best; and five firkins went off at twenty-five cents a pound for every one that was sold at twenty cents. ‘r'he fact is, there has been such a quantity of inferior butter forced on the market that people have got used to it. The most that can be said is that some is less bad than others, | Few know the delicate aroma and | nutty flavor of the best sweet cream | butter, The great majority of consumers are i content If they get butter devoid of | strong taste or smell, hence the opening | for butterine. which is free from bad ! odor and has nu unpleasant taste, or | rather very little taste of any kind, | But the remedy lies largely in the hands In the first | place every effort should be made to! manufacture a good article, and mar- ket it in an attractive shape. Second- | ly, those who can and do make good | butter should seek a market where | such products are appreciated. If the | local dealer pays one price for all but- | maker should transfer his business to some dealer more nearly abpeast with the times. The *‘one price’ dealer will | thus only get tbe inferigr article, and | When | * i Cows AND Sueer.—Try to keep the i month, if it is possible. | Even though the grain may for a while it is well to remember the danger of | cows shrink in milk now they will not | 1 antil spring. Do not allow them to | run In mowing lands, or even in pas. tures, excepting for a few. hours’ exer- | cise in pleasant weather, and then see | that they have been well fed upon be- | ng ‘turned out, as all they may eat of | the frost-bitten grass or weeds is an! vjury to them greater in value than the cost of the food given at the barn would be. Go through the flock of | slieep once more, and see if there are ot others that should be culled out made mutton of. isually tests them as severely as any of | she fall months, and those that go | ! yught to winter well, Important, When yon visit eave New Yorx OnRty, save bag page expressage and §3 carriage Hires, and a29p | s#iihe Grand Union Hotel, oppotite Grand Cea. tre! Depot, 0 elegant rooms, fitted up om lion SOLAR, fl and European Plan Revator, supplied wilh the best. liorse cars, stages and eeviiel rairoad 10 al depota, Families cag ive better for ems money al the Grund Union Hotel han atl anv other dreb-cipag hotel in Lae cite. I¥ left to themselves sheep will retire | i" at a cost of ony | spwards por | Hesagraot | This is a relic of the time: when they were wild and such preeau- | $0018 Were nacessary that they migh: wild stmalt But, the fact has its ad- je Knolls that sheep select for their sleeping places are originally poor; bat sheep will soon enrich them. | THe brass is sweeter than on low land, aud shimep are less liable to disease, $ THe objection to the Ives Seedling grape is thal 1t takes the proper color before it is ripe and is marketed in the | green state, While this permits some | to market grapes early, yet the decep tion practiced on purchasers, many of whom buy such grapes supposing them to be ripe, when in fact they are green and bitter, causes distrust, and really lowers the prices of good grapes when they reach the market. The growers of the best grapes are in favor of sup- pressing the Ives Ssedling if it can be done, Tne raising of turnip and cabbage added materially to the income of the farmers on the east end of Long lsland, One farmer near Mattituck is said to have cleared $1200 from cabbage seed alone. Another made $120 from tur- nip seed raised on a small plot, The main erops in that section are cauli- flowers, cabbages and potatoes, and the raising of seed has heretofore been sub- midiary to these crops, but it has proved 80 profitable that many farmers have gone into it largely. Fanuens, when butchering, will make profitable use of their calf and sheep heads to throw them to the poul- try, They are better if cooked, but will be eaten raw, A certain amount of meat is necessary, and where this cannot be found it should be supplied. Persons who have their poultry on small runs will find cracklings cheap and beneficial, If they are run through @ sausage-mill they will be all the bet A Famous Bible. The most beautiful volume among the half-million in the Congressional library is said to be a Bible, which was transcribed by a monk in the sixteenth century, It could not be matched to- day in the best printing-office in the world, The parchment perfect preservation, Every one of its thousand pages is a study. The general lettering is in German text, each letter perfect, and every one of them in coal black ink, without a scratch or blot from lid to lid, is in 1 first letter 1s very large, usually two or three inches long, and is iluminated in red and blue ink. each of these capitals there is drawn the figure of some saint, or some incident of which the following chapter tells, illustrated, a page, and no where is traceable the slightest irregularity of line, space or formation of the letters, Even under a magnifying glass they seem flawless, This precious volume is kept under a glass case, which is sometimes lifted to show that all the pages are as perfect as the two which lie open, A legend relates that a young man who had sinned deeply became a monk, and resolved to do penance for his misdeeds, He determined to copy the Bible, that he might learn every letter of the divine commands which he had violated, Every day for many vears he patiently pursued lis task, Each letter was wrought with reverence and love; and the penitent soul found its only com- panionship in the saintly faces which letter, an old man reverentls page, and ff lded the sheets Soon afterward he died. - --—— like thee, Dr, Fell, ‘I do not The reason why, I cannot teil.” odor this oft-quoted doctor was in, “Twas probably because he, being one of the old- school doctors, made up pills as large as bullets, which nothing but an ostrich could bolt without nausea. Hence the dislike. Dr, R. V Pierce's “Pleasant Purgative Pel- bird-shot, and are quick to do their work. For all derangements of the liver, mt aps co of the other. I ——— ® » * » Rupture pile tumors, fistulm rw Bend 10 cents in Address, World's Dis Association, G53 o X. ar ———— It is the mother who moulds the character, ani fixes the destiny of the child, pensary Medical Dr. Pleree’s "Fa not extolled as fulfills a singleness of nesses peculiar to women, collar to Women, 160 pages, sent for 10 cents in stamps. PENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Main Street, Baftalo, N, ¥Y G03 ss Ay is wool-producing State, yet the eggs pro- have nearly équaled her wool product. Nothing like Cannes RKulney Care for Drapse, Gravel, Bright's, Hears, Urinacy or Liver Diseases, Nervousness, do. Cure goaraatesd. © Arch SL, 'tia, $1 a bodtle, 6 for 500, Dru TY iL ¥ Pe] AI AIS Marry iato a different blood and tem. ameut from your own. am . nil Who Work pe Important to for a living. land, Mal eo, send and they will you make from 85 to $25 and upwands a day and live at home, wherever you are located, Some have made over $50 in a day. tal not required; you are started free, Ages; both sexes. All is new, comes sure from the stare, all workers who begin at once, Great in- ms isin Always leave home with loving words, for they mav be the last, — If you feel ad thong walt was gathering around the beart (wart-dropsy) or have hears I heard a story not long ago of an | undertaker who was called up in the | night by a ring which the central oflice | operator said was from one of the great | cemeteries, and the voice that called | him was so strange that it made him | shudder. 1t was wonderfully distinet, | and yet go slow, so cold, and so far | away, that it sounded like nothing else | that he mad ever heard. It uttered not | a single word except n long-drawn-out el LO=e0-0-0!" shouted back, the 1 Hy And the more he wire to him, Dum-founded at last, he | hung up his telephone and sat down, while the sound | Then he jumped the central office, | “Give me No.—* he called. That | was the cemetery. Presently had | the connection, **Were you calling me | just now!” he asked. “Calling you? | Certainly not, Haven’t called to-night.” | { up and rang for he Then he abjurgated the central office, “Certainly the cemetery did ask for | the connection.’”” Next night the same | call came, and the shuddering undertaker | heard the same ghostly ‘‘Hel—lo-0-0-0"" | until he could hear it no longer, Then | the same colloquy with the cemetery office and the central operator followed, | I am told that the undertaker grew almost insane with the ghost call, as he | began to regard it, and had the | his shop, to the | he has not since been called up by the | voice®from the other world, #its in nightly dread of it. A N—— nn he To prevent manure from fire-fanging | if often i it be- | Manure must heat and water will hasten the process, but when sult will be a Joss. Frequent turning over of the heap, which exposes it to A pint of sulphuric in a pall water sprinkled through the mass with some su vessel will decompose it and also $y id of itable | pre- Tie thoroughly prepared and well- tilled fleld produces a crop which pays the cost of production, while | the crop on the run-down, poorly-tilled | fleld runs its owner into debt. The | thoroughbred or high-grade animal yields a profit to its owner. The scrub | dies in debt for ils living. . - c— i To analyze the charms of flowers is | like dissecting music; it is one of those i8 far better to enjoy snit————— For vouthfal freshness and color to gray halr, use Hall's Halr Renewer, A neglected cov gh often terminates fatal. | ¥. Apyer's Cherry Pectoral affords speedy | elief, restoring 1 i * 2 on —— —— ton, sympatnetic heart troubie--Dr. OCRAN. WEED regula en, corrects and cares, NT —————— the wishes of the other, he. only natural hair renewer, Carboline, made from pure unrefined petroleum and guaranteed the prince ot all bair reuewers, A IAI unless the house is on fire, a ———— Frazer Axle Grease. The Frazer Axle Grease last four times as long as any other. Use it, and save your horses and wagons A trial will prove that we are nghe. tes A Neglect the whole world besides, ratbier than one another, Original, prompt, clean, sare and effec. tive for pain and soreness. Jop Porous Flasters, Toe Lest is the cheapest, Jip Plasters contain active medicinal agents forthe care of pain, wen AI I If one 1 angry, let the other part the ips only for a Kise, F118: All Fite stopped frees. Treatise and $2 trial ttle ol Dr. Kline's yreat Nerve Restorer, free to klicases. bendtio De Kline S31 Arch st, Phlla, Pa Give your warmest sympathies for each other's trials, ST. BERNARD VEGETABLE PILLS Wannawred Puamy Vearrasus, of The best cure for Liver a 3 Mr ¥. NEUSTAED) Bit a COCKLE’S ANTI-BILIQUS GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY Bohn IRON BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTIOM BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS axp FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN mv ie BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD | CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGCISTS The Censuine har Trade Mark and crossed Red A Des ON WiRpLer, TAR NO OTHER. JONES uO PAYSthe REI HT on Wagon Seales, Trem Levers, Steel Bearings Tare Beam avd Roam Box for Bisse aweniien thie « Rt Tr price sh ON 9 SRNR stared or no Fea Boldiers & ra. Now laws Plonner & Co. Att'yu, 15 ya, Washiogton, D.C, Prors sion PENSIONS F AR on Jamon River, Va in Claremont flastrate] Olrcame Froa inall parte Da. Manas, Qainoy, Mich, Pp faventors Guide, ba f In DR. Pile Dintme ns. Bigndteg, § 1 or Pretradin CVE SUR AN TED, Prorat CWE ERAT ko. pare k CIOUNBION, HOLLOWAY & CO., Ages aud a. Awe L. Claremont. Va. and Morphine Habit carl in 1) OPiU 03 dara efor 0 Tom patients ears l ATE NT 82, sus Breaman, Paant (awrer, Wastungton, B. 0. ILES n case { will curs any of liek for Fi are! or Pile £ » a ou, {ha 82.30.) Vrice per box, 50¢, and ®1s Bold drogeisis or malled on reed ny Phila, I's Wells of depth, 2 {31 io guy Som um A my por L vith Jon mor han Fhiag Wor in and are ead dor Whaler or Er Pactarens in x ents for i1instratod ® J. Avbhass, Plerce Well Excavator Co. New York. FRAZER AXLE AXLE meg ye wou GREASE Plao's Remedy for Ostarrh is the Pest, Easiest To Use, and Cheapo, CATARRH SCIENTIFIC. A A The recent communication of M, Fe- ix Humbert and M, Henry in regard to the method of producing pure hydro- gen, and of making water gas at an ex. tremely low cost, has caused a sensa- tion all over Europe. The process con- sists in causing small jets of steam to impingé upon incandescent coke, whereby, the carbon being In excess, the steam is decomposed into equal carbon; and, further, in leading these gases over a large surface of a highly heated refractory substance iu presences of a fresh supply of superheated steam, whereby the burning of the carbon to dioxide is effected and another volume of hydrogen is liberated. George G. Andre asserts in the Colliery Guardian that this process is described in the pat- ents of Jacquelain, Gaudin apd Bou- chain, taken out as early as 1854. The quantity of a ton of coal, which reduces the cost of the gas to a very low figure ~very little, indeed, it may be sup- posed, above the cost of natural gas, gas is taken into aecount, It has happened, sald Disraeli, that beau ancient sepulchres which have pors engendered by the corruption of Lhe dead, kindled as the flambeau ap- proached them, to the great astonish- ment of the spectators, who fregnently out **a miracle!’ oh of the ancients At Ihe King of the Belgians, Leopold The is subject applied year, The next al progress of electricity the 0 The essays must be written in French, The ture, Industry and Public Works, opin An wmjant Joges from three to weight; from that to the fifth month it ought to gain about five ounces or about six drams a day; after the fifth month, about drams a day; at the fifth month it ought to have doubled its birthweight, and in - > According to the report of the One be the exceed that distance, That of the -> > For Weak Women, Mra. lydia E. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass the first of Beplember, 1831 with uterine hemorrhage. physician could prescribe did not check tt and ashe Ths Loa ied with §rolapsus Uterl, Ira 1A8) 0 15 ness of Lhe imix, sickness of the ioms of appetit I perchased a tra Vegetable Compound, She said siv Cover a salutary y elect from Uw firel Qos the is comparatively free from ibe The #% al | Prolapeas Mage x very a rele Slomach's slckuers, &o hemor much betterani in J« x Yeg Her appetite Is restore |, and he and strength much improved, have been wonder fully benefited a5 are drawn out in gratitude for 1 Bympathy for other sufferers, for whose sake allow our names to be used.” C. W. EATON, Tourwios, N. 3% The Compound is put op mn Pil dyloeenge nod Liguid form. All #0id by druggists The Pil and Lozenges sent by mall on receipt of prior UNEXPECTED. A MOTHER BAVED FROM AN UNTIMELY DEATH. Tears of Borrow Turned to Sruiios of Rejoicing. We feel Lh r Bess fe and mm rane 8 we a RocuEeTRR, Aug. 41, 185, PARDEE MEDICINE CO. ~GENTIEMEN : } 20 iw seventy-hree years old, and anti | was sevenly WAS Q!WAYS slrobg and bealthy ; bil (he mount that ume, I fee 10 be enflicient fora Life.-time. 1 nad 4 severe gb lack of scatic rheumatism, progiraled me © my nbs mbes or 1 LA year and my ids were calied in 10 ree good phvsicins th i they « bie lo Miralghien my ' ’ jife was * ire i urg then 10 t pu. as | had read 80 moot i wy 4 your Hemedy Gof the past Loonie hm'ory of ide of fered Wo 10 show whe Yairdoe'r By cures wholly saprecedent medicines it bas proven it We an appreciation at hor that which has been poured o Tr used Take two ounces of alcohol and Add about a tea- Use it in of Westminster Chambers, When cool, it grows darker, until at 180° Fahr, it its original redness, ly fps si mile to run a locomotive, on the aver- Age, 41 cents for repairs. A ton of coal will run a Jocomotive twenty-four miles, a pint of oil will run eleven miles, a pound of waste one hundred and twenty-three miles, The locomotives of a railway like the Northwestern run a half million of miles a month. For copying printed matter, dampen- ing the surface with a weak solution of acetate of fronand pressing in an ordi- nary copying press is recommended. 01d writing may also be copied on un- sized paper if wetted with a weak solu- tion of sulphate of iron, mixed with a small quantity of solution of sugar. An ingenious Parisian, M. Adrian Gacon, has patented a blasting powder, which provides a new explosive com- pound intended to have the force of dy- namite without its extra-hazardous properties, The compound consists of a mixture of nitrate of or ni- trate of soda with sulphur ashes and tannin, Wade's Fiber and Fabric reports the invention of a machine that sews on buttons, It 1s claimed that i will per- will do it better, becanse 1t never slights its work, but puts in just the number of stitehes it is ga for.! It will sew on buttons with two or four holes equally well, and at the rate of six per minute with twelve stitches on each. rp Ap The diminished cost of production in } have made has wen The permanent for il areputals other remedy alie 10 attaun, Send for pamohi 4 PARDEE MEDICINE (8, Hochemer W, ¥, 10 Boldiers & Helre Seni stung for Jirzals 1. fa BING dad ary Washingion I 1 Packawe of Proopefisld's Cutts Towler fou I" Horses, Cattle and Ponitry, The best sande FRORVIELD, 308 Dillwyn 86, § huiads, Ps Our Little Ones and the Nursery. The Prince of Mage zines for children from § to 10 years old, 32pages each month of an syories and Poems; Ivan tifully liostrated with artistic and original draw. ings by the best liv arusts, Clabes with Periodicals. News deplores sail i8, Agenis wanted. Send a two cent stamp for spacimen copy, Single Copies, if ots, he me e year, $1.50 4 i A German Asthma Ownre dover fois wo ghee) nmedinie relic in be worst cess Jueuroe ge fortalie sleep ofacis pares where of others f000 4 Briel vonmevnccs Che wont shepiiesi. Ties BW ete sal $1.08, of Draggiots or br mall Pave FREF fw ramp DR. KEK SOBIVFMAN, $8. Peel, Miss, De KLINE S GREAT i Si: J Eman & Kenva Diseases. Oaly for Neve Afvitsons, Fits, JMipoye te GLE of taken as directed. Ae Fae aides Fo rad hottie free rus Charges onbos wie v shee welds of Arch Ge Phitadetodan Pa. ITA TING FRAUDS, STOPFeD FREE Al averiont cwiEsn. Iszave Vercons Hestored UNRIVALED ORCANS Onthe EASY PAYMENT system, from §3. 08 par. Ly 100 styles, $2240, ‘send for Oss month wo 3 slogue with Pall particulars, od UPRICHT PIANOS, Contracted on the new method of stringing, ow siomiar termes, Fand for descriptive Catalan oe, MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO. Boston, New York, Chicago. No Rope to Cut Of Horses” Manes. Onlebra #1 py LIPSE MALTER nd BRIDLE Combined, cannot siisped by any bores, Sample Bera pa LR ns ve i s pe ad oR Tiarness Deadora. Loo Slscoant to he Trade on iw . % Lic rouse, eckonter, N, ® $8 un day, Samples worth SL9 Ea aa rt the horse's A ‘s Sarery Reo Howoen, Holly, Moh, wn wh RJIEDICAL OFFICES. N. Second St, Philuda., Formers Drs.J.N.&J. B. HOBENSACE. Established 40 we. For the cow of wll Special ES OF MRS, meting VARTOOOELE, Kao. Callor woe and ba sured by a Graduate of Jefferson College, with Hoapitsl perkins, Hours, 8 10 Ry 6 to 9. Closed Busiirn, E WANT YOU! 2 morris swe preditaisie t to pepo win every —]
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers