A a — vi ——— ——— SMOTHERED BY SAND, Four Laborers in a Brooklyn Trench Killed by a Cave-In. Without Warning the Conduit Collapsed and Covered Them, Loose sand caved in upon a trench at the corner of Crescent street and Liberty avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y., a few afternoons ago. Four men were killed and three injured. It was thought that the accident might cause a water famine in Brooklyn. One of the men lost his life while attempt- to rescue hie fellow laborers. The were smothered or drowned in the water which poured into the ex- cavation from the broken main of the Long Island Water Supply Company. The dead are: Philip Askoni, twenty-five years old, an Italian; Josoph Cosine, twonty years old, an Italian; Hugh Murphy, thirty-one years, of Crescent street, near Liberty avenue; unknown [talian, The men who were caught were forty- eight feet below the surface of the street. Valentine & Cranford have the contract for building the new conduit which is to supply water to the new reservoir, located along- side the old one on Ridgewood Heights. The new conduit, consisting of forty-eight inch pipes, is baiug laid beside the old brick aqueduct, which is eight feet in diameter. he trench crossed Liberty avenue at an acute angle. Through Liberty avenue run the pipes of theold New Lots Gas Company and the Long Island Water Supply Come pany. They are eight-inch pipes, are only four feet below the surface and were completely undermined by the laborers. The soil 1s of a sandy nature, An immeuse pile of dirt had been thrown up oa either side of the excavation, which was about fifty feet in length, On the west bank was a small shauty, with a derrick which was used to lower the iron pipes. There had been fears for several days that the bank would cave in and the laborers worked with reluctance. The contractors, however, assured them that there was no danger. Men were bracing the banks of the excavation when the landslide occurred. Foreman Hughes was superintonding the strengthening of the ranges and one of the pipes was being lowered by means of the derrick when at half-past one o'clock, with out any warning, oast bank caved in. The majority of the seventy-five laborers were at work on the bank and only seven men wore at the bottom, They were buried under the immense 1 of san. aud dire, Six men were looking after The majority of them were near the trench. They were the victims, It came in the twinkling of an eye Few piopls saw it. Almost before one could turn ils head it was over in the op of the the braces. the top of Some of the laborers turned and ito th as if the bott out of that part of the earth Fred Craolord, the son senior member of the contracting firm, and the superintendent of the work, was looking to- wards the excavation when the cave-in occurred, With startling suddeaness the shoring seemed to melt away oud the sand rushed together lke mad waters, There was no cry of warning, no scream for help, Everyitdy was dazed, The Italians trembled and many ran away trembling with fear The fall of the east bank weakened the support on the west side and that also caved in. The Long Isiand Water Supply Comp any’s main was broken and thers was a rush of water which quickly fille cut. The gas pipoalso parted and the gas escaped in volumes, Word was sent to the office of the water company and the supply was at once cut off, gns company » turned off gas, and within half an hour the work of digging out the buried laborers had begun The Italian laborers went to w ina half hearted fashion to rescue their fellow workmen. They acted as if they wore afraid that there would another cave in, and few of them could be induced to descend to the bottom of the cut. They worked with difficulty on account of the natures of the slide. which filled the exoavation to the depth of ten feet in a slanting direction. On the day after the accident only one body had been recovered Brooklyn was on the verge of a water famine because of the break in the conduit Manufacturers in Brooklyn were warned not to use the city water, and bouselolders were told to use it sparingly, GOVERNOR HOVEY DEAD, Indiana's Chief Magistrate Fipired Suddenly at Indianapolis, Alvin P Indiana, died at 1:20 o'clock a fow mornings ago in his room at th Hotal, Indianapo lis, Tad. His last moments wers peaceful and conscious. and his last words were wiry for his favorite granddaughter, fonzion All the immediate members of his family were present, The direct eauss of his death was heart trouble Alvin P. Hovey was a poor boy, but by ran. } wn had dr Jooks pred rd of the the als be Governor Hovey, of Yaninison AR ine Mary his own efforts worked his way up until he | Lecauns of the most influential and prominent men of the West, He was born in September, 1521, at Mount Vernon, Ind, which was His early odunose tion was limited, At thirteen he was ap wentiood asa brickmaker, but four years ater became a toacher of the town school, having meantime devoid his spare mo ments to study, teaching he read law, and when vwenty-one was admitted to the bar General Hovey commanded brigades and divisions of the army in the battles of Shiloh, Corinth, Port Gibson, Champion Hill, Big Black, siege of Vicksburg, siege of Jackson, Rocky: Faced Ri ige, Dalton, toons Church, After his Kentucky raid he was placed in command at India where he was at the close of the war, In 1565, just before the assassination of President Lincoln, General Hovey was ap pointed Minister to Peru, which diplomatic mission Ea held for five years. He was know to many of his friends as “the Poet Governor,’ one his home I —— — A WATER FAMINE, An Accident Causes MMecomfort Brookiyn for a Day, The big break in the conduit at Ridgewood by which four men were killed was cleared overiylng earth on the second even. after the collapse and soon after toward Brookiyn. The flow again of the conduit had not 0 much injured, but that it was deamed safe to allow a moderate depth of water to flow through it, and before 11 o'clock all the pumps at ations were at work and the two city reservoirs were being filled, This ended ail fears of a real water fan. or of ing B o'clock water began raliroa oparal ' holders wera in and the city was without protection trom fire until late in the Brooklyn Bridge cable could mot be Locomotives drew trains of two cars, sands walked over the bridge, | Baill ungs- | ary’ | Georgia, 1; ssaca and Al | napolis, | WORLD'S FAIR NOTES, ARTISTS and manufacturers in Denmark are making great preparations for the Fair, HAWALL otherwise the Sandwich Islands, has decided to make an exhibit at the Expo- sition, FOUR HUNDRED railway lines have already agreed to return exhibits to the Exposition free of charge, Ox the roof of the Horticultural Building, around the central dome, an elaborate dis "play of roof gardening will be made, Tar National Farmers’ Congress, at its recent sesion at Sedalia, Mo,, heartily in- dorsed the World's Columbian Exposition, Tur Government Department of Agricul. ture is taking stops to make a very elaborate exhibit of every kind of wool clipped in this country. ALL Indian exhibits at the World's Fair will be under the direction of the Govern. ment, or of Chief Putnam, of the Depart. ment of Ethnology. Tux Agricultural Department of the Gov- ernment will make an exhibit of facsimile casts of all of the 200 varieties of edible mushrooms which grow in this country, Oxvorp Uxrversiry, England, has ex- pressed its willingness to send an eight-onred erew to the World's Fair, provided a com- petition can be arrange! with American college crews, Provesson Ives, of the Art Department, | reports that the artists of Russian are deeply Interested in the Exposition, and have prom- ised him to send to it a fine collection of their best work Tie native flora of each State dnd Terris tory will be shown at the Exposition, under | the direction of Chief Thorpe, who has en listed the Lady Manager collection of specimer s 0 undertake the Berlin organization of IT is announced in the that the entire Upera Company of Berlin, come to Chicago in 1803 to { performances in the Masic Hall to be erec in the Exposition grounds, DOWEDADErS the Imperial Cror FRAXCE, throu Eivard Bruwaert, the French consul at Chicago, has asked for 150 « XX) square feet of spacy in the Exposition 100,000 fest in the Manufsctur. Jullding, 830.00) in the Fine Arts. 10 in the Live Stock, and 10,000 in chinery KX) the Ma AN additional appropriation of $500,000 to $490,000 is what the Board of Management il the nmant Exhibit thinks will necessary to insure the exhibit at the World's Fair on the scale intended by Congress The membors will try to have this included in the Treasury GENERAL NeLs Marsh (rave ) estimated x A. Mites will ! al of the parades l n 1 ted with the Edfposi the parade on the occasion of { the buildin riet M write a « tory ¢ A VERY Cape | the De This « tion an idea which leave the mouth reach the hands Huan Price, one MISNONSTS, DAs Male arrangements the World's Fair a LA tree whi his Stats It is twer and will scale 2500 teen foot | three four inches wide, with Ist ga, October 13 nroe, of C AZ has! de { mmemorative remonies of the var the gems Dass ’ ho } of ¢ t t ne S Park Com taken stor have Drexel Grand and wood boulevards, leading to the Exposition grounds, brilliantly lighted with electricity An siectrie plant, costing §75, 000 to £190,000, and equal to supplying 300 are lights, will be established. The Exposition authorites will Ihuninate with electricity the entire Expo sition grounds. More than three times as much powsr will be required to run the dyvnamos as was used in all the departments of the Philadelphia Centennial show Ix the centre of the Horticulture Building will be a miniature mountain, seventy feet high, upon which will grow giant ferns and palms and other vegetation. finding there a congenial home A mountain strean lash from one ivity $0 another and play hide-and-seek with the foliage. Beneath this rock-mountain will bs a cave, eighty t in diameter and high, sixty food brill Hantly lighted by electricity, where, during the whole six months of the Exposition, the experiment will be trie] whether plants will grow nnder electric light as well as under sunshine BRCRETARY Dickinson sent out notices to the Governors of the various Ntates asking them to choose two members of their World's Fair Boards to come to Chicago December ¥th to attend a big World's Fair eomvention The object of the convention Is to have the delegates meet the Board of Control. De partment chiefs and other officials, and to devise uniform plans for State work, Mrs Palmer adds to the invitation a statement that she wants all women who are members of the various State Boards to be present and learn about the plans for promoting the work women are doing —— THE NEW APPORTIONMENT. How the States Will Count In the Electoral College, ith Oak tree fo The following table exhibits the Electoral votes of the States under both the old and the new apportionment, The increase in the total vote since 1598 js accounted for to the extent of twenty votes by the creation of the new States of Idabo, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakotas, Washington and Wyoming, and as to the remainder by ad. litions of twenty-thres votes to the appor. tionment of Ntates, as follows: Alabama, 1; Arkansas, 1; California, 1: Colorado, 1; Hiinods, 2; Kanme, 1; Mass. chusotts, 1; Michigan, 1; Minnesots, 2; Missouri, 1; Nebraska, 3; New Jersey, 1: Oregon, 1; Pennsylvania, 2; Texas, 2; Ti consin, 1. Soden Alabama Arkansas California Colorado Lovisiana........ Maing .......... Maryland...... Massachusetts ........ Michigan, . Sabbaes Minnesota, ........ Misslasipu , , . Misourt........ Josey. ......... AP ALLE LE ETET North Caroline Fanaa ran ALL RR IT Oregon . ELE EET RE ARERR RD] REE EE SEs aannrninn LAE BEE EL SetBaceB i BunElanas BESERRINT ENN nr FR ALE SERRE» — “_-—oe LE Td ——— LAA AAA EEE senssnnsesrsnenill i ——————— A ———— NEWBY GLEANINGS, Yrrrow fever rages in Brazil, Russia has been hoarding gold, Isvrugxza is epidemic in Berlin, Tie Gorman national debt is $195.000.0Mm, Tue mining troubles in France are spread. Ing. Tre Russian loan Paris Dernorr, Mich, Mayor. Tur gloomy. Tur greatly, Texas’ six months’ drought has been broken was not successful in has elected a singly tax financial outlook in Europe is very Chilian navy has been overrated A SIX #007 vein of coal has been found at Tuscola, Il, Tre influenza is epidemic in many Earo- pean countries, Tre weathor-wise are predicting an un- Usually severe winter, Tre Finnish authorities are making war | on the Salvation Tae New York Central Railroad's earnings inst year were over $7,000 000, Army, nod Tene are 11 Unit 0) net tons of I Ntates Treasury at Washington, silver Cninrs Con gramme to better ALMOST besn dine considering a pro ountry's finances, inexhaustible « wereld ml m hava on Niga Island, Alaska, Tue car famine is endt «od atest difficulty | Xparian tos and the »l in shipping unpre gr gran IN the face of an will neverthele wus deficit Russia rarmy and navy estimate, AT four cents a pound many of growers of California claim a prof crops of $159 an aor FRERE is 8 move on foot in Hawaii throne Queen Lilluokalani and set public in the Sandwich Islands Tur variously 000 boxes stream n FREER LEAT op ol estimated from hax begun to wthward AT Austin, caped « request wait for him until his tera expi a 8K ( £ 5% - flow rolden Hill, himeeil Pexas, t, surrend of his sweaths one Rn © at the mised to ni pr al CHINA has been warns] that at the end of the appointed time 1 combined P will seize her cust recsipts and hold till satisfaction for been given A NOVEL on Puget YWOTrS the Mion riots ha CHRISTIANS MASSACRED. Hundred ¢ Killed in Tayou and Sanchi, China Over Onan vers Killed blame ups f robe northern alarm | hoo 1 pe vino o at ek Kinchiow have beens massacred FIGHTING IN PERSIA. Revolt, Headed by the Righ Priest, Promptly Put Down A dispatch from Teheran, the Porsla, states that the Msaitah priest of the Shiah sect, jominant religious sect of ths which is the Pr mntry, its followers numbering nearly sven million: reomntly fermented a revolt in Masanderan, a provines in Northern Pe Fhe Government took prompt measures $0 ruppress the revolt or a body of 2 was despatoned to restore ordar and to place the high priest under arrest wers prepared, bowever, and made a determined resistance against the Shah's soldiers. They had entrenched themselves in A strong position, and when sum moned to surrender refused to doso. Orders wire then given to attack the stronghold of the rebels, and a Jong contested and desper- ate battle ensued. The rebels fought with desperation, knowing fall well the punish. ment that would be inflicted upon then by the Shah should they fall into his hands but they were finally defeats not, however, until two hundred of their number had been killed. The loss of the troops was twenty kilisd, A large number of taken prisoners. high priest FOO The rebels Among the prisoners is the - ————— DOCTORS TURN BURGLARS, Arrested While Trying to Blow Up a Sale in Gardner, 1} Drs. Boyes and MoAdam, leading phy siclans, were arrested early a few mornings ago in the act of blowing up the safe of the Gardpoer (LL) Bank. A livery stable keeper named Briggs was with them The tric ware tra 1 by a detective who took part in the jo When the dencue. ment came the three culprits attempted to wsonpe. The detective shot MeAdam through the arm and he dropped, Dr. Boyes was SSught but Briggs escaped, The raid on the bank was the culmination of aseries of daring burglaries that has ex. tended over a year. Ws — SUITS ABOUT REVENUE. The Annual Report of the Solicitor of the Troasary, General Hepburn, Solicitor of the Treas ary, in his annual report at Washington to the Attormey-General, says that the whole number of mits brought and delendad by for the year MIs Ot the ‘wnite browugnt, favor of the United Nrates; twenty-nine wars adversely or dismissed, anit tho The entire amount collectad from LL in six pending. | Comm in the | British | exhibition of © tae 1ebels wera | | saved, | persons on board 3491 | fifty: | Hons, 55) | dition to perenne mvel fron 1 PROMINENT PEOPLE, Banox Himscn is worth $100,000,000, Greece's King speaks twelve . az Tux Czarina devotes much of her charity, This in Representative Year in Cong. ew Tur Princess of Wales is on 4 visi father, the ling of Denmark. Ex-Prest r Hit, few anys ag nitham, Mas Miss Branpoy, the novelist, | Lobby the collection of old cum NO matter how late it is Gladsions reads an hour before he goss to ed Kuxmve Tewrix, of Xiey pt, hax a trie of twisting his left leg under him when sitt ng. CAPTAIN Davin Hurenixnsoy,of Day, Vit ‘ celebrated his ninety-third birthday re ently by shooting a deer Ingen, time to Mills nineteenth of Harvard, GQiWay:s GOVERNOR AXD XaTOR-eLecT HL, of » » ’ New York, has engaged rooms at the Are Hogton Hotel in Washineton “r . wn. Bavrvoun, the new Tory | British Houss of Co NMOons, is hed pianist and vi vier in ths a bighly ac inint Ex-Exrenor Dox i510 the hands of YEDRO, late of Bri his trie iis res tand whe nds ar t the old him resume business his countrv*eall Hexky M | African | | he ; Cents and has Joh se of the great won in Only « hang } ther American re r Hamilton Fiainfisld, N. J. har, ondl the hill on whi ner was born “Wars Warner in re of his generosity t by offi. and » Bis native w ALLEN ox, formerly conspl the 34 nea emninile, aruik, HANGED THEIR CORPORAL. of Soldiers Getting Tired Petty Persecution There was much excitement in England upon the receipt of from Alder. mt British that a spirit intelligent shot, where In situated a gz military camp amd barracks ren rient that He ination staal WAR § ped at with fae been of murderous it inones of the regiments place Taken connection subordination which has played in the Guards which » ago resulted in the practical "10 Bermuda of a whole battalie of Lsron- adier Guards, sr was followed by a revodt in the « stream Guards, t at Aldershot m sonsirusd as anot ntant which | evall in all } yohes of the British dine time loporiat the { which affair -r to pu Yiowe It appears that a corporal of the Second batailion of the Prince of Wale" Lsloster legiment (Royal Canadians, which batta jon i= at present doing duty at Aldershot had by his petty tyraanies rendered himself an object of peculiar aversion to the men The complaints of the privates were un beaded and they determined to rid then selves of the corporal. As he was going his rounds he was seized by the men, dragged Wo a convenient spot, a noose thrown around his peck and strung up to a tree. The free end of the rope was made fast and the self. appointed executioners decamped, The corporal had been banging only a short time when a sergeant discovered him and cut the rope. The corporal was nearly dead, and 11 reguired the most strenuous ef. forts on the part of the surgeons (0 resusc tate him — LIFE-SAVING SERVICE, The Annual Report by the Superin tendent of Work Done The annual report, filed at Washington. or Buperintendent Kimball, of the Life-Savin: Herviee, shows that at the close of last flsons year the establishment 8 in 178 on the Atlantic forty eight om the lakes eleven on the Pacific and ons at the Falls of the Ohio, at Louteville, Ky. The resale of all the disasters within the sane of the servios ware as follows Total num of disasters, 401; value of property nvolved, 7 0M S05 value of property 5 Ts am value of prop Jowt, #129 M5 number of total number of per number of persons Jost, persone sncoored at sia number of days suooor afforded S16; number of vessels lost, 620. In ad vessnls Lhers worn fortysix others rescue! who had fallen from wharves, piers, si The cost of the maintenance of the services during the year was $040.201. The Superintendent invites attention to the embarrasunent ander whic the servios labors owing to the frequent resignations of trained men who leave the rvios for better compensation at les hamardous voeations [ Stades that this exodus of experionced surfmen, shown in the last report to be more than thirty per cont, has continued during the last year, and it is obvious, uniess speadily ehoscked, the efficievey of the corps will be seriously Impaired. Many who would otherwise leave are retainad by the pr of Dotter wages in the future exel by former recom mendations and by the meddts of the cus which they think ought to be apparsnt embraced tire erty sans saved, 3441; number of - FEUD QUENCHED IN BLOOD. Two Texas Farmers Meet, Quarrel and Kill One Another A double killing coourred nine miler east of Weatherford, Texas, in Parker County, A.B, Frohman and Willam Rivers, well mown farmers, wore neighbors, but for a Jong tine ts fetal had ativied betwesn them their families round Rie on sme 5 iio 3 SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR DECEMBER ©, Lesson Text; “Christ Crucified,” John xix, 17.80-Golden Text: 1 Peter iif, 18 Commentary, 17. “And He, bearing His cross, went forth into a place called the place of a skull, which is called in the Hebrew, Golgotha.” The other gospels tell us of one Simon, a Cyrenian, who was compelled to bear the cross, but it is evident from this account that Jesus started for the place of crucifixion carrying it Himself, 18. “Where they crucified Him, and two others with Him, on ether side one and Jesus in the midst.” Consider well the meaning of the words “They crucified Him,” make it all as real to your mind as if you saw ft the nails driven through His quivering flesh into the wood, note the ine tense pain, and yel you cannot realize a tithe of it, People pow rejoices to have found what they consider & painless way of execut ing criminals by electricity what a contrast to the awful cruelty of crucifixion 19 “And Pilate wrote a title and put it on the And the writing wa oi Nazareth the r of the Jews Pliate once nsked Josus, What is truth (xvill,), but whether intentionally or not wrote the truth when he wrote this title 20. “This title then read many of t Jows: for the place where Jesus was crucl- fled was nigh to the city; and it was written in Hebrew, and Greck. and Latin T™h three languages represented the whole known world, and thus it was indicated that the fact that this crucified one was the king of the Jews wa TH { , the whole world. This also the pr sty hum foretold, “And the Lord shall be king over all the earth--in that day shall ther Lord and His name one.” “And it shall come to pass that every one that is left o nations which came against Jerusalem even go up from year to year to worshij king, the Lord of Hosts, and to kesp of tabernaclies Zech, xiv, ©. 16 21. “Then ssid the chief priests of the Jews to Pilate, Write not, The King of the Jews: but that He said, | am King of the Jews," That He said He was the kis f the Jowy they were willing to have as a malefactor of His saying. of the Jews Fa TORS Jesus he iter o be oun { y : IK would be pro But if He really ti His crucifixion at their instigation 1 net and re- were not t we wr tied when they had ts and made and also soldiers, , took His garme a part ified Jesu ar parts, iis oont en from ng among then for what sin ever « u oompare with this! But all the clothing which we w Adam's sin, and that we are n, for there can be no doubt that man made in the image of God was ere the fall clothed with light as with a garment 4. “They maid therefore among selves, Lot us not rend it, but cast lots for it whose it shall be: that the Scripture might be fulfilled which maith, parted My raiment among them, and My vesture they did cast | These the sol this pr xxi 18; remember that it was written s 1000 years before tis fulfillment dowry i bumbly =» things are known fr world (Acts xv. 1M; from the beginning, and fr the things that are not vet Oblwerve als was fulfilled, even to one piece ing { which they cast lots. ther xxii, 27. 35, how the same pearson treated shall yet be the rul [ all nations, and all the world shall worship Him, Ex pect as literal a fulfillment of all this 235. “Now there stood by t} Lg His mother, and His mother's sister the wife of Cleophas, and Mary lene 9. “When Jesus therefore saw His er, and the disciple standing by, wh He loved, He sith unto His mother, Woman, behold thy son As in the upper room with the ap wiles at the passover, with suff ring enough before Him to overwhelm Him, He forgot Himself and sought to cotafort them ; so now in indescribable agony of boly and sous He onan yet forget Himself on to make provision for the temporal welfars of His mother and give her a new son who wil in some measure take His place 2. “Then saith He to the Behold thy mother And from that hour that dis ciple took her unto his own home If his mother's sister was Salome, the mother of John and James and wife of Zebedea as we would infer from Math, xxvii, 8; Mark exv,, 40; then she stood by and beard the charge of Jesus concerning HRA Happy John to have the privilege of being a son to Mary instead of Jesus, Happy Sale ome 10 waloome such a sister to her home if John still made his home with her. Dat neither son nor sister could fll the aching void in Mary's heart resurrection and re union in glorified bodies ix the only cure till them it most be faith and patience 98, “After this, Jesus knowing that all things were pow accomplished, that toe Seripture might be fulfilled, saith, 1 thirst” The three hours’ darkness from the sixth to the ninth hour would seen to fntervens be twoen the last verse and this, daring which He probably uttered the cry, “My Goi. my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me™ And now the end bas ccme, but there is yet ane other Beripture to be taifliles, for till heaven and earth pass away, one jou or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled (Math, v, 1% 20, “Now there was sot a vessel full of vinegar, and they filled a sponge with vine [i and put it upon hyssop, and put it is mouth.” Thus was fuifilied EK Ixix., 21, “In My thirst they gave Mas vinegar to drink.” But while we read this and see its fulfillment, let ws pot torget the broken heart becaass of reproach and heaviness, and the wain search for pity and human comforters (Pe. Ixix., 20, 30. “When Jesus therelore had reosived the vinegar, He said, It is finished; and He bowed His head and gave up His very last word is found In Luke xxiil, 44, “Father, into Thine hands 1 commend SYary sae w the © ot the 1 LE iknH . 14 4 : bamer AM" rem winners in h them therefore lors did " Bi» rsp Lr 1 the foundats WAT ew mm ab 4 mae x of Jesus Mary Magda~ oth. wh ugh Tiscipie, mother set in cold | celery, cut in | mayonnaise made | sufficient the ghost™ | oo sc — HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. HICKORYXUT CANDY. Take ove cup of hickorynut meats, two cups of sugar, half acup of water, Boil the sugar and water together with. out stirring, until thick enoush to spin to a thread, Flavor, if desired: then water. Stir quickly until white, then throw nuts. Pour into flat tins BYLATES, the into in " and ont Ladies Home Journal, AX APPLE BALAD, For the basis she used solid tart ap- ples, pared snd cut into small bits. With this she mixed an equal quantity of bits of the size, After thoroughly mixing, she dressed them in the salad bowl with a simple us follows Into the previously beaten, a quantity of was slowly dropped to make a thick cream, to the same yolk of one egg, salad oil thinned icy by vivegar, added a Add pepper and salt to and the ma ready which was then proper consister fully, Wax FONDA warxey ore ul mixed thicken A merican CHINESE Yisn pounds of fr er for twenty mint 2, rad og tut : L iell-over tea Never put pickles in : iful QD i fap You get more wear In | ary { of « wr fable use, mix ra starch with one in the kitchen needed hair MADDY oil and vinegar axe an ex. saturated coll ee pot Rubbed with w raz i » v n + th Kerow s A tin Kettle L) WH As £1 as new, A of ! and water belore re. ght will strengthen the throat snd keep off bronchial attacks, uring at ni Did you know that if you place tough neat in a bath of vinegar water fora time it will become terdert ittle A bit of charcoal put inthe saucepan with your cabbage destroys much of the lisagreeantle odor pervading the stmos- phere at such times Be careful to ventilate your bedrooms; it will prevent morning beadaches and the disagreeable lsssitude consequent pon the breathing of bad air for any length of time, Save all your broken and erooked ear. pet tacks and keep them iu a box in the kitchen for cleaning bottles, They are better than shot, for the sharp edges serape off all the stains, To clean brass wird cages wash in cold sds, and while still damp rab with whiting, then with a flannel, and flaish polishing with tissue paper, or wash, wipe dry, rub with kerosene, Saturate the edges of carpets with a trong solution of slum water to destroy moths; if an vopainted floor, wash the | floor with it before putting down the carpet. Do the same to shelves where | black ants appear. A nice fumiture polish is made mixing boiling linseed oil and white var nish, using one-fourth varnish to three. fourths of the oil. Apply with a flannel, rubbing thorouzhly, and afterward rub. bing with dry flannel or chamols skin. Prime wheat flour shoul 1 have the § lowing charsoteristios: Wien handled, none should sdhere to the
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