S— GENERAL BANKS DEAD, The Veteran Commander Expired at Waltham, Mass, General Nathaniel P. Banks dled at his home In Waltham, Mass, at 8 o'clock p. m., from brain troubio after a long illness, For early two years ho had been a sufferer, but @ was not taken seriously {ll until about 0 weeks before his demise, Nathaniel Prentiss Banks was born in Waltham, Mass., January 30, 1816, lie we- Solved a common school education, and / NA \ AU OENERAL X. P, BAXKS Jearned the trade of machinist in a cotton mill, Daring his leisure hours he studied law, gave lectures and edited a local paper. He was admitted to the bar, and in 1849 was sent to the Legislature, The same year he was chosen Member of Congress by the coalitionists. During his term he withdrew from the Demoeratic party and allied him- golf with the Know Nothings, They sent tim back to Congress by an overwhelming majority. The contest for the Speakershlp, which began at the opening of General Banks's seo- ond term, lasted for two months, He was nominated on the one hundred and thirty third ballot. General Banks was elected to the Thirty-fifth Congress asa Republiean and served until Dee, 4, 1857, when he resigned to take hisseat as Governor of Massachusetts, He was re-elected Governor in 1858 and 1858, In 1560 he General George B, McClellan in the Presidency of the lliinols Central Railroad Company, but resigned at the breaking out of the Civil War, and went to the front as a Major-General of volunteers, his first active service being In the Shenandoah Valley, After serving for a time in defending Washington was assigned to the Department of New Orleans, succes General F. Batler., In having relieved of his resigned commission, ani rett i to Massachusetts where he was electe ‘ongress from hi old district. He was re-elected until 1877, except in 1572, when he was an active sap- porter of Horace Greeley, After his retire. ment Congress he acted as United States Marshal for Massachusetts, Maud Banks, the actress, is a dsaghter of General Banks, suoceadad he from —— SIX MEN LYNCHED. Suspected of Barn-Burning. Are Shot by a Mob, Neggeomes Of the lynch mon two miles west of Millinzt They six colored ya, Tenn, a village onthe Chesapeake and Ohio Rallroad, For a year or more the pople of that part of the county bh i sonstant state of exe v y net insendiarsm, Barns and bea arned, and recently ti itlding 1 Millington Fair Grou troy ¥ a § ert Haynes, V r Hayes and Graban they were arrested near Keravi in the western part by Deputy Sherif Richards Later in the his prisoners where the ‘ to have Am magistrate, hardson started with {PN fs h Hir gon for Millington, a preli . § WAS near. ing Millington, it 1 topped by a mob of fity men killed ull the prisoners, iting their hor«es, rode away were not : ’ new to that part of the con . IecoZnine. ae of them, The detective n who the prisoners L ] ive been are rine wt a (uns, 0 hers massed, but the VIKING SHIP SUNE. The Famous Craft Goes to the Dot. tom of the River After sailing thousands of milos ov Atlantic through the lakes to Chicago without a mis” hap, the Viking ship was the Chi. eago River during the storm, This famous vessel was one notable ex hitdts at the World's Fair, The Viking ship, which was built on the model of an old Viking rover foun fourtean years ago in the ground deep under the vil. age of Gogstad, near Sandefjord, sailed from Christiania on April 9, 1868, Her com- mander was the famous Captain Magnus Anderson, who, with a picked crew, eraised along the coast for a time and early io May commenced the trip across the Atlante, which ended triumphantly. Captain Ander son's object, it was given out, was to show that the Norsemen might have dMscoverad America while on sgme of their venturesome trips on boats et A the Viking, When the strange eralt reached New York, it remained in North River for some time and was of popular interest. The Viking was seventy- soven feet long and pulled sixteen oars to the side. She was built throughout of solid century defying oak. smn IO — SIGNALLING BY SUNLIGHT. Pike's or the Ocean, up the St. Lawrence anid sunk in Messages Flashed Between Peak and Denver. A message was signalield with sunlight from the top ol the Equitable Balifing, Den ver, Col , to the su nnit of Pike's Feak, sixty pix miles, (lone, MeLaughiin and Bissal loft Denver Jor Pike's Peak to make the experiment, This was the nowsigs which was flashed from the top of the Pak ; “Pixe's Prax fo Captain Glass'ord, Denver We greet you via sunbeam, Are rived at 4 p. m, yest: Snow storm pro. vented our opening station, McGroxe" Experiments will be coatinned at certain houss for threes days, ut the end of which the | start for thelr attempt to Woveral days ago Rergoants Me. fas FAY. signal men will flash a message from Mount Uncompahgre to Mount Ellen, 183 miles, The flashes of the mirror on Vikw's Peak could be distinet ly sean by the nake! eye daring the trans mission of the messize, Tae Peak was first ealied from the Denver side of the line, and within five minutes after the operators be- gan thelr work came the resnonse, tia 4 the railroad and mining strikes io Iilinols ow a total of $244,407, Tans hg rolls for the services of the mill- | cent, ; FARM AND HOME OWNERS, They Number 12,760,152 United States. in the | The Census OfMos has made publio the principal results of the Investigation of farm and home proprietorship, which was made in all of the States and Territories, This is the first investigation of the kind ever con. ducted for this or any other country, The farm families number 4,767,179, of which 65,92 per cent, own their own farms, and 834.5 per cent, hire, while of the owning families 28.22 per cent, havo encumbrances on their farms and 77.78 per cent, have none, In 1880 25.566 per cent, of the farms wore hired, Of the 7,092,978 home families 56.90 per cent, own their homes and 63.10 per cent, hire them, while of the owning famiifes 27.70 per cent, own their homes subject to encum- brance and 72.50 per cent, free, In the cities and towns of 8000 to 100,000 population are 1,740,679 home families, of which 85.96 per eant own their homes and 64.04 per cent, hire, while of the owning families 84.11 per cent, own subject to encumbrance and 63,89 per cent, without eu. cumbrance, In the cities that contain over 100,000 pop- ulation there are 1,948 834 home families, ol which 22.83 per cent. own their homes and 77.17 per cent, hire, while of the owning families 87.80 per cont, own subject to en. cumbranoce and 62,20 per cent, free of encum. brance, In those cities New York has the highest percentage of home tendency, nAme 03.687 ; Boston is next, with 81.57 pm jrooklyn third, with 81.44 per cent, Jarsey Clty fourth, with 91,20 per cent., and Cincinnati fifth, with 80.82 per cent, To bring the urban population into con | trast with the non-urban population, totals have been obtained for 4,224,660 home families living outside of cities and towns of 8000 people and over, and of these families 43.78 peor cent, own their homes, 56.22 per cent, hire, while of the owning families 23.09 per cent. own with encumbrance and 76.91 per cent, own without encumbrance, The 836,957 farms subject to encumbrance are worth $8,054 923,165, and the encum- brance is $1,085 585960, or 35.50 per cent, of the value, Toe 800,033 homes subject to encumbrance are valued at $2,632,375, 004, and the encumbrance is $1,048,953 603, or 89.77 per cent. of the values The average value of each owned and en. nbered farm is $4444, of encumbered home $8250, and the average encumbrance on each of the farms Is $1224, on each en- cumbered home £1208. The interest charge on the encumbered farms is $76,738,077, on encumbered homes $65,182.029. The aver. age interest charge encumbered farm is $87, on each he The age rate of interest on farms 18 7.07 per cent, In the cltios of 8000 to 100,000 the average valus bered home is $3447 ; average encumbrance, $1363 : average annual interest charged #584 ; 6.29 per cent, average rate of interest, 6 I In the efties having at 100,000 popu- lation, 83555 represents the average valu each owned and abered York has the highest value, namsly, $1 San Francisco is second, with $7993 ; lyn third, with $7349 ; Omaha fourth, 7179, and Washin with he annual interest on sach and encumbered be sities is #1 The highest u #4383, in New $33, in Louls York, and the | ville, Denver has the highest average rmte of interest, namely, 7.87 per cent , and New Now Orleans is second with 7 per csnt, cu cant, , of ea Bast home, enog i.50 York has the lowest rate, 4.95 cent. , and Bos- ton stands next with 5.14 per cent, rm AI SWEPT BY THE FLOOD. An Awtul Catastrophe Overwhelmas Uvalde, Texas A territls satastrophe town of Uvalde, Texas, and thera is Ing In many > ous Leona River, torrent by out a moment's warn submerging and wraokis drowning a number citement of the bafell the thriving arn uae! sn recent rains, ned ng the bodies Hateh, Miss Martin Maley, two Mexican« It was about 2 when the flood broke over the rushed down the the banks cf that strea lowlands on either side t foot, The east side low land, and was directly water An earthqeake shook 3 duration was distinetly felt during the night, At one place near the city about a quarter of a mile of heavy aracks appears! on each side of the apparently no bottom. ® loss to the Southern ia enormons, forty miles ges haviagz been washel estimate of the low sad to the ratiroat known, reach $1 MANY LIVES LOST. Chinese Flow sr Boats Burned on the Leooa River, haviag Pacifle Company track an! many away. A rough ) property in general mpany will, as far as 500.00) Canton River A terrible fire wire \ | wnton A flower fire, nd the lames spread rapid River, China, itil haadre is of thea crafts ware dettiro at jeast one thousand natives ied in ths flames, The flower boats were m stern to stern in rows, and large nan’ aatives lived upon them, The spre gration Irom boat to her was 80 rapid that the unfortunste Ohiness had time to eut them from their moorings, a strong wind materially heiplagto spread tne flees fire, poaria pred the confine one Many hundreds of the persons flower yard and were drowned, while several buadrel others re mained on floard the doomel emit and per ished In the Hames, st si — - TWO RECORDS IN A DAY. Lucania to New York and Campania to Queenstown, aboard tha bows leapel over The Canard line steamships smashed two tranatiantie records in ons day. First, the news came that the Campania had lowerad all eastward recordy ons hour and twenty minutes by reaching Queenstown from New York in five days, ten hours and forty-seven minutes, Agent Vernon H. Brown leit proud and bee gan to talk of still better achievements, not dreaming that at that minnte the Lucania was rashing In towarls Pire Islan! away ahead of time, throwing recoris ts right and loft, as she swopt en towar Is Sandy Hook. It was 80 foggy out thers that ths steam. ship was soarcely recognizsd, and it was ale most 5.80 before it was learnad that at 4.59 p.m, the Lucania had passa! the lHghtahip ~just five days, elght hours and thirty. olght minutes after leaving Daunt's Rook, Kho had thus beaten the Campania’s record of two weeks ago by lfty-ons minutes, —— woto the architects who are preparing for ths new mint bullding in Philadel. phia is Edward V. Willams, a colored man, who resides in New York City, anda who has designed some very dainty suburban cot- tages, A Maxy deer ars dropping dead by the way. side in Washington and Poenobseot Countim, Maine, Aloeal newspaper shrewdly suspects that the malady will disappear whan haat. ing can be done openly and above board, JERE NEWSY GLEANINGS. Cavrronxta has fomalo tramps, Tue bicycle rage has spread to India, Cricaao’s present area is 185 square miles, GREAT firms, CAan-rane many, Perv and fight.” Dusrix, Ireland, electric cars, AMERICAN securities show gain in London, Arraxrta, Ga, elght-story hotel, Tux Populists falled county in Arkansas, New You Crry is overrun mostly trom the Bouth, Burirarx has eighty profit-sharing is 2)¢ conts in Chomitz, Gor Ecuador are ‘‘spolling for a has neither eable nor a substantial is going to have a new to carry a with Tur new Criminal Court House, New York City, was formally opened. Tue Mid-winter Fair surplus Is expocted to amount to about #200 000, Greamax-Russiax colonists in Kansas ar returning to their old homes, Coxtisvep improvement in shown by the tra reviews Tnx Peary relief expadition ported ‘‘as well” at Golhavn Tue Salvation Army paign in the Hawaliar Tue lon farmers and dairyn Tue fads this year of the East are bioycies Iris age canal oath an Jats, now estimated that Ch system will cost $25,000,000 fonon's OARO 8 « financial condition of to be better than Jag nr chants is said Cuixese In Japan and are under the tior May at lonast the Ualt E last Jans living in 1 to Quebee, Batok [rom forest joston, Mnss,, hes ros fl Mme so that artificial lignt ate that th turers w Te firs York Bay rage 49% 50 yators tot bushel, or in all 10.000.000 a day, are ro osived in New York Oty alone during the MRWOD Ax unfailing sign of ness is the ineroasad the the revival leman 2 ent higher Lt ve A 20r I bs $4 1, MLK ns in 1 priceless helrioon articies ot nial times Massachusetts Histortoal Sosiety ee—— -— THE LABOR WORLD. Ix Italy bakers get 84 a we Graxaxy has 240.000 Union the far West are x T5O (OD members, makers have organized, yy 10,000 An £35 a month. ut y has Chinese shosmakers, ericans, van rms liamonds, sparativa association, aha, Ne Taw « will be Ix lilinols mines Inst year six ers were Killed while at work O%e mat mn makes 600) tin the aid of improved machinery (N.Y farrensing the sigs Tnx organized in 18961, Ans SrYnacoes toamsators str of wagon box Amalgamate | Bosisty of ( has 41.000 meamb Tix dues of the Newsboys’ Union o land, Cal., are twenty-five eonts a mot Sr. Lovis carpenters protest against fire men doing their work around engine houses Ix the textile trades and mines of Austria a week of seventy-two to ninety hours is not uncommon, that sirikes hazarlous Ax impression fs growing against large corporations are experiments Tris year, for the first time, Labor Day wis colebrated throughout the countey as a National holiday TweXTY-FIvE THOUSAND mon are sald to be emphiye! In prolusing and han fling Now York's oyster crop, A praxoxp cutting factory is In course of establishment by a fiem from Ansterdan, Holland, in BrooXiyn. Coronep men are being importel to take the places of striking miners at Rosiyn, Wyoming, The miners get eighty cents a ton Tur Chinese laundrymoen of Boston are about to form a trust for the purpose of keep. Ing prices for work up to the proper stan. dard, Exrroves of a Manchester ( England) iron works have done mors and better work ina year under the eight-hour plan than ever be wre in nine hours, Tux Boston Board of Aldermen has desid. od agninst contenet labor on elty work, and advocates that not less than #2 a day shall be paid to laborers, Tux report for the year of the Brothers hood of Locomotive Firamen shows 23.500 members and an expenditures for death and disability elalms of §1,000,000, Enwano Paso, the oldest locomotive ene ginoer in Canads, was crushed to death in Westville, Nova Scotia, by the wheels of his locomotive, Me had been ranning an engine vi the tracks of the lIntercolonial Mining Company for a quarter of a century. single | buyers, | making bos rox won the series from Cleveland, xrey leads Pittsburg in batting ana vk .yy has released Inflelders Shindle and Gilbert, Tue Pittsburg team has been an huge dis. appointmont, GiaxzeLy, since his re-engagement by Bos- ton, has caught finely, ooxyy and Pittsburg are the most er- + teams in the Loague, Tue Pittsburg Club released Catcher ritt and Cincinnati signed him, Lacuaxce, first base, 8 doing about best playing for Brooklyn just at present, Mer tho trengthenad of the race Tur Cleveland team must be for another year or it will be ou Prrrspuns has released Shortstop Det e, the boy wonder, He was too s neryiox of the old-time baseball players writers In New York | rray talent thy Fas ove collected Singie & Boxt annual calle! upon to Wauux the bas the surprises of t be {1m pressed New York 75 40 ¢ Boston 13 40 645 Phtiadel , 06 47 584 Brookivn. 61 51 5 nes Cleveland 57 5 i 95 LOAN, LOGIT - J ' y PROMINENT PEOPLE. Qrexx VicroRia pays over 84000 a year in dortor’'s fens Sexartors Caaxoree anil H Aro Warm personal friends Tu BarLey poem of two verses Tawntao IL, the Maori King, is death was due to influenza It is esiimated that the Em; many travels about 18,000 miles a vear Hewnvy will heantify [,, the birthplace of her father, Y.. rth ALpRricn £200 for a BAS sror of Ger Rox GOULD | nike the yoane artlet who ls ns A sou plor Dovotas Tr Toes, 80 erent A reputation is a deat mute Tus thod= Island living war Governors ars Spragu *, of Cartin, of Pennsylvania, anl | Oglesby, of [linols Couxt Carntvi's organ, the Refehbote, is advocating the cultivation of better relations bet ween France and Germany Gexensnl Hannmsox has hal his hale and whiskers so closely cropped that his Inti | mate frien is scarcely recogn'zs him. Ir was the boast of the ate John Arkine, of the Rocky Mountain News, that he went throuxh the war without rising above the rank of corporal A prerATon announses the death at Kildy- part, Teoland, of Lisutenant Hoan, owner of the cutter Galatea, which competed for the Amerios's cup in 1896, It i= sald that the Ohio Southern Railway has the youngest rallway sapsrintsndent in the worl, His name is Honter T. Dick aud he Is twenty «throes yoars of age, A wan correspondent, in the person ol Julian Ralph, has gone out to Japan 19 gather Incidents of the Oriental contentions for the benefit of Harper's Weekly, Tux diploma conferring the freedom of the u sivsrsity town of Jena on Prinos Bie marek is the thirty-first docament of the kind received by the ex<:annsellor, Samres J, Kiugsax, Towa's war Governor died a few days at lowa City. He ba been falling gradually for soms time. He was born December 20, 1813, He was Prosi- dent Garlleld's Secretary of the laterior, | CONDITION OF THE TREASURY | Decrease of the Public Debt and In- | crease in Cash Reeelpts, The monthly statement issued from Wash. | | family as she looked over the stock of { | summer flannels bought with the ut | ington shows a net decrease in the publle debt, loss cash in the United Btates Troas. ury, during August of #5,174,642.60. interest bearing debt increased £80,000, the | non-interest bearing debt docromsed $91. 977.55, snd the Treasury incrensed #8,082. 745,24. | ‘T's balance of the several classes of dobt at the close of business August 31, were: | Interest bearing debt, $635,042,670 ; debt on which interest has ceased since maturity, §1.881,750.26 ; debt bearing no Interest, $370,867,503.47 total, $1,0160,742,018.73, The certifiontes and Treasury notes, offset by an equal amount of cash in the Treasury outstanding at the end of the month were 8615,350,572, nn decrease of $1,621,767, The total cash in the Tressury was 81,621,757, The total cash {an the Treasury was #701, 703,857.85, Thegold reserve was 855,210, 000, Net eash balanos, #71,081,197.27. In themonth thers was an increase in gold eoln an of £356,033, the total at the 42. Of the surplus bank depositories #17,- intwo years an " wosl revenu , $1,060,412 y receipts in August were abnorme ally large, the expenditures, owing largely to the fact that but little interest on the dobt was paid in that month i much io July, O00 The ex sounts war, , $476, less than on the lol misosiiansou £5.600,911 ; navy, #3.446,272 ons, $11,334,500; interest, $011, ympared with those of July and , 1898, the expenditures for the sams iths this fiscal year were §4, 500,000 gis shown salons in p nses, his savi War exp SLEIOnY and Ix France the foraje crops, artificial natural meadows, promise so well that no f N - thi i Bay will be nocossary THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices Produce Quoted In New of CC: ntr~ York. Prunes, ¥ Plana Waterms Peas Or ¥ based ane wrries, Cap ns. +h Apples, green, ¥ b Pears, Bartlett, Grapes, Del, #1 Hay(iood toe Clover mixed, Btrawlong rye... ... short rye LIYE Fowls, ¥ ™, Spring chi footers, © Turkeys, ¥ I Ducks, ¥ § . pal “es Pigeons, ¥ pair DRESSED PY Tarkeys, ¥ 1h . Chickens, Phila, broliers, Wasiorn, Jersey, ¥ Ib Fowis, ¥ Ih, Ducks, ¥ ™,.... Guose, ¥ Ih Squnim, ¥ dos (ovens ir LTRY VEGETADLES Potato, Jersey, ¥ bbl. ... Sweets, POOL, .ooiiiiiie Cabbage, ¥ 100 srnuse Onions Yellow, # vol, Red, ¥ bbL.,... I Rquash, marrow, ¥ boi Turnips, HRossia, # bbl. Egg plant, ¥ bbl, ..... Celery, ¥ doz roots Strife beans, ¥ bag Green poas, # bag Green corn, ¥ 100 Tomntoes, ¥ box Cucumbers, ¥ 109 Lima beans, * bag. ... Caulifiower, ¥ bbl... GRAIN, KTC, Flour~Winter Patents, Spring Patents, .... Whent, No, 2 led, September, ... . Corn~No, 2, a "onahiee Omte-=No, 2 White. .ovsine, Track mixed Rye—State. .....co0iiinniine Barley Ungraded Western, , LardUity Steam. ..ooouvym TAYE ¥TOCK, Boaves, olty dressed, ...., Miloh Cows, ¢0 1, 10 00d. Onlves, ity devwessd oui Country dressed .. ooo Bheap, ¥ 100 he. ...., Lambs, ¥ 100 Ms. ,., HogsLive, ¥ 100 fs. . Lressed ERE EA EE EE EL RARER Tha | the worst of it all is that, say what I HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, VASHING PLANNELS, “Ail shrunk-up and sbeolutely good for nothing,” said the mother of » most care and st great expense. “And will, I cannot get my flannels washed carefully, One of my lsundresses is an | enthusiast on cold water; another has always regulated her thermometer, snd the third declares it makes no difference whether the water is hot or cold, they will shrink snyhow, and I do not think that there is any wonder that they consider ing the way they “These women, work by the Zoo every one of them, onto the washboard and | them and grind them in their to make unnecessary as it is ruinous IT times in despair I do them m} , and the that they do not shrink. pretty strong, and with a very little sal it, aud HH I, by possibilty flannels in it efforts them clean, Consequence BE Ard I nsesuds, soda In just as hot any can han ile the is nearly boiling, so much the ; I put the flannels in the tub, pour on the suds, cover them let then stand for fifteen m an and ip ana nutes 1NuULes, up by belts or collars as gangs rly wut Bl sible with my very finger-t rain f them, dip water « them again and draining I TOCOEE, ““If there are any spots, I have fil { 1n walter to a pasty cong: / fn of it on the spots and leave them a few minutes longer. 1 not ral i neither do 1 rub the bit do BORD in, I simply rinse them the water, ard this not necessary to them think they will do, 1 they ill drain 4 clean | nearly out, then suds and pat them ‘nder no 1 Or Pt absolutely out Wavy { I wring ther than 1s ng RFR TY, Are day Lhey were the ents y may be irons i cool irons and rab for this is worse than the gar gar nd squeezing p t as may bi 574 and earefully that fabric will sm ] i passing In lannels will las ot preserve their « + New York Ls RRCITRS PY Api le Cream 14 pound of aj a. half a salts ul of grated ywdered sugar, 1 lemon, half o ANee gi la ly Approximat Peel t i stewpan with ) kithem till tender, pass ied water, cents, the them "ar, apples through a get cold; whisk ap t tifl frot cream, with the es of lemon, add the apple puly M gelatine boiled in a f water; the and . gill O ur int Apple Custard —Two ponn ing apples, three cloves ( n 2 ff aner milk, ten ounces loal sug three bay leaves, a littl lemon four eggs, half pint cream. Apor mate cost, fifty cents and core the apples, boil them with the cloves in a little water, with half a pound pounded sugar; whe: quite soft beat them up ves h an nd remove the cl pulp into a glass dis ver witha rich custard made as follows Into a lined saucepan put one pu f milk, two ounces loaf sugar, t or three bay leaves aud a little thin lemon peel ; let them stand on the side of the stove for half bour; remove the bay leaves and lemon peel; put intoa jug four eggs, and whisk them well; pour the milk over the eggs; put the jug into a saucepan of boil water ; stir one way until the custard thick. ens. Take the jug out of the water, stir for a lew minutes, s custard aside to cool; when cold pour over the apples. Whip half pint of cream and pat it on the top of the custard. Apple Egg Puadding~Ten apples, hatf pound sugar, ten cloves, quarier pint of water, four eggs, grated nuts meg. Approximate cost, twenty-five conta. Peel and core the apples with out breaking them, fill with sugar, and put one clove in each, set in a ple dish, pour the water over, and bake in a moderate oven. When sufficiently cooked, beat up the eggs with the re- mainder of the sagar and the nutmeg, pour in snd over the apples, and re- turn thom to the for ten min. ntes; sift sugar and grated nutmeg over, and serve. Apple Fritters Siz tablednooniala of flour, one of yeast, ote hroakiast #apinl of milk, two oggs, vue vunce of sugar, two ounces of suet, three apples, one ounce of enrrante, Lhe rind of a lemon, one-quarter pound of lard. Approximate cost, twenty-five cents, Miz tho floar snd yer=i to a stiff batter with the milk over mguts the next day add the eggs, well beaten, and the rest of the ineredients; knead well; the suel must be very finely chopped previous to mixing: when well mixed ent off pieces of the dvagh, make into an oval form about one inch thick, three inohes wide and four and a half long, fry in boiling lard ill of a golden brown, drdin on blotting oven paper, sul serve.—New York Re corder
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers