adding the usual quantity of 2 poss. Make the dough thick, &s hard s it will hold together. In rising, it woftens #0 much that it can just be kneaded ded without sticking. : i6 kneading is an important part of ) on. A quarter of an hour's ought to suffice for a small re- the one here and stiff to begin witk is to avoid put- Sing in flour after the dough is light, for: the mass softens so much by’ putting {potatoes in that it willbe just right when ented. the kneading, put the dough Hk ferment again, and, when A third knead- : knead as before. ng still improves it, but it is not neces— St No butter should be put'in these rolls, or in bread either, as it makes it like a short cake in grain, which is precisely what one desires to avoid. - ! Good rolls ought to be puffs of wheat flotir baked; they ought to tear in shreds or strips, have a fibre or grain like the husk of a cocoanut, and a fragrant wheat smell; ‘and. lastly have a rather ugh spring or tear to them, and a crackly crust; In form they are round the sides and bottom, ‘and this is ed not by rolling them up between the hands; as many suppose, but from the potatoes, and the way in which they 2 kneaded. Each roll must be cus off ‘the mass of the dough; thatis to say, the dough must not be keaded and then into rolls, but must be kneaded id put back into the pan again to rise 2 8 lump. When raised and kneaded the last time, turn it all out on the board, cut off each roll from the mass without tearing or disturbing it, or even touching it with the hands (alittle prac- tice will enable one to do it), and place gently in the baking-pan about an a apart. After standing a few minutes—say five or six—they will be ready to go into the oven, and ten . minutes ought to bake them if they are ¢ : ov] Before they are put into'the oven they be cut down the middle with a : knife dripping with melted butter. This prevents the cut sides from coming together and makes the cleft clear and we . : J As to the trouble involved in the pro- cess, I leave that to the judgment. of housekeepers. Aft six in the evening we - set our rolls, at nine they are ready to knead.” They are left all night to rise TRAVELS FAST. An interesting instance of the | magic of the telegraph, an illustratio of the way it can annihilate space, outrun thesun and perform mystifyi Jugglery with old Time's hour-glas and with the calendar, and an object- lesson in every-day science, are afford. ed in i pe connection with the execu. | pelidence secured through the policy of Pro- tion of the sentence of murderer Deeming in Australia. Deeming was hanged at 10:01 ‘a. m.. and the news and details of the execution were read by the readers of American papers at. the early breakfast table, and even before daybreak that day. 1f the execution had beén on any other day the news would have been printed in the evening papers the day previous to that of the execution, for the news of Deeming’s death was received in America before 9 o'clgek ‘on Sunday evening, apparently thir- |’ teen hours before he was hanged. The news was in San Francisco soon after 5 o'clock Sunday evening, having been sent by way of - Montreal. The telegraph beat the sun by almost a whale day. The message had to travel the course traversed by the sun, too, and did not make the gain by cutting across lots or doubling back and stealing a lap. With a ca- ble under the Pacific the message might have doubled on the sun’s track and gained a day in a minute or 80. Telegrams from Australia must take the western or sunward course, and make the full circular tour. The | message left Melbourne, on the far side of Australia, very soon after 10 o'clock Monday morning, traveled about 15,000 miles, was transmitted thirteen times through as many dif- ferent stations and different lengths of cable; reached New York at 8:50 p- m. Sunday and was in the Sun of- fice before 9 o'clock. The difference in time between New York and Mel- bourne is fourteen hours and forty minutes, so that when Deeming was on the gallows it was 7:30 Sunday evening in New York, and the mes- sage traveled the 15,000 miles in the remarkably ‘quick time of less than an hour and a half. ; This was the route, the message passing from one cable and one set of instruments to ‘another at each station. From Melbourne across the Australian continent by land line to Port, Darwin, thence to Banjoewangie, in Java; to-Singapore, to. Madras, across India to, Bombay, under the Indian Ocean to Aden, in'Arabia; ‘under the Red Sea to Suez, along the duez Canal to Alexandria, under the | some other make. reasoning creature, and open to cenviction, no doubt. : be settled without due thought. come with a well? The WING “Look before you leap,” iri be ap Bl A PATRIOTIC WORK, Every person who is opposed to Free Trade Slavery and favors American Industrial Inde. tection, should read the documents published by she American Protective Tariff League. As a patriotic citizen itis your duty to place these documents in the hands of your friends. They are interesting and instructive, and embrace discussions of all phases of the Tariff question.’ The League publishes over 5) different docu- ments, comprising nearly 600 pages of plainly printed, carefully edited .and reliable informa~ tion, Among the authors of these documents are, Hon, James G. Blaine; Wm. McKinley, Jr., Governor of Ohio; Senator 8. M. Cullom, of 1ili- 8 5 Or. Jose! lenator. A. 8 ow York Roane; Dolliv rk ; Co) sman Dolliver. on B. F. Jones; Davia Hall bios of x-Con; man ‘kins, o 3 4 . D. G. man, of New York; Hon. Geo, 8. Boutweill, of Mass. Hon. BE. H. Ammidown, of New York; Enoch Ensley, of Tennessee. This complete set of documents will be sent to any address, post paid, for Fifty (50) Cents, Address, Wilbur ¥. Wakeman, Sec'y, No. 23 West Twenty-Third Street, New York. SENTRA on trial WE PAY FREIGHT If you do not keep it. We think you will keep it. It pleases everybody. | It is an Zonest piano. It is the WING Piano, You may have a preference for Still you are a The question is too important to Years of satisfaction or of regret piano. Does it wear Piano does. ~ Whatever piano you buy, there TITANIA __ (The Queen of Fairies} | fi FOR LADIES. " STRICTLY HIGHEST GRADE | ~~ DIAMOND FRAME -1/ * CUSHION ano PNEUMATIC / “ee TIRESm— WARRANTY WiTH EVERY WHEEL SEND YOUR ADDRESS FOR CATALOGUE ARIEL GYGLE MEFS, 60; =ozsex: "IND. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- ent business conducted for MooERATE Fees. OUR OFFICE 1S OPPOSITE U. S: PATENT OFFICE and we can secure patent in less time than remote from Washington. . 3 3 Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- tion. We advise, if Jateniable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is’secured. A 'PampuLeT, “How to Obtain Patents,” with cost ‘of same in the U. S. and foreign countries $ sent free. Address, i C.A. SNOW & CO. OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. C. CHESTWEICGHT FOR YOUR HOME. Ne Enamel, Swivel Pulleys, Braided Cord, ete, Neatly ND) = Send for Price List to the Sohne - CHEST WEIGHT onthe mar. RSS [3 Finished in Bicyol og 5. Different Styles, all Excellent, Rubber Bumpers, Adjustable Weights, . : s NEW SHOPS OF DAVIS SEWING MACHINE CO. A ATI TT The handsomest, most practical and durable . ket, for Home or G packed for shipment, with book of instruction. ‘Steel Rods, _‘macher Gymnasium Co., Akron, Ohio, 3 de a y The Schumacher Gymnasium Ga, 35 OF DELICIOUS FLAYOR THIS IS TRUE OF THESE SPICES. | Capacity 400 Machines per Day FOR TERMS, ETC., ADDRESS DAVIS SEWING MACHINE C0. DAYTON, ©- CHICAGO, ILL. THE “OHICAGC COTTAGE Mediteranean to Malta, Malta to |are piano secrets you ought to know. Marseilles, across France and under | Our J7e¢ book tells them. Send a the channel to London, thence to postal card for it. It may help you Ireland, under the Atlantic to Cape to buy a different piano.. We tak ‘Canso, Nova Scotia, and thence down | yp + Sisk." We alse toll Ae the coast, via Coney. Island and the nearest dealer whore: ell you the Brooklyn bridge, to Broad street, WING Pi ne youcan see a New York, The time occupied by a Jano.: It is worth Jookin, cable message in reaching any distant |/%- So is the price. WING point is taken up by the number of | SON, 245 Broadway, New York. ORGAN” Has attained a standard of excellence. which admits of no superior. .. It contains every provement that inventive genius, ekill and money can produce. : = Sika bg again, and the first thing in the morn- ing, before the fire is made, are kneaded again. When they are light, which will be in an hour, they are ready to bake.— Harper's Bazar, : g + muslin | EDWIN.J. GILLIES & CO. [I 24510249 WASHINGTON ST NEW YORK. ! 7 _.... BEASONABLE SOUPS, = At this season of the year, writes Mrs. 1Te TOONS, E. R. Parker in the Courier-Journal, rich soups are heavy and lieating to the sys- tem, and should not be served on the family table. Many very appetizing soups ace made from vegetables nd deli- cate meats that will be found wholesome and nourishing. ' Cream .of Asparagus Soup~Wash a bunch of asparagus, put in a saucepan of boiling water, and boil half an hour; take from the water, cut off the tops, put them aside until wanted. Put a quart of milk in assucepan fo boil; press the ragus stalks through a colander, wid thom to the milk. Rub a table. spoonful of butter and two of flour to- er; stir in the boiling milk, and when thick add the asparagus tops, with transmissions, - the dctual electrical transmission through any one cable being inStantanedus. Taking - that into consideration, the New York Sun thinks the news traveled remark- ably fast. 1t might seem from the foregoing that by traveling around and around the earth one might have the same dav and date for an indefi- nite period, provided he kept pace with the. sun. But the day must end somewheré; dnd end very ab- ruptly, and the point where the old day dies and the new one is born is out in the Pacific Ocean, about mid- way between San Francisco and Yoko- hama, and running due north and south. That line of demarkation. in EVERY FARMER EHOULD GET ONE OF THE eyo Fv ts teria, Paraly, tism, Apoplexy, kK on and Nervous Pains of the e, Nervous D : oly + y Mental an FhysicalWe - Brain,” D tive - Memory, e Back, 4 Drunkenness or the Liguor Habit. B >mmen, Professional men, students and elerks whose rains are constantly active exhanst the nervous forces, Become forgetful; nervous; frritatle; with dull brain and nao pain in eyes and head; eto. “Thousands of women are weak, tired and finally they are overcome by prostration of the nervous system and gradu- ally break down; Botanic Nerve Bitters rebuild, birengthen and invigorate the whole being, Oalms the nerves, induces sleep and restores health suffer from a debility of some nature concern + 1 10 speak to their physician. It drain upon the system which is the cause of o he ree oomach, Heart, Kidue prod g softening of 8 n, Epilepsy cr ote, Not in the world compares with Bo Bitters, for & speedy cure of the above complaints. 50 ois. per bottle, Prepared only by the Herb Medicine Company, 348 DiLLwyn STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA, i midis THE STRONGEST HENCE THE MOST ECONOMICAL. PEPPER, MUSTARD, GINGER, CLOVES, = CINNAMON, ALLSPICE. Buya¥ Ib. bottle of your favorite Spice from ong i a *., of the following feading grocers. : Shidit ws dibiaibei dena NRRL. These excellent Organs are celebrated for their volume, quality of tone, quick fesponse, variety of combination, artistic design, beauty in finish, perfect construc- WARRANTED : 1t and TR s ? So tion, making them the most attractive, 5 YEARS . Window salt sad pepper to taste. Take up and the calendar runs Tong pening SIMPLE IN CONSTRUCTION ornamental and desirablo organs in the : hing pote : : gi] Sof; CLS ACTOS ARC BINON Easily and Rapid] ted! : world for Homes, Schoo urches, | (EET madeand Green Da Soupo—Bhell half a peck of Yelands and just scrapes the end of nt a Nr : D iy roe = WANT A Lodges and hoclotles, s k of peas; wash the pods, but 1n a soup kettle | Now Zealand, but. tor convenience Binoy ir omatle Fence Ma. Wa ; Rk : — aud cover with water; boil until tender, | cape and not to bave it Sunday mid- position to. Being ware andFicket Fance in ETALLIC 00F Catalogues on application, FREE. eS drain, put the water back n the kettle, day on one side of the street and | A manandboyocan weave 50 to 60 rods of Shik, % Sin on put the peas in and let boil until tender; ‘Monday noon on the other. in some Jence. a day, at] an average cost of less than WE MANE iT : erknowm, uo take out a pint and mash the rest|igandq of the Pacific, the line has Will build & strong fence and stop large or — Ghicago Gottage Organ Be. 1s to make through a sieve; put them in the kettle, | bean crooked so that it does not cut | small aaimals: : A WT satire 50 three igi 2 ilk, let come to 3 any island. As the earth turns be- | The price is within tho reach of every 228 WABASH AVE, ol oil, put the pint of whole peas in; rub | tor; the sun, midday of Sunday | “wre : +5 dollar's two tablespoonfuls of butter mn two of | would advance around the world un. te for circulars and full Information 18 : onicao0, nL. 6 regio Sour and Jatis in the Soup, setson, with til it struck that line, wiien it oust The Johnstown Fence Jachine Go., Ltd Aha. Scientific American ge. Tick: chopped parsiey, pepper and salt. © | perforce change or every day would P.O. Bo Agency for ; ready to take up add a tablespoonful of | yo Sundav. The change is really O. Box 231, Johnstown, Pa. g . unity of a Gr. and Rf ED. 1 kinds of © Sea Foam” » handle ght in car: tore in sugar and a sprig of mint. i Spinach Boup—Takea peck of spinach, steam until tender, rub through a col- ander, put in a kettle with a quart of soup stock, a’cup of cream, a tablespoon- ful of butter, salt and pepper; let boil ten minutes. When ready to take up drop in a raw egg for each person, Serve with dry toast. ‘Soup Mai Prepare a bunch of gre— celery, a head of lettuce, and a handful of parsley; put in a ssncepan, cover with water, and stew fifteen ‘minutes; ‘add half: a pound of butter and two sliced onions, let cook slow, sift in a tablespoon of flour, pour over a gallon of water, season with salt and pepper, let boil slowly, beat the yolks of two eggs, ‘and add with a teacup of walnut catsup. : Bog SBoup—S8lice. two white onions, fry brown in butter, add three pints of water, and let boil, season with salt and pepper and a teaspoon of sugar, stir un- til the soup thickens, take from the fire, mix in gradually the beaten yolks of four eggs. = Berve with sippets of fried bread. Lima Bean Soup—Put a quart of young tender beans in a saucepan, cover with boiling water and boil slowly for twenty minutes; drain and press through a colander, put a quart of milk on te boil, add to the beans; rub a tablespoon- ful of butter and flour together, add. to the soup, stir until thick, ‘put ina pint of white stock; let boil up once and stir in the beaten yolks of three eggs. Season With pepper and salt. {Delicate Chicken Soup—Put a well- grown chicken in a soup Kettle with three quarts of cold water, let come to a boil skin carefully and let simmerslowly until the meat drops off the bones; add a slice 6 of y and. of let cn minus, ss, ro 30 | made at midnight. It may require a little thought to straighten out the subject, but it will come straight eventually. : Almost One-Four:h Live West. According to the census of 1890, there are 15,000,000 people. living in the States and Territories lying west of the Mississippi River, almost one- fourth of the entire population of the United States. TONE, * AC HAVE Wr TION = {ges cious dive P ERECT framewons, | Bidet: . AND MODERATE PRICES. { | &% % GUARANTEED & YEARS, & SEND FOR CIRCULAR AND PRICES. I” 3 1% : TheBandY js B the result of twelve years’ iexperiencein the manufac- a ture of Wind J] TE ly Engines, and contains all the features of a first-class en- gine. Send for déscription and prices. BARLOW & YOUMANS GALFSBURG, MICH. &@ - 1 OULTRY FOR PROFIT. | MANUFACTURED BY "Many people are deterred from keeping: poultry fear- ing An epidumis will carry off their op ear ; The Bird Food Co.'s chicken Crotera Pus redu @anger of loas through that'd) are the the cholera, but roup also, and tims hich chickens are liable, Put up in these are most easily piven, of this Soma , when mixed wi hens, will greatly This Powder keeps poultry health therein Keepy I TEEL AND IRON ROOFING ROOFING PAIX sy CORRU- ED, IRON SIDINGS AND CEILINGS ! - Corrugated Iron Suitable for Elevators, Mills, Barns vs elc,; a Specialty, | it Best and cheapest roof in the world; tools Foil Tastvae nt with all orders; wind, 8 ons sen waver and lightning proof. - SEND FOR ALLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. N. A. HALDEMAN & Co, 93 N. FRONT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA, AGENTS WANTED. Have you written ime yet? If you haven't, wisdom ind (intelligent ic} ntelligent person of either sex, who an rea a rite, and wha fter instruction, ill work indus ly it; any one can put it om. all ers; ; in Hasa La High Arm. “Has a Self-setting Needle. Has a Self-threading Shuttle. Has No Eqguaal in Construction. Has a Mechanical Appearance. Has an Ele t Finish. Has a Perfect Adjustment. Has a Positive Take-up. For information and MU. & CO. Eo does a Larger Range o Oideat bureau for securing patents in America. than any Sewing Machine in the : Every t taken out by us is brought before y E : : $8 public by & Bokies give Hee uf hur Examine THE ROYAL for points Srientifir meric excellence, and you wiil - buy no other. Largest circulation of an. solentifle paper in the vorid, Splenaidly tustrated, 'ROYAE S. M. C0., Rockford. Ill, TOOL: S10 ea Die, a New York. 181 Rr Sond AT ONCE for our circular and Investigate this m THE STAR DRILL Co.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers