Newspaper Page Text
IJrwarf of Ointment* for Catarrh That
C on la In JHercarr,
Ah mercury will wurelv destroy the fM*n*o of »
►moll and complately demote the whola «>>* |
tom wbon entering it throui/ft the mu ecu a Mir- i
farea. Hurh aKI« !«*•* should never be n*©d ex- i
oept on pnfM npt k>n* from rorubtble nhyni- j
clina, ai the damage they will ao )h ten jolu to j
the kfood yon ran possibly derive from them, j
Hall h (atarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheuoy & (Toledo, O.,cental oh no mercury,
ami in t-aktn internally, and m te directly upon
|he Mood and mucous surface* of the system.
lii buying Mail < atarrh Cure b» aure you t
the genuine, jt j . taken internally, and made
In Toledo, Ohio, hy K. .1. Chsnev A' Co.
f#r .Sold h\ J)rugtfiHt>. jjrJr< ' v per bottle, j
Most | ii'< >| *I*j would ij' reed in small things ;
If they were not troubled with great ambi- j
>ions.
Hjrup oI ri2"»
Produced from the laxative and nutrition*
Juice of California fig*, combined with the
inedi* inn! virtues of plaotH known to b© most
t n» filial to the human acts gently on
the kidneys, Jiver and bowels, effectually
cleansing Urn hyatem, dispelling colds and
beaoncties, and ruring habitual constipation.
Ho who is lord of himself, and exists upon
Ills own resources, is a noble but rare being.
LAnirs needing a fr«ulc, or children who
want building up, should take lirown’s Iron
Hitlers. it Is l’lcMNant to takn, cures Malaria,
Indigent ioti.Hiliousne»*s and Liver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
It is w ith our judgrn ni as our watches
none go alike, yet each L» ii *ves his own.
FITfl stopped free hr I)n. Kiijyk’h Oh*a»
Nkkvjl ItKMToKAft. No fits after first day’s use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial hottJe
frre. Dr. Kline, 981 Arch Hi., Phi la., Pa.
With atiducily one ran underbake any
thing, hul one cannot accompli »h everything.
Many persons are broken down from over
work or household caret brown * Iron lilt
tern rebuilds the ,i>sten», aids digest 1011, re
move « exi «•* sos Idle, and cure- inalarlA. A
splendid tonic for women anil < hildren.
To remind n man of a kindness conferred
is little less than n reproach.
If a filleted with ho re eyes uno Dr. Isaac Tbomn
soii’h Kyo-water.Drugglstii sell at 26c.per tx>tt)tf j
The great mind is one that can forget oi :
I«x>k beyond itaolf- »
That
Tired Feeling
Whether caused by change ;
of climate, season or 1 i (e, hy 1
overwork or illness, is driv
en oil hy Mood’s Sarsapa
rilla, which imparts great
nerve, mental and bodily
strength. He sure to get
l
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
“German
Syrup”
Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Par
sonage. “My acquaintance with
your remedy, Hoseliec’s German
Syrup, was made about fourteen
years ago, when 1 contracted a Cold
which resulted in a Hoarseness and
a Cough which disabled me from
filling my pulpit for a number of
Sabbaths. After trying a Physician,
without obtaining relief -l cannot
say now what remedy he prescribed
—I saw the advertisement of yout
remedy and obtained a bottle. 1
received such quick and permanent
help from it that whenever we have
had Throat or Bronchial troubles j
since in our family, Bosohce\s Get I
man Syrup lias been our favorite 1
remedy and always with favorable
results. 1 have never hesitated to
report my experience of its use to
others when 1 have found them
troubled in like- maimer.” RiiV.
\V 11 11 ahuarty,
of the Newark New A Safe
Jersey, M E. Contcr
cuce, April 25, ’9O. Romody.
9t j
G.G. GKITV Sole Man’fr.W ooilbury.N.J.
SM LTT I S
giLE [Jeans
Cure Biliousness
Bick Ucadach.*, Malaria, (\>stivt*ue*s Heart
Burn. OixxiiKvtK, Rid Breath. Nervous
Debility, I>v solitary. Jaundice,
in tin* Stdo and under
the Shoulder Blade*
Never fall to act on a Torpid Liver.
K&prl puytiions bib* from tin* system;
i’lwar the Tom pi ox ion, \id Digestion; (’rent©
an \ppetit< . rim* and promt Chills and
Ko\ ers W © also make
(«' to th.. hotlls)
a©®# wvfer thin elr< K.sjxs ~ly among vrtunoß
»*ut ehOdivn. lK»th ku-.-s -ugut llmmuil
to lake.
RELIABLE. SAFE. ECONOMICAL.
Frio* 35 cent* i*t bottle, five for ft, 1
cither nt,>. Sola by Druggists Write for
Picture.
J. F. SMITH & CO., NEW YORK CITY,
MONEY IN CHICKENS.
For 2V In ■‘lamp* >m* M-ntl * i.t'l tdK I.<h Kkl*
!B|| Ike ex j ■ »«*»*> «■ f » l l ' •»> '■ ■ -»t Y ■ iit|) Kaiwt It
•»*aeht*A h. « t' l IVUh I nli.t I \.TT hIMAH-* for
Kl»-» f'* r FatleaUiF. Fowl* t«* ty*r
BtVdhu « very lit I rt**juisH* f*w protltal.e I «ul
try raltiitk hVr'K rt'Kl.lMHNd lv. 1a -bkul
llreri Sf« Yoil
CIAR# 'ra Nrnvors W r.KTv iik n ria's .
JblljiK veil , I '* ell H ».
tree Ur. J. 11. |i\ |; 1 ; . Ctsftal.v. n.
CDr C To I'him MIT 'I IKKIKU.
■ ■* “■ 'VI ' t)|eu ' Al
»uao.. * n,iimvlv«, for nil*' tol l vU u*«
iaUbßliai Aid Cvrme>uikuit i«wi MuWlakrd
! REV. DR. TALMA GE.
!
THE KUOORT,N DIVIVE’S SUNDAY
SERMON.
- ■
Ha iqect: "OniyWroiiV Work."
Text: *'. I>1»/ tkf . r'-ning and flit* morn
ing were the sixth «/a— ti-tuenin i., t.l.
I From Mooiiny morning to .Satnr i»> uio|,i
( j'lVfMua vr.-.-ir vork if «>r f,, t vo fill" I
Illiat w-erli with sio -• v c ara Inj.py. But
i mu iroiiiß to tell you wtmt ffod (li>l in one
H—t CoMruogony, (jeolosjy, ustronomy, or
ichthyology, botany, «noty
an; null cast sutijo-ts tlmt no hun'iti* life n
long 011011 ;h to i-xplora or romprehonJ any
ono <>: thorn. Blit I Inter ltiou<ht I mi.tlit
in mi Unusual way t.-H you a littlu of what
| <«>*! . lul in om> i-ri'k An‘l whether you
make it a work of ,|*yv or u w,. j!c of a I
«*are not, for I shall reach trie sani s practi
cal result of reverence and worship.
The firs! Monday morning found vsingin.:
hi space tlio piled it. lumber of rocks and
metal and soil au l watur from wliicli the
worth was to be build I <>od mi le ito tils
mind to create a human family. And they
must have a house to live in. But where?
Not a roof, not :t wall, Set n door, not a
room was fit for human occupancy. There
is not a pile of blarß basalt lu Yellow-tone
I'ork or an extinct volcano in Honolulu so
inappropriate for human reeelene > as was
this (ilohe at that early i»rrio I. Moreover,
(here was no human architect todra w apian,
no ipiarrymnii to blast i he foundation stones,
j no carpenter to hew out a beam, un i in
mason to trowel a wall
The lir-t thin? ne idej wa* light. It was
not needed for Hod to work by, for 110 can r
work us well in th ■ .iarkne-s. Mill liglilauay
be neec.s/n y, for "ftnyelic intelligences are to
sen in Its full-lory tlj ■ pro ■ .of u erl I inn I I
nur. I!ut where are the Candles, wh >ro un
the. candelabra, where is the ebon leb r? No
rising nil will roll m the niorniux, for it th •
run is already it- atoil it, li-lit will not yet 1
: reach the earth in thro day . Nor mom
nor start can brighten this darkAM Thu
moon null stars are not burn yn, dr ii I
rrenlej their light will not. resell the ear ill
for some linn* ynt. lint lliei'c is nee lof im
j ni^i* / iato luidil. W here shall it. come from''
I ho record makes rnc think that, standing
I over tins earth that spring morning, Hoi
' I‘Kikisl upon the darkness that palled the |
ilieightu of this world, and the i ha-.ni .ifil, .
and the awful reaches of If, and ultere I.
whether in the Hebrew of earth or some
languatcecelestisl I know not, that word
which stand- for the subtle, bright, glowing
and all pervading Min i, that word which
thrills and garland-and lifts every thine it
touches, that word t he full meaning of which
I all the chemists of Hie ages have busied
themselves in exploring, that word which
suggests a force t hat flic-, one hUndro I and
j ninety thousand nlilei in a second, ni l bv
undulation , seven bundl ed and twenty seven
trillions m a second, ilmt one word that (lod
utters—Light ’
And Instantly the darkness iiegan toshiiu
uieiy utni the thick folds of blackness to lift,
and there were scintillations mid corusca
tions and Hashes and Billowing up of resplen
dence, and in great sheets it spread out
northward, southward, eastward, westward,
andn radiance tilled the atmosphere until it
could hold no more ol the brilliance. Light
,iowr to work hy while supernatural intelli
euros look on. Light, the lirst chapter of .
the lirst day of the week. Light, the joy of 1
• lie ciulurie- Light, the greatest tile sing
that ever touched the hilinmieyc. The robe
of the Almighty is woven out of it, tor He
covers Himself with light as with a gar
incut. Oli, blessed light! I am s > giud this
was the lirst. thing created that week. Fur
Inck of it the bod\ stumbles. O thou Father
of Lights, give ns light ’
Now it is Tuesday morning. A delicate
and tremendous undertaking is set apart for
this day. Tliere was a great superabun
dance of water, t»(id. liyihe wave of His
liaud, this morning gathers part of it in sus
pended reservoirs, mid part ot it He orders
down into the rivers and lakes and sous.
How to bang whole Atlantic oceans in the
clouds without their spilling over except in
right iprintitias and at right times was an
undertaking that no one but Omnipotence
" niM have dared. But (lod does it as easily
as joti would lift a glass of water. There lie
hoists I wo clouds, each thirty miles wide anil
live miles high, and balances them. Here
He lifts the cirrous clouds amt spreads them
out in great w hite banks as though it. had
been snowing in heaven. And tuo cirro
stratus clouds in long parallel lines, so
straight you know an iiilltiit.e geometer has
drawn them, t'louds Whioliare the armory
I rum which thunder storms get their bayo
net-sol tire. Clouds which are oceans on
Ihewiug No wonder, long after tins tlr.st,
’Tuesday of creation week, Klihu confounded
Job with the question, “Dost thou know the
balancing ot the cloud-: ”
Half ol this Tuesday work done, the other
halt is the work of compelling the waters to
lie down in their dc-tined places. So Hod
picks up the solid ground and packs it ttpin
■ to the live elevations, which are the eonti
| neats. With 1 1 i - tin er lie makes deep do
pre-sioils in them, and these are the lakes,
while at the piling, up of fhfe Allegbanivs and
. Sierra Nev adas and Fyrcuees and Alps and
Himalayas the rest of the waters start by
the law of gravitation to the lower places,
and in their run down hill become the
rivers, and then all around the earth th so
rivers coma into convention and become!
oceans beneath, as the i kinds are oceans
aliox i .
Now it is Wednesday morning of the
world's lirst week. Hardening and horticul
ture will he born to-day. How queer the
lulls look, ami so unattractive they seem
! hardly worth but mg b . u made. Hut now
all the surfaces are changing color. Horn '
lrung beautiful is creeping all over th nn. It
has the color of emerald. Ay, it is herbage.
Il iil to the green guest ’ Hod's favoritocolor
an t Hod's favorite plant, as 1 judge from :
the fact that he makes a larger number of
them than of anything else. But lords von
derl Something starts out of the ground
mid goes higher up, higher and higher, and
spreads out broad leaves. It is a palm tree
j \ under is another growth, and its leaves.
hang far dot n, an iflis a Willow tree. Vnd
j yonder is a growth w ith a mighty sweep of
| branches. An I hero they come -the pear,
i and the apple, and the pencil, and the pome
granate. and groves, and orchards, an I for
ests, their shadows and their fruit girdling
t he cart ti.
Now it is Tiuirs lav moruiug of the world’s
first wok. Nothing will lie created to-day.
rile hours will h> pxssvl in s-jttering fogs
in 1 mists an 1 v spars. Th * atm isplr-ro
. must b> sw opt clean Other worlds are t»
heave In sight, j'lus little -hip of the earth
has seemed to lia\e all the ocean of im
mensity to itself. But mightier craft are t,i
b-lmib-Ptc lav on the high -ms of spac v
Firsts the moon's white sail appears ami
iliv-s very well until th** suu hursts upon the ;
scene I'ue light that ou the previous throe
mornings was struck fro nan espivi il word
n nv gatners in tlio suu, moon and stars.
Oae for the day, the other for Lheuight.
And Uie suu now app.vtrs, afterward to be
found eight hundred and eighty-eight thou
sand mile-in diaui'ter, and, (Hit m astro
iivianeal scales to he foun l to weigh nearly j
four hundred tliousmd times heavier than
our earth; a miglitv furuace, its heat kept
up bv meteors pouring int oit as fuel, a world !
itevouriug other worlds with its ja ws of
fla ir’ And th 1 stars ec u > out, th «s > str »t
lamps of heaven, th 'se ki*v -of purl, iqvill
which Hod's fingers pl.av the music ot the i
su!iores How bright th >v look in this ori
ental evening? t'otistellatious! H.»laxii>s' !
I Wh it a twenty four hours of this firs! week
- >l.ar, lunar, skill »r app varan • -s' Ml tliis
Thursday an I the a 1 joining nightsomiUoye l
in pulling aside the eurlain of vapor from
th -s- finsUixi or pale-fai-e I worlds.
N i» it i» Friday m >rnmg in to > first sve>'; ,
j of the world'* history. Water. Imtuotafla
j swimming it; air. hut not a wing living it.
!Itis a silent world fan it lie that it was '
! mate only for vegetables* But hark ' There
; i- a swirl an l a setas'!■ a- ~, all the four
■ rivers of Bisv,. Hihoa. Hidek-I .ant Kuphr.a |
te- They are all aswkn with life, some .
da: ting like arrows through split crystal. >
and others quiet in dark pools like shadows.
K. ry thing, from spotted trout to bohamoth. 1
•ail i; >loiv 1, all shapoJ, the aniti3tori of
Many tribes that •hall Hy th iir wonder i of
eea trtlctlop Confoun 1 the Agaesizex, the
i Cuvier,, and the Linnaiuses and the Ichthyo
! (nit of the more than six thousand years
tallowing this Friday of the first week.
Ani while I stand on the banks of these
Paradisaical rivers, watching these finny
ti ib . I hear .a whirr in the air and l look up
an I b hrld wings—wings of larks, robins,
•! v eagle . flamingoes, albatrosses, brown
Vhr-ishari. Creatures of all color—Value, as
f dip-, cl in the skies; fiery, as it they ha I
I iwn out of til) sunsets; golden, as if they
ail t a ei their morning bath in hatter- in.
An I whik- I am stu lying the colors they he
’ till to carol an I chirp and con and twitter
il l rua up an 1 down tlie scales of a music
that they mu ;t have hear t at heaven’s gate.
Yes. I fin I the n in Par i lise on this the first
Friday afternoon of the world’s exist, -nee.
And f sit down o.i tile bank of the F.up’a
rat“s, mil the iilurmur of the river, to
gether with the Chantof birdsin thesky. puts
me into a state of soiuriolence. “And the
evening and the morning were the fifth day.’
Now it is Katiir lav morning of the world’s
first w >.;k an I with this day the week doses.
But, oh, what a climacteric day! The air
ha-, its oonulatiort and the water its popula
tion. Yet the land has not one inhabitant.
But here they come, by the voice of Hod cre
ato.ll Hors s grander tiiau tbosa wliidi in
after tim i Job will describe as h iving neck
clothed with thunier. Cattle enough t.i
cover a thousand hills. Sheep shepherdo l
by Him who made for the n the green pis
ture’s. ' tittle superior to the AI lerneys mi l
Ayei -'iiros mi l IJevonshiies of after times.
I. ■opards so beautiful we are gla 1 they can-
I not change their spots. Lions without th -ir
fiereciie-, an I all the quadruped world so
•' -ntle, so sleek, so perfect.
But. something i wanted in Paradise an 1
the Week is almost done. Who is thereto
pluck the dowers of this*E lenie lawn? Who
is tin re to command these worlds of quadru
ped and fish and bird? For whom has Hod
put back the curtain from the face of snn
and moon and star? The world wants an
emperor and empress. It is S iturday after
noon No ono hilt the Lord Almighty can
| originate a human being. In the world
where there are in tlio latter part of th"
Nineteenth century over fourteen hundre l
million people, a human being is notacun-
I osity.
Before night there were to be two human
and yet immortal beings constructed. The
j Woman as well as the man was formed Sat
■ in bay alternooii. lie tu -o adi •;> sleep fell
upon Adam mi l hy divine surgery a por-
I I >n of in id > was remove I for the nucleus
of another iv alien, it has been supposed
that p fillips days and nights passed lev
t a • in the m i ciilincaudfeaiinine creations.
But no! Adam was not three hours mi
litate !.
<n' l hi- allied info this cohl sculpture of
a man the breath of life, ar.d the heart be
gan to beat, an 1 the lungs to inhale, ami
tli" (■>■ , to open, ami the form to thrill,
and with Hi" rapture of a life just come
tli" prostrate being leaps to his feet —a
man ’
But the scene of this Saturday is not yet
done, and in fli < atmosphere, drowsy with
the breath of flowers, and the song ol' bobo
links and robin redbreasts, the man slutn
b rs, and by ciiiesthetics, divinily a iminis-
I r, I, ihe slumber d?ep -ns until without the
oozing of one drop of bio (I at the time or
the faintest soar afterward, that portion is
removed from iii-: tde which is to Im built
up the Queen of Paradise, toe daughter of
tli" great Co l, tli" mother of the human
race, tim b n -diction of ail ages, woman the
wife, afterward woman the mother.
What do yon think of that one week’s
work? I review it not for entertainment,
hut because I would have you join in David’s
doxology, “fJreat nn I marvelous are Thy
works. Lord Hod Almighty;” because I want
you to know what a homestead our Father
built for lbs children at the start, though sin
lias despoiled it, and because l want you to
know how the world will look again when
Christ shall have restored it, swinging now
between two Edens; because I want you to
realize something of what a mighty Hou He is,
anil the utter folly of trying to war against
Him; because 1 want you to make peace
with this Chief of the universe, the Christ
who mediates between oiFendeii < Inmipotenee
uml liiiliniil rebellion; because 1 wantyou to
know how fearfully and wonderfully you
are made, your body as well as your soul an
Omnipotent achievement; because I want
you to realize that order reigns throughout
the universe, uni that Hod's watches tick
to the second, and that; His clocks strike
regularly, though they strike once in a
thousand years,
A Story With a moral.
Gen. George A. Sheridan is one oi
the most famous story-tellers in
America. 110 had just returned to
Washington, after his eloquence had
been expended in vain for tlio defeated
Fmaker, and was sitting in Camber
lain's sipping a pousse case, lie talked
very freely on the result of the election,
amt (hen was reminded of a ‘‘little
story,” apropos of something.
’•Home young fellows," said the Gen
eral, “were telling stories and having a ]
hilarious time. An old gentleman sat a j
little apart and seethed unable to join j
in their merriment. He was rallied on j
his moroseness and asked to tell a
! story.
“’1 don’t know any stories in your !
vein, my young friend, ’ said lie, ‘but 1 i
will relate a little incident with a moral, j
There was once a little bird. He had j
down about all one long cold day try- j
ing to lind something to eat. But his j
search had been a complete failure and '
late iu tlu> afternoon he tlew home,
weak and disconsolate, and climbed
feeblv on the' perch, about ready to I
drop with fatigue and liuuger. He was |
nearly ready to drop when he detected
a dead sheep which i’rovideuco had
placed over in the bushes. He climbed
down from his perch, hopped over, and
managed to climbed up on the sheep.
There lie peeked aud peeked and peeked
away until his little craw was tilled
w ith nutritious, if unsavory, food. Then
he felt much better. He flapped his
wings and hopped nimbly about and
tiually tlew back to his perch. Then
his little throat swelled with gratitude
and ho sung all the songs he knew and
tried to sing several he didn’t know,
v. hen a hunter came along, leveled liis
gun ami shot him.'
“Thei old gentleman seemed to have
finished his story. ’But tlie moral.
W hat is the moral?' asked the young
man.
" ’The 111013 d, my young friend, is:
If you will eat carrion, don’t crow ovet
i it*’"
lIE \Y \s IN IT.
Clerk Matthew*. Was in ibc Express
llolilmu’v ami < unit ’tl .
A Dos Moines lowa special says: The
American Kxprc - rob! s v at Carroll Satur
lay night lias taken a ile.-iiivtlly sensational
turn, deik Matthews, who w:t> found tied
and gagged, lias confeeasixl to Complicity in
the crime. He says the robbery was planned
by himself, Craig Niswougpr and Anson
Soharuweber, two young men of Carroll.
H > went with Superintendent Hamer of
1 Omaha to an o'd vacant h >us» we st of town
ami hauled out 1 1 c: 1 ( on.vabueut to,
winch lacked otih s r *.• id the amount stolen.
Nlsw ngerauil tv-barnweber weie pia si
under arrxsst.
I HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
CLEARING WINDOWS.
Cleaning windows is an important part
of the work in the routine of housekeep
ing, and while it does not seem a diffi
cult task to keep Ihe glass clear and
bright it nevertheless requires a knowl
edge cf what not to Go. Never wash
windows when the sun is shining upon
them, otherwise they will be cloudy and
streaky from drying before they are well
polished off; and never wash the out
side of the window first if you wish to
save trouble. Dust the glass and sash
and wash the window inside, using a
little ammonia in the water; wipe with a i
cloth free from lint and polish off with |
soft paper. For the corners a small i
brush or pointed stick covered with one
end of the cloth is useful. When you
come to the glass outside the defects
remaining will be more closely seen.
Wipe the panes as soon as possible after
washing and rinsing and polish with
either chamois or soft paper. In lius- j
ing one may dash the water on the out- !
side or use a large sponge. It is prefer
able to a cloth.— New York World.
CAKE OF CFII MAW ARE.
Due of the most important things is to
season glass and china to sudden change
of temperature, so that they will remain
sound after exposure to sudden heat and |
cold. This is best done by placing the j
articles in cold water, which mustgradu- j
ally be brought to the boiling point and j
then allowed to cool very slowly, taking
several hours to do it. The more com- j
raon the materials the more care in this j
respect is required. All china that has ,
any gilding upon it may on no account be
rubbed with a cloth of any kind, but
merely rinsed first in hot and afterward
in cold water and left to drain till dry.
It may be rubbed with a soft wash leather
and a little dry whiting, hut this opera
tion must not be repeated more than once
a year, otherwise the gold will most cer
tainly be rubbed off and the china
spoiled. When tLio plates, etc., are put
away in the china closet pieces of paper
should be placed between them to pre
vent scratches on the glaze or painting,
as the bottom of all ware has little par
ticles of sand adhering to it, picked up
from the oven wherein it was glazed.
The china closet should he in a dry situa
tion, as a damp closet will soon tarnish
the gilding of the best crockery. Iu a
common dinner service it is a great evil
to make the plates too hot, as it invari
ably cracks the glaze on the surface, if
not the plate itself. The fact is when
the glaze is injured every time the
‘•things” are washed the water gets to
the interior, swells the porous clay and
makes the whole fabric rotten. In this
condition they will also absorb grease,
and when exposed to further heat the
grease makes the dishes brown and dis
colored. If an old, ill used dish be made
very hot indeed a teaspoonful of fat will
bo seen to exude from the minute fissures
upon its surface. These latter remarks
apply more particularly to common wares.
Glassware lieporter.
RECIFE,S.
Hollaudaise Sauce—Cream a half cup
ful of butter, add the yolks of two eggs
and beat well, then add the juice of half
a lemon, oue saltspoonful of salt and a
few grains of cayenne. Just before j
serving add slowly one third of a cupful
of boiling water and cook over hot ;
water till slightly thick. This sauce, if j
well made, is particularly nice to serve j
with fisli.
Virginia Pudding—Scald one quart of
milk and pour it gradually oil three
tablespooufuls of flour. Add yolks of
six eggs and whites of two and grated
rind of one lemon. Bake about twenty
minutes or until well set and put away
to cool. Beat the whites of four eggs
to a stiff froth with a coffee-cup of
powdered sugar; add juice of the lemon.
Pour over the pudding when it is quito
cold.
Ilaggis—Haggis “stuffed in a bladder
and boiled iu a pan” is what is eaten iu
bounie Scotland. To an even cupful of
oatmeal (which must be soaked all night
in water) allow half a cup ot raisins,
washed and stoned; the same quantity of
dried currants, three of mutton suet,
chopped fine, and a little salt. Mix
well with suflicieut water to form a stiff
paste, till a sausage bladder with it, tie
up tightly and boil.
Potato Fritters—To two cupfuls warm
mashed potatoes add two tablespoonfuls
cream, one teaspoonful salt, a slight grat
ing of nutmeg and a few grains cayenne.
| Add three eggs and two yolks well
; beaten, and beat till cool. Add one-half
I cupful flour and drop' by the spoonful iu
j hot lard. Fry light colored and drain
on paper. Add one tablespoonful of salt
to six medium-sized potatoes in boiling.
In seasoning, u little nutmeg may be
used. These fritters are very nice.
Plaiu Omelette—Break six eggs into a
howl, beat them very light and add six
tablespooufuls of hot water. Have an
iron saucepan, about eight inches iu
diameter, hot, and melt iu it one table
spoonfui of butter. Pour in the eggs
aud shake the saucepan vigorously until
the mixture thickens. Let it stand a
minute or two to brow, mu a knife
around the sides of the saucepan, and
double it over. Slip it into a hot disli
and seive immediately. Just before
folding it, sprinkle halt a teaspoonful of
salt over the top of the omelette.
Melton Veal—Take cold roast veal,
chop fine and season with pepper, salt
and lemon juice, add one-fourtli tiie
bulk of cracker crumbs, moisten with
good rich stock; take one-third the
atnouut of finely chopped lean bam; rea
son with mustard and cayenne pepper;
j add cracker crumbs, as with the veal,
and moisten with stock. Butter a mold
and line with slices of hard-boiled eggs;
put in the two mixtures- —of ham and
veal—irregularly, so that when it i
cooked it will have a mottled appearance,
press closely and steam one hour. Set
awav to cool, remove from the mold ami
slice before serving. Nice for lunch or
supper.
’ London will have a new Thames tun
nel.
RAM'S HORN RELIGION.
It roaiesses a Kills That Is Entirely Un
mistakable.
T ITTLE trouble^
I V He the mOB I I
tl deadly.
r/ —'I The right kind
JSa sugar never
/ Love is alway!
ffdlu willing to be
V crucified.
V Faith is the
’ X 1 YL-, real basis of joy
J/Zpi) in religion.
* iW s - " TnEdevilloves
L/q) J a quarrelsome
Christian.
A lie is the devil’s best attempt to
ward creation.
Never go round a sin. fetriko it
square in the face.
The devil never gets tired of watch
l irig the cradle.
No mam ever lost his religion by trust*
| iDg God too much.
Theology alone, is a poor thing to
take into the pulpit.
There is no such word as light in
the blind man’s dictionary.
When the world can’t understand a
man it calls him a crank.
Every life is a voice, speaking either
| for Christ or against Him.
The man who is not afraid of little
1 sins is the man the devil gets.
The devil never asks anybody to go
I all the way homo with him.
One blind man can easily j>rove to
| anot her that there is no sun.
Till 1 devil is in trouble when he finds
a man who loves his work.
Love is the only thing that can
lighten burdens by adding to them.
It is remarkable how liberal a con
gressman can bo with garden seed.
If you want to make Satan tremble
resolve to be a happy Christian.
The ’devil’s best time to make hay is
when Christians are not busy.
Quit Everything Else-
S. S. S., is the only permanent cure for contagious blood
Taint Old chronic cases that physicians declare incurable;
are cured in every instance where S. S. S., has had a fair
trial.
I honestly believe that S. S. S., saved
my life. I was afflicted with the very
worst type of contagious blood poison
and was almost a solid sore from head
to foot. The physicians declared my
case hopeless. I quit everything else
and commenced taking S. S. S. After
taking a few bottles I was cured sound
and well.
1 hos. B, Yeager, Elizabethtown, Ky.
90T DOWN WITH HIGH PRICES.
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ffjAMi Over 1,000 Articles akSW
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\ LIBRARY
Write at once for Catalogue. J * ——
Send Stamp* and mention goods wanted. 111— —I——J
THE LUBIJRG MANUFACTURING CO. PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Dri»r. A lU.-J, Nos, -'{•-i.T. J«5 North Mh Street.
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Cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cramps, Summer Complaint
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Take no *ul>»litntr. It l*a* no niiial. VuiirdriigKist or merchant will order it for you.
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■n the treatment of catarrh of the head
' and throat and lung troubles, Send for
pamphlet free describing the new treat
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71<» Hroadway, New Xork.
o 'NSMITHDEALtn r7r* *eu t,
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COLLEGE. Richmond. Va.
I triulUliO
lltird t |l2 a. to l ce-s*h*-n I"u |Cvt jouriuon«T
huulrn. Klir. L
There’s a patent medicind
which is not a patent medicine
! —paradoxical as that may
sound. It’s a discovery! the
golden discovery of medical
science ! It’s the medicine fox'
you—tired, run-down, exhaust
ed, nerve - wasted men and
women; for you sufferers from'
diseases of skin or scalp, liver
or lungs —it’s chance is with'
I every one, it’s season always,
because it aims to purify the'
fountain of life —the blood—-
upon which all such diseases
depend.
The medicine is Dr.
Golden Medical Discovery.
The makers of it havd
enough confidence in it td
sell it on trial.
That is—you can get it front
your druggist, and if it doesn’t
do what it’s claimed to do, you
I can get your money back/
every cent of it.
That’s what its makers call
taking the risk of their words. 1
i
Tiny, little, sugar-coated
granules, are what Dr. Pierce’s
! Pleasant Pellets are. The best
Liver Pills ever invented; ac- 1
tive, yet mild in operation;’
• cure sick and bilious head
aches. One a dose.
)
|
1 ; Am. N. LT. - - No. 23, 1891.
.„ , | .I, i rnmmmmmmmd
Send for our
new book on
constitutional
or Blood
Diseases,
mailed free.
The Swift
Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
; X 8 EWJS’ 98 % LYE
jßjk B Powdered and Perfumed.
BRgLsalf ch (patented.)
strongest and purest I.yemade.
■kStA /A-'lakes the best perfumed Hard
’•Soap in - Jominutes without boiU
*o;/. It is the best for softening
water, cleansing waste pipes,
yfeg disinfecting sinks, closets, wash-
SB ing bottles, paints, trees, etc.
IL PENNA. SALT MFG. CO.,
' en Agents, Phila., Pa.
TTT? A T TIT calendar sTiTif
XXXjft Xj XXI i tnr each day of *o/. :tOo,
rn wit. m!! nuil for in.. etc . to< loot. *SO,MM in
use iie«i£tie<| lot the tuiis.es .< nuumii at!
1891 Cook Book
<«inr OWiaaMHMBJrt »««« 1 MlH'«*horo, Vt.
BAGGY KNEES «
a . . j\ stu j»-iit* at iiorvord, Amherst. mid
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