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HOUSEHOLD MATTERS.
To Dress Vegetables.
"Wash greens thoroughly; pick them
close, for an outside leaf will spoil a
dishful; split the stems of cabbages
across twice. They should be washed iu
a pan, sides as particles wooden of sand or dust hang
to the of vessels. Do.not
pour water on them; draw the water and
then plunge them in; throw into the
water a handful of salt, as that willdraw
out worms or other insects, which can¬
not be seen without pulling the vegeta¬
bles to pieces.
All greens should be boiled by them¬
selves in plenty of water, with a good
lump of salt; the water should boil
when they are put iu and be kept boil¬
ing; they should be well done or they
are unwholesome; a very little soda
put into the water preserves their color.
No directions can be given as to the
time vegetables take for boiling, as much
tain depends on the size and age. To ascer¬
when they are doue pass a fork
through they begin the stem, if soft they are done;
to sink when nearly boiled
enough. through Greens should be strained
a colander as soon as done.—
Detroit Free Frees.
The Lemon Medicinally
Lemonade made from the juice of the
lemon is, according to the People's Friend ,
one of the best and safest drinks for any
person, whether in health or not. It is
suitable for all stomach diseases, excel¬
lent in sickness, in cases of jaundice and
fevers. It is a specific against skin com¬
plaints. The pippins crushed may be
used with water and sugar and taken as
a drink. Lemon juice is the best anti¬
scorbutic remedy known. It not only
cures this disease, but prevents it.
Sailors make daily use of it for this pur¬
pose. I advise every one to rub their
gums healthy with lemon juice to The keep hands them and in
a condition.
nails are also kept clean, white, soft and
supple by the daily use of lemon Instead
of soap. It also prevents chilblains.
Lemon is used in intermittent fevers,
mixed with strong, hot, black coffee,
without sugar. Neuralgia may be cured
by rubbing the part affected with a cut
lemon. It is valuable also to cure warts
and to destroy dandruff on tho head,
by rubbing the roots and of the hair
with it. It will alleviate finally cure
coughs and colds, and heal diseased
lungs, if taken hot on manifold, going to and bed the at
night. Its uses are
more we employ it internally aud exter¬
nally the better we shall find ourselves.
Lemon juice, according to a writer on
good health, is anti-fcorbutic, useful in
removing tartar from the teeth, anti¬
febrile, etc. A doctor in Rome is try
r ing with it experimentally and in malarial that fevers it
great success, thinks
will in time supersede quinine.
Better than Pie.
Good wheat bread and butter, or bread
and cream and syrup, or a little sugar
and good apple sauce, will makrHt dish
superior to any apple pie I ever met with.
Very few cooks know how to make a
pie that will be really digestible in stom¬
achs of ordinary capacity. day, and We usually stew a
few apples nearly every
eat the sauce warm, with bread and but¬
ter. Many times it is impossible to get
good marketable apples, • and which we are
obliged to use “nubbins,” are
scarcely fit for hogs. Yet we make ex¬
cellent sauce out of such very poor fruit.
All tho specks and defects are cut out
with a kuife having a sharp point. Then
the fruit is washed clean and stewed
without peel being such small peeled. trash If one there attempts will be
to
but a small amount of pulp left. As
soon as every part is cooked soft, let the
mass be forced through a collander, or
small sieve. This process will separate
the from the thus a
fair The quality of the sauce skin from poor give apples. the
aroma of will
sauce an excellent flavor. A little nut¬
meg grated into the sauce while hot will
improve Sugar, the little sauce, New for Orleans many palates.
or a molasses,
may be mingled agreeablo with the the sauce if much
sweet is to taste. By
stewing apples in tho foregoing manner
one can use very inferior fruit to a good
advantage when large and smooth apples
cannot be procured. At certain seasons
of the year, we can get nothing but half
ripe stewing India them rubber-like with the apples. Yet by
skins on, and
passing the pulp through a sieve, we
make people a palatable throw dish out of apples that
most away. Then with
good brown bread, or wheaten mush, or
grainlet, we have a dish that is fit to
place before a queen at a royal banquet.
Try it and see if it is not better than pie,
having a tough, indigestible crust.—•
Phrenological Journal.
Recipes,
Carrot Sweetmeats. —Boil some flue
grained carrots in water until tender;
peel and grate, add sugar, slips of cit
ron from > spices if preferred, and the juice
canned fruit; simmer slowly aud
put away in jars,
Tomato Toast. —Prepare a sauce, by
seasoning little strained stewed tomatoes with
a cream, and salt if desired, and
thickening the the same with a little flour,
same as for snow flake toast. Pour
this while hot, over slices of nicely
browned toast, and serve at once.
Strawberry Cream Pudding —Put
one pint of milk in a farina boiler to
scald. Moisten four even tablespoonfuls
of cornstarch with a little cold milk; stir
it into the hot milk, and cook until
smooth and thick; add a half cup of
granulated strawberry sugar, and a half tumbler of
jelly. Beat the whites of
four eggs until very stiff, stir them quick¬
ly into the pudding, and turn out tc
cool. Serve very cold, with sugar and
cream. This is very nice.
Lettuce and Stuffed Egg Salad—
Boil eight eggs for twenty minutes. Cut
them in halves and take out the yolks.
Take two egg-, well beaten, one tea¬
spoonful of dry mustard, three table¬
spoonfuls ful of of sweet cream, one teaspoon¬
salt, one of pepper, two table¬
Boil spoonfuls until of thick oil, and custard, two of and vinegar.
as then
mix with lhs yolks of the boiled eggs.
When cool, stuff the wnites of hard
boiled eggs with this mixture. Serve
the eggs on lettuce leaves.
Peaches and Gelatine. —A delicious
dessert is made of canned peaches and
gelatine in this way; Soak one-half cup
ful of gelatine with a cup of sugar and
a dozen halves from a can of peaches
for one hour, and then pour through on a cup'of boil¬
ing water pass all a strainer.
Be sure to stir it over the tire until all
the gelatine is dissolved. Set it aside to
cool, and when ready to congeal have
ready a cup of rich cream; whip the
cream until light, add a pinch of soda
spoonful and stir it into time. the gelatine Turn quickly, into mold one
at a a
wet with cold water, aud set in a cold
place to harden.
How Horseshoe Nails are Made.
The great bulk of horseshoe nails that
are used in this city,and in fact through¬
out the United States, are manufactured
principally in Cleveland, Ohio, although
some few come from Rhode Island.
Horseshoe nails are now made by
machinery entirely. They are hammered
hot from head to point by a succession
of blows similar to those made by hand.
The machines are day, capable and of turning out
500 pounds be per required any be shaped. pattern
which may can
Tiie nailer can take Swedish iron rods
from a small portable furnace and thrust
them two at a time into the machine,
which rurs at 1000 revolutions a minute
and quickly shows them and dropping shaped out in
into blanks, properly bent hand-made
a style surpassing manufactured. any From horse¬ the
shoe nails ever
forging machine tho blanks are taken,
when cold, to the finishing machine,
which draws the blank out, compresses
it and points the nail ready to drive.
The nails when finished are packed
neatly in boxe* containing from farrier 500 to
5000, and arc usually sold to the
at sixty cents per 100 nails, The in
vention of such nc-\v labor saving de¬
vices are in striking contrast to the time
when horseshoe nails were forged by
hand and straightened out by the
farrier before being fit for use. In those
days the nails used to bring about. 2£
cents apiece .—New York Mull and Ex¬
press.
Electric Plano Playing.
Electricity has been invoked to supply
a substitute for a musical education. By
means of the Stephonium, or “electric of
music interpreter,” Mr. J. C. McGee,
Edinburg, proposes to enable persons
ignorant of music to play the piano The and
other instruments of similar action.
music sheet is placed behind wires
spaced to correspond with its scale, and
each successive note is sounded by
touching the wire over it with a metallic
pointer, which closes an electric circuit,
and strikes the proper bell or string. It
is only necessary to follow the notes with
eye and hand until sheet the piece is down played. the
By sliding tho up or
whole range of notes is quickly trans¬
posed into another key. The Stephonium
may be removed to any distance from
the piano or other source of the musical
tones.
cataurh.
A New Home Treatment 1 for tlie Cure of
Cntnrrh, Catarrh Hay Fever. Dcafii OSS
an
The microscope has proved that these dis¬
eases are of contagious, living parasites and they in are lining duet the
presence brane tho mem¬
of tlie upper air scientists, passages an leustachian
tubes. The eminent i yndall. Hux¬
ley and Beale, be endorse this, and these authori¬
ties cannot disputed. T he regular me hod
of t‘ eating these diseases has been to apply an
irritant remedy weekly, and even d ily, thus
keeping the delicate membrane in a constant
state of irrita ion, allowing it no chance to
heal, and as a natural eonsequ nee of such
treatment not one permanent cure has ev r
bee r recorded. It is an absolute fact that
these diseases anuot be cured by any weeks, applica¬
tion made oftener than once In two for
the membrane must get, a chance to n al
before an appl cat.on ilr. is Dixon repeats di-covered . it is now the
seven years since
parasite in catarrh and formulated liis new
treatment, and since then liis remedy lias be¬
come a household word in every country
where the English language is spoken. Cures
eff cied by him seven years ago are cures still,
there having bee no return of the di-ease.
bo highly are these remedies valued that ig.
norant Imita ors have started parasite, up of everywhere, which
pretendi nothing, g to des by roy remedies, a the results of t the ey
know
application of which they are equally ignor¬
ant. Mr. 11 iron's remedy is applied only once
in two weeks, and from one to three applica¬
tions effect a permanent euro in the most ag¬
gravated Mr. Dixon cases. sends pamphlet describing his
a
new treatment on the receipt of stamp to pay
postage. The address is A H. Dixon & Son,
<104 King street west, Toronto, Canada.—Scien¬
tific American.
ted Bishop for promoting J. H, Vincent, religion a native of Ala., is no¬
among young people
“ Then let the moon usurp the rule of day.
And For what winking tapers show the ceive, sun his way;
my senses can per
I need no reve at on to beTeve.”
Ladies suffering lrom any of the weaknesses
or ailments peculiar to their sex. and who will
U6e Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription accord¬
ing to directions, will expeiie ce a genuine
revelation in the benefit they will receive. It
is a p sitive cure for the most complicated and
obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flow¬
ing, painful prolapsus, menstruation, falling unnatural sup¬
pressions weak back, ‘female or of the womb,
reversion, bearini down weakness,” sensations,chronic anteversion,
ret
con estion. inflammation and ulceration of the
womb, ovaries, inflammation, mpmied pain with and “internal tenderness in
acc heat.”
Most of us eat too much and sleep too little
we read too much and think too little.
Sypher & Co. of New York,the nttonariana, and
are purchasers, at all tim'S, of Colonel
other relics, such as portraits and letters of
the signers of the Decl ration of Indepen¬
dence, Presidents, Genei als and all celebrities
of the period of the Revolution. Also old stiver,
china, furniture an i curious ancle, general¬
ly. Parties desiring to dispose of anything in
the above line would do well to eorresp »d
with that firm. Their address is MSO Broadw ay.
and they were established in 1831.
President Cleveland lias received official no¬
tice from Brazil of the abolition of slavery.
Thousands r.f cures follow Ihe use of Dr.
Sage’sCatarrh Remedy. 50 ee:,ts.
In Denver, Col., five of the richest saloon
men ask that the license be increased to $1,000.
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
' Medical and scientific skill has at last solved the
problem of the long needed medicine for the ner.
vo us, debilitated, and the aged, by combining the
best nerve tonics. Celery and Coca, with other effee.
tivc remedies, which, acting gently but efficiently
on tho kidneys, liver and bowels, remove disease,
restore strength and renew vitality. This medicine ia
a
aines
{unbound
It flu? a place heretofore unoccupied, and marks
a new era in tlie treatment of nervous troubles.
Overwork, anxiety, disease, lay the foundation oi
mnwous prostration and weakness, and experience
has shown that the usual remedies do not mend the
strain and paralysis of the nervous system.
Recommended by professional and business men,
Send for circulars.
Price $I.OO« Sold by druggists.
WELLS, RICHARDSON &CO., Proprietors
BURLINGTON. VT.
ROANOKE
II Cotton and Ha;
Yfll The best and cheapest made.
H a Hundreds in fatter actual than use.
L Bates cotton any
Ml ftOANdKE ^Tahd Out
| WM WOODWORKS Press for circulars. our
ton and Hay Tenn. Box.60
Chattanooga,
SlOO to $300 made "'working for
& SON £££& CO.. 1013 Main st., Itichm nd Va.
Sc . _
HERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL iff&SBS
improvement HERBRAND CO.. Fremont O.
PISO'S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
EXTERNAL USE"/ n. r
And Soreness Resisting from
@s?« L-/ /{Ob 58 te>.
SfJacobs f'rje sfnrqacl] welt wi(fr
Oil: Apply flaij/ie/sfeepEd
in /jot wafer and wruqg ouf.
SOLO BY DRUGGISTS AriD DEALERS.
“'CHA? A.VOGELER C? Baito. Mo.
Lecture on
“ROUGH ON RATS. 1 ’ U
IUI
To Sea ’Tut Bed Rugs, about uux Koosh os Rats
with grease and smear their benzine haunts, and
put a 15c. box of it in a pint of and
BED BUGSSrfira applied. For
crevices wher^rease cannot be
Water Bugs, Beetles, Roaches, nights >vjg/y( . . ■
&c. For two or three Nasis^
sprinkle Koran on Rats dry- .
powder, in, about and down the-^ #j.S
sink,drainpipe. First thing inDECSLCo OCCTl CO >
the morning wash it all away
down the the drain from pipe, garret when tocellar ail J^ m — -
insects —
will disappear. The secret is in —
111 *V A »TCO I EH Dll EUlttw ISO the fact that wherever
insects are in- the
house they must drink during the night. For
Potato Bugs, Insects on Vines, etc., a table
spoonful of the powder, well QA It 11H * ft UFO El E
shaken in a keg of water, and U V
whisk applied with sprinkling Keep it welt pot, spray stirred syringe, 15c., or
broom. up.
25c. and 81 Boxes.—Agr. size. See full direc¬
tions with boxes. - GROUND Gophers, SQUIRRELS, Chipmunks,,
cleared RABBITS, by Sparrows, Rough Rats. See directions.
out on
tesjMgefes E si WELLS, Jersey City, N. J.
GQ M B
TO «
cf
SUCCESSORS H? .*/ pu* e %\ GZAl 93 0*
0 I O WHITE CO M
\\-> H
W m SB
e *£*****¥■ tr
n ©
© ft
a TRADE HARR.
JOHN T. LEWIS & BEOS.,
WAIl It ANTED I’UIIE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange Oil.
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed
- CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
The BUYERS’ GUIDE ia
issued March and Sept.,
each year. It is an ency¬
clopedia, of useful infor¬
mation for all who pur¬
chase the luxuries or the
necessities of life. We
can clothe you and furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at home, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
what is required to do all these things
COMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair
estimate of the value of the BUYERS’
GUIDE, which will be sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & GO.
111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, III.
bo want a good, reliable
ami
a .
s
toaoiua
VUASIC
LViAN’S Patent Combination GUN SIGHT:
40 Per Cent. Bend for
REDUCTION Cutalogne of s
in Price. Sights, Rifles, Ao
Addre« 1VM. LTMAN, illiddleficld. Conn*
DALLAS
of cheap farming lands In the wor d. Population
18S0, 10,338? 5 in 1888, 857 houses 40,703. Will building: have
100.000 in years. progressive city in now Texas, Ex¬
traordinary Largest and inducements most for manufactuicrs de¬
WALLA ; Rail¬
lightful climate. Make 8, the great
way Centre, your objective poiut to visit all por¬
tions of the State, Address
SEC’Y IMMIGRATION ASSOCIATION.
AN. U .Twenty-threo, ' 88 ,
If so, vmfra BROWN & KING“
Manufacturers and Dealers in
Cotton. err:l “fools“ iilill Slymligs.l and Gon-‘ ‘
W roux It ran P floods. e u n I u‘
and Bruls
3‘ 5.330;!) $12. ATLANTA. GA,