{ title: 'The News gatherer. (Macedon, N.Y.) 1888-1918, August 12, 1893, Page 7, Image 7', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031562/1893-08-12/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031562/1893-08-12/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031562/1893-08-12/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031562/1893-08-12/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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-t£tta42%\ »i>L-.*V,, - -31-' i i'vi' 1» now recognized as tl c ttimdard nxln grcnin' >f tbo U.S.j-.is told'in e>ery Si nfc'imd county; to Ibo Union\ nnd la to-day itithavtarlvat. im- tatlons have been mnde, nil ela mini; to he as rood as thii FrSzer, thus virtually, admitting U'suporlorlty. 'Every eenu1no\]>ackiii;e'beara lie trade mark. Dealers nn 1 consumers caD Ihus distinguish the genu! 10 from tho imita tion, and pr itcot thoinselv .-B ai .-n.lnst frdud. A veteran of 02 years at^Albany,' N, Y., it- learing a farm. Wo Cure JCupinre. No rnnlttr • ( how Ions standing. Wrlto tor free treatise, totliuon'als etc., to S. J. Bollcnsworth & Co.,0\vego, Tioga Co., N. Y Price SI: by mail. Sl.la. Carp and\ecl don't move 30 much as a tin Jl winter. , Students, Teachers (male or female), Clergy- wen and others in nietl of change of employ- cent, should not fall to wrlto to IS. F Johnson t Co., Richmond, Va. Tbolr- great\ sueciM ihows that they have got the true Ideas about caking money They can show you how to imploy odd hours profitably. The first ninimrncturins enterprise in America WHS a gloss factory at Jamestown STa. W. n. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes: \Suffered with Catarrh for Ufteen years, Hall's Cilarr'i tJire cured )«».\ Sold hy Drug.. A resident of Uartoit county Mo., has a renrd seven feet I ng. Beccham 'B Pills aro better than mineral wa ters, lieecham'a—uo others. 25 cents a box. The score of a baseball game at Brenhem Tel., was 111 to 11. Sore throat cured at onco hy Hatch's Qnl- foraal Cough Syrup. 2o cents at drusslsts. V N U 3 1 \August Flower\ I used August Flower for Loss of vitality and general debility. After taking two bottles I gained 69 lbs. I have oold more of your August Flowef since I have been in business than any other medicine I ever kept. Mr. Peter Zinville says he was made a new man by the use of August Flower, recommended by me. I have hundreds tell me that August _F]9Wer has done them more good than any other medicine they e\ - er took. G KORGE W. D YE , Sardis, Mason Co., Ky. ® • An agreeable- TAxativo »naKrnvE T ONIC, Bold by Druggists or sent by mail. 25c, 60c and $1.00 per package. Samples free. VA tlf\ The Favorite TOOTH POTDIS A.V Hw*orthoTcelhand Breath,S5o. 4 I 'M*. Top Surrrj.M? uulecll ALL '-I50 RoidWaeon J2S compel I tor*. UG Road Cart..18-21, Uuy oTfac-f BugryIIarnfcaBf3.8e lorr and »»e v llOBuecy\** $4.7ft Middleman's / tSOTeam \ I1S .CO nroflU K, MoriranSaddlell.ee n«*tf>i:uerrte. U. S. BUGGY dV CART CO. 01 S. l,awrrnco St., Cincinnati, 0, iWonderful Patch Plate A new and HCIUII rifle pt Inclplc for turn ill ns Tin. HrnKK, Copper, Iron unci Lent).without the uf»c ol itctil or IMII itc/.Inc iron. One plate costing 15 cents will mriul 100 urdlunry U-nks, which would cost to repair at any tinsmith's trnm 5 to 10 cents ojich, Price 15 cnttn, £ for 'J5 crnts. Anyone* can u#m It, Full directions with each iiuta AddrcmTlIB PATCH PLATE CO., 1614 SuHciuctianna Ave., I'll Mn lU'lpl.lrt. Pa. MARIETTA COLLEGE. Academy of Marietta College. Marietta College for Women. Poll term In all departments begins Sept. 12th. Forcatalogucs and lnfurmntlnn, address rrrn.JOJIN W SI.HI'SON. Marietta, O. SEELET'SH ARD RUBBER ^RUPTURE. bend for Mechanical TraonTent of ituptQro find Price List.\ Address LB.sm.BT Jt CO., « S. llt b St., rhlladelpltU^P*. TRUSSES MARRIAGE PAPER Rent* want correspondents GUNNELS' MONTHLy , TOUEDO, OllIO . nniTBT 011001^^ tor FREE Circular. • Ill I tit bUntU J.N Kleln.HellevlUc.N.J. $75.00 To 0 cam be made monthly working tor B. F. Johnson & Co, No. 3SonUi 11th St-.Rlchraond.Ta DeXot Be De«»iT«d with Putes, Enamels and PalnU which stain the hands, Injure the Iron and burn red. * The Hiring *un Store Polish la Brilliant, Odor- lets, Durable, sod the consumer pars for BO tin or gtaaa passu** with ersrr rint M« '.'SUMMER&SONG.T- - r r -To]41ie'fricndiy.\summerbtooze- • ^Ndd'tho' bnuicliel ot'tho nrecs j Fenthcfod singers nil dhy long , ^CarolfortirHjoyoiis'song; Bees and butterflies so:gay _ To'tlie Dowers tbelr visits pay; , , Nature, liTher* sweetest voice,' ~~ Seems to bldus all rejoico. ' God Is good. Hound tho margin of tho lako Endless flights tbo swallows take, - And Irom many it neighboring bush Sing tho robin and tho thrush. In the fields the ripening grain - Bids us to'givo tlinnks ngnin ; Ear and cyo filled with delight Teach us breach sound nnd sight- God Is good. —Walter Barber, in the Independent. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort nnd improvement and lends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. Tho many, who live bet ter than others nnd enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by inoro promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tho remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its ejcellence is duo to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, tbe refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ntivo; effectually clennsing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and$1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also, the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. THE OUTCASTS. NARROW strip of mingled beach and dune, un evenly broker; by sparso veg etation' nnd the decaying frjme of a deserted building juts southwnrd from Watch Hill. Even in midsum mer the spectacle is forbidding; and when a Jan uary northenster piles the waves of the Atlantic in slanting ranks against the beach, in tho closing honrs nnd half lights of a cloud-walled nfternoon, the sight is inexpressibly wintry and bleak and depressing. On that raw January afternoon the folk of tho life saving station were snugly within doors, as a mnn Bhnbbilj ' and insufficiently dressed shuffled down the wind-swept Hill, passing the east- ermost hotel, crossed a sandy drive way, skulked under the lee of a row of weather beaten bathhouses, and struck hastily southward down the little nar row strip or cape. As the full sweep of the wind borno in from tbe open Atlnntic caught him he shivered weakly and wrapped more tightly about his neck the onds of a soiled colored hand kerchief. Our American word \tramp\ best describes his appearance. Gaunt, unshaven, ragged, disreputable, slink ing, he showed the main indications of having fallen behind in the march of our civilization. His shiftless and dirty aspect had for years at once in spired the aversion and excited the hos tility of honest citizens. Such as he was, the vagrant pro ceeded with a feeble insistence along the dune with a furitivo air, as if even iu that unoccupied place ho suspected the presence of those who would warn him off the premises. Soon ho sham bled down from the dry snnd of the low ridgo t o the shingle on its inner or western boundary. As he descend ed the sun began to pierce tho sombre cloud wnll which hnd cast a lifeless gloom over tbe afternoon. Tho thin ning bantls of aerial vapor presently broke in several places; tho crumbling edges melted into shreds and draperies of gold, lemon and eannry, and us the Bun'fi rays gained wider domination the yellow tones deepened into crimson and light purple. Remnants of the wall drifted away ns islands of gray floating in spaces of crimson and lemon. Rays straying down ux ^on the water tipped the surf with a warm glow and flecked the further brine with gleamingjewols cf light. Other rays falling upon tho Eands lighted them with 11 frobtly bril liance ; abend, in the middle distance, they softened tbe decaying rafters of the old building, which had previously stood out bleak and gray against a wintry sky. For pome minutes the creature stum bled clumsily forward. Thou he sat down upon n timber half buried in tho snnd, pud, resting na c)bo;yfl 'l.ftjineo nnd his chin onH hand gazeiT fixedly westward out over the water. As he sat a band of yellow light traveled down the hill nnd nlong tho cape, ere long reaching tbo rngged creature nnd bathing him in its chcerfnl glory, nnd playing upon a fnce which misforture, hardship and degrcdntion hnd not been able to rob entirely of tho traces of gentle breeding, or to deprive alto gether of the ennobling influence of a generous though weak nature—one which in other times nnd other places might have brought to its possessor good citizenship, worldly prosperity and peace of mind; or perhaps mipht have fallen before sudden trial. Daylight was now rapidly paling. Ae the vngrnnt reached the worn threshold twilight wns closing in, anil as he swept earth and air and water with a blurred and lengthened f^izo tho upper run of the sun sank behind the uplands .of Westerly Just as he passed into the shadowy hallway an other human outcast showed upon the erect of the hill and a moment later be ^nn to descend toward tho littlo cape. Tho interior uf tho building w;qO even more dismal than the desolate ex terna - . Sand had drifted in piles against the wainscoting. Scraps of dry i-taweed fluttered across the warped floors. Through eroviceu in walls tho wintry winds complained at. times thrilly, more commonly monot onously. -Brokeu sashes rattled. Oc casionally a lintel or a jamb groaned fantastically. Once n brick fell down the .draughty chimney. Tho house niightOiavc teemed to bo the forgot ten, monument of a life long since dead. Entoring the nearest room tho tramp knelt boforo a hearth, and -producing a knife from hjs pocket mechanically and absently whittled into shavings and splinters four or fivo small sticks which had laic, half covered, in a pile of ashes on the itreplncc. Apparently ijonsing hiraseif from a'reverie he rose, searched th «vroom and returued with a few scrax.-s of paper, a handful of dry seaweed and, some worm-cntcn boards. -These combustibles he heaped together on the hearth and fenced iu.arowof clam sholln. Then he lighted n match nnd soon was warming himself at a brisk fire. A few minutes later ho felt in an inner pocket and took out a small package wrapped in a pieco of newspaper. Theu ho looked steadily nt tho heart of tho firo nnd abandoned himself to reverie. Harkl That sound did not como from the sen,\nor from tho wind, nor from tho tvnlla ^Jior from the fire. It carce from outsit tho ,outer door— jind now from the* iall. It wns tho \Yes was'-thejrjepjy. \Yes Frank, for I must^Qspnt.'.of.yonr'life forever, to BtarG\ 1 ydfi .Bn'.your new life. Go now. Go to\ the station -for the night. I ruined •yoitr.'f.life, but now let me bless ft.\ ^ The man' citught at her Inst, words. \Yes .Corn,\ he cried; ['you .can bless it.'' I will go onI<one condition.\ ' 'On one condition ?\ r' \That you go with me.\ \That I go with you?\ Then as sho more fully understeod, she said, badly: \That is not to be. I would give my life to help you, but I should only be a drag on you if I went, and— and—you could not obtain nil that I hnvo jnst wished for -you. I shonld be a drag while you are,earnings suffi r cient money—\ \ 'Jloney,' \ ho interrupted. \I do not need money. I heed you farmoro than money.\ As he spoke ho rndoly tore open the newspaper package, dashed the powder 'within down on tho crazy floor, and rubbed his half shod feet through tho littlo whito pile. \I need you far more,\ he insistently shouted. \Look nt this!\ as he pointed an index flngor at a short paragraph around which showed a blurred pencil marking.. His companion looked and read aloud: mncertam.iootsteps'ot' ft human jbemg. And \t\^e^noy ^^&ij^ih ^B ^adijncJB of tjhp'fijrelfgn't^M^ -whose treaqhe\ryjhad \i6olate 'd'him from ambiti6n-'arid\faith^n human.kind, and hail Jea .-yater.'-'to^'h^ from compuiionsbip. '^tl^self-* respecting men.; - Here' oven in..tliiij.solitude, his .X)ast.h'ad cpine t o bini; > - \Coral\ he gasped iri;feeblojvmaze- ment, mingled with impotent \wrath. His memory traveled back fonr years until he saw, as in a dream, this woman and himself-lovers,. young, jortunato. In his discrept mind ho recalled tho July evenings when ,thoy had.^strolled together in the moonlight on \the same beach. Ina broken way ho thought of the afternoon when she had scorn fully tossed back to him his \ring not a stone's throw from this wretched building. Bewildered, crushed, he had since drifted whither his weak nature carried him, and had not from that day seen her ; had seldom heard of her. \Cora!\ he called again, and more thinly; and then ho found himself sob bing in her arms. Tho woman smoothed and soothed him as she might a child. Presently she put back her straggling hair from her sunken cheeks and said : \How was it, Frank, that yo u camo here?\ \I was tired of everything—overy- thing,\\\was tho reply. \I thought that I would come back here to die.\ \Poor old boy! Poor Frank I So you wished to end it, too.\ The two mused for a time, staring motionlessly at the fire, each pursuing the track of a wasted life. After some minutes tho man said : \I had thought you rich, beautiful, courted and—and married, dear. 1 had thought of you as a proud and happy wife, with rosy children, per haps, at your knee—a child yourself of fortune and health. I had thought j-ou tho brilliant and petted favorite of your oldtimo circle. You know, dear, how I idqlized you in those days, and how I surrounded yo u with the glory of youth, beauty and gayety. But-you thijew me away and broke my heart—or what I called my henrt, for my nnturo was too weak to have n manly henrt. I never was worthy of you, Cora.\ \Poor old Frank! you put the blame on yourself, when it was all m y fault, wicked, wicked girl that I was,\ tho woman wailed in a monotonous minor as forceless as her companion's words. \I was dazzled by his attentions and gavo you back your ring when you showed jealously. And I have had nothing but misery since the end of that summer.\ Tho fire was burning lower. A chill was creeping into the room. The sec ond wanderer rose, shut the door to tho room, and asked^ \You haven't a drop of something warm about you, have you, Frank?\ \Yes was the response, as the man produced a glass flask. \Take it nil.\ \I'll save half for you.\ \Oh I've something else.\ Tho man pointed to tho pnekago, tied up in newspaper, which he had laid upon the floor after lighting the fire. The other at once saw his mean ing and said: \Share it with me, my poor, poor boy. Thoro surely is enough there for two.\ \If you wish it, Cora.\ \Whe n the last board In the fire falls we will each take half of the pow der. There is no place in the world for either of us. Our families wish us dead. We have no money, no true friends, no protection—not even hope. And wo have done it all ourselves.\ ***** * Five minutes later the board fell. As the man wns oxtending his hand to grnsp tho package, the woman bound ed to her feet. \Wait she cried, in a voice ting ling with healthful excitement. \This is all foolishness—worse, crime. Cir cumstances and I are responsible for your sitffennj;-, but you aTono, you, yourself, would b6 i'dSponsiblo if you committed the unpardonable crime. If j-ou swallowed that poison, Frank, you commit tho weakest act of your life. Go to the life-saving station for tho night, get work to-morrow and forget the wicked girl who started you on your downward path, but who now starts you on your retrieval.\ \It is too late.\ \What nonsense. You are scarcely twenty-six. You still have your life before you. Think what hope there is in that. Think how_solomn self- destruction is. Think, Frank. You now have tho knowledge that I did not marry him, that I have always loved you, you alone. That must be some poor consolation to you. Take that with you—or, better, forget me—go back to tho world, earn enough to carry you to some Westkrn town, and build up your future in some wonderful Dakota or \Montana place. Marry, Frank, and with bright children to bless you, your life will yet be all that even I could wish for you. Go, Frank.\ Sho was now endeavoring to push him toward tho door. But tho vagrant thrust her-back as he asked: Aud lenve you hero?\ jrlves $50,000 to the Chicago Unlvcrity, and leaves tho remainder, SQme $200,000, to the hoir-at-lnw, a nephew ol thosiiino name, II he Is still living. The rei duary legatee some lour years ago mystoriously disap peared from nn Eastern summer resort, and was thought to have boen drowned, but M no direct proof of this could be found hie uncle refused to accopt that view. - I n case nothing is discovered of tho'logateo in three years, making up the customary seven years tho property will go to oertain charities. \I saw this yesterday at Stoning- ton,\ explained Frank Ames. \Bui what meaning had it for me then? I had lost ambition and hope because 3 thought I had lost you. I marked the paragraph, bought some arsenio and wrapped i t just over tho paragraph. Then I started >for this, ruin to end my ruined life hero. But that is all ovei now. We will start for the station now and go to a justice of the peace in tho morning. Como! I cannot live without you. You only can persuade mo to live, and I will live only on the condition that you marry mo to-mor row morning.\ -HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. THE WAT. TO PUT. The ordinary process of frying is rarely understood. Food is 'made greasy and often indigestible because the fat is not as hot as it should bo and the pan not deep enough. The fat must bo smoking hot—about 400 de grees Fahrenheit. \ Experience will Soon teach a cook that the required tomperature is reaehed when a hit of bread browns in a few seconds if placed in thp kettle. A thin coating is thus made on oysters, croquettes, or whatever is being fried, and all tho juices and flavors aro kept within, tho fat outside not being ablo t o penetrate it. —St. Louis Star-Savings. Just as old Sawyer, senior of the rising firm of Sawyer, Barr, Levy A Bar-well, was rising from his desk on the following day t o go down t o the Palmer House for _ lunch, his freckly office bo y tapped at hiB door and came in with a telegram. Mr. Sawyer some what petulantly toro open tho enve lope, glanced at the few words within, and said t o tho waiting Mercury of the office: \Tell Mr. Replevin that I want to see him.\ \Replevin ho said, as that olerlt entered, \I have found Frank Ames. File this telegram under 'Ames.' I will be back in twenty minues. That's all.—Daniel D. Bid well, in Godey's Magazine. The Ynnilln. Among climbing plants it would naturally be supposed that some of the orchid family would develop in that direction, and we have a most striking example in vauilla. That there are not moro scrambling vines in tho order ie probably due to the fact that few or chids can endure tho intense glare above the tree tops. Tho vanilla, how ever, with its thick leaves and stems, is specially adapted for such a position. Unlike other climbers, it has no long. tap root, but is often cut off from tho soil, and is really nn elongated epi phyte. A small species grows below the canopy of tho Eta palm in the midst of tho swamp, and here any con nection with the soil is impossible. Vanilla is the only true climbing genus, but there are signs here and there of a move in the same direction by otherB. In eomo of the Dendro- 'biums, norial roots and new shoots are produced at the end of the long stems, which in congenial situations enablo the plant to raise itself to a higher po sition, nud thus virtually become scan- dent. Again Zygopetalon rostratum at taches itself to growing trees and rises with them to a considerable height. Unlike the vanilla, it has a hard stem like oxtens on, to which pseudo-bulbs and leaves aro attached at intervals of about a foot. The lowest arc withered, but further up they are moro fresh, while the topmost buds aro those of tho current year, now TO CLEAN TJTX-NSTLS. The European way of cleaning cook ing utensils is one of the practices Americnns could import without dnnger to their institutions. The tins nnd pans nre boiled in strong sodn and water, then scoured with solution of oxalic acid and flue- snnd, and iinallyj rinsed with clear water. The result is a delicious cleanliness and a shining exterior. To clean cane-bottomed chairs, turn thein upside down and wash the cane work with hot water and a sponge, using soap if it is very dirty. Let them dry in the open air or in a draught, and tho cane will become as tight and firm as when new. To clean enamelled wear used finely powdered pumice stone. To remove grease spots from the range, rub with a soft rag and a littlo paraffine. Clean sinks with boiling water and strong soda. Never scrub oilcloth, but wash it with a soft rag. Use neither hot nor very cold, but lukewarm water, and no soap. Powdered charcoal is tho best cleanser nnd purifer of glass bottles in which milk or food has been carried. To clean papier macho nrticles, wnsh them with a sponge nnd cold water without soap, dredge with flour whilo damp and polish with a flannel. Tho result is a loug string, often ex tending six or eight fivt up the tree, nnd branching to the side if more light can be gained in that direction. It is never attached to tho soil in any way, and is therefore truly epiphytal, gain ing an advantage ovor others by chang ing its position for ono moro congenial when necessary. Under cultivation it appears to givo up this climbing habit, probably be cause tho conditions are unfavorable to its continuance. All these climbers appear to have been doveloped from rock plants, aud they may be comparod with tho Rtrawberry and other stoloni- ferous plants rather than ordinnry vines.—Longman's Magazine. prturr SYRUPS. A storo of fruit syrups is a delight ful addition to the preserve closet, and surrjlus fruit can be used in no better way. Remove the hull from strawberries nnd pick over, without washing, if tho berries are free .from sand or grit, half a dozen quarts of ripe berries. Put them into a double boiler or a large stone jar, stood within a pan of boiling wnter, add half thoir bulk of sugar, that is, one pint for each quart, and heat slowly for an hour or longer until tho berries are soft. Put into a jelly bag and leave them for two hours or more until the jmce has completely drained out. They must not be squeezed. Put this juice into a sauce pan, heat it to 200 degrees Fahrenheit and keep it at this temperature for one hour. It is best to use a thermometer, but if this is not at hand heat the juice until it steams, but do not allow it to boil, as this destroys tho flavor. It can then bo bottled and sealed for future use, nnd will keep indefinitely. It is nnd bear flowers. | important that it should remain at C HICAGO , Jan. 22.—Tho will of Franois Ames was admitted to probate to-d«v. The Poetry of Motion. The moving machinery of a horso, says the Newark Call, is a very com plicated one. The muscles of tho limbs that lift the legs and move them forward aro numerous, and there is no way that it can bo told whether or not a horse will koop his logs well under him and move these easily and grace fully. So much depends upon a horse's system, as to whether ho will put lire and energy into his gait, that tho for mation alone, be it ever so symmetrical, cannot givo a guarnnteo that ho will have an ngilo step. It is harmony of action combined with a dogree of ner vous energy, even excitably, that com pletes the makeup and action of the horse that all turn from other objects to gaze upon. There is a species of attractiveness in that sort of motion that rivets tho attention of all passers, even thoso that ordinarily pay little attention to horses. It does not re quire size to mako this sort of a horse. Carrying up well, as such animals gen erally do, they look larger by far than they are. Such animal, moving past with head and tail up, is a very de ceiving object.- Of all tho exhibitions of cquino grandeur there is nothing equal to tho display that can be, made by an elegant young trotting-breod horse when ho is showing himself with out restraint and ijus.t as the animal buoyancy of his animal spirits promptp ,hiW H6w *-a 'horse must bo formed to move in the manner.-- stated is some thing that cannot bo-fully designated. The most experienced'horsemen will not give an, opinion on^ a horse's gait nntil'thoy see him move. They form no opinion from the formation while tho hprso is standing still, .simply-be cause they cannot. A man, it is true, may form a correct opinion as to what a horso with certain peculiarities will do when he moves off. Thus, a horse with straight back cannot be graceful while in motion becauso he cannot get his feet well forward in action;. but no estimate of his motion which will not vary can be formed until the horse moves off- Burled in (Julcksnutl. 0. R. Mettonay, a farmer who lived near Winimao, Ind., met a dreadful fato the other day. Ho went out to drive up a herd of oattle, and, being in a hurry, undertook to drive them' across a marsh near his home. They marsh is composed' of bogs and quick-] sands, and Mr. Mettonay, his horse and; forty head of cattle, sunk in the sands and were buried' out\ of sight.—Now' Orleans Picayune. \ ~ * the above temperature for an hour, in order to complete the process of steril ization. Grape syrup may be made in the samo manner, and furnished a most healthful- and acceptable drink for well and sick. Currants will require three-fourths of tho bulk of sugar. Raspberries, blackberries, peaches and apricot sy rup are all niado in the same way as the strawberry syrup. To use, dilute the juico with cold water, or soda water, in the propor tion of one-half juice to ono of water, although these proportions may bo varied.—American Agriculturist. A»»*i/-^-f'.» VK—T*lf V WAR M WEATHE R - DISHE S FO R LUXCH E )N. Galantine of Breast of Veal—Bone a breast of yiun g veal, spread out flat over a boartf; trim tho meat at tho ends for an inch or two, so that the skin will hang over; tnko tho scraps of meat, a quarter of a pound of veal cutlet, and a slice of unsmoked fat pork, chop fine and season with salt, pepper ,tv littlo minced thymo and pars ley, with dash of spice. Mix with half a pint of chopped beef tongue (cold boiled), and half a dozen olives. Form this dressing in a mass, roll tho veal around it and sew it together: wrap in a cloth and tio with tape to keep in shape. Put in a braising pan, pour in a quart of stock, and cook six hours. Take up, let cool unwrap and 6lice thin. Garnish with olives and square off as pie jelly. Chanfroid of Chicken—Boil a fat, young chicken; out up into neat points; take off tho skin ; dip each pjeco in bechamel sauce: set on ice half an hour. When well set arrange on a dish with chopped aspec; garnish with narrow strips of cucumbers and boiled beets, pour half a pint of May onnaise, and serve very cold. Iced Cheese Sonfflies—Grato one and a half ounces of cheese; Parmesan is best. Whip half a pint of cream and a gill of aspec jelly to a froth ; stir in the cheese; season with salt, cayenne and a little mustard. Fill small cases with the mixture; grate cheese over the top, and set on ico until iirni. . Eggs n la Creole —Takoadozen fresh eggs and cook in buttered molds. Take from the fire and let cool ; slice off the whites at one end of each when perf eotlj- cold; take out the .yolks care fully so as to preserve the Bhape. , Mix with a tablespoonful of chopped truf fles , a littlo pepper and salt, and put back in tho whjtee. Dip the eggs in aspec jelly; set on ice until cooled, and dip again. Set in a dish 011 a lied of fresh lettuce leavcR , drop a lea- spoonful of thin Mayonnaise on each egg. Set on ice until very cold. Olive Sandwiches—Stone a dozen olives; chop them fine; add an ounco of butter and a littlo cayenne; mix and spread on slices of buttered bread; trim neatlj- and arrange on .a dish, and garnish with lemon. Chicken Fingers—Cut thin slices from the breast of a cold roast chicken; cut each slice in narrow titrips; dip in Mayonnaise sauce; arrange four strips on each slice of buttered bread; cover with top slices and cut in four narrow strips, lengthwiso; fold oaoh slice in wax paper; pilo on a napkin and servo.—Courier-Journal. Europe has 06,320,000 fawurs; tho United StateH, 9,000,000, . ^Dji9*ftl% PreTMtatjT*. An •zpcrienced pbyaici &a U credited: By the Western Rural with the following gratuitous! proscription, faithful uee ot which, he avert, would* d o away -witti, dyspepaia elevoa times out of twelro: \People not habitually great cater* ire guilty of serious isdiecretion in the time and mannoi of taking food.' Half the people I know haro violent, attack?* of indigestion because they persist in eating .hearty inoals when'in nn exhausted condition. Tbey seem-never ablo or willing to realize that there aro timet when the ayitem ,11 in . no fit stnto to grapple with 4 full meal. They come In tired and hungry, almost ravenous, not thinking that maybo a good deal of what' they consider hunger is gastric irritation, then sit down to a table and overtax the already strained vital powers. As a rule no person should eat when very hungry. The wise thing to do is to drink a cup of water with three or four tnblespaontuls of milk in, alt down five minutes and then begin slowly to eat and eat very sparinclv.\ Just So; JuitSo. Tho subtlo lino dividing genius and Insanity is so dcllcaio that in many In stances it oannotbe dollnoU, it can only lw folt. 1 von the deep researches of physiological-psychology nro unablo to designate principles on which tho judg ment oan depend for logical deductions on the subjoct, and the searching analy ses and arguments ol many erudlto studonts and philosophors are as incom prehensible and moanlngloss to the or dinary mind as tho vain vaporings of a mind unhlngod.—New York Moil and Express. RICH RED BLOOD !\.roV-f. t of d «**V less of tut links, consti pation and ps>or clronW tiori of the blood. Hood's)' Sarsaparllla hunorlTnL. i[y blood ITM In very poor condition. Sine* tukinir Hood's S*rsstp«r- lln I have (tood.riob, rs4 blood,i\ntl do not blo»t»s). I used to Hood's Sarso- uurllls. has proved it* merit to me as it will to all who talc* it fsir. ly.\ M RS. M. P. T OM*. Niantlo, Ct. HOOD'SSARSAPARILLA CURES. II O«« V B Pills Cure Sick Uoadacbo. 33 ccutj. Wolllnp Nntcr In an Envelope. \ : \ify wife and I,\ saya a travolinj maD, \were onco in a hotol where w» couldn't get any boiling wator. Aftor we had discussed the situation my wife asked me if I had an onvclopo in my - satchel. I got ono out, when she tdd mo to till it with wator and bold it over\ tba gns jot. I hesitated, but finally did it, and expected to sea the envelop* bluze up every moment. But it didn't bliize. Tbo envclopo took- on a little- soot but that was all. Tho water boilocs iu time, aud tho envelope wns as good at ever wlion the experiment waa.at an end. I don't know the chemistry of tho pro* cess, but try it yourself and see if rk •will not work.\—Chicoco Herald, George m. was the only British so-f oreign whose reign wns longer thaa Victoria's. Victoria has occupied tho throne fifty-six years, and George TJ0L occupied it sixty. At Chicago Royal Leads All. As the result of my tests, I find the ROYAL BAKING POWDER superior to all the others in every respect. It is entirely free from all adulteration and unwhole some impurity, and in baking it gives off a greater volume of leavening gas than any other powder. // is therefore not only the purest, but also the strongest powder with which I am acquainted. WALTER S. HAINES, M. D., Prof, of Chemistry, Rush Medical College, Consulting Chemist, Chicago Board of Health. All other baking powders are shown by analysis to contain alum, lime or ammonia. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. When You Want to Look on the Bright Side of Things* Use SAPOLIO THE KIND THAT CURES MRS. REV. A. J. DAY, | No. E«<!on, N Y. j SCROFULOUS ECZEMA | FOR 20 YEARS! S] 1 D ANA S ARSAPAJMA C O., S I MESflnsr—Mv wife wis born of parent*p>«31*-^E noted to C'O.Vs VM PXXO.V. Six of h>r|fl = brotheri and iliten dlrtl of JLU.VO 1>I.S-=S • EASES. My wife'i health wiiunmutlly good s ^up to the ace of shout 40 yeari; at that tinteH |SOKO F Cr .O US taint manfrcrtftl Ittttf tuthesi •form of ECZEMA , on nearly all p»rt»,of H ICH |bodyt after a time it yielded to the rcmrdlea mcd .|pj gexcept on front of right ihoulder where It haa5= |remained for XO year* with almort Con-BH §ata.nt Irritation and Itching. SIncoming!^ DANA'S ' 1 SABSAPAKIELA I la WEX on her head haa hroVrn and dlKhirgedS = untl] almort entirely gone. *]Jabltual CoJtlvcneiaS jalao(rreatlyreIieTCd. * * £=2 • AV« have heretofore utcd a variety of ronedfciH Iwlth hut little mult, but DANA'S SAllSAl'A-S IRIIXA. hoi proved io effectual in relieving niy S Ewlfe of JHCZn .lf A and NCKOPULAl | In the blood that I mutt aay It la a grand comb!tin- =| Itionof remedial agenta, and that my wlfe'a Rreatg| • improvement la duo to ita power sad the bl cuing Ml f of a kind Providence upon la uie. ~ ' HH _5 I have taken one bottle myielf and And It aS • ^Splcndlil Alterative. 31 Keipectfnlly. REV. A. J. DAY. „ E| PutorM.E.Church,Ko.ZaftoDN..y.H| t • • ...\'I • Only ons Siriaparllla 10U.M1 ths \ NOB SBENEF1T—NO PAY\ plan.' Only ona could j, glstand- the tei>, end that one Is DANA'S. || •jurarx &BSK THIS. m 13 Dana Sarsma'Mla ^n. R««--' CURES RiSSNG .. BREAST :\ \MOTHER'S FRIEND\ offered child-bearing woman. I liavo been a mld-wifo for many years, and la each caso wliero \Mother's Friend\ liadbecnuseditliaa accomplished -wonders and relieved much suffering. It is tbo best remedy for rlslne of the breast known, and -worth tbe price forthat alono. Mas. a. N. HRUSTEn, Montgomery, Ala. Sent by express, charges propald, on receipt of price, $1X0 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Sold by all druggist. A TLAKTA, GA. P A TT^WrG TRADEMARKS. Examination I iV 1 XilJM J O. and advice a< to patentability of Invention, Send for Inventors Ouiate.orbowto get nlpatent PATRICK OTARRELL, .tvlaaisoTox. D.O. DRINK A. ERS,ERMDE THAN ( / LEMONADE. m 4k Direct i ona.—Teat poonful Chtrrr Ambroila ana table- i •poonful iuj»r, mixed -with I either cotd or hot water. Aik | for bottlci at crnceri and drug' girt a. WantrWc. Sci.dG2e. (Quiets lh * tterre*-! iCooIa the-Blood. » IQuenohes TbJtrt.1: JAlda DigeiUoa. Mampi for lample.by tt.ftll, or $1 W lor lwo.We. bottlca, by rxpreai, prepaid,—enough to> make tcveral gallon*. (Hgenti make blj pay with ui.) * FRIHK E, H0USH4C0.235Wash'n sL Boston, Mitt. P N U iil MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS \WITH THOMSON'S! SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS* No tools required. Only A hammer netded t<> drlv*.^ ana c inch th.m eaaiiy and quickly, Ie«rinfc tho cltnata abio'.uuly tmooth. Iti-qulrlng no hole to bc^tnade i» the leather nor Ltirr lor Uie Utvets. Th«y i n «ti to a via and durable. Millions now hi a»*. it - knethi, uniform <r assorted, put up In boxes. Atftc your dritlcr fo r them , or tend 40c. im rtunpi for a boi uf 100, assorted olzeo. Man'fd by JUDS0N L. THOMSON MFG. CO., tFAIsXKAM, \WAS*. £T fRAZER AXLE Bestinthe World! Get the Genuine Sold Everywhere GREASE I A N IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE; • For Indication, BUIouinca*. E Headache, CoM*tI»»Ulon, lia<X £ Complexion. Offenalvo ltreath, | t>nd ail disorders o£ the Stomach, f LlTcraod Bowels. I , RIPAN S Y A RULES t € act gently yet promptly. Perfect idlffeetlon follows their uro. Bold, Sby drugplEtsorKntbymAJI. Box f (ftYla]s)<fic, t I'ackago (4 bores), $3. I For fire Muplcs-adaretw . _ , L lllVASH CHKSaOAL CO., New Tarfcl J IW.i»UMiWMiia»UlOawitin^WMMmil*MIUilaMirtlMfBB>»maaMJKs^»^ If ony one doobta thrt wo can cure the nu*st ob stinate caao la 10 totm dayf lot hJm wr'.tm f>e-- pat lleulars and InrasU- trato our rcliftb Hty, Oux- flntnrl.il backing im- I\.OO.ooo. When mercury. BLOOD POISON | A .SPECIALTY. lodldo potassium, sirsapirlllaor UotBjirlnes Ml, -wm- irojrantcc a euro—«nd oor Undo 'H* 1 '?\ 0 too only- thing that will euro pcrraanonUr. risltlv. proof MM. scaled, freo. Coon lUutxor Co., Cnloigo, IU. F b mt a. BO • BIJO UN AV.JIOHRIS:, l£fllalC/fl|™-Hsiiiii::toii,i >.<7l 3yJ ?Ufc!st 'IT, , MadJadlcattaBClaliaa. attjaluc^ rtso's Remedy for Catarrh Is tlx Dcit, Easiest to Vet, and Cbeapert. CATA R R M \\^H~6oW bydru«Uu.or tent by mail. 0 Ma X ..T. HaulUa*, Warrm, fx;