Daily News, Volume 2, Number 89, Franklin, Johnson County, 2 December 1880 — Page 3

ILV NEWS

aide

DECEMBER, ?. 1880.

iJoot t0fiic« Bail can.

tr th* Stalls Rod furrier Btther Ornifri a ,BAST. Delivery. CW«S 901b and thro' nut.... «00ajn..iacttitid ©oil* and stations on ffaRailrond.. 7 00 a so.. wU*

and station* on

,U*R»ll»wed,v IJSOain,. *15pre jolie and *utkns OK 7:*)e miaaurod-

Iliinow..,.,, HSOam Jtockjr............ 490bm. 1 and tbro' eaat....

fes on Toieds, Wabash 4s Kera KR. west ef Ian-

W*

and

bed to

Ton

8,

S p*

and tutkmi Railroad.... 490am. dJchlxan, Mitawaotkand 4»p». I WRIST, i* »d tbre' we*t 00 a «.. ISOQmdt ,faa cm Vandal ia RR. and ler» llllaol—* 7 00 a at 130*md Js and we»t....... 490pm..ii00od ****d sia'toos on Tanfn«llro«d 4 90 am,. SO a is cod stations on 1. A lit 490pm. loaoam aad tkre'west....... 4S0pv.. tl5pm and stations aoath on *nrille.fc Yisc^ane* IlH.il 80

1* pm

Si&pn

are.. SIS pa

and utatioa* oa Illinois

fane land

Railroad.

TSSain.

i-f".

90 a at.. 00 pa

WORTH,

.11., (thro* poach), and statleas oa B.

T.

TOOa*

RK

.ltoopn

7fta

I Minnesota, Wisconsin tiorthera Illinois.... go, lawa. Mleklfaa Inesots, Wisconsin aa

IMtn

7Ota at..It00f as

n. id VII X) a ».. 2 .J

31Spm 'Warn

700am.,

•them nilaola.. Mport aad stations oa RR 4 90pm iaaspelis, Deea-

ffaaspert a laniaaa

1 T.

*00 am

Steam 10 00 pm

Itriajfleld RR TOO am ba Toledo, Wabash A RR., eaat OaarUle. T00 a "Okie, Northern Jndltchlfaa and Canada... 7 90 a

.10 00 pm

MOUTH,

lie, Vlaceaaes and fcetoa 700a ranch and Satllraa(lbro' ches).,. TOO am. IS CO aad 1 grille aad stations on E. A A RR 700am. .UOOmdt wiile and atattona on If. ?II. RR.,... 490pm.. 980pm .era Illinois and Western s*. Atucky 4 90 pm..'99Q pm Mfrn Illinois and Western fttacky 00 a m.. 1206 ia (it jlngtoa and stations on a.i.B. E, RK..., 4 90 pm.. 000am

.IfOOmdt

HACK LINKS.

n«tou,f»ralna Creek,Grays '®f*d Pal rbanks.Tnesday, '17 and Saturday 7 00am.. 700am lnd„ Tuc»d»yand Sat4 90 pra.. 100 pm ta I

Tided Into men Curler Districts*

w«:

pn

DiaTMiCT—Pred Trier, Carrier. rlh sld^ of Main utrcct, b«fr»*o«n 0th aaiT7tb its nOrtk from Main Id city limit*, Inclodlnu i*ll«if between 7th and 811 and to the alley 4tl

Sin 4th

5th street*

«ia*

atao,

ffrecitt, north

uiwrnurr—James

Berth

9tli, 9tb ani

of Sd avenne.

0*0OtrrntcT-John Kuppeahetmer, Carrier. 11 south slda of Main street, between 5th and add all territory between 4th and OH alrveta to the City limits, iaclodlnf te tl.c alloy be ft 3d and 4th streets aad to tae alley between "Vod 7f.h streets also7th street sentti of Dem-

ty

Johnson, Carrier,

in noutb aide of Main street, frota the river to »treel, and all territory west of the alley bv-,.-n Sd and 4th streets south to city limits. tram DisratoT—Frank Slblev, Carrier.

side of Main stroot, from the river to

tlreet, sad ah territory weat of the alley be.a 4th and Mk streets, and aortk ta the city ta. sTTfi Dtsrat^T -J'rank M. Mills, Carrier, aeiiorth side af Main street, from 7th to the eannl, betweeu 9th and loth streets, and all 'ttjfcry from the alley between 7th aad 8th streets

H» the Vandalla HR:, north to Sd avenue, and territory north of the Vandolla RR., eaat street to city limits. *xth DiaTBicr—John R. Byera, Carrier,, «w south side of Main, between 0th and 7«i beta, from the alley between 0*

!«nd7tb stroet!', ilns, and all tcr'

to the old canal, south to Doming, and all tcr to city I l^vaNTH DisTktetV'Loals Bagana, Jr., Carrier. ,»uth

eaat en Poplar street and swith toclty limits.

of Main street from 7th east to city

fta, inelttdlng ths north side of Main, eaat of eaiyil

city tlmlta, and all territory wes'

inth street, eaet to city limits from Pop

U»e aoath

to the

rtb.

i*m.

Vandal I* RR. trade

MrClsln, Auxiliary Carrier, whoeednty a to make extra collection and delivery tripa.

a«outaTioxs.)*{

10 mall is collected from street letterboxes on street from 1st te IStk streets, north on 4th to tfry, south oa 4th to Walnat and sonth on 1st oplar, and Ohio atreet 6et eeen 1st and fttb, week day between 8.80and9.90Am, between and 10:90 a m. be twee a 13:110 and tKV) m, eollecttoa Ineiadea to Poplar street on the :v and east to 13th, and nortk to Union tH'pot] |V««n 8:30 aad9 S0 at, between 4:40andl:3i and between 8^30 aad 0'flUpm. All other are collected from twice per day, between oura of 8,*00 aad 10:00 a aad between 4i») :30 m. ere are four deliveries ef mat' per day In the ueM part of tke city: at 7:00 and H:a0 a tu. aad 4:90 also a delivery at 0:00 saeh business houses a* desire It, of bnalness is located between Sd and 7th eta and not more than one square from Main, a Sunday, tbe Post 0®ce Is (open from 9 te SO

Mtk a ta. aad perse&s destriaf their mail out at the windew designated by the number o' carrier. nday collections srti the entire city Is mal tweea 4:90 aad 6:90 m, aad acaia ia the ba&d as part of the city between 9 aad o'clock pa Receiving boxes have been placed oa every ear it of Main street to enable persona residing near to avail themselves of the frequent collection ad* thereon with a very sbart erallt. The attention of the public is called to the great stance each carrier Is obliged to walk, and par living a dlaUact haefc esteo to place botes ii other ceavenleat places as will facilitate the *eanpt delivery of mall. Carrier* are not allowed watt leaser than SO seeoads for aa answer to a and arte* waiting thai

411,

treat doers aria

not all saswt

long

awl receiving no

itiut tout ami recetviMt

lewer, be meet retain the mail aatll tae next deery. (Carriers are obliged to be preaspt, aad to their work quickly, bataader ae circMastaacee helmpellte er dtscearfeoas.aad aavsuck should

Immediately reported to the feet Master. PerMUt owning dog* are warnedtkat asdeeathey keep «M| tied dnrtag the day. carriers will ao4 deliver t'^Vr malU hat they will he obliged to c*JI at th

I*#. If nunes XT

KBVOUJ^DEBII^rTYs OK Aim uritctKn nRsimK, »ADS MARK^ QMT ^.TNAOC MAITK

""irA

1

M.

car* far Stall

ad Weskness, Spermaterrbe*. IMIIVmny^ WWie all mssaseatbat follow

ifiat misi^T ts

Mo. ilMlutak*^ Bissk, Bwtworv. M«ai. DOM ta TAM Haute aad byatt Draggista ewy frWra. "fx .. 1 J»

ft* The S|Mtlin)t Onue.

of

11ft p»

4 90

pm.

*0'-

Spelling their periods, like dkii and monquitdA, aiwl, after U»ssitg awhile in »Us«y mtuitv, auhedde, aovl tlm world relived grateAiUjr in peaifa !U' tie liui«. wUbotit a nmx«juiU-i pI over its head. At inUrvabi for twenty y«usrail sort of huleocu, tj»ota»t«c«hap* wt« held up to public view. Men Parted at the ugl.v pectrra, aod ,w»«Klprinj5 at the mental •raakin«H

ihr v*oni-nwn«U't*» tbey weut

on aaffltttaS, and. taught th«*ir •bikiren. Aftothrr rraxe haa coiuv ovrr the fVuajr broth* rbood. Finding that they taanot beb«*d,bet3Ul aoddi?*»ibwfS every word that hiui a so-called silent letter before, behind, or wiUsin It, they have terroint-d to tluruat in the thin edge of Uw Uaife, by inciting a irtray new* printer to jnirtai! a few unhappy worda at a time, in a hope that the cDiomon-wnse public will Iworne used to the aorry H|ectacte of the ikeletoataetl monstroettica Tbey reason a the sentiment xpmtv-d by I'ope,—

V'lea la a mouaarof aofMcbifel mte« Aa, to b* tuuvd, needs but to be a*«n: YK, aeen too oil, ftunltiar with turr

0m*,'

Wa Ant e»dur*. tbeo pttr.tbto embraoeii

They propose to dtetubowel wich wolda :is head, health,and print them, hed, hclth, t*tc. We prtinime that all worda with ohor ailent letters will in tiraealtare the same fate, and silent become ailnt,—excel lent dwindle to xlnt, ete.

Tltey propose to omit the final letter of aire, have, (rite, etc., ami make them ar, hav, giv. What snappy, staceato words they will become! Wo innocently have imagined there was a xlight, long-drawn, softening, sound-effect given by a Hnal e, like the ctwlence of an orgau-note but the refortnere seek to knock ail the political eophoniouu smoothness out of the words. Their ears need educating.

They propose to alaughter mercilessly the equivalent of the Greek, ph, and substitute the letter f, and spell cam for, fllosofantoru, fotograph, etc., ami to curtail 1 dotible-endera, making skill shrink to skil, spill to apilt egg to e^.

They propose to change ed final tot, "when it has the sound of t,"{ignoring the fact that it never has the sound of In the month of correct speakers,) and to tnrn lushed into lashi, fixed into fixt, etc.

The elephant's trunk having been .*1 neesed in, our modest spelling refonneta expect to

push

in the entire quadruped,

i'hen it will be insisted that every obscure ,r silent vowel will be ejected, and despite of all etymologic and tytnigraphic properties, a multitude ^of plumply-handsome words will be denuded of their fair proportions, and will atand in shivering nakedness in this wise: armed rmd beauty buty engrossed ngrost offender ofnder

bean bo elegant legnt enwrap nrap pewter pntr, etc.

And a pretty mess of pi they will inqkeJ We rcspcctmlly suggest that the innovators go a step fttrthcr, and drop all vowels, and substitute points, after the manner of Hebrew words. Why not

We presume after accomplishing their present partial ahriveling purpose, the revolutionirt8 will break out into a ftrocity that ahall eeiipsc the spirit of Danton and Robespierre, and ft multitude of fullvrotmdetl, honest worda will be worried and torn, and nothing be left but wkinny skeletons, ugly and ocfornied enough to make Young teaniCraw^uint-e*ed, and unintelligible enough

to

dnvo etymologists mad.

Alter our native words ahall have been shredded till they l» like skeletons.in a surgeon's closet, perbajwtiic "fonetlc" fanatics will look for other words to conquer. The French would bo a jjood language to begin with but what a job they would have! Life would be too short for the work and the restlctwucsa of the icnonocla«t8 would subside into the quietness of man's last sleep before they could decide even how to begin the attack on that language of shrugs, winks and jerks.

The cunning deformera modcatly claim already that at least "nine-tenths of the bfttins of scholarship nnd common sense in America are on the side of reform." We dont see very clearly what is tftcant by the "bruins of scholarship and common sense hut the phrase is on a par wilh their other absurdities. May true common sense deliver our printed tongue (tung, they would make it) from uneasy experimenters, who should devote their superfluous force to some useful eud.

Ait*r(i*er.

1

!'.

1

U.

A Good Teacher*

The following sensible opinion comes to us shorn Of its authorship. It is none tlu less worth a careful reading however "A truly good teacher is cheap at any price. 80, too, if a good one be necessary in any school, ne becomes equally necessary in every school. Hence two hundred and fifty thousand corn-

difficult task tlian to raise, equip, discipline and support an army of equal numbers. It is, moreover, a more im portant undertaking, aud necessarily in volves afar greater expenditure of time, labor and money, If it is to be

beings

nam.

Memory, l?nl»«rsal Lawstlado, Pain in Um ack, Ditna«s« of Sislo*. Premstnre Old Afr. od maay other Disease iw le*d to iBM&ltjr or \Mw««9tAioa nam

PT*«MM*r*

gnre*.'

fcKTTuU fMurtknlar*

ta oar

pasapblet, wbkb we

tfts.'iifef1tsby

testre oeend free by

taatt

to every oa*. UTTbe

sail od rwt^K of tto aesty ad TUB IS NAY HMCISK

1 111

MONTI! guaranteed, fli

a

A*f

at

borne made by tbe tadasirioaa. wpt ud ao« reoaUed we

will

elfcrt ywa.

en, wotnwn, boy* ai»d ftrts w*k* awae* tbetee si

w«rk

dm at Uaa ai

*BytkW else. Tbc work 4* Hffel

urf «Kk

aa

*ay«M en ft right at*. All

ate wtee. wbo ee« tato ac4lt* w^t *e«4 sad

P» tbemeel«ys

ostitiM bema free

aow ts

ti* tfeMf

already at «».tsi«a AdtemTStTB. Aa^saia, Ma

wtU done.

True teaching or educational power is J90I «ndi cannot be a cheap commodity liwica#)se it li not only ra*t^ but i« a mofe difficult ahd higher orde/ of work thdb any other coufined to humau hands. The tiller of the soil, the artificer in wood and iron, or even the painter or sculptor, with all delicacy of conception and refinement of touch, hare an easy task in comparison with the true educator who works upon the subtle forces of mind and spirit seeking to mold his precious materials into the divine symmetry, unity and beauty of a perfect il eh&rmcler. If high order of talcnt and fj skill be required in these lower perishable irtnsof human workmimshiajhow much mom should be mded of those

ottither limitation ordeesy. mj^^u»'ai4muLaii4ii-,aTO.. The fblldwiTtg adY*rtWa»«rt Appears fa a Outadian pspott "Will the gentleman who stole my melons last Saturday night be generous enongh to return ne a few of the seeds, as tlwsjr sure a ehstae **riety

Lawyer C. (mtering the office of his fViend Dt, ML aad ^eakiag. in hoarse whisper:) 'Fred, Ie gyt iwdi a coW this morning that I eaat speak the troth." Dr. M.: "Well, I'm glad it'* nothing!** will iotarfcrs witk your hwlfiess.

A wontan bad almost won the {niss ai a mxtm soeiahhs whe» some cne happened to remark tbat her baby was mts% «d, and bad a big month. It was a mean advantage to take of ber, but ihs vUlalli bad his reward.

A man jtusmd into a well beoaase bis and daughter nLn him in detMS. Aft*r htwm rwwd be dertnred he wm«ldn,t do a feolWi thing again, aa be Ibnad it dHSknlt to hep his beodabot* in theweUtluuaoQtof ii.

Hiunl)iiff Fowls,

Titer® are six dilVttvut varieties of Ifsttt* and for tho benefit of those who would like to know "what they look like,*' I will give a brief description of their tending points.

The piumnge of lite AVhito Hamborp* is their name indicates, fs white throughjut. Tltey have large rose combs, white swrlobea, well-ex ponded ta.il, with long .veil-curved sickle feathers in the cock demlef legs of bluish black oolor,

Tlie ptinnage of the Bl»ck llsmbtirgis is black throughout other poiatt MW the white,

Hie Silver S^tangled Hamburg* are welltiamtHl, the plunutfge lieiug entirely white, a black spangle ou the cud of each feuther the hack el ihnUiers of the heus tre slrlped towards the end of each with ^reenish-blnck legs of a slaty-bluo other x»nts same as the white aud black varieucs«

The hens of the Golden Spangled Hambnrgs are rich goldeu boy color with a p-eenish-bliick spangle on Ute cud of each feather—except the neck feather*, which tre striped down the centre with black. The plumage of the cocks differ from that jf the heus but slightly it is a shade larker, being of ft mldisli-hoy neck aud toddle feathers striped down th® centre with black tail of a rich groenish-black, with handsomely curved sickle feathers j»ther points same aa otbep varieties„pf this breed.

Silvered penciled Hambt hens have dear silvery-white plumage, e*tch feather, except tliose of tho neck, penciled across with greenish-black bars. There is not much penciling visible on the cocks of this variety plumage white, except the ts^l, which is black, sickle feathers nnd tail coverts black with an edging of white rose rombs, white ear lobes and slaty-olue legs.

Golden Penciled Hamburg heus are red-lish-boy in color, each feather pencilled across with black bars, except the neck feathers, which are of a goldeu-bay color. The cocks of litis variety are more gorgeous in their get-up than the hens. They have clear reddish-bay neck and saddle feathers fling feathers are reddish-bay on the ont•ride web and black ou the inside each feather of the secondaries, or feathers which are visible when the wiugs are folded, has a small black spot on the end breast and body of a redduih-bay tail black, with an edge of the reddish-bay or sickle feathers aud tail coverts other pointy{|ftme other varities of Hamburgs.

The Hamburgs are all non-sitters excellent layers good foragers hardy if allowed liberty, but I do not think they bear confinement well bens weigh from three to five pounds cocks from four to six. For across on common fowls in order to increase the egg production, a Hamburg cook woulti prove a good iuvestment.— annie ikld in

Pratrie Farmer. ,.

I, 1 -.V. 4'

Xurkey Raising

It is just as easy to raise fine, large and healthy turkeys, if the proper course be ursned, as it is to worry over a lot of puny ..irds pll the season, and then have them only attain to about half the size they otherwise would. The best place to r*iibc turkeys successfully nnd profitably is on a grain or grass fhrm, where they can have a good range. Turkeys kept housed will not do well. They cannot bear confinement. It is natural for them to roam about, even while young, in search of bugs and flies. The best mother is a turkey hen ahe will cover her chicks well.

For breeding stock, select a large, weli Ibnned and early hatched young gobbler, and, when it can bo done, have yonr 'hens two years old at least. They will lay better, set steadier, and are far better mothers, while the yonng are invariably hardier than those iVora last year's hatch. If good, strong stock is selected, turkey raising is very easy, and especially profitable where bronze gobbler* «re used. A young bronae cobbler running with a dozen common nens will add nn average of five pounds to the weight of each chick-hatched the first year, while the young turkeys will be stronger and more easily raised, besides bringing a greater remuneration to their owner when marketed.

In some portions of California flocks of from 1,000 to 5,XK) are raised by one owner. The young require nothing but warmth for the first forty-eight hours. Turkeys hatch in twenty-seven or twenty-eight days. If young turkeys are fedatal!,tney should be fed with soft food, not wet food, ami often. For the last feed, given early in the evening, broken wheat is preferred. They are very fbnd of curd, or cottage ehccse, or stnearkase it is good for them. 1 know some parties who consider that their success in raising voting turkeys is due to a free use of the above. For drink, fresh and sweet milk is preferable to water. Do not let it sour in their drinking vessels. Corn meal, mixed with the liquid in which meal has been boiled, is a good food. Onions chopped fine are very desirable for poultry, especially so for young tnrkeys. One of the greatest enemies of chicks is the large or head louse. To prevent and remove of each young

I his pest, anoint the head turkey with lard or butter. oil, liut that is too heroic treatment. Dust your turkey hen well with carbolic powder when you mt her, and repeat a f«w days itcfore hatching. .Follow a similar course with chickens.

4rf* t!

getting nine osmels, the UMtkbdtwo.

Virtue comes ttjr the baleftO.

my

—JBbssf

Farm Notes.

Proft«ior W. W. Tracysay« that nisntesi profitable crop was five ww of aqwisbe** from whii'h he obtained twenty tons onl ^20 for seed. The expense of cultivating mat less titan that of any other five acres be had, and Ute wiwfie cost was less than that of an equal area in hay, including everything, The ground was ploughed, and workctd in rows eight feet each way, with a third of a bushel of manure to each hill, The plants had one cultivation with a three-shovel plough, one liouug, one dressing with a two-horse cultivator, and afterwards the large weeds were pulled. He found squash good feed to start Mock to fatten, as well as for other purposes* The variety was Huston Marrow.

The cheapest meat for the fktvneri* mutton. It may safely be said to cost nothing, aa the fleece from the sheep of good breeds will amply pay for keeping. Then, for additional profit, there a lamb or two, the pelt of the animal, if killed at home, Ute excellent manure from its droppings, and the riddance of the pastures from weeds, to which sheep.are destructive fo^s. With the exception, of poultry, mutton is the most convenient meat for die former. A sheep is easily killed and dressed by a single hand in an hour, and in the warmest weather it can be readily disposed of before it spoils. Science' and experience both declare it the healthiest kind of meat, and a foolish prejudice alone prefers pork, which, whether fresh or salt, is the unhealthiestof all.

The best fertiliser to*use in setting fruit trees of all kinds is partially or thoroughly decomposed chip dirt. We made use of the material for the first time some twenty years ago in planting pn orchard, and it wns a wonder to those not in the secret what caused the trees to make such a fine growth the first season, and afterwards, too, for that matter. This experiment was so satisfactory that when we set our new orchard we made a li1eral use of this material, wilh the same satisfactory result. These trials have proved to our satisfaction that chip dirt is the very bfesfc material to mix in the soil as you plant the tree that can possibly le used, for the reason that it holds moisture, aud is full of the elements of plant food therefore, it promotes a most Inxuriant, natural and healthy growth. .Repeated trials have satisfied me that a tree is not only more sure to live, but will make double the growth the first year, (especially if a dry season,) if some two bushels of of chip dirt are properly used in its setting, than it would without it. A single trial will convince the mostskeptical tliat the best possible use that can be made of this valuable material is to apply it to the soil in planting trees in order to push them forward during the first precarious stages of their growth. -tli

Cocoanut PI

e.—One

Corn* Soi

Some use coal

I"'I— I Ml I. II

The Romance of Arithmetic. There is a clever story about Moham* med AH and thecamci*,antf though it will be AuuUiar to many of our leaders, they will scarcely be sorry tobe reminded bf it A Persian died,'leaving seventeen osmds to be divided among his three sgns in the following proportions: tbe efdest half, the second a third, and the a ninth. Of course, camels ca&t be divided into fractions, so ia despair, ths bnrthess whaiitiAlhw diflwlty te Mohammed AH. "Ill lead you another camel to make eighteen, SAd now divide them yourselves*" The coaseqoenee was, each brother got from on«»eigbth to (n«Mf of a camel more than be was entitled to, and Aii received his camel back agpiA the eldest buotbev lis, sad

3^

to have

ia saoNil psck sgis, bn vice

tU -.iMw Kaqpetrtewee ftmm WUmf. "I bad been rick and mlwrabJe no long and bad caused

husband so nwa

trouble and expensed no one seemed to know what ailed rae, that 1 wascomplet«lv disheartened and discouraged. In this mate of mind Ijtst a bottle ef Hop Bitters and used them unknown to my fanfly. I sooa begun to improje and ssined fad that my bttsbasMf and family thought It strange sad unnatural, but when I toJd tbcm what had helped me, tbey said "Hurrsb for BfUeis! long may they prosper, for they hav* made BMMber wm s&das

bs|p|y.w---T!»MoUb^r.

fW

[)»,

yjr,

grease spota

front garments may be had by mixing 4 tablcspoonftils of alcohol with a tablespoonful of salt. Shake the whole well together aud apply with a sponge or brush.

Foil Cramps.—A cold application to the hare fee"4. such as iron, wafer, rock, earth or ice, when it can lie had, is an excellent remedy for crump. If tho patient isseized in the upper part of tho body, apply the remedy to the hands.

iv—Take

AxuelCake.—One and one-half cups of granulated white sugar, one cup of nour. oue teaspoonful of cream of tartar, the whites of eleven eggs, one half teaspoonful of salt, mix flour and cream of tartar

thoroughly together aud sift, beat the eggs to a stiff froth, beat in the eggs and teaatwonfttl of vanilla, add the flour, which rfiould be beat in lightly but thoroughly, sad bake slowly for forty minutes.

Preblr

IjmIIcw.

Those languid, tiresome sensstlons. causing you to feel scarcely able to be on your feet that constant drain that is taking from your system all its elasticity dnving the bloom from your cheeks: that continual strain upon your vital forces, rendering you Irritable and fretful, can easily be removed by the use of that marvelous remedy, Hop Bitters. 'Irregulsri ties and obstructions of your system arc relieved at once, while the special cause of periodical pain is permanently removed. Will you heed this?—Cincinnati Saturday Night.

ft.

onasl

Wn ivm

a

-FOB TUB *'''%.

DAILY NEWS

DPBTR. W JilMlldL.

THE L.ABOEST AK0

E S A E

FOE THE MONEY

niiciiil

wrmrm

""i***' •""i* mi- „,y

IIaktrk'S IFEJ* Tojio

thciufor

r.

Jl

J.

grated cocoauut,

oue quart of milk fiVe eggs beaten separately, one tablespoon of fine bread crumbs sugar and flavoring to 'taste. The above makes two pies. No top crust. l.YCERJKK Soap.—Take toilet soap, slice and inelt with gentle heat, and add to one pound of soap one ounce of pure glycerine when sufficiently cool mak©' into balls.

To PrevextMii.k Soubino.-—Aneffect-ual remedy for milk turning, in summer time consists in adding to each quart fifteen gmius of bi^carbonate of soda. This does not affect the taste of the milk, while, it facilitates the digestion.

ToRemovi:Grease,

mw

six eats of com. cut

and scrape from the cob so as to get all the milk, add water enough to prevent it from burning, boil twenty minutes, then add one pint of milk, butter the size of an egg, a little salt and pepper to suit the taste, let it come to a boil and serve while hot.

M.

serves every puiH*t wbete a Tokjc ts necessary.

A- v- 2 rffrt' "^1

k\Pi

-ai "^tth

hi -.4

Cr.

nii «.« ji Ai

•r

Miscellaneous Recipes. *,,il''

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CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,

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SASHES, DOORS, BIJNDS, ETC.

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Chambers's Encyclopaedia

American Additions:

Standard Books.

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AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANCE,

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Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' .•« •:,''flardffare,:. -i«r

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CORNEA OP NINTH ANTV'KULBEKRY STREETS, ERRE TTAUTB. IND.

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MACHINE-SHOP

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Portable and Stationary Engines, Flour, Saw iltfl unci MINING MACHINERY, HANGERS, PULLEYS, SHAFTING, UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM K^J^ES*

Universal Knowledge.

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