Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 26, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 March 1877 — Page 2
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 21. 1877
WEDNESDAY. MARCH tl.
Hayes will not whack with Newmaa, aad the "president's pew fraud every Sunday. will lot coniam t The News triee hard to kick Morton, bat anfortunately the place aimed at u too high for the Tom The mb legs. Tackard and Kellogg are clawed as machine politicians by the Chicago Tribune. Yes returning board machine politicians Jutit like Haye, the presidential fraud. Bristow and Harlan, like VTatterson, find the "brass-hooped ptgginM bursted "at the founUin." They can join lion. Henry, who is a music man. in the eons of Blue 'grans and daisies." Stanley Matthew suoceedä Sherman. He understand the history of the fraud by which Hares wu made president as thor oughly as Sherman, and will be as earnest in his effort to keep the record from the pub lic. Old Simen's eo, J. Donald Cameron, late of Grant's cabinet, goes into the United 8tates senate as the auoceesor of hia father. It U not generally bettered that. Don will take special pains to conceal ' his dislike for Haye. There are a great many newspapers thatknow Hayes is a fraud, that he ia in office by the efforts of conspirators who did not hesitate to commit acts of the most ubv mitigated scoundrelisra. ' Still they speak of him as "the president" instead of "the fraud." Old Ben Butler, they say, is running around Washington like a "one eyed dör Jn 'a meat house," picking up all he can get on the dead run. . Ben don't know whether he la a "vassal or a peer" up to thLs time. He ban not trot the hearings of the new adminis tration yet. ' ... . .' .'. POLITICS AND PARTIES. .. . t' , L . . Since it is a fact that politics is the science of government, there is likely to be in the future, as In the past and present, a wide divergence f opinions in regard' to methods.' policy, institutions, .and purposes of the science, and as a legitimate result parties are about as certain to exist aa the tides are to ebb and flow. The existence of political parties is all the more certain from the fact. most humiliatingly demonstrated in the late history of the United States, that th radical thief. party made it possi ble to degrade politics to the lowest level of infamy. The Journal, in its issue of yesterday, with a modesty peculiarly characteristic of tbe radical thief party, which it represents, captions an article "The Duty of the Democratic IMrty and open its batte ries by saying: The bNtory of a country U epitomised In the hUtoryof it polities. The real development of a nation in not illustrated by the wars whioh Henzirea in. the military vfotoriea whioh it achieve or the territory which It conquers and annexes, bat rather by Wie ro w n or moral ideas and the advancement of thoM princi pe and sentiments which make a people in herently great and strong. If it were possible for an ass to ' kick itself to death, the writer of that paragraph must be about the deadest ass in the Jour nal's editorial stable, since its purpose, inferentially, was designed to Impress upon the readers of the flatulent cholera, morbus organ of tbe dead legged senator, that the great radical thief party is the party of "moral ideas and those principles. and, pen 'timents which make a people inherently strong." We say,' Infercntially, this was the purpose of the radical thief party, organ, because the writer immediately adds: t, , Judged by this standard, .the democratic party ha never boen anything bat an element f demoralisation ia onr national politics, and of weaktMMM In our aattdtiar character. This paragraph certainly vindicates the in ference drawn. And if anything else la required to triumphantly establish the claim of the writer to whatever honors belongs to the Journal's am the following will suffice It has indeed done something towards enUtrxinaoar territorial boa nd He, but thl was done with no worthier motive than ex tending the domiti of slavery. It na, br porcbtuw or by conquoHt, addco n gooa many enn to Ihn national (loin!: but it wm 00114 lnthhopA that every acre might be culti vate by idave labor. We make these extracts eWefly for the Durnose of drawing a few comparisons between the national democratic party and the radical sectional thief party. The democratic party in extending the area of the nation's domain indicated the manifest destiny of the country. Its prescience was greater than that of any other party. Its statesmen were of a grand er type, and of largrr brain. They saw the country s growth in population, and pro vided for the expansion. They saw the out stretching wilderness and. prepared to oc cupy it By generous legislation they in vited the oppressed of other lands to their shores and provided them habitations and a home. Louisiana, Florida, Texas, New Mex ico and California were brought under the starry flag that the founders of the radj ical thief rty characterised as a 'flaunt ing lie," by the national democratio iarty, Lands for empire fctaus, and prrcions metals In exhauitlese supply, navigable river, in land seas, and a country ocean bound these were the achievements of the national demo cratic party from a territorial point of view. What ha the radical thief party f accom plished in extending the territorial bounda ries of the country? ATas! Alaska. In this eoraptrison the radical thief party looks sindt. It will be found In other re spects, when unpsred to the nation! dem ocratic Dirty, th tt it h not only infinitely small but infinitely Infamous. The na
tional dem ratie party has always been the party of law. The radical thief party wss coaoeivfd In violation of law, bom a hazard, having no legal paternity, and has ceaslcssly opputotd U s:ice it bai au exlatttce. The
national democratic party was . far- a united
country, syru boused by Its nag ana pro tected by its constitution and laws. The radi cal thief party pronounced the constitution a "leajue with hell," and made ceaseless war upon it, until the whole country was a charnel house. ; The national democratic party knowing no north, no south, no east and no west, had far generations bound the sections together in bonds of friendship and lore. The . radi cal thief party, by hates born of hell, never ceased its fiendish work until national repose was transformed into war, and order was dethroned by confusion and anarchy. The national democratio party adminis tered the government economically by putting honest men in office. The radical thief party, as the records show, and as its name implies, squander ihe revenues of the gor ernment by filling a large number of the various offices with thieves. The national democratic party sought to bring about reform In the government by the decision of the ballot-box. and on the 7th of November last triumphed. The radi cal thief party, by frauds of matchlese in famy, reversed the decision of the people and outraged every principle of honesty and truth by placing R. B. Hayes In tbe office of president With professions of devotion to the people the radical thief party is the deadliest foe of republican institutions. Bloated with public spoil, Its managers are still in hot pursuit of plunder: to obtain it they damn their souls with perjury and would as readily, if plunder could be se cured, desecrate the receptacle of death and gorge their thievish desires amidst the memorials of man's last Infirmity 'The democratic party Is neither dead nor in a dying condition. Look at the record. More than four millions of voters, with a clear popular majority of more than a quar ter of a million, and, counting whites, a roa jority of more than one million. Robbed it has, been by radical thieves, perjured villains and conspirators. But it is even now on its feet; its great heart never beat truer to prin ciple, and its resolve to overthrow the radical thief party is as strong as when In 1378 it achieved its grandest triumphs. RADICAL SWAO POLICY. The fact is pretty generally tnderstood that under Orant a very large per cent of his army of officeholders were thieves; that offices were swag mills and swill houses. where radical frauds were ground out and radical swine fattened. Hayes, who ia - a second edition of Grant, except that he obtained the office by fraud, is making a tremendous show of civil service reform. Look at it The men who are in office are to remain, except possibly here and there where some official refused to "bleed" liberally, in which case he will go out and a more hungry swill fiend will go in. Wheeler is said to have announced that he will not plead the cause of any of his friends and relations for swill. If the president deigns to ask his opinion be will give it just as he did in r gard to the Louisiana returning board; that is to say, denounce a scoundrel and thief, but if be can be made to serve a good pur pose take him in and furnish him swill from the government milL It is further stated that Kvarts and Schurz have been appointed a committee to draft rules for the government of the radical swag mill and swill house. According to the Chicago Tribune "the recommendations of members of congress will receive no wnuii4aratin tt-vI hn thpir nnlrw ions are asked, a , policy that will result in a continuation of . Grantism throughout the country, and which, under the circumstances, s 'altogether the safest for Hayes.. The men who are in office are familiar with tbe frauds that made Hayes president and If disturbed will ''blow". . a a a on him, ana become- aisturoing eie luents fire-brands in his powder magazines that will lift him out of fraudulent presi d ntial boots. The . men . who are now in office in thousands of instances, If turned out. would have to reMre by the light of brisk blaze or leave to the possession of strangers books that the most expert accountant could not balance, and the state of things that would immediately ensne would be anything but -creditable to radicalism. The assertion was mde long since that Hayesisni would be a con inua'ion of Grantism, and current events demonstrate the correctness of the declaration. This state of things, however, 1 not long exist. The men who roam over cme-resaional districts in the interests of radicalism will have' something to say about the management of the radical swag mills and who shall have achauC9 at the swill. Haves, the creature of fraud and perjury, of countless crimes of every shade of blackness, will not be permitted to enjoy his swag and awill while he iguores tho who, were ready to damn soul and country for his success. J. Madison Wells will have to be taken care of pretty .constantly aud even Kliza Pinskston, Murat Halstead'a burs saw embodiment of female grace, beauty and virtue, will have to be looked after. Messrs. Scbura and Evarte will not be . permitted to build around the presidential fraud a barricade that will relieve Mm of responaibilityaud permit swag and swill to Sow in a ceaseless current to the men whom Orant empowered to steal. There may be a lull for a few weeks, but when the hungry fellows who have looked with longing eyes upon the swag mills, hearing the favorites of Grant lap the swill behind the screens, fairly asrake to then aliiing sense that the civil service policy of Hayes means their everlastingexclusion from the bankqueting rooms where the faithful are rewarded with swag an swill, you nu.y bet your bottom doollar there wiiu be a change, or explosions that will let the light Into the den where the crime was per fected that disgraced the country with presidential fraud.
II AY E&-PACK AB D-KELLOG Q. These three miscreants are destined to
ive In history indidsolubly linked together, welded in the white heat of national scorn, objects of universal execration and loathng, dead or alive, or damned, the same. When the Louisiana returning board was in travail the monster triplets, Hayes, Packard and Kellogg, were brought forth miracles of crime. Who has not read accounts of the transmission of disease from parents to off spring, so terrible in their loathsome con dition as almost to make men wish that the Almighty would revoke the edict to "roulti'ply and replenish the earth?" The return ing board offsprings, Haye, Tackard and Kellogg, bear about in their official char acters evidences of parental d Ureases which can not be contemplated without a shudder. In the slums and dens of all the great cities, where moral and physical deformities are sought to illustrate the deep degradation which vice entails, specimens are discovered for the description of which new terms have to be coined limbless monsters, and mon sters with more limbs than nature demands double beaded monsters blind monsters monsters mute as stones monsters born, bearing the disease of parents; ulcers, tumors and boils, scrofula in all of its terrible forms, quickened masses of sin, but still humane. From these specimens bear ing crime's most terrible penalties select the most repulsive, and we will match a them with Hayes, Tackard and Kellogg, the spawns of the crime-stained and crimeCursed Louisiana returning board. Its frauds, its treacheries, and its perjuries have been of sufficient power to destroy every ballotbox in our ocean bound republic witn a population of forty million freemen. Its crimes came forth fanged and hissing like venimous serpente, and truth and the right stood aside. The people declared that Tilden and Hendricks should occupy the offices of president and vice-president model men of virtue and intellectual powereta temen ws puer et tans reproehe. The Louisiana returning board reversed the decision. In broad daylight it committed the crime. In the presence of forty millions of people it worked and plotted, frauds and perjuries multiplied. The work was done when Hayes, Packard and Kellogg were dandled on the knees of Eliza Pinkston. Hayes is in office, but he is there by virtue of the frauds of the returning board. Tat tooed by It crimes and branded by ite per juries, he can no more escape from tbe ulti mate consequences of its infamies than he can escape perdition wnen toe day 11 lorecloses his chattel mortgage. Packard, the returning board governor, the barricaded and caged fraud, who was born to the governorship of Louisiana more cer tainly than Hayes to the office of president, is now looking to Hayes for protection and recognition Upon the principle ot "honor among theives" Haves onght to respond. They are creatures of the same parentage the out growth of identical frauds, and damned by the same crimes. Hayes has been the most fortunate, but it is too early to establish an aristocracy of villainy, and Hayes ought not to feel too proud of his success. The Philadelphia Times, in commenting upon Kellogg's case, refers to Packard by saying that "he is no more governor of Louisiana than Morgan is governor of New York or 'Pershing of Pennsylvania, and yet on his 'certificate to the election of his partner in 'crime it is claimed that Kelloeg should be 'admitted to the senate. The character of 'the man, his criminal associations, tbe notorious fraudnlency of his election, the log'ical effects of hia admission, and the danger.'oua tendency of the precedent that would 'thus be set, forbid that his petition , lor a Wat shall be granted. Hia certificate is worth no more than so much medicated 'paper. In the better days of the republic 'such an applicant would have been 'kicked out of the back door of the 'senate. Does th'a man deserve milder treat. 'ment? Kellogg's proper place is a cell in 'the penitentiary. The senate has lte Pat'tersons, its Spencers and its Mitchells, but 'heaven send that for the sake of the coun try it may be spared this new and greater 'disgrace." This is the opinion, be it remembered. f a paper that acquiesces in the decision that made Hayes president Packard has a supe. rior right to be governor, and Kellogg a su perior right to be United States senator. All three are returning board productions and the disgrace of the country. To denounce the methods by which Packard and K-Mpg sought power is to denounce Hayes. The three stand or fall together. To indole either, or all. is to insult tbe patriotic senti ments of the country, and commit an out rage upon the truth of history, which pro claims Haves a fraud, and Packard and Ktl logg bis peers in crime. THE WEEKLY HEVflXEL. We hare no hesitancv In challenging compirison between the Weekly Sentinel and any other weekly newspaper circulated in Indiana. We are giving our readers sevektttwo columns, chiefly reading matter, includ ing the widest range of topics politics. poetry, literature and the news of the day. In addition to Ihn our review of the mar ket ia all that could be desired by business men, traders and fanners. In this connection we de-Ire -to say that we are under obligations to those Kho art aking an interest In giving the 8entllel a wider circulation. Subscriptions are nrinz in uimn us from ail portions of the state. Among those who are doing efficient work we take pleasure in mentioning the name of W. a D.mal lion, Eq , of Middle b.irg, .Elkhart county, who sent u a e nb cash our hold of fifty subscribers, with ' a acooninimen for which he has think. Tha Sentinel propoees to the fort, or at lea4 what ht re Is left of it and to see to it that when the roll call i ecain heard in Indiana the resKonae will Indicate the fact that the -
triumph of fraud has not dampened the ardor of those who gained two grand victories over radicalism in the year of onr Lord 1876. Now is the time to organize and to keep the
watchfires burning. -Governor Williams is likely to be pretty extensively bored by applicants for appoint ment on the board of state house commissioners. The probabilities are that no ap pointments will be made for several weeks, posbibly months. Evidently it is the governor's intention to put none bat the most competent men on the commission. That he will have an eye to ability and integrity is generally understood, and It is possible that those who apply for positions will not be the most fortunate. If the commission contains a large element of recognized busi ness capacity it will not set the enterprise back in the least, and in the long inn will be found vastly more valuable than that other sort of ability which is pretty much exhausted in making a stump speech. To build a state houie means busi ness, from laying the corner stone to driving the last nail, and as a general thing business men attend to business more satisfactorily than others whoe habits of life have led them to seek its enjoyments and triumphs In pursuits where they have not been brought In contact with sharp contractors. The fraudulent president concluded it would be a master stroke of policy to get Key into his cabinet, and thus bny up southern sentiment The southern people a r.ot courtiers, ar-l will value the stroke c policy at its true worin, ine 5iooiie Register says the appointment "deserves re 'spectful consideration, but tue abject letter 'of that insignificant personage puts him in the attitude not of a reputable southern 'leader whose principles are fixed, but of a 'courtier who moulds his views to suit the 'policy of his master." Bob Ingersoll has gone back on Blaine. He says he is for Hayes now although he did say at tbe time of the nomination that "the 'party had nominated a d n fool for the 'presidency." Bob's for reconciliation now. He don't want to make the old speech over any more, in wnich he mane tne radicals howl with rage, as he described Blaine and Hill's bout in congress, and bow Jim knocked the heads of the confederate 'brigadiers together until their tongues hung How the radical audiences used to langh last summer when Bob Inpersoll told them what fun Jbere was in taking two confeder ate brigadiers and knocking their heads together. It was figurative, of course, but striking. . Bob enjoyed saying it, and the boys all laughed. We were thinking that Bob could find a brigadier or two in Hayes's cabinet to have the same kind of fun with. The New York Tribune ays "there are 'about forty millions of people who are long'ing for a regenerated civil service, for established order in the south." Just about the number that ere longing under Grantism, and they will have to long a little longer. Hayes will keep the old thieves in office. He dare not turn them out A Mr. E. 8. ßteale, a chap in the treasury department, had a daughter born to him the other day, and calls her Hayesinia. Why not call her Haystealia. Her father's name is ßteale, and then to have "steal" and Hayes so artistically interwoven would be appropriate and truthful. "Hayestealia" let it be. What a rumpus it would hare occasions a wt . f . among the radicals 11 iiiaen, atter navtng been successful, should have appointed Gen eral Joe Johnston secretaryf war; or even Mr. Key, the democratic senator from Tena Ai a neteee, as postmaster general, un, now they would have '-howled" to be sure! They say Jim Blaine is very angry and gloomy now-a-dayn; wonder how Morton stands the pressure? Confederate brigadiers are ata premium now in Washington. One in the cabinet of the new fraud; Where, oh, where are tho "fruits of the 'war!" What will fire the loil" north next election? The Vanderbilt will will stand. William feared a decline in stocks and forked over. Lady Clerka und Cmtomeri. New Vork World. Scene A store. Lady clerk putting a finishinir touch to her longest curl with her fore-finger. To her Enter Female Customer. Female Cubhftner I wioh to see some linen collars, pleat-e. Ladv Clerk, after a brief pause and with a leeme snow 01 pitying invrresi u r - . . T . . IT.. 1. linen at the second counter to the lelt (Ke laMes into contemplation of the infinite.) K. c. Lfiiien collars. 1 wifn 10 see. L. C. after mentally apprai.-ing the custo mer's wardrobe and resolving if ever she has a black silk dress to have untre bugles on it O! ( Takes down and languidly oixmh box. and become absorbed in a flirtation between the fbop walker and the red headed thing at the iae counter.) F. C. These are very common, uave vuti nothing better? 1 IL. recover! tut ner consciousness inn " . . 1 j poliiely smothering a yawn The others are '2D cent each. I didn't kimw as you would ore to phv so much, flakes down other box and hebs.) F. C These will do: bnt these are too larm Twelve is the s'H I wear. L C. f ukiiut the measure of r. V s necx as if for ttie guillotine, with Ktue vivacity) Ü. no: 15 inches at leat Here are the col lars on want, (rakesd'iwna box of 15' a. . F. C. (ivruon.itratiiitfly) But I know the six-.f my own neck. I wear 12a. ' L. C (making a grudging concession) am Mire jou are ini-uikeii. fry these. (Pre pttivs to take down box of 14 a.) . K. C etiin mad) Will you show me m mum twelves, or stwll I go and see if lean find some one who can? L. C (Ummtine down box) There (filar..) tili 1 1 you Had belter take ihirte lis. for 1 know that twelver are too null. F. C. make s l-tioii. pay and exit, pur snd tbrn-igu life Wy the implacable halted
of the U C .j . : :-. . .1 . :i 1 ? I-.'. . - - '.' ...,
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Carefully Selected for the Beneflt of Bnrwl Bender. LATISO OCT AX OKCHAKD. ' Bat ;wo forms are usually adopted in the laying out of an orchard the square and the quincunx brm. The square has a tree in each corner. The quincunx has the advantage of economising ground by distributing the trees evenly over the surface, and is more ornamental. To Lay off the ßquare Form. Draw a straight lin for the first row; then, with a tape-line, proceed to space it off for the trees, placing a stake where each tree is to stand. Then, at right angles from the firet line, measure off and stake a line from each end. Between the last two stakes in the end rows, measure off and seta line of stakes, which will be parallel and opposite the first row. The interior space of the plat should then be measured off, and stakes set to indicate tbe exact point where each tree is to stand. TO LAT OFT THE QCINCCNX FORM. Lay off the first row as before. Then, with the line, describe an arc from the corner tree in the direction your next row is to stand, and of the distance your trees are to stand apart. Then with the line, describe an arc from the next tree, of same length, intersecting the first line. The point of intersection will show where the tree is to stand. Pnceed in the same manner, describing arcs until your stakes are all set HOW TO PLAKT YOrR TREEH I!t EXACT FOiTnOTT. To do this, make what is known as a reflace ot a straight edged board eight feet ong, six inches wide and one half inch thick. Cut a notch at each end, at equal distances from tho center notch on the same edge. Lay the board on the ground and place center notch against the stake, where the tree is to stand, and stick down a email stake in each of the end notches. Tbe center stake and board may then be removed and tbe hole dug. When ready to plant the tree, tbe board n placed Over the hole with the end notches agsinBt the two stakes. The center notch will indicate the precise point where tbe tree Ebould stand, and at the same time help to Bteady the tree while filling the Boil about the roots. The replace enables the workman to plant each tree in the precise position in dicated by the stake, and of a uniform depth. CABR Or ORCHARD The ground, whether level or rolling, if of a stiff clay, or a soil retentive of mo sture, should be plowed and thrown into ridges, before planting tbe trees on the top ot the ridges. No fruit tree will thrive with "wet feet. Tbis ndmng sbouid be a permanent thing of the orchard. Cultivate your orchard for a few years as you would corn. Never grow grass or small grain among your fruit trees. Take three or four horticultural or agricultural publications and post yourself on your business as well as you would r you were pursuing a mercantile or me chanical business. Brains are as necessary n crowing fruit as in anything else, and if you expect to succeed without ,vieir use, our word for it, you will lau. PLOWING TABLE. The following table indicates the distance traveled by a horse in plowing an acre: fctpAce traveled In Breadth of furrow slice. plowing an acre. 7 inches................ 1-T, miles 8 inches - 12i miles 10 inches 9 9-10 miles 11 Inches...- ...... 9 miles 11 Inches. K miles 20 liicne .. 4 8-iO miles 21 inches .. ... 4 miles From this table can be seen the gain in the labor account with a crop which conies from the use of a broad furrow in plowing. If we call 16 miles a day tbe day's work for the horses, we plow but i acres a day, by mak ing a 9 inch furrow; nearly z acres by niaxinr a 12 inch furrow, and when a gang-plow is used, which plows a 24-inch furrow, the acreage is increased to nearly 4. The ne of an improved plow, wmcn turns a broad furrow and pulverises, is therefore an economy on land suited to its ute, and there is great gain from tbe use ot a gang plow under circumstances where it is apDlicahle. riXroaTtwo clover bebd. it may roi oe known generally that this country ex ports a good deal of clover seed. The follow' Ire! ! sontthine of tbis trade, and the countries to wh ch the seed goes The fig ures given are the number of bags of two bushels each: London 23 .914 Liverpool Glas low., Bristol Hull Hamburg... 6:4 J0;iuu a Bremen. ..... llavre....... Antwerp Hotleraaru. 7,05 a.f TOt ft j .nfsmamnnT -tt - -irtt""" Ihe If oaaekeeper. BlITTS OX TUB MARINO OT BREAD. o,aa As a most difficult branch of housekeep er's duties, bread making requires a gener ous stock of patience, aud a vast deal of ex perience. The skill 01 it is in no sen e in tuitive. but acquired through repeated fail ures and doubilul succerses; and even tbe accepted recipe of many a houewife makes a noor anolotfv for a perfect losf of bread. The best of recipes eels hard usage in un skilled hand, and -the indifference which uitich bread making betrays would spoil any ruie. and otleiid any table, learning is worth s iiuetliitig. but in this, a-iii most uth er skilled emplo limits, eierieiice is every thitur. The women 's centennial comnmiiee. who complied the "National Cookery Book, considered the chief evil of luucli bread makiui; to be the ue of saltratus and other bttkiiiie iHwder. and enjoin upon their sisters pi do away with tiös vicious custom Were there no such thing as saleratu. consid ring the uses to whicu it is often put, the diiiiui; tablea of the present generation woud perhaps olfer a more wholesome diet, ceitiinlya more acceptable breal where such a powder is now used; and were tne common and unhealthy bh-cuits, with their M Itquentiy mipnur-sireaaeu Bunuei, which require special training of the stomHch tor eeu a Passable diuestion driven awsv from every dming room, the eff. ct would be of iininen.e importance. Mr. Tegettneier. i:i bis ' handbook," expla mthe proc.-sib which A kei make their bred so 'utit ai.d s.-.niry. They mix a little ot tbe flour the v are about to use with water and tue yet-t, and bet it to rise some time before mixing up the laass of dough. , In this way let veaxt is reunited, and by this whole "sjionge" acting as a ferment the bread is niu-li better and solter than is made in th ord nary way. The rising of the d nigh is quickeued by adding to the sponge a tin ill Quantity ot manei noiiea potatoes. To in ike half a peck of flour into bread on this system, ui-tsu three fourths of a i-onnd of eil boiled, mealy (otatoes through a coarse sieve or colander aud mix with a pint of flour; mix an ounce and a half of Herman driid yeast with a pint and a? half of lukewarm water and strain into the flour and i otatoes. beat the whole into abater. ftlVrr with a blanket and set by tbe fire to ri. In two hours, if kept warm, this will hMve nren considerably and conMiiutes the mm nitre. " Heat this with the hand very perfectly and mix with a ptpt and a half of
nearly blood-warm water (2 degrees Fab.. renbeit), and pour into half a peck of flour, which has already bad one and one-foarta ounces of salt mixed with it Knead the whole into dough and let it rise in a warm place two hours in warm weather, but longer in cool weather. Then turn out on a floured table, divide into pieces suitable for loavts, and knead luchtly into proper shape with only flour enough te keep it from adhering to the table. For a still lighter bread a portion of the dough, when ready for the oven, should be well kneaded, with flour enough to make it rather solid, divided into small loaves or rolls, place on a slightly greaed tin, and set in a very warm place to rise again. Then wash over the loaves with a little milk, and bake for about twenty minutes.. Upon taking from the oven cover with a cloth to pre vent the outside from becoming hard. Stale bread, which is far mora healthy than new, may be made soft and palatable by covering closely with a tin and placing it for half an hour in a moderately-heated even. nortEHOLD KEcinta. For Otkx. A basin of water put into an oven in which cakes or pastry are baking will prevent them from burning. Trv this
simple means. BKEr Hash. Use stale bread eoaked la milk or water; season with butter, pepper, and salt, and a little onion chopped fine; make into cakes, and fry, light brown. ScLPHra Mixtcre roa thi Blood. Five teaspoonfuls powdered sulphur to one of cream tartar; mix with molas-tes; take one teaspoonful three succeiwive morninsrs. then omit three, and so on until it has been taken nine times. Eggs A5d ArrLEs Beat no the eces as for omelet, pare and slice the apples, fry them in a little butter; then stir them in with the eggs. . Melt a little butter in tbe frying pan. put in the eggs and apples: fry. turuing over once, and serve hot. Osioss. In cooking onions cream or milk not only adds much to tbe palatableness of this unusually Jiked vegetable, but it will also remove in a great degree tbe unpleasant flavor, which is apt to be left in the breath of those who eat freely of them. Cholera Morbus. To cure cholera mor bus mix two tablespeonsful of wheat flour with tust enough water te moisten the flour: drink it. If the first dose does not check tha pain or the purging, repeat the dose in half an hour. Severe cases sometimes reauire a third doee. , BuutKETs. Into one quart of milk putt lump of butter the size of an egg; let the mule get warm enough to melt the butter: stir in floar suffi;ieut to form quite a stiff batter, and a dessert spoonful of salt: onethird cake compressed yeast dissolved in a little warm water; cover tightly; let stand in a warm place over night; fry on griddle. To Make Bread. To make thoroughly wholesome and nutritious bread, tbe whole of the wheat should be ground together and useo. r ine white nour alone doe not con tain one-half the nourishment nor is it half so healthy. It is coming to be generally understood that unbolted wheat is best and. indeed, most palatable also to people generally. Scrambled Eogk with Dried Btrr. Shave the beef very fine; put a tablespoonful of butter in a Irving pan: set it over the Gre, and when hot put in the beef ; heat a fw minutes, stirring constantly to prevent burning; beat up the required number of eges and stir ia with the hot beef; stir al together until the eggs are cooked. Serve immediately. Potato Cakes. Boil some white potatoes. roaxh them very fine, adding salt, butter and' milk as if used as a vegetable; then mold in them sufficient sifted flour to make them into a soft dough; roll them out ort the paste board about an inch thick ; cut in small. square cakes; fry on a griddle greased with equal parts of lard and butter, cook slowly. turning but once. ice for breakfast or an ordinary lunch. To Rid a House or RiTs.-,Wet a few pounds of unslacked lime with strong lye made from potash; let it be quite soft; spread it around the holes so that the rats can not avoid treading in it; let it remain a week or bo, and if it gets dry scrape it off and moisten again. The mixture burns their teet and they will not be likely to make a second visit Do not let it come in contact with oil cloth or paint Old Party lAm Revived. Chicago Times. There may not be any significance In the ttwt nvrth1a it I m trt that m. th what isabsardly styled 'The Cabinet'! exI cepting one, pre-ent a remarkable similarity in their party antecedents. Mr. Kvarts was a Whig. Mr. Kherman was a' whig. Mr. Devens was a Whig." Mr. Key was a Whig. Mr. Thompson was a Whig. Mr. McCrary was a Whie. Mr. Schurs ruurht have been a Whig if he had not arrived in thi country iust after Martin Van Buren'a free-soil rebelion in 1848 had initiated the business of disemhoweline the Whig party. There is another remarkable coincidence in the same connection, namely, that most of the chiefs of Grantism, who are now arravin? themselves in opposition to this whir . c 1 . - cabinet, present a crreiondinc wmliarity in their party antecedents. Norton was a locofoco. Cameron wm a l(XVfco. Butler was a locofoco. Login was a locofoco. Grant was a . locofoco. Bline probably would have !een a locofooo if he had beeu any account at all at that period. 1IIT ADTLUTPtl Teople sometimes ask why does Dr. IL V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y.. efwnd so much money in adveriining his family medicines, which are so well known and surpass all other remedits in popularity aud aale. It ia well known that A. T. fciteward considered it good policy, and undoubtedly it paid him to spend niaiiv hundred thousand dollars in advertising his goods, yet nobody questioned the excellence of his merchandise. The grand secret of success liea in offering only eoods which poess merit to sustain them selves, and then through liberal and persistent advertising making the people thoroughly acquainted V ith their good qualities. Men do not succeed in amazing great for tunes, establishing thriving and permanent business, and founding suta'antial institution like Dr. Pierce's Urand luvalids' Hotel at Buff ilo, , which cost over two hundred thousand dollars, unless their business be legitimate, their goods meritorious and their services, which they reader the people, genuine and valuable. Dr. Pierce , does not attempt to humbug you by tellin you that his Golden Medical Dii-oovery will cure all diseases. Ii says, "If your lungs are half wasted by consumption, my Discovery will not cure you, yet as a remedy for severe coughs, and all curable bronchial, throat and lung aftVctions, I believe it to be unsurpassed as a remedy." The jieople have confidence in his medicines Ucause he ds not overrecotuiued .hem, and when tried Ahey give sttisfacti n. ilia Medical Adviser, a boos of uver nine hundred pgt, illustrated by two hundred and eighty-two engravings, and bound in cloth-aud gilt i offered to the people at so moderate a price (11.50. poetpaid), th&t it li no wonder that almost one Hundred thousand have already been told. His Memorandum Books are on every druggulrt's counter for free distribwUofi.
