The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
The Cedarville Herald. W. H. BLAIR, PiiMUMr. ftffSHARVILLE, t o n i « THE BATTLE FIELD. -yjAntipw ip i i.p— p- AN OLD SOLDIER'S 8T0&Y. 'T0» JSxpertsi;*#* o fFoar CavalrymenWho ' 'Wert Left: Behind ThelrKe*lmeut. After the grand revlewiuWashlngton in 1885,my regiment, the 31»tNew York Cavalry, went to Parkcrsborgi W, Va„ and from there by 'boat,-■ to HL Lpuls. When we got to Cincinnati it was ju st getting dark. 1We anchored ont In 'the ,river. No onew** tilawedonslu>re;but t^rOeof UBjfave an old felipw a dollar to row us..over ito Covington.. IVe ex amined the products of th e town' and mixed our drinks considerably and then yyenfc over to see Cincinnati and had a high old time till near morning when wew en t to sleep On a lumber pile. We woke up about sunrise and went to the rlyer. Lordy! th eb o a t was .fast tu rn ing the bend down the river and throw- in’ the water; away from her Stem like she waft bound to g e t there quick. We »ald» "go it, dam ,yoff,” .and"/hen "we weht' back-and took In Cifioinnhtlby daylight. About fonr o'clock we called a council o f w ar and appointed our- ;BelvOs a coramittee of four, to hold a confab' with the provost marshal and see what he was willing to do about it, and about his furnishing us transporta tion 'to St. Louis. He listened to ns a while an’ then said: "Sergeant take these four bums to the guard bouse." T hat was a pretty way to tre a t us, Wasn’t it? We took things easy, because we could stand 'most any thing those day£. While we Were considering, a Sergeant .and fourmencame and called our names and said he was to take us to St. Louis,' and th at we were to sta rl immediately. So: th efiv e men marched us four to the depot and you would have thought Bar- num and his earth vasn ’t a circumstance to the curiosity of the people th a t saw Jtoaedtatolyreceives the property, so tt The Sergeant was very kind to us BiOW PICKPOCKETS WORK. fildQCMM of a High Order |feee««ary In the BaalMM, . ' Piekpockets usually wprk fat gongs pi Su re «r. four. Some w ill .work with. W»*y but nd t many. Bayton 8am ah wants.three. Their signal fog action Is. “lUwad-up." t was standing on the annur. of Illinois and Washington streets one, day when, unexpectedly, J wwght the' words, "Bound-up.’* I flamed and saw four fellows approach a mam standing alone, and before I cohid malice what they were about they had %k pocket-book. I went up to him and .antedMm if he bad lost any thing. He sAHfer his wallet, and exclaimed: "My :»aA sopte otto has robbed mel” and, arsing me a’wild look* started and ran. Y*en gave atten tion to the thieves, and A ry were soon locked up. We found sandthe man’s name and- sent them to JdL There pickpocket# get,to h e r e . amicably expert, and improve, them a k t s by. practice un til they lean t how, 'JHton after a wallet they use the thumb' •-•redforefinger to pull the lining of the packet up till the wallet is in reach. If H r victim has his hand in the pocket,1 anr, known as the front stall, w ill hack Wftin the crowd against the other arm, and another, the rea r Stall, will, as if by aorident, knock the victim's *h a t his ' eyes.. He Is- there- bound to draw out his hand rcpTace theT hat. ' The front Stall ■awes over so th a t he can not pu t this Asad down again, and meanwhile the dexterous fingers of the thief secure the wallet or watch, as is desired.' An off- r, a fourth man in the round-up, ken bridge and jammed a s up seme. The worst of it waa we could get noth', in g to drink hu t warm rain watebj and righ t then and th e n I swore off ever stoppinga t anytown in Southern Indiana We finally got through to East St. Louis and had not been there more than tw o hours when we saw the steamer coming np the river with our regiment on hoard, we kep t shady un t|l the boat landed; then-wejquietly stepped onboard and found that we had not been missed as there had been no roll call oii the trip, As for pur friendB, the sergeant1and guards, 1 always thought they must have looked rather sheepish when they went to report to the provost marshal a t fife, Louisw ithout ns,*—Uncle Josh, im North Carolina Ledger, A HOLD CHARGE. Three' thief is detected he will not have fihr stolen property on hts person. The meric is done quicker than you can tell -ft” “Pickpockets usually have small Is a fr, do they not?” *“Yes;-hut GarTity, the notorious Cht- •pickpocket, was an exception. He the biggest hands I ever saw, bu t very successful in what he d id but was obeying his orders and I have always had a desire to talk to him about it. After we got started, he said he guessed we were all righ t and gave uS' our tickets to give to the conductor our- selves, so he would not be bothered; Then we a ll settled down, to sleep; Shortly after we four waked up and talked It over and concluded it wasn't necessary to have any body to take care Abeminute he was aaHfag some fak ir ' o f ns and wd had b etter get off an* take r i i h i au«t the next-pa—»"g hill* in a another train, which we did about mid- waawd while he and his pals ‘rounded night, talcin' our tickets w ith ua, which w f some one they thonght It worth '.w as proper an* righ t to do. ' * ' * . We then went to: a farm house near by and rapped a t the door. By and by an oldgentiem an came to the door and opened tt about three baches and In quired the cause of the alarm. We said we -wore discharged soldiers,, on .onr to attack, A characteristic of people is th a t they always c an y wris of dollars w ith them. When _Bbj’loa Sam waa arrested here he was i n i by the mayor; and asking one of A t officers to reth e to a private room him,, he ripped np one suspender , way home and had got le ft a t the sta* « r« o ak o»t eight «100 bills with which ‘ tion, th a t we were hungry and wanted «ft fay the fine and costa. - Pickpockets something to eat; th a t we would sleep stiff always p n t Up money for fines or | on the grass in,the yard if he would le t M l ahd then leave the place. Thej ns. Then the door, swung open wider and we were told to come In. The old, man,had good hacking. He had an old .army :sab«r.;ih' bis t s r i , behind him waa the hired man w ith a shotgun, a boy with a pistol, an old woman with i mop and a hired g irl w ith a rolling pin The old man said.;'the're..had' been rob bing going on about there and they had to be on th eir guard, but, said he: “ f make no doubt you are a ll righ t and yon are welcome; I am glad to help a Soldier. I had a son killed a t Shiloh,*’ ftiid then he stopped because his voice trembled and he said, “sit down gentle men." Then the old lady took her apron away from her eyes and said:, “Yes, yon shall have' supper and any thing else you want," an’ she went to the kitchen. We did a good job of eat ing. Then they took us np-stsirs to bed and when I saw th ab e d s ! said: “Well, God bless the oJd man," and ! have. said it a thousand times since. Next morning when w f awoke, the sun Waft shining and tha old man waa call- ingt “time to get up, boys.” One, of our boys MUd; "My Lordl time in* time again have l beard my father call ns hoys just like that.” We ate a hearty breakfast lend said good- by to ohr friends. Wewant to the sta tion and hoarded a train which came along, and rode till aboutnoon and then got off againto look for rations a t some little town in Indiana. We west over to a store and met fotir or five lnfaatry- meawhohad been discharged and just got home. We had Our revolvers with ns and after we drank 'some beer we “allowed” the* cavalry could shoot as good as the infinity, which they “al lowed" we couldn’t. We agreed to shoot for a square meal and I shot for the .cavalry, best three out of five. We shotat a ring Ihetiae of a silver dollar, on a tnpe one hundred yards- distant. The first shot my opponent missed the tree- and my bullet struck seven feet above the mark; tally one for me. The neat shot he struck ahont three feet above sad 1 a little eloser;ttug two, I won every ta lly . ' Tlny Were hot satis fied and wanted to hot money- an" tty I t over. I told -them f -didn’t .'Want, tiiilr money, wUoh made ftHMsho^ ter than ever. I told them I WOidd just fraotiee-,a little htfmo T would mmmls’Mmftt-mAtg to HiiM idihi wssftftijw.,*mau spw-emmsawim'jwwfWf-vpmmft m*vv five haUe every oM of tiiem within the •eirole, --.Thin . timg f ’Towid” they didn’t wmit to het ri^ m . do any thing to get away. While A ry make thonsanda ofdollarsonly one ■atof fifty, perhaps, saves any thing. Ttmj. waste th e ir money as a rnle In jmjvbling or carousing.”—Indianapolir Jumbal. • __ - EVENING CLOAKS. fiheKSsrcst Oase Are Vary BcaatlfU—Zlov TheyAreMMl«. . Evening cloaks are closely wedded t« -mvadaggowns, ,aa the possession of one - aniwMltates the purchase of the other. TBrmost bewildering, bewitching gar- sarn tyet seen enveloped the figure of a A id e r, rather pale woman, and re- fibefet! marvelous-tints upon her fair, A i r skin. I t Is of fawn vicuna cloth, studded w ith large wafers of shaggy material In the same shade, and Is lined Asnsghout with pink mervellleux satin. AHshout thyliood, down the fron t and j u r a the sides; are plaited double frills • f Msrsh,; the pater one of fawn, the Im erone of surah, which frames In pic- •timsque convoluted fullness the fair Am o f its wearer. A warm, soft cloak ■rpale gray cloth, lined with ligh t ysl* ttm satin, has a yoke of chamois braided w ith gold, surrounded by a deep frill of A e cloth, revealing the brightness of Aelfnlng in Hs folds. A thick wavy-surfaced India cafhmere ftr.ua the foundation of a .beautiful wrap Tiie outside is red, the inside wtdte fur, th a t the delicate dresses be neath it may no t suffer by contact, th e high collar and fiat cape are bor dered w ith sable and fastened w ith je e p s simulating miniatures quite in *fcM ra tte r w ith the Old World a ir of the sfeh garment. Another striking and costly cloak for Mrewiaifgwear is cu t in the conventional •faratar form of d o th in a tin t of the new dahlia red w ith a hroche design in Mack sad trimmed With a large roll Writer reaching to the feet Of white Thibet goat. The Same fur borders and lines the cloak. A very pretty modal o i evening o«p« in the Huguenot AjAtfeh* £ai« gby-afoth w ith* woven design in gray, heliotrope and lim it; The ftn»m and wide ro ll collar am «£ white Angora, fend the mantle afcmr over Along, ck*e vest of hello* fimpft vmm$#*0fmMdl# h ta fftw fab rit wsedderatiy empioysd for evening -riN |«wm i£* riy js * >e*smpi#' In white t w ith white ostrich ffte fronts of ydMy. |ymga|, — , ,—.i^ r 1 - ^ w ja^-iL arouna uiere unu i oars: ana men HHttk l i i MbtJ b iM ri^A rU - ■XTVtiKrjk m mwiisn sable borams, In eomldtth* A m wffft ririivrilow hroesdee, make g k asset effeetive and alegaotof even* wm p tifeM lA ^ If*T . t« tt, Ita r th e tiid n got atm ted » along tia ft tMOngsq to m e btiddqusrimA aatl aMv-afdd fb •ndm oeto f the ofKnMwerad&i board. Yon olffdkt to have fteentm slide off th a t IffNhllWA*.*|iiA mfriti mmem ^ww weem -sswvm- wemvewms ,mmmpem-wvftR took imother ttidnimditranintoa bro* How Thirty-Six Soldier* Hat ThoviMBd to.Kout. This story of bow tblrty-slx brave sol diers on the one side pu t tq u tter rou t and rapid flight 3,000 brave soldierf^on the other side is from the lip* of a pri vate who fought in the ranks through the stirring scenes of tbe sixties and came out with an honorable discharge. In 1863 Hanover Junction, a little town between the forks of the North Ann and South Ann rivers, was held by a body of troops from Longatreet’a brig'* ade. There were about 3,000. of them, and as the post was a vantage point about the same number of troops were Bent from Burnside’s army to attack the place. Among the first to cross the North Ann river was Private McCarthy; of a New York regiment, now a resi dent of Kansas City. With him were thirty-four members of the same com pany, commanded by Captain Kil patrick. The 8,000 defenders of the post were drawn up In battle file some distance from the river. Hardly had K ilpatrick's men reached the bank When he commanded them to charge, and the little troop of thirty-six went charging directly in the face of 3,000 troops drawn up in line o f battle. The sight of the little body chiuging alone waa too much fo r the nerves of the 3,000 raw troops and they fled. Unused to the artifices of war, they thought there must be some trick in it and they cu t a t once fo r taller timber. The little troop of thirty-six had ac complished without the lose of a man what might probably have taken 5,000 men to do.—Kansas City Times. FISHING FOR A GANDER. How 0 SolSIor KvaS<« aa Order Forbid- dla* ran ch 's- ’ A man Who waa caught in the ac t of akinning a neighbor's sheep, covered his embarrassment by declaring th a t no sheep could bite him and live. The logic of th is laequalcd by th a t of a'Yan kee soldier who once had a narrow es cape from an enraged gander. The tqen of a certain Maine regiment,which waa in the enemy’s country In 1863, con sidered the order "no foraging" an ad ditional and uncalled for hardship. One afternoon about dusk a soldierwas seen heating a rapid retreat from the rea r of ■ farm house near: by, closely punned by a gander with wingsoutspread,whose feet seemed scarcely to touch the ground, andfrom whose beak issued a succes sion of angry screams. The fugitive was not re-assured by the cries of the gander’s owner*. '’Hold on, man, hold on! n e won't hu rt yon!” “Call off your gander! Callhlm offI" shouted the fleeing soldier. Neither man nor gander stopped nn tti inside the camp-lines, when the soldier’s friends relieved him of his fierce punuor with the aid of the bu tt of a m usket “Hid th a t gander think he could chase me like th a t and live?” the soldier exclaim* ed, as he surveyed the outstretched bird; but he said nothing of the belted hook, w ith cod-line attached, which m ight have thrown ligh t on th e unfor tunate gander's strange actions.—N. Y, Star. ; ■, . A Corporal's Daughter, Shortly after the second battle of Bull Bun, Mr, Warren Lee Goss, having in jured a foot, was “limping along in the rea r of the army like a true straggler.” Tiie route waa in Maryland. Maryland waa the first plaoe, since I had come to the front, where we were greeted With smiles from women wad children, A in pleasant farm-house, near Damascus, where flowers grew In the garden, and vines climbed along the spacious veran da, a little g irl peeped oVer the gate, and said good-morning. I asked her if She wasn't afraid of so many soldiers, and she replied! ‘Tio, my father. Is a soldier In the army, too,” and then, timidly, aa if fearing to dminle me with his exalted rank, she Mid! “ He's woor- porali Ho you .know him?”—Youthh Companion. * /., } iiT ff FOR w i f S K lk , J Tst* four drafts during the rebellion were: Total number drawn, TTMI t; total who penoaafiy served, to* tal who. fiftihtfl - ft*!! **»?>•: lM,S4k total exempted, S1S,*M; <riiMftedM«MM«MiAteiftlWhoprid , m *+■ tiekt andt«n»ei»td 'M oampuent In Boston last attnuaer, MAllia-- ' I ^sJykgjyh klX hs - ht MMI w -mBwTm' IMHIlVfVra IvwlwWJDIMl GrB* m, h i ith f ■pmhd l, only ........ . tm * IN WOMAN'S fiEHALF. THE TRUTH IN “ HANNAH JANE.” 'WomanWhoforgot AowmatMuae*** *»» Grow OldKariy. T hat painful poem, “Hannah Jane”; is full of disagreeable tru th , hu t I t is tru th , and th a t is the saddest p a rt of it, says a w riter in the Chicago In ter Ocean. There, are thousands of ju st suph faded, dejected women who have been left behind in the race, and o re no lotiger mated to the husband, who was not the superior a t the outset. The a t tractions of youth- are transitory, and there must be .some-compensation In added character and experience, fo r th e faded bloom, the wrinkles and the loss of grace, A- woman’s life is comparatively cir cumscribed, The Wife and mother must spend much of her time a t home. She misses tluitrefreshing contact w ith the -world, the exhilaration and stimulus which are derived from the interchange of. opinions and ideas. Instead of re plenishing from these sources, she is constantly giving out to the children who appeal to her upon eveiy occasion, Snd who draw upon all her resources, mentally, spiritually and physically. Regard for the bodily well-being of a family—the clothing, the preparation of -three meals a day for three hundred and sixty-five days in the year, the nurs ing in siqkneSs and the regard for health—a ll these, faithfully attended to, leave, apparently, little tim e for reading or th e cultivation of w hat used to be'called accomplishments.^ There is little time for reading hooka o r even newspapers; there is no time to prac tice, “keeping up the music" th a t was once cultivated as a promising talent, Cleverness w ith the pencil, a faculty for languages, or a talen t fo r writing, - all are sacrificed to the urgent demands of the growing family, and the sacrifice, for it is a sacrifice, is no t always made cheerfully.- The woman who aspired to he something on Her own account is haunted by regrets of unused ability and undeveloped powers,* and th is w ith no undervaluation of the sacredness of the duty of wife and mother,-and in the fu ll knowledge th a t these duties were voluntarily assumed. In nine cases out o ften , however, the married woman*who becomes too much absorbed in domestic m atters does so unconsciously. She lets the sewing «n< croach upon the reading, and the sweep ing and. dusting and setting In order swallow up the hour th a t could he daily spared for w rithig and practicing, and ttoon e is any this better fo rit.- A little plainer food, fewer and- plainer garments,' will leave th e household in no way defrauded of its rightful dnea, and itw ill be the gainer in other ways. The mother who is w cllread, who,Can direct the reading of her family, ivhp has not forgotten her music o r drawing is much more than the mere provider fp r bodily needa. . She is an intelligent, helpful, interesting friend; o f vvhom her: husband and her children nev^r tire. Women are beginning to discover th is for themselves, as the thousands of clubs throughout th e country, the ina- jority of whose members are married," five sufficient evidence. ■ I t is not easy to keep np, bn t it can he done. There are hundreds of wom en who snpport their families w ith pen and brush, and never appear hurried t>r hsrrassed, and their housekeeping does not suffer because of th e ir .professional Work. A woman died recently, in a Western city who belonged to one of the oldest and most distinguished fun* iliea of Philadelphia. A sa bride she emigrated with h e r huaband to what was then a wilderness. She reared a large* fam ily, sewed; oooked, did the hara work of-the farm w ith her own hands, hut she never deteriorated. Her children were a credit to her,-and she instructed them herself in music, in French* end history and mathematics. In the la tte r part o f her life she was perm itted to return to the city—no t her native city—h u t the one where she found the opportunities which she had sacrificed; snd for Which she had' never cessed to long. I t was a beautiful righ t to see her sitting a t the piano, stately, silver haired and gracious, playing w ith a lt the enthusiasm of a modern lover o f Chopin o r Beethoven. She was a person of strong w ilt, and had no t relinquished a single custom or accomplishment, although fo r years she lived With no society but th a t of htor hhsbaad and her little children, flbe had retained a ll her refinement of m sinteraiiddreM & atehataeterisii the gentlewomen Whettever she tfiay live, nod What she did fc possible for other Women, In th is age, w ith hooks to be had fo r the asking, w ith the opportun ities for travel, and studjft it Is to ha: hoped th a t poor Hanbah Jane Is an ex- Mft. fttAN K '* W lFE ,' . o ther risss o f n rtn emdd muster o rfM ltM M k in vmtSom and show aa MHla drsfikaunsM H«WS tOrfeMWa***- ffuStril * YMStaa Hotter. < •J fmmd iuyA tt moentiy h rik t% to Sir. <toc*)WW.ffiffldgHdimhwhBmW om * 'Ori notor-hod ntooce etoemwfrkONie-dii h k experimuM ; Wito wmnon journalists. His Words w ill Interest tootriH iai Of IgtvetoM n verismm. 4hiidri-'“dom«ef to e best writeni on n y paper oswthe women editors Of it, snd there is not otto of them vfho Ik h o t paid ito h a r w oH eatm ^aa thd sM a ltow e ton in an . ibsU svu frnly to toto. I t l s true th at, WriAm hums, to imum nnattoas, boon wadMupald fto tind r tohotm hm lam . rnmrtniod, frem nHd—aas t hafaam m r tiiak to la sta ts of thtogs kgrSduslly ha* otwritor laos. L o t w om anheg ivanafair Thay wfil very of ten do work ever better than men. ,in proof of th is, le t ma give yon an anec dote of one p f my women writers: “ For years the Ledger has published a weekly srtiele whieh has attracted widespread attention and interest jt is, I may'say, one of the leading feat, urea of the paper. For along timeit was w ritten by a man, a non-resident Of th is city, and whom I had never seen. Qne morning h is wife came .to see me, ’Mr, Childs,*, she said, ‘my husband is ill and unable to do his work anv^ longer. For a number of months psstria have been w riting his editorials for him, and I have now come to ask you to allow me to continue doing so.* ‘Certainly,’"T said. I f you have been w riting them you can go on doing so; bn t say nothing-of- the change to any one.* “Some rime after th is the husband died,: On going to the office in the' morning one of my editors suet tne with a face a yard long. ‘Mr. Blank ia dead,’ said he, ‘and I don't know what we are'. going to do without him. His articles were such a special feature, and them is no one else in the country with ability enough to w rite them .’ ‘“ Isn 't there?’ I asked. ‘But doyou think th a t they have been as good as usual of late?’ “ ‘Better,* he replied. ‘The articles became stronger and wiser the older hq grew.’ , “ 'But are you sure th a t there has been no "falling off these last fevr months?’ I persisted. “ ‘No indeed; it is ju st there wherethe improvement is noticeable. The older he grew the b etter became his work, v And th a t makes it all the more discom forting to realize, th a t we can never se- cure any one who could do' it onp-tenth as well,’ he added, mournfully. “ ’‘Oh, yes we can,’ T answered, ‘it ■ may Interest yon to know th a t for more . than a year past Mr. Blank has no*' w ritten a line for the Ledger.’ “ 'Not w ritten tone line?’ gasped my amazedi editor. “ *No; for the la st.y e a r Ond longer Mrs. Blank has been doing herhus, band's work, and she Is stm quite caps-' hie of continuing to do s o / “And she did, and does to-day. “There; you can see, Is a case where a veteran was fooled by a woman’s eff- oiency. Perhaps if M rs.' Blank had come and-Hsked permission to write the - articles her ability would have been m istrusted and she would'nothavedone as good work as the feeling of confl . dence enabled her to tu rn out.”—Lv - dies’ Home Journal. PaeuUar i*uraalt* far Women. - Every year women seem to engage more freely than ever before In peculiar . pursuits, says an exchange. A yonng : lady ha England is ju st publishing an account of a journey she made .with only a valet, through a w ild part of Russia. She went op horseback and - traveled 1,500 miles, -She rode astride. , aud wore a sort o f Hr. Mary Walker - costume, which a t times She covered, w ith a coarse woolen gown. 8he Slept ou t a t night on the ground, went, bare- foffted, ate vile food, lived in a discom- fo rt equal to th a t of Stanley or Kee nan, and a ll to w rite a book, Another lady went over Alaska practically ai and has w ritten a book, and for women to go around the world alone, has be come so old a story as to no longer fur nish amusement o r delight for anybody. Women are famous fishers in Norway during the summer, and last year sev eral o f the most po tab le' mountain climbs o f the Season were made by women. ■ * ■ CONCERNING THE FAIR SEX. H alf of the number of pupils attend ing the evening d a ise s a t Toynbee Hsll are women. T iik “bachelor” g irl is now the tem applied to the yonng woman wholeaves the paternal home and strikes out for herself. MiftS F. A. Q xat , who has token the degree of LL. B., a t Dnblin University, is one of the two women In Europe to he honored in such manner. The other is Miss Workington, of Dublin. A incur female device fo r earning s livelihood is th a t of going aroefid to the houses of society people and cleaning and repairing fine dresses th at have - been accidentally soiled o r otherwise injured, The scheme waS developed is Buffalo. There are some women who have a ll they can attend to In this line. T hu statute providing foe the admis sion of women to medical examinations a t Oxford was rejected by only four votes. This practically insures itssue- Oeta In the future, aha the opposition will not he longmaintained. The num ber of women students In the healing art Increases almost dally, fthd their achievements In the profession ore con stantly gaining in dignity and import ance. A large hospital foe women is London latoly opened, which Is minis tered to. by women only. Is crowded to its fullest oapaeiiy oil toe time. Tus number of women In America employed to remunerative occupation* Is wtojtofdr »e*sfy tk p#resut> of the total female population, to the previ ous dasude /th e percentage was only IL lkpcr eent. oftoe whcle.. Ont of the eleven riasses of Occupations, womfu haws tooteasod oompoiwtively In nine, vto: 'Government serried* professions! andaosaestie service, trade, agriculture, flkhories, mMafeetoreaana m appms* risks, While they have decreased eon- _ umtivetoos laborers and topersonsl aerrios. In 1976 fhars were nmcteeu hcunches of tudustty In which women ware not empioysd; la 1865 thafiumber W filNdnMdto toton, HOUSE ' «*3Sevor put : eevwoddhjt- moisture --Bihhons a pu t .away fo fA 0p r,m -the msp afsCterln mroduoeii disc. —Oneen E b new milk, tw the sliced hre; bsnwn nicely ffpreadwithh -^Head Chi thoroughly cl feet un til tins s ilting While liqnor, chop fl red pepper, ss ponnded; put odd a few spo pot* and plac May he eatei Boston Badge —Raised Ik using one ,qu» enp o f yeast; cupo f lard, t large mashed to Buit; very light; ro enough to fry plate, arid set longer;than c der. This m Household. —A Cough each of 'too: Slippery elm , pinto of wate pail, place «b water and let tinod,hoars, s Strain the liq i * add-one p in t; . ' sugar, and, fo oheckerbujy. three times OOUghis hard - —Plum Put cnpfuls(finely nrisins). one and carefully . brown sugar, > citron, two flour, hne tea der, one cnpft ojl these into Well-huttefed : a saucepan, w half:lipito sic half .hours, tu w ithhardsau .---Brown Be crumbs, aboi peeled, quart tablespoonful capful of sug ' cinnamon. B a la y e ro fa p ) layer*ottcrum . nuinon, hits o; Water over e the dishes wit the bread-crui .are not very Cover closely t three-quarters cover and broi -sugar.—N. Y. —EggToast brown • burned. Floe m flkinaskiU butter, some somb eggs (fo use eight egg* milk is scaldii stirring all ra. on cooler pari oorporftted, m to harden, dij lifting i t out onto Xho t trie der of the eg; then lift in tooth—Detroi TERR* A. X1««rfaMnx *• peak' Of late ye: farms have apeake, and he the proprii h i p e s t farm snd i t consif lake, which < sands of te rn rapidly as wa SOrrOnaded tl to keep out which are th has made h filled with at When the fen Hot get out Me has nurs and he keeps they are ton i serve them ft older*torrapii as a Justice o) , Court are c times eat the areyotmgan tons ten aient' to r tihemselv of their beinf Sraoss to the , tomstog ong Tenrs ago th kat, and you <fils tor two) years ago th; ndb a sn to v am oases in ■> ssBsfrom si Sftoss. • Rem ustoware, oi oaeddQar, a .a s
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