The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52

HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. —Use soft water and a lew drops ol turpentine and a little augur with your stove polish. —popper saucepans are cleaned on *Ji$ putslde with salt and vinegar, and on the inside with soap and water—after they have heen filled with water and a small lump of soda, which muBt come to u hoiL—'Ladies’ Jlotae Journal. —Many good housekeepers who have preserved strawberries, cherries, plums or almost any preserves which have be* gun to ferment, but are not moldy, add them to the mince meat before it is scalded, in proportion to a quart to the quantity given.. —Tongue Toast.—Take a cold tongue tha t has been boiled, mince it fine and mix w ith cream and beaten yelk of an egg and simmer on a stove. Haying first cut off the crust, toast slices of bread and butter them a little, lay in a flat dish and spread Over them thickly ’ the tongue while it is hot.—Boston Budget. > —Rye Drop-Cakes.—Mix together two cupfuls and a half of rye flour, half a cupful of rye meal, one cupful of wheat flour one teaspoonful cjif salt. Stir in gradually three cupfuls and a half of milk and add four well-beaten egg& The rye meal can be done without, but the calces are much better with it. Fill the iron gem-pans.—Demorest’s Month­ ly- • . —Bread.—Put a pint of sweet milk in­ to a vessel and let come to a boil; then stir in meal till it is as thick os mush. •Cover oi t closely and keep warm over night. In the morning add a pint of lukewarm milk and flour to make a good stiff batter. Now sot your yeast in a pot of water to keep warm; when light . and spongy work into loaves; let raise and then bake.—Detroit Free Press. —A sand-bag, with a plush cover, is a most useful •present to any one who drives much in wintry weather. A capvas-bag contains the sand, which should not be packed too tight. This may be warmed a t any time in the oven and then slipped into the, cover, which is a plush or velvet bag with handles like a child’s school bag. This, placed in the carriage or sleigh, will retain the heat a long time and give great comfort, —-Mashed Potatoes.—Remove ' the skins from the potatoes and let them ■ lay in cold water for an hour;- then put into a sacepan, with a little salt; cover with water and boll; when done drain off water, turn into a bowl and mash fine; melt a piece of butter size of an egg with a little milk; mix it with the mashed, potatoes until they are a smooth paste; be careful, not to have them too wet; then put the* mixture into a dish piled up.—Boston Herald. , —Pumpkin Indian Pudding.—With a pint and a half of stewed pumpkin mix a pint and a half of Indian meal and a tablespoonful of ground ginger. Into a quart- of boiling milk stir a pint of molasses. Add, stirring hard, the meal and putopkin. I t will be improved by adding the grated rind of a lemon or orange. Tie in a pudding bug and drop into boiling water. Boil four hours. If West India molasses is used, it requires' no eggs; without it, add three. What is left may be reboiled next day. —Pumpkin Marmalade.—For a; nice ripe pumpkin of medium size about six pounds of sugar, one pint of good cider vinegar, one ounce, of ginger root bruised and a dozen elbves tied in a bit of lace or thin muslin will bo required. Pare the pumpkin and cut into small pieces; heat the other ingredients in a . porcelain-lined kettle, add the pumpkin and cook Until quite soft; then take it out of the sirup with a strainer, keep­ ing it ho t while the liquid is boiled down a little; pu l the pumpkin back into the kettle and le t it boil about half an honrj stirring well meanwhile.—N. Y. World. •_________. ' 'THE DOWRY IN FRANCE. How th e Voting T.ndy’s Pride In Humbled Who Marries a Jllch Ilaaband. The question of money in the dowry Is th& tender spot in all French mar­ riages. A poor girl who goes into a rich family of the middle class of society has to climb a veritable Calvary before she can be united to the man she loves. All the circumstances connected With the wedding presents, with the furniture which her fiance buys, all the matters connected with her trousseau and with the contract which estab­ lishes h e r share of the property in the future, are, so many humiliating ob­ stacles which distress her to the heart and inflict upon-her pride wounds that will never ecase to bleed, To what length do these well-known defects and Intrigues extend! And how many young girls go sorrowfully to marriage with the feeling—the certainty—that they are being married for their dow­ ries. There Is no class of French society from the peasant to the nobleman, where the same spirit of covetousness and the same scenes do not reappear proportionately, altered only by the different systems for tha settlement of the bride’s personal property—tha t is, h e r dowry, Equal marriages o r equal . conditions of marriage among the peas- ' auto, or the middle class, or the aristoc­ racy, are called marriages de oonve- nance; and they are generally the hap­ piest; not because they bring the blessed Joys of choice and love with them, but because owing to the fact th a t the prejudices of French families in the m atte r p i dowry are Wot in that esse shocked or forced to make concessions Or sacrifices, the life of the young peo­ ple flowson less disturbed by reproaches leas tormented, and therefore happier, —North American KeviaW. , FOUGHT WITH NAPOLEON. An Old Monk Wlio Was Ones a Soldi** s f Pr»»ee. . s The Trappist Monastery, situated in Kentucky, Is the home of those monks upon whom the injunction of perpetual silence is placed. The stories that sift through to the outside world, with more or less romantic detail, concerning the individual, monks of La Trappe, are many, There Is one told of a brother a t Gctlisemane, which is old, but full of dramatic suggestion, lie was a soldier of Napoleon, so it was said, anil after the Emperor’s first abdication took the cowl of the “Brown Brothers,” and ultimately came to Gethsemanc. Forty years ho lived in silence, hearing noth­ ing of the world’s history, but with one item of curiosity left unquenclied. When he came to die and was lifted from his.hard couch and laid upon the harder floor, strewn with straw, when all followers of the. order must meet ex­ tremes, the Abbot, as is customary, told him he was a t lil erty to ask any ques­ tion he degsired. “What became of the Emperor?" the old man asked prompt­ ly, and then for the first time learned Napoleon's fate, long years after that restless clay had become dust.—Chicago Journal: "",•!' '1 A"■»■' 111 \ - . !1 —Here is a true tale of business life in New York. Once upon a time s youngman got employment as n<lerk in the establishment of a prosperous merchant,who paid him fairly for faith­ ful services and treated him well ac­ cording to his worth,' so that his mind was contented as time sped along. In the course of years, and in the vicissi­ tudes of fortune, the merchant failed, went out of business, and fell into pov­ erty. In the mean while the clerk,who was of a frugal turn of mind, had saved enoughtof his income to begin business, whereupon he .set up his establishment, took as a clerk the -man who had,once been his employer, paid him. fairly for faithful service, and treated him well, so that both are now contented as time speeds along.—N. Y. Sun. _ —The Corbin Deer Park, near New­ port, N. 1L, was recently inclosed with a wire fence, and many partridges were 'found dead in consequence of striking the wires in their flight. The distance around the park is about thirty miles. In man)- places ledges and rocks have been removed b y blasting and the ground leveled, in order that the fence might bo-built so,,near the ground that animals can not ciscape. . —Marshal Villars, when^j^bout leav­ ing Versailles to take command of the army in Flanders, said to the King: “I . leave your Majesty in the midst of my enemies while I go to combat yours.” ■.. . —Spearing salmon in Ilogne river, .Oregon, has lumished rather tame sport to numbers during the past season. Many ranchers arc feeding them to their stock hogs. Gratifying to All. i. The high position attained and theuniver­ sal acceptance and approval of tbo pleasant liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs, as the most excellent laxntlvo known, illustrate . tho value of the qualities on Which its suc­ cess is based and are abundantly gratifying to theCalifornia Fig Syrup Company. “C a . n ’ t you 'stay tor dinner, Ifaryl", Aunt Mattie said. - "No, ma’am. Ma said uot, ’le»s you iusisted.” She insisted. You wear out clothes, on a wash board tentUnei as much as on the body. Untofoot- tpt. Buy Dobbins’ Electric Soap of your grocer and savo this useless wear, unde over since lSdt. Don't take imitation. There arc lots of them. W uex aro Brooklyn people like violin strings} When they cross the bridge.— Brooklyn Eagle A* E n r lM S r TleV*t. Thousand Mile Books at 3 cento per mile. Good to a Thousand Points. Thousand mile books will be sold by tha Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton B. £ . on and after January 30,1801, a t tha rate of $20, and will be accepted on all divisions of the C., II. & D. and fifteen other roads, reaching a thousand or more points. The purchase of one of these mileage books assures the passenger not only cheap riding but an ever-ready ticket, T ‘ between cago, ................................ manca, Ft. Wayne, Peoria, Ann Arbor, Cadillac (Mich.) and innumerable' other points. The following roads will accept them between all stations: Buffalo So Southwestern, Chicago «fc Erie and N. Y., 1*. & O. Divisions of the Erie lt’y, Dayton & Union; Dayton, Ft. Wayne &> Chicago,. Flint Sc. Fere Marquette, Ft. Wayne, Cincinnati Sc, Louisville, Grand Trunk between Detroit and Buffalo, Indianapolis, Decatur So Western, Lake Erie & VVestern, Louisville, New Al­ bany So Chicago, Terre Haute &Peoria,. Toledo, Ann Arbor and Northern Michi­ gan, Wheeling Sc. Lake Erie and Van- dalia Lino for continuous passage be­ tween Cincinnati'and St. Louis. • “Hivfc you any thing to say, prisoner}” asked the Judge. “No your honor, except that it takes very little to please me,"— Philadelphia Times. •1 0 0 Reward. >100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least onodrdailod disease that science has been abio to euro in all its stages, and that is Cutarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. ' Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting, directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution urn! assisting.nature m doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its cura­ tive powers, that they offerTtOOfor any case that it fails to cure.Send for list of testi­ monials. F. J. C hexk ' t & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, TOo. •■ “W hit have you Been doing for the last year!” asked one scedy-laolcing man as he stopped another on the street. “Time,” was tho laconic reply.—Washington Post. Confinement and Hard Work Indoors, particularly in the sitting posture, are far more prejudicial to health limn ex­ cessive muscular exertion in tho open air. Hard sedentary workers are far too weary after ofllco hours to take much needful qxor. else in the open air. They often need a tonic. Where can they seek lh vigoraticu more cer­ tainly and agreeably than from Hostetler's Stomach Bitters,- » renovant particularly adapted to recruit tho exhausted force of nature. .Use also' for dyspepsia, •kidney, liver and rheumatic ailments,. ' ' Bosstxo is cheap nowadays. Any onewho dan ompjoy a typewriter edn bo s dictator. —BinghamtonRepublican. H ave no equal a ' a prompt and positive cure for sick headache, biiiousnoss, cousti- £ 011011 , pain in-tho aide,'.and all liver troub­ le. Carter’s Little Liver Pills, Try them. CnA rm - “How did you got hurt,, deab boy I” Cholly—“A shadow fell on mo."— Punch I t I s no longer necessary to take blue pills to rouse the liver to action. Carter’s Little Liver Pills aro in .ion bettcr.Dou'tforget this. .. How to gel ahead oT your own shadow— face tin light.—ruck. A wl work—Skocmaklng. T ax ex out and bta ten—Drama. B eliktk in strikes—Bowling club*. HorsxHOLDKH*—Real estate agents. A oiurx reduction—Dumping the fire. X xaookiutes every thing—Tha micro­ scope. ___ No LAtmsiiYwork—Wringing tho hands. T n sheriff's remark—‘‘I’11warrant you." W hat everybody pockets—Handker- chiefs. ’ T hhough thick and thin—Tho list of soups. _ T hs safe burglar la always Indanger.—N, O. Picayune, ’ - -- -■—• • -"■■ ----- t N ot one man in ten can tell when he's loafing.— Atchison Globe. A matter of time and money—a promis­ sory note.—Drake’s Magazine. T hs man who is supposed to be a “brick” seldom helps to build any houses.—Yonker* Statesman. _______ A dtkktibbk —“Ginger, I'd tike to have you writs me a little ode on my baking powder. 1want it right up to tha prevail­ ing style." Ginger—“I understand. Yoa want it alum-ode.’—Boston Courier. A won am likes best to be paid a compll* A peculiar fact with refer­ ence to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is, that, unlike sarsaparillas and other ‘blood medicines, which are said to be good for the blood in:March, April and May, the “ Discovery ” works equally well a ll the year . rounds and in all cases o f blood-taints or humors, no matter what their name or nature. It’s the cheapest blood- purifier sold through drug­ gists. W hy? Because it’s on a . peculiar plan , and only pay fof the good get- , Can you ask more? “ Golden Medical Discov­ e ry” is a concentrated vege­ table extract, put up in large bottles; contains no alcohol to inebriate, no syrup or sugar to derange digestion; is pleasant to the taste, and equally good for adults or children. The “ Discovery Skin, Scalp and affections, as Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Fevcr-spres, White Swellings, Hip - joint disease and kindred ailments. ASEB IOUSM IST iM X M k a M M b ^ k H H A s t m t M s t s i S S S S S h S X S S ^ S S S ^ f m M n l M < k ( #d th a fcawats. A ( t t r t S m r . N r iM M M s ip tf r s tts tlv s w n M lI a s sw ttM w s < M « s ,« w sq s >stly tlw k * s* _______ tpi aba is.—Louisville Journal. “Yzs,” said the editor’s widow to tho tombstone maker, “John was a dear good husband, and I want something nice, Lot me see what yoh have In the (way of * dis­ play headstone,"—Washington Post. T ub Arabs have no “hellol” in their-lsn- guage. The nearest they come to it Is to throw a stone and hit a man in the back and then ask him as he tarns around: “Does it tffeaaoHeaven to give you good health this tnorniugl”—Detroit Free Preen. sold you you ’ cures all Scrofulous F ob T hboat D iskasbs ahi > C oughs use B iiowh ’ s B ronchial T houuks . Like all really good things, they are imitated. The Wiunis or# sold only 0* box**. T here are batter things in this world than money, but it takes money to buy them,—Indianapolis Journal P eople Are Killed by Coughs that Hale’s Honey of Horeliound and Tur would cure. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cut elnoue minute. Tint girl who wears “shoes like gun­ boats" should be a fleet-footed creature. B ronchitis I s oureS by frequent small doses of Pieo’s Cure for Consumption. “P apa , enn dogs toil time!” "A watchdog can, possibly.”—Yalo Record. i That* mtm admit* ithiy combined tm Dr, Tatt's IJver Fills, Tittyw ill, in a shoTt time, cure a ll tha wT. ftertnes that result tram inactive bowels. They alto feme to the intestines, stlmalnto the saersUms, and correct imperfect fane* M om ! notion a t tho stomach and liver. T t t i t ’ s l i v e r P i l l s HEWER DISAPPOINT. tried* 2St* 0Mo*MJ< 41 ParkPita*. N.V. THE POINT. A 1 " but From n Catholle An&» - bishop down to tbs P o o r e s t o f t h e P o o r til testify, not only ,to tbs' virtuesof ST. JACOBSOIL The Great Remedy For Rain, i to Itssuperiority over till other remedies^ expressed (bus: it, Cares Promptlj Permanently; wi.lcb means strictly, that the palivstrlcken seek a prompt relief ivhb no return of tbo' pain, and this, they nay, Bt. Jacob* till will give. ThisIs it*excellence. “ U Your Child Sick. S. S. S. \ NEVER WITHOUT IT. gives strength; health and vigor to weak and delicate children. About three years ago my little boy .three year* old was confined to his bed with what the doctors pronounced in­ flammatory rheumatism in his left leg. He complained of severe pains nil the time, extending to bis hips. 1 tried several remedies but they did him no good. A neighbor whose litilo son had been afflicted the same way, reoommended S. S. 8, After taking two bottles my little boy was com­ pletely cured, (and has been walking one and a quarter miles to school ev­ ery day sinca I keep B. S. S. in my house all the time, and would not be without i t 8. J. C heshire , Easton, Ga. It is perfectly irmless, ret so powerful as to cleanse the system of all impurities. BOOKS ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES F R E E . TH E SW IFT SPECIFIC CO.» Atlanta, Ca. TMSO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best! EasFest to use. JT cheapest. Relief is Immediate. A cure Is. certain. For Coldin theHead it has noequal. It Is an Ointment, of.which a small particle Is applied to the nostrils. Price,toe. bold bydruggists or sent bymall. Address, U. X. UAaxi.Tixa, Warren. Pa ThisTIcture, Panel size, mailed for 4 cents. J. F. SMITH A CO., Makers of “ Bile Beans,” giss It 257 Greenwich St., N. Y. City, C U R E BiliouEnesa, Sick HeadachCf Malaria. BiLOEANS. I—ELY lFassaiceM, Ith e Sores, 'S CREAM BALM— Cleanse* tha Nasal o s Allays. F a in s a il In flamm atian , I titv e s R e lle f s t once fo r Voia in h c s ii . i I Apply into the AToscrfis.— — ft fs Quickly Abtorbei. I I OOo. liragglsts or by null. ELYBROS.,64WarrenBU,N.Y.| e v e r y WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF — .... . THAT CAN BE RELIED ON BE U P ^ TO T H E MARK i s r o t t o s p u t i I f f o t t o D i s c o l o r ? BEARS THIS MARK. t r a d e M A R K ' NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BKWIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT* THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. ForOneDollar Best as b aistl, we will deliver,, free ef all ehsixes, 1* asy nertno> la the I'aited State,, all the ful- Iswlag arilrles esrelklly parked la a seat box: O m u I i of VauIlMSoap, vnsoopM10cts. OiMcali of VattllMSoap, icmtH-- 26 “ O m twoou aci bottkofWiiloVasofiM26 “ Of k n l w a a f ih ik v lk k a a . w k s - ~ * $ 1.10 VASELINE. O m tvoouncobol *ofPanViMiiM, 10oil. O m twoouncekottkV im I m Pomadi, 16 " O m JarofVasallMCoWCream . . . . . 16 “ O m oah«ofVustllMCamphorko-. --10 “ If you H avaogcaa I or to tUMPVofollno la s.sy fotrn h% cArofal to MW tonlyfenclNOiroojUByf uF.by u« »*■ ctirinAl ra<’k*ir<‘*« A rr<*at tnAO,YdrurRf 4 taaf«lryInE to pfrmuA<f« bu/rrm to lokR VABELI/IE \>T them. Nfivprriflii U»inch Mru:nritin. i« ilto arttHa i* ad Imilntlofi tall! iiot (IvajDU th a re ,a lt yonetpc < A i t 1 JLVK HKAI. VASltLINE l» H it h r all O r i n M l a t tea te s ta CHESEBROUCH M T ’C CO ., : 24 State Street, New York* I S U N f H O M l STOCK FARM. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187E w . i u k I r & CO.’S BreakfastCocoa fromwhichtbe excetoof oil ■ has beenremoved, J s a b s o lu t e ly p ttro s a l it tMBolnhle. * N o C h e m i c a l s are used la its jirepsrstlca. It bss more than thrtt tlr.u, tfi$ ttrtnglh of Coes* mixed With Starch, Arrowroot 6t Surat, i ami is therefore far more eco- LDomical, coif/ny let* than Sad | centocvy. iuadcijetofia.nour- _ ISefclng, r.trrnctheniiie, **aav ZMOsttKD, aSd admirably adapted for invalids o* well ss for peraom In heelth. M i by tiiraeera ererywhert. W.BAKEB A CO.,DorchMtor,Xu t. $500 REWARD 6 TON WAGON 8CALE, $60 is not equal to anymade, and a standard mfiaMtl soole. For pwlkulara, sddraa*only JoltsofBiaghAintoD,Blagiuatoii,El EMORY * B * i j* a * > a K i imaertef ef rercl:- rvacli Coach ____ ledVrarery large atad af hnnee iasaleetfirem. I | i « - astaemf atock. aixk* sflea* raaassslrie aa* •all ea easy tens*. Vlattsrs always wai; esoM. Larg* Cetidega# f l« . Addree, M. C. tirsaar Os, Ukh, PiltXTX arXiStwartniaaM BOILING WATER OR MILK. E P P S ’S ORAfEPUL-COMPORTINQ. C O C O A LABELLED1-2LB. TINS ONLY, Patents-Pensions-Claims, M f f l T M & S S t e pyrPUt* taia rAWX.wtr as*ymavaa r, ,.iW. A ee^aj'K fllA~A tare rallef. often* CTtlDJL g rata* w t Araa w « a«*f t tat*. .......... . .... _A .N .K .-K / _ ____ wiiew w a m k a l h D « am * a i» « J t « a state B e* yarn *hw «h* MwMtoHasM to r “ i

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