The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
h o u s e h o l d b r e v i t i e s . —Water in which orange peel has been soaked freshena^he complexion. —To prevent layer-cake fron^stick* ipff. grease the 'tht$ adit; dust In,a little flour. . ■ ny —Hot milk is a simple' means o i com* fort, and is most reviving tOone-Who i i fatigued hy over-exertion. _A tiennftn prescription for prevent# ing cold-sores and boils from coming .to a-head is to paint them five or ten times daily with equal parts Of boracic acid and water. . ■ ' -Steamed Brown Bread.—One cup four milk, one and one-half cups gr%* lam, one-half cup Indian meal, one* fourth cup molasses, one teaspoon rgjilerutus.—Household, -Lay a piece of thick Canton .flannel under your tablecloth. Even coarse nnpery will look a much, better quality with a sub-cov’er than if spread directly over the bare table tpp. , —Mock Lemon Pie.—One pint water, two tablespoons corn-starch, one cup sugar, one-fourth, teaspoon citric aqid; season with extract o f lemon; boil in a double boiler, cool and pour in nice crusts bakedbyown. —German Apple Oalt*.—Knead to* gather one-half pound of flour, well dried before the fire, two eggs, a little salt, half a cup of milk or water and onc-faurth pound of butter. Roll .this mixture about half a finger iu thick* ness, place it in a tin, the sides of which ’must be turnedup all round. Peel some apples, core and cut them in quarters, then, place them iu the dough, each quarter straight tip. Sprinkle a little! lemon-juice, powdered sugar and spice ovet the apples and bake in a hot oven. —N, Y. World. —Orange Pudding.—Peel and slice five oranges, and sprinkle with sugar; heat one pint' of milk in a steam cooker. Take one tablespoonful of cornstarch, wet with a little milk, a little salt and the yolks of four eggs; beat well, and add to the'hot milk; when thick set away to cool.- Take the whites of the eggs and one Cup of white sugar, beat to a stiff froth. Cover the orange with, the cold cream, then put on the frosting, and set in a pan of cold water in a quick oven to brown the frosting. If the orange gets heated it makes it bitter. —Boiled Eggs.—1. To cook* evenly, pour boiling hot water over them; set where they will keep just below the boiling point, and cook eight minutes for soft and twenty minutes for. hard boiled eggs. 2. Pu t on ini cold water; when i t has boiled the eggs are done, the whites being soft. 8. Drop into boiling water, cooking three minutes for soft, five minutes for bard and ten to thirty minutes for very bard to slice. 4. An ornamental dish.—Slice the eggs thinly, remove the yolks, toss them lightly into -mound shape in an egg sauce and season. Place around this, onlettnceor parsley leaves,.the inter laced rings of the whites.—GoodHouse* keeping. •. ‘ THE HOME DRf&S. It Should Always Be /Neat and'Attract- . Ivei The importance of neat and tasteful housedressingcannotbc overestimated. iChe matron who appears before the Luember# of the family in a shabby, soiled wrapper and makes the excuse, if indeed she takes the trouble to make one a t all, that “it is so much more comfortable,” has little idea of the'pos sible consequences of such a course. Could she but realize: that her dress is an evil example to her daughters, and productive of consequences tha t will reach far beyond her own span of life; that her husband and sons cannot fail to draw comparisons between her dress and that of the lad k s th ey meet -in other homes, and that these compar isons cannot fail to decrease th e ir’re* spect for her, she m ight be induced to give more attention to her personal ap pearance. Hot even the burden of care and con stant employment can furnish a suffi cient excuse for careless personal hab its, for few things are more important to the well-being of a family. There is an old saying to the effect th a t an un tidy mother has disobedient children, and, while neither parents nor children may realise the why or wherefore of it, yet there is always a lack of respect and an indifference to the authority of a mother who take* no pride in k e r per sonal appearance. Aud it is not the mother alone upon whose shoulders rests the burden of responsibility for home neatness and order in dress; the father has his duties to look after as Well, and should never fail to insist Upon tbe youuger members of the family presenting themselves with well-kept hands, elcan faces, neat ly brushed Hair, and orderly dress, a t least a t every maal where the fatally as sembles.—JL Y. Weekly, The InflneHce » t Parity. The readingof poetry predisposes the heart to generous thoughts; I t teaches a young man what is noble In mankind; it opens his mind to the reception of great hopes and unselfish ambitions,. Never again can a man feel th a t rapture which falls upon a boy When, in the dusty atmosphere Of a library, while the motes dance as the sun pours through the windows upon the leather hacks of the books, white, outside, the carts ramble up and down the street*, he sits alone tuaeng the hooka, poring over a volume of poetary. Then the gates of k**ve» lie open for Mm to gaze within; nay,hear** Itself hicks* to him within his resell, and r**dy for the whole world eheuld they b u t Choose to step wititk.—Wtltec M m tk M Harper** Baser. ... —Wanted I t Over as Soon a s . Possi ble.—OMisa Jbaurg (who ha* been listen ing to the conversation of her learned caller for about,two hours)—Yea, the JPdglisb language is indeed a wonderful thing.' By the way, professor, how many words there In It? The Pro- scssor—About two hundred and fifty thousand, Mbss.Laura! “What an im mense numbers How many of .them are in compoq use?”. “Perhaps forty thousand." “Andhow many are tech nical or scientific?” “Estimates differ, Miss Laura. I should say there may be One hundred thousand. Surprising, is it not?" {With a glance at the clock) “ I t seems almost appalling, But go oh, professor.”—Chicago Tribune. —Up a Tree.—A Russian civil official reports to the government that In Jan uary he saw a pack of wolves estimated to number 2,000, and that halt an hour later he saw another pack about 500 strong, all seemingly in good Audition .and prepared to- devour any thing eat able which might come handy, lie adds, as a sort of apology for making the report that he was up a tree when he saw the wolves. Trip* Undertake* foe Health'* talk* WiU be rendered taw* beneficial, ahd tiw fatigues of travel counteracted, if the voyager will take along with him Hostet- tor's Btomach Bitters, and use that protect ive add enabling tonic, nerve invigorant and appetizer regularly. Impurities in air and water is neutralized by it, and it i t a matchless tranquilizer and regulator of the stomach, liver and bowels. I t counteracts malaria, rheumatism, and a tendency to kidney and bladder aliments. F irst Broker—“What h fl become of that messenger boy of yourat Ho was slower than death.” Bepond Broker—“Yes. that's lust the trouble. I t overtook him.”—Yale Record, Do r o c know that you can beautifully docorato your walla ana ceilings and do the work yourself and very cheaply i I t can be W hex Dobbins' Electric Soap was first made in 1884 it cost 20 cents a bar. I t is pre- etiely the.same ingredients and quality now and doesn't cost ha>f. Buy it of your grocer and preserve your clothes. If he hasn’t it, he will get i t .„ To he a success a soda water fountain must bo a first class fizzle.—Binghamton ' Republican. ■■■■■.. l r you are tired taking the large old fash ioned gripingpillB, try Carter’s Little Liver Pills and take some comfort. A man can’t staudoverythlng. Onepill»dose. Try them. Tun opera singer who reaches th e high notes must have a soar throat.—Pittsburgh Dispatch. _____ Tun best cough medicine is Piso's Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c. A smor plates are probably the best on which ta serve hot cannon balls.—Boston Herald, done w ith Alabastine, the only perma nent wall coating. Alabastine never scales like kalsomlnes. Never generates j disease like wall paper* No washing or ' scraping walls. Can renew costs indefi nitely. . Easily applied. A sk any paint dealer or write for designs mid instructions to Alabastine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. . »Twould bo a most unreasonablo woman who should demand of her policeman lover that he should give up his club.—Boston Transcript “I have UEEsj Am.iCTKD.wltU an affection of the Throat from childhood, caused by diphtheria, and havo used various remedies, but have nevqr found anything equal to B rown ’ s B koxohiai , T roches .”—Rev. G. M. F. Hampton, PiUetpn, Ky. Sold only in boxes. . No, AMAitTi.ua, unfortunately the in spector of customs will be of no use to you lu looking into your husband’s shady nab; It*. * et trusty information for nil who grow irn lt of any sort or kind. Stark Bros., nursery men, Louisiana, Mo..w ill send it free to u l interested.—O r . p .-.aJudd Farmer. Au. worn out—overcoats. J s s r as they are—the funnymen. .' G ot a snap to it—the pocketbook. .,1 - r .....................1 AJ.WAT8 seen In wrappers—mummtea Raqcmzs no soap—to scour the plain*, H ave a seat on the bench—shoemaker*. Aw els rotor is a sort of hsnd-me-dow* affair.—S t Joseph News. I t is more blessed to give than to receive. This applies especially to medicine—N. Y. Ledger. j A bbar - trad —raising stocks.—Pack. Tax auctioneer pursues his labors with gall and bldderness.—Washington Star. _ Asall-roundromedy—pills.—Philadelphia Inquirer. t _ ■ ■■ TncColossusof Rhodes marked a great stride in art,—Washington Post. A granite monumentI t sometimesa slab* sided affair.—L ight . T ub dogs who take .the prizes a t the bonch show aro the bread winners.—Elmira Gazette. T hbrh I s sgood deal of the wag about* dog.—Boston Transcript. W hbm is a timekeeper npt a tlme-koepcrt Five tiniosoutof ten,—Jeweler’s Circular. I t is better to give than to cecelvo, espe cially in a personal cnoqunter,—Texas Sift ings. ___________ ■ H oxbt is the root of all evil, but the need of money Is the evil Itself.—Binghamton Leader. B ubo Up,—“H ow old la your boy*” “He’s old enough nownottObeold enough to know th a t he don’t know some things that wfll know when he’s a little older.”—Th* Bobod. ■ ’ A D istinction Without a Difference.— Stranger—“And do you still train for •prints!” Athletic Old Gentleman—“No, I Ip rln tfo r train*.”—Harvard Lamptxm. BzitUlX OUJli to bo a good place for tin ~ topers, for it 1-. city always ,an he Spree. -Boston GuzcUo. T he P u BH o Awards the Patm to Hale's Honey of Horohound and Tar for coughs, Piko’sToothache Drops CureIncneminut*. B lows are not always exchanged when >u strike as acquaintance.—Pittsburgh lapateb. ______ f yo D! Do sot purge nor weaken tho bowels, but act specially on the liverand bile. A perfect liver corrector. Carter’s Little Liver Pills. i-i jgga...............I . \ Tho world never sits down twice on smsn who has any point about him,—Milwaukee Sentinel . . w O N E E N J O Y S Both the method and results when Syrup o f Figa is taken;ait is pleaaont and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and-cures habitual constipation. Svrup o f Figs ia the only remedy o f its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Jigs is for sale in 50c and II bottles by all leading drag* gists. A d j reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for' any one -who wishes to try it. Do sot accept any substitute. * CALIFORNIA F10 SYRUP TO. BAHFXAHCI9C0, CAL v towemie, Kt. pent roftt. p.r. Copyright,MOO. M w h o w a tte fo r an inactive liver to do its work, exposes himself t o a ll the diseases th a t come from ta in ted blood; Don’t w a it! Languor and loss of appetite warn you t h a t g rave r ills aro close behind. You can keep them from com ing ; you can cure them if t h s r v e come— w ith Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Ditoovery. I t ’s the on ly blood and liver medi cine that’s ‘guaranteed, in every cose, to benefit o r cure. Y ou r money bade if i t doesn’t, Thus, you only p ay fo r th e good you ge t. Can you ask more? I t efeansei th e system a a d e a m pintolea, b to toh to etup* tkms a n d aJl akin t o d teafp dis eases. Berofalou* a ffee tito i, a s 1 Iww-wortM , ttNN iiri •w iling* to d t a a o i t y ield . i t ; Ifef mpKi&r ttte n tfr o propertieta If You Have X c s s s U ll* , I s S l c t i t iM , FlafaljMie*, M d t HM SM h c, “ a ll mum *amm,n I*e» la g UM k, jre a w ill U s 4 Tin’sn s tk * rem e d y yam weed. _TI»sy t#Me a y th e v w k * t* s i« tli s s 4 b s ii* his th * fla g g in g * s « « M , s s r r m t s / H m M ts lk l ate i h iM t s I w iH sM c w ill f lisa r e lie f rir»Mth*s*. X lc tl/* s (s riH M t« C . BOLD M VBBXU n tEBE s _ - BOlUNCfWATER OR MILK. E P P S ’ S OPlATaffUL—COMFORTINQ. C O C O A MLY« tALL lh ONEY! LABELLED1-2 LB. TINS ONLY. B 08 E W a L S J “ MAKii AHtumt WUA -- m r m , IN.-OHIO . 1 BRU ISES , FROST-BITES, INFLAMMATIONS — AND A L L - HURTS AND ILLS OF MAN mo BEAST. iThwhoft andNona Awtofc "wrtui for lllu«tr*t»dCAt*!ofO».BS^tear»je M . HUMELY CO .. LA PORTE , INO . LESSONSlf^0"- BUSINESS $ 1.09 . a rm y a e r jo v o n o m r a a . g M W tW IS H M Im rM lIM * * A cough or cold is a spy jvhich has stealthily come inside the lines of health and is there to dis cover some vulner able point in the fortification of the constitution which is guarding your well-being. That point discovered the spy reports it to the enemy on the outside; The enemy is the changeable winter climate, If the cold gets in, look out for an attack at the weak point. To avoid this, shoot the spy, kill the cold, using SCOTT'S EMULSION of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda as the'weapon. It is an expert cold slayer, and fortifies the system against Consumption^ Scrofula , GeneralDebility, and a llAnaemic and XVasting Diseases (specially in Children ) / Especially helpful for children to prevent their taking cold. Palatable as M ilk. SPECIAL.—Scott’*Emulsion (• non-weret, and I* prescribed by the Medic*! P ro fusion all over the world, because iti Ingfredieni*are scieatifloaUycotablned in such * Banner aa to greatly increase tholr remedial value. CAUTION_Scott’s Emulsion!*put up in salmon-coloredwrapper#. Be sore and get thegenuine. PreparedonlybyScott h. Bowno.ManufacturingChemUti,NewYork. Sold by all Druggist*! Q A T A R R H * G ives R e lie f a t once fo r Cola in lie a a . Apply into ;h*Xottril*.—— It i* CfufeUp Alser&ra. Wo, jUroggltUor tj^auU, ELTBK03..MWanenfit, N.T.| emr WATERPROOFCOLLAR or CUFF THAT CAN BE RELIED ON W o t t o s u i i t i ■ N o t t o D l p o o l o r l BEARS THIS MARK. j «K UP TO YMC MARK TRADE M a r k - NEEDS NO LAUNDENINCL OAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT,i THE ONLY LINEN -LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. I«p - - " x ts r , ■ lu vQ rA C x c a cu o r — IRONSIDESAGITATORS H o r s k p o u m f ts , a w ir f a ir f a s t a c k k r s , TREADPOWERSwd RAWFRAMES, SAWMILLSandENGINES. Tkeg An Far Ahead’ef AMOther* iaf (Wef Wert and WaraMIlty. CatakgM H U , a riiM is a rm a .wj a—i s a i . pMOW XXHRDY TO* CATABXH.—Best., t u M t to DM.* T citeapeft. Belief U UnaiidiaU. A cur* la tonu s. Wot CtoM to tL Headit bats* equal r a t a R R M ItWMOfntiaeirt, of wWeba *jn*n portMei* applied MtM rsn-tn. Pa tfaWILL PAYi IMAZAb \g*mm HRdMl'flfOtfMtllOMff A*» w nw tout*I m nww af?aS^feBS}rAT rzntatan mourn, a—, ... " ’ 1 t9fBBS y S f f iV t t ? } « , h TV ° ' Avent*.wjuitci er«*v*Vn!»rm*Ma,a—r—eat*. f n m ; —■ ,,i.- .Ty,**r.irMi f.i - i ■- > .Mm uN.K.-«f . 1880 AMytOttmtmtrtMtm i Jtok. I '^MMw x P^NB-BR^^r aMM^^^^eB^NNMM^w—OB*PM
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