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Show exhausted and a new one hould be Miller elge and ravel it u; made and inocuIuUd with Lulls otsod J'Mqnin Mil!,, r d rs new a interval' short noth. At from the old bed. Seulinel lean hotels. I a ' Tfvt ti,,!; IE Etch a pretty thread of red n, L with red. Thi Mlnreliaiieou Itecipes. Ineago rim, $ , aid: pattern in the corners Large Crops from Cut Potatoes tha cover AT serviceable H lit IT I'll CoS'Tiimtion'. A fotip plate full of makes a good When the Early Rose was first u;trk ami duty well ami wear a long time. iA UTAH one room to coarse oatmeal porridge taken night mil do up . MANI!. out I planted 5 lb., which cost on'y be in the sitting-roobrought It may m dark and morning is good lor those suffering with good effect. r tl.atI,.u!Ji; $3. They were cut to single eyes and And ' HOUSEHOLD HINTS. s0 much yet from this trouble. There should be A summer lap robe is made tints. f each placed 3 ft. apart, making 47 the outside! taken also every morning on lirst get- Get two shades of heavy brown flan to iron sprinkle the ting and the produce was 331 1. or Americans. The iWiitv up a glass of cold water. At a nel. I'se the darker of the two forthe hills, Why thM ami 51-with water table lay certain fixed time, regularly' every day, border. Calculate it for a depth of a bushels; at the rate of 530 will l00 in relief. on liolil Tli:.the it will obtain M.mket. should the Cut to edge a ot the ni The or when yard. try patient ironing quarter per acre in round numbers. ,3n they tins them in ii tirtuli :n pi. tecs ami prevent all The most eminent physician into scallops and then pink travels,, next year I planted a quarter of an do not know. I When trav- around. Cpon each side outline v nk n and Inn iug :il)out. Never country once remarked: half the previous about acre, using ' tl' with horseshoes in the corner all eling if I must choose between breaktry to iron with a blanket linvin cut to single eyes and two sets w rinkles or bunches. fast and this relief, I omit the break- Or put a large pattern of this kind in crop, in a lull. The 1,200 hills gave 123 l.":.. a, l all ilv All the outlets of the body, the center of the light cloth. If the Id Veal Sydney - Mix or.e and a half fast. bushels, not counting a feiv bushels and the Mexicans, y the of the kidntvs, dark the is the the out border Ilari-soncut lungs, skin, worked, One of acre in dug early July. 1 on nees of bread crumbs with half a hoivels, must he ja.iil kept open and free, doth a large monogram and fasten it the same year planted m the pun of gravy, two ounces ot beef suet or stagnation with all its dreary con- to the center of the light doth with same manner gave me measured li.ilf a pound of cold lr.il, half the a9 sequences inevitably follows. fancy stitches. The border is hemmed and counted bushels. The next spring my work, inv room n, grated rind of a lemon, a .small tea One cup of upon the center and then finished "Lint food was fairlv Chocolate Caramels. in used the house every Early Rose d as nmeh When f spoonful of salt, around with fancy stitches. was peeled thickly and the eyes kept attendance i ile. y,,t jc each of m.e-- ami nutmeg, am! a fourth boiled milk, 1 cup of molasses or syrup, Tnis is the way to make a fancy for The--thin sets of is this the gave f mum tie pepper, ami four egg of planting. brown t Vn,,?"0 sugar, cup hotel cups footstool. Take seven round tin cans fully ns large a yield as those hulk 15. ike one hour. her e. chocolate. Cut the latter into line pieces that you buy fruit in, all the same ones cut trom the large tubers. I have are and when the other ingredients But even this M is I, ed itotato balls make a dainty as old doth around them. fl.lt in the chocolate, lioil sie. Wrap planted similarly cut sets in boxes in dish in the center and six around the Take the mashed potato left well heated put ikii one Iut nut for transplanting later all together half an hour, stirring con greenhouse it. Fasten them all together, put a into the garden, and the from dinner, warm it. nml season with " yield was as and incident. I asked fr tinually. Pour into buttered pans piece of old quilt or some cotton on salt, pepper ami lemon juice or nutmeg. as that of the ordinary crop for with my bread and coffee onp to ami cheek off into squares before it is the good Atld two beaten eggs and three tabh top. Take a paper and lay over I was told that cold. cuttings. it and cut all around it. That will large ivas,(H) spoonfuls ot melted butter. Mix thorThe largest yields of potatoes ever mu.-- t wait till the hnU 'ay Waffles. One scant coffee cup of make it in six scallops. Cut out cov- grown were produced from rooted cutoughly ami form into small hall when ready to Use them, fry a delicate tl butter, one coffee cup of sugar, two er for the top by your paper pattern tings of the stem of the young plant from the eountrv. I and of brow n in a little butter. cretonne for a the cut the this is hour; piece a which had no portion of the tuber to land tonnt, i! and a half cups of sifted flour, three Tomato .Soup Without Meat A quart eggs, one tablespoonful of water, a bit width of the cans and seiv it around draw nutriment from. Last year I At la-- t a hare-foand a, '.in of tomatoes, or a ilo.eii fre'h ones, of saleratus as large as a email pea, the scallops. Turn and put it over took from six to eight sprouts from tirolv naked Indian rum.; vh the Iho fur cut out a then cans, piece each bud of a sweet potato and these in, making and a little nutmeg. nc and a half quarts of w ater; hoil tofiionmms bottom the same way and hem it on. planted out in the field grew vigorous- his muddy feet oi the gether for half an hour, rub through a TuirE. Take honey-comadI have one made, and every one tripe, dirtvSn. P01 ly and yielded over 800 bushels per took from a sieie. add two tablespooufuls of butter boil it till pei feet ly tender with salt to mires it. dirty hag three'r0r In rubbed smoothly with two of tlour, acre, some of the tubers weighing eight pounds, and the average of the hage leaves tied up tightly cayenne pepper and sal(. and one pint 6?ason it, put it in a howl and cover jrit Stable Windows. r The proprietor of the ho'tel. fc' , of milk, boiled before it is added to the it with vinegar for a day or two. Rebeing four and crop unBarn windows are easily broken move from the vinegar, dry with a pounds. Sweet potatoes are all grown marble desk, untied one of Id soup. Add the seasoning l ist. clean doth, dip in beaten egg and then less of double heavy glass. Ail ex- in this way; the .Stewed potatoes may he easily presprouts being pulled took oft the cabbage leaies at in bread or cracker crumbs, and fry cellent j w' is to cover the sash from the seed and this is left to throw threw on the lloor precaution pared. Chop fine a number of cold in butter. Thus at outmore sprouts. Is it reasonable prepared, tripe makes with boiled potatoes. Put into a saucepan wire galvanized a most delicious dish. The pickling that the common potato differs began to turn and twi-- t aiid,"a with salt, tlnee ounces of butler, a vinegar may he omitted, and the tripe, netting. This protection pays for it- wholly from every other plant of sim- the little ball, almost as .I large imp of cream or milk, thicken when served, have a squeeze of lemon self in saving glass and in the neat ap- ilar growth? And are we noiv to cast two fists. At much i- u' with a it ry small tablespoonful of flour on it. of Also the bars pearance buildings. iside the of thirty years and bartering, he gave IhelmU800 and a little chopped parsley. Stir of wood fastened six inches apart for a new way and practice experience li to come a then Then lie came tome, boil; gently across the frames make a safeguard which they money. Flown rs. opposed to all this gathered roll in his let them hod gently tiie minutes; they accident. windows are against Sliding hand, greatly delignt, Vk From the Louisville ore then ready to sene. far preferable to any others for stables; knowledge? he could let me have omefei I never found soil too rich for potaNever touch flower with a hen a eai pet d ie, not require to ho nqt your are not easily broken, and can be toes. I raised a crop equal to 1,200 from the country, and proetdl.fted from the Hour, it niav lv much nose when you inhale its perfume, opened a little for air in cold weather bushels per acre on an old barnyard; great ceremony to place itb tin brightened and improied hi- first said a gentlewoman the other day in and wide in summer. The bars are the vines covered the ground in a mat But there were still more itrin;. then a coverand a , by protection. By more than sweeping thorouglib and t hen going my hearing to her little daughter. and the majoii-tover it with a clean cloth and clear wa- This lesson in the proprieties is one ing of line wire gauze, or cheaper mosof the hills turned out 12 quarts. He went back to his marble o ptl ter containing about two tablespooufuls which all mothers might well impress quito netting dipped into strong de- Last season I saw over 700 bushels of took a knife, came hack, cut sons coction of oak or willow bark to make peerless iinmoniu to of a bucket upon theirchildren. Amongthe ruling strings, then taking off the per acre turned out from a occasional thorough classes in China, I am told, it is con- it more durable, will be a most of these crops were and throwing them on the Both 10 ' plot. alt assist, in keeping sidered a gross breach of etiquette to protection to cows or horses; from cuttings of two eyes each and J'b off take to after coat mat gan and inlittle a insect, powder dusted carpets free from dust. bury the nose in the buds and blos- side three sets in a hill, which has been as tot of iihieh he all will the stable clear husks, few the out o keep ice in the sick room, cut a soms of a bouquet. Surely from an long as I can remember the common flies. piece of flannel about nine inches .esthetic point ot view, any such intruding way of planting. It is not the cutting floor. When the la- -t of adorn b, t is to be reprobated. Who of i he seed which makes the present husks were removed, mine o" square, and secure it by ligature about practice smiled Sittin Hem. lias not at the of I lie mouth of an small yield, but the loss of fertility; knife. With renewed ffourishis.j' appearance ordinary tumbler so as those ardent lovers of the stars of jf Of course every hen has been set the big yields are to leave the cup shape' depression of always upon rich ting off' a tough, hard, dry pet flannel within the tumbler to about earth who, for example, thrust their that would stick to her nest during soil. Potato varieties run out only of cross between smeareiw" nasal organs deep down amid the half its depth. In the llannel so the past month, but as hens must lay by reason of a continued course of lie laid some fresh blitter Wet cup laden lillies, perfume and after formed pieces of ice may lie culture and taking seed from many preserved inhalations raise their face out their clutches before the sitting poor bon k i Anl this in the on poor soil. Two crops many hours, all the longer if a piece of all ago I golden with the pollen of the dese- fever takes possession of 4hem, the hail 430 bushels per acreyears flannel from four to live inches a which lias of Early the audacit, f city square crated bloom. To treat in this way larger number will not he lie used as a loo-- e cover to the ice ready for Rose, which was very nearly equal to times boast of a population 4 cup. flowers that are intended for another the nest before this month. Do not my first crop grown on beter soil. ym 'heap llannel with comparatively open seems almost a million. Vl sacrilege. To say sell any eggs now, lmt crowd the hens Karl Offel in X. Y. Tribune. meshes is preferable, as the ivate'r easiof the injury done to the by all that can he relied upon lie sitting ly drains through it and the ice is kept nothing Wait Too To Long petals by such an invasion, there is M hen it comes to finding them all )U quite dry. There was a man at the Centra Applying AVoutl Ashes. Santeed or fried potatoes, arc often something in distasteful to sensitive nests, much discretion is needed, that persons Clay land, usually heavy and tena- table market yesterday with ggh having their bouquets confusion does not cause trouble and e nidemned as mdig, hut they are brought into such close' contact with loss. Of course, the simplest way to cious, unless deficient in g century plan! ins )kt potash is less so only when allowed to soak in fat the human face no matter how "di- set them is in rows in the e" lie was and mad. benefited pot, wood for by the ashes, If made as follows they are not objee-- . vine it may be. The enjoyment of but the hens will not all remember said he I humble: the perfume of flowers is keener and their own nests, and will crowd two tendency is to make it more compact; Slice cold boiled potatoes. in of each Put them into a frying pan with four more refined when the fragrance is in- or three on one nest, and loose sandy gravelly soils, usually leavingtheirown ere sin. sell ounces of butter. Let them brown haled without touching the blossom. eggs to become cold nnd this me didn't you perish. It is and friable and at the same time dehie advisable to set the liens in different ficient in slightly over a quick lire. Shake the Years ago? potash, arcdircetly benefited For the Housekeeper rooms and apart from one pan occasionally to keep them from the Each one answered in c" T another, by ashes. The light soils are but if the nest rows must be used, burning. Shape them, turn upon a Boston lleruld. usually Then he made sue!) a row that if kb then warm platter, and season with chopped ey The French have a way of making a there must be a careful watchfulness. too loose for either grass or the small ru an to A good rule is to keep the caipe up and told him parsley . salt, pepper and butter. For pp( and the effect of windows grains, is ashes foul to tender in the roasting well Havent I got a right to taf he l.yn ni.iise potatoes, you need onlv add tough darkened, so that the hens will solidify as well as to supply the want ' small onion, cut into small bits, and which is north following. It should not be the man in high .ief manded of mineral plant food. The grass tempted to leave their crop ho seasoned and tied up try brown. until noon. When you is much helped by ashes, especially in nests have been swindled, j10 I When securely other chickens their dry land, and in ordinary cases oila robbed anil made a frtol of l Cabbage Pudding -- Take a large head tno thicknesses of soft white or pale give the of cabbage, trim it, a little, and boil live hroivn paper and put into the oven noonday meal, and while the' greater profit will be derived from a silence in this free land? 'Ca half an hour earlier than the time one are feeding, go f0 the minuter, then take it oil', and strip off would take given quantity applied to meadow or is the cause of y our j choose What to assure ad the its hens off the beingdone. sitting s ight or ten of the outer leaves; and pasture than when used for grain growput It will steam slowly in this way, and make them go outtofoed. nests, this plant ofscwel, I ing. bought While the last-mMoreover, he rest back in the pot, and boil twenty ashes is they if delicately dredged with Hour w hen are out clear Ther w the nests of But I think nowhere very else will here about live vears ago. minutes, then dram, am! chop tine with the is taken off at the end of dirt ami feathers, loosen broken eggs, paper ann the straw they pay better than for potatoes, me that it was 95 vears old. !!n a half a pound of bacon, half a pound of the half hour-ia hot oven it will a little, and dust Persian up insert pow this plant being a rank feeder fresh beef or other meat, the yolk of come out brown on would bloom this spring, fie lie der over the eggs. Noiv comes the and easily carved. I sum egg. one onion, half a loaf of ermn-Mchave been in potash. rht a roast shows signs of turning critical time. Do not time on the thing i, practice . bioa I, a piece of butter the sie of it forget what you of applying wood ashes, one part, away enough set nbo should be put into a hot oven house. Ive im nights to for liaye done, and do not trust the hens, mixed with plaster, two it walnut, one teaspoonful of salt, one half an hour. If this to the to L parts, does but within day not save half an it home Eve hour be sure to reby land soon after planting, or it, and gone pepper black or red, as nothing will. meat into boil- turn and see that each is on her own potato as soon as the germ begins from you like. Mix well, ami put into the ing water will Plunging to freezing. to break only hasten the catas- proper nest, or you will have trouble the gronnd, hm os stripped off', tie in a thin cloth, trophe. Of course a large handful on whats the matter? ' ' putting Well, ia a tame doubtful every case come off. liens are each hill. I have also and boil two hours. I've wire it may be sliced up and the inside creatures ofthey gypsum, They lied to me! habit, and a little traini- ashes, and salt, mixedapplied Those who are fond of a salad within about equal they h served in a stew. and ng goes a way with them. If portions by weight, in the hill when botanists examine it, out meat will find potato salad very Boiled pototoes left over should they can begreat old! 10 made to keep the same covering the seed, which the plant isnt years produced the palatable, lake eight cold boiled pota- never bo heaped up warm to steam nest three or four days, will be finest and clearest tubers I ever raised my fooling around for ninety there one another. toes and They should be laid out little danger that the quuntit v of celery, will make any and in good yield; and I flower out jjUJ regard this see the infernal thing f'ut the potatoes and eelerv into small on a table, and are then as good for mistakes about it they for the treatment as remainder cm a sure remedy for scabBut what can you do? bits and mix. For the dressing, take a frying or mashing a when first cooked Thc-- uili so sa'' by the d potatoes, tenmVT' yon common There are on often bits of meat left .small teaspoonful of drv mustard, one I want to find the hyeoi moving them, but not the farms. F. P. Root, Monroo Co., many to the X. clinging Y. bones of make boiled one ham responsibility of seeing that they ie- egg, the job on me. I'll teaspoonful of salt, one of which jj may be used in an appetizing turn promptly to powdered sugary and teaspoonoutfit or break his neck. e,it their whole nests after breakfast dish. The Killing Chill. Shred the meat let go in'?. When all is ful of ivijite pepper. Mix the sugar, vo. arc A great many right, darken the Don't get excited. Take salt, pepper and mustard well witlAho it come to a boil in milk into which it mysterious diseases ftlld leaV0 tllC111 and he s ?i,r0nn1?aln tlueken home. and cold, losses plit the tjravy with a intil in animals could be traced go yolk of the egg. And two at the day time. little feeding corn starch or mils and water of salad oil, four of vinegar, lastNever! to exposure, and it may bo weeks behe and serve. Shredded the dried beaten beef is very Culture of Mushrooms. white of the egg. Pour ly He lifted the pot high fore some of them ed sen in the good develop. Abscesses same over the potato, and garnislf'lhe dish , Mushrooms may be life out of the Cold rice left over fromway . grown with ease may break out on account of a chill-- dashed the with parsley. one break- m ou3 kI i down the sat so lungand stomach troubles. stifiiy following manner: Clear horse A roomy lounge in a In d chamber is fast makes a very good dish for next The and then mi cither in the form of rice manure freed from straw is mixed with old disorder called horn his arms and aid: folded morning, s a great eonivi i nice. It affords an op- ha s is the 'f':, result of cold patted up m the form of a feeblePcir- Ring for your old Patr0t0 8 ,0am aml put up culation. Animals with bfrm!! 1'Vt portunity for an afternoon nap without halls or in omelets. A rice potato . ; are found omelet I'm to! going want dead ),'ds vou or fdnd three feet wide and man disarranging the well made bed. and should be made with two eggs to a cun two t!" the ftchifl11 is b'S1 on often here till I get eyes ea,lso the middle. The bed 0I A Staii F',d t.lie many a careworn woman would lie takeId h?k 110P' and care should be on a blood from lsteed with warm water as it is the surface Jy job down for a few minutes upon a lounge a it is served very hot up into the internal oreans, made and is left to In heat', which it will and they will Bread crumbs soaked in in her bedroom who would not think of Detroit Free citizen! an Ve ypresent water tepid fher, Whebva test with and in then the daytime upon the bod. a when all of the inflammatr0n resting passed through ti colander Teter.Pllt into a hole in the there is is Jie excess A Useful PhilosoP. ) Along, broad, pine box. with wooden make an excellent foundation for of blood. If rheie found heat.ls be to reduced to casters attached, makes an admirable griddle cakes They are best if a is weak part that will be And what are you goin? t made Rn a egi ces, pieces of mushroom sure to be spawn congested and here inflammation the lounge frame, or a narrow cot bed- with sour milk and soda, instead of procured from will little man. seed tie stores stead could be cut down to bo of suitaare neaa, and tl'tee eggs should iiwiFed lnto ; q0t"dpr' be patted the boy on the e i made in the bed 9 SiK-i-Tble height fora lounge frame. This irrow a quart of crumb i s batter to be when you n and covered 3 cessively cold weather should be supplied with a good matgoing you "'ay inches jpart eafb I to 1 16 ,ungin soon nn tlwl 1 m going to be a waiter, r.ncjr Work. tress, or a covering of chintz or thr- - imhTh spreads Von, Jed an(l in three or four fed ,a. To make a could be drawn over it, with a weeks0 U A waiter? Well, that atsucht'mes, blankets put on all stand cover young mushrooms push frill falling nearly to the lloor. From Get a piece of Let me tome brown linen one one to three square pillows, similarlv cathereYi t0 tlle surface nntl ma.v be yard ar0 oiI' you Turn why square. little by man, the them if gently breaking edges as from an animal lro, y covered, would perfect this lounge, hen. four or five for the soil. The t inches bed should be kept , waiter? . which could serve readily for a bed in can care be .titch it brtto aro.ma tLn aTtiS decree' 7?.torn- - 't with water at 90 t jma jvf livvxi Because, sir, I've y After two months the bed is all things come to hi . that ulailti, Boston Courier. -- Hoi FARM Seplsiit. A-N- D FIRESIDE. ..Cii fa-t- en wor-te- d. u-- ed ttf-ii- i v J ls horse-whip- -- 1 ; Lu-h-e- 2 s '0 lm.;l,LI,pliWo 1 il one-thir- -- e 1-- 2 he-- di-m- tivo-stor- y 50 1 ot tre r three-quarte- hhf' half-inch-nie- i- re-lil- ts 1 Courier-Journa- l. - - , knee-deep- y p-- two-third- t s . com-fcrtat- floor of I : long-draw- n ed to ol a siekly-lookin- . hen-hous- e Look-a-hore- U) !' flower-stan- d plan -- hit- - di. eW . mn-t- hen-hous- wm g. f to d one-thir- d 1 one-ha- lf I table-poon-f- (1 uls J 111 nincty-livo-ye-- - Lin ' - u ., Z erc-fonu- e bed-roo- ir .iZ v r W |