The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, November 18, 1909, Image 2

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C5^??*"" ? Remedies are Needed JL ' Were we perfect, which we ore not, medicines would not often be needed. But since our systems have be- ~ ^fiHWB^yp come weakened, impaired and broken down through , indiscretions wbicb Iwve fooc on from the corly ages, ' through countless generations, remedies art needed to nHBjp|ff aid Nature in. correcting our inherited and otherwise acquired weaknesses. To reach the seat of stomach weakness and consequent digestive troubles, there is 8 nothing so good as Dr. Pierce's Coldcn Medical Diccov- ' o Tt glyceric compound, extracted from native medic- 1: inai roots?sold for over forty years with great satisfaction to all users. For Weak Stomach, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, Pain in the Stomach after eating, fi Heartburn, Bad Brenth, Belching of food, Chronic Diarrhea end other Intestinal tl Derangements, the "Discover/" is a timc-provcn and most efficient remedy. j. The genuine has on lis _ /H r\. ^ 1) outsidej \wrapper tho J on can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic,^ medicine op known composition, not even though the urgent dealer may _ ?uj aim a nine Digger profit. . Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and ' bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy. ^ "-SfU^CfT.. "Ifco IiAYOLAJ/r ?". a"; !gj lr.a::> rrM at r iow prim. ; 1' 'jfhcri- aiv Ikiujh tiio ? <>:>} :n<>rv but to<?ro is no better lamp t t i at any prim rh-? Burner, tho Wirt. the Ohio ne Ho der ? ' Yrf?v* a? Sea/tiff 111 ar - vi:.' 1 thi. v's n ;v lamp: there ;vir:s of the R \ Y O i/lMF ro i Oinvtly i-niisi'iicttsl an 1 thotv i>-. n"'Mi n ' ' mjopr known in the nrmf lamp-at kin* that < uld a.wl ! > tb | ;j value of th? MAYO as a liitht-givini: device. Suitable for J Ri any mom in the bouse. Every dutl-r everywhere. j ^rjk If not at >our*, wrtta for it jeripilv;: circular to tue tu.;tr?jt i (< Sisndard Oil Company j" UCHT^fe?T?^ 11ni'irv>n< ntrd > ^ * ' Por colds and gkip. | Virtu* that parleys is near a sur> ! Hick's fiPrmx! Is the best remedy? render.? Krt'll Relieves the at'liiiu; and feverlsiiness?cure* 1 : the Cold and T-e>n>i"s normal conditions. It's WHY I'K'Jl'LE SUFFER. Iktuid ?effects immediately. lwc.. kac. and *jOc.. aluiuir stores. i Too often the kidneys arc the cause The Exception. ar.'J the sufferer is not aware of it. "Then you don't believe in mar- Sick kidneys bring headache and side ried women naming 1'or office?" said pains, lameness and stiffness, dizzithe sulVrajretlo s-tillly. :'crs- headaches. "Oh, there are exceptions to the tired feeling, urin-j rule." said the < tlmrhau man with B?jIf ^ arv troubles. Dean's j a smile. "Now. there is one office I Kidney Pills cure j don't object tt) i?iv wife running lor." V. j the cause. Mrs. j "Ami what mat. >ir?" I " ' Ylreinin Rnli .- i "The employment ollU-o when we Liu nr. ^ it-ta. X a., J 'iave.rt a ? ....k ChM-sv.rn News. says: "TFor ihirtJ Hard "to Cheese. ? V*fy?S ' | y;>rrsf, ,T , "Who is votir favorite in this pole ' < j cveryth!nKbnt .loath ;.. 1 ? with my kidneys. I i con roMi>\ . . ?!?.! cannot describe my suffering from; . cat*. j m.u\. 1 ian terrible bearing down pains, dizzy; the poet. "( mik. hook. hook. I run t speHs heaflachrj| and ,l0ril,l!s of p quite make up my timid. I hey re tia, blindness The urine was full ol | both good !.>r rhwues. Houston sedi:ncnt. I was in the hospital three I C-ironiele. weeks. Doan's Kidney Pills wort j j~ . quick to bring relief and soon mad? ; u Xone but the e?>nlev:ptihle art- up- me well and strong again." ! | prehensive i f contempt.? Hot-lie- Remember the nam.?Doan's. Foi j foueauhl. rale bv . II dealers. "o eeiits a oox ; ui ; ?r?- I-'oster-Milbiirn Co . Buffalo, N. Y. a <All Who A Tale of Hugo. J* ***-* * A ne? .lutes ol Victor Hugo are re- '> BT\-, * _ _ vive.1 in 1'aiis. One of them tells oj WGZllCZ SLdTiJO^ his experience at the home of a Re Uf publican hostess. The I inner tint. I,A good health, with its blessings, must un- (nine, an 1 yet no butler appeared t? tp derstand, quite clearly, that it involves the pronotuu-e tin* saeratuental formula 'n question of right living with all the term "Madame est servie. finally, on. ii implies. With proper knowledge of what t'lt" iidiiiiates, M. !\ . vice pre>i It ... ,, - ... <lent ?)i' the senate, approached tin N" is best, each hour of recreation, of enjoy- . , ... . 11 . in _ mistress ot the house, and said 11 ment, of contemplation and of effort may iaujr|,i,ljr. Pardon me. hut have 1 r' be made to contribute to living aright, made a mistake? I thought that voi J.1 Then the use of medicines may bo di3- had asked us to dinner." The l;uh w pensed with to advantage, but under or- whisper ed. in rep'y: "Botheration MI dinarv conditions in many instances a } , s" ^' ^i '! '? ? ha\e been toui n, ... , , . , teen; hut AI. l.e lfover lias exeusec fu simple, wholesome remedy may be invalu- ,limseIf at ,iu. lasl foment, and 1 V? ui able if taken at the proper time and the }.a<i to se,?i t-or a substitute. There's to California Fig Syrup Co. holds that it i.3 one of our guests here who wouh r' alike important to present the subject never sit down it we were thirteen ill , truthfully and to supply the one perfect A moment alter. \1. 1*. ^ . i " was talking with Victor Hugo. "Car laxative to those desiring it. , . ,? ,. ,, rr " von imagine wliv we don t dine? D Consequently, the Company's Syrup of j10 aske,j , ,u. poet ,,irs bpi.auSf * Figs and Elixir of Senna gives general there's some donkey here who ii h: satisfaction. To get its beneficial effects afraid of sitting down thirteen a Rt buy the genuine, manufactured by the tftble! And lluuo replied, severeh 1 California Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sale Jn/| 8olc"'u,.v: "That donkey, it ii J' by all leading druggists. ' ?:? fa Dr. Pierce* Pellets, small, sugar coated ; The Ideal pA| ATAI A Cream of easy to take as r-xncly, regulate and mvig I n Cathartic ^ Castor Oil nrutp itcainiwh liver m i luiiveU Do not tl? OHILDRCX LH*K THK SfOOW. K?lUTMriatnl#iCy. CocrMR OIHie slUl.UU II, 1IW.1 Mi l "WWCW. UKJ IlOi Qrlplng, Aids Digestion 2 3o. Al ^ DKTiH.I*-T*. gri{lC. tl Children's Con ah* c*.uf\4,50 I Caution. Ones Much Suff.rlnr " ?uld VOU 11,8I rV ? Woman wht 1 - B^ *y /???[* ^?5$v?}itf9?E3 'ia ' 'M>en divorced?" ^ ^ fg sTiw * 'Io? *1 know. A good dca' JgBr ^r^iT^y would depend on wluit she ha.I heei oi 1 . I . doinjr with her alimony.''?Cliieagr 91 Jit ? Record-Herald yj xa ?tsi nmii yq?. (ovi?si?fo\3s ? o, Icw- raict?>ootke* ?. h-w *. Gate , A Consistent Reason. v, throats and orrvenfcmore teriou* illoea*. OiiUren II Brooke '. " S< VOU're HOt taking tll< | P< w tokc *"* do<* "*"* electrical treatment ?" j " All Drunists. 25 cants. '^iin: "No; they charged me toci-< niueh. ?Harpers Weekly. ?1 I r^-?--^n V1TAUZER i * , " SHAFTING. PULLEYS. BELTS, i J& a, Ji, ^SJBjk. p LOMBARD IRONWORKS,1 " Paper-Hangers & Painters /jr YBEjy t? ? ?j?>)t Ikumi toot porta? wltt no w- '?! tj^ '' torn lanrtMl bj wlITa* Alfrtd PmU' P r 1 MSSomHCV^ /V n Wsllnnrr Wt lint nan wood ork?i> i* *?eW ?*? iieiosmira"" ^ #w r? ill I 11 ito -Wt *row. w. o*?f Tl^rsl wofe TtEdTOnES LOHT POTTERS. A weak p w rlo"iSt27ilC rcan la like a clock run down. MLNYON8 u "Slii ?VKri fc ?Tw Mm, Im VITAMZEIt will wind him up and make '* Hs-' ? him go. If you nre nervous. If you aro tl m% atipfB Irritable, if you lock confidence In your- gi IlMjaaiAaa JV self. If you do not feel your full manly l|rFlf|C*a| IIVII vigor. begin on this remedy nt once. Thero r ill IlllnW A|]|k are 75 YiTAI.IZER tablets In one bottle; (si Vw | vUV V igiur every tablet la full of vital power. Don't Ht W m upend another dollar on qnsek doctors or ** Umwi til (MlUaf tu tteas spurious remedies, or fill your system with \ daya: affects a pirasin^ cm harmful drugs. Begin on munyons si si lajatoCedavr. Trialimljmst VlTALIZEIt at once, and you will begin ^ t^-^Jfcratvaafree.MUsmahewnt to feel the vitalising effect of this remedy . ** r^WHte 0 rTP * fPaaeV te if, ,1*1 1! ..t Prfe^ *1 poe?-'fi"1<C 1 TYHitaaataiiaU. 'if ? Areata. 4a j Muu) on. Gdrd and Jeffaraon, I'bl .<, i'a. jOOD roads for THE APPALACHIAN! Lnswer to Question How to Got Thei ?Appropriate the Money an Spend it Intelligently. Mr. M. L. Shipman, eonimissionc f Labor and Printing, North (.'art ma. addressed the Good Roads Coi ress recently hold in Asheville, i lie following clear and pointed suj; est ions, which we print in full a elpful in the great campaign of edi at ion along this line us a basis o ur continued progress and develop tent: "Mr. Presided and gc?ntlemer he object of this meeting ha eon dourly and tersely stated: "IIo* iin \vo obtain pood roatls in th uuthcrn Appalachian Mountains?" To this the obvious answers are li've the will to pet them; pet tiv :oney to build them: spend the mon V* tight. These things mean, o mrse, the collective will, tile con - ried action, the unselfish purpos i the whole people. And that is ai ile ideal without education. Tin rst step therefore is to preach, t< i-inonstrute. to insist; to advertisi ud illustrate; to reper"" and and re erate. There will be need too o let, need of statesmanship, need o alienee. The instruction must b> oicrete, in words of one syllable, it vamples of dollars atul cents. 13eton he collective impulse i? obtained lere will have to be individual eon Icticn?conviction and conversion 10. of a people who are strong 11 le tenacity with which they cling tl.l ways, cauti >us before they an <i to accept now doctrines. Titer ill have t<> be a propaganda o nlty among a people prc.no to dlf %: M. I.. 8IIIPMAX. r?a non-partisan ambition among I eopie lertile in polities and susi* i. iis of motive. 1 low a~e wo going to do it? How iv wo going to win for ourselves as principle that which we in.li idual t ndorsc and about which collective. we are so apt to divide? Itelieves in (load Heails. J would not be ta;< !! as spcultins > a pessimist. I believe in g.'od ads as a theory, and 1 believe in if ir future among this people as a a t. if I suggest temperamental difmltics as opposed to physical ones, is because of my confidence in the . rth and stability and potency ol y people. When they want good >ads they will get them. Trust the contain character t*nr ttcii T")w dr.g is to make tlu-m see that they fiat tiii-m. Allium? the experts thai e gathered here it would lie worse iun useless for me to attempt to set irth the advantages of good roads or bad ones. It would lie idle for me i go into the question of how the t ils should be built, when the time ui es to do the actual work of conruction. Iti this respect I know that am not an expert. I know it not em innate modesty but from sad ex r:ence. In common. I take it. with any another who is here today. I ive built roads, or assisted in cnnructing them, myseif. Ar.l 1 have dden over my own handiwork ufrwards?huh deep?and cussed it ns tnde. The Litter humor of the old[' hioneil method of road building >s already sunk i>eep into the un:'tstanding of the people. When the rr.o for the great revival comes, the ork will be in able hands. And lite uple will not regret their sweat. Ilut let us in the spirit of confi;*nce that should characterize litis looting, confess that old prejudices re slow In dying among us. In spite r improvement here and there, in lite of healthy and slowly leavening dilution now and then, the work . t almost awaits its start. Among dter things, some of us have incidenilly?now and then?"dabbled" in DjitJcs. Wht n we haven't gone in virnmlns; ourselves. we have observ* ] others sailing tholr unstable crafts 11 the sea of statemanship. And w? ace also observed that the easiest ay for any ambitious servant o( jo people to commit legislative liarl art by means of political shlpwreflk, as been to pass a road law for r.my. This question of good ron ne calling for the broadest st;?suinshlp rather than any branci ol eliilcs, but even measures of statestaut-hip must be executed by politlans. In any handling of this queson, therefore, the politician must fx mrldered and protected?not onlj jr his own good, but for the good ol le cause Itself. For politicians an ot good martyrs unless there is ar isue In the role, and we must no icpect to pave our roads with * th? olttlcal corpses of self-sncrlflclnir leir ilsttors. Under such a system, evei lose roads that we have woul< peedlly fall Into a state of sad dls i-pair?not to say inocuous de jetude. Out of Politic*. The matter of roads, therefore ticuld be. In as large measure aj osslble, taken out of the hands o (??? ???-??"> ? y> I,,, \ i iiti'un, ursi to Advocate i centralized system under the complete control *f either state or nation. But 5 there should be given an incentive to the counties aiul townships to declare for. and tax themselves for. good toads in return for and in considera1,1 tion of assistance from the state at large. To the end of highways that shall be properly constructed, that (r shall be judiciously planned and that shall be the logical parts of a system >- destined to net-work the state with i- pike and by-road, each adequately constructed and maintained, I take it that the greatest measure of success will follow upon the highest uniformIty of conception and construction Once the state is as thoroughly com'f rr.itted to the principle of good roads )- as the people are to good schools. theie will be at once the end of hapi: hazard method and ill-delined plan, s The old religious conception of the v moral advantage of a rough and "nare row" way has been relegated finally to tlie realm of allegory. That Is : j where It belongs. "Facilis descensus e averni" may have once be ?n true. Our aim now ought to be to make the way f to market equally broad and equally - smooth, it is to an industrial and e commercial haven that we must look i tt for the broadest measure of moral i c expansion. The road that Is narrow | r? is now the road preferred by vice u and shunned by virtue. The church . and the school house seek the high- I f way. Heretofore, the very vital need j f v ii*ch every resident of our country j e i districts has felt for improved high- ' i j ways has, in a sense, e attributed I e j through jealousy and contention to !, i po?-[pone and hamper the good work. - | Who of us has not sickened at th< . | ot uuum.v wrui:;:ios over j i 1 j ro-iil routes? Who, if he lias ever , : i I yiehieH so far to ambition as to sit | i e on a county boaril. lias not prayed ' j fervently to bo delivered? or. if he i f j has boon merely a spectator of their : troubles and an auditor of the. abuse and scandal heaped upon their def. relets heads, has not taken sati-'action in the thought that his troubles, at least, were not complicated by the laudable desire to shoulder those of his friends and neighbors? From the very na'ture of the case, the county unit is too small an one to j permit of the proper mapping of even I its oxvn roads. I Individual Work I However woil tno work may be j done in the individual county?and j ! there are brilliant examples?it must i Inevitably, if pt r:"'>rmod with sole re-! eard for such a unit, not only result ; in di?cord and lamer table dissension,! but it must also fail of its best opp rtunity. in scope, in purpose and in I progr? salve economy. What wo need, ' therefore. in thfse comparatively i Icmaller counties f tho west, is a sys- ' tern of rona oullding, declared upon ' I and endorsed by t!:e slat'.*, which will j aid tile county in its work, while sit ! : tlie same time giving full scope t I for the exercise of county enterprise I 1 I and the enlistment of county pride. I ' Already there is in the state policy | towards schools n feature that it se ms I 1 j to me is a dire t precedent and jus- j ! , Itlflcatlon of tlie general plan tiuit I j , , have in mind on this road matter. 1 refer to the fund from which we are ' ' 'stablishing the rural school libraries. I have not the figures at hand, nor ' in 1 proposing to detil in figures, ieven a statistician must now and then take a day off in the Interest of truth) but we nil know the gratifying success and extension which lias fo'i lowed the exi cutior. of that policy, in , short, the state sets aside a fund, raised by taxation out of tne whole , > people, and says to evcrv school district in the state: "See lure, do you , i want a library in your school? Then i i go to work to get one. i State Aid. 1 "Raise a certain amount and the < state will supplement tlie fund in 1 your district, out of tlie fund collect- 1 i ed from the whole people, whether ' they qualify themselves for libraries ' i or not." We know the result and it ' i took but a superficial knowledge of I human nature to forecast it. There ' is something of the trader in us all? [ I and a little more?if reports of some down-easterners alleged experiences i be true?in us. of the west, than in others, ""he state is dotted with rural ' libraries, selected by the far-sighted > and cultured hi ads of the educational department, which wore purchased i hy the people with voluntary donations of their means because they wanted to get the benefit of the state f and. As a r< suit, tnere have been placed in the hands or the poor ihe . magic means whereby their souls are stirred to rise. There ha .e boon placed before the wondering eyes of those ripining in darlwiess the radiant vis* t ions of the fields of li?lit which they i may hope to win; ther? lias been held ( forth to a groping amMtlon and fet, tered genius the golden ward of op; portunity a.nd inspiration. Who can measure the volume or gauge the current of the swelling Hood of influence for good set in motion by this one simple device, the henuty of which is Its utter democracy 01' operation, from centralized charity or patronage. And have we not in the library metht od and the kindred policy of the state towards the special school tax p ' districts the lesson and the inspiration a I that shall, on a large scale, make \ HMiins, iHuvucume an i i-nuuring the ^ i great and universal system of roads ^ i which is to bless our country? 8 Suppose the state were tlrsl to com- r f mit itself to a great mountaln-to-the- ^ sen turnpike, beginning, say at Ashe- f ville and terminatin<r at U'iimini??nn I Suppose that to encourage the con- I i struction of feeders to this great ar- r r teriul highway it were to Issue its t f bonds in adequate amount, and de- r s posit them with the state treasurer to t i be delivered in proportion ta bonds r t Issued by the several counties for i i roads within thtjlr borders, planned r - and surveyed in accordance with the ? ? comprehensive suggestion and advice t 1 of an expert and far-seeng highway ^ - commission? Would not such a plan ' - stir the local pride in each county? 1 Would there not be a rash on the part of the people to obtain their proi, portionate benefit of that for which I h they would all be proportionately I ' f taxed? Would the counties and the | 1 , pcopie a. at. i t! , ot Ing 11 i I tlie iig'it th ;.g, ... w ll as the * 1 right thing to do while neglecting tc do It? It would be "up to'" the people. It would be Intelligent self-help It would mark the end of t>!?i?erinj and usher in the era of concerted action. Each county would have it! vote, each township would have It! say, each citizen would have hi! voice. The result would be the result! of the majority?Vox Popull making sober, instead of its too-ofter drunken choice. Ilo|K* of West. It Is out of some such policy a? this?which I have roughly suggested?that I conceive must comi the hope of Western counties for adequate roads. We have here the richest heritage of nature, but nature seems to gunge the measure of hei rewards to men l?y the measure ol mea's toll. Through the years in thii mountain couotr* we have been approaching a destiny limited only by the way in which we meet the condition that holds it in lease. The condition is transportation. Transportation is spelled i:i syllables of roadways. When we of the mountains look upon our massive hills, when ?v iinisiiii'r our ricn mil deep-lying ralleys, when we contemplate the ivondcrs of our higl-iying yet fertile isothermal coves, wnen we gasp in calculation of our water powers and the wealth of our pungent forests, when we dream of the mineral riches that core the hearts of our eternal crests; when we translate these opportunities into terms of transportation. we are apt to sigh for the levels of the east in anticipation of our own Herculean task, forgetting in th? realization of the work the infinite rjuaiity and quantity of the infinite So far, we are as miners working placer gold in pans. We have not such t shaft. So far. and truly, we have not had the capital upon which to retiize our heritage. Ituilroaris and Manufacturing. Here and there a railroad has burrowed into our mountains. Along the railroads we have prospered in manufacturing, in mining, in the smallest proportional way in the transportation of our products. The railroads are the arteries of trade, ending from the mountains to the plains and to tne sea. Where are the reins of that trade, the lateral system iv herein must circulate the hlooil of mr l?ody of civilization? Khali \vc keep them clogged, as now, with I Jmors and misgh ings? t ?r shall wi take a physic l'<>r our health? It is tc rjr interest to join the state in the effort to bring our r.-sources into easy reach of all men? Is it to the state's interest to share with us the expense ->f accomplishing? speedily and for all Lime what we, unaided, could accomplish only superficially and with travail? No policy such as has been hintei rould, of course, escape two classes oi rritics who are always with us. W't might safely count, 1 am sure, cn the abjection of some constitutional lawyers and on objection, on the same ground, from sonic legal laymen font ;?f referring to Magna t'harta and tilt [till of nights as tne 'greatest dockyments ever written." We might alsc ount. to a surety, on the vociferous objections of certain parties at home ind elsewhere, who, at the menLion of bonds for any purpose, art ipt to froth at the mouth between loud cries of "pay as you go," and gasps of "Putting? a burden on posterity." In answer to the constitutional students It might he suggested that statt lid to roatls is founded on precedent! "tinning into and behind the "Darl ^ ges," and so good that some of th? - ads that resulted stand today as models after the passage of time sc that not even hieroglyphics car -ecord its beginning. Also that th< constitution of the United States .vould be a bettor working (locumeni 'id the present government do mor?. ward extracting tlie usefulness out ?f the "Post Road Clause" and that he state certainly contains nothing jrohibitory and much out of which he power could be logically construed. While to our friends of th? pay as you go" morality for the leople (they without exception are villing to take credit for themselves) right be answered their gasping solictude for "posterity" in the phrase ol hat gifted senator, whose name 1 dc tot now recall, who once replied tc i similar plaint: "Posterity, Mr. Presdent, what in the hell has posteritj tver done for usl" For my part, sis t > posterity, I be eve that we can bet serve our progvny by serving ourselves; that we :un assure them the opportunity oi Happiness and prosperity by leaving hem a land developed and tit for theii lands, anil by leaving them, through luch development, the means and the llltlir*^ to nnnrpfintrt nml tirnmAto We Are Posterity. "Posterity!" Wo are posterity n charge of It. responsible for it and o It. In the words of the German iroverb, "Das ewig uns Hinaus"?"the ternal springs from us." Teach this 0 our mountain folk, simply, plninlv, lonestly. Woo them away froi >reju<llees, fire *.hem against tl line of "let well enough nlo his campaign for Improved hlj reach th? m by example, in p ind in charity for faults that luperflcla! as the storm-sears < tills, nn<l the good roads move he next in order of our progress towards wealth and learning, morality ind peace, will lind at their hands a eeponse the stronger for its delay and 1 etiurage the surer for reflection beore battle. The intimate relationship sustained >y the press to all agencies of progess Is sufficient guarantee that it nay be relied upon to supply its full luota of the ammunition needed In his educational warfare against lgloranoe in road construction. The >rees is always ready to sacrifice any leedel proportion of Its service on thf' iltar of public good, and Is ever ready o encourage measures looking to the levelopment of the country along the ines of morality, education and indu?> rial progress. T>he "Twin Cities" of Minnesota? St Paul and Minneapolis?are talking about uniting and ? bill t? that end rn 'i t odi;c ! "u l\o '.cgls'a ture. i - . , 'g . ., : . , <,u , , : 4'.IMiiniiir-" ? ! < [THE ^ >e'| ; EPICURE'S ? ; [CORNER ^ | J FRUIT BATTER PUDDING. ( Make a batter with two tea m of flour, four eggs and a pint , i ^ half of milk. Pour this into m ping tin into which a good su * fat has been heated to hoilin; -it 4L Add quickly to tho mixture a > . Jjl of currants, raspberries, or * . ?' J which have been previously i % with two tablespoonfuls of .J Cook till nicely browned an ^ very hot.?Baltimore Star. ^ TOAST MERINGUE. This is a sort of idealized toast , which proves tempting to the capri- m cious appetite of an invalid. A slice of thin, evenly browned toast is m dropped for an instant into fresh boil ing water that has a pinch of salt in m it. Over the range meantime have a ^ tiny saucepan or cocotte with three m , tablespoonfuls milk and a little piece of butter about the size of a hazelnut. M As soon as hot add the stiffly beaten white of one egg and let cook just long enough to heat thoroughly. Pour the cream and egg over the toast, cover with a hot plate and get it to the invalid as quickly as possible. Like most other foods prepared for the sick the success of this dainty depends o? | its careful making,attention to detail?^ and hot and quick service. ? XeC York Telegram. K [ BEEF HEART?VEAL STUFFIXW Soak heart three hours in cold waC i or; remove muscles; take out eveiK atom of blood; make filling as fcK" lows; One pound of uncooked tcsK chopped fine, one-quarter pounl afr salt pork, chopped fine; one-quirtEe ? pound sausage meat, two heapiig tM hlcspcons oi' dried bread crurbs, Bp tablespoon of onion juice, on: tanj spoon salt, one-quarter tcispt*F; black pepper, one egg. slightly leat^fe. I ;uix ail tiipse ingredients v.cHtogy ^ or and stuff the heart; wrap tlghB M cloth; s< w it: stand-in small aucepR ^ point down; cover with boiliS waA simmer slowly three hours, hen ^ it out; remove cloth; bake a a q? oven one hour, basting ever ten ? utes with a little melted bi ter: s with brown sauce or pan gavy.?V ^ ton Post. S? ^ MUSHROOM D5H. ? A mushroom dish new sons combines oysters with trerr The mushrooms are lirst con;:cJ|? ^ butter. Then they are placed ? _, side upward in a shallow di.;.?,5>- ^ oyster is put into each cup, ift ? sprinkied with salt and peypT P * the dish is ;.ui into the oven a:d 't-- ' ^ there j^. 11 the oysters pii:p 'm Q shouhlmb* served with bcasM sauce. * \ For the sauce season a np arte. ^ half of white stock with a slice i " carrot. ; slice of onion, a ?t of ALy leaf, half a dozen whole peperco? ' a sprig of parsley, and cook* s ? fifteen or twenty minucs. "By si rain, blend with three abiesj? ^ fuls of flour and the same inantl^fc * butter rubbed to a cream,add a B. ? ful of hot milk, season wi'n saltK' V pepper.?New York Sun. Kj^ ^ WCJ 1JOU.SEI I Holo \ i Hints! 1 a?v ' h A t Try adding a small spoonful of *j ^ > on juice to fruit that does note J ? readily. n 1 Use a pinch of soda when crB J sour fruit and it will require Bp 1 less sugar. 1 J If you wish to iron a starchccW j meat in a short time sprinkle itB?. k hot water instead of cold. When salad dressing shows ( clination to curdle, add a small of soda. M* Good treatment T have aH ^ learned for a rusty wire cloths Bp ? is a coat of paint; two coats ae * : J 1 better. B 1 Boiled or roasted meat, ir.enj a i to be eaten cold, will keep inner anr ^ more moist onri lender, the?.' Avar g skius are removed oy puna* ing water over them. J One way to utilize beautlfil pl<ffj of real lace upen an afternooi.tpiljH * is to employ ii as undersleevee, drBa B, into the cuffs at the wrists. Vrillf nan l.o 1...11?1 It . . ....v v?? uv jiuiicu uiuui mura quickly and comfortably if a bowl of cold water is kept close at hand, into fl which fingers are dipped whenever a fl crushed berry sticks to them. I Left-over biscuit, which are far from palatable warmed over, can be I cut into slices and toasted or buttered I on both sides, cut into dice and 1 , browned in the oven as a substitute j for croutons. J i The New York Times tells o? a wo- 1 man who carries when traveling la J her bag a small wire toaster just Wft- J enough to fit over a glass globe. With I , | this at hand it is easy to get a cnj^H , of "nor st <d-r?-*t notico or bent cnrl^H ) ). g !ro...- without. holding Hi ra Ui thH