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The Topeka Daily Capital from Topeka, Kansas • Page 7

Location:
Topeka, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
7
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I git is boldstatement "to'say that aay "Advertisizi; Cheats their dance programmes, and the frequenters I Thirty 4 1 Indorsed Tear B-COrd, V-- fcr Physicians. WOMAN and; home. medicine ij never known to fil." but it is tted. mptically by the proDiietors of Hunt's Kidney and -UttJ Remedy. This medicine is specific for diseases of kidneys, liver and bladder, and has a reputation of thirty years standing.

The Brickett building at Haverhill, Mass burned. Kate Gilmarttai umped rom the fourth story and was fatally in ured. Joaie Branahan was seriously hurt jumping. An Answer "Wanted. Can any one bring ns a case of Kidney Liver Complaint that Electric Bitters will not speedily cure? We say they can not, as thousands of cases already per mar nently cured and who are daily recommending Electric Bitters, will prove.

Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Weak Back, or any urinary complaint quickly cored1 They purity the blood the bowels, and act on the diseased parts. Every bottle guaranteed. For sale at 50c bottle bv Swift Holliday. Discouraging reports from the British officers at Wady Haifa concerning t2a Nile expedition. Don't You Do It.

Don't suffer any longer with the pains and aches of Rheumatism, which make life a burden to you. Relief, speed and permanent can be procured at the nearest drug store, in the form of Kidney-Wort. Elbridfie Malcolm of West Bath. Maine, says: "I was completely prostrated with' Rheumatism and Kidney troubles and was not expected to recover. The first dose of Kidney Wort helped me.

Six doses pet me on my feet, it has now entirely cored me and I have had no trouble since." The Welsh' Mountain thieves robbed Daniel B.8hiffar's jewelry store, at Bow mansville Pennsylvania, of $900 worth of goods, and also stole a horse and wagon to carry away their plunder. Purge out the lurking distemper that undermines health, and the constitutional vif or will return. Those who suffer from an enfeebled and disordered state of the system, should take Ayert area par ilia to cleanse the blood, and restore vitality. John Hanney, a prominent politician of Schuylkill county, Pennsylvania, has been convicted of embezzlement and conspiracy. Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath secured by 8hi1oh's Catarrh Remedy.

Price 50 cents. Nisil injector free. Bold by 8wift Holliday, druggists. MMiHPPIHM The outlook among the iron mills at Pittsburg is improving. Orders are begia-ning to come in e.nd bids on othfer orders have been asked for.

Singular R. R. accident. Two Mei-chant'a Dispatch cars were derailed last week by running over a cow. They were loaded with Peerless Cough Syrup tor Cleveland.

25 and 60 cents per bottle For sale by Swift Holliday and A. J. Arnold. A sleeping car on the Memphis Charleston road was thrown from the track by a broken rail and burned. Seven po-eengers were injured.

An Enterprising, Reliable Hocae. Swift Holliday can always be reliep upon, not only to carry in stock the best everything, but to secure the agency foo such articles as have well-known merit, and are popular with the people, thereby sustaining the reputation of being always enterprising, and ever reliable. Having secured the agency for the celebrated Ds. -King's New Discovery for consumption, will sell it on. a positive guarantee.

It will surely cure any and every affection of throat, lungs and chest, and to show oar confidence, we invite you to call and get a trial bottle free. The carpet factory of Alexander it Sons at Yonkers, New York, has dosed on account of depressed trade. They employ between 3,000 nd 4,000 hands. Will you suffer with dyspepsia and Hver complaint? Shiloh's Vitalizer is guaraa teed to cure you. Sold by Swift A Holiday, druggists.

The decrease in the public debt dories November will be about $1,000,000. The decreased revenues, and the payment ef $8,000,000 in pensions, account for it. Backlen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for eats, bruises, sores, ulcere, salt rheum, ferer sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns and all other skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay requirecV It is guaranteed to give perfect sstisfao Hon, or money refunded. Price 25 oests per box.

For sale bv 8wift A Holliday. John S. Sammons. of Montgomery, fcew York, in a paralytic fit fell on a hot stove, and when he was found the right side of his face was burned to a crisp. He may recover.

A Sore cure for Piles. The first symptom of Piles is aa intense itching at night after getting warm. Thb unpleasant sensation is immediately re tieved by an application of Dr. Bosaakors Pile Remedy. Piles in all its forma.

Itch. 3alt Rheum, and Ringworncaa be permanently cured by the use of this great remedy. Price 60 cents. Manufactured by The Dr. Rosanko Medicine Co Plan O.

Sold by A. B. Whiting and Bant Sua H. A Hurl bat has been appointed receiver for the estate of the late Wilbur 7 Storey, but he is enjoined from interfering with the staff or policy of the Chisago That hacking cough can be so crskUy cured by Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee It.

Sold bj 8 irift Holliday, druggist A collission between a Burlington A Cedar Rapids train and a Chicago Northwestern train killed Fred Phillip, a re man, and badly injured J. O. Becjsina, aa engineer. Sleepless nights made miserable bt tiat terrible cough. Shiloh's Cure is the tea ady foryou.

SoIdby SwIft HoSisSsT The bigamist Neville, who. who ployed as coachman by Mr. Whitney, ef I betxc. wooed and won his daughter, hss been coavicted at Toledo. Ohio.

Be frd make aa tsort for a new trial. The HoraUestllaninTcpciLa As well as the handsomest, and ctiera are invited to call on Jones BrosTopeka, ana v. a. Angle, Korth roneka, and pet a trial bottle of Kemt.e Balaam for tha Jl a. a fa" a little fenewpbut he is worth nashinaw taste and A Token of Wider Culture.

fNew York Post -V Hie number of women who make, design. or at least superintend the making of their own dresses according to their own particu lar style and taste governed, of course, in a degree by prevailing modes is no doubt today much larger than it ever was since fashion ruled the world." This is certainly a token of wider culture in the best sense of the term, and a sign of a finer appreciation of what is fit and becoming individual cases, leaving current rules and set decrees of fashion to be utilized or not, to be received or rejected, when and where it is deemed best The ridicule and opposition of those who blindly follow wher ever xashion leads seem rather to stimulate than dampen the ardor of women who in the matter of dres and its adornings dare to be independent and free, and are inflexibly bent on being so. This is no new example of woman's will During the reign of the coal scuttle bonnet and the amplitude of crino line there were found scores of woman who wore head-covering of simple style, and followed modes of dress in which the natural and graceful lines of beauty were preserved without doing violence to really good taste, while at the same time serving as a decided protest against the prevalent ungainly fashions of the period. Three little Dishes of Apples. Arthur's Magazine.

Roll out tolerably thin a little piece of light pastry; place in it a large apple of a good baking kind, pared and cored; cover it well with the paste and secure it firmly; bake it in a temperate oven. Four of these turnovers, as they are called, make a dish; they are good either hot or cold. Stew six or eight good baking apples, pared and cored, until- they are tender, let them cool, and mix them with the yolks of two eggs and enough sugar to sweeten them; spread this mixture on a dish, cover the top with fine bread-crumbs and a small quantity of dissolved butter, and bake for a quarter of an hour. Boil a pound and a half of loaf-sugar in a pint of water for a few minutes, add two pounds of good cooking-apples; let these all boil together until the mixture is tolerably stiff; just before removing it from the fire add the grated rind of two lemons; press it into molds which have been previously dipped into cold water and not wiped. When the gateau, as it is called, is turned out on a dish, ornament it with blanched almonds, and pour a custard or some whipped cream round it One of Fronde's Stories of Carlyle.

Exchange. It is no exaggeration to say that if one of the stories in Froude's "Thomas Carlyle" had been published during the historian's" life, no woman, unless possibly one of his kinsfolk as hard as himself, would ever have spoken to him again. His wife, suffering from the combined effects of chronic neuralgia and a terrible fall, with the nerves and muscles of one side entirely disabled, lay on her bed, unable to close her mouth. He came Into her room, looked at her, while he leaned against the mantelpiece an act intensely irritating to a woman not vain, indeed, hut proudly desir ous not to look ill and said, "Jane, ye had better shut your mouth. Jane.ye'll find your self in a more compact and pious frame of mind if ye shut your mouth." That Mrs.

Carlyle endured this and afterward remained near the man who inflicted it upon her, says much for her con stancy; but no woman who reads its crude brutality can afterward be open to conviction that there was anything good about Carlyle. Distressingly Distorted. New York Cor. Inter Ocean. The more approved girls of New York are going rapidly toward distortion, and away from those fundamental principles of art which the recent mania for culture ought to have instilled in their minds.

The bustle is bound to develop. It is already present, palpably, and every day enlarges it No longer do the female promenaders remind us of draped goddesses, quite superior to their envelopes, and in outlines corresponding to 'human beings. They are humped rearward distressingly by means of bustles, and already a sympathetic distension of skirts implies a return to the hoops of twenty years ago. It is all a great pity. There is no help for it, however, and we can only possess our souls in patient waiting for a cycle of fashion to once more bring round a reign of symmetry.

"Polishing" the Skin. The Argonaut. Fashionable women and girls in New York always have their arms and necks "polished" before going to a ball or other entertainment where they appear with verv decollete dress. The polishing greatly beatifies the skin. First the arms and neck are rubbed very thoroughly with rose water.

After this has been rubbed off, the arms and the shoulders are covered with cold cream, which is allowed to remain on fifteen minutes. This is then rubbed off with a piece of fine, soft white flannel, and the arms and shoulders are covered with "baby" powder and rubbed very thoroughly. This finishes the operation. When this is completed they look like polished marble, and the skin seems to take on a wonderful fine and beautiful texture. A Woman's Small House.

Ella Rodman Church. The small houses that men build are not tasteful; they always build a row of them which look as if they had been cast in a mold, and are utterly lacking in the way of finish. A woman's small house would be sure to have a fine entrance, to which a diminutive house has quite as good a right as a large one: it would also be convenient and present throughout its length and breadth, dainty, unexpected touches that would make it a sort of poem in brick and mortar. Plenty of people are craving just such a house as this: and, therefore, victory seems perched in advance on the banners of the woman wno shall dare and do iu The Terrors of Whites. San Francisco Ingieside.

A white stocking is a hideous thing. A pair of them make two obvious and wretchedly-misplaced high lights in an otherwise admirable picture. If I were a man and had to live in a house with white walls and be married to a woman who wore white stockings I should consider myself justified in making a bee-line for parts unknown. If, in addition to the white walls and the wife with white d.ino mri mai nil wMt m.rhu topped table piece, I should wrap myself a white abroad and join the noble army or gtwsta A Noble Type. Exchange.

Margaret Fuller was as noble a type cf womanhood as this age has produced, bat with all her strength of intellect and con-, i scions leadership, she gave her heart to an Italian lover when she had the true testimony that he bad already given her his own, and she grew almost immediately as wife and mother to be vastly more of a woman than she was before. Texas Sifting: Women may not be deep thinkers, but they are generally clothes observers. best; he of a I I "TtuhMnmwimmmnn tr K-rtn mr I article, in an elegant, interesting style. Thenrun it into some advertisement that we avoid all such. "And simply caU attention to the merits Hop Bitten inas plain honest terms aa 'ftwL, ZZZZZirrni wW.k their value that they will never use any-notioed in all the thing elsft." 'Thx Kkxedt so fevorablj papers, Eel igloos and secular, Is "Having a large sale, and Is other medicines.

supplanting all There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant and the proprietors of Hop Bitten have tnown great shrewdness and ability in cempoundiag a medicine whose virtues are so palpable to every one's observation." Did She Die? No! "She lingered and suffered along, pining away all the time for years." The doctors doing her no good;" "And at last was cured bv Hop Bitters the papers say so much about." "Indeed! Indeed!" "How thankful we should be for that medicine." A Daughter's Misery. "Eleven years our daughter suffered on bed of misery, "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and nervous debility, "Under the care of the best physicians, "Who gave her disease various names, "But no relief, "And now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bitters, that we had shunned for years before using it" The Parents. Father is Getting Well. "My daughters sav: "How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." He is getting well after his long suffering from a disease declared incurable." "And we are so glad that he used your Bitters." A Lady of 43 None genuine without a bunch at green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their name.

The Stock of Roeenfield Brothers, cloth ing dealers of Baltimore, was damaged by fire. Loss on building $5,000. The Bigelow Carpet company at Clinton Massachusetts, announce an 8 per cent re" duction in Seven men were killed and two were in-1 jured by the explosion of the boiler in a sawmill near Elizabethtown, Kentucky Dr. Frazier's Boot Bitters. Frazier's Root Bitters are not a dram shop beverage, but ate strictly medicinal in every sense.

Tliey act strongly upon the liver and kidneys, keep the bowels open and regular, make the weak strong, heal the lungs, build up the nerves, and cleanse the blood and system of every im purity. 8old by druggists, 1.00. For sale by Jones Topeka, France has decided to increase the duty on foreign grain two francs per hundred pounds Mrs. Dr. Walton's Periodical Tea.

Mother Walton has prescribed this valuable medicine for a great many years in her private practice. It has proved an unfailing specific in the treatment of the many disorders ta which the female con-; dition is subject It is a sure cure for the monthly troubles that so many women suffer. Mailed on receipt of price 50 cents. Frazier Medicine Ohio. For sale by Jones Bros.

Burr, Son brewers of New York, have failed, with preferences of 110,000. SaratOKO High Rock Spring water for sale by all druggists. The general assembly of Virginia has passed the electoral bill over the Govern or's veto. We regret to state that our poet has hauled off for repairs. He burst off all buttons last week, trying to find some thing to rhyme with Cobb's Little Podo phyllin Pills.

He is better now and ex pects soon to be at work again. Only 25 cents per bottle. For sale by jliday and A. J.Arnold. A defalcation has been discovered in the office of the State Auditor of public ac counts of Virginia.

Bough on Bats. Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants bedbues, skunks, chipmunks, gophers 15c. The glove Mitchell ani fiijhtat Pittsburg between Gilleepi was prevented by the police. Heart Pains. Palpitation, dropsical swellings, dizzi ness, indigestion, headache, sleeplessness cured by Wells' Health Reoewer.

Edward Holmes, while hunting rabbits near Pueblo, shot away three toes and a portion of his foot. A Card. To all who are suffering from error and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, I will send a recipe that will cure yon nn or chargx. This great remedy was disoov ered bv a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the Rev.

Jobeph T. Inman, Solum New York The French government has learned that China intends to continue the war now in progress. Young Ilenl Dead This. The Voltaic Belt company, of Marshall, Mich, offer to send their celebrated, elec tro-voltaic belt and other electric appliances on trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) afiiicted with nervous de bility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also lor rneum.um, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other dla- Uomplete restoration to health, to vigor and manhood guaranteed, no rax I is Uieamd as thirty days trial is allowed.

Write them at once fat, illustrated pamph let free. How often do we hear or the sudden tal tenrdxuUbn of a case of when a young life might have beta' eaved by the prompt use of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral I Be wise in time, and keep a bottle of it on nand, ready for instant ere. Jack Moore, an engineer, and Robert Nesbv.a brakeman, were instantly killed and two firemen were probably fatally in i i 4U- -V jurvu vuluwu uu uw vttius, Ohioa couinwestern railway abost fifty a 9 a miles xrom aiemp-os. the by or a of theatres the bills of the Dlav: The ranid I improvement in these articles witnessed dur ing the last ten years goes on unchecked, and the artistic thought and skill bestowed on them are often of the highest order," involving heavy outlay. leading a Husband Captiye.

Cor. San Francisco. News Letter. However, supposing you have a husband whom you wish to twirl around your little finger, you must first love him "with all your heart, with all your soul," and the love you feel will make it possible to put up with all those little discrepancies which crop out man's nature when you come to live with him; for the best of men become monot onous after a while. In the first place, should your nusband be a man oi Business, wno comes home tired to death, cross, and worn out, do not-' at once entertain rm with the troubles you have gone through during the day.

Do not rehearse the shortcomings of the servants or the disobedience' of the children. Meet him with a smile, kiss him, take his hat and overcoat from him and let him severely alone until he has toned down his irritability with a good dinner; after which he will be in a position to listen to anything you may have to say; but I always found it an excel lent plan to hide disagreeables entirely from a husband notice, men aon want to nave a repetition of annoyances at home when thev have so many in their daily path out side, and, believe me, the effect of keepin; household quibbles out of your husband's knowledge wonderfully enhances your value as a wife. I have seen so many arrant fools fly at their husbands the moment they enter the house, and there and then give a de tailed account of the troubles of the whole day, even taking to tears as an argument on their side and oh! how men hate tears; how they detest household details and, be ing naturally selfish, in a fact hate anything that puts them out at home; and they are right. The breadwinner ought to be re lieved of domestic jars. Of all things, when your husband comes home see that the dinner is well cooked.

Don't make a row because the meat is under done or burnt to a stick. Bather go into the kitchen yourself and see that everything is comme il faut. You don't know how a man appreciates a loving welcome and a good dmner after the toil of the day. Put your self in his place, each woman who has to toil for a fatherless fleck. You don't like to come to a cloudy atmosphere and an ill-cooked meal.

You think you are at least en titled to serene comfort at home, and if you don't get it you rebel. Why not men also? Nothing on earth fetches a man like a good dinner and a well-dressed wife presiding. The husband who can look forward to such a state of things every day of his life will never tire of home, and the wife who studies his comfort will have little difficulty in man aging him according to her will. Men are gregarious animals, and will wander in spite of all allurements; but they are selfish enouzh to remain where thev are best treated, and by taking a little trouble for a year or two of married life the years that follow will, as a rule, find the husband always glad to go back to the pretty home where smiles await him and the dinner I spoke of. There are so many women who object to being ''bossed," as they call it My dear ladies, you can always be boss if you take the trouble.

By giving in you get your own way as you never would by fighting for it And, after all, it is better to feel you re spect your husband so much that to give in to him is not a difficulty. Of course, I am now speaking or tne rignt kind or man. There are some men such perfect brutes that no kindness has any effect upon them. When you are unrortunate to eaten sucn a one, di vorce him at once and take care how you choose the next Nine men out of ten are manageable, if you go the right way about it, and one great point is to act attar mar riage exactly as you did before. Argument and contradiction are vital enemies to married peace.

Should you "wish for anything Darticularly. don't insist upon it after re fusal Of course you must have it, but bide your time. Some women are persistent, and ask: "Why may I not! Why won't you do as I ask you?" irritate the man. Rather bide vour time, make an extra good dinner of his favorite dishes, put on the color he likes, make home and yourself sweeter than ever. You'll get it sure, even if you have to wait Also, when you want him to do any particular thing which you know will be for his good, for heaven's sake do not say "do it" Rather drop a hint that you think so and so would be a good thing to do.

Oet him and then let the subject drop. I venture to say that in a short time that man will do precisely as you wished; he will never permit you to think he has traded the least bit on your commcn-sense. Wow, some women under sucn circumstances wouiu crow over the husband with "I told you so, and now you come to my way of thinking." Absurd, ladies, absurd: never let a man know you rule him, yet rule him in all things, if you can. Are Baby Shows Immoral? New York World. Paris, which has at unexpected moments the most extiaordinary spasms of morality, has forbidden the projected baby show, on purely moral grounds? and the one Parisian paper in this city which insists that to pub lish the written concession oi a man guin is a scandal condemns baby shows in general.

But why should baby shows be condemned? Why should not paternity be publiclv praised and its fruits admired? What is there in tne world more beautiful than a healthy baby? Why should there not be a decorous pride in motherhood? Why should there not be a pleasant competition in the production of the handsomest and healthiest children? What is there immoral in the exhibition of that which is the evidence of a noble duty rightfully performed Why should mothers not be encouraged to lead lives that will in sure tine oil spring Asa waai more prac tical way to encourage them than to bestow public favor upon the finest children? Im morality, indeed! The great immorality or our time lie hidden behind those squeamish and fashionably weak women who are afraid to bear children and ashamed to own it A Lesson in "Slashing." Ella. Guernsey in Detroit Free Press. My dear, the hope of the world is in our and better than all outside mission work will be your own efforts. light up the parlor for the boys, open the piano for them, and make, them love "sister" better than afy ooe else in the world except mother. Dear girl, they are worth working for, and men often tell what their sisters are by their walk in life.

A candy pull at home, historical and geographical games at home, the latest and best music, you know bow to keep them by your side, and strive for good, choice reading and music, though yon must indulge in; something funny, tor diversion. Morality and temperance is best taught by the fireside. First, we want good motbers and sisters, then good brothers will be the re sult life 13 too short to put off until to-morrow this work. Oh, be up and doing in thii dearest and most precious work while the boys yet love hoax And dress ta mash" your brothers aad father every day. Put oq the pink necktie Bobbie loves HOW A HUSBANDS HfcAftT MAY BE LED CAPTIVE.

Are Baby Shows Immoral? A Lesson in "SIasnInS" Carlyle'a Brutality Some Fashion Notes An Interesting Chapter on Soaps. New York Of all soups the most common and susceptible variations is the one in which the stock is prepared of beef. The trouble with the average American-prepared meat soup is that it is too greasy and thick. German soups are often thick, but seldom greasy. Everything is liable to be run across in a Scandinavian soup, from a small sardine to a raisin or a grain of allspice.

But the delicious French soups are always clear. During the cold weather the stock for beef soup can be kept on hand. At any season it should always be prepared the day before using. The shin is a good piece for this purpose. Have the bones well cracked and extract the marrow, which should be prit in the soup.

To each pound of lean beef allow one quart of water. Put the beef, bones and water into a close kettle and set it where it will heat gradually. Let it boil very slowly for six or seven hours. Look at it once in a while to see if the water is sinking too rapidly. Should this be the case; replenish it with boiling water, taking care, however, not to add too much of it.

When it has boiled seven hours, set it away and let it stand closely covered till the next day. Almost an hour before it is wanted for dinner take off the cake of fat which will be found on the surface of the stock; remove the meat, which can be used for mince meat or in making a nice salad with cold potatoes and onions. Set the stock over the fire and throw in a little salt to bring up the scum. When this has all been carefully removed, put in such vegetables as are desired. If these are cut fine it is "Julian" soup.

If young cabbage, quartered and boiled, and young carrots and turnips are put in whole and dished up with the soup, with the addition of toasted crusts, it is the French family soup, according to the taste. The vegetables are better when cooked by themselves and added with their juices to the soup. The seasoning, too, is a matter of taste. Vermicelli or macaroni which has been boiled tender can be added if desired. There is no more absurd notion in regard to soup-making than the idea that all sorts of scraps can be thrown into a pot.

and made into a good soup. A skillful cook can create a good soup from chicken or turkey bones, but for meat soup only fresh and uncooked meat must be used. Veal soup can be prepared in a similar manner to beer soup, it is unnecessary, however, to boil the meat the day before it is wanted. Three hours is sufficient length of time for it to be over the fire. The same proportions of meat and water are used as for the beef.

Be careful to skim it close, and if not clear to strain it through a colander. If macaroni is used put a little butter in with it before adding to the soup. To make mutton or lamb broth allow, as for the preceding soups, a quart of water to a pound of meat. Boil it for two hours slowly. Add half a teacupful of cooked rice at the expiration of this time to the boiling soup.

Cook one nour longer, stirring fre quently to keep the rice from settling to the bottom. Beat an egg to a froth and stir into a cup of milk into which has been rubbed a tablespoonful Of flour. Mix this a little at a time with some of the scalding liquor until the egg is cooked so that it will not curdle the soup. Take out the meat and ut the egg and milk into the pot. Season with pepper, salt and such herbs as desired.

Catfish can Le made into excellent soup. The bloated scavenger of this name which does duty about the city wharves is not a tempting specimen. He is an unclean and dissipated glutton. But the small catfish of the streams and lakes is quite another fish. To six of the fish averaging half a pound apiece take two quarts of water and one- quarter of a pound of salt pork.

Skin, clean and cut up the fish. Chop the pork small pieces. Put all into the pot with the water and a head of celery or some celery ends and such other sweet herbs as are convenient. Boil for an hour and strain. Return to the kettle and add one pint of milk, two beaten eggs and a large piece of butter.

Have bread toasted and cut squares to serve on top of the soup. lhe most common of vegetable soup is bean soup. Any kind will do, although the best are the French beans. Soak a quart of them over night in lukewarm water. Put them over the fire next morning with one gallon of cold water.

Boil for three or four hours. Add celery, onions, if desired, and one or two thinly sliced potatoes. Simmer unni tne vejretaoies are aone. uaraway or dill seed is a good addition to the seasoning of bean soup. opus-pea soup can De made in the same way as bean soup, except that it requires less Tomato soup can be made in the two fol lowing ways, and no one who has not eaten can nave any iaea now good it is: To one pint of canned tomatoes or four large raw ones add one quart of boil in water! Je.

the vegetables boil till thor ougely mixed through the water. Then add one teaspoonful of soda, when it will foam. Immediately add one pint of milk. Tit in plenty or butter, salt and pepper to taste. It is then ready to serve.

Tomato soud can be made witnout muk. To six large tomatoes, or a pint ani a half of the canned vegetables, allow one gallon of water and boil thoroughly. Add a large piece of butter. Beat an egg to a froth, add a little milk or cream and put into the soup just be fore it is sent to table. Onion soup is made by frying finely sliced onions butter and turning bourn water over them.

To six good-sized onions allow a gallon of boiling water. Throw in some parsley, pepper and salt to taste. Serve with a slice of bread fried a b'ght brown in each plate. Pumpkin or squash soup is almost a na tional dish in France. Indeed, the first- mentioned vegetable is scarcely employed there for any other purpose than for soup-making.

To two quarts of thoroughly cooked pumpkin or squash allow one quart of milk, plenty of butter, pepper and salt Save with toasted bread. Sorrel is a pest to many a farmer, and al most takes possession of nis iresniy broken fields. However, sorrel mases a nne eoupfc albeit, likrt the pumpkin, ft is essentially French. To two quarts of eorreladd a good handful of spinach and a few leaves or lettuce. Put them into a frying-pan with a large piece of butter and cook until thoroughly done.

Then put them into a kettle with a gallon of boiling water. Just berore serving add two beaten' eggs with a lit tk. cream. Have squares of toasted bread in the soup and tureen. This soup is highly esteemed for Th Men Card Craae.

fTb Guests nowadays collect and keep their menus and guest cards with as much care as foung ladies just out in society preserve Tmml 'Slti mtfZTJ "E7 CTJILES AT.Ti OF THE XZDITEY8 lu.vxii 3IiADDES AST) bgans DROPSY GRAVEL HABETES DISEASE THE BACK 3OI.8 OB, SIDE By the use of this BEMEDY, the Stom-aehandBowela eeily regain their strength, and the blood is purified. It is pronounced by hundreds of the beet doctors to be tha ONLY CUBE for all kinds of Kidney Diseases. It is purely vegetable, and cures when other medicines fail. It is prepared expressly for these diseases, and has never been known to fall. One trial will convince you.

For sale by all druggists. PBICE 1.25. Send for Pamphlet of Testimonials. DISEASES DETENTION OS NON-HJETEETTION HUNT'S -REMEDY t3 Pmvf liana oy 4 tehte. Mrs.

ohn Jacob Astor pave a dinner the inmates of the New York Newsboys lodging noose. Promising opena the eyes of expectation, we promise that if any housekeeper will use Br. Pace's Cream Baking powder lor lightening and raising their biscuits, cakes and breads, that they will find that no other article of its kind trill produce such nice resnits. There is no powder stronger; none purer; none so healthful. Test it in the oven.

1 MSNMIHWHHaiH-Mm The Democrats of Washington, celebrated Thanksgiving day by holding a great jubilee in nonor of Cleveland and Hendricks' election. BuchuFaiba. Qaick, complete cure, all kidney, blad- der and urinary diseases, scalding, irrita tion, stone, gravel, catarrh ot the bladder $1. Druggists. Thanksgiving day was generally observ ed throughout th conntry, the exchanges, banks and easiness houses being closed newly everywhere.

Care of Bheamatism, OCBANUS PoSTOFFICE. Rockaway Beach, N. Y.t March 1, 1883. I have been a great sufferer from rheu matism. Some six weekB ago I had a bad attack and was laid up for appeared to me of any good.

I got a box of Brandreth's Pills at last, and took three and four every night for a week. I got better every day, and in a week 1 was well. On this beach we have no doctor, and our main reliance is on Brandreth's Pills and Allcock's Porous Plasters. M. P.

Holland, Postmaster. Senator Romero, Mexican minister to the United 8 sates, declares that the people of his country have the kindest feelings iowardr the United states Bough on Corns. Ask for Wells' Rough on Corns. 15c Quick complete cure. Hard or soft corns.

warts, bunions. Dr. John Maxwell, living near Spring field, 0 chloroformed his live chldren and himself and laid down to die. Three of the children died. He was revived and placed in jail.

The Peerless Cough 8yrup of Hill's, And Cobb's Little Podophyllin Pills, Are the very best remedies now to be found For Dispeptics, Consumptives or chills. Only 25 cents per bottle. For sale by Swift Holhday and A- J. Arnold. Thanksgiving day 'was generally ob served here yesterday.

The exchanges, banks and most of the business houses were closed. "There Was a Little Girl." Yes: and when the roses faded from her -cheeks, and she became listless and languid and pale they gave her Brown's Iron Bitters. It built her up in health and made her ruddy and strong. Miss Weigold, 23 Perrv street. Pittsburg.

Pa writes that her sister, seed took several bottles of Brown's Iron Bitters for nervousness and dyspepsia, and was greatly relieved. The fall meeting of the St. Louis Ath letic association was held yesterday at the Union base ball Dark. There was an at tendance of between 4 000 and 5,000. The participants in the sports came from all parts ox the country.

Brown's Bronchial Troches will relieve bronchitis, asthma, catarrh, consumptive and throat diseases. They are used always with good success. The store of Mrs. Raebael Lew. at 602 Levee, was robbed of pistols, cloth' ng and jewelry.

As Thousands do Testify, So does Thomas Roberts, Wholesale Grocer, Philadelphia, 1 who says: "BuaHXTr's -Ai2tB allays all irritation of the n. eTa will most effectually remove dandruff and prevent the hair from falling out. BURNETTS EX TRACTS. 2A 'tupenorihf if theae extracts cni Weir, perfect purify and great aw warranted free from tha noisonoua oils and acids which enter into the composition of many fruit flavors. The' Treasury' Department purchased ftft fiGO ounces of silver, making the total for the month OOOfOOO ounces as required trv law.

a tv, butcher does nave some runny ex He told his assistant the other rThreak the bones in Mr. Williams' nut Mr. Smith's ribs in the basket for him, and tell Mrs. Black to take Dr. Ball's Coogn cy rupiw uei Vf 1 'Jt 1 A'W Jiii ui ii i nan WW inroas ana itrass.

a reman tnat ta 1 entirely upon its merits end is 1 i Hi cuxo ua rcuew au cnrouic ana itfgiH I coughs, asthma, bronchitis, and eoasaas- 1 "Wk I uoxu rnce iro ana JUW..

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About The Topeka Daily Capital Archive

Pages Available:
145,229
Years Available:
1879-1922