Independent in all tilings; Iculral in Jotliing." "Vol 3. - - - i ROSE3BUH o-, oscoiSTr'sa?xJ.aD-3r, sEPtr. rz, is'za ISJO. SO 4t Y . K. WILLIS, Attorney amlounselor at Law. Dental Ilotice. " sa. z. barnes, dentist, HAS TAKEN ROOMS OVER THE NEW York Cash Store, where he will be found prepired to Fill, Cienn and Extract Teeth, S tiai tetta. All wort doDe in a workman-, Ike manner, end at reasonable ra; " i.i i i , , m . . ESTABLISHED. .1855 . r W wecnattea togetner a moment PiOneer Establishment. jand) ilftcr asking how j wa3. pro THOS. P. SHE HID AIT. greasing on my work on Toxicol. " The first haidwaie dealer in Umpqua ! Ogy, he departed. , vaiiey. m the Bnck uuiidin-, j Blocks of OOOLPARM&UIIOI Hill L3 STOVES, Of the Most Improved Patterns ever re ceived in this city. And Uca 1... Om mnat cnmr.ttfl RtnrV nf 1 . wvumm Muunv, , And manufactures everything in the line of TIN,TI1EET-IR0N & C0PPERWARE In a wo.kkmanlike manner, and on most reosonable terms. ' , -y ' Always on hand, and in qu ntities to suit. U OSEBURG ACADEMY THE AUTCMX SESSION OF THIS lNSTITCTIOIi "WII.li COMMENCE: ; Holiday, S ept 2d, 1878. Under the suiwrvision r, ihe undersijrned assisted by Mis9 HaUie Oiililand and J. M. Bower The First seven weeks; of the the term will be free. The last five weeks weeks will be charged for according to mo riwinn. RATES OF TUITION Orthography, Reading and Writing per month. . . ....$1.66 yeruitmrti. ...... ............ 2.00 lessiou to regard all consultation? Higher Aiithmatic, Algebra or Geooi- . a8 gtrictly confidential " per month. .............. 2. ou - Latin, Greek or French per month.... 3.00 I presume SO, but excuse me. Such pupils as desire to continue the Jn wo wortls, doctor, VCU have .'study of Latin or enter upon a comnierc:al . . course, during the seven wet-ks free Bchojl the reputatlOU ot knowing more can have tWir recitations heard as ; was about polg0nR than any other liv done last spring, either before or after dis- r . . J trict school hours. J. BKOWNE, L. L. D. ing physician. NOTICE. Placer Mining. U. S. LA.XD Officr, ) RosEBCiio, Ok.J n,frrTnTi' Ta ticniTTiY H1VRN THAT JLi D. A. Levens. whose postuffice ad-: dress is Canyonville, Douglas county, ! State cr Oregon, has made application for . patent for place- claim, .o. 37, in the Green Mountai Mining District, situated 1 in Douglnsc jnty, Oregon, on unsurveyed 1 lands described as follows : Beginning at the junction of Brandy Gulch with Hogam ,Jk initio Jnnf. tince N. 2 grces.30 minutes, 6.50 chains, to a yew minutes, u.ou cnains, 10 a yew long and 4 inches in diameter ;! i lour sides, S.," also VC." et for N. E. earner claim aspost. pest 3 leet marked on nr "37" apt for N. K. eirner claim a nost No, 1. thence S, 8.50 chains to pott No. 2; veil and draw C ft your glove, if thence S. 20 degrees VV 10,50 chains to y0U nJease. post No. 3: thence S. 19.00 chains to posti' rrui i.,., tu-. No, 4; thence s. 16 degrees E 10 00 chains ! The lady, without reply, threw to post No. 5; thence s 30 degrees E 655 back her heavy veil, and showed chains to post 6; thence W 3.64 chains to xer a small .black-Silk mask COV post No. 7; thence N. 80 degrees W 5.5o . rt ,,,1 ji , r . , 1 . chains to ist 8; thenoe N 16 degrees w fnng the middle of her race, but ' 10.00 chains to post 9; thence N. 19.00 leaving exposed a charming chin, chains to post No. 10; thence N 20 degrees and two lips that ail auchorite E 10.50 chains to post . No. 11; thence N. . n .l.-ina to TntTo. 12- rthr.m K 3.74 Would long tO klSS. chains to post No. 1; being the above de-i Bciribedyew pos;2d. initia. point ol b - ginning and containiug twenty acres ac- cording to plat of survey filed in the Kegs Ister's office by Surveyor General of the State of Orecon. The foregoing described claim of D. A, Levens is ot recoid; the said applicant, D A Levens, having acquired the said claim by purchase from John Stephens, who pur- (hassd the same from Joseph itamsey, the original locator: all of which is a matter of record jn the recorder's office of Douglas county, Oregon; and now known as "D. A. Leven's Placer Mining Claim," joined on the east, south and west by unsurveyed Government land, and on the north by ground claimed by L. D. Montgomery, All adverse claims must be nled in the United States Und Office at Roseburg, ui pi" uvmc, . mvan " v, " , Oregon, on or before the expiration of this and discovers that he is not trns ; onl7 me perfect when he backs notice. It is hereby ordered that the above fed with the sight of his patienf, ; up against the sapling w here he SS he isaD bonf ' he -WlHb .WWt .o.fiodritht the paper published at Roseburg, Oiegon. draws at once from the case, con-Chlve3 have cha wed up both tails Given nuder my hand this 5th of Au scious that he can do nothing,and ; and one sleeve thereof. That is - gust, 1878, w. f. benjamin unwilling to risk his own reputa- what makes him, in bitterness of ; ' tion nnd the life of the unfortu- spirit, renounce the bouudless XMfcTOTH) Lt V E R T.nate slave bJ the blind attempts charms thut nature to her votaries ; But I am not an ignorant slave, ; yielas, and go home in sad solilu- ... .AND. Feed Stable, This establishment is the 3 est in tbe State ! and connected with it is a large a a a aii a v fn iinrii pi ii r a . f" a WAuUN Tflriu wiin tint ontu houib Capable of accommodating anj timbu s horses and wagon. BEST OF HAY AND GRflJI Always in full supply at living prices And No One is Allowed to tit Away Dissatisfied. Don't fail to give us a call, f6r we ar. ot termined to suit yon in quantity, quality and prices. W-KiUUT CARLOS. A DOCTOR'S STORY. BY-O.H. SCTAMBROOK. : M,: I - v. , 13 1 ill and the ram had begun, to -tall., in l heavy drops. , . o . I was sitting in ray office writ- trfk when gome one wrapped at lny door, it was ten o'clock; wlip " . , ' " , ; ; I could be coming so late at night; someone sick,! suppose. Not so; it ( was a young doctor Paul Edgar, ,Uan MrtQt;., oo nhr,;'tnn " . 1. W .:,.,wt:,. Iff 11UCU 1LI 1LUL1VU UU 1 . Ull T D1U1UU T 7 5'.. ! He had been gone but a short ' auuiuer vuiicr. . vjuiu- iu ujc door I found a servant who said that a lady wished to see me, and a fcote, which read, . . i hnnnpfl mo like this: uear sir. v.ou win not retuse . . ' ior nve miumes. a person i.ww viuuu vi.i.i. Hem! said I. lite and death are not very utiU8ual occurrences ; 1 bring the lady in. j ' , , ' A moment later she appeared;a ' tall stately woman, richly and ; completely veiled. I handed her a chair, and then ! 'seating mvself awaited her please ' i Dr. -, 1 presume, speaking : with foreign accent. 1 Yes, madam. l I wish to consult you upon 1 a very serious matter Sir. It 18 . , . , entirelv confidential. It is unnecessary to mention I tbat tact, a physician is bound by j the honor and dignity ot his proM It is of poisons you wish to ppeak. Yes, I suspect th: t I have .swallowed some deadly substance, not at once, but in too minute doses Must beginuing to make themseiVes felt. I have come to you for information, aud for an antl(ote which, I ttust you Will . . 1 , J noireiuse. Before we talk Of antidotes, we must discover the poisons, if w H . . , nnt. V., your sus nicions are correct. Ev- ery poison has an antidote of its cijr ui&iii hub an 'Miiiuuie ui iih own as every Vice is counterpart . 7 1 t an especial virtue. Raise your n appears, maaame, mat ai- though vou thought fit to respect s mv T'at-n ,u nnf :A ' J ' " . r ' to confide in it, said I U diplea3 ure. Pardon me, sir; but it is very possible that you and I may meet j again, perhap8, in society. It IS f . . fr0 f . t nnt ,xa able tc recognize me better for us both. Madame, in the seraglios of the East, when a Frankish physician i a art n rrsn ol rt nnanriKa frw tViA l :f l- ; ' i 'and it is I who take the responsis bility in this casej said the wo- man in a sweet and pathetic voice. I will die rather thun re veal myself; but 1 do not wish toouth three montl s ago die, and 1 believe that you can ! How can I? You mav ask what questions yOU wieh,and I will aujwertbem hones tongue cers on my nnnofsnl ir TP1 h n axiCWl M II (T hPilT.. Wilt not these suffice? ; I undertake the esse, but it is on your own .responsiminy, remember. I will bear it. What first? lour hand. The masked woman drew offj tly. You may see ray hand, , j - ; you may put your nus - J J ri . .1 Reenerv bevond the Lakpq. YU temmes. inroooiujr r j . r 7 i r i MS . j word, and little hand extended to me a I which I- carefully examined. jj. was white and smoothes marble. T71 r n rhin Q ron l n r ntflla n n ! ""u luiii) itiMuuit . IIIUIOj auu iu penng fingers. In the center of her hand was a spot about the size of a five-dollar p ece, which burned like living flrel The tips ot, , 6 YnSers f ere, nnmid and cold. Across the bikek of her nanci exteuded a red stripe Upon this I placed my fingers anu briefly inquired, natural or accidental. - in either; it is tiofe connected With this case. Further examination 3howed her explanation to be correct. I j then began a rigid catechism, de- termiued that if she would not spare' no show her face I wouki MHw. ! : - i i ancI refinement. Alter thus auos- oning her I proceeded to the cab- et and took out a vial ot gol-, .1 i: : j i uo" "iu'u; T 1 . xviauaiue, says i, your suspw ' fiions arft correct. X ()U fiaVe" fiWoiimvf1 "tulu"l"J 111 1111 in minute doses, narge quantity of a deadly eas- rern ornor. nam v irnnwn nhv fiicians in thia fionntrv; Q w v" rv My toxis cological studies have acquainted both with and its onlv antidote , s oniy anuaoie. made me the drug That anti his phial, bul it is in itself a terrible pois.m and is to be used against the other. Here are fifty drops. You V11 taIce cording to the direc- it you are aliy,e, come t6 me. In tnat event you w1j hav!e uo on. ger a motive for conceairaent,and and should be willing to eacriiice ynr -incognito in the interest cf t-'wi vv-a You are somewhat brutal iu your suggestions, rerr arked the patient arising and putting on her gloves. A)a(,itme yoa misti ke:I am ? professionally, said I, ringing the bell. As the servant came I told him to get the lady's carriage. Madame, I wish you good even ing. Good evening, sir, and the lady passed out, leaving in an envel ope on the table a note f a buns dred pouuds. Weli, the elixir I presented to her is cheap, even at this price. With a sigh of relief j I turned to the table and commenced writ ing in my work, and in about au hour I retired for ihe nis;ht. . To be Concluded Horrible Predicament. A Bostoi; paper tells of a fasti dious and biishtul old gentleman at Boston arrayed himself in a black suit of clothing vhich had been hanging in a closet fo sev eral weeks, on a'. recent Sunday, and started out for a walk just as the streets were crowded with church-goers. V Before he had gene tar his suspenders suddens ly parted, and as he excitedly clutched at his pants, and they broke away like burued paper and fell into fragments to the ground. -With a shriek he flod to homevva d, but, before he reached the friendly shelter of his house, he was almost naked, his coat atid vest having! dropped piecemeal to the sidewalk, and as he passed through the j shin caught upon a nail was stripped to the skin. and he It is bad enough for the young man at the picnic to sit (down on the CUStard pie, but hlS agony IS j ry state, an irreligious, citihcd, cpuutry-hating unbeliever. A Disappointed lover vho went 0 with .a ig appe- blighted heart and a stro jtite tor death aud oblivion, came 'x"1,1-? 1 T UUJe,,ut wu" a I . .v. i i. i, .i ii. . face uevv vlu ewa3R. P.ampnor nonsense won t j bunk together. Even the Russian language has not the power to describe the feeling ot the maj with la mos quito bite between his shoulder-. blades. her glove without a! low lever auu THE GUARD OF DEATH. , a 'lurimng incident in isapoieons Retreat from Moscow. .. . The. horrors of war have been detailed in almost infinite varie- . . - " - ty, affording themes ot inexhajs-. tlMe abundance lor the moralist, e he n:,toriau and the 103 p0etJ lie m3tomu aua.tne rc" mincer. Abundant in Guclrde tails cf suitering must have been the disastrous campaign of Na poleon in Russia, or rather, the most disastrous portion of the campaign, the retreat from Mos cow. . Tbeondinary disasters of a re- treat through an enemy's country . . ... w'uc, iu iuis lUBiunue, iKitnuijy ty ot the cold, and that, of the multitudes who perished, there Wgre thousands who sank beneath (its nirors. for hundreds who s.Mik , " , , , HVf UA - IUV VUJ' sacks. Yet the assaults of these roving warnor3 of the deserts were fearfully destructive, llovs ering in small bands around the divisions of the retreating French and never tailing to strike when ever a small party of the enemy separated from the main body on it3 march aud , such separations were daily becoming mora '.fre quent; through the relaxing of discipline aud the increased want of provisions there was no pos. 8ibility of either resisting; or es caping their attacks. Well ntoun ted on their fleeJ and hardy coursers, such was the rapidity of their movements that they seem ed to spring up trom the (arth, always appearing when least ex pected, and, repulsed, scouring awa with a celerity that' defied pursuit, even it the worn aud bar rassed Frenchmen had been able to attempt it. From thern, in deed, there was but one resoruce To keep as closely together as possible when attacked by the Cossacks, to form in solid squares and meet the shock; aud above, all,-to pursue their march with the least possible intermission, for those who halted died. Thus were the remains of i"a great army toiling back across the frightful waste of thatriuhosi pitable region, but daily leaving thousands of their number stif fening on its snows; the :: troops ot Cossacks bweeping around thern, and briiiffin up the rear, reauv to pick up every straggler whon fatigue or ' the hope of greater safety in isolated p-ogress had separated from his fellows. The main body had passed on; and there was solitudeiu the ast and naeed steppe which they had traversed. The cold wa dread ful, aud a driving storm of storm of snow was whiteniug the ground to which the intense frost had given the rigidity of marble. ' ' Kill the AVeeds in Augast. ' There is no better month to kill Canada thistle, as well as vvseds generally, and the destruction of bushes, than August. It is also peculiarly a time when farmers are not so viiiuch hurried, and when the wecljs have fully developed themselves. The farmer can see ta a glance, indeed has seen all the season, the necessity ot com mencing the work of destruction. The best thiag to be done with weeds of all kinds dxtirpaftd from the land is to use them in the compost heap, or tv gather them in large heaps to remain there uu tildry, and then burnu p, "root andbranch." The practice ot some farmers who look only to their ownseltish purposes, who live tor themselves and rarely have a neighbor with whom they are on friendly terms, is to pull up and throw into the public highway the weeds from their fields. There they are left to npen their seed, and the first wind that comes tney are carried away, sometimes for miles, either into the land ot some other farnu r or into a stream, to be landed along the banks for a great distance.. We have more than once seen people calling themselves farmers and christians engaged in this mean business. The poet who delights in ex travagant flights, of pathos will have to step up lively before he overtakes a sadder subject fcr dyspeptic rhyming than a man struggling home from market with both arms fall of house -plants. BETWEEN BITES. Made of awl work shoes." Phosphorus was discovered in 1677. A popular steak-holdcr-iron. -grid- . Hold fish were introduced into England 1691. A tooth pick isn't the woral toilet these days. A passee beauty has to make up tor lost time, i ? Ilo-.v to get a head Steal into cabbage patch. Truth is not drowned in water nor burned in fire. The man who is honest from policy needs watching. The new tints in note paper are shell-rose and primrose. The sea holds the. oil and wick tor our final conflagration. America takes the prize for pa per at the paris exhibition. In Noah's ark it took two of a kind to beat a pair. Keep clear of the man who does not value his own reputatiou. . A young lawyer jot Pittsburg has inveuted a water velocipede. Every boy has to let something off tsudden near a cat ouce iu his lite." -; lie who sm;le3 ct another's mistake lorgets his own ijrno" ranee. rJ he Graphic has s en lad:e3 in their shirred sleeve i. Owing to the heat. BeaeonnVld is ill; t o much Turkey. Gortechakolt is ill; too little Turkey. Why is an idea like a pig? Be caue voa must catch it before ) ou, can pen it. " When a pickpocket pulls at your pockets tell him you have no time to wait. In this fast age, he whose feet are beautiful on the mountings is the horse jockey. j Dennis Kearney is in favor of a community, of brains. lie gains v division, if nobody oise does. . - 'i It is an ill -wind t at bloes ho- bod.good. The vellow fever has driven the hghtuiiig-rjod peddlers out of Memphis.' J The same backache that makes a boy howl when he's diggu.g potatoes ' wreathes "' his fact? with smiles when he shps oft to a picnic. Alexander ; II. Stephen? was never marreu. lie uas always had all he wanted to ! keep from being blown away by an ordiua. ry breeze. It is debatable whether yellow lever wis sent to scourge Bob Ihgersoll or the Potter Investiga-i Hon eomiuttee. Thus fai the iMioeeni alone have sufiercd. 4 'Each heart knows it own sor row best," thought a pioui father as he sat down on an egg which he had forgotteu tv remove from his coat pocket before g;ing to church. ' ; Five years ago a woman in Ste le county, Minnes)ta, was struck dead by lightning. Noth ing daunted, she married again, and recenMy her second husoand was killed in the same manner. Ed3on's new electric coftee mili not only griudthe coffee quicker, but it indicates where the servant girl lias; niauen a pound and halt of sugar to take home with her. j The London Lancet says a blow on the Tear often ruptured the drum, and warns parents against boxing childieu's ear?. You can get more music out ot a child bj applying the slipper a couple c.f feet below the 'drum." An old Irish soldier wno prided himseltupon his braaery, said he had fought in the battle of Bull Run. When asked if he ha 1 re treated and made good his eseape as others had done on that la mous occasion, he replied, "Be jabbers, those that didn't ruu are there yet. It was not believed that the Paris exhibition would boa finan cial success, yet the governmeut commissioners feel that they are out of financial difficulty. The cost of buildings and maintenance is estimated at ab-ut $9,000,000, and a revenue : ot nearly $7,000, 000 is already assured, j lhe at tandance has exceeded all cvpec tatious. . ! AN miSH LEGEND. -H The Irish have a curious legend respecting what they call Bhiad na oge; in Oiher words "The blos soms of- youth." The legend is this: "An Inshmaa at one pe riod went to Denmark,4 where he -b hospitoblj- roceirodmocli to his astonishment. lie was taken into immediate,, favor by those among whom he visited. He was told that in a certain part ot the country of Limerick, from Cvhtvh it appears he came there was a Cf ock f gold hidden under a thorn bush in a garden which . was so clearly.poihted outl to him that thero oeuld bo no mistaking the locality, lie was i . He was (further told that among the gold was a re inarkable circular i iece of coin with which he should return to Detirnark, but that jhe might be come the possessor of all the gold in the crock with the exception of that particular circu)ar piece. The Irishman was obedient to the lets ter. He returned to Denmark wiih the circular piece, and kept for himself all but that. The Danes were rejoiced Dane having been A very aged rubbed with the wo jdert'.i I circular piece" of gold, at once became young again fresh and vigorois as in the days ol his bovbood. So with other Danes, You have brought back said they, the Blaiqd na oge, the blossom ot jouth, land Ireland shall be poor evermore. He Would Tell. She had invited ihim to top to supper and he wi s trying .to" aps pear at ease and, unconcerned, white she was ou her prettiest be havior. ' . : Have you used the (sugar, John? inquired the mother, in a win. uing rianner. . j John don't want aiiy 6Ugat, said. the )oung h Dir. abruptly. W by not: inquired the father. curiously, "white John, in his sur prise, swallowed a mt of toasted crust, and nearly cut his throat open. j Cod he don't, I heard him tell Mary his' night-r- l u keep still, interrupted Man', in a hurried maimer, while the young man caught his breath in dismay. j . I heard him say, persisted the heir, with feaatul eagerness, that she was so sweet j he shouldn t never use no U''ar aov more an then he k:ssd her, an' I said I'd tell, an The heir wai lifted out ot the room by the ear, ami (tne, supper wat finished in moody silence. mm i i i ........ ; . j ....... . .. ... ,. . A recent visitor to Westmin ster Abbey noticed two bouquets of handsome flowers upon Dick ens' grave, and beside them a more affecting tribute to the dead uoveli!?t a little bunch of daisies and wild hyacinths,' slightly laded as if it had been brought from a distant country lane in a hot, un Said an orator at the Womau's Rights Congress at Pans: "We were born naked, and yet society makes us cover ourselves with clothes, to earn which wenave to work and labor. Such anomalies as these will rapidly dTsappear when our rights are coueoeded." Every now aud then some chap writes to newspaper for a receipt to prevent hair from aiming out It .men would go home from the lodge before' midnight, with their legs sober, their hair woulu not come out so rapiily. We always go homo early, and we have more hair now than the day we were horn. The Piinee of Wde was lately on a visit to Bristol. After his departure .the following adver tisement appeared in a local newspaper: "The comb used by his Aighues, the Prince of Wale?, is for sale. Ben Butler invited Dennis Kearney to come to Massachu setts and work tor him. And then after Dennis bad been there and worked tor him as only Den nis can work, the ungratful Ben invited him to -leave and swears he never wanted him. 'Let me kick him for his mo tor," is what the appointed stock holders now say about Keely. SHORT COURTSHIP. The Omaha Republican oia re cent date says: Bernard Volk i,s a welNto-do farmer, living in Ad disco couuty, Iowa He u miaV five of Germany and is twenty five years ot age. He vis:ted 0- maha on Tuesday a "single man, with no intention- ot committing matrimony, and before" night hd was married to a young lady whom he had never. before seen It happ med in this-wise: lie ini' bibed quite freely of liquor, dud in this happy condition he made up his mind to hunt up a wife. In walking along ' Tenth street he saw a!young girl washing in a room between b'arnara street and Jfo. 2 Engin Lqusc, and walking, up to her as she was, he asked her if she was married, and, if not, would she marry him ? She saw that he ment business, and calling in the other Women ot the house, they madean immediate investi gation into his ability" to supporf a wife. He showed them he hau coneiuerable cash with him and u MI farm in Iowa. She gave her consent, and proceeding to the o.fice of Hon. W. O. Bartholo mew, County .lodge, license was obtained, and Bernard Volk and Annie Fisher were mee man and wife. The bride is nineteen years of ago, and was born in 8ioux City, Iowa.r A Wonderni SprH; ' Silver Springs, Florida, is one of tho greatest cu nositie3 of th o South. It bubbles up iiy at basin5 nearly 100 feet deep aud about aii acre in extent, sendit'g from it a deed stream 60 to 100 feet wide, and extending six to eight miles' to the Oclwha river. Iu the spring : itself sixty boats may he at anchor quite a fleet . The spring thus forms a natural inward port, to which two steamers run regularly from tho St. John's, making close connection with the ocean steam ers at Pilatka. The clearness of; the water is truly wonderful. If seem? even more transparent than air. You see the bottom 80 feet below the bottom of your boat, the exact " form of the smallest pebble, the outline 'and color of" the leaf that has sunk, and ah the prismitic colors of the rainbow are reflected. Large fish swiming it, every scale visible and eyery' movement distinctly seen. It you go over the fissures in the rock from Which.-the water rushes tor ward like an inverted cataract American JJacb'ncry. The London Times prints tWo columns of description ol the me chanical display of the United Sta.es at the Paris jExposition. In the editoral article commenting thereon, the Times says:" "The4 pre-eminence of the mechanical genius of the United . Slates may be admitted and is illustrated noS for the first time in the exh'bitiori la Pans. The Times, without pretending, to-exhaust the whole secret of the phenomena of tho i n ve n t i ve ge n i U3 across th e Atla n tic, finds a reason therefor in the greater efficiency ot labor there, and the increased cost aud dif3 culty of hiring it. The condition of a union is au. economic society drives its inhabitants toward in vention, and there, as elsewhere, nccessity may be said to be the mother of it," Green Tomato Soy- Slice twa callous of orecn tom itnA nn4 twelve or fourteen good sued onV ions; two quarts vinegar ; one pouud sugar; two table-spoonfuls salt; two of ground mustard; two ot black pepper, ground; one ta blepooutul all pico and one o cloves. -".Mix "all -.and' still until tender, stniug often jest they should sh uUl scorch. Put up in small glass jats. This "is very nice tor most every kind ot meat and fish. - . Pickled Poaches Bub the? down ail off with a coarse 4ow1; steam in a steamer until ' they ca j be pricked with a straw. - UaVa' cloves, stick threo" or four in each peach end drop iu the jar To every quart of cider vinegi put one pint of whi to sugar, ona ounce of stick cinnamon; "boil all together halt an hour then pour on the hot peaches. If the. vine gar is good these will keep aU winter.