!!! ill!hiliſi | 2 L ſº- ) º Ż Ž à * • Ż Ż % % % Z% % Ż Ż i. - 2 % Ż -%. l 24% l | | i. y | |º Ilimuli |imml |||||III/IIIihilllllllll !". all * | ||||||||||||||||||||| luminuſ º |lin. (III Illiiilu. |||||| | | Nº. | | |N|| --- | | @ . | | | | | ...anll | | Lºr || | | |h, "l | |liſt | IIII III/IIII IIII IIIII |||||||||||| |||||||||||| ||||||||| |||||||||| IIIIllllllllll | | | || | "||||||||||| | |Illilull III.iiii- | Willºts (my ſhut “What capital cooks those Shaker women are l I don't get anything to eat in my Fifth avenue home as good as what they gave me; and they seemed to take no special trouble on my account either.” So said a wealthy New Yorker on his recent return from a few days visit to the Shaker Community at Mount Lebanon, N. Y. : This book contains the portraits of eleven famous cooks. These shining lights of their profession are chiefly from France and Alsace. We believe there is no English school of cookery in England. In the United States occasional attempts are made to teach young ladies the art of cooking, but without much SUICC0SS. In the earliest ages men lived on the fruits of the earth ; they ate no kind of meat. Hence they were seldom sick. Food and physic were the same thing, as is the case with birds and animals in a wild state. By and by they began to live in a more complex way. They adopted meat as an article of diet and tried to find out how to cook it ; but for centuries they got no further than boiling and broiling. - It is only within the last five hundred years that cooking began to be an art in the sense in which we now look at it. In one of his novels Sir Walter Scott tells about a supper given at the house of Cedric the Saxon, which shows the rough cookery of those days, and what gluttons even the best and richest of the people were. * Professional cooks began to appear in England not long after the Conquest. They grew in number and in favor with kings, nobles and others who could afford such a luxury. Joseph Cooper was chief cook to Charles I., and in spite of his high position he stuck to many simple dishes, and often placed upon the royal table oatmeal pudding, hasty pudding in a bag, and the like. A noted cook of a much later date was Louis Eus- tache Ude. He presided over the kitchen of Touis. XVI, and afterwards got up dinners for the English Earl of Sefton and other aristocrats. He became (Continued on page 2.) . 6 G *º-s- N. / D \ N A. « » tº Y " \ l Nº. tº . . S \, ſº º N × N- º ~~. ºS $º \ C º 2. * . | * * ~sº º £2 e - * & C Lººm. Rs Yºhº. Sº 2 º Aº 47 º' º a tº M.--> º's Q º Zºrº •. D s º Al O 49 º • N * > Xº, sº-º-o ºn. 22: ºº . & .” " ** , , e, e. D - e. e Y Kl º 's ºr A. * ...A. sº D. C * c \, . C * K º, a ** a C sº * * * * ~ *s º 5 sºexº, ſº f/ 2'-- e.g- L º I º • * C & AUGUST BRUNOW, Cook for August Belmont, of New York, is a Parisian, and in Paris he cooked for the descendants of the famous house of Lor- raine, and for the Freemasons' Tavern and the Russian Embassy in London, and other Inoted institutions. Salary, $7,000. © Y-Tº-T-7 *. vºy A-A ſºng A. 2- A-. Wºmº A U ºf Tº ſº 2- - MINUTE PUDDING. Take any desirable quantity of milk, bring it to the boiling point (being careful not to let it burn), add a little salt, stir in wheat flour to make it stiff, and serve with cream and sugar or sweet sauce. . GOLDEN PUDDING. One cup of granulated sugar, one egg, one cup of sweet milk, three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, 2% cups of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, pour into a low, square tin and bake twenty-five minutes. It should be served hot, with a sauce poured over it, made as follows: Stir to a cream one tablespoonful of butte: und a half cup of sugar; moisten with a little cold water two teaspoonfuls of flour, and pour a pint of boiling water over it, then stir in the butter and sugar; beat the white of an egg to a stiff froth, and stir in the sauce; flavor with lemon., & 2 chief cook of Crockford's Club, London, in 1827, the year in which one of his former employers, the Duke of York, died. On hearing of the Duke's death Ude exclaimed: “Ah, my poor Duke, how you shall miss me where you are gone !” e The cooks whose portraits you will find in these pages are all employed in New York, which is the center of social life in this country. People who never enter the inner circles of society have no idea of the taste, skill and money invested in social entertainments. at the houses of the wealthy. The supper is always elaborate and expensive. , Money enough is often spent on a single banquet of this kind to furnish an ordinary family with a good living for years. At such times the chief cook is an important person. He must do credit to the family and to himself. So he draws on all his resources to make a spread that shall be as much a work of art as a painting by Church, or a poem by Tennyson. He does not care a straw whether the supper is wholesome or not. He wants merely to make a sensation, to excite the envy of rival cooks, and do a stroke of work that will in- crease his fame and his salary. For elegance and brilliancy these scenes are like dreams of fairyland. Vast sums are spent for flowers, decorations, music, artistic bills of fare, etc. At a reception not long ago Mrs. C. Wanderbilt of New York, paid three thousand dollars to a famous pianist for playing for her guests just one hour. * - On the evening of December 13, 1888, Mr. Cornelius Wanderbilt gave a reception at his house in West Fifty-seventh street, in honor of the new rector of St. Bartholomew's Church, to which many so-called “society” people belong. The parlors were crowded with bishops, doctors of divinity, famous business men, college professors, judges, politicians, financiers and eminent lawyers and physicians. There were no wo- men present. & * - The guests entered the main hall under a Gobelin tapestry looped over the top of the stairs. A chimney É.” opposite the entrance, masked in trailing vines, half revealed a bank of white lilies in bloom, At the left of the main entrance was a little room, with a (Continued page 4, on ). º • U ºf a 32- Algºº º I P. b º/ C ** * D . * ſ &O d º 4 p. I | J. BAILHE, Cook for Mr. Orme Wilson, of Fifth Avenue, New York, has served in the families of Hon. Earl of Cork, Baron Reille, of Paris, Trevor Lawrence and Lord Vivien, and for many years at †. famous Chafon Restaurant at Bordeaux, France. Salary, 5,000. Aº- a 2- Y-y *r-y ºr-ºr-wºmy vºy FRIZZLED MEAT. Take meat that is too tough to boil, put it where it will freeze as hard as possible, then, with knife or machine, shave in small pieces; have a hot griddle or frying-pan, grease and put on the meat, turn quickly, then salt, pepper and serve with gravy. TEA CAKE. Three cups of sugar, three eggs, one cup of butter, one of buttermilk, four cups of flour; beat all together thoroughly, and then put in one teaspoonful of soda, and stir just enough to mix the soda evenly in the dough; bake immediately. • CRULLERS. Three cups of sugar, four eggs, one teaspoonful of but. ter, one cup of buttermilk, one teaspoonful of soda, and flour enough to make a stiff dough; fry in hot fat. {} Q •. & t . & w g | | p p #. [. | . N w rt t l O r º Moon's Phases.—New Moon, 1st; First Quarter, 8th; Full Moon, 17th; Last * ! Quarter, 24th; New Moon, 31st. - 1st Month. JANUARY, 1859, aſ Days. sūſīTTETWELTTHºt Hi-TERE Shaker Family 1 2 3 4. § I Pills are sure to |S rise 7 24|S rise 7 24|S rise 7 24|S rise 7 24|S rise 7 24 Operate. S gets 4 48.18 sets 4 44|S. Sets 4 45|S sets 4 460 sets 4 47 ( M sets 5 49|M sets 6 59|M sets 8 MCM sets 9 13 ETITIOTTITTIET is rise 7.25 8 rise 7 241S rise 7 24|S rise 7 24|S rise ºf 24|S rise 7 24 S rise 7 22 ſº sets 4 43]. gets 4 498 gets 4 50S Bets 4 51|S Bett; 4 52|S sets 4 58|S sets 4 54 lºt set 10 24|M set 11 26|M set morn!M sets 0 27|M sets 1 26M sets 2 25|M sets 8 23 TIäTITIATI5 TiāTITTiāTiā- 8 rise 7 28|S rise 7 28|S rise 7 22 S rise 7 22|S rise 7 22|S rise 7 21|S rise 7 20 § sets 4 55|S sets 4 56|S sets 4 57|S sets 4 58|S sets 4 59|S sets 5 DIS sets 5 2. M sets 4 20 M sets 5 15|M sets 6 M. rises M rise 5 92|M rise 6 84|M rise T 30 TEOTITETTETT #: 24. TITE5TTEGT S ribe 7 201S rise 7 191S rise 7 191S rise 7 18|S rise 7 18|S rise 7 17|S rise 7 17 B sets 5 8|S gets 5 4|S sets 5 5S sets 5 61S sets 5 'llS sets 5 91S sets 5 10 M rise 8 41|M rise 9 46|Mrise 10 53|Mrise 10 591 morn. IM rise 1 lolli rise 2 21 27TTESTITESTIT3OTT51 Shaker Family is rise 7 16|S rise 7 15|S rise 7 14|S rise 7 13|S rise 7 12| Pills never make Sºtº 5 11|S. sets 5 #2S sets 5 13|S. sets 5 15|S. sets 6 lº you sick Miriae B 32!M rise 4 42/M rise 5 4tlM sets M sets 544 you . \ * N mºmº_º - = \ *. table in it, on which stood a huge punch bowl full of claret punch. The art gallery was turned into a din; ing room. On a large table Mr. Vanderbilt's cook had placed a pyramid of delicacies to be eaten a la four- chette; and in the middle, as a show piece, was a model of a church made of a confection called Nougat. It looked exactly like a brownstone church with marble trimmings, and on every side of it was a lawn of *. roSeS, e The guests drank the punch and ate up the church. . Mingling quietly with the company were three detec- tive policemen in evening dress. Ü & During the season—the fall and winter—such things are common, and the kind of cooking to be seen at them is intended to tickle and stimulate the jaded palates of the spoiled children of fashion. These dishes contain ingredients which clog the stomach and bring on, indi- gestion and dyspepsia, with all the miseries that follow in their train. & - ... There seems to be only one people who know how to cook so as to nourish the body, give plenty of variety to please the taste, and at the same time never to Q (Continued on page 6.) . . . . . . , AUDRIEN PONS, Cook for Mr. F. T. Wilson, Fifth Avenue, New York, is a native of Paris; has cooked at the Hotel Biscarrat, Montpelier, France; has cooked for ex-Queen Isabella, of Spain, and has prepared breakfasts for many royal weddings, and cooked for the Baronne Yugerlat, of Willandry. Salary, $5,000. A- Ty-w vºy vºy ~my A-A M, x -x_* >wº U-- ºg WAFERS. S. ** Five cups of flour, one cup of sugar, two-thirds cup of butter; rub butter and sugar into the flour, two eggs, half cup sweet milk, one teaspoonful soda, all º together; mix the flour, etc., roll very thin, and 03, Kē. CURRANT PUDDING, One quart of milk, three eggs, one small cup of sugar, all beaten together; spread a slice of stale bread, and place it in a deep baking tin; take one gill of currant sauce, strain out all the juice and spread the currants on the bread, then pour the custard of milk, eggs and sugar over the bread, and bake till the • j is done. The juice of the currants should be ... eaten as a sauce on the pudding. cause any of the troubles we have alluded to. We mean the Shaker communities. Somehow or other they have mastered the art of making food at once palatable, digestible and nutritious. Yet they do it in a very simple way; there is no mystery or magic about it. Here it is, in a nutshell: They use the best materials to cook with, and then devote to the task all the necessary time, labor and patience. The Shakers have no faith in any inventions to save trouble in cooking. They won't have anything to do with “self- raising flour,” yeast cakes, patent baking pºwders, Or puddings in tin cans, sold by the grocers. They would just as soon believe in self-washing dinner plates, or in a stove on which to broil a beefsteak without heat. Every lady who aspires to be a good cook may as well understand first as last that she cannot do it by any of the short cuts described in the silly “popular.” cookbooks, that the country is full of There is only one way, and that is the Shaker way; by study, by work, by honest treatment of your materials, by obser- vation, by patience, by perseverance. The Shaker cooking is plain, but in some form or other they manage to serve up almost everything that is good for regular and daily eating. e have the gº to give in this little book some genuine haker recipes, furnished to us directly by the Shaker Community of Mt. Lebanon, N. Y., and not published in any other place or way. [º But after all, you must remember that rich food and over-eating is not the only cause of indigestion and dyspepsia. Poor food, irregular hours of eating, over- work, grief, mental anxiety, lack of sleep, etc., all help to bring on the same trouble. This is why disorders of the stomach are universal in this country; and nearly all the other diseases people are suffering and dying from arise out of a disordered digestion. For this complaint the Shakers make a remedy which is more successful and more widely known than any other. Millions of bottles of it are sold every * #. They have agencies for the distribution of it in England, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Spain, Australia, Turkey, India, Africa, and indeed all over the globe. This great publicity has not been brought about by ſº (Continued on page 8.) - 0. HENRI RIVIERE, Remarkable among his fellow cooks for his jolly and laughing disposition, is now cook for Mrs. Winthrop, a society leader of Fifth avenue, New York. For ten years in Paris he cooked for Fould Brothers, bankers. Has tickled the palate of Wanderbilt and ex-Mayor Cooper. Salary, about $4,000. º 2- A- 4- A- A—A- 2- 4--A—A---- A—A-A A ~-_-_- A-A- a A—A- ë –A- Am a A-AA-A—A-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º: 2- A A- w—ºr ~mºrºmy ºr vºy-ºr-mºrºy vºy-ºr sº-ºr-ºr v-y v-ºr ºr-wºmy [ . . | ` ſºm my A. v A ºr v=v, Y-y v Y-Tº-FTY *- ºr-ºr ºry ºr Uºmº- APPLE TOAST. Take slices of stale bread, toast and spread with but- ter; take as many apples as you desire, cut in thin pieces and stew in saucepan as quickly as possible, sweeten, mash fine and flavor with nutmeg. hile the toast and sauce are hot, spread on toast and serve. INDIAN MEAL PUDDING. One quart of milk, scalding hot; stir in enough meal to make a thick batter, add one-half pint of chopped sweet apple and about a gill of suet; chopped fine; one scant teaspoonful of ginger, a little salt, and good molasses enough to make it quite sweet; bake in a slow oven four hours, or until the top is of a rick umber color. - e * g M sets 9 6|Maets 10 9|Msets 11 11|M morn. M rise 7 87 M rise 845 * [S rise 6 42|S rise 6 418 rise 6 39|S rise 6 87|S rise 6 85 S_sets 5 45|S_sets 5 46|S_sets 5 47|S_sets 5 49|S sets 5 50 d w & º e | Q & * * tº 0 tº * v=w=w—w—w—ºr -–tº– --~x- ---, #oon's PHaSEs.-First Quarter, 7th; Full Moon, 15th; Third Quarter,22d. ' 2d Month.TFEBRUARY, Isso. 25 Days. ==E=E. Twº THE THEEEF Shaker Family Pills cure bad taste in the 1...]. 2 mouth without causing the least griping or is rise T 11's rise 7 s dºll S68s S. Sets 5 17|S sets 5 18 M sets 6 58|M sets 8 1 *, lºº, lº ### | 8 || 9 | v- S rise 7 8|S rise 7 7|S rise a 6S rise 7 5|S rise 7 4|S rise ºf 8|S rise 7 a § sets 5 2018 sets 5 21|S sets 5 22iS bets 5 23 .. 5 25|S 8ets 5 268 sets 5 27 gets 0 9 M sets 1 7|M rise 2 5 Tio III | Hå is TīāTITIB-Tié- S rise 7 1|S rise 7 OIS rise 6 58|S rise 6 57|S rise 6 56|S rise 6 55S rise 6 58 8 sets 5 28S sets 529'S sets 5 §18 sets 5 32|S. sets 5 38|S. sets 5 B4|S. sets 5 86 M sets 3 2/M sets 8 57M sets 4 48 M sets 5 36|M sets 6 19|M rises. |M rise 6 Bl I7].15.19. 20...] all, 33.33 |S rise 6 528 rise 6 50}S rise-6 49|S rise 6 48|S rise 6 46|S rise 6 45|S rise 6 48 § sets 5 378 sets 5 38|S. sets 5 39|S. sets 5 40|S. sets 5 42|S. sets # 48|S. sets 5 44 Mrise 9 52|Mrise 11 oil M morn. M rise o 12 Mºrisei 22 24 |T25 || 26 T27TT28TsºrTrºn, Pills are good for torpid liver. M rise 2 80)M rise B 86/M rise 4 34}xi rise 5 2. M sets Y-Tº-Tº-Tº-y wº-y w - - –4 = advertising, but by word-of-mouth comment and talk among the people themselves. Those who are bene- fited tell their friends and acquaintances, and so the news goes from door to door, from town to town and from land to land. There is no form of advertising which can compare with this quiet, unbought praise. It is honest, impartial and effective. This preparation (called Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Syrup) cures only one disease, . that dis- ease has many names—so these good º a conversation not long since, a leading S O trated the point in this way: “Suppose,” he said, “a e say. In aker illus- person runs a large splinter into one of his fingers. . It CauSèS §. and inflammation, followed by a festering SOTC, IN O remedies do any good until the splinter, is removed. Now, indigestion is like that splinter. We suffer from aches, pains and twenty different ailments and diseases, and don’t know how to cure them or ac- count for them. Sometimes we have pains in the head, and are so giddy we fear we shall fall; our food distresses us; we are upset with nausea; we are ner- vous, irritable and gloomy; we cannot sleep; the eyes and skin take a yellow tinge; the heart beats in an º - Q º mº P 9 g * * U … * º Aº a *-* irregular way; the breath is short and a hacking cough Šets in, and we are terrified with the thought of con- sumption; the hands and feet are cold and clammy; we feel tired without reason and have no ambition. “These things, with many more, are commonly treated by physicians as though they were distinct dis- eases. The doctors, give them long and learned names, whereas they are nothing more or less than symptoms of the real trouble, which is indigestion and dyspepsia. We Shakers also hold that malaria, rheumatism, liver and kidney complaints, all arise from bad digestion, having for many years observed that when the stomach is thoroughly set right by our medicine, these afflictions completely disappear.” Facts prove that the good man was right, and it is not easy to say whether the world has more reason to be grateful to the Shakers for their skill in cooking or in healing. º FOR THE COOK. WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. One pound of wheat flour is equal to one quart. One pound and two ounces of Indian meal make one quart. * One pound of soft butter is equal to one quart. One pound and two ounces of best brown sugar make one quart. - . One pound and one ounce of powdered white sugar make one quart. O One pound of broken loaf sugar is equal to one quart. Four large tablespoonfuls make one-half gill. One common-sized tumbler holds one-half pint. One common sized wine glass is equal to one-half gill. One teacup holds one gill. © - One large wine glass holds two ounces. One tablespoonful is equal to one-half ounce. 10 Moon's PHASES. ad MOnth. -New Moon, 1st -----~~~~ * ; First Quarter,9tn; still Mocz, 27th' Ia8t Quarter, 24th; §§ Yoon'ſſist. --- MARCH, 1859. 81 Days, ==E=Elºğāt HiFT=== Shaker Family Pills are put up in glass bottles, and look like of fine su 3 8 rise 6 80 S sets 5 54 M sets 7 52 10 S rise 6 19 S sets 6 2 M sets 1 47 gate 4. S rise 6 28 S sets 5 55 M sets 8 55 S rise 6 17 S sets 6 8 º & P 5 S BetS 5 56 M sets 9 56 'S rise 6 16 'S Sets 6 4 M sets 3 29 S. rise 6 27 6 S rise 6 25 |S Sets 5 57 |Msets 10 55 S rise 6 14 'S Sets 6 5 M sets 414 pearls in their coating | 1 S rise 6 88 S setS 5 52 1M Bets 5 42 sumº 2 S ribe 6 81 S sets 5 53 M sets. 6 48 7 S rise 6 24 S sets 5 59 Msets 11 54| IšTITIZE S rise 6 12 'S sets 6 6 |M sets 4 54 -If S rise 6 " 8 sets 6 9 Mrige 6 29 | 18 M. sets 240 |S rise 6 6 S 8ets 6 10 M rifle 'ſ 39 |TI3 S rise 6 4. S suts 6 12 M. rise 8 50 . S rise 6 2 S sets 6 18 M rise 1 03 T24. T 8 rifle 5 56 $ gets 6 17 M rise 1 80 S rºse 5 54. |S BetB 6 18 M. rise 2 30 25 || 26 | S rise 5 52 S gets 6 19 27 S rise 5 51 S sets 6 20 M rise 3 22} 20 | 8 S rise 6 22 S. Sets 6 Yn orn. 15 'S rise 6 11 S sets 6 7 M sets 5,80 21 S rise 6 1. S sets 6 i4 |Tââ S rise 5 59 S. Sets 6 15 Imorn. Mrise 11, 18] |T35 29 S rise 5 49S rise 5 47 S Bet S 6 21|S BetS 6 22 ¥ rise 4 6 M rise 4 48 M rise 5 16 0. 9 S rise 6 20 S sets 6 R M sets 0. 52 16 S rise 6 9 8 BetS 6 8 M rises |TE5 rise 5 5% |S_sets 6 16 M rise 024 | | 3O S rise 5 46 S sets 6 23 « M sets TāT & rise 5 44 Shaker Family Pills cure pain in back and side, and cleanse the stomach and bowels of all Sour and acrid #::::: humors. i wTv-T-I -Tw A Story for Women to Read. . I was always a weakly girl from childhood, and took medicine almost all my life, until about eleven years ago I was taken down with a pain in my right breast. The doctor called it pleurisy, and treated me for that; and to no purpose. Then he doctored me for neuralgia of the stomach, and that did no good. I got worse all the time, and at this stage I commenced shaking all through as though I had the worse kind of a chill, and then my liver began to swell with such soreness I could not bear to be touched. This went on till 1884, when an abscess formed on my liver and burst. Then the doctor left me to die and said I could not live. About this time my husband was in Springfield, Ill., one day, and brought home some almanacs from Dr. Diller's drug store, and among them was the little book that had in it the history of Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel's Syrup. We read it over, and sent and got the medicine, and I began to get relief right away; and I * (Continued page 12.) * J ADOLPH G ALLIER, Now cooks for Mr. Whitelaw Reid, editor and proprietor of the New York Tribune ; has served the Hoffman House, New York, and has officiated at the mansion of Gov. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. In his own country he cooked for several noblemen, Salary, $3,500. FEATHER CAKE. One egg, one cup of sugar, half cup of butter, one cup of sweet milk, three cups of flour, two teaspoon- fuls cream tartar, one teaspoonful soda ; flavor with lemon. MASHED POTATO. Take a quart, or as many potatoes as you desire; cook on a steamer over boiling water (cooking in water spoils potatoes); as soon as done mash in a kettle or basin; add a very little fresh butter and good cream, heated before putting into the potatoes; salt to suit the taste; do it all up quickly, stirring the potato briskly, but not too much. . & & (' r" ºn * i. * -->A. -, --____ º a 2–2 v. º. 6 0. ^ kept on taking it till I used six bottles, and I got well and am now in sound and vigorous health and very fleshy. Before I took the Shaker Extract I was not much better than a skeleton. MARY DRONE. Barclay, Ill., Jan., 1889. ( ) Dyspepsia and Foul Blood. I have been taking the Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel's Syrup, and also Shaker Pills, since last Decem- ber for indigestion and dyspepsia and palpitation of the heart. I was also troubled with ulcers in the throat and cankered tongue, and ulcers and sores on the arm and swelling of the knee joints. But I am now happy to state that after eleven months constant use of Shaker Extract and Shaker Pills I eat, sleep and walk as well as ever. Before taking the Shaker medicines I had no appetite and could not walk. . . . New York É. Nov., 1888. CHAs. A. OSBURN. Eruption On the Skin. For the past six or seven years I have been afflicted with a breaking out or eruption on my feet, which at times was so bad as to completely disable me and lay me up. I could not wear a shoe. I was treated by three different physicians and also used various patent medicines and oid woman's remedies without number. In fact I did everything I could hear of, including a trial of the faith cure, without benefit. I was in this º and hopeless condition when my friend, Mrs. N. L. Strickland, of this place, suggested that I should try Shaker Extract of Roots. You will not blame me if I say I had no more faith in it than in so much sweetened water. Why should I have? Yet there was a bare chance, I thought, that it might help me, and on that I acted. At the date of this writing I have taken six bottles and the trouble in my feet is entirely É. I now understand that it was caused by impure lood, and when the Extract drove away the poison, the breaking out, as we say, got well of itself. My general health also improved and is now better than ever before. Independence, La., 1888. PI.EASANT BENNETT. 13 HENRI BOULIC, Cook for Mr. Pierre Lorillard, Jr., of New York. Born at Brest, France, 1855. Came to the United States in 1876, and worked for Delmonico, on Fourteenth Street. Has cooked for the University Club, New York. Salary, $4,000. Amºl 2- A 2- 4--A A-. A-A---—A---—A—A-º-º-º-º-º: A-4L A- A 2- 2- A—A- .*—AA-º-º-º-º-º: 4--- 2- 2- A-_º- *my-v-ººrºmyº-y vºy-mºrmºr-º-º-º-º-º-º-y vºy vºy vºmy *r-ºr-wºrm-ºr-º-º: SCALLOPED POTATOES. In a two-quart basin put bits of butter, then sliced otatoes until half full, then a little salt, pepper and utter, then fill with potato until within an inch of the top, then more seasoning; add three beaten eggs and ... milk enough to cover the potatoes, and bake half an hour; when, by trying, it is not milky, it is done. STEAMED POTATOES. Cut up cold boiled potatoes in thin slices, enough to half fill a two-quart basin; set them in a kettle of hot water and cover them until they are thoroughly heated; take one cup of hot cream, a little salt, pepper and butter, and pour over them; stir a very little, just enough to saturate with the cream; serve hot. 14 l New Moon, 29th. 4th Month.T Tsū "Shakerſ • Family Pills are , the best. 1 | S rifle 5 42 8 8ets 6 25 M sets '' 48 2 Tise 5 41 etſ, 6 26 S S B M sets 8 43 3 S rise 5 89 S 8ets 6 27 M sets 9 48 APRIL, 1859. t=TRETWEET FET FET== | 4. |S rise 5 3? S SetS 6 28 Msets 10 42 Moon's PHASEs.—First Quarter, 8th; Full Moon, 15th; Last Quarter, 22d, so 5 S rifle "5 36 S sets 6 29 Msets 11 38 Days. 6 S rise 584 S sets 6 80 morn. 7 8 9 1O TIET S rise B 28 S BetS 6 88 12 S rise 5 25 S BetS 6 87 | 11 S rigé 5 26 S 8ets 6 86 S rise 5 28 S. Bets' 6 34 S rise 5 29 S Set & 6 33 8 rise 5 88 B sets 6 31 S rise 5 31 S 8et.8 6 8? M sets d : 14 ( M sets 1 23 15 8 rifle 5 22}S rise 5 20 8 sets 6 89}S sets 6 40 M sets 5 2M rises M sets 2 8 16 S rise 5 19 S gets 6 41 M rise 7 43 p e M Sets 2 49 M sets 8 26 M sets 4 _0 MI sets 4 32 17 S rise 5 17 S Sets 6 42 M. rise 8 58 18 S rise 5 16 :S sets 6 43' Mrige 10 12 19 | S rise 5 14 'S sets 6 44 Mrise 11 2s). 2O S rise 5 18 S sets 6 45 In OTIl 21 [S rise 5 11 S Betº 6 46 M rise 0 26 22 S rise 5 10 S Bets 6 47 Mrise 1 21 | 23 S rise 5 8 S sets 648 |M rise 2 8 24 S rige 5 'º' S. Sets 6 49 M riBe 2 46 25 S rise 5 6 S sets 6 50 M rise 3 19 26 S rise 5 4 S Sets 6 51. 27- S rise 5 3 S. Bett; 6 52 . Mrige 8 49. M rise 4 16 Tºš S rise 5 2 |S sets 6 53 M. rise 4 42 S 39 59| Shaker Family Pills cure constipa- S sets 6 55|tion and sick headache. M sets 7 88: Stomach and Liver. 0. For the past eight months I have been sick, and twice & in that time was given up to die. My trouble was with the stomach and liver, and the poisoned condition of the blood in the end produced spinal meningitis, that terrible and dangerous disease of the spinal chord, more or less involving the whole nervous system. It left me shattered in health, and I was informed by my physi- cians that there was little or no chance of my eyer get- ting back my old vigor. At this I felt as I think a man must feel when he is sentenced to a life imprisonment. I was to drag myself through a few years offeebleness and suffering, an object of pity to my friends, and at last to drop into the grave. This, I say, was my con- dition when I first heard of Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel's Syrup, and began to use it. I had taken less than one bottle when its good effects became ap- parent, My appetite returned, my sleep became sound and refreshing, proving that the nerves were regaining strength and tone. Inever understood before how true it is that most of the complaints people suffer and die of arise from indigestion and dyspepsia, and impurity . . . . . (Continued page 16.) - - | 29 }S rise 5 0 'S Sets 6 54 M. Betſ; ( - ". . zº- sºme tº 2 EDWARD SCHELCHER, Born in New Brisach. Alsace; thirty years in this country; for eight years chief cook of the New York Hotel, and fifteen years º the Grand Union, Saratoga. His salary ranges from $5,000 to ,000. CUP CAKE, One cup of butter, two cups of sugar, three cups of flour, four eggs; all stirred well together. CREAM SPONGE CAKE. One cupfull of white sugar, one cup of flour, half cup of cream, two eggs, one teaspoonful cream tartar, one half teaspoonful of soda ; flavor with lemon. FOR MAKING BREAD. Two and a half quarts of boiling water to two and a half quarts of flour, stir together, but not to a paste; when cold, add two quarts of warm water, the same of flour, one pint of yeast, one handful of salt, mix to- gether, set over night in a warm place; in the morning take five quarts of scalded milk, and five of flour, mix thoroughly with the sponge, raise three and a half hours in a warm place; then knead in dry flour enough to make a stiff dough, raise again for three hours, mould out, put in baking pans, raise three-quarters of an hour, bake one hour; this will make one . loaves. - l6 \ \ W * Moon's PHAs Es.-First Quarter, 8th; Full Moon, 15th; Last quarter, 21st | -- '- New Moon, 29th. - 5th Month. MAY, 1889. 31 Days. =EN-TE: THE TW==== Shaker ºmily. Pillºre | 1 || 2 || 3 ºr-ºr 4T the best pills made, They S rise 4 58's rise 4 56ls rise 4 55ls rise 4 54 always act gently and 3 ºd ś ºd ś is gºs j : ; Cause no pain, lºſsets 8 as Meet 9 allºſsetsio 28 Msets li is 5 || 6 || 7 8 9, ... 19 11 f is rise 4 53|S rise 4 52|S rise 4 50'S rise 4 49|S rise 4 488 rise 4 47|S rise 4 46. 6 0. 8 sets 7 0|S_sets 7 is sets T 2.ÉS sets 7 8|S_sets ºf 4|S_sets : 5|S sets 7 morn. |M sets 0 4|M sets 0 47|M sets 1 25}M sets 1 59|M sets 2 80|M sets a TIE TI3TTITITIETITIGTITIE, |S rise 4 45}S rise 4 44|S rise 4 48|S rise 4 42|S rise 441/S rise 4 40|S rise 489 S sets 7 - 7|S sets ºf 8|S. Sets 7 9|S gets 7 10|S sets T 12.ÉS sets 7 18|S. Bets 7 14 Meets 8 80; M sets 4 0|M rise |M rise T 51Mrise 9 6|Mrise 10 16|Mrise 11 17 19.20. 21.32. 23.24. 25. 6 rise 488;8 rise 4 37|S rise 4 87|S rise 4 86|S rise 4 85/S rise 4 85]S rise 4 34 S sets 7 16|S sets 7 16|S sets 7 17|S sets 7 17|S sets 7 18|S sets 7 19|S sets 7 19 morn. |M rise o 8|M rise 0 48|Mrise 1 24|M rise 1 54|M rise 2 24|M rise 2 48. TāāTä7Tää 2.3TT3OTT3TTShaker s rise 4 84's rise 4 88's rise 482's rise 482's rise 4 81's rise 4 81|Pills are § sets T 208 sets 7 21|S sets 7 22'S sets 7 28|S. sets 7 24|S_sets º 24|sure to M sets 8 18|M rise 8 40|M rise 4 8|M sets M sets 8 abº sets 9 laldo good. of the blood. Get the stomach, liver and kidneys right and you cure almost anything. Keep them right and it is almost impossible that one should die of any cause short of violence or age. I now enjoy perfect health and can work hard and as many hours a day as ever I could. For this great blessing I gladly acknowledge my obligation to Shaker Extract of Roots. . Groesbeeck, Texas, 1888. J. W. PITMAN. - Good for the Children. Mrs. John McFall, of Astoria, Long Island, N. Y., writes that she had been in the habit of .# Seigel's Syrup, or Shaker Extract of Roots, while living in England, where she was born. On coming to this coun- try to live she continued to use it, and says that as a family medicine, especially for the sickness of women and children, it never fails to relieve and cure. She adds that in England it is more popular, and does more good than all other so-called remedies put together. In reply to many inquiries as to the genuineness of the medicines sold by us, we beg to refer to the last cover page of this book. A. J. WHITE. I7 . Pain in the Back and Stomach. For several years I have been troubled with a pain in my back. After trying everything I could hear of without benefit, I called a physician who said it was lumbago, and had continued so long it couldn't be cured. By and by the pain left my back and went to my stomach, and for years longer I was tormented with great misery. Often I would have such faint spells come over me as to make me sit or lie down until I felt better. Some few weeks ago my wife was visiting a friend who gave her a bottle of Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Syrup, which she brought home and gave to me. I began to use it, and before the bottle was out I had more comfort and relief than for eight years past. I feel like a man who has just been liber- ated after a long imprisonment. SILAS E. KENRODD. 148 Elk Street, Charleston, Kanawha Co., W. Va. Crippled For Life. “Mary, darling, if you don't keep still you'll surely tumble down and be killed, and then what will papa do for a little girl?' “The speaker was a ship captain just back in port after a long voyage. He was sitting in a chair by an open window, in the lower part of the city of New York, more than twenty-five years ago, On the window sill by his side was the child, five or six years old. She was delightedly watching the vehicles and passers-by. in the street and rattling on with her chatter, once in a while giving a jump almost out of her father's arms. “After his warning, however, she was quiet for a few minutes, and then, seeing a team of goats come along, with a boy driving, Mary at once forgot the peril of her perch, leaped up with a cry of pleasure, slipped from her father's grasp, and fell upon the stone pave- ment six feet below, where she lay as if dead. r * 18 Moon'r. PHAsrs.-First Quarter, 6th; Full Moon, 13th; Last Quarter, 20th; New Moon, 28th. 6th Month. .JUNE 1889. 3O Days. TSUN.TMONTTUES.TWEDTTHü T FRI. TSAT.I. Shaker Family Pills are mild but thorough, and pre- | 1 vent the ill effects otherwise likely to arise from excess is rise 4 sl in the pleasures of the table. g t S sets 7 35 A-º-º-º-º- 4- A-4---—A-º-º-º: —ſº 10 * 2, ..] ... 3, ..] 4, ..], 5 , ... 6 7 8 8 rise 4 80|S rise 4 30|S rise 4 29|S rise 4 29|S rise 4 29|S rise 4 29|S rise 4 28 9 4 29|S S gets ºf 26|S sets 7 26|S sets 7 27|S. gets 7 28|S Bets 7 28|S gets 7 29|S gets 7 29 & Msets 10 46|Msets 11 25|Msets 11 59 __Inorn. M sets o 31 M sets 1 0 M sets H. 29 9 – | TOTT11 || 12 T 13 14 || 15 5 rise 4 28|S rise 4 28|S rise 4 28/S rise 4 28S rise 4 28/S rise 4 28|S rise 4 23 § sets 7 sols sets 7 81|s sets 7 81's sets 7 82's sets 7 82|s sets 7 sals sets 7 as M sets 1 57|M sets 2 28|M sets 3 2/M sets 3 43|M rises |M rise 8 58|M rise 9 57 TIGITIZII5] 19 || 30. Tai Tââ S rise 4 28|S rise 4 28|S rise 4 28S rise 4 28|S rise 4 29|S rise 4 29|S rise 4 29 § sets 7 83|S sets 7 83|8 sets 7 34|S sets 7 84|S_sets 7 84|s sets 7 35|s sets 7 35 Mrise 10 45|Mrige 11 24|Mrise 11 57 morn. M rise 0 26|M rise 0 58|M rise 1 18 23.24.I. 25.36. 37 IzāIaş. 5 rise 4 29|S rise 4 80|S rise 4 80|S rise 4 80's rise 4 81|s rise 481/S rise 482 8 sets 7 §§ sets 7 85|s sets 7 85|s sets 7 85's sets 7 85|s sets 7 35|s sets 7 as M. rise I 451M rise 2 12|Mride 2 42/M rise 8 17M sets ºf sets 7 89|M. Beta 8 45 3O U- Y - A--- Shaker Family Pills cure biliousness, tone up the rise 4:3 liver and expel from the body those humors which are #. §§l the source of fatal fevers. & **—& *. A A--A—A 2- *. tº ºr-vºmy ºr *-º-Tº-º-º: º ºr ºr-º-ºr U_ _ _ .* A-. *—º-A. A-...--A—A--A. A. 4- .*—--AA.A.--—A--A—A-A—AE---—A-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-AA-A—A--A—A Am a 4-A- 2- * *Tºr-mºr-º-º: ºr-º-º-º-º-º-wºmy v-y ºr w v wºr-w U - . . . . » *my “When picked up and examined one of her hip bones was found to be so badly broken that it was doubtful whether she could ever walk again. Dr. Alexander Mott, the most eminent surgeon of his time, took the case in hand, and did all that could be done for the poor little sufferer, but she was doomed to be a cripple for life. Many weary months, full of pain, went by before she was able to stand and look out at the window again. By this time her loving father was in a distant land, and Mary missed him more than words can tell. s “After this sad event Mary was rather a witness of the active sports of other children than a partaker in them. She grew up to womanhood, but her lameness has always prevented her from taking the outdoor ex- ... ercise necessary to good health and spirits. And that . . . . (Continued on page 20.) . . . . . º JULES WEBBER, President of the Societe Culinaire Philanthropigue; born in Stras- burg, and has practiced his art both in Europe and America. Cook for Mrs. William Belden, of New York. Gets a salary of about $3,000 a year, with valuable privileges and perquisites. SOFT G|NGERBREAD. Six cups of flour, one of butter, three of molasses, one of milk, four eggs, one teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of ginger. STEWED TOMATO. Take canned or fresh tomato, and bring it up to the boiling point; to one quart of tomato add one teaspoon- ful of butter mixed with the same quantity of flour, one cup two-thirds full of cream, four crackers broken up fine, and a little pepper and salt. Some cooks add a piece of soda about as big as a pea to this measure. BEEF SOUP WITH VEGETABLES. 's To six quarts of broth (not very strong) take éight potatoes cut up quite fine, three onions, one small car- rot, two turnips, one gill of rice, a small piece of celery, and red pepper. Chop all the vegetables very fine and boil all of them in the broth about twenty minutes, ex- cept the potatoes, which should be boiled separately. 20, friend. s rise 4 36 Aſ sets 0 28 M rige 0 15 * | Tin Month. New Moon's Phasms.-First Quarter, 6th; Full Moon, Mºth; Last Quarter, 19th . Moon, 27th. 6 JULY, 1889, 31 Days. TsūN. Pills are a family 7 S sets 7 33 T TShakerſ †IETWEET 1 S rise 48 S sets 7 35 Meets 10 2 |S rise 4 37 S sets ºf 33 M sets 0 59 14 15, S rise 441/S rise 4 42 8 sets 7 80|S sets 7 80 M rise 9 18|M rise 9 55 21’ 22 8 rise 4 47 S bets 7 25 'S rise 4 48 S gets ºf 25 M rise 0 44 | TEIU | 3 |S rise 4 34 & Bete 7 35 2 S rise 4 83 S sets ºf 85 4. S rise 4 84 S sets ºf 84 Msets 10 84 9 S rise 487/8 rise 4 88 8 gets ºf 83|S. Bets 7 82 M sets I 35|M Sets 2 17 IGTITIT S rise 4 48/S rise 4 44 8 bets ºf 29|S. Sets ºf 28 MSets 11 3 U IOI { 18 ºp Msets. 11 81. | | S rise 4 85 S sets 7 84 Msets 11 59 IFBI. 5 |- SAT | 8 8 rise 4 36 S gets 7 83 In Oºle • 11 S rise 4 89 S sets 7 82 12 S rise 4 40'S rise 4 40 TIET S sets 7 818 sets 7 31 M 89 tº 8 13 S rise 444 |S. Sets ºf 28 Mrise 11 21 Mrise 10 26 Mrise 10 55 23 24 S rise 4 49|S rise 4 50 S flets ºf 24|S. gets 7 23 M rise 1 17|M rise 1 54 | M rifles |TIST S rise 4 45 S sets_7 27 Mrige II 48] 25 8 rise 4 50 S. Bets ºf 22 M rise 2 37 vºy $ 26 S rise 4 51 S gets ºf 21 M rise 3 25 M. rise 8 84 2O S rise 4 46 S sets 7 26 In OTDR e S rise & 52 S sets 7 20 M sets 3O 31 S rise 4 55iS rise 4 56 S sets 7 19|S. BetB ºf 1818 Bets.” 17 M sets 8 38|M sets 9 7|M sets 985 Cºmºſ ºf , º, Mºmſ º 29 S rise 4 54 Tºš S rise 4 58 S sets ºf 9 M sets 8 8 Shaker Family Pills eure * dizziness, and never gripe Ol' CºllS6 IlêllS08, A- ſº-L_º - ºr A-, wT- is not all; as from time to time there has been a dis- charge from the crushed bony structure, which has greatly weakened her and run her down. Not long ago she had occasion to refer to the accident of her childhood in a letter to a friend, from which we are permitted to make the following extract. She says: ... “Besides the lasting injury done me by the fall from the window I have been troubled with an inherited tendency to scrofula. My blood has always been thin and lacking in vitality. Any hurt, or wound healed very slowly. Of late years I have suffered terribly from indigestion and dyspepsia, so that at times I didn't know what to do with myself. Two or three times a week I would have splitting headaches, and much distress in my chest and back, and on the right side in the region of the liver. & 8. “I had to be so much shut up in the house that I fell into a state of worry and nervousness I can hardl (Continued on page 22.) ſ e- | - 2 : %". It, º& ZººZ ſ % º ſ … tº ºn N. º' - . " sº E. HENRI MATTHIEU, Cook for Mr. W. D. Sloan, of New York. Native of Paris. Served his apprenticeship at the famous Maison Doree and the principal clubs, and some of the first families in London. Was employed at Rideaux Hall, Ottawa, Canada. Salary, $6,500. CALICO OR VEGETABLE HASH. Two quarts of finely sliced potato, one carrot, one blood beet, two turnips; these should be cooked and chopped; two raw onions chopped fine and a small piece of celery, parsley or turnip tops. Put them in a stew-pan and cover tight and set in the oven. When hot, pour over a gravy of drawn butter and cream, stir together and serve. | BUCKWHEAT CRUM PETRS, { In the evening before using, scald one quart of milk, w and add half a gill of Indian meal. When cool enough to mix add flour enough to make a stiff batter, with half a cup of good yeast. In the morning add two quarts of butter-milk, two teaspoonfuls of soda, half a cup of butter and buckwheat to make a stiff batter; a. little molasses improves them. ſº & 22 Moon's PHAsks.-First Qu 3th Month. AUGUST, 1889 New Moon, 26th. arter, 4th; Full Moon, 10th; Last Quarter, ign, 31 DayS. TNTMONTIETWEET THE Tºtº= Shaker Family Pills cure bilious- | ness and all forms of liver com- plaint. S. rise 5 0 S sets ºf 12 M set 11 82 T5 'S rise 5 1 S sets 7 10 In OII] . —T-a- S l'Ise 5 2 S sets T 9 M sets o 11 7. S rise 5 3 |S sets 7 8 M sets 0 56. |S rise 5 1 S rise 4 57 S Bets ºf 15 M set 10 2. 4 2 S rise 4 58 S sets ºf 14 M set 10 29 9 S rise 5 5 S set S T 7 | | M sets 1 51; M sets 2 55 S Bets ºf 6 11 5 rise 5 7 § 6e tº 7 3 Mrise 7 48 S rise 5 12 8'S rise 5 9 S sets 7 2,8 sets 7 0 M rise 8 23; M. rise 8 53 13 14 S rise 5 10 S sets 6 59 M rise 9 21 15 S rise 5 11. S sets 6 68, M rise 9 48 16 S rise 5 12 S sets 6 56 Mrise 10 16 3 is rise 4 59 S sett; 'I 13 M sets 11 0 1O $ rise 5 6 S sets ºf 4 M rises | 17 S rise 5 IS S sets 6 55 Mrise 10 45 18 S rise 5 14 8 sets 6 53. Mrise 11 it, 19 S rise 5 15.jS rise 5 16 S sets 6 52; Mrise 11 52 25 || 8 rise 5 21 S. gets 6 43 26 S rise 5 22 S Bet S 6 41 M sets. . . IM gets 7 9. M sets T 38. 2O S sets 6 50 ITY OT" ſle g- ºmuruºvuºrº- - ) L. p- 27 s rise 5 23 S Stet B 6 40 21 S rise 5 17 S Bets 6 49 M rise 0 33 | 22 S rise 5 18 S sets 6 47 M rise 1 19 S rise 5 19 S sets 6 46 M. rise 2 11 23 'S rise 5 20 S sets 644 M rise 3 7 28 S rise 5 24 S 8ets 6 88 29 S rise 5 25 S Be tº 6 37 M sets 8 6 S rise 5 26 S sets 6 85 M sets 8 88/M sets 9 2 3OT 31 S rifle 5 26 S sets 6,33 MI gets 9 34 describe; sometimes I would fall to the floor insensible with attacks like epileptic fits. I have been in this condition for ten years. Now, you must remember that besides the prescriptions of the doctor, I took almost every sort of patent medicine which seemed to have any bearing on my case. “The last thing I tried was the Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Syrup, and I am right glad I did try it. It suits me as nothing ever did before. It drives away my headaches and gives me an appetite. * * “Years ago I used to sing all day long when I was doing my work. After I got sick I lost all wish to make music, but now when I feel dull and out of sorts I take a dose of “Shaker,” and in an hour or two I break out singing like a lark. “Tell other women for me that this simple medicine ge M is worth as much in the house as food or drink.” |. ARY DE GRoss, 150 East 125th St., New York. FREDERIC HEMMERLE, Cook for Cornelius Vanderbilt, of New York, is thirty years old ; native of Alsace ; studied in Paris at the Continental Hotel ; has also cooked in the principal hotels of Baden-Baden, Geneva, Frank- fort, Turin, and the Union League Club, of New York. Salary, $5,000. ~ –& TOMATO TOAST. Take fresh or canned tomato, stew and season with salt, pepper and cream, with a little flour stirred to a paste in a small portion of the cream before adding to the rest, then toast slices of bread, spread them with butter, and spread on the tomato while hot and serve immediately. - EXCELLENT TOMATO SOUP. Three tomatoes cut up fine, one pint of boiling water, one-half teaspoonful of soda, one-half pint of sweet milk, salt, pepper, a little butter and four crackers rolled fine. This is enough for four persons. - DRESSING FOR CABBAGE. One egg, one spoonful of sugar, one-half spoonful of flour, one-half teacup of sweet cream, one-half teacup of vinegar, and a small piece of butter; beat well, let it boil, then add about a quart of finely chopped cab- bage, cover tight and serve hot. k . 24 … *. ºw- Moon's Phases—First Q uarter, 2d.; Full Moon, 9th; Last Quarter, 16th, New Moon, 24th. tº 9th Month.TSEFTEMBER, Issa. 30 Days. *E=E. TRETWE. 1 3 rifle 5 27|S rifle 5 28 8 gets 6 82|S 6etB 6 80 Msets 10 9|Msets 10 51. 2 . 4. 8 rise 5 30 S 8ets 6 27 In OFI). 3 8 rise 5 29 & sets 6 29, Msets 11 All 8 9 S rise 5 84|S rise 5 85 8 sets 6 201S sets 6 19 M rises. M rise 6 50 |M sets 0. 40 5 Sº rise 5 31 S sets 6 25 6 S rise 5. 32 S sets 6 24 M sets 1 46. THITFEITEKT: 7 S rise 5 33 S sets 6 22 M sets 2 57 10 8 rise 5 36 S sets 6 l'I M rise T 19 S rise 5 87 S Bets 6 15 M. ribe 7 47 TIT TIETITI3T. S rise 5 38|S rise 5 89 S sets 6 148 sets 6 12 Mrise 8 14|M rise 8 48 14 S rise 5 40 S Bets. 6 10 M rise 914 rise 5 41|S rise 5 42 sets 6 9|S. Sets 6 7 Lºſ rise 9 48|Mrise 10 27 TETTEäT rise 5 48|S rise 5 49 S sets 5 578 sets 5 55 M rise 2 56|M rise 8 59 TTGT 18 S rise 5 48|S rtse 5 44 S. Sets 6 5|S Bets 6 3. 17 Mrige 11 11 morn. Tºzi TTE5 S rise 5 50S rise 5 51 } } TIGT2O. S rise 5 45|S rise 5 46 45 S sets 6 2/S sets 6 0 M. rise 0 1 M rise 0 55 2.3TT 27 S rise 5 52 S 8ets 5 588 Bete 5 52 M sets |M sets 6 36 21 S rifle 5 4? S Beta 5 58 M rise I 54 |TE5T S rise 5 54 S rise 5 58 8 sets 5 50|S 88tſ, 5 48. M sets 'i 4|M. gets 7 84 S Bett, 5 4 iM sets 8 a [ - -º- ºr-vº-w Y-y 29 (T′ 3O $ rise 5 55|S rise 5 56 9 sets 5 45|8 sets 5 48 Msets 8 50|M sets 9 87| mouth, and are ve ry pleasant to take. we are Just as Glad as He is. Shaker Family Pills cure bad taste in the ºr -: Uº What I want to say is this:–That Shaker Extract of Roots is worth five times its weight in gold. I had the dyspepsia for two years, and this medicine cured IIlê. I bought the first bottle of Dr. Denman, drug- gist, corner of Front and Elm Streets, Cincinnati. I am glad you have intro duced it. * W. H. WISE, Cincinnati, Ohio. An Expensive Education. In 1874, while I was a young man living on a farm at Winnsboro’, North Carolina, I was as hale and hearty a fellow as you would wish to see. That year I left home and entered college, where I studied hard for six years. So sudden and complete a change in my habits now and then brought on attacks of indigestion, which finally developed into what appeared like incurable (Continued page 26.) { GUSTAVE BERAND, Age twenty-five years; the youngest cook in New York. For five years chief cook to the Marquis Chanaleilles, both at his country house and his elegant residence in Paris. Is now employed by Mr. W. W. Astor, of New York. Salary, about $5,000. Ǻmº U_ºmº ſº ºr ºr ºf *—a C - - , , º, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vTº-y A—A ºr-ºr 2- Ǻ 4-A-A—A- A-. A-__*. ze. … *-º-_^-_-_^-_^. … º. *—A—& … * … *_- ū º v-y º RECIPE FOR MAKING YEAST. One-half pound of dry hops, pare one dozen of po- tatoes, boil in five quarts of water three-quarters of an hour, drain the juice through a sieve to four and a half quarts of rye flour, stir until the flour is all moist, but not to a paste; set aside to cool; add one teacup- ful of old yeast, one-half teacup of salt, the same of ginger, one-half pint of molasses, mix thoroughly to- gether; be ready to use in twelve hours. A-A A. zº A. --- º wºr-wºr-vºy ºr ºr w wºr-wrvºsºr—w-wºr-wºr wº-w-w As will be seen by observing the amounts paid these cooks in the form of salary, their incomes exceed those of Senators of the United States. And the cooks get “tips” besides. Senators are supposed not to get "tips.”. 26 Moors Paass.-First Quarter, 1st, full Moon, 8th; Last Quarter, 16th; New Moon, 24th; First Quarter, 31st. Ioth Month. TodTOBER, Iaso. Tai Days. … *_-_^-_^_^_^_^. iſsiſſion. Tüßl WEETTHüüß Shaker Family | 1 || 2 || 3 || 4 || 5 Pills are purely |S rise 5 57|S rise 5 58|S rise 5 59|S rise 6 oſs rise 6 1 - |S sets 5 42|S sets 5 40|S sets 5 88|S sets 5 37|S sets 5 sº vegetable. zº M set 10 82}M set 11 35| morn_|M sets 0 43|M sets 1 54. 6 -7--a-Tă IO IIIIa. § ride 6 2/5 rise 6 8S rise 6 º'S rise 6 6|S rise 6 lºſs rise 6 8S rise 6 9 8 sets 5 33}S sets 6 82|S sets 5 29|S sets 5 29|S Scts 5 27|S sets 5 26|S sets 5 24 M sets 8 4|M sets 4 13|M rises M. rise 6 14|M rise 6 41|M rise 7 11jM rise 7 44 18, 14...], 15...], 16, 17. ... 18. 19. 8 rise 6 10|S rise 6 11|S rise 6 12iS rise 6 13|S rise 6 14|S rise 6 15'S rise 6 I6 8 sets 5 22|S sets 5 21|S sets 5 19|S sets 5 18|S sets 5 16|s sets 5 15|S sets 6 is M rise 8 21|M rise 9 4|M rise 9 51}Mrise 10 43|Mrise 11 40] morn. M. rise 0 40 T20I 2IITää.E. 23.I. 24. Tà5Tl. 26. 8 rise 6 18|S rise 6 198 rise 6 20's rise 6 21|s rise 6 22's rise 6 28|s rise 6 24 8 sets 5 12|S sets 5 11|S sets 5 9|S sets 5 8}S sets 5 6|S sets 5 6'S sets 5 4 ºf rise 1,42|M rise 2 46|Mrise 8 51|M rise 4 59|M sets. M sets 6 - M sets 6 46 27 28 29 3O || 31 Shaker Family § rise 6 26|S rise 627's rise 6 28's rise 6238 rise 680 Pills are good for tº sets 5 2S Sets 5 1|S sets 5 0S BetB 4 59|S. SetS 4 57 torpid liyer M sets 7 82/M sets 8 25l.M. sets 9 274M set 10 84|M sat 11 44l A-A. Ç A_*. A tº dº C-x ºl \ \x, a dyspepsia. This clung to me in spite of all the doctors could do, and at the end of my college course I returned home, a sick, depressed and broken-spirited man. Other diseases, caused by the foul and poisoned con- dition of my blood, followed, and I made up my mind that my hard study to get an education would only send me all the sooner to the place where the scholar and the fool are on a level—the graveyard. • ‘ I often said to myself, “What's the use of my being alive anyway? The sooner; this lot of diseases goes ahead and makes an end of me the better. Such a mis- erable dyspeptic as I am simply cumbers the ground.” This was a wretched way to talk, I admit, but those who have suffered as I did will understand and pardon it. About this time (1880) I saw an account of Shaker. Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Syrup, and began to use lb. ** g s' t I had a hard fight, for there wasn't much of me *left to build on. But the medicine won. Several 27 years have passed and I am sound and strong as when I worked on the old farm in boyhood. If nothing more could be said for Shaker Extract than that it will cure such a case as mine it were enough to render it famous all over the world. It has to my knowledge done great good to many others. Yours very sincerely, (REv.) A. C. JoHNSON. Newberry, S. C., July, 1888. … *_^_^_^ A tº . . .” - zº a º Aº z \ z º. A --- I would not take $500 for the good Shaker Extract of Roots has done in my family. ISAIAH GREEN, York Station, Ala. Nobody Doubts His Story. I was lying on my death bed. At least so I thought, and so my friends thought. My trouble was pneu- monia and inflammation of the stomach and kidneys. My family physician was a very skillful man, and de- served the confidence which we had long reposed in him. He said there was no hope whatever of my re- covery. I have to thank Mr. William Bailey, of this place, for the bottle of Shaker Extract of Roots, which I believe saved my life. If any one doubts my story there are many people here who will testify to its truth. J. J. BRINDLE, Hickory Tavern, N. C. ~my-w w— Rheumatism. Never before has there existed a remedy as unfail- ingly successful in rheumatic affections as Shaker Ex- tract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup. It lubri- cates the joints, promotes the secretions of the fluids necessary to remove the stiffness of the muscles, re- moves hardened deposits in the joints, greases the ma- 28 Moors Piases—Fun Moon; 7th, Last Quarterisin; New Moon 23. | a r First Quarter, 29th. - e 11th Month. NOVEMBER, 1889. 30 Days. TENTMONTIETWEET THETHEITFº Shaker Tamily Pills cure pain in back and 1. | 2 Side. A dose taken at night gives a good ap- |S rise 6 31|S rise 6 88 |S sets 4 561S sets 4 55 petite and a clear head next morning, morn. TM sets o 34 3 || 4 || 5 || 6 J. 7 || 8 || 9 8 rise 6 34}S rise 6 35|S rise 6 868 rise 6 87|S rise 6 38|S rise 6 40jS rise. 6 41 8 sets 4 54|S sets 4 53|8 sets 4 51|S sets 4 50|S sets 449|S_sets 448|S sets 447 M sets 2 4|M sets 8 9|M sets 4 14|M sets 5 18|M rises. |M rise 5 42|M rise 6 17 IOI, III. 12.15. 14.15. 16. S rise 6 42|S rise 6 43|S rise 6 44|S rise 6 &6|S rise 6 4' |S rise 6 48}S rise 6 49 8 sets 4 46|S. sets 4 45|S. sets 4.44S sets 4 44|S. sets 448|S. sets 4428 sets 441 M rise 6 57|M rise 7 48|M rise 8' 83|Mrise 9 28|Mrise 10 26|Mrise 11 26|_ morn. ITITIE, º ãOTTETTETTääT 8 rise 6 50%& rise 6 51 |S rise 6 58|S rise 6 54|S rise 6 55|8 rise 6 56|S rise 6 57 8 sets 440 S sets 4 40|S. Sets 4 39|S SetB 4 38|S sets 4 88|8 Beth 4 37 |S setB 4 8? M. rise 0 28|M rise 1 31|M rise 2 87|M rise 3 44|M rise 4 55|M sets ..., |M sets 5 21 , 24...], 25.l., 26 |TE7TTEBTITESTITä0 8 rise 6 588 rise 6 59|S rise 7 0 |S rise ºf 2IS rise 7 8|S rise 7 4|S rise º 5 8 sets 4 86|S Beta 4 36|S sets 4 $5|S. sets 4 85|S sets 4 84|8 sets 4 84|8 sets 484 M sets 6 18}M sets 7 14|M sets 8 22|M sets 9 s Msets 10 45].Msets 11 54 morn. A-a chinery of nature, and makes it move easily. One or two bottles of Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel's Curative Syrup, will do more than a hogshead of lini- ments, for it carries out of the circulation the acrid humors in the blood from which rheumatism arises and removes the inflammation, soreness and stiffness of the muscles. A short trial will convince the most discouraged that it is all that is claimed for it. Female Diseases. The Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup, has given health and spirits to thousands of females. The hollow cheek, the sunken eye, the sallow countenance, the dark circles underneath the eyes, all are indicative of weakness of the female organs of generation, and are speedily overcome by the use of Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup. 29 A. *. A. A ºmy-my ºvºy ºvºmy-my ~my During pregnancy the Syrup can be taken with per- fect safety in 10 to 15 drop doses instantly after eating. If the bowels should be costive, an occasional dose of Shaker Family Pills will give great relief. Care’ should be used so as not to produce violent purging. A gentle action is sufficient." Shaker Extract removes obstructions, brings the hue of health to the countenance, and it should be used by females suffering from the various diseases to which the sex is subject, such as lucorrhoea, or whites, falling of the womb, bearing down sensations, etc. Two or three bottles of the . Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup, will bring the blush to the cheek and vivacity and elasticity to the system. Flag- ging spirits are restored, and new life and vigor take the place of the loss of energy, sickness and decay. Piles and Costiveness. The soothing, balsamic, and healing properties of Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup, render it of the utmost value in curing hemorrhoids, or piles. The movements from the bowels are made free, regular and natural; all irritation is removed, in- flammation is subdued, and the piles disappear as if by magic under the influence of this agreeable regulator and healer. Costiveness or diarrhoea cannot exist when this regulator has done its work, for it promotes exudation of sufficient bile and enough of the natural , fluid of the intestines to regulate the movements and give tone to the bowels. Blind piles, bleeding piles, . itching piles, etc., disappear with the use of the Syrup, and are cured as effectually when high up in the bowels as when at the terminus of the intestines. 30 Moon's Phases—Full Moon, 7th; Last Quarter, 15th; New Moon, 22d, First Quarter, 29th. 12th Month. DE º | CEMBER, 1859, 31 D8yS. 1 S rise ºf 6 S Bets 4 33 M sets 1, 1 2 rise ºf 7/S rise 7 BetS 4 83 S S Bets 4 83 3 l 4. rise 7 9 S sets 4 33 M sets 2 6 8 w S rise ºf 12 M. rise 5 88' 9|M. Bets 4 12 'S rise ºf 15 S BetS 4 83 M rise 6 26 M. rise ºf 20 M rise 8 17 5 S rise ºf 10 S sets 4 38 M sets 5 14 II.IIa S rise 7 15 'S Sets 4 88. M sets 915 6 |S l'ise 7 11 s Betſ, 4 88 M rises . 13 S rise 7 16 S Sets 4 33 Mrige 10 16 7 S rise 7 11 S sets 4 30 M rise4 54." 14 S rise ºf 17 S. Sets 4 84 Mrise ll 17 ºr PT S rise 721 S. Set& 4 36 M sets TāāT S rise ºf 24 15 3 rise 7 18. 8 BetS 4 34. morn. *T22T 8 rise 7'22 8 sets 4 37 2O S rise ºf al S Sat3 4 86 M rise 4 58 E7T S rise 7 24 18 19 S rifle ºf 20IS rifle ºf 20 S BetB 4 35 S. Sets 4 85 M rise 2 81|Mrise 841 25 26 S rise ºf 23|S rise ºf 23 S sets 489|S_sets 489|S_sets 440|S. sets 441 M sets 8 281M Bet& 9 4i. Msets 10 51 Msets 11 58 Shaker Family Pills are sure to operate. They are purely vegetable and never produce subsequent con- stipation. 16 17 S rise ºf 18|S rig6 7. 19 S sets 4 34|S_sets 434 M rise 0 19|M rise 1 24 | 23. 34. S rise ºf 22|S rise ºf 23 S BetB 4 37|S. Sets 4 33 M sets 4 53 M sets 6 0 |M|. sets 7 13 29 J| 3O 31 | S rise 7 24's rise 7 24|s rise 7 24 B sets 4 41|S. sets 4 42|S sets 443 morn. M sets 1 2/M sets 2 5 C M sets 3 | 9 || 10 | S rise 7 18:S rise 7 14 $ 8ets 4 33|S sets 4 33|S sets 4 83 wr Sick Headache. There are few persons who, at times, are not more or less subject to sick headache. Moderate and occa- sional use of the Syrup is a sure preventive, as thou- sands who have tried it are willing to testify. Nervous Debility. This is caused by a long-continued state of impurity. of the blood, which irritates the nerves. Sleepless nights, twitching , of the muscles, trembling of the limbs, poor appetite, easily disturbed by noise or ex- citement, desire to avoid company, peculiar sensations over the entire body, are among the difficulties which attend the complaint. A dose of Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup, at night, will, in a short time, so cleanse the blood and soothe the nerves, and restore strength to the body, as to make life en- joyable and happy. Nervous debility vanishes before the quieting, ºgº healthful action of Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup. - 31 1 a :--- vºy A. wº- --~~- ſº C º Aº, A- Diseases of the Liver. When the liver becomes disordered and diseased the person so afflicted is indeed miserable. He suffers with dull pains in the sides, bad taste in the mouth, spots before the eyes, flashes of heat, irregularity of the bowels, piles, coated tongue, disordered stomach, heartburn, costiveness, and pain in the head. He frequently has a dry cough, high-colored urine, yellow skin, and dull, sleepy sensation, rendering him unfit for business or for employment. The hands and feet are cold; the circulation of the blood is sluggish; the patient suffers with vertigo, ringing in the ears, loss of appetite, nausea and sick headache, heartburn, dry scurfy skin, etc. t d The origin of this disease is dyspepsia. The Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup, will re- move the cause and the liver will then resume its natural functions, and good health will be the result. The dose should be 10 to 20 drops instantly after eating, three times a day. º The Bowels. The bowels in a healthy state carry off all the useless matter which can be carried off in solid form. Some- times the main channel becomes choked up by slime on the coating of the intestines, which gives rise to constipation and irregularity of the bowels. If the bile is not thrown out from the liver in sufficient quantities the bowels become costive and the mem- branes of the bowels become weak and irritated. When much irritation exists diarrhoea follows, because the bowels have not the strength to do what is required of them. Inflammation follows. The fundamental cause of this irregularity is indigestion. The Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel's Curative Syrup, will remove this indigestion and cause the fresh, new blood to become pure and healthy. t , Dyspepsia. I have been troubled with dyspepsia ever since I was ten years old. I always had difficulty to retain any- thing on my stomach except the plainest kinds of food. 32 Some time ago I began ºf Shaker Extract, and am now so far recovered that I can eat anything I desire without feeling the slightest bad effect. g Mrs. SALLIE WEATHERLY, Calera, Shelby Co., Ala. —ºn Mr. Walker's Two Doctors. Shaker Extract of Roots and Shaker Pills are all the doctors I want in my house. So far we have never had any sickness these medicines could not cure. F. M. WALKER, York Station, Ala. DIRECTIONS. For USING SHAKER ExTRACT OF Roots, or SEIGEL's y CURATIVE SYRUP. Dos E : FIFTEEN TO THIRTY DROPs, two or three times per day, in a wineglassful of water, immediately after eating. The quantity may be regulated by the patient, who will bear in mind that sufficient needs to be taken to operate on the bowels two or three times each day. The blood will thus be purified, the sweat glands of the skin will be opened, and the flesh made soft and healthy as an infant's. The kidneys and liver will do their duty, and all humors of the blood will be driven out of the system, and the body purified and restored to a sound and healthy condition. The medicine must be taken instantly after eating, so that it will become mixed with the food while in the stomach. - Commence by taking ten or fifteen drops toree times a day instantly after eating, in a little cold sweetened water. It is best not to take the Syrup on an empty stomach. If this does not give relief, increase the dose to thirty drops, always to be taken instantly after eating, so that the Syrup may become mixed with the food while being digested. It is essential that the bowels be made to move freely every day, and if the above doses of Syrup be not sufficient to effect this, take one to four of the Shaker Family Pills at bedtime. It is better to take the Pills than to increase the dose of the Syrup. G 168 Duane St., N.Y. º A. J. WHITE. Shaker Soothing Plasters. . A cure for pains in the back, chest and sides. The Soothing Plasters afford immediate relief. Our Porous Plasters never get dry, because the linen of which they are composed is covered with ..India rubber. They refresh the system and banish aches of every kind. This is why they are called “Shaker Soothing Plasters.” If you are troubled with a cough, with pain in the chest, use the Shaker Soothing Plasters. Shaker family Pills, Unlike many kinds of cathartic medicines, do not make you feel worse before you feel better. Their operation is gentle, but thorough, and unattended with disagree- able-effects, such as nausea, griping pains, etc., etc. Shaker Family Pills are the best family physic that has ever been discovered. They cleanse the bowels from all irritating substances and leave them in a healthy condition. They cure costiveness. These Pills prevent fevers and all kinds of sickness by removing all poisonous matter from the bowels. They operate j. yet mildly, without any pain. If you take a severe cold and are threatened with a fever, with pains in the head, back and limbs, one or two doses of Shaker Family Pills will break up the cold and prevent the fever. Shaker Family Pills prevent ill effects from excess in eating or drinking. A good dose at bedtime renders a person fit for business or labor in the morning. The Pills, being sugar-coated, and pleasant to take, the disagreeable taste common to most pills is obviated. PRICEs of SHAKER MEDIGINEs: Shaker. Eactract of Roots, or Seigel’s Curative Syrup, per IBottle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 cts. Shaker Family Pills, per Bottle . . . . . . . . 25 cts. S'hotker. Soothing Plasters, each . . . . . . . . 25 cts. In case the reader cannot obtain the medicine from a local dealer, we will forward the same by express, on receipt of P. O. Order, or stamps in a registered letter, for the quantity required. Agents wanted where we have none. Send for terms. Address, A. J. WHITE, o O 168 Duane St., New York. ... For Sale by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicines generally. º, tº dº ſºw &ºt &\sca', CY * (Sºssy º 8&A 9. JA. yºv, \\o gºwow, Åkºv º Jºs. ^ºk / §, **** (R&A)\}. *A. at ºw Satsatov, & ºw Akoko cº, | wº - $ºwacº, foºtwº 0. Z sy - | A., 4- 0. º ſº º /. % /… \ Sk 1% V& /* º // sº º - - - --- * * *-*. .."------------" -----------" "… "…" "…"--- - - - - - - -------- - - - - - -