we "the grapes. 8 teaspoon sblespoonfyl each of pepper, all: ey cloves and cinnamon. . Boil il thick, bottle and seal. Grape Preserves.--Remove the skins, place them in one pan and the pulp in another. Cook pulp yi fil soft, then run it through a col- ander to remove the seeds ~Add the skins to the strained pulp, measure and put in the same amount of sugar. Boil until it will nearly stay on the spoon when the spoon is turned upside down. Preserves are not bitter or stringy when made this WAY. Spiced Grapes.--Five pounds of fruit, four pounds brown sugar, one pint vinegar, one tablespoonful each cloves and allspice, and a lit- tle pepper. Cook slowly three or four hours. Grape Jam.--8tew the grapes. in a little water and press them through 'a colander, adding more water to get the pulp through. Boil fifteen or twenty minutes before adding sugar. Measure pulp before putting it on to boil and allow about three-fourths of a cup of su- gar to each cup of pulp, Boil half an hour longer, stirring 'all the time Grape Wine.--One gallon of wa- ter to one gallon of grapes. Crush well. Let stand one week without stirring. Then draw off the liquor, To every gallon of wine add three unds of sugar. Put in a vessel, ut do not fasten it at the bung until it is done hissing, When it thas stopped working fasten it up "i#nd let it stand two months. It twill "then draw off olear. : Bottle, fork and seal. Keep in a dry cel- 3 Kas Pickles.--Grapes must be 'anderripe and firm, and are better if but slightly turned. = Pick from ithe stem and pack into fruit jars, "being careful not to break the skins. 'Make a syrup of one quart yvine- gar, eight cups sugar, one level tea- "ZZ spoon whole cloves and a heaping teaspoon broken cinnamon tied in a little bag. Bring tothe boiling point, cool partially and turn over Seal and 'keep in a dark, cool place. This amount of spiced vinegar is enough for seven pounds of grapes. Green Grape Preserves. -- Cut fopen six pounds of green grapes and remove the seeds with a sharp knife. Weigh the fruit and use equal quantities of sugar. Put grapes va kettle, with just enough water to cover; bring to a Sad, skim, then sprinkle over the the quantity of sugar al ood, Bring * to a boil again; Preming grapes under the syrup, but use edre to keep them 'unbroken. Add "more fugar, cooking five minutes. Repeat the process until all the sugar has been used. As soon as the 'syrup jellies, turn: into small jars. When cold the gra pes should show distinet in the e ar jelly. NEW PINEAPPLE RECIPES. Pineapple Filling fr Cakes. Half a pint of grated pineapple, on¢ tablespoonful of orange juice, two tablespoontuls of lemon juice and some icing sugar; mix together the pineapple, lemon and orange juice "and enough icing sugar to make it if consistency to spread Pineapple = Canape.--Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add obe pint of shredded pineapplé: cook for 10 minutes ; add sugar and | lemon juice to taste and serve on slices of fried bread or sponge cake; garnish with cream. . Pineapple Water Ice.--Having nd red and sliced a sufficient i ; how o ineapples, cut the slices in- 1 pieces, put them into a p dish, Sprinkle sugar over or, i let them several hours in in a ooo! place ub oil into the kid befor fk on again. 1 ' To darn a rent in dar! ravel out and thread of if i | of 1 ing and sewing cotton: If you keep' your clean kitchen utensils in cup "and drawer you will find them always ready for immediate use. { When the cake in the oven is ready for a final browning throw a handful of chips on the fire. or tuck in a newspaper. If you. wish fo give a brase ar- ticle a polish like new, heat it first, then rub on a paste of hot salt and lemon juice. Rub clear. A good salad is made of stuffed cucumbers, the filling made of diced cucumbers and onions, or cabbage and green pepper salad. rve on nasturtinm leaves, When stitching chiffon; or any such material on the machine, use the finest possible thread and put a strip of thin paper under the goods and stitch - them together, then tear away the paper when the work is done. JAM RULES, Do not allow, tin, iron or pewter to touch the jam, as any of these are liable to spoil the color. Everything employed in the jam making must be scrupulously clean. The sugar must be of the best. The fruit must be gathered on & dry day, any that is imperfect or damaged being discarded. It should be just ripe. Tht jam P hould be boiled until on dropping a little on a plat, :if jel- lies. Jam should be boiled fast to preserve the color of the: fruit and kept well stirred: All scum must -be carefully re- moved as it rises. 11,000 HUMAN SKELETONS. - Mystery Surrounds the Origin of These Bones, The mysterious removal of 1,000 human skeletons from an ancient crypt under the Parish Church at Rothwell, Northamptonshire," Eng- land, revives the question of the origin' of these bones. Rothwell was once an important place; but never important enough to own so many skeletons. Moreover, a large proportion of them bear the marks of wounds, but the theor that they originated in some battle is nega- tived by the fact that many of them are those of women. Moreover no 'battle has been fought near there gacept the battle Naseby, and: less than a thousand : men « were killed in that fight. : Even the an- cient battles: between the Danes and the Saxons were all recorded, and there is no story of such a bat. tle as this, nor was there ever a visitation from plague so. far as is known. The crypt itself is of un- known age, and the mystery is fur- ther increased by the fact that when the bones were first discover- ed nearly two hundred: years: 80, they were carefully arranged in layers with the skulls on top, then the legs, and then the arms. They have now been removed and placed in shelves--a sight well worth see- Fhe by the curious tourist--Diindee here ve . ! SUN To REPLACE COAL, Italian Sin ¢ Offers Solution of in the dar n described in a oport jus the department, and it makes nating reading. . Having "found central abode of the criminal 'mi orobe, the doctor hands th administration of oe ment«to 'microbes of its for one of the principles therapy is that of killing crobes by the use of dead ones of their own variety. By ino patient suffering with io fog 1 with a suitable number of dead mi- orobes of the same variety as those found to be causing thei amma. tion, the natural opponents of mi- crobic life in the blood are stimu- lated into action and assist cure, 2,000 PATIENTS TREATED. So remarkable have been: the cures obtained at St. Mary's Hospi-| tal that the number. of patients nn- der treatment now runs into thou- sands. Duxing the past two years some 2,000 . with, ahd 500 are still' under treat- ment. Two men who made pilgrim: ages from Russia and Hung spectively, in thé hope of ance from their microb pres- sors, and another = wre y ill with an exquisitely painful foot, crossed the continent of America |. the: patients have been dealt. etgle eyes anc "its wa; markets of Zarda a Child is Held by Tar, and recovery of a ¢ from one of the small streets on the ris and suffered torments in an 'Atlan- | submit: to | tie shecrage; rather than the loss of & limb withoud the last card to save it. rou tine. work, together with some spe- cial investigations, has "required | of during the two years the examina- dion 9 of some 20,000 specimens of Experiments on those fines, with the aid of a patent splint redently introduced inte ng and 'by Mr. Gauvain, medical supetiniond to the Lord Mayor Treloar C er Hospital at Acton, have gested the possibility of even STARTLING DEVELOPM N in the near future: Already 0b punlis ny of {mew pupils ihe sity Health ered in he position. id a aba, aew. who. went to the roof to bang out some_ clothes on Monday morning, ent vig Jl BUSH state from wi blistered nt 3 e child was severely through: exposure to the' tropical heat. The ohild had boon lot for two, which + es sumption of the glands, bones, and | skin is, yielding to the treatment. {It is not too much to hope,' 'the governing body, in their re) "that when treatment along these lines ig generally adopted, hunchback and high-booted crippl as a result of tubercular disease, will disappear from our streets. | "It is very satisfactory to reco in eonnection with this form of tu 'berculosis, that of eighty-seven tients treated during years, only. two have eventually {: 'suffered the 'loss of a limb despite 8) our efforts to save it, and that'w both these men we 'were handicapped | by the circums hat the disease had already isted dor several months and i volved most of the bones about the these two ankle before they came undef treats | | ment.' Certain forms of rt dis and child-bed fever have fy bene- Jointly treated by jnoeiation, and Lost on a Roof fo for - Sixty Hours, A remarkable story of "the lous | ti : dvised Not to Haun J aud Rot in "Bap ? Gums a esus w ri jecting: o opening of * Chicago's Physio, thos De ver Ey ith. ot it t oe or at {ihe Taos de Extracts ealth Depart: | gels, The childs ot Jerez) hiought ont of Et