jars of ¥ to AR the jam keep. Stir thosotighly Lore the j carefully an and tie' Srapelsy inde Bix rapefruit, sugar and water. Wash i skin and, cut it. in , measure to Sint of Trait a and we add one one-fourth pounds of sugar. Return to the stove and boil until fruit is transparent; -and the Sain armalade. -- No. 1. Wash, wipe. fd ¢ cub into. quarters Fy pulp, rejecting seeds. A seven pints of cold wa- ter, let stand overnight, and in the morning cook until | "peel i is ten- der, which will take several hours. Pet aside overnight. Add ten cups "(five pounds) sugar and coo. stirring once in a while, until the. syrup thickens slightly on a cold, plate. : Pineapple-Orange Marmalade. -- "Three well-ripened pineapples, and six oranges. Remove the cores from the pineapple, and the white ~ membrane . of the - oran Put through chopper, and r every ~ cup of pulp take one of sugar. Cook very slowly until like jam. Pour ii in lasses. Amber Marmalade -- No. 2. -- - 8lice one orange, one lemon and - one 'grapefruit thin with' a gsharp ~ knife, removing seeds Measure and let stand over night the same: quantity of water.' In the! g morning put on' Ly 3 > and lob bo oil for twa. minutes. J Jo stand d to iy "pint cold. y Candied G rap sure fruit is pe 'Wash. remove skin in quarters and o strips about an inch g the ota Mearyre weight sugar t ht fresh | h yslesy or ES ecen, the with any kind of bread. {a filling scraped raw; haefs wil 'wice as Brush. hos chisken ey Lk minced h diam, seaboned od d Curry. a, : Formasan cheese, or with | the cheese mixed Jf will find favor.' another | * | .Keép. in cellar.a. few. o which you allow to send up shoots. ill be Ho rein ed olives and a n and, hea "Chopped nchovies - .or sandinos mixed with: boiled ing mayonnaise or cream, are good Shredded or minced sweet; (green peppers, cream cheese and mayon- naise are delicious withimub: bread. "A toasted 'sandwich, faxing glo tempt the appetite when "The r ings fail. - | ih ng. with" mixed with: biibter, ib 'Any kind of baked, cold cooked fish, mixed with a. sgeeb or sour: minced' pickle and mayonnaise or. boiled dressing, will make a sandwich filling, . ., Th any Minced celery and "olives, ed to a good consistency. with mixed pickle and catsup, will make a tasty Shin with or witho the n 1 minced te hogy the diffi: : Honsehold Highs, a Grape jam with whip a Weim on it is @ novel and p Aessert. Very gour fruits' can partly sweetened by a pinch of salt while cooking. The living-room" table + op? "uld never be crowded with'" books, A few are enough. fhen woolen blankets are" on their best, cover with silkoline 'and tack like a quilt. Individual tarts are always at- tractive and 'make' an" 'agreeable change for the luncheon table." The woman who means to econo- mize _on labor in' her home' "will have as little bright metal as pos- gible. "If a rug curls, moisten" 'it and wrap 'it around a broom stick in the opposite way from ts desires, then tie and let'it dry: RA Anybody a dmter #¥ the family cork very. arice little rug of rabbit skins wn together 'on w piel oiiearpesi i= iu the. onians They are delicious in winter sal-| ads or to rub the salad bowl with. ad sauce should never be served stiff and sticky, but et smooth |. and free | ol . bre L and unreasonableness of Li that or | made the consist a by us. | through' the assistance of an evil || house (see Matt. 12. 25; Mark 3. 3 suggestion of _| him his armor' in which he trusted. 'Meat patties for luncheon dishes BA be are' Seotomical because' they can be , d Iniost' every. soft: of-eold he deta tas she patal we Bit ue SHIFT 1 < . ntified 'Beelzebub with Sa- tam or a, him to. dinate evil power: E 16. Sought of him a heaven--A > 8. er, to. u aws the Bhs fo og. ip ese the out evil. If the power he could ca would' i d fall.' ivided against a houses --Better, 'house after howse fall I eth.' Here i apparent] desol! Teun to Sule ke ot tion brought ut a: divi kingdom," had id bath Nefer. as 'Matthew! and' Mark] to" &'/ divided would surel A house 25). 19,.20. Your sops--Jewish exor- y | cists whe ghar incanth.tj | tons to ay the Spirits} of isease pe othor spirits of evi By the finger 'of *Glod--Matthew (12. 28) says "the spirit of God.' 21,-99. This fare rable contains a alah 49. 24-26, The strong man would then * refer to Satan guarding the ccHLEARNG of ia} own court or mangon, and the stronger 'Would rotoai Jesus, who wotild overcome him' and 'take from' 23. He shat is not with. me is against m he contest between Christ "Satan is such'that no ohé "ean: remain neutral: Indiffer- ench 'lieve Js 'equivalent to apposi- tion. % 24-98. In reproving! the Pharisees for their baseless criticism of him and' f6f their 'desire for a miracle to test his "power, Jesus depicts their spiritwal condition by. using} the parable of expelled demons, a subject To reign to our thought to- day, bat moving in the region of popular 'Gpinion of his: ~day.~~ The point of the parable for us is" the fact of common experience which if emphasizes, that he who hag once experienced the goodness and mercy. of God in the forgiveness of sin and thereafter permits the old |- habits' to. agajn take possession of his life Joi re ta. §in Bl Sily to lower' Shower fe e lan- 8 Eo Whiteread --Dese Corio fortes, and' places uninhabited by' Ber were thought te be the haunts: o ay . ng, sgst 3 findipg nione-- The Semon ds seekin ng ! for a place o of Erol Satie i taken, lls it! Sho ere Purpose 1 9reans, and Bifies- "Grow U iy Stent it swent vi y Stel progress. Miss Pocodky ie dington on .the Thames, where" thers, ] Dick; 'and .Getrgs, both TTT "OF GROWTH. alil "Te Is F Yeaty 0ldi% : Xb ods claimed by; scientists So aye made a study of the subject |. that' 4 'man's 'bfatis 'and the bones that are not subjected to pressure, grow. continuous! until he is forty, | ears old 1 t ato say.that the shoul grow: stradiger, the capacity of the lungs imereass and the 'brain' $héuld develop steadily until the end of the fourth decade of life. "A man ceases to grow tall, how- ever, at the beginning of the third{" decade, begause, after that time the body while in the erect position! éompresses' the vertebrae of small bones in. the, spine, the disks of: cartilage between them, the pelvis and the thigh-bohes, and 'this pressiré overcomes the 'matural elasticity ofthe disks and: the growth of the bones, A British scientist contends that | were & man a quadruped, 'and therefore freéd from the downward pressure produced by his weight | upon the spinal column, he would continue to grow in height for ten vears longer than he:does at pres- ent, since it has been found that bones not subjected to compression increase up 4 the fourth decade. ge A SECOND GIBRALTAR. Heligoland Has Been Strongly For- * tified in Recent Years. Wonderful 'éhanges * have 'been made' by Germany in Heligoland during past few' years, From being merely a fishing village the place; has-been: transformed into a veritable Gibraltar, with a home for all small 'warcraft, including 'divigibles: #nd"waterplanes. The: 3German: Gibraltar protects the mouths of four rivers, including the Elbe and the Weser, A protect-, ing sea 'wall: has been built' half, round, the-islénd, and from the high erland, rH t. and best wif pp. disdprearing plat- Tue ply ago the art cr 100 SHOUE AVOUT. men number 1, 500, : pressure exerted by the weight of Approathion) ' s instinctive] and so-alsosdre her aeatngss, her coquetry. and her her.modesty.. In all weathers and in all company she cleans her fur and hér face." 'A 'traified cat 'pre- fers to 'inake Her toilet before a mirror!" Man's 'love for his cat is "free ' ftom sitobberyi: The Persian cat, the cat'of China; or the tail- 'less 'Manx, may be the object: of our admiration ar: our. astonigh- household. is the ohject of our love. Camoens: was toe poor to buy a geandle; he had no light but the Juminous eyes of his, ;cat. on the \night when ho. wrote his chant of the Lusiad. Jdleness and agility dell together under the velvet pelt of the cat; and her savage atavism is linked "with gracious and grate- ful civility. Her ways are stringe 'and contradictory. ' She creeps through the" night like a' 'shadow, springs from the 'darkness as if elec- trified," and lies in the' torrid heat Tike a Worshinpar of the sun. RET CONTROL OF THE WEATHER. PB Sir Oliver Lodge Sn Suggests New Use for Elecetricity. Sir Oliver Lodge, the distin- guished physicist and principal of Birmingham (England), University, in an address before the Institute of Electrical Engineers 'recently, siggested the possibility of obtain- ing some measure of aontrol over | the weather, If clearing weather, he said, was due to electricity, it might be im- agined that man could acquire some control over the electrification of the atmosphere. If it was desired to produee rain, 'why not send up-a kite to reach the -- He believed that if enough electricity . were . discharged into the clouds the drops would behave 'there as they did in the laboratory; they would co: e, and, once that had happened, the process might be repeated and caiise a shower. "When rain was 'wanted, the leg- 'durer said, negative electricity should be sent up,' and if fine: wea- ther was Ba positive electri- its i ee EXPENSIVE To 0 RUN LONDON. 'Jmmense Sams prom Réquired For any ar bows i It costs London, E Th the Lo fas Red he a "$55,000,000 a Se bib at 'grants' "from the Gover: | poses; AREA it 8 it donit | ve 1 3 | asks the ratepayers for. $35, There ovis blok Bue whi oe a re ent say Fi or | exact amount hich the people Have EAR it hae on n $2,256,~ "much aa 4130, [Ea HEE is oo tive will be Tamreh, thr ment ; the: common cat. of .our ewn | | other: great schemes to pay. All that can be said is that' ere in RE hr no ia trom yest to east, irl s and world. for oe nd, none can say, , 'very doubtful whether 'even a na- tive has crossed more than the out- ; | ekirts.of the desert. Countess Mol tor, has already done consider: le || travelling alone in. Southwest: Af rica. "I intend," she said, 'to travel alone, so far. as Europeans are con- cerned, for I believe. this to be the safest course. ..I shall dress and live 'as an Xtab. My plans have been discussed with the Geographi- cal Society, which admits the im- mense interest attached to the des- , but makes no secret of the dan- us chagacter of the jouriey, rom 'Daira T 'gh "travel "to i the point from' which several Wheticeessful 'attempte 'have "been '| made' 'té get: inte the: iu ztfuot the country: This part of jomrney will involve a couple ijthe I weeks! tra- vel over mountains. My Jox xt obj ec- &6" 'Weeks' ; ¥ joiriey to the southwhrd Svor diff- Miss Tey Bonk hatdss of sha wamil single adh nia "outt mi of England, is now teaching the women! students of the Jniversity of Washington at Seattle how to row: théuBten stroke. and is making 24 years old,.and was born at, Ted- she wasitaught to row by her bro- Sbmpion single scullers, 4 oltntalfl 'county. 17 eas '"Tamreh is the MEt' péint'ih*the 'desert marked on thie map, and'the 1,200 «miles. of: desert. between that placeand Muscat is. absolutely. un- known, One. of the greategp: perils {will be: the absence of water, hut I am arranging to travel ip the. spring, when 'my nl. will have a plentiful supply of milk. Bas- ing my rate of progress by camel at thirty miles. a day, I should, with luck, emerge at Muscat i in May. 14 go i UNIQUE B BRIDGE. One of the Most Ti Tnterésting iho World in Tado-China, What is claimed' to be one of 2 'most interesting railway stiuet inthe world is ! bride over the Faux Namti gorge' in 'Indo-China, where, owing to the peculiar" dif culties -in the way of building a bridge of any type, it was necessary to adopt a special design suited. to the only method of erection. that seemed possible, The sides of the gorge, according to a writer in Popular Mechanics, are practically vertical and haye no chance of "the approach to the bridge ' from €ither side except through tunnels. The track grade is 335 feet abovs the river, so that no system of falsework could be used in build- ing the "bridge, while cantilevers were out of the question owing to the lack of "elbow room.' The design, finally adopted consist- ed of two steel trusses, each hinged at the cliff side, which were 'erected in a vertical position and then lowered so that the ends met, forming '& structure of inverted V-shape. The ends of the two trusses were | firmly connected, steel towers: were erected on' the humps of the trusses and on. this support the steel:deck truss, carrying , the track, was placed. At. the "beginning of the work it was necessary to.lep the workmen down by: ropes. from the tunnel mouth to prepare the foun- dations of the supporting. trusses. The track trusses were built, in the tunnels and, were then moved into position on rollers, From end to end this bridge measures 220 feet 4 inches, while the distandés between thie heals of the his trusses is 180} feat. ANOTHER SotDAY ey To Build Dam on on White and Blue Nile Sotith' of "Khartoum. Worle huis! bedi commenced on an- to "reclaim: by 'irrigation: vast tractsiof deers >in he Soudan. de is believed. it ean 0, made. bo: Saaz mon ta; cotton output of the. B i ls Ti Pi ahh, ti ras &: Jha LY between the Blue D Ty pie fies roum, one over € ams lh i ha a ag a a de thie i Pn SS Wn tal ha