a... ..:.u.....u.».-..‘.....:.4>.._.v.z=.mmanning»: .‘m. .14. .n. ... -: ‘ . .1 ». TESTED RECIPES. Sweet Breads Friedâ€"Wash in salt BLOTCHY SKINS. ’â€" 1’. Trouble Due to Impure Blood Easily Remedied. Bad blood is the one great cause of bad complexion and blotchy skins; This is why you must attack the trouble through the blood with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. All blotches, boils, ulcers, pimples and paleness are the direct, unmistakable result of weak blood loaded with impuriâ€" wd’ water. par-boil. cut into pieces ties. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills con- the‘ size of a, large oyster, season, dip- in rolled cracker crumbs, and fry 3. light brown in lard and butter. Graham Pullsâ€"Beat one egg thor- ougl‘ily, add one pint of sweet milk, then one pint of graham flour gradu- ally: beat the whole mixture briskly with an egg-beater; pour into cast- iron gem-pans, well greased and pip- ing hot; bake in very hot oven; this mixture is just sufficient for. twelve gems. Graham Crackersâ€"Rub two tea- spoonfuls of bakingâ€"powder into seven cups of graham flour, add one cup of sweet cream or butter, with a little salt. then add one pint of sweet milk; mix well, and roll as thin as soda crackers; cut in any shape; bake quickly, then leave them about the stove for a. few hours to dry thor- oughiy. For- lTemOii sponge.â€"â€"\\’hlsk the Whites of ï¬ve or six eggs until still; soak one ounce if gelatine in a tea- cup‘ful of cold water for an hour, then dissolve it in half a. pint of boiling water. .Set it to cool; when nearly cold adcl’ the whites of agg to it, al- so the juice of two lemons and the greeted rind of one, and half a pound of caster sugar. Beat all until it is as firm as a sponge and place in a mould. Boston Baked Beans.-â€"Put a quart of beans to soak over night; in the morning pour off the water, and add frcSh water enough to cover, to which add- atiout one tablespoonful of moâ€" lassés. Put a. small piece of salt pork in the centre, almost covering it with the beans, and bake slowly from six to eight hours, adding hot water as needed until nearly done, when they can be allowed to cook nearly dry, or according to taste. Corned; Beef Soupâ€"When the liquid in which the beef and vegetables were boiledtis cold, remove all the grease that has risen and hardened on top, and add tomatoes and tomato cat- sup and- boil half an hour, thus mak- ing an excellent tomato soup; or add to it rice or sago or pearl barley, or turn it into a vegetable soup byvboilâ€" ing in the liquor any vegetables that are fancied: Several varieties of Soup may have this “stock†for a basis, and be agreeable and nutritiâ€" ous. Macaroni with cheeseâ€"Throw into boiling water some macaroni, with salt according to the quantity used; let‘ it boil" oneâ€"fourth of an hour; when it will be a little more than half cooked; drain oil‘ the water; place the macaroni in a saucepan with milk to cover; boil till done. Butter a. pudding dish, Sprinkle the bottom with plenty of grated cheese, pit m some macaroni. a little white pepper, plenty of butter, sprinkle on more cheese, then the rest of the macaroni, cover that with bread crumbs, set in quick oven to brown; serve hot. Dolly- Varden’Cake.-â€"'l‘wo cups of sugar, two-thirds of a cup of butâ€" ter, one cup of milk, three cups of flour, three eggs, oneâ€"half teaspoonâ€" i'ul of soda, 'one teaspoonful cream tartar. Flavor with lemon. Bake one- half of this in two pans. To the reâ€" mainder add one tablespoonl‘ul of molasScs, one cup of chopped raisins, one-half) cup of currants, piece of citren chopped fine, one teaspoonful cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg. Bake in two pans, and put in sheets alterâ€" nately- wi’th a little jelly or white of an egg beaten to a froth. To Fry Apples and Pork Chops.»- >Season the chops with salt and pop- per, and a little powdered sage; dip them into beaten egg, and then into beaten bread crumbs. Fry about A basing Sure tchng A Chronic Case of UnusuaIfSeVer-ity and Long Standing Cured by Chase’s Gntment. ' of r. qucr the position; they drive out all lthe impurities; they actually make new, rich red blood; they strfike right at the root of all complemon troubles; they are a. positive and per- ,mancnt cure for all virulent skin dis- ieases like eczema, scrofula, pimples and erysipelas. They give you a clear, clean soft skin, free from all blemish and full of rosy health. Mr. Matthew Cook, Lamberton, N. W. T., tells how Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cured him of erysipelas after other medicines had failed. He says: “My [skin was inflamed; my flesh tender and sore; my head achecl; my tongue was coated; I had chills and thought I Was taking fever. I tried several lmedicines, but nothing helped me until I began using Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and drove the trouble from my system, and I am now in the best of health. I think these pills the best medicine in the world for blood troubles. It is an every day record of cures like this that has given Dr. Wil- liam’s Pink Pills their world-wide prominence. They cure when other medicines fail, but you must' get the genuine with the full name: Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ple, on the wrapper around every box. You can get these pills at all drugâ€" gists, or by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by writing The Dr. Williams' Medicine 00., Brockvillc, Ont. twenty minutes, or until they are done. Put them on a hot dish; pour off part 7‘ of the gravy into another pan, to make a. gravy to serve them with, if you choose. Then fry apples, which you have sliced about two- thirds of an inch thick, cutting them around the .apple, so that the core is in the centre of each piece. When they are browned on one side and partly cooked, turn .them carefully with the pancake turner, and let them finish cooking; dish around the chops, or on a separate dish. HINTS TO H'OUSEKEEPERS. Bedroom windows should never be entirely closed, if the owner is strong, and even in winter should be left open at least tw0 inches at the top. When frying Spanish onions, put a plate o’vcr the top of the pan to keep in the steam. This makes the ~onions cook quickly and keeps all the flavor in. If you are hoarse, lemonâ€"juice squeezed on to salt sugar till it is like a syrup, and a few drops of glycerine added, relieves the hoarseâ€" Iness at once. (5 If cauliflower is boiled with the head downward, well covered with water, it will come out much whiter than if exposed to the air while cooking. To prevent sticking and burning when frying fish, etc., when the fat Icomes to a boiling point sprinkle the bottom of the pan with salt. This also prevents the fat from splashing. Remember to sweep the carpets the . way of the Imp, to brush the other way is to brush the dust in. Attend to all stains as soon as possible. If left they will soak into the carpet and be very difï¬cult to remove. When soot falls upon the carpet or rug, never attempt to sweep it up jut once, for the result is sure to- be in disï¬guring mark. Cover it thickly ‘with nicely dried salt, which will onâ€" luble you to sweep it up cleanly, so lthet not the slightest stain or smear 1will be left. To cleanse feathers for a pillow. es, -â€"._._..-._.... ..._L-.. _-..._â€"â€"._.â€" um" Throughout Canada there are hun-jvinced that the ointment made a. 'dreds of- cases similar to the one deâ€" [perfect cure. ‘ ' scribed behow in which Dr. Chase's Ointment; has proven a. positive and lasting cure for the most severe form of itching piles. Mr. 'Alex. McLaughlin, for 30 years a resident of Bownmnvillc, Ont., writes;â€" “For twenty long years I suffered from itching piles, and "only persons who have been troubled with that an- noying disease can imagine what I endured during that time. About seven years ago I asked a druggist if he had anything to cure mo. ' He said that Dr. Chase's Ointment was most favorably spoken of, and on his recommendation I took a box. "After three applications I felt bet- ter, and by the time I had used one box I was on a orv. I continued the treatment un- til thoroughly sci-(vi. and l' have not suffered any since. I am ï¬rmly con- “I consider Dr. Chase’s Ointment an invaluable treatment for piles. In my case I think the cure was re- markable'when you consider that, I am getting up in years, and hadbecn so long a sufferer from this disease.†Mrs. Jane R. Scott, North Gren- ville, Cumberland Co., N.S., writes: “Last spring I obtained from you a- lbox of Dr. Chascfs Ointment. and ~uscd it; for inward' piles.‘ It "gave me almost instant. relief from the torturing, itching and burning, and {as the trouble has never returned I :consicler~ the cure a permanent one. iYou may use this statement for the beneï¬t of others." ’ ‘ . ' Dr. Chase's Ointment, 60 cents a ,box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, ‘Batcs & Company. Toronto. To pro- fnir way to rccovâ€"itcct you against imitations the p-or- adayg_" atrait and signature of Dr. 'A. W. ;Chase, the famous: receipt book au- =tlior are on every box. x______________________________________________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" First place the feathers in a bag of newspapers, not too tightly pack. ed, and bake in a cool oven for sev- eral nights. Then pich over the feathers, cutting off any sharp ends, and tearing oil the down from the larger feathers. Reject any feather that is stained, put into clean paper bags and bake again till thoroughly dry before putting into waxed tick- ing for pillows. The secret of success in whipping cream lies mainly In the coldness of everything employed in the process. Chill the cream on ice, and if you have a syllabub churnâ€"an upright glass eggâ€"beater will “do the busi- ness"â€"it should be chilled before the cream is put into it, and in Warm weather, set in a bowl of ice while being operated. Beat steadily, but not fast. Rapid beating makes the cream greasy. One cup of cream will make a pint of whipped cream. Now is the timeâ€""between hay and grass"â€"-when dried and evaporated fruits come in play. We are tired of canned fruits and preserves, and wel- come the more acid, dried apricots, nectarines, prunes, etc. It makes a great difference how they are pre- pared. Soaked three or four hours and cooked quickly, they bear no comparison to that soaked twelve or fourteen hours, simmered gently for three or four hours, and not sweetâ€" ened till about twenty minutes be- fore it is done. Cook in the water in which the fruit Was soaked, add- ing more if necessary. Stir with a silver spoon, and cook in a granite or porcelain lined kettle. Prunes should be well washed be- fore usingâ€"so indeed should all dried and evaporated fruits. A half cup of sugar is sufficient to sweeten a. pound. Prun-ellas, Which are more acid, re- quire more sugar. Prunes are nice cooked down till the juice half jellies, then segged with cream. Properly cooked, the prune becomes something quite different from its estate as we usually see it. If the pancake griddle or the waffle-irons have been unused for some little time rub with dry salt beâ€" fore heating and‘greasing. THE INVALID'S STANDBY. Egg Cruelâ€"Beat the yolk of 1 egg well, add 1 teaspoon sugar. Stir in 1 cup scalding milk and grate nutâ€" meg ovcr it or add 1 teaspoon van- illa. Then add the white of the egg beaten very stiff. Cracker Cruelâ€"Four teaspoons fine cracker crumbs, 1 cup milk, 1 cup hot water, salt to taste. Put the water and milk on the stove together until hot, then add cracker crumbs. Corn Meal Cruelâ€"Two teaspoons corn meal, 1 teaspoon flour to 1 qt. boiling water or half milk, and half water. Mix flour and corn meal with cold water, add the boiling water and cook ane hour. Salt. Barley Gruelâ€"Stir 2 tablespoons barley into 2 gts. freshly boiling wa~ ter. Boil three to four hours. Milk may be added if desired. Strain through a sieve and sweeten to suit the taste. Oatmeal Cruelâ€"Put ’1- tablespoons oatmeal into 1 pt. boiling water; add -} teaspoon salt, and boil without Stirring for 30 minutes. Strain in a sieve, rubbing through as much oat- meal as possible. Have ready 1 egg well beaten, add 1 teaspoon powdered sugar. Reheat the gruel and pour over the egg. lilix carefully and serve. Whipped cream may be a subâ€" stitute for the egg, and makes an exceedingly nice grucl. l - 4 ...._._..§ a. A. u. crises s cream-a can 2638» 4} 15 sent direct to the diseased _ parts by the Improve: Blower. fflf") Heal: the ulcers, clenrJ-‘ifle alt - , _~ passages. stops droppin ,s in tho 3‘3") throat and penna'nanl y cure: "7' Cniarrh and day Fever. Blower f2“ -.. All dealers. or Dr. A. W. Chase i-lt-llcinc Co.. Toronto and Buffalo. â€" -â€"~+.vâ€",â€"â€" PAY, PAY, PAY l I +++++++++++++++++++++Â¥ shell some round green peas into a. bright tin pan. The little boy sac dowu in the rocking chair, and he played the peas were bullets rattling against a. fort as they dropped into the tin pan. When the peas were all shelled, his dear grandmamma gavs him a bright cent. He went out and called the tabby cat and they ++++++++++++++++++++++é ,YOUNG 3 FOLKS * Q. .o. .:,.o.+-o>+ eo+ PHOEBE, 0 mother, see that little bird 'Up in the tree alone ! She calls “Phoebe, Phoebe, Phoebe!" Why doesn't Phoebe come ? the store and bought a. Peppermint stick. Afterward when he sat on! the porch eating the peppermini stick he decided that ho was not a lonesome little boy any longer. -..__..._+_.______ BABY’S HOLD ON LIFE. m- , The little ones are frailâ€"their hold upon life is slight. The slightesl symptom of trouble should be met b} a. reliable corrective medicine. Baby'l OWn Tablets have proved by theil record of success to be an ideal medi‘ cine for the ills of infants and young children. The Tablets cure all stonr ach and bowel troubles, allay the ir‘ ritation of teething, break up colds, prevent croup and destroy worms The mother has .a guarantee that! this medicine contains no opiate of harmful drug. Mrs. T. E. Greaves, Maritana, Qua, says:â€"â€" “I have used Baby’s Own Tablets with great V suo case. They never fail, in my experi ence, to cure the little ills of chil~ drcn." You can get these Tablet! from any medicine dealer, or they will be sent by mail at 25 cents a box by writing The Dr. William! Medicine 00., Brockvillc, Ont.. ‘ --â€"â€"-+-â€"â€"--~ QUEER SOURCE OF INCOME. There is said to be at least one mam in London, England, who earns a' livingâ€"or eks out an income from other sourcesâ€"by a habit he has con< tractcd of meeting with accidents. According to a, statement in the Southwark County Court recently this enterprising individual is known to have accomplished ï¬ve more or less successful accidents in the last year or twoâ€"and to use a common form of application for damages af~ terward. It was a ladder on two occasions, a. ccllar~flap on the remaining three. The "victim" was stated to have claimed £50 unsuccessfully after the last mishap, but.one. Then, it was represented, he claimed £15 against a p'ubliczm, but the solicitors be enâ€" gaged withdrew on learning of his la;- inentable record of accidents, and the suit fell through. Now a barrister asked on behalf of the publican and the public for scale. Judge was sympathetic. “I remember, observed his honor, "once being in a case Where a man used purposely to fall over carpets put down across the pavement to save dainty ball shoes, etc., from beâ€" ing soiled. “But instead of my getting any good by showing that he had several times purposely fallen over carpets, a noble law lord, who tried the case, was very much interested in the man's favor, and thought it was very hard that he should have met with so many accidents." IIou'ever, Judge Russell decided that he had no.power to grant the “Lonesome, dear no," said the old Pre‘scntnapm‘cauon'. . †spider. “I haven't time to be.†‘ DWI: fll‘glmd “1.0! bai‘l'IStel‘. . 5’011 Then she began to make a web from [have Power to .Cel'l‘fy Where 1‘3 is it the top of the ladder to the highest jmflttm' 0f PUNK" important? {mil barn window. When she came to Where .VQU get a man Of this kind. the top of the window she hurried Who makes it his llObbY in life 10 g0 to the ladder again with the spool about and put his feet through peoâ€" of thread which she carried in .her ple’s cellar flaps or coal gratings or pocket, singing all the day: 7 to run up against ladders and then “Over and under, through and claim damages, it is a matter of thl‘QUgh, public importance to resist such I never could cry with so much to claims," ' do." i “If you could stop people altogeth- The Iii-“0 boy f01‘g0t to cry {01' a or from falling down outside public while, but before long ,he lay down houses it would be conferring a great in the hay and squeezed out two boomn admitted the judge. lears' He was “St beginning to “That is most essential,†rejoined booâ€"110° When 119 Spled 2‘ htth 1111"] the other, "but failing that we are 11012519 .M’ tlllmwtopp Of ‘3]: cmrlcs' trying to stop a man who doesn’t mo ml SW21 0 ‘ew 0 ' am 8m ' fall, but says he does." “What’s the matter, little boy ‘2†“Oh, I’m very lonesome," the little "w l IN AN OLD TRUNK. 0 where is Phoebe that she fails To hear her mother call 7 Or does she hear and never heed Or answer back at all ‘2 Dear mother, when name, I'll answer your ï¬rst word. And never let you call and grieve Like that poor mother bird. you speak my THE LONESOME LITTLE BOY. ’A little boy once went to visit his clear grandmamma, who lived a long, long way off in the country. He wore his best suit and his ruffled blouse, and he carried his nightgoan rolled up in a. nice bundle. He rode all the long, long way in the milk- man's cart, and he thought he was going to have a beautiful time. But when he had a. few minutes at his grandmamma's, he began to feel very lonesome. The grandmamma lived in a little red house with a flower garden and a farm, and ï¬elds and ï¬elds, and an attic, and a hammock on the piazza. But the little boy was lonesome. He sat in the hammock and kicked with his new shoes and several large tears dropped down on his rufl’ied blouse and took out the starch. He was sorry that he had come. Just as ho was feeling so very un- happy, the grandmamma’s large gray tabby cat came purring up on the piazza. She rubbed against the little boy's legs, and she said, "What's the matter ?" “Oh, I’m so very lonesome,†said the little boy, “aren't you ?†“No, indeed,†said the tabby cat. “I have too much to do to think about being lonesome. You just come around to the barn and see my kittens." So the tabby cat led the way to the barn, and the little boy followed. after, sobbing every step of the way and saying, “Booâ€"hoo, booâ€"hoo.†Tho tabby cat made him climb up the ladder to the hay loft and there he saw three little white kittens, and three little gray kittens. Oh, they were cunning, and they ~.ad their faces washed, and they chased their tails, and they rolled over and over in the funniest way, and the tabby cat sang to them. “Purr, purr, mew, mew ! We never could cry with so much to do." The little boy forgot to cry for a minute, watching them, but pretty soon he sat down on the top of‘thc ladder and began to booâ€"hoo again. As he was sitting there, a nice ‘fat spider crawled up beside him and said: "What's the matter, little- boy ?†" "Oh, I'm so lonesome, boo-hoo !†the little boy said. “Aren’t you lonesome, too ‘2†Addison I) 'An amusing practical joke has just boy†said. “I suppose you are, been perpetrate: in a. Continental-~‘L02- H . __ club. A member hurt his‘ï¬nger,‘ and . ' Not" at 311: 531d the mOt'hel Baby Finds a Bottle of Cal-belie not wishing to consult his own doc-Swallow- ltor he asked a brother member, who was a. physician, to’ look at it. The physician did so, and, to “0' sur- prise, sent in a bill for $10. The victim showed. the bill to an- ather member, who was a solicitor, and asked him what he should do. The solicitor promptly advised him to pay the bill, and sent him in anâ€"v - other for $5 for advice given. The man, complained of his treat- 7 'ment to yet another member. who reported him to the committee for “Don’t you see how [busy I am ?" The little boy watched and he saw she Was flying in and out of 'Whilo the mother was unpacking Ell-‘0 bal‘ll (1001': bl'lllglllg' wet mu‘l 1“ an old trunk a little 18 months old inc-r bill. Then she flew out the door baby got hold of a bottle of carbolic ll'ul'r more mud, Singing 5‘“ 'Lhe way: acid while playing on the floor and "30315 imd eggs: an? bables: 1900; his stomach was so badly burned it I. novel," COUld cry. “71th so “well to was feared he would not live for he do. . _ _ could not eat ordinary foods. The The little b0)r was 1308111111“? to mother says in telling of the case: feel a mite happier n0W~ He Chmbed “It was'all two doctors could do down the ladder from the loft and to save him as it burnt his throat “rent 9’“ into the OYChard' ' He sat and stomach so bud that for two down in the grass and ate a large months after he took the poison Acid and Drinks It. When there was nothing walked together down the road ti, costs on the higher" ' pagne.’ . - ' '11 ’t met his 6in ations. Iâ€"Ic red apple. ï¬gs-nï¬tiglï¬cly ï¬ned a cgase of Chum- left but the core, he remembered that ' ' ‘ , - I he was, lonesome, and he cried one tear on ‘his ruffled blouse. -'An old I ,1 I r . ‘T. r. mool cow whowas all alone . near - R’LALLX nounsr' ' by, (35:112ng grass, came up close to “YéS." Said the hone-St farmer- “1 him and said: “What's the matter, know there are people what always little boy 7" ' Plits the big apples at the top 0f , “Oh, I’m so lonesome," 'said the the -barrcl,‘but .I don't." . . little boy. “Aren't you ‘2†. “That's right," exclaimed his honâ€" “Bless me, 110," said the mooly est fri‘efld', adm‘h'ingly- "I have al‘ cow. “I’m too busy. Don’t I have ways tried to conVince 1-011“ that to chew all day to make cream and that 50†0' thing doesn’t'l’al’ in the milk for you and when it comes 4 long run-" ~ o’clock don't I have to walk way "Ah." eXCIaimCd the farmer. "if down to the bars and get milked? they'd go to the city once in a, While I'm doing something all the time. thGY'd learn something- ;I always "Cream «for butter and ,custards, put' my big applesat the'b‘ottom of ' mooâ€"o ! ’ . I the barrel; ' ' ' " I} never could 'cry with so much ‘4 ' "That’s the way ?-" “ do," "Yes. 3‘0“ 500. People have {3:013 50 The little boy stopped crying for SUSDiCiOllS that they almOSt always just a minute and then he heard his open the barrel at the bottom now- dear grandmamma calling: "John, John, come into the kitchen a min- “ ute." So he went into the kitchen and is dear grandmamma asked him to Whenever a boy secs anybody eat- mg something he Wants .a, bite. nothing Would lay on his stomach. Finally I took him into the country and tried new milk and that was no better for him. His Grandma final- ly suggested Grape-Nuts and I am thankful I adopted the food for be commenced to get bctlcr right away and would not eat anything else. He commenced to get fleshy and his cheeks like red roses and now he is entirely well. “I took him to Mainmoras on a. visit and every place We went to Istay to out he called for Grape-Nuts and I would have to explain how he came to, call for it as it was his main food. "The names of the physicians who attended‘thc baby are Dr. Eddy of 'this town-and Dr. Geo. Gale of Nnvf port, 0., and anyone can write to me or to them and learn what lrapcâ€"Nuts food will do for children and grown-ups too." Name given by I’ostum (.10.. Battie Creek, Mich; Look in each pkg. for the famoul little book, “Tim Road to Well. nvilio.â€Â« .',‘<.M_r -...« ~ AW- 7H‘N'5‘kw‘ , W. 4 J'w’urguysvwvsavfu-zwmuu may“ ,4 no ,, c,_...‘.c,..._,..., .(u- â€"“‘ r v 's w .x \rv\- ‘m=vw~.~w~..â€"-an~,.va,-v...r,m wu,’ ¢~¢~w .. . “to. ~ I V I \ symmmsewnwwmgwâ€"xmraâ€, _,â€" .\ A ., /;~n 14.1. , . ‘ 7-1:; '1“: y i