3 €€€€€€€€€€€€Q€€<Q¢Q€€€@, About the ’ ....House §3§§BBB easseaeessaasbe é“ DOME STI C RECIPE S. Jellied Saladâ€"Slice four cucum- bers and just cover with water; add a slice of onion, minced, salt. cal" cane, and a little lemon juice: Simmer five minutes, add a small tablespoonâ€" ful of gelatine, and cool; add a 6111) of English walnuts, and put all on ice. When ready to serve, break into bits and lay on a bed of lettuce hearts, and add a little still may- onnaise, being careful not to let the dish look mussy. Golden Mousseâ€"Cook a cup of suâ€" gar with a sniall halfâ€"cup of water live minutes; beat the yolks of six eggs very light, slowly beat in the syrupyt and cook over water till it coats .1-“".’spoon. Strain and add a pint" stilliy whipped cream and I '-.iia. Put into a round mold and only in ice and salt for five hours. Turn out on a round platter, and fill the center with whipped cream, and if your table is decorated with yelâ€" low roses, lay a cluster of these by the yellow mousse. This dish must be made very early in the morning, as its freezing cannot be hurried, but it is worth some trouble. Salmon ’1‘urbot.â€"-â€"l"our cups milk, four tablespoonfuls flour, yolks of four eggs, butter size of walnut, two teaspooni‘uls salt, pepper. Cook till thick in double boiler, as it burns easily. Remove bones, but not oil, from a pint of best grade salmon, and fill buttered baker with alterâ€" nate layers of custard and salmon, putting a layer of cracker crumbs on top. Dot with pieces of butter and bake thirty minutes. Can be reâ€" heated nicely by steaming. Fried Chicken in Virginia. Style.â€" Joint a tender chicken as for fricasâ€" see. Dip each piece in beaten egg, then roll in salted cracker dust until thoroughly coated. Set aside. for an hour before frying in fat to a golden brown. Be sure to fry long enough for the thickest pieces of chicken to be cooked all the way through. To prepare the fat, fry half a pound of bacon sliced thin. When crisp, but 'not burned, strain off the fat, and _j omoyaaaaa» I return to the pan. Keep the bacon. hot while you fry the chicken (pre- pared with egg and cracker dust) in the fat, turning twice. Should there not be fat enough, add drippings or other fat. When done arrange upon a hot dish and garnish with the bacon. . Salmon Salad.â€"Flake one c. .1 of salmon, removing skin and none. Chop fine enough cold boiled pota‘ toes for one cupiul, onion for one tablespoonful, and cucumber pickle for one-quarter of a cupfizl. Season and mix thoroughly the salmon, poâ€" tato, onion, and pickle. Make a dressing of oneâ€"half level teaspmmful of mustard, oneâ€"half teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of sugar, two rounding teaspoonfuls of flour, two rounding .teaspoonl‘uls of butter, yolk of one egg, three-quarters cupiul of milk and oneâ€"quarter cupful of strong vinegar. Beat the egg, add the milk and mix in the mustard, salt, sugar and flour. When smooth, put in the butter and cook until thick; then, be- fore removing from the stove, gradâ€" ually pour in the vinegar. hold this dressing into the salmon. Having ready some crisp lettuce leaves, place a tablespoonful on each leaf and stick a celery stuffed olive’on the top. Egg Kissesâ€"Take whites of four eggs, beaten somewhat stiff, and add one pint of granulated sugar gradually. Add one mixture until it will stand without spreading when dropped from a spoon. Drop the mixture from a spoon on oiled papers, leaving room for them to swell. Place in a cool JVOH and let cook until a light delicate brown. Constantinesâ€"Bcat together five eggs until very light. Gradually add threeâ€"quarters of a pound of’iine granulated sugar and beat until the sugar appears to be dissolved. Add the grated rind and strained juice of a lemon, then work in, a spoonful at a time, three-quarters of a round of sifted pastry flour. Lastly, beat in oneâ€"quarter of a pound of butter which has been worked until soft.and creamy. Drop by half teaspoonl‘uls on buttered flat pans, placing them fully an inch apart. Bake in a modâ€" erate oven, and when cold put to- gether in pairs with chocolate icing. HINTS FOR THE HOME. Mint sauce renders lamb with which it is eaten more digestible. Never overcook meat either by roasting or boiling, for by doing so much of the nourishment is lost. Steel that is exposed to the weathâ€" er may be kept from rust by having p...â€" _m_.,...-. ... Disease takes no summer vacation. if you need flash and strength use Scott’s Emulsion summer as in winter. Sand for free sample. SCOTT 3.: BOVINE, Chemists, Toronto. Ontario. 50c. and $1.00; all druggisls. ~..r. ‘s-..-_\.z~x - [a coating of copal varnish applied appetite by swallowing at a. gulp a to it. wineâ€"glass of home-made hitters. Never add 5‘18'31' t0 batter before Dinner is the great event of the day. CPORlng’Orflt Win tum it ,hc‘avy- Food is abundant and of good qua- E’calded m'lk has the same enact on"lity; but mushrooms, onions and fat boiled batter puddings. Drink water as hot as possible early in the morning as a cure for indigestion, and again an hour beâ€" fore dinner. Remove old paint by wetting it with naphtha. If one application is not enough, repeat till the paint is dissolved. To clean Fern Potsâ€"Wash the crusted parts with diluted inuriatic acid. This loosens the crust, and good as new. Garments worn during the Ibe folded up closely for the night; play rather too important a part in the repast, and the whole is prepared with very little attention to the re- cognized principles of hvgienc. No sooner has the last dish been reâ€" moved th'air a deatlilike stillness falls upon the house. It is the time of the after-dinner siesta. The young folks go into the garden and all the members of the house- hold give way to drowsiness natur- Wllh care the pots will be made as lolly engendered by a heavy meal on a hot Sumn‘ier day. Ivanovitch re- dav tires to his own room, from which should neither be. left lying about, the flies have been carefully expelled anywhere, perhaps on the floor, nor by his pipe bearer. His wife dozes in a big aria-chair in the sitting- linstead they should be well spread room, with a pocket-handkerchief about where space allows, and shak- Sl)1‘C:1d over her face. The servants on before putting on. snore in the corridor, the garret 01‘ Another Method for Removing a the hay Shed, and even the old Stopper.â€"â€"Wrap a tick duster round Wat?“ (log in the comm. of llm yard the neck of the bottle, Shut stretches himself out at full length the end 0f the stopper “3va i“ aion the shady side of his kennel. drawer, give the bottle a gentle turn; if the stopper doesn't at once yield, put a few drops of salad Lil round lthe stopper, stand a little while, and repeat the process. . , A liquid starch gloss which we can recommend consists of live ounces of glycerine and two ounces each spermaccli, gum senegal (cheap gum arable), and borax in fortyâ€"nine ounces of water. lllix all and boil together. Two or three tablespoonâ€" i'uls of this added to four ounces of boiled starch is a good proportion. Beeswax for polishing Linoleum is excellent if Scrape one ounce of yellow soap for every two ounces of beeswax. Place all in a gallipot, cover with a little turpentine, and stand on! the stove In about two hours the house gradually i'eaw'ak'cns, doors begin to creak, the names of the various serâ€" vants are bawled out in all tones, from bass to falsetto and footsteps are heard in the yard. Soon a man of servant issues from the kitchen, bearing an enormous tea urn, which puffs like a little steam engine. The family assembles for tea. +â€"â€". A LUCKY GIRL. _._.- prepared as follow52â€" Saved. From Deadly Decline by Dr. \Villiatms. I’ink Pills. “When I think-of my former condi- tion of health,†says Miss Winnil‘red till all is dissolved, stirring with a Perry, of West River, Sheet Harbor, stick occasionally. Place a little of N.S., “I consider myself a lucky girl this on a flannel and rub the lino- leum; afterwards polish with soft and I owe my present good dusters. A white fur rug may be cleaned by I Sllll'ered almost all that one can en~ rubbing into it hot wheat flour. Spread the rug on a large deal table I was as pale as a sheet, and wasted away. The least noise would startle before commencing operations. that I am well and strong toâ€"day, entirely to Dr. Williai'ns’ Pink Pills. dure from weakness and nervousness. Should the flour not cleanse the 1111' me, and I was troubled with fainting entirely, repeat the process with dry spells, when I would suddenly lose magnesia. done with new flannel. with a clothes-brush. The rubbing should be consoiousness and drop to the floor. Shake the At other times my heart would palâ€" flour out of the rug when clean and pitate violently and cause a smother- brush ,it the right way of the fur ing sensation. Night and day my nerves were. in a terrible condition, Before using preserved vegetables and I seemed to be continually grovâ€" drain away all their liquor, place the ing Worse. No medicine that I took vegetables on a sieve or colander, helped me in the least until I began and pure boiling water over. This taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and process rids the vegetables of the after I had taken a half dozen boxes, water in which they were preserved. and which often causes taste; and boiling water also tends I felt so much better that I stopped a bitter taking them and went\on a visit to Boston. I had made a mistake, to soften the vegetables, and makes hOWOVCI‘, in stopping the Pill-‘3 t00 them more easy to cook. Preserved soon, and I began to go back to my vegetables as a rule do not, require former condition. I then called on a. to boil so long as fresh. well knOWn Boston doctor, and after A l’olish for Brown Bootsâ€"Mix one CXPIfllniIlS' WY 01130, 'tï¬lll him hOW’Dlï¬ ounce of muriatic acid, half an ounce Willlams' Pink Pills had helped me before. He told me to continue their lavender, half an ounce of gum ara- USO, Saying I could take nothing bet- Die in about one pint and a half of WY: alld I got another supply and sour skim milk. This should be ap_ soon began to regain health. I took plied to the boots with a flannel, and about eighteen boxes in all, and they when dry polish with a soft (luster. “my and completely I'll-gloved my It is a good plan to wash broWn health, and I have had no sickness ' , H boots with saddle soap about once a smw~ week, then let dry thoroughly before polishing. Dr. Williams’ Pink This can do just as much for eVery weak nervous, To Clean Your “’aterproofrâ€"Dip Filled-{wed young Woman, Who is Slip- the garment in soft cold water, then with a scrubbing-brush and yellow soap proceed having spread it flat. on the table. ping from anaemia into deadly dc- cline. They make new, rich health- to scrub it all (Nor, giving blood, and that is what every growing girl and woman must have When the dirt is removed, clip the to retain their health. It is because cloak in repeated waters to get rill these pills actually make new blood of the suds, but do not wring it. Hang up in the air or in an airy of alum, half an ounce of spirits of room to dry, but do not put it near that they strike at the root of all common ailments of life,’ such as headache and sideaclies and back- the fire. Paint or grease'spotsv may “01105: in‘ligefiti‘m. habitation of the spirits of turpentine, and common soap will perform the rest. In cleanâ€" ing any form of mackintosh [be removed by srouringâ€"drors or avoid hot water. + I HOME LIFE OF RUSSIANS. It Is Singularly Regular and Monâ€" otonous. The daily life of a Russian couple of the wealthier 'classcs is singularly. onl-.,- with the. changing seasons, says the New York I-i-erald. In Summer the lord of the house gets up about heart, kidney troubles, sciatica, rheumatism, neuralgia, S t. Vitus Dance, and paralysis. lut only the always genuine pills can do this, and the sick one should see that the full name “Dr. Williams' I’ink Pills for Pale People" is printed on the wrap- per around every box. Don’t let any- one persuade you to take anything else. Sold by all dealers or sent by mail at, 50c a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by writing the Dr. Williams†Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. . +â€"â€"â€"- ONTARIO’S RESERVE. 7 o'clock and puts on, with the as- Lake Nepigon FOIeSt Area. Con- sistance of his valet do. chambre, a simple costume. consisting chiefly of a faded, plentifully stained dressing tains 7,590 Square Miies. A detailed description of the Nepi- gomi. Having nothing in particular gon Forest reserve, which was creâ€" to do. he sits down at the open winâ€" dow and looks into the yard. Toâ€" ated by an 'orilerâ€"inâ€"Council of the Ontario Cabinet recently, shows it to ward 9 o'clock tea is announced, and be the largest area of the kind yet icgilai and monotonous, varying he goes into the dining-roou‘iâ€"a long, set aside in' such a manner. Its area narrow apartmcnt, with bare wooden is 7,500 square miles, including Lake floor and no furniture but a table Nepigon, and chairs. ere he finds his wife, which, with the rivers which feed it, forms the greatest with the tea urn before her. In a trout fishing ground in, the. world. Its few minutes lenter the room, kiss their papa's lhand and take their places around the table. As this morning meal consists merely of bread and tea, itl does not last long and all dispersc‘ to their several occupations. I The head of the. house begins the ;labors of the day by resuming his lseat at the open window and having lhis Turkish pipe filled and lighted 3by a boy whose special function is lto keep his master’s pipe in order. E'l‘he housewife spends her morning in in :more active way. As soon as the. breakfast table has been cleared Sll’t goes to the larder, takes stock of= the provisions, arranges the meals and gives the cook the necessary maâ€" terials, with detailed instructions as .to how they are to be prepared. The lrest of the morning she. devotes to lher other household duties. I Toward 1 o'clock dinner is anâ€" liiounced, and Ivanovitch' prepares his, the younger children land area is estimated at 5,- 000 square miles. The soil of the reserve is not gen- lerally suited for agriculture, but is heavily tini'bered. On it are found spruce, jack-pine. tamarac, cedar, balm of Gilead, poplar, white birch, and some scattered groves of white and red pine. The spruce are the largest: in the province, some of them being thirty inches in diameter. In shape the reserve is almost s-rluare. Starting at the southâ€"east angle of the Township of Ledger, in the Thunder Bay district, cast of lNepigon River, the. boundary runs duc- cast 22 miles. Thence a. line runs north 98 miles, west 73 miles, then due. south 98 miles, and from there east along the south bounâ€" daries of the 'J‘ownships of Purdam and Ledger a distance of 51 miles. It thus includes a strip of territory around the borders of the lake about 2.0 miles wide, Iâ€"__L health u: '3' i. $21511? 3:3. L ; vein .qaZ‘J Show the Favorite risk of Milena Black, Mixed-or Natural Green. Sealed Packets only HIGHEST AWARD ST. LOUIS l904. amr “.2: â€"â€"_._. N will be a big day for me; keep eve‘y- a 1 body away.†Some days passed oe- â€"â€" fore he was well enough to get EXCITING TIME IN AN ENG- about, but, now he is better, and told LISH CIRCUS' his friends that he felt his wuakness __ passing away. He is reticen‘; about The Brute mauled His Trainer and his recollection of what occurred to ‘ Stalnpeded the him during the trance, but there is . no doubt that he sincerely believes he Alldlence- had marvelous visions. He is a. dea- con of the little Welsh Baptist chapel . H, ,.‘ , _ 1 _ at Eglwysbach, and related his $3135“: “$110â€? gmkt‘gglj 'Dmby- dreams to his brotherâ€"occupants of h' 1° '0’“ 0“ “nests: , the “big pew†(luite modestly, and llolla‘utmmf 1:0" the CKIllb‘tlon with every indication of sincerity. were just beginning when one.of the On a recent Sunday he went to the elephants, Without the slightest chapel fox. the ï¬rst time since the “Timing. ferocmusly attaCde 111$ visitation, but he took no part in tl:&_11101‘. Frank Built‘lï¬ The brute the service, merely remaining quietly ‘ \‘iCiously swung round his trunk and in his place till it was over. felled Bailey to the -g‘l‘oun(l. Then A. similar strange illness befel him he advanced, and to the horror of nine years ago, and as he was recov; the audiencc,_pressed his kneemon the cring he declared in writing that he body of the helpless trainer, who could see heaven, and sent for the cried loudly for help. preacher from Forddlas. The pastor With a solicitude that was almost actually professed to see the vision human. the other elephant ran up, which Mr. Mr. Davies described to butth against the attacking animal him. and When he said so Mr- DilVlOS and forced him off the body of his “'85 able t0 SIlUilk for the ï¬rst time victim_ Several attendants now after the seizure. For some months rushed forward and carried Bailey Past, Prior to his NCO-“t trance. MP. out of the arena, and the erring ele- DaVie-S believed that he 551W “13 ï¬gure pliant seemingly conscious of his of a man in the stable yard when he guilt/quietly folloxved them outside. Went out to gwe provender to 1‘“ Every onethought the danger was horses at mght' over but a succession of terrifying â€""‘+‘â€"â€"â€"â€"‘ S‘iulllteti’.’§:..?.2‘él 'glfoli.‘2§°“€hilâ€yili Th3 Hglllg Bank 0f Canada A powerful elephant ran riot at beast was still in a. bad humor. BROKE Till-{OUGH TENT. Then there was a tearing of canvas and the elephant thrust his head and trunk through the hole he had made and again roared at the audience. A panic ensued. The spectators fearing that the elephant would burst through, made a wild dash for the exits. It is remarkable that in the The first General Meeting of the Shareholders of ’lhe Home Bank of Canada was held at the Head Ofï¬ce of The Home Savings &. Loan Comâ€" pany, Limited, on Saturday, June 10th at 12 o'clock noon. There was a' large attendance of Shareholders, almost all the Subscribed Capital stumpch no one summed serious in_ being represented, either in person or jury. by proxy. 1Ailnongst fpresleiciit. An attempt was made to ca tum were notice(â€"Eug::iic we 0, 1.“ the animal. but he careercd iiIadly Wm'd,Stock'. J‘P†rhomaï¬ Fly’ln’ '1‘ round the field, and eventually seized j“ “00¢ L; G' G_°°d0r_},mm' M“ J‘ Mr. George Coleman, the manager of inane-‘5 , 9E? Llellt"(’01' Jaime") the circus, with his trunk, flung him Mason" Illos' Long" an' J' J' l‘oy' to the ground, and gored him about R' 1" bmlth (051†’3‘ Hammond)’ J- the body with his tusks. 1" Mln‘rayk _Isaa° “Moody' , N‘ UltimatelV the animal Was paciï¬ed Gooch, “illiamu Copke, ‘ l’lilliam and secured in “011$ Crocker, John White, (r. C. Gilmour, Medical assistance was obtained. 13' D' Brown’ J' 00,01)“ Mason' WId‘ and the injured trainer was removed mm: Hawke’ ‘Ias‘ “mam L',J' 009‘ to the inf‘irmar'y and the manager to grav?’ IE; 1" btregt' “1‘ T‘ harm‘th his hotel. They are in a. critical con- 1L q' heuy' Wm' Pagc' Matthew (lition, but the doctors believe they O'connf’r' A' MCC‘rlb?’ J‘ J' Faltc‘ will bolh' recover. well, 0. E. P. McWilliams, (Hamil- ton), John Erz, J. J, Doyle, J. F. _MILITARY FUNERAL2 Logan, .1. I". Franks (Manufactur- A ï¬ring" Party “Om the 10031 V01“ ers’ Life). On motion the chair was “mumps {md ycomenr-V Who are 9â€" taken by Mr. Eugene O’Keefe, chair‘ camped 1†Chatsworth Park was at' man Provisional "Board of Directors, terwards procured. ’l‘hey formed a and the General Manager, Limit... row of khakiâ€"clad men. A. short Col. James Mason, mica as seal-e- distance away the doomed elephant lull.“ was secured with massive chains and rl'h'e meeting was called for the I‘OPCS. . l purpose of electing Directors and to At a safe (“Stance in “13 l‘Oal‘ pass byâ€"laws. The Chairman in his thousands of townspeople and vilâ€" remarks stated that Over $500,000 lasers stood intently gazing on of the capital stock of the bank had these unusual proceedings. The ele- bccn subscribed, and that, $250,000 Dhlmt Was fOI'COd ‘60 his 1'111005, the in cash had been paid in to the Min- order to ï¬re was given. and a mo- is-ter of Finance and Receiverâ€"Generâ€" ment later he Toned OVOI' dcad- oi, as required by the Bank Act; that _____+.._.___._. so soon as the other requirements of _ the Bank Act had been conmlicd I _ ) 1'! A TV“) DAYS TAANCE- with the certiï¬cate authorizing L the bank to begin business would be isâ€" sued by the Treasury Board. This Would be done by the end of the preâ€" sent month, but the bank could not the villagers of .Eglwysbach’ new. begin rbusiness until their new prom- Talycaln' was investigated by a re_ ises, Res. 8 and 10 Ixmg street west, porter of The Liverpool Post-Mercury were “may: Pl‘OlJal-lly in the C'fll'ly recently. Eglwysbach is in a pictiu'eâ€" part Of August that “1011 UK! tl‘unS‘ sque valley, which lies between the if†from the Home SflVlnf-ZS 59' 1-“51†hills of Denblghshirc, which form the Company would be consummated. eastern boundary of the Vale of and the bank would begin with its Conway. It; is off the beaten tl-ack’dlcad office and Toronto branch at and in the main street is an oldâ€"lS an“ 10 King street West. and Wit-ll world village pinup. Strange Experience of Welsh Bap- tist Deacon. A strange story, which is exciting Just, oppositc:two branches, one at 78 Church the pump is the home of Mr. William 1 Street, the present head office of the Davies, a well-toâ€"do coal. merchantlllome . Savings 451: Loan Company, and carrier, who is married and hasland the other at the. present branch three grown-up daughters. Six wccksl “A†of the company, No. 522 Queen ago, when he should have been ready street west, corner IIackch street, to leave for 'l‘alycafn, he was miss-land would have at the beginning ed, and. search being made. he wasgabout $3,500,000 of deposits, and discovered lying qiutc unconscmus on ; over 9,000 depoqitOl-q 'fh'c ell-Lip. the IlOOI O‘f‘lhe. 115137201150 91 balm-lint!“ also s'nted that too stock He pas calllcd IMO t 0 1101150. 311d all‘IOOliS of the ban'; were still open cyclist went post haste to summon a'fm- guqu-lpllmlg . . . I‘ll‘L _' .‘ ‘ " afictméqgg- glass“ iiï¬ï¬gnlvï¬glgoln flhe usual by~laws of a bank were ‘3’: ‘ _ ~ . p ' K3,then passed and adopted, and the found lying in a stupor or ti'ance,.l~ollo“.ln,, Ploclml m,.,,cl0,.§._M0,.ql.g and it was very difï¬cult, if not im-llqugenp lem S lelvn'n possible, to administer restoratives.2\;. ..l ,1. I '1 v‘ ~a‘ : ’1 ‘ n . - - . . I 11.! » tom, J.l., lhos. ]\. hood, lhe tiace continued till the .lfl‘ltlftvilg C (.0 a lh M- T H C . . . * , . 1. . "‘ - 'I‘ - evening, when Mr. DaVies recovered F and' (if tang,’ ,‘ ' 'aIIR'lJ’ ‘ u I I n i ‘ K 4 ‘ - _ n . l n . h suflimently to take a little nourish-' ‘ ' IL†' 0- ’111‘09 J ason, mcnt, but he could not Speak. l’>Ie,l:1}il-Splmtm' hem-.9; also General Manâ€" however, wrote on a slip of a or. . . which was brought to him that) I)hel At a SUDSNI‘KT'.“ "Hiding or um thought he would be able to speak in . new lioard of Inverters Mr; O'Keefe fourteen days_ Something. secumd tulwos elect-ed .l'res1dcnt and .Mr. l-‘lynn affect his threat for the full fortnight l \ we'l “A'S‘d'int†so that he could not articulate a " +~.. ’ word. "All his requirements he made: THOSE DEA“ FRHF‘XDS‘ known by “'l‘iting‘ them down! Stellaâ€""I have to be very circum- Strangely enough, the power oil slicet since my engagement. Tom's speech returned to him on the night awfully jealous.†of the fourteenth day, just as he had Maudeâ€"“tbolish boy! I'm sure l . , . . :Sflltl would be the case. The nightiyou "Cum. have a Chanel, to glv,‘ him IDUIUX'O this he V-‘l'OtO. “'l‘o-morrow any cause for jealoust " “Au‘AAA‘A -«4 AMAuAA‘A-‘AA‘AAI