l .i; ++++++++++++++++++++++ that its liars ‘ VEGETARIAN DINNER. Cream of potato soup. Macaroni with tomato and cheese. String beans. Cauliflower with mayonnaise. Il’afcrs. Cheese. Strawberry Shortcake. Coffee. is richer even than cabbage in proteid, the nutriment value of cabbage being one part. proteid to four of carbohydrate, so that cauliflower scrved'on entire wheat bread, toasted and enriched with a white sauce to which the yolks of two or more eggs have been added, would seem to provide the full measure of needlul proteid, and in a form that even the most pro- nounced opponent. of the vegetarian) might -::cnsidcr satisfactory. If properly taken care of after the meal cold vegetables dressed as salads are most appetizing at this Cauliflower season. The chief desiderata are tenderness of the vegetables, just enough dressing and no more, and a chilled state when served. Cheese combines well with many vegetables, as it does also with grains and macaroni. When delicately cooked and diluted with appropriate ingre- clients it may be used, but more sparingly, than in the season when the function of digestion is more vigorous. Tomatoes with Macaroniâ€"Cook oneâ€"half pound macaroni in rapidly boiling salted water until tender. scald one pint cream over hot water;- add half pound cheese cut into thin shavings, and stir until the cheese is melted; add one-fourth cup butter and a dash of salt and paprica. :I-Iave ready, baked in a serving dish, ï¬ve or six tomatoes with the skin and core removed before baking; dispose the macaroni in a wreath around the tomatoes, pour the cheese mixture over the whole, and serve hot. Cream of Potato Soupâ€"Boil ï¬ve potatoes and an onion five minutes; drain, add two quarts of boiling water, and cook until tender, then pass them with the liquid through a sieve. Season with salt and pepâ€" per, an-(l stir in the yolks of two eggs beaten with ,a cup of rich cream. Do not allow the soup to boil, but stir and cook until the egg becomes slightly cooked. Have ready a small turnip and half a carâ€" rot, cut in straws and cook until tender, separately in boiling salted water. Add these to the soup toâ€" gether with one or tWO tablespoons cooked peas or string beans out small. WITH LAMB LEFT OVERS. Lamb Croquettesâ€"Two cups finely chopped cooked lamb, one cup boiled rice, one tablespoon chopped parsley, one tablespoon lemon, juice, two tablespoons flour, one cup cream, one tablespoon butter, salt and pep- per to taste. Scald the milk; rub the butter and flour together until smooth, add to the scalded milk, and stir until it thickens. Mix the meat, rice, parsley, and seasoning Well together. Mix with the thickâ€" ened milk and cool. When cool, form into cone shaped croquetted, cover with egg and bread crumbs, and fry in smoking hot fat. Curry of Lambâ€"Two cups chopped cooked lamb, two tablespoons flour, two cups stock, one tablespoon orange juice, one-half teaspoon chopped mint, two‘ tablespoons butâ€" ter, one teaspoon curry powder, salt; and pepper to taste. Erown the butter, add the curry powder, meat and mint, and cook ten minutes or until the meat is well heated and A tic 'ling in the throat; hoarscncssat times; adccp breath irritates it;â€"â€"these are features of a threat cough. They’re very cicâ€" ceptivc and :1 cough 111135- ture won’t cure them. You want something that will heal the inflamed membranes, enrich the lood and tone upiflthc system ' ' dbeifr s. is just such a remedy. It has \vondcrï¬il healing and nourishing power. .Rcmovcs the cause of the cough and the whole system is given new strength and vigor . Sand fer fru sump}: SCOTT €99 EOE/NE, C/Jemlrtx T H "In, Om‘. 50c. aniï¬â€˜nso. ' A! druggisls 'WHWW E ias they provea very valuable :- .nurc. ‘to have a garden should ever throw away soap suds. shrimps i j l dry. ‘ i :raise the nap. l Physicians assert that baked petaâ€" !toes are more nutritious than these icooked in any other way, ~3ll‘ictl ones are the most diï¬cult to ': ldigest. crumbs, crumbs. quick oven and serve. 'SPINACH; ' ' In cooking spinach in a large seasoned. Add the flour, stir until brown, add the stock and stir until the sauce has thickened. Season and serve in a rice boiler. In place of a rice boiler, one cup boiled rice and one of meat may be used, following the directions given above. Pilafl‘ of Lambâ€"One-half cup rice, two cups cold chopped lamb, two tablespoons butter. Boil the rice in plenty of boiling, salted water twenty minutes or until tender. Drain and mix with the ï¬nely chopâ€" ped meat, which should be seasoned with salt and pepper and a few drops celery extract. Add the but- ter, melted, and when the meat is heated, turn the rice and meat into a greased tin mold. Place in the oven a few minutes, or until the pilaff keeps its form when turned out. of the mold. Mutton Scallop.â€"Two cups ï¬nely chopped cooked meat, one cup to- mato sauce, one-half cup bread crumbs, one tablespoon butter. Melt the butter, add the bread crumbs, and stir until they are thoroughly greased; season the meat with salt, pepper, a drop or two of onion juice or other suitable seasoning. Fill a. greased baking dish with alternate layers of the meat, sauce and bread covering the top with the Bake twenty minutes in a quantity of water, which must be drained from it, the potash salts, its most valuable constituents, are lost. Tender spinach will cook in fifteen or twenty minutes; if attention can be given to the process use a little more water and less heat. Spinach Ballsâ€"Melt two tableâ€" spoons of flour and half teaspoon of sugar. When blended add one tableâ€" spoon cream and threeâ€"quarters of a spinach, chopped fine. Beat woll, remove from fire, add tWo eggs, one at a time. Season with salt and pepper to taste, and a few grains of mace. Butter one tablespoon and fill with the spinach mixture, making it level with the edge of the spoon, and poach in a saucepan of boiling water four or five minutes or until firm. The water must not boil hard, but simply sim- mer gently at the sides. Six or more balls may be cooked at one Let drain in a colander while the cup co okcd time. making a cream sauce; reheat balls in the sauce and serve. ll‘rcnch Spinachâ€"’l‘he French stew spinach in a little milk or stock, or in a little water to which a piece of butter has been added. The broth is served with the spinach. It may be needless to add that spinach must be thoroughly washed. HINTS FOR HOME LIFEa A little salt rubbed on earthen- ware pudding dishes will take away brown spots. A new clothesline if boiled for half an hour will become tougher, last longer, and will not tangle. A slice of raw tomato rubbed on to ink stains on a white cloth or the hands will remove the stains. The smell of tobacco in a room will be gone in the morning if a basin of water be placed there over night. Save scraps of ham, tongue or pressed heel for they help to season forcemeat and make excellent relish- es. Cut off the flap of sirloin of beef and sprinkle salt over it if the weaâ€" ther be Warm, then boil and serve cold. ' All herbs used for medicine should be gathered on a fine day and be well dried in the sun, spread out on paper. In making buttonholes, if the cot- ton is passed will prevent much stronger. Chamois gloves are useful wear for a railway journey, for they can be washed overnight ready for the next morning. . Make. tea with soft water as often as possible, for it softens and opens the tea leaves more thoroughly than hard water. Milk is not so likely to turn sour if kept. in a low, wide pan, but it turns very quickly if kept narrow vessel. Patent leather can be revived and brightened by rubbing with a linen rag soaked with milk. Then polish with a soft, dry duster. After frying do not pour off fat until it has cooled a little, then through beeswax it its knotting and be in a long, the and be careful .to keepback the ‘ {sedimentï¬ whiCh throw into the pig- ‘ ’tub. « Soap suds should never be wasted, _ ms- I‘lO one who is lucky enough The clear juiceflof one lemon, taken Without cugarpin a wineglassfulof tCold water, is a thorough remedy for i[muddy complexions and erruptions ion the skin. ‘ 1 . _, -. i A felt hat may be stiffened by I tplacing a wet cloth on the brim, and massing a hot iron over this till it is I Pulling away the cloth will and that 1 Piano keys can be cleaned as can iany old ivory by being rubbed with ‘muslin dipped in alcohol. If very yellow use a piece of flannel maintenâ€" ed. with cologne water. If new tinware be rubbed over with helping me. - My appetite began to improve, and my food to digest bet- 7 ter. I used the pills for a couple of months and I was well. Now I am always ready for my meals and. I can fresh lard and thoroughly heated in the even before it is used it will never rust afterwards, no matter how much it is put in water. Braid for trimming washing frocks should be dipped in .cold water and pressed dry on the wrong side with a rather hot iron before being used, to avoid shrinkage afterwards. _____.._+_._.._._ PEARL IN THIS TOOTH. Trick Played Paris Dentist. A val’iation of the pearl in the oy- ster trick has been successfully play- ed on a prominent dentist of Paris. A man who said a hard substance had sunk in a decayed tooth while eating an oyster called on him. The dentist extracted the substance, and found it to be a large pearl. The patient then declare-d that'hc had left his purse at home, and begged the dentist to accept the pearl as his fee. The dentist was too honest to take so valuable a jewel, and gave the man $10 for it. When the client had gone he discovered that the pearl was not; genuine. He gave chase and captured the man. At the police station the-man conâ€" fessed that he had played the same trick eight times successfully that day. Successful on 0. .____¢___â€"â€" BLOOD DISEASES. Can all be Cured by the Use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. More than half the disease in the world is caused by bad bloodâ€"weak blood, blood poisoned by impurities. Bad blood is the one cause of all the headaches and backaches, the lum- bago and rheumatism, the neuralgia and sciatica, the debility and bilious- ness and indigestion, the paleness and pimples and all the disfiguring skin diseases like eczema, that show how impure the blood actually is, It is no use trying a different medi- cine for each disease, because they all spring from the one causeâ€"bad blood. To cure disease you must get right down to the root of the trouble in the blood. That is what Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills do. They make new rich, blood. Common medicines only touch the symptoms of disease. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills root out the cause. _That is why those oills cure when doctors and common medicines fail. Here is pos- itive proofzâ€"“I suffered agony from indigestion," says Mr. Fred. Fillis, of Grand Desert, NJ). "I had no appetite for my meals and no energy ITS SUPERIORITY "I / IS GUARANTEE. Sa.tsown 50ch only sealed in lead packets at 40c, 50c, and 60s per lb. By all grocers. Highest Award, - - St. Louis, I384. w tiEVER Blight liilElJES TIE-IE COURAGE AND PATIEN CE WHICH THEY SHOVJ. __ A Kong-Kong Bank Was Robbed. After Three Months of Hard Labor. In the whole catalogue of during bank robberies there is no story more amazing than that of the robbery at the I’Iongâ€"Kong branch of the Bank of Western India, for not only did the case display the most astonishâ€" ing daring, skill, and patience on the part of the robbers, but their suc- cess has never been equalled by other bank-breakers. It was generally understood that the sales and vaults of the Western Bank were about the strongest ever built. and the robbers, of course, knowing this, decided to attack the bank in a way they believed the builders had never anticipated, and therefore not provided for. They rented a house. on the opposite side of the street and settled down to live like simpleâ€"minded gentlemen. Some three months later the mana- ger of the bank had occasion to visit the Vaults, and to his utter amaze- ment and consternation he discovered that the principal safe, which a day or two before had contained upwards of $250,000 IN BULLION and other Valuables. had been emp- tied oi everything. It did not, take long to throw the responsibility for this astonishing change on the simâ€" pleâ€"minded gentlemen over the way, but when a visit was paid to their' abode it was found that they too had disappeared. While living quietly and respectably evincing no inclination to hide themâ€" selves, but showing their faces freâ€" COHStant dIStl'CSS» and everythmg I quently at the windows and walking ate lay like lead on my chest. times I felt my idea burden. I was always .loctoring, but it did me no good. Then a little book came into my hands, and I read that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills would cure indi- gestion. I got them and began tak- for my work; my stomach caused me ing them, and I soon found they were eat anything, and all the credit is due to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. I keep the pills in the house all the time, and I occasionally take a few as a precaution. I can honestly -adâ€" vise all dyspeptics to use this mediâ€" cine, as I am sure it will cure them as it did me.†Give Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills a fair trial and they will cure you, simply because they make that rich, strong blood that diSCaso cannot resist. See that you get the genuine pills, with “Dr. Pink the full name Williams’ At in the streets like the most honest folk, the robbers constructed a tun- nel connecting the basement of their domicile with the vaults of the bank. To accomplish this they dug a shaft 'down to a sufficient depth to enable them to tunnel under the road with- out being heard by passengers or risking a collapse of the earth; and they cut an upward shaft giving them access to the vaults, where, one day when the bank was closed and they knew the safes wore loaded with valuables, they quietly broke in and cleared away everything worth taking. . One can easily appreciate the cour- age and patience of these men. They had to cut a tunnel between 80 feet and 90 feet long, sufï¬ciently high and wide to allow the passage of two men carrying a heavy chest; they had to dispose of the immense amount of earth displaced in cutting the tunnel without anyone knowing; and after some twelVe weeks’ incesâ€" sant labor in cutting the tunnel they Pius for Pale Peopleâ€, on the Wrap‘ had yet to make a way through per around every box. You can get them from your medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing the Dr. Williams Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. -43...-“ A BISIIOP’S STORY. It; would indeed be a queer bishop who could not tell a good story on himself. The late Bishop Dudley of Kentucky was wont to relate vith much relish an interesting experience which he once had in connection with wall‘ies. At a ï¬ne old where he was a frequent guest; waliles good. One morning, as brealfa:~1t drew near an end, the. tidy little linenâ€" coated black boy who served at table approached Disnop Dudley and asked in a low voice: "Bishop, won’t 37’ have ï¬e?†"Yes," said the‘genial bishop, “I believe I will.†' "Dey ain’ no' mo',†then said the Virginia homestead the were aIWays remarkably ’n’er waf- nice little black boy.‘ "Well," exclaimed the ' surprised reverend gentleman, "if there aren’t- any'm‘oro waffles, what made you ask Vmo if'I wanted another one?†"Bishop," explained the little black ‘boy, "you‘S"._,dcng:_ at ten a’rc‘atly,' an’ I thoughts-y."'-wouldn’t 1’! want 'no mo . . j; '- ‘ HOT '50- FAR WRONG. ‘ .» A ‘HJ ~“A typographical error,†said a physician, ,"nearly'cdused me once to sue a'Chicagoxpap‘er for, libel. I was called to “Chicago to consult on a. sis-ions c'swc.’ A"number of .reportâ€" ers were handling the case, and one of thém.wcre about me: . “ (The doctor felt the patient’s pulse and then prescribed for h-im.’ "But the competitor made this harmless sentence read: “ "The doctor nurse and then prescribed for him. felt the patient’s I). THE CONCRETE FLOOR of the bank and break into a safe of exceptional strength. The cutting of the upward shaft under the bank particularly must have been an anxâ€" ious task for the robbers, since at any moment they might have be- trayed themselves to someone above; and it speaks volumes for the cure with which they labored that no one suspected them or what was happen- ing until they had made their escape with $250,000 worth of valuables, the carrying away of which, apart from anything else, must have been far from a simple matter. 'An equally surprising font was perâ€" formed by the thieves who $200,000 worth of diamonds from a Kimberley hank some years ago. While the tunnel in this case, was; only about 120%. long, owingr to the fact that the thieves were able to avail themselves of a big main-drain to approach the bank secretly, other difficulties that had to be overcome were much more formidable than in the Ilongâ€"Kongwcas‘e. The safe in which the diamonds vere deposited was one of such remarkable strength that before. entering: .on their enterprise 'the thieves evidently decided it would be hopeless to atâ€" tempt to break into it at the sides or door, as the work might occupy too much time, and that it would necessary for them to attack it at the back, which, being built into a wall, they could work upon after bank hours, perhaps for days to- gether, if necessary. 'And this deâ€" cision was arrived at despite their knowledge that the wall into which the. safe was built was 8ft thick and BUILT OF SOLID GRAHI’J‘E. They started operations from‘ the drain running down below the street on which the bank fronted, "by dig- ging a tunnel 20ft. long on a level with the bank’s vaults. This tunnel, cut through exceedingly difï¬cult. ground, opened on the foundations cf the building, which were, on the one hand, too deep to be passed ï¬nish \and on the other hand so thick and stole l I the net and raise it. solidâ€"4ft. of the strongest masonry â€"t.hat ninety-nine men of a hundred would have abandoned the enterprise, if only because of the risk of cutting a passage through such a wall beâ€" neath the feet of an oiiice full of clerks and everâ€"passing pedestrians in the street. But the thieves fortune in diamonds in were men not disheartened, had a View and frightened or they not cut a way through the foundations, but through two other walls little less formidable, before they came up- on the iinal wall into which the safe was built; and they made a way- thrOUgh this latter and the massive steel back of the safe in such a quct workmanlike style that not a easily __and only soul suspected anything was amiss until one of the bank oliicials went to the safe and found it cleared of $200,000 worth of EXQUISITE DIAMONDS. Against these two astonishingly successful enterprises stands the at« tempt on the Mexican branch of the National Bank of America, when fail- ure attended the thieves, not because they were any less daring .or manlike, but owing to the bad luck. They constructed a tunnel from a house they rented to the vaults of the bank, but failed by a few hours to l'CaCh the valuablcs, Worth an enormous sum of money, owing to an accident. It chanced that when these men had tunnelled a distance of some thirty yards, and arrived just with»- in the vault where the sale was, some of the beams they had used to shore up the tunnel collapsed, causing a .slight subsidence of the bank’s founâ€" work- sheerest dations. At the same time the man- ager happened, quite contrary to his custom, to go to his ofï¬ce, and he Was surprised to find a difficulty in opening the door of the room. A cursory examination was sufï¬cient to show him that since closing time the slightly, the wall of his room had sunk causing the door floor. Probably this circumstance alone would not have shattered the thieves’ scheme, since the manager would have waited till the morning to call a builder in, by which time the safe would have been emptied. But while he was considering the matter the thieves in the vault below were mak- ing frantic efforts to repair the dam- }age to the tunnel sufficiently to (ms t able them to complete their task be fore daybreak, and the manager heard them working beneath his feet. The consequence was, he immediately took a light and a revolver and dc; 'scended to the vault. Two men sutk denly appeaer before him. He shot one dead, but the other disappeared in a manner which utterly baffled his comprehension till he searched the vault and came on the mouth of the tunnel, which, of course, explained everythingâ€"London Titâ€"Bits. ' 4...! .r... SM LLING DAISIES . to press on â€" The well baby is never a. cross baby. When baby cries or is frctful, it is taking the only way it can to llet mother know that there is someâ€" 'thing wrong. That something is lprobably some derangement of the {stomach or bowels, or perhaps the {pain of teething. These troubles are {speedily _, removed and cured by Baby’s Own ’l.‘ablets, and baby smiles againâ€"in fact there's a smile in every (loge. lures. Mary E. Adams, Lake George, NIL, safis:~â€"“I have found Iiaby‘s Own Tablets so good for the ills of little ones that I would not like. to be without them.â€- 'l‘hat- is the experience of all mothers who have tried the tablets, and they. iknow ' for it is l . this medicine is sues, ,guaranteed to contain no opiate or . soothing stuff. Equally I l ' poisonous . ¢â€"-â€""â€" SWAI‘JS' LONG S‘s’r‘lll. l good for 1119 child just born or. well advanced in years. Sold by, all druggists or mailed at 25 cents a box by writing the Cir“ Williams Medicine 00., lirocluv‘illc, Ont. Two Australian black swans were recently picked up off l-i'orfoll-L Isl'dn'd in the .i".L:.I.~ifâ€"ze. ’I‘hey must'lsive traV~ cited 41-00 Inilc-f'l. The birds were in a very exhausted condition, but after a freshâ€"water bath and plenty of food they ranch/311.. The black swan is a powerful swimmer, but. «100 miles at ‘sea is a long swim, even for him. THE Dennison tum, Near the Tonga Islands, in the .I’aciiic, some time ago, a lTsr'n net was sunk 23,000 feet. below the stir- face. That is the deepest haul ever made. It tool: a whole day to sin}; life. was found even at that depth, over four miles, where the temperature was just above freezing and the pressure 3,; 009 lbs. to the square inch. .. was: .; .