. . . 11,â€. ‘ H‘r‘ï¬l'-7:"â€%".u"lv ‘ '_"'v:l“i~‘,;{ii.- *7"! iii! home needs. Free for the asking. tr: irï¬xwzï¬ii'ï¬ _++++++++++++++++++++++‘l of fine stale crumbs or part crumbs that its this :++++++++++++++++++++. LEFT OVERS IN CUPS. Chicken in Riceâ€"Chop fine enough left over poultry to fill a small cup, cook a cup of salt, and a generous spoonful of but- :Eer. If you have a little stock it is ‘better to ï¬nish it off by simmering gently in it. ‘Moldvthe rice in cups and scoop out a little of the inside. Mix the chopped chicken with a little cold gravy or if yen haven’t this, make a sauce by browning a little grated onion in two tablespooni‘uls of butter and thicken it with a table- spoonful of flour. Add to this stock, milk or strained tomato, as most conâ€" +++++++++ ++++++++l+ 4. + Venient, or if there is a small quan-, tity of the chicken gravy, add it to] the white sauce instead of the toma- to. Mix only a little of the sauce with the chicken, pile it lightly into the rice cups, sprinkle bread crumbs, over it, aad brown for a minute un- der the broiler or in the oven. Serve with the rest of the sauce dipped around them. flash in Baked Potatoesâ€"A small quantity of almost any kind of meat is requier for this dish. Choose half a dozen round potatoes of equal size, wash them perfectly clean, and bake. Cut each one in two, scoop out the interior heat it until smooth and light, with salt, pepper, one ounce of butter, and the yolk of an egg to every three potatoes. Put a spoon- ful of the prepared potato into each half skin, then a spoonful of the fineâ€" ly minced and seasoned meat, and pile up with the potato. Put in the oven pile up until the tops are brown and bake quickly. Fish With Mayonuaiseâ€"Tliis is a good way of employing an almost in- iinitesimal quantity of fish. First, place in little china or paper rainc- kins a layer of broken lettuce, light- ly dressed with oil, vinegar, pepper, and salt. Next add a layer of mineâ€" ed cold boiled potato, also marinated with oil and Vinegar. On this place a little heap of flaked salmon, white- iish, trout, lobster, or crab. Put a teaspoonful of mayonnaise on top, and garnish with a stuffed olive. Peas in Carrot Cupsâ€"Scrape corâ€" rots, slicing on the bottom so they will stand up, and cut off to the height of small cups. Cook both tops and ends until tender and chop the smaller pieces or cut them in dice. Add cream to canned peas from which you have washed off the juice, or to a “left over†of peas, and thicken it. Add the chopped carrots and serve. them in the stem ends which you have hollowed out. Lamb in Coquillcs.â€"â€"’l"hese little shells may be served hot or cold, and are delicious in combination with cold lamb. Chop the meat ï¬ne remove any skin or gristle, mix it with some aspic jelly or a cup of gelatin which you have molded, with some well. seasoned stock. Line the shells with cucumber pickle chopped fine, put in the meat and jelly, and sprinkle with chopped mint and a teaspoonfu] of mayonnaise. St} NDAY DINNER. Cream of celery soup. Roast veal. Baked egg plant. Potato croquettes. Stuffed peppers. Wafers. Cheese. Coffee. Apple dumplings. Roast Vealâ€"The best part roasting is the tenderloin or kidney part. Like all white meats, veal needs to be thoroughly cooked, and should never be served rare. Sprink‘e the veal to be roasted with salt and pepper and spread the top thinly with butter. (look slowly. pounds of veal will require about one hour to cook. Serve with the gravy in a sauce dish. Gravy left over, when cold, makes a jelly, which can be served the next day with the cold meat. THIS HANDSOME Willi Exactly like'cut. built of solid oak, hand carved polished, ï¬tted with velour cushions, best quality in assort- ed colors. splendid proportions, forfable back, is adjustable to four po- sitions, with brass mounted on easy running casters. Morris value cannot be purchas- ed elsewhere for $10.50. Our special price Send for Our Large Illustrated FURNWURE GATALOGUE Containing nearly 500 illustrations of newest designs in furniture for the home and showing a saving of from 20 to 30 per cent. on purchases of WEE distill Wiii‘iifiifiï¬ 9% timited rice’ Season it Wi{hitopped with a half Three f M95 Frames staunchly and large reversible The design is new and of broad and com- adjusling rod and A Chair of equal less than gift “K†Canada. I Joli-ll. " and some chopped cold bacon. Refill the halves, dot the top of each with bits of butter, and l)1'0“'ll in a quick oven. Stuffed Peppersâ€"If any cold meat remains from Saturday chop and use it, Well seasoned and mellowed with melted dripping or butter, as a stuf- ï¬ng for the peppers for dinner; otherâ€" wise cold hoininy or rice or stale bread ï¬nely crumbled may be used. Chopped parsley, onion, curry, or other seasonings may be added at Ipleasare, and each filled pepper is teaspoonful of When the oven is hot it 1's lwell to pour a little stock in the Ibaking pan, but do not have it over Ihalf an inch in depth. i butter. "â€" CARROTS . Carrots are a great skin beautif‘ier and should be served frequently. Baked Carrotsâ€"Cut young carrots 1 in dice; place in a baking dish, sprin- 'kling each layer with a little salt and pepper and putting here and there bits of butter. Cover the whole {with milk. Set the dish into a pan lcontaining hot water and bake till i tender. When they have become soft lcover the top with bread crumbs and "bits of butter and brown it. Carrots in Croninâ€"Scrape the earâ€" lrots; cut into slices or strips; put into a sauce pan with plenty of waâ€" l l f ter and a spoonful of salt. Boil slowly. When tender drain; add a 'tablespoonful of butter, into which a little flour has been rubbed, pepper and salt, if necessary; last of all the cream. Let it boil just long enough to cook the flour. Serve hot. The butter and flour may be omitted, but they will be needed if milk is used instead of cream. Carrot Salai'l.â€"â€"Slice cold boiled carrots and mix them with mayon- naise or boiled salad dressing, mask- ing the top iliCely. 'larnish the ‘hiiiliillii i Impoverished soil, like impov- erished blood, needs a proper fertilizer. A chemist by analyz- ing the soil can tell you what fertilizer to use for different jproducts. ' If your blood is impoverished your doctor will tell you what you need to fertilize it and give' l it the r v ich, red corpuscles that are lacking in it. It may be you ' need a tonic, but- more likely you need a concentrated fat food, land fat is the element lacking and in your system. There is no fat food that is so easily digested and assimi- ' lated as Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil It will nourish and strengthen the body when milk and cream “an, sauce. fail to do it. Scott’s Emulsion for is always the same; always lpalatable and always beneï¬cial where the body is wasting from {any cause, either in children i or adults. We will send you a sample free. Be sure that this pic- ture in the form of a. label is on the wrapper of every bottle of Emul- sion you buy. Sill!" & BflflllE .Baked Egg I’lanLâ€"Baked egg plant should be dropped into boiling salt- ed water and boiled until it feels ten- der on pressureâ€"about twenty-five minutes. Halve it with a sharp CHEMISTS knife. scoop out each center, leaving the sides about an inch thick. Chop the portion taken out. season it well, 60c.a.nd $l.00. and mix with it an equal quantity “Drama. ‘ speculating with some reason for mak- ily it will f .. "-Ac 0......“ v»... 1.4-. 'x \4 TllCi‘t is alrcat in Store forYliil dish with sprays of carrots’ own graceful and pretty leaves, with here and there a small red pepper, or line ' the bowl with lettuce leaves as for other salads. IF YOU HAVE NOT TASTED _ KITCHEN OF THE RICH. I . 5" ’ It’s nice to know about them even. if one cannot afford to own many of the wonderful new kitchen inventions. They are coming our way and they are making everybody happy. Thch is the hollowâ€"glass rolling pin filled with ice for pastry. There is a high metal rack which holds six pics, one above the other, at a distance of several inches apart. This saves conâ€" siderable space in the pantry, and (in account of a stout handle at the top, may be easily moved from place to place. - There are table and pastry shelves COVCl'Cd with plate glass or marble. in?“ eylon G superior to the ï¬nest Japan Tea. 40c, 50c and 60c per Ito. BY ALL GROCERS. ï¬igheSt Awamfl. Sm. Lacuna-9 15-3304: 2 Frying pans of aluminum take the .z:y..rr=+...m..~...w.se.“swam;“magma,.3, place of iron. The saucepans are in MAGNIFICENT tiff blue and white enamel, and the dishâ€" ious earthen dishes now so much used in cooking those attractive little bakâ€" of inâ€" pan and sink are of the same ware, ' dark blue preferably. Almost as attractive are the varâ€" ers and casseroles and rainekins chocol ate-brown, creamy White i. side. The jars for sugar and salt , come in blue and white porcelain. with the names painted and burnt on their surface. Among the newest things for kitchâ€" en use and one which will fill a long felt want, is the sieve or colander which stands by itself. Never does one so fully realize the lllnllLaLlL‘IJS of two hands until one tries to pour out hot jelly 01' soup from a big ket- tle into a wobbly sieve or bag. The latest is a sectional frying-pan divided through the middle so that . ."i . ; Think of it. a beautiful nut? 01' Blue Fox. the most .2 . fashionable fur worn, given absolutely free. Such an , : offer was never made before. The only reason we can) afford to do it. is that we arranged for the-u handsome , Furoduriugilic dull sewn in the summer and go: them 5; nearly at cost. The Ruff is 41 inches long. nearly ‘2 4 Inches wide. made cf the handsomcst Blue Fox Fur. 1" very rich, soft and fluffy. Ibis warmly padllvd. lined with . . the same slimleol' mm and ornamented with four long tails of Blue Fox also. Such a handsome Fur him never " before been given awn . and you can get. it so easy. Just .3": send us your name an address. plainly. and. we will mail 5:. you 2doz. sets of “ Picture Post=Cards one “my cook two thlngs at: _ the toscllnt Ionasetu cardstoasrt.) They are beautifully same time over one griddle. DiVide'l colored. nlltho rngc,:iud sell like hot cum-a. Slu‘llnu . ~ oi-punu.llty was nevi-r offered before to the. wol. en null .: girls ofCanmliL You couldn't b- y anything in the Fur L. Stores that \\ mild look richer. he more bl-rouiing or more f stylish. and remember. It won't llflnt you nne rent. it rite til-day. We trust you rind send the Picture Posl-(‘nnls ', plï¬tllald. Colonial Art (10., Dept. \ Toronto ;; so: marl Igor: was) ice cream freezers make two flavors of cream. There are strawberry hulâ€" lers, pineapple eye snips, raisin seed- CI‘S. individual planks for fish, which are small enough to be served on a izanaé'ew'wbwwâ€"‘Aa‘m‘w " dinner plate, churns for whipping ,m- _ _ - â€"-â€"-â€".â€"_~::- ....,_._._- um... " 611mm and "iif-I‘I'TOS. lfop Skueadmgt‘, probed into this planet they found life. i called the platypus. .It inhabits the blend and Stnlmg “hm ‘ ome 0 deep forests of the river bottoms of “So I expect,†he continued, “that if wel prope into other parts of the universe we shall also find life of some kind. it. those things are inexpensive. It is - - both Australia and New Zealand, interesting to read about them any- !and, it is said, has many of the way' depends on what you mean by 'lnan.lcharacteristics which distinguish the r w » ~ We might not find beings with noses.beaver tribe. The platypuslis not. n 1151514)!“ “1313' and five ï¬ngers on their hands like our- | common animal even in its native T0 Stel'ilizc milk. Place it in IL selves. ll. is'improbable that in the uni- haunts, and is yearly becoming verse we are the highest that exisl,and scarcer because of the war which the it is therefore probable that others cx- natives wage against it .on account isl. son'iewherc. [of its peculiar eggâ€"laying habits. lle continued that worlds might bej’l‘hey have a superstitious dread of bottle and close the neck with a Plus or Cotton-wool. Put the bottle in a large saucepan, fill the latter with cold water, and bringr it to boilingr point. Set it aside to cool slowly. unoccupied for long periods like ourl the harmless little animal because its A verv good way to prevent the own globe. Besides mistakes might habits deviate so wulely from those irons from sticking to starched arise in other ways. Astronomers -ni generally noted in fur-covered, four- things is to tie up a piece of boes- Mars looking atoui' earth would probub- footed creatures, their hatred of it wax in flannel and rub on the iron ly say it was loo wet to be inhabited; being so great plat no band, “vile- before using it. This method also it was nearly all water. they conjposgd. oi half a (1071(311'01‘ 03),; gives a very nice gloss to the arti- * â€"â€"â€"â€"-+ hundred families, Will settle in trie cles. RHEUMATIC SUFFEREBS. vicinity of a lake ,or stream until To test the purity of turpentine â€"â€"â€"-' _ the young men “beat the bush and drop a small quantity on a piece of Will Find a Certain Cure in the kill every platypus that can be white paper and expose to the air. Use of Dr. Williams Pink P1115, iound. No trace will be left if the turpenâ€" , _ â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-4hâ€"â€" - - - -. - i . - . heumatism is a disease of the ' tine is puie; but if it contains 011 Oi R 1 Y I . V yvgter ME, OF CAN “)A “J, other foreign matter the paper will blood- L‘ery docwr now ddmlth †’ ’ this to be the fact. Doctors used to Y0[_ENG WOMEN T00, timgytfcï¬tlsfligmrh‘t‘t13311331131033:lgel a Business or Shorfhaud education 0 . ' i - ' - _ 1,“:llOllllng will pay you so well, and no 0103', NOW “19-37.,1‘110“ 15hr; cï¬lld ngalschool can do so well for you as the Started. the. fh§0a50ï¬w (t), on} shrdlu l'll‘tllll lirdlu slirdlu hrdlli lirdl the Palms 301%“ 161mm 15' ‘ old successful Canada Business Col- be greasy. Easily and quickly a kitchen may be cleaned thus:â€"â€"'_l’our two or three tablespoonfuls of paraffin into sink, then with a small cloth dipped into it rub briskly round the sides sink if >1?£3’y§z(1333~‘2!Â¥1’75¢€3’€11mm _. ~ . . - -'>rr ;li> ‘rl . ‘ and bottom- liiIISO down. and 8-11 only bc (Puma by “119° 1,.“ . bay 'lege of Hamilton. We can place 300 grease and dirt will have gone. blood which causes it. Dr. \lillianis of 0m, graduates in good situations, ’\ 011081) S'ifc for meat mid other Pink Pills always cures rheumamsm' during the incomingr VClll'. We did pe‘risllables rim be made from a because they aetlmny Pka P?" it [his year and can (1‘0 it again. This wooden box, obtainable for a few rich 1‘0db109d: “’hlch (“1‘03 9‘}? “‘3 is the old reliable College of Canada, cm,“ from ,L prowl. Nail a pica: poisonous aCIds, loosens the stiffened established 44 years; 26 years under of perfn'atod Sine over one side of “hing 30mm and l‘luscms .‘md re‘ present principal. Over 3,000 gradu- bov after takinc' awav the wood. and Stores the rhei'mauc 5â€â€œ??? ales in successful business life. 'llry ‘ a ‘ 1by health and happiness. Dr. Williams it†White , fix a small door with leather hinges. ' rt‘o ensure health for children give them plenty of milk, plenty of ï¬an- nel, plenty of air, and let them have plenty of sleep, and they will seldom Pink Pills have cured rheumatic suf- ferers, some of them when they w-ere almost hopeless cripples. Mr. ’1‘. H. Smith, Caledonia, Ont., sayszâ€"“For a number of years I was badly trouâ€" R. E. GALLAGHER, Principal, C. B. College, Hamilton, Ont. C. A. Buildings. A. LIVING TO OLâ€"CHEST. Y. M. if Mm. r,†.thhJ-ng That is milk bled with rheumatism, and was so ’ ‘ ‘- . ' ' 7 .. - , ._) ,... . . is the best diet they must be Warm- “Uppled I could .Smluly a? ‘35} No carpenter’s chisel can do more . n y 1 , _ . . .' ‘ u . . Iv clothed must be much out of ""011" I “led qulte a num'ml 0 cflective work than is turned out I4 ’ ' medicines, but they did not help me . . with ease and neatness b the beavâ€" Then I saw Dr. Williams’ Pink I’lllsi y l ‘ , l ll.‘t be allowed to slec (001, out m s p cr’s tooth. This is the ' u ' * " . . , principal :éll‘alllltll tiny ahaken of then ac aavertised as a curagto: 1 man with which these‘patient’ clever To make an oil stove burn well and gm†5"?!)W' :1 )"1 wwéuhol bililders construct their dams. The thoroueg clean and refill every 9“ f0“ bo‘ies dlgynnb “10' [in]: outer surface of the tooth is a scale time after using. if you allow oil mo" and con 1“ e a‘ g ’ L of very hard enamel, while the body throiighout the winter, and am ]]O\V and dirt to accumulate in it it is . _ . i V J, of it is of softer (lentine. As the , - . . .. completely cured- I hch 5m“ “0.1"â€! softer substance wears away in use sure. to smell unpleasantly \\lll.1 ed out of doors in cold weather Wm“! . c . _ , - the end of the tooth takes a chisel- lighted. .Don’t cut the wick, but rub . like be'Vel, . it off the charred parts With a rag or out a coat, and did not feel even ,, liavmi‘ . thin, slightly- twinge of the trouble. L E ‘ r. ,projecting edge of hard enamel ‘ - ir. 'Alwa 8 turn the ., . . .‘ as 5;“.nparz({u you age going to If you 3T0 snagging an Cindilélbi‘dgfï¬i sharp as any carpenter’s tool fresh light it again- case due to ba 00 or 1'0 L "' |from the oil-stone. The thin scale 11017521)“,wmi‘tms thPmliuï¬igs of enamel gives keeniicss, the softer 9}â€10 11301.1; mfgcgc looseiinh‘t to “‘10. dentine supplies strength, and. thus 1,101. J 00(1’] “ (1-. m1†drives ‘iti the combination forms a formidable 11-1900,; (gm égitcml‘sedbrthzt is why DI. |tool, which actually sharpens itself Williams’ Pink Pills cure such trou- by "59' bles as anaemia, indigestion, palplâ€" T:"â€"“‘_+_“"_ ‘ tation of the heart, neuralgia, liead- 'l‘luILTI-IING TROUBLE. ._..â€".â€"+â€"â€"â€"â€"- PLANETS INIIARITED. That is the Opinion of Sir Oliver Lodge. ' OTHER Sir Oliver Lodge, the famous scien- . . _ . . . , v. - ‘ kidney and list is [he latest to alleinpt a reconcda- 6101105 and bflCI‘MhQP’ . , . , H . . fiori between science and religion. He is liVel‘ tl‘OUblt‘S, St- Vitus Dance» PEP" '~l“c‘3uâ€â€™}3 153011019“? 3990‘1“)dn‘e‘,§ delivering a series of lectures in Lon- alySis, and the specml Secret 211“ by “CFVOWuChS’ “Imablhty 31“ and womanhood.' stomach disorders, which may lead ments of girlhood . - I do! to serious consequences if not promptâ€" don upon this subject, which are at- traclimr considerable 'itlcnlion from But only the gelllline Pills can W , scientiï¬c sources (is wolf as from mom. this and these always have the full ly treated. dialiy s. Own Tablets is bers of the Royal family. His idea is name “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for the best medicine in the world fol Pale People.†on the wrapper around; teething‘cliildren. 'l‘hey allay the ii;- each box. Sold by Medicine dealers] Humiliation in the tender swoollen everywhere, or sent by mail at 5",!) gums, correct the disordered stom- cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, ach, and help the teeth through pain~ by writing the Dr. Williams Medicine lessly. Mrs. IT. Nutt, Raymond, 00., Brockville, Ont. ()nt., says: “My baby suffered terri- â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"+â€"-â€"-â€"-â€" bly while teething, but as soon as I QUEER AUSTRALIAN ANIMAL. i began giving him Baby’s Own Tat- lets he improved in every way and i: now a bright healthy child.†The Tablets also cure colic, constipation, diarrhoea, indigestion, simple fever: One of the oddest of the many and destroy worms. They are_guar- though it wo111d queer and unique creatures that in- anteed to contain not one particle of what my habit the antipodean wilds is an ani- opiate or harmful drugs, and may lJ( mal about the shape and size of tliex given with equally good results to He is not a emu! the new born baby or the well grown that where there is a strong personal- persist continually, llftel' what is called death may rejoin the larg- er personality of which it sprang for a life in this exislence. “I think,†said Sir Oliver, indicating his body, “that this a bit of matter here for seventy years or perhaps less, and then that will rejoin its larger self. I . . shall then find I have a large memory Natives Have Superstltlous Fear or a larger personality altogether. I of the Platypus. am speculating of course, but 1 am ing these assertions, lake too long to explain grounds are.†Sir Oliver was asked whether in his American raccoon. opinion lnan' existed only on tliis,iosity because he resembles the coon' earth, and whether the sun and theiand lives in Australia, where all na- stars and all the universe exist for the ture is topsyâ€"turvy, but because of a beneï¬t of this globe, as was argued by remarkable habit the female of this Dr. Wallflco- species has of laying eggs and hatch- Sir Oliver replied that Dr. Wallace ing them after the manner of birds. liked to hold a minority view, and in This queer egg-laying animal, the this respect he certainly did hold the only creature of the kind on earth, minOI‘lly VicW- Wherever scientists as far as the zoologists know, is child. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail at 25 cents a box by writ. ingr the Dr. Williains' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ‘ ._._~.__+_..__ > There are 240,000 different special of insects on earth; some of these art so small that 4,000 of‘them ore onl; equal to a grain of sand, 1 l !