hcse are Always pop Sticks: One cupful Pa Eng- walnuts broken, 'one etipful of "dates, cut fine, one cupful of pow- dered sugar, three tublespoonfuls tue flour, one teaspoonful of baking]? Be one teaspoonful of vanidle, vo eggs beaten separately. Bake]: An a flat tin in slow oven with paper under. them, Oranges with' Jelly. --Select fine oranges with perfect rinds ; cut one- 'half hole in stalk end, rémove pulp an pith; 'soak' oranges in cold water for one hour, then scrape in- #ide well in' cold" 'water, and set aside to 'drain : off well. ° Holes "made in king may be stopped with butter. aud fill half of them with: bright pink orange jelly and the remain- der with grange ice cream; when quite firm wipe carefully'; cnt in two, serve tastefully on green leat or '#pecial napkin. Relish.--At this time tof year, when pickles and chili"sauice run shokt, while the craving for. acids is much icalter than usualy a deli cious chili-sauce cansbe makle from canned tomatoes. Put in the pre- serving 'kettle one quart of canned tomatoes, three green peppers chopped fine or four small-ripe ones, two minced onions, two table- spoghfuls each of salt and sugar, ene'of cinnamon, dnd three scant cupfuls of vinegar, or less if you do not like it. very acid, Simmer gent- two or three hours, then bottle. ig; will keep for a long time. Btone jars are better for chili- sauce than glass. Orange Marmalade. "-- Quarter oranges and place peels in salt water for twenty-four hours; then bail the peels for three hours in fresh water, changing ' the water once. Pour off water and put peels shryough food chopper; using %he finest grinder. Remove the seeds from the pulp and squeeze out all the juices with a lemon squeezer. Do not use pulp. Mix chopped peel and juice and measure. Allow one pitt of granulated sugar to each quart of the mixture. : Boil twenty minutes; bottle. | and seal with rounds of brown 'paper dipped. . in brandy. One dozen good oranges make Yen jelly glasses full. Potpurri.--~The woman who cans pnd preserves her own fruit will al- ways have in the course of a wea: pon or two some left over jars of fruit, jelly, and jam, sometimes a little stale for having been long in the pantry. If she has carefully saved the left over juices at the ! time of preserving she has the in- gredients for a delicious conserve 10 'use with meat. The following mixture made thirteen pints of de- Jivious potpourri: Seven pints Dam- son: plums, one pint cherries, one pint raspberry jam, one quart syrup left from spiced peaches, one pint syrup' left from spiced apples; one pint spiced currant juice, one © glass ielly; three packages seed- loss raising, a little chopped citron. ene quart chopped ' figs, twe oranges chopped and stewed until tender, juice. of one lemon: SALADS, {7 Fruit Salad. ~One medium sized oranges. J eubes, Ha dressing. jet Stand on ice a ha 1 hour or more Serve wild golden i g-wo ORES. one-half 'tea- il salt, one-quarter oupful Bet. oranges in cracked ice: water ; mix all i J in under crust og! take from the oven ands) ol sugar, return: to he, oven and | brown. HOUSEOL TANING, Curtain Stretching. AeCet © men grogery string, using it dou bled, and after having out off & doubled thread the. exact length of your curtain | meas the lace edge only; with a bodkin or small safety pin draw the string throu the 'narrow hem lengthwiie o oh curfain, fastening securely eac of the string: Do this to each cus tain. If dong right you will have » periegtly | straight, edge af stretching and the string never: show. $i An Ironing Hint In laghdeFing: & wool waist or any Wool Foote 1 if you have forgattenito irgn if just: before it:i8 dry, as fou should; erp is the remedy: Sprinkle a fol sheet evenly and quite damp. Thea! iron your waist on this, and, as you will see, the steam forms and dam! ns. at evenly. ' The garment will cok nice and smooth ; but you are nau done yet. smooth; but damp. Now iron it again on a | sheet and it will remain as smoo a3 though ironed after being sprinkled. and rolled np an hour, or when it should have been--viz., before being real dry. USE OF LEMONS. or crushed sugar will cure a cough: Lemon juice used as a gargle will cure sore throat, A cloth soaked in lemon fice will stop the bleeding of cuts if bound about them tightly. Bqueeze a little lemon juice into a glass of water and drink it before breakfast every morning. It will sweeten your stom Lemon and glycerine make an excellent lotion for the hands if ap- plied before going to bed. It will remove roughness and vegetable staing from hands. = Affer having ycur hands in hot soapsuds rub with 'a piece of lemon. = This will prevent chapping and makes the hands soft and white. 4 Cut a lemon and sprinkle salt on the cut surface; rub well with this on brass. Wbdiann, LITTLE HELPS. There are many everyday articles; often overlooked by "busy housewife, that may be utilized as easy cleaning devices and prove most effective in lightening the la- hcrrand drudgery of 'housekeeping. Of these many articles ihe brush is ane of the most important. A box containing brushes of dif- 'erent sizes should be kept in tus kitchen. Use them for cleaning vegetables, b loaves of bread 'as they dome f eto' A soft brush is wetl in clean- ing cut class. - Have on hand three different sizes of paint brushes; one | sisters, says the The Indian is taught venerat women from his earliost | Any unkindne posed to be swi J fortune and a ma ance. Should she be es or Ap-| tue of her must be placed th il a% her husband's side. Otherwise the ceremony is Bot legal The standard tof morality, the lécturer, asserted, is higher in In- dia'than in England. The Indian, it is 'true, is legally allowed to take a second wife should his first mar- riage prove childless, but ° por | it is city, Cireums this foolish chiatge 15. mac Jesus is in league. with th the ns toF oe was notorious that a kix ora house which most rare to hear .of an Jadian | disunion, - availing himself of this privil logic of that wai When the Princess of Wales vis: | dom had 'no chance to! stang ited India she was regarded with| Satan was 'working tie greatest veneration, not merely, own interest (verse 26.) for her charm of mannér or the fact that one day she would be Empress them out tJ . sols cust} 27. 'By whom do. our -y of India, but for the fact that she! charge back had five sons. themselves. Baoreldm, Death was not forced on any wi-| ing out of demons by m dow, the lecturer asserted. : They were free to choose for themselves. | practised: If they did not feel called npon to make the sacrifice of suttee ey were always at liberty to. refuse. Hgwever, should they desire to: sacrifice themselves the nok them a crown. of martyrdom, ing 'for themselves the title "Devi," Tt was an error to think they were burnt alive.' poison was drunk and cremation' followed. Finally Mr. Ghosh related that a The fin of tac inevitable' on A cup of'doeds a8 those. Jone by "Fl miles, : rom Satan, then hy timate. that T should cover | ic formula, and incantatic by some rabbis and t disciples. - Let them be the judge whether such uotabiemitscley en to be assigned to Satan, when their miserable works of m ught | buted to a bighes power 28. a thruse of ish to think that such b pt possibly emanate the Spirit of God 'must be their source. That being so, the king- prediction calling down disaster on' dom of God was with them, which a man passed harmlessly over a woman, 'her 'moral standing being the higher of the two. The great) diamond, of. India, the Kohinur, carried with it a curse the ef- fect that its wearer would rule over India but die a sudden death, woman might wear the je ly. The late'Queen Victoria had: it placed in the royal crown, but now, 'said the lecturer, it adorns the one made for Queen Alexandra by the order of the King, to whom tha prophecy was sent from India' A ATO] FARMING INI PALESTINE, Unprofitable to "Both Landlord and _ Tenant. Consul Wallace, of Jerusa wiites as" follows of a methods of to-day in "The land is rented and farmed n which Tom the oven) | fitabl "both la alike. The lands onesthird of the oid ae) After the Jarret the brush; one and one-half inéites medi ll 08 wide, for. Br riddles: bread 'and cake tina; one of ovis inch: width for - cleaning the from cared rodyark. A aie a A et the 1 safest was the same as saying he was the |} Messiah. 29. First bind the strong man--| 1t was not by being in Jeague with 8 he others: undoubtedly ' nox SE dake, ome - TR i Eat an wind that Qohiis owed his has this distance in five days. My #ir- chip, now approaching sompletion, : ds a 85 combination of an ordinary. bal: the devil: that Jesus, was able tof~ enter: d spoil his He had gained: the mastery ove Satan he wilderness, and thi lesser work of casting out inf | demons was easy. It is man who, in the name hus conquered the force "ous of others. 290; He Js hat | is not with, me Refer within himself that can go forth, in | (U0 {the same name, to cash t demons]. g