boiler for 15 easionally. ~ Remove or Ai 'add 'whites 8 eggs (beaten stiff) and }4 'epp. nub 'meats: broken in pieces. Serve, with. whipped cream, 'Rhubarb Marmalade.--One oup- ful rhubarb, juice and pulp of one orange, one tablespoon of lemon juice, one teaspoonful of grated yellow rind, 1% cupfuls of granu- vgugar, one-half ocupful of blanched @lmonds. ' Cut the rhu- barb into small pieces and to each cupful "of the pulp and juice add the pulp and juice of an orange, a teaspoonful of the grated = yellow irind, one tablespoonful of lemon juice and 1}4 cupfuls of granulated sugar, Let it stand until the sugar ja. dissolved. Boil rapidly until transparent, then add half a cup- ful of blanched almonds cut in thin slices, boil up once _ and put in glasses. Strawberry Short Cake--To make it sift two eupfuls of flour with two heaping teaspoonfuls of 'bak- ing powder and a half teaspoonful || of salt. Work a large tablespoon- ful of butter into this and add one cupful of milk. This will make two layers. Spread the first layer with softened butter, place the second layer on it and bake in a hot oven. When done, separate the layers, and cover each with the strawber- ' ries which have been standing in sugar. Place the layers together and serve with whipped cream or a strawberry sauce. Bean Cutlets. Two tablespoons butter, one tablespoon flour, one- half cup bean liquor, salt and pep- per to taste, two eggs, one-fourth pound dried beans, bread crumbs. Boil beans in usual wa~ in salt wa- ter and soda until very tender. Drain them, saving the liquor. Mash beans ; put butter in pan over fire ; blend in the flour; add liquor, pepper and more salt is needed, beans and the beaten yolks. Put in dish and let get cold, th:n make into cutlet shapes (or as for pota- to cakes). Dip in beaten whites of gas, then in bread crumbs, an fry in hot grease. These are sim- ply fine. Boston Baked Beans.--One quart navy beans, three-fourths pound fat pork (side meat), two table- spoons molasses, one-half onion (minced fine), one-half teaspoon dry mustard, salt to taste. Bake not less than six hours, moving in oven. Keep well covered with wa- ter, but do mot add water last two hours. (This came from an 'ld German lady.) Pixie Biseuits:--8ift and measure four cups (level) of good flour; add one teaspeon salt, two heaping teaspoons baking powder and one rounding tablespoon lard; rub into dry part. Beat yolks of. two eggs very light and mix with one cup aweet milk. Mix this with flour, ste. Roll one-half inch thick, cut, put lump of butter on one-half and fold over. "Bake in hot oven. Baked Ham.--Boil ham the day before, After peeling, stick the fat full of whole cloves, one and one-half inches apart. Pepper and cover the whole with dark brown sugar one-fourth inch deep and a gifting of flour on top. then bake in a slow oven an hour or over, bast- ing ab times with a little sour wine, or. vinegar and water will do as well. Of course have a little wa- ter in the pan to bake in, Fudge Cake.-One cup sugar, three eggs, two-thirds cup butter, one heaping teaspoon of baking wder, one cup milk, two and one- Lai oups chocolate (melted), one- half cup nuts. Icing--One and one- " half teaspoons butter, one-half cup wnsweetened cocoa, one and one: quarter cups 'confectioner's sugar, a pinch of salt and one-quarter cup "milk, one-half teaspoon vanilla Melt butter, add cocoa, salt and | milk. Hot 'eight minutes, Beat until ¢i pour on cake. 01d Colonial Cake. One 'cup but- er, 'two and one-half cups granu- jated sugar,' oge cup. rich milk, four cups pastry flour, 'six eggs, one aspoon soda, two even bea- oream' of tartar. : Cred + | baked. a : It is wonderful what a looking- glass will do toward cheering', up dark cornets.. Remember every garment must be thoroughly cleaned and aired be- | a forse it is put away. z Lay paper patterns away flat in| a common file book and they will be neither lost nor torn. To keep cheese, wrap it in a cloth dipped in. vinegar and then cover with waxed paper. -- * Fruit salads should replace heavy puddings and pies for desserts as soon as warm weather sets in. Boil apples or potatoes 15. min- ates, then bake them. 1t takes much less time than the usual way. When peeling 'onions hold & cork between the teeth and the eyes will not become affected. If a little too much salt is put in soup or gravy a pinch of brown sugar will take away the salty taste. To prevent carpet from ravelling when cut Tun two rows of machine stitching where it is to be cut. A little alum added to the water in which children's clothes are washed will render them fireproof. To whiten clothes which have be- come yellow soak in buttermilk for one week, then wash in' the usual 'way. Instead of keeping parsley in wa- ter, which often turns it yellow, put it in an airtight jar in a cool place. This will kéep it fresh for some time. Summer squash, string beans, cabbhages, asparagus, cauliflower, cucumbers, beets, turnips and car- rots are all improved by standing for a time. in cold water. Vegetables with a strong flavor, like cabbage, onions and turnips, should be cooked in a large amount of water and kept hoiling rapidly and a small bit of soda will improve them by softening their fibres, Wilted vegetables may be fresh- ened if allowed to soak in cold wa- ter. Old wilted potatoes become solid and crisp when soaked in cold water; if soaked for long after paring, they lose some of "their starch and mineral matter. To retain the color and natural flavor of beans, peas, carrots or other sweet-juiced vegetables, gently simmer them in slightly salted water for soda destroys the delicate green color of. these vege- tables while salt intensifies it. | Collars of coats so often become dirty. before the coat is finished with. A good remedy is to rub the soiled part with a little paraffin oil on a soft cloth, and then hang in the air for an hour to take away any unpleasant smell. When cleaning a stove that has been splashed with fat from the frying pan the best plan is to take a piece of rag and dip it into the soft soot at the back of the stove, rubbing the greasy parts before ap- plying the blacklead. This improves |. the appearance of the stove, and you can polish it without difficulty: To wash woollen stockings 80 ! that they will not shrink ig quite easy. First shred some yellow soap into a small tin sducepan, cover it with cold water, and let all boil slowly on the stove till 'a jelly. Take some tepid water, and with the boiled soap make a good lather, Wash the stockings in this. rubbing well, and using no other soap. Rinse in tepid clea ter, wring out, and "set in ge to dry quickly." ig LONDON'S BOMELESS, Over Two Thousand Persons With- out Homes, The annual census of homeless persons has just been taken by the London county council, It shows that 9,881 persons on the night the, wae w ib re, have declined since 'not be expressed' in ordi made were without Ted » 3 of Samaria: pes Galilee in the border country two 'provinces. In order Samaritan territory many. crossed the Jordan and 'trav fod | through Pera€a, recrossing a point near Jericho. Jesus was fo doubt taking that route, because he desired to carry the 'gospel 1 bo the people of Peraea. 12. As he entered into a certain village--Better, "As he was about to enter in.' Ten men that were Jopers.- Those who know the prevalence of leprosy in Palestine say ~ that would not be unusual now to et so many lepers, especially in this frontier country. re the dread- ful malady had broken down the barriers between Jew and Samari- tan. It is also possible that the le- |' pers had heard of the coming of Jesus. Stood afar off--As required. by law (see Lev. 13. 48), though" the precise distance to be képt was not |. fixed. 13. Here the suerere] doubtless knowing 'the 'works of Jesus, took the initiative and asked for help. Others with whom he came in con- tact, as the woman in the = gyna- gogue (Luke 13. 12), had not this knowledge or" were too weak in faith to. seek Je¥ Yet to them 180 his aid and his lassie "bre given. - So to-day some who-sitin |* darkness ask for the gospel ; others, like the woman in the synagogue, know not its power, But to "all alike the church must minister, Master--Suggesting one having authority, as "the master in the house.' 14, And when he saw them--Or, "'divectly he saw. them." Very likely Jesus had not noticed who the men were until they cried out. Show . yourselves unto the priests--Compare Lev. 13. 2. Each man would probably go to a priest near his home, the priest who had pronounced him a leper and s€ him away from the dwellings ot others to live in caves and tombs: The Samaritan would go to a priest on Mount Gerizim. As they went, they were cleansed ~--Their prompt "obedience Christ's command shows their 60 fidence. How much time elapsed after they left, before thev "were healed is inot indicated. 'Perhap they 'had already separated, to go to his ewn home, before the healing took place, so that the Samaritan was alone. 15. With a lou voice glorifying God--The joy of his heart could inary tones. 16. He fell upon his face at his feet, giving him thanks--Now | that his leprosy was healed it' was 00 longer Necessary 'to stand afar off."". Or, was it that in hi bounded j joy. he- forgot all about th carried away | g rians, the Ss remnant' Comsin ing (2 Kings 25. '11, 12)" inte ' i J n coloni and - 5 counter lay in Again the Entente Cordiale of France and England. By F. Matania, in The Sphere. M. Raymond Poincare; President of France, Queen Mary, of Great, Britain, King George, and: Madame Poincare. : They are drawn stand- ing at the gala performance of the opera during the playing of the national anthems of Great Britain and France. If true to life--and Matania's drawings usually are--this lates picture of their Majesties | indicates that the hand of time amd worries of State are leaving their marks on both Ki gold tissue, from the crowded g and Queen. The Xing So for this occasion was in the uniform" of an admiral of the fleet, and the Queen wore a dress of Madame Poincare was ini white. The artist depiobs the' moment when the. eg party were met with a storsn.-of of 'cheers tan than to others, we are at least: sure that it must have been so be- 2 lo cause of his receptive heart. semrientirmte Meee BANNERS OF GREAT DEAD. ~'Death has been busy during: the past twelve months among the dis- tinguished servants of the Empire who are members of the Order of | Bt. Michael and Bt. George, states 'the, London Daily News. At the an- nual service held in the beautiful little chapel of Bt. Paul's Cathe- dral, the Gentleman Usher of the Ble Rod read out a death roll con taining no fewer than forty names, 'perhaps the most famous being 'those of Lord Strathcona and Lord Minto and the most unexpected that of Menelik, "Emperor of Ethiopia." So small is the chapel that the Knights and Companions overflow- ed into the Cathedral mave, form- ing a lake of scarlet and gold there. | ry A edwin CRETAN DEPUTIES, Fxoiting Seno. & at Opening of Parliament. In "Travels Without Baedeker,"' Arden Beaman tells of an interest- ing and gignificant incident that he saw when the Greek parliament opened its sessions a few 8 ago. After the Deputies had filed into the 'chamber the boat was Dota wheezy A the 'Hirondelle. bul arose; and a Di a nes, | Bile with savages, put out Tom : 03 of the travellers got out their rifles and revolyers, 'while third saw to the epgine. But il chances of escape seemed. The savages were plainly hate lowness of the launch flight "impossible ; and in hand- hand conflict % they, were far oitamua- : from the square, & sudden | d commotion arose among the troops | = 4 assembled for the occasion. Horses plunged and Pewter } Bog hoofs and. accoutrements rattled noisil Light came from a high pearl grey gan window; with the figure of a pray- ing knight in one corner and from 'two tall candles burning on the al in tar. Six ladders, full twenty feet high, | y ranged. ab intervals round the cha- pel, looked: oddly discorc they played a necessary central act of the service. The roll of departed members had been read and the choir had sung very sweet- ly '"The Saints of God! their. con: flict passed," when a little group in black--women: and: children and two young. men--moved | galloped "The cries became: frantic. The . pursuit. nave into the chapel and stood with | bowed heads just below the. pray-| ing knight in the window. They wete the relatives of the six Knights Pay Cross, recently dead, whose be removed from gq nificently vested in a we. of} h pen Bishop: : i or "the on. ors rejoicing: conupante, "continued the: "When es' Ha ts S6ill Ornsmented Feathered Songsters.