WWW“. It. Dixon began improvement ‘9 appetite m and the “N "I w“ . '1'th It we miss hall dhcontent with . although trite. 103 to the truth we still go on ’. anzl “look bo- rn; for what it m: “This life very patient is re to change his prefer to suffer lat other think! a window.†that the malady low the so-call- » might be situ- proine of Mrs. “always hold- thorn in it.â€0r. lie soul. it is in Me by "pam- mum is thngS‘ [1};- Â¥orld. for drain upon 00" tmusing Par? 0‘ 1. An excellent pf discontent is “1 mercilessly 3d ask Why I†“0 doubt his Pulirely to the Pink Pills, and teasionaliy m... m “,3â€; 'NTENT. ins cure using line Sugar. Lot it a “’01 Plum. and "W "used and (11'. W to bruise the hump, allow one u mud Of Drarnw UR ANGES. Orange Flower syrup should be made Ihen the pure white leaves are falling 30!: the orange trees. It is slow Wk to pick them from the ground. large blankets or sheets can be mad undar the trees the frozen. Work the cream 1 will}: to make it light. cover thI Id turn the crank ag‘xin, now mpidly as pubiblï¬. In a few Ints the cream shallld be read) pct. It should remain packed in Id ice for at. least two hour bub? if k9?" f‘nlr .\r a"..- ...:__ I. 3 a. smmth, dark mass. Add the up! and stir all Into the cream. la; the vanilla and freeze carefully. '[hrre pints of milk are enough for “8:36 puhful of cracked or pounded m [be ice should be pounded tine, mlthet‘reezer should be packed ï¬rm- 1]. [so an ordinary freezer of stand- url quality. It the cream is frozen to» rapidl) it will be coarse. After let-king the freezer turn the crank mm minutes. 'l‘hn open the freezer move the heater and scrape off with l'hin-bla'ieel-knife the frozen crust of this cream that where the sides of the : an and mix it. thoroughly with 8‘ deen spoon or spatula, with the! miter cream in the center. Replacel the heater and mver of the an and‘ turn the crank agrin for three or {our : Mum, then rum-:1: the operation ofi mping the side» of the freezing can .' ant hiring thu unfrozen cream with' ORANGE SYRUP ‘31; one cup of milk, 03.1".“ a .poonflll of gelatine, one libel-a] “do; ,ngar, and a tablespoon!“ of 2:“. Soak the gelatino in four wwwnluls of cold water for two W7†Bring the milk to the boiling . z, and stir the gelatine into the } mug milk. and continue stirring nib it is melted. Strain the proper» (in :hrough a fine wire strainer into "Mm, add the vanilla and the An excellent. chocolate ice cream 3%! he made of a quart of cream, a 9â€â€ of mi k {1. large tablespoonful Of {gamma 3 cup and a half 0‘ sugar, W) ounces. of unaweetened chocolate WM line. and a tablespoonful of my; extract. Soak the gelatine as “fore, stir it min a cup of mill: and min in into 'he cream. Stir the i“sped chocolate into the remainder of mmdk. “hich must also be heated to the boiling point; sxlr the preparation} “humane over the fire until the! molate is all melted and the whole. ' 03" [“6 iii.“ â€rm ‘ â€0.9000000000000009 0: look. “DELICIULS ICE CREAM» Jdliod 1 . a . ex 13159113 vanilla. 108 cream “$9198, 8L An Â¥ 83 or thivkcning of flour" 1‘00 Onps ’“ bdut'eg no cup 01 ‘ c â€", ‘ lat. J '3' _ Am. .-.m of milk. one Jame a â€â€œ503--- 125001116 remam pmked in salt éfor at. least two hours. It 18 if kept. four or even six hours It H eaten. 'VOI‘ to a. froth, put i r each 90qu of ' anu skim. Ad roll i in the beaten egg, light. cover the can nk ugxin. now as M». In a few mo- ehwuld be ready to AND GLACE Mm: longer. Iti it is cooked D the fire. andf strained lemon 1 ‘ a Pan of cold: cream thor- “"11 taut sup-v . ~â€"_- ed for the menu cards. and these. decorated with views of Buckingham Palace. are printed in -J...“ v...â€" is invariably couched in the French language. n matter what the nation- \' alw-uu'v _____ £13110. drain off the wate‘f‘ anfl set the rive on the range, where n: wall keep ('Mâ€"i‘tcï¬) bBil till {he grains burst, or boiled in a nmall quantity of water, the grains will _§tick Mgether. When _,L AL_ 1 Thomas Murray, the noted chef, says ‘many cooks do not know how to {do so simple a thing as to boil rice properly. {Each grain of rice, he says. should be distinct, whole. but at the same time tender. To accomplish this, a small quantity of rice should be boiled in a. large pot nearly filled with water. Put it into cold water, and a little salt, and boil rapidly for twenty or thirty minutes. Test the grains oc- ca-ionally, and when a slight pressure between the thumb and forr finger will ‘ crush them they are done._ If .allow-j j The season of green corn is with us. And there is cornâ€"and corn. Some :justifies all we expect of it. and some :is not fit to eat. Corn that has passed gout of the milk should go to the'pigs. :That. which has not may he served at ftal‘le. Don't boil green corn an hour, ior even forty-five minutes. Don't let it stand and soak in the water after it is done. BoiJ the corn till the milk does not escape when a kernel is pen- etrated by the nail. Twenty minutes is usually sufficient. Then drain off the water and leave the corn covered if it must stand. But it should be served as soon as done. Lay anapkin on a platter, pile the corn on ithri‘n- kle with salt and fold the corners of ‘ the napkin over it. ' SUGGESTIONS TO HOUSEKEEPERS. If You spill oil on the carpet, ’cover the spot with cornmeal as quickly as you can. The meal will take up the g‘reaae. Shredded Wheat Brown Bread. - T.W0 . cups of shredded wheat t crumbs, one cup of corn meal. lone-half teaspoon of salt, one cup of lmolaa'ses, one and three-quarters cups iOI- sweet milk, one-half cup of sour :‘mllk. one level teaspoonful of sola. .‘Have the water boiling in the kettle {or steamer before beginning the bread. 'Also butter three one-pound baking Powder tins with close fitting lids. ix the crumbs, corn meal and salt, and the molasses. in which has been mixed one-half of the soda. Then add the sweet milk and last the soulr milk, to which has been added the remaind- er of the soda. stirring it until it ef- ferveaces. Turn into the small moulds and steam one and a half homrs. This r...“ \- nun-n. U'.'lquo 11110 is the lightgzxt, best-flavored brown bread made. : .WALES’S FRENCH MEN US- Quarter cup of water. Line six cups “ï¬lth the top halves of the biscuit ' '. and then drained; this makes them pliable so that they may be easily Shaped to the cup. \Vhen the apples are tender, remove to a colander to drain, then place one in each cup. Add to the water in which rthe apples were cooked, the sugar. the 89ftened gelatine, lemon juice and mud, and cook until it reduces one- ' d. Turn this mixture over the ap- plea till the cups are full. If there 18 any syrup left, save it to fill the cups a‘; the mixture cools. \Vhen cold and firm. turn out andserve with cream and sugar. lat is hot the fish balls fat, and will ban! about- color, tasting as well as drain: put layers sung in apresel‘V- (1 set in hot oven can like any fruit. The lper. He sailed his boat round the point at Windy Arm when thirty other boats hauled up on the beach. Ap- proswhing Miles Canon men shouted to warn Olaff to land and lighten his boat and wait for the pilot. “That's the canon,†they shouted. “Miles Yemen." "Is it i†said Olaff, “l’ve been watching for it all day." And he tool; his. boat through and on through the “'hite Horse Rapids with- out moving an eyelid. But now float- ing ice began to impede Olaff's pro- grem. “I ll keep on going till Eh? freez- es up," he said. And he did. She* froze up when (Huff had got to Five Fingers, and Olaff went into camp. He built it shed and ate up his grub un- til he had left whatnhehcould pull. a passage in his boat and assist him to manage her, but Cleft said. “No, I don't want no passengers. and I guess I can handle the boat myself." At the Tagish Lake custom-house Olaff worked four days to pay for the duty on his goods, and went on his way with-gut the delay rattling his tem- I . It took him ten days to move his outâ€" fit from station to station. Difficul- ties too great for other men never some of his provisions were stolen he “rustled.†as he called it, and worked for others until he had earned enough to replace what had been stolen. Then he moved on his own outfit. \Vhen at last he reached Lake Bennett, he built a boat and calmly set sail withâ€" out any of the excitement which others exhibited. Men wanted to buy 0 work to “do what he could for the best." Up before daybreak, he 000de a. substantial breakfastâ€"for he be- lieved in feeding himself wellâ€"and with fifty pounds more on his back than any other man could carry, start- About (hristmas Olaff sturtéd for The experience of many 11 trail confirmed the wisdom views. Nothing discounts When misfortune overtook ] to Work to “do what he cou bBSt." IIn lznfnrn Anuk..-..1- things, had no “kick." it D~o\:â€"â€"L ‘ "NO,'†said Olaff, “I start- 6d t0 20 throw +kn Klan “ - Prince of Wales, Whose Injured Knee Prevents Him From Stand- ing, Viewing the Cowes Regatta From the Royal Yacht. e Klondike. It took him make up his mind. It Ulatt Olsen Nothing discouraged Olaff. misfortune overtook him he set men on the n of Olaff’s v ,_., __ v--.“ ..... , vvu uuo chu' larity of the timekeeper. In laying aside a. watch be sure that it rests on its case. If suspended, the action of the balance may cause oscillation, which will interfere with its going. To keep your watch clean take care that the case fits closely and see that the watch pocket is free from fluff, which is so often given off by linings. _.-_. *._- mined the queen will get her share, be able to understand ‘EnS’Oboy, until --â€"--â€"---â€"-â€"-â€"-â€" Peasantâ€"Five dollars fine for enter- CAREOF A â€WATCH. ing this estate. Touristâ€"«But why is A watch should be wound up every no warning sign put up then? We, bad day at the same hour. Avoid putting ione, but took it down again, for while it on a marble slab or near anything"it was up no one came in. ' excessively cold, as thg sudden change Yes, Sir; he's the moat CODSidel‘ato of temperature, contracting the met- chaplain in the 31mi- HOW is that! a], .may sometimes cause the main- \Vhy, when things begin to go wrong spring to break. The cold coagulates with his regiment he puts cotton in the oil, and the pivots and wheels,. - . Y ‘ working less freely. affects the regu- ; $833!]: so that the boys may 'feel flee iarity of the timekeeper. In laying . . . . aside a watch he sure that it rests oni Implication 0‘ Vulganty.-â€"Mx. Par- its case. If suspended, the action of the i venuâ€"My dear, did 5'00 intend to 1’91“!“ may (@1138. oscillation, WhiCh {leave them price tags on them'picters \Vlll Interfere “nth â€in onlno 'l‘n Irnnn . - A watch should be wound up every day at the same hour. Avoid putting it on a marble slab or near anything excessively cold, as the sudden change mined the queen will for he say "She% a.g get her share, ood mrdner." As time went on Olaff sized up mat- ters something as follows, and grew contented; “I don't want no pardners, but my pardner’s nev- 61‘ here to bother me. She doesn’t put any work into the claim, but there. she's a lady, and I wouldn't let her work nohow, even if she wanted. If a man must have a pardner he can’t have no better pardner than the queen. She’s all right as a pardner." Olaf! is still working on his claim. fuld the only thing that troubles him 13 whether his pardner will come for her share of the dust after wash-up. _._-_.. --v â€â€˜11.; II C-UL work. It worried him to have a part- ner, more especially a lady and one of exalted rank. But Olaff found it hard work; thinking and idling was strange to him, so he gradually drifted into working regularly on his claim as hard as ever. .’- .. â€".â€"â€" vv v-â€"-ua uuu UHUUSUL UVBI‘ ! the situation. Then he went down to 'Dawson. took his place in. line behind lmissioner’s office. and waited pati- lently for admittance. The thermo- imeter registered 53 below, but Olaf! :“wanted to see the guld commissari." ‘and that was a detail he could not iremedy. ‘ . After waiting two hours and a half he got in. “I want to see the gul com- missari," said Olaff to a worried-look- ing man seated behind aroughly made desk and some gold scales, “1 am the igold commissioner," was the reply, ."what do you want i†â€I want to know the queen's address." said Olaff. “Somebody's always wanting to know something," said the commissioner. “What do you want with the queen's address ?†“Well.†said Olaff, “the queen and "me is pardners on a claim up the crick, and I don't want to be pardners with the queen no longer. I don’t want no pardners nohow. So I want to write to the queen to know1 if she'll buy my 250 feet or sell her 250 feet to me. I don't want no pard- ners, and, anyhow. the queen’s not putting any work into the claim." 'l'he commissioner advised 012sz not to write, but to wait and see what the future would bring, hinting at possible changes in the law. Olaff went back to his claim. but had no heart for some SEEâ€"1333;; amped. one night at. Qlaff's cabin and discussed the mining regulations, as stampeders will. kun mining regulations are still strang- er. Olaft learned, to his dismay. that half his claim did not belong to him. It belonged to the queen, the stampde- ers said. Olaff was mightily troubled. He stopped working and thought over fhn n:ig-n‘=-â€" n , ' â€"v v ‘7‘. “I, vuv ‘u‘. C - 'an‘d went to work prospecting. To 1:33 {Burpnse .a. lead pencil prospector Jumped his claim. Olaff moved to an- other looation, found good prospects and recorded. Then he built a cabin . He had all the gold he wanted, he thought, and it was all ï¬le congratulated himself â€"â€" vu mu M van more on n18 sled than any two men could pull. He made slow progress. but. he said. “I ahali come there some time if I keep moving." Four miles a day doesn’t seem much. but if persisted in it counts up, and at last Olaft arrived in Daw- Hei with more on his EARNEST PLEA. ! ' Sheâ€"I don't know wharher to let you become ensued to me or not. You would not have asked me if Jennie had not refused; Heâ€"But you know second thrush“ are always tho wiser. Why, Mr. Grumpy, exclaimed his old friend, whom he had not seen for years, your daughter looks just the same as she did when a. baby. .Well. she's not the same by a good deal Then you could never get her to sleep. Now you can never get her to wake up when you want her to The Savage Bachelor.â€"A man who will leave his property to his wife only on condition of her not marrying again, said: the Sweet Young Thing, is as mean as he can be. Oh, ,I don't know. said the Savage Bachelor. Per- haps he is a friend to mankind. Mrs. Pan'enuoâ€"Yes, the manlbought it from gave me a written guarantee that the painter was past seventy-five before he done a stroke of it. a jubilee dinner!" VDon;t afoâ€"Fgetwto’ih: Vite me! Turned His Back. â€"- Landlady - lThat new boarder is either married or ‘a. widower. .Daughterâ€" Why, mamma, he says he's a bachelor. Landladyâ€" Don't you believe he is. When he opens his pocketbook to pay his board he always turns his back to me. . A Genuine Gem.â€"Mrs. Parvenueâ€" That picture in the corner is by an old master. Mrs. Swartleigh -- ln- deed! I would never have guessed it. he 33 [3011": (DP?!) 3' Le a] Unexpected Answer. â€"- Secretary-â€" TOomon‘ow will be the twenty-fifth anniversary of the day when I enter- ed your service. Employer â€" Indeed! Then I suppose you are going to have a. jubilee dinner! Don't forget to in- in the parlor? Mrs. Parvenuâ€"‘Yes. I want folks to see I ain’t no vulgar bargain fiend. a 'Wisdom of Experience. â€" Widliam (rea.!ing}-â€"I.’a what's a. prolonged con- flict? _Pu7-It’s _something you'll never Room for Auother.-â€"Baowne â€" I'd join the church it it wasn't so‘lull of hypocrites. Towneâ€"That. needn't ,de- ter. you. There's always room for one m-__., Is that so? What ordinary-looking plants! When do theyâ€"erâ€"begin to plug out? An Explanatxon.â€"5m1tn-You and Jones don't seem to be as thick as you we’re. Does he owe you money? Brown â€"-No, not exactlyâ€"but he wanted to. Asking for Information. â€"- Farmer- That field there is tobacco. Visitor-â€" of her as exhibiting any taste at in. There are ways and ways of break- ing the ice, said the diner-amt. Ionco took a girl out to dinner whose first remark to me was: Do you talk or lis- ten ? Different Vlews.â€"He-â€"Sho look so sweet! Sheâ€"Indeed! I never thought 1 80011088? Returned Emigrant --4 Dry! Well,lshould remark! The moon out there has to depend on wind to get full on. How often do you wear. me to tell You not to make that noise, Johnnie! said the father. I would rather you wouldn't tell me at all, replied Jack. J udgeâ€"You robbed your benefactor in a most shameful way. Do you teel no compunctions of conscience! Pri- sonerâ€"Before answering, sir, I would like to consult my counsel. Looking Towards the Links. â€"- Seth Hatfkinsâ€"That's suthin' like that game of shinny we used ter play, ain't ix" Len) Pusleyâ€"Them sticks are like it; but the clothes ain't, by gum! A Western Droughtâ€"Eastern Man- gets pretty dry out West sometimes. Gifted. -- Has Rugby any talent! worth mentioning! Talents! 1'" known him to borrow one. girl's horse and Phaeton to take another girl Ollt for a drive. Contractor.â€"Yoxi wunt a regulu‘ mosaic floor, I suppose! Owner of Buildingâ€"Yes, it that's the style. J mst as lief have the modern orthodox. though. What we call aping in case oflemon- kf‘l. we call feshion in the amp! men and women. M! sister has lost her voice, and We've tried every doctor in town. That so! Then try her with a mouse. FUNNIGRAIS.