in which you (raking. but SELECTED RECIPES. Shot. Calmâ€"One egg. one cup of nugar, two cups or butter or lard. onehall cup of milk, mo guns of flour. two momma 0! baking powder‘ Cream sugar, butter and egg mixing in milk and flour alternately until used um beat in the balms; powder. Bake in shallow pan. When cold divide into two sheets Lv cut.- ting through with a. long. sharp knife Bflls‘ and ï¬ll with His following â€ling: â€01L constantly stirring until spongy. one cup of sugar, two cups of butter. yol'ks of two eggs. grated ï¬nds and juice of two lemons. When cnld It-rcad Ln lowar sh'eet. renLux upper and he with the two whites beaten s'm, lo‘lr tablespoonfuls at 5 addvd, flavored to taste. Place own a, mount to harden. Price Breadâ€"Slice stale broad rathu thick slices. Beat. up two with three mblapoonfuls o! sugm one lint of milk and lay the l in until wall soaked. Then fry lint lard. Bo? ‘ed Icing for Cakes.â€"Twa of granulatod wgar, one of w Whitcs of two eggs. Boil in a .s; skirts prove more becoming hort ones to little women. This to reason. for nnytliing like ad dress, gi"cs dignity 4.0 its About! rr welds th‘ poured over or: cooling 1 Bdon th an n salt wa at too often or it wil the hair. peeling Ierrnn‘z' for 1] ul never to cut any in, as it has a ver ntil nd divide it at from soup. Into dripping meat. or trying rind ste: ll cup m'lk enough vinnun sugar, put int FOR HOME LIFT Ie sé'rup liar lre‘water. 8H :lr House Min (1 ual beneï¬t. to the splendid tonic. m the wh the injuru hioned disinfect- r grandmother's r'antflge of being my the capital Ell: Bw d plm oil a Jt 3! sift l’uls 'nth an Ha ln' h'u tim turn for bread two wh cu! I?“ How do the persons who so {earl night air that. they sleep in rooms‘ with tightly closed windows expect; 01 to liVe should there be an escape of 11. gas while they slumber? They d0! not. give themselves one chance out M “I of a hundred [or their lives I Heâ€"Do you remember your school friend, Sophy Smythe’! Sheâ€"Yes, indeed surd-Iooking thing What became of he conduc Hcâ€"Oh, nothing The price of nearly everything gitâ€"unless you want. to sell. Wore ihat inturcsting and miscalcu- lnting gentleman, Robinson Crusoe. to ï¬nd himsuh‘ upon one of the sand slopes of the 1' uciï¬c Coast, he would think that his Loiisumc building of a boat so fax xrom water as to be unaxailubie when ï¬nished was being repeated on a large scale. A pit. 100 feet, long by 4U [(‘CL wide and 12 or 15 {not deep has been dug, and in this, often miles away from any open water, is mm a large. flat bottomed barge, seamed 31ml caulkcd and made properly scaworrhy. Cuts Its Own Canal Ahead and Fills in Behind Itself. nova! by applying a paste made 01 Pipeday and cold water. Leave on all night and brush' on in the morning. A second application may be necessary. To remove red ink stains, moisten the spots with strong alcohol ncidu- lated with nitric acid. It. is always desirable to make a blank experi- ment ï¬rst, as all materials will not. take the same treatment. cacy of starch for toilet. use. This is especially useful for sore teat. First wash the toes with tepid wu- Ler, but do not soak them; wipe quite .dry. and then dust with starch crgshed to a. powder. yond its own length I'hc electric current i1 separate power hung on; distance away. the motors on board Scrub the inside 0! the teapot with ï¬ne salt and than rinse it with boiling water. Tea Wlu not be good unless the inside of the pot is kept bright and clean. Alter use the lea~es should be taken out immed- atoly and the pot wiped quite dry. Two ways '0! removing iron would from linenâ€"Rub the spot with I; litâ€" llc powdered oxalic acid and warm wal‘r. Let this remain to soak for a few QOcnts and than rinse in clean water. Wash the spots in a. strong solution of cream of tartar and water. Repeat it necessary and dry-in the sun. The work This is ilh whic M ‘nti V'el'y few people know of the £31- AN ELECTRIC BOAT THE UNEKPECTI alt m. s the gold dredge. The sand 1ich it. is surruundud contains quuulitics which would not work out. except hy such a : apparatus as this. simple Scotch huggis worth of liver, some :nan oniun, oatmeal, 1t. . l‘nrboil the liver Ir; when cold grate i‘ m sueL shrcdcdï¬no. "pour in n toncupful o ore throws. Lemons may ‘rcsh for weeks by cover daily with fresh water. A non juice in a spoon. then )X' castor oil, and a little m up achms ul’ essence of ginger. mhms o! essence of capsicum; ith a little burnt sugar and hrongh muslin and bottle. _ orvous housewife, who lives ,ant drum! of ï¬re may, with He trouble, make an extin- Lhnt will put out. a blaze it once. All she needs to do wt. thl‘vc pounds of salt in a .1‘ water. and to (his add one mh‘ pounds of Sn] mmnoniac. wires Lvnsl guns on continually, the out. gradually eating its h the marshy slopes,- ï¬ll- canal behind, as it works by fool. and never having m1 more than n few feet in ‘CU ['6‘ away. ant: an board by inns begin the sand 'unl of the boat are med intu sluiccwnys m], siitml and treated re vdluablc particles, (tailings) is then de- ? stern. I do. A mc So silly, gir quart Onlyâ€"I murri the taste and ncv than n :Lh. ï¬vo qua ‘K‘cctcd dcrricks ink I’Lcl‘s of an oun \thn cold, at pchincry driven untors. By the water has per- und the boat, 1' condiLions, is ni ur (Ii ,poun, then a. l a little more )il, will mask and Sunds 1", tie in a honing waâ€" and a. half :11 of mash- - dinner [or thc )m' s boiled, us much licn and tie in a 1150 Lh the \va , ah- too! f sucL POPDL‘F w ha“ old mum boil a] add and mld cannot. tion if ml works must. he read in order tn see that. life must progress. 'Wnrks on the laws of the country and those of other countries must be read in order to get an Idea. of the universal law; governing thum. ()nly utter this its done should attention he givâ€" what what anything; therefore w what. is occurring Lo- OCCUPATION 01' “The 400,000,000 1 crned by scarcely units. There (Ur “7.0 time, the wars but those anything; what. is ( and this shows tlu: insufl‘u‘i: our educational system. 'l‘ln devote themscvos to contun and the educated Incl: one: this shows the weakness of 0 meter. For this doplm‘ahl lion I will quote Chung llui' â€The weal. must he suhjugnte â€We have not made any tions for 4,000 years. In â€ll States nvw life rulos, but,‘ \\'( remain the same and â€Our high oniciuls follow [In ‘Honur thu Emperor and keep the burburinns.’ Foreigners at. our untiquatml ccljx-uluninls studied speeches which are, mu lhi: our troops, this sh Modern are of n ‘heu‘ armnrod (Tl'Ul'SL‘l‘S (20L drmls, they have mmlur modurn machinery, thunsu inventions, new books u out every year; a. mult‘Lu ants, handcrafts,‘ ulcrch lers; scientists improve In your their respective br: learning; women and g‘i and children, all know no ,and'writc. And me? “()ur yearly rcvcnuos u: 70.000.000, our debts tr 000 (this refers to Hm in war with Jmmn in 1894-9 shows uur ï¬nancial \voukn our we "Our orlucul CHINA'S CRY FOR REFORM A , (Y Adopte-’ y ‘ The insurrection agai; the Chin- eae Government which just. brok- en out in Kwangâ€"ai, a p Vince in the south of China with u. rrow fron- tage on the Gull 01 Ton in. will call wider attention to ch 2 unrest and dissatisfaction in the in erior of the empire. A week ago ports from Szechuen Province on the upper Yangtse declared that another Boxer uprising was threatened‘ there. Szechuen Province on! the upper Yangtse declared that another Boxer uprising was threatened‘ there. One of the latest to speak 0! these disturbed conditlons is Dr. 0. Franks, the ofï¬cial translator of Chinese in the service-of the Gernmni Government. He says that. Chinesoi scholars and agitators have been writing pamphlets, books and plac- ards and reports on needed reforms in which they present witlly diver- gent views as to tho political dau- gers of the country and the Causes that make the empire weak. Many of these publicixglnns are is- sued from the treaty p ls. Only a little while ago the Pekin Govern- ment made a futile cï¬ort. to have certain writers in Shanghai taken to the capital for trial because their writings were objectionable to the Government. Mnnv of the writers think the only way tor China to hold her prestige is to opcx': the doors to Western know- ledge, machinery and ideas of pro- gress. It is interesting to note haw ruphically they sum up the causes I China’s troubles and how they contrast Ch nu with other nations to the great disadvantage of their own umpire. from translation has just. publisher one thu rcl'ormc contrasts the Eur China ' their drmls UNREST IN THE ' 303' THE EM? _ . I EUROPE AND CHINA The following quutuliuns m‘u ma r IDEAS 017 makes incrchn it shuts and .ruat F ly incom trained ‘ urmnnu LEARN NO"IIINC NEW xkn why 7 to 1m: m: l, hcnc ] with n‘n nor "BECSS int nil men and girls. y( all know how to And we? y revenues amount our debts to 200.‘ crs to the imlcmnil mu in 1894-95); all much] wouknvss. L possess well (In armored monpf our luiliLm-y Weak :nco, mudvrn much (“'11 H l‘ )rnncu (liminishl . realize that ' an inrlopmldcnt itself up in its THE “'0 [{LD nntr Mo powerful and how knowledge is nnce diminished. It realize that China § no education. our not, understand nn.\'- L0 militm'y‘ matters, 1vo no schbols they ntl'y lack education uropcnn ad in (ll utnliuns are which Dr. I . and in the ', hung \‘uu )pcun 1'uwars Lln Shinosv n 100 high c 11 day KIAUC‘II'AI Smtcs have a billions, their mlmr millions, cuunt. by hun- Mum sciences, .usunds of new ux‘u brought ".‘LLIIIC of peasâ€" rrchunts. sold- from year to branches of girls, youths huw to read The r )ntumpl understand astr 1nd Weakness. machinery this shows 200.000,â€" Icmnity of '1); all this the only prostigx: . tn nLiâ€" qwho in Japan; wish us ) sulfur n. 1w drilled ligni laugh and all : am char ‘0ndi unke ï¬rst Wei, with Id uken Fl) Lung: true is making sure uf ii; inq tliumphunt. The man who is willing to fur fnii-u‘o finds success Fortuneâ€"mood or budâ€"only hurt when it touches» the h-yurt. We nil hold the doctrine of total :lr prmiLyâ€"ns applied to our neighbors Mme good is done by dispensin good cheer than by giving away do] lnrs of. the ( Khartoum An old | of life. Thom is no liberty like the of 10:0. ’l‘h‘u: ‘ church We awn _v uid; but. uflt mm- ï¬lm] ul sk’dgo. Within a. captain and the rum ed into n crevasse, thn edge, suspendc their sludge SLI‘aJS pull lllin trc the tin "A dying man lies stricken in 1115‘ desolate solitude. Over him circle vunuroa 'ln watt; below. foxes with sharpened teeth are waiting. Even the smallest. vermin, ï¬les and moths. mites and an“, sumrm In great num- bers and atrivo to get. their share. Such In China's position to-day. “To be sure, when the man aud- denly springs up. the whole dywd flies away, but. when he ramina still, than foxes and vultures (all one upon lnqothor, ï¬ght and dispute the motâ€"l him HI Their South.‘ ship [11 to Llrm hill "This was the must southerly point.†The spunkur was a Captain Scott, the explorer, at the Albert Hall, London, the uthr day. He waved his hand carelessly towards the gigantic screen on which had just. been thrown a vivid photograph of hummocky ice, and in the foreground u sledge with a St. George‘s cross fluttering from its polo. Captain Scott was giving his ï¬rst public narâ€" rative of his three years' sojourn in the Antarctic regions to an eager crowd of about 7,000 people. \\omlcrl'ul photographs of i0: clifls. glnCicl'S, strewn with huge boulders, hills of gm screen like When wir sledge cxr Captain 30 ton and D11. with sledge: wont. till LI and the fom the dogs or Jr is at hand. What will be the fate ol the sick man? “There is a remedy for him; if he takes it he will live; it not. he will die He knows it, therefore he wants to take it. He wants to gulp it. down, but a. harder matter sticks in his throat. II this matter is removed the invalid will be able to swallow and shall llve; if not, he won 't be able to swallow and éhull die. cius: then the brotherhood an "Thus life and death are in his case separated only by a. hair's breadth. Such is China's situation toils)! The .Chinese are also wr than over on religious qua are giving special pruminc View that Confuoilmixm c only world religion and t. course of a few hundred nations will acknowledge and embrace the teachings cius: then the world wi 7,000 People Hear Him Tell of His Wonderful Adventures. "China's existence or destruction] is a question of the greatest impor- tance :n the world’s politics. Toâ€"dny the decisive outcome of this question ig at hand. What: will be the fate oti m‘ to the old clauses and old rhu- when."- Tiara la a brie! extract from a reâ€" cent Chinese book, "History 0! Re- form Movement of 1898." The exâ€" tract is taken from a chapter head- ed "The Relations of China to the Foreign States." Lou: cures many of our Iikings. 'l‘h- grwdy churcli cannot grow. Fmâ€: always puts its fvot. on Incl: We ran keep only what we gin [‘m‘minulogy Itli. lip the captain and Who dc ) lew ‘he sludge with U) rdc who had became ill. '1‘ m 150 miles Captain Scott described Ll lventurous day 0! his life. at on a glacier slcdn‘inu- \l 'l‘l rmir lrly Iconomy in love results in county h is lgg'cd ‘11) front rim» THE CAPTAIN'S STORY surra FIE NODDED T0 11"! SENTENCE SERMONS Lnnnot measure wors hatch, and pull . sunn- duy UN 1' at the slmlg. rut-rod one 01‘ {cut ngs om Finally g dang had 1. worlu religion and 3 of a few hundx‘c "us will ucknowlofl ‘mbl‘nco the [(-nchir then the world oxpcditi n Scott, d Dn. \Vil: nnot keep haapinoss to yo turning poi: 0n the v, » captain an out us l as th man 51 Tl 0d one to tho Within y, “7th the xgcrously she to turn buck My littl '1‘) stly i or whnt many \“ uplift .I'h with Licut sun, wont ( I’l’ -s from f‘ man w} >1n‘ his sometimes many yards 11! ually ronc ‘int t h 0d and was . other mm' 1d the slcdg captain. w? co men an1 apt to terminat sining mun walk and hl'mg oven 1 in midnir Lu the me: ht to SI lllC )wlorlgo this In. rnchings o! conl‘ )rld will be 0 urs will cease. ‘me 5 h wh in the hoqup s in the lwlntcd up On nirylnnd.‘ established w h n 1n a. Captain public narâ€" sojuurn in 0 an eager ple. it? she calm mid thc ing had They iting more -stions and net: to the an be the hut. in the ywrs‘ all ill at the “Lil on on: praised ugn in. ‘ till all th‘ IIC sln very nly thL ds tht .u'Ll‘ sat 1 ho had indly hurts at. U told lhul kill old uh “I in m ch11 it mo cent 1y ‘ret'urx Celebration 1 at a sumluc and form†r all parts of clty.ol the 1 utmost. and hold wns house. Tho dinner t side»: this, Mr pensos of eve how‘ bly children shuls pl Mi l ill am In illa; ut h l Never, probably since the days of the Pied Piper have so many child- . ren been gathered together by a sin- gle individual an Inst. June, when Senator James J. Frawley, or New York, invited to a grand picnic in Central Park no lower than 25,000 youngsters. And they all came. too. many of them accompanied by their mothers, who knew at they would also receive_a war welcome from‘ the popular Senator. Each child} wore a red and white jockeyfap undl‘ carried an American flag (tho gifts all ‘their host), while, in addition, thou-3 sands of the children were decked inI brlllinnt colors, guy sashes, and: startling stockings. ' I By nine o'clock each child was waiting at. a given point in the disJ trict which claimed "Pop" as anl Ielector, and when ton o'clock mun! Church, army in Jung] ’l‘hu gall Lhu the pnrly ‘nu-ly inm mu band. and Qu ponies (lies flow this whic all the youngster fourth Street, lives. He was and in an incred lieutenants had t thing like order monced. Senuu the procession, u followed hv n on They little carry in Then n m1 vat Dre ‘hildreu A MAN ENTERTAINED AN ENâ€" TIRE TOWN. SOME IMMENSE mums! New York Politician Who Invited 25,000 Youngsters to 3. Picnic. agnn roplie the wurhl r this huge y six lilU ml Queen 4 M 1th Ids. nml rtnin thc 1 dinner. nsir 000,000 and $20.00 1902 he returned 1 WERI had ALI youn‘ rtuin 401 lwvlv tons in nun l‘nl Ill W h HIS EXPEC TIH th ‘xpros n n 4 in 'l‘h numb 3th H E I) o'clock each child given point. in the claimed “Pop†1 in gut-st. wh 's nu thl‘ Ill t w 1nd six nll 1 his ismn‘ 1rd d( estate nrtum F‘Ol ton o'clock 04 marched to Kit Acre the Sent: waiting for 1h t1) into a A L S'l‘UI-‘I Jul! illn Al shbrt Um: hildren in the march ‘rawley pn ill his :\TI( in and 000 h xs 1n the (i MIIJ nl 1t w hi tha tht ago :in mrknbl hn Her hrali But he h 1w '5 life small While cu; Jtt pur ulli ive th ‘ After man’s (h hi. agmta [alarmed Pg“. would have to providom‘ (our and ï¬ve thousan-t than: to go ahead and q the best. dinner possible. summer-time the tables u the ï¬elds about. a mlle town, and were spread 0 acres. The waiters nun: If Australian Cliuns to Euro Dis the dl’nner lent, and a the guests has a rig] the most “i M W “i Th erg ART OF THE EGYPTIAHS cow-red Mummy Precess U declared on | th few own 3d up, the g. mam would an