fruit. To every 3 qts. grapes add 1 pt. water; put into a porcelain kettle and heat to boiling. Cook slowly for 15 minutes, and skim carefully. Strain off juice, and filter through a jolly bug until quite clear. Heat again to boiling. Add 1 cup hot: sugar to each qt. of juice, and seal in thoroughly sterilized cans or bottles. Chocolate Cream Cakeâ€"Beat the yolk of one egg, add one-half cup each of sugar and milk and two squares of chocolate grated; let. it come slowly to the boiling point, stirring all the time. When it thick- ens set aside to cool. Cream one- half cup of butter, add one and one- half cups of sugar and beat, add one-half cup of milk, two beaten eggs, the chocolate mixture and two cups of sifted flour, one level teaspoon of soda and one teaspoon of vanilla. Bake in layers. Do not, take from the tins until cool. Spread with a cream ï¬lling made from two cups of sugar. ten tablespoons of milk boiled until the thread stage is reached. Add three level tablespoons of butâ€" ter; cool. stirring; all the time, and flavor with a teaspoon of vanilla. Unfermented Grape Winesâ€"Select ripe. perfect grapes fresh from the vines; stem, and wash carefully, reâ€" jecting any unsound or imperfect fruit. To every 3 qts. grapes add 1 pt. water; put into a porcelain Broiled Steak With Parsley Butter. â€"I-Ia.ve the steak cut thick and dip it in olive oil. Broil on both sides, turning often until cooked through and not dried. Lay in a. heated platter and rub over the top with softened butter mixed with ï¬nely chopped parsley and a little salt. French Fried Potatoesâ€"Pare po- tatoes and let them lie in cold wa- ter for an hour. Cut in eighths lengthwise and fry in deep smoking hot lard until a delicate brown colâ€" or and cooked through. Place on brown paper to ‘drain inside the oven door and when all are cooked sprink- le with salt and serve hot. Lemon Pieâ€"Line a plate with the best paste, pricking it in several places to prevent blistering While baking. Set in the oven and bake until crisp. Put into a double boil- er the juice and grated rind of one large lemon, one and oneâ€"half cups of boiling water, one and one-quarter cups of sugar,, three level table- spoons of cornstarch, the yolks of tWo eggs, and cook until a custard is made. Fill the baked crust with the Macaroni for Luncheon.â€"Cook oneâ€" hnlf pound of macaroni in slightly salted boiling water until tender, then drain. Beat the yolks of two eggs. add a tablespoon of melted butter, 8. saltspoon each of salt and red pepper and two of mixed mus- tard with one cup of sweet cream. Fill a buttered pudding dish with alternate layers of macaroni, cheese and seasoning, and have the last and top layer of the cheese and seas- oning. Bake in a moderate oven until browned on top and serve hot. Canned Tomato Sauceâ€"Peel a dozâ€" en large ripe tomatoes, add a half cup of coarsely chopped sliced hum, half an onion and three tablespoons of hot water; set in a covered sauce- pan on the back part of the range, or over the simmering burner of a gas stove, and cook slowly for from one to two hours. Press through a siofve, add a. teaspoon of sugar, 8. half teaspoon of lemon juice and salt and pepper to the taste. Some would prefer to have it quite hot with cayenne and others like it more mild. Heat again to boiling and seal in small jars, when it will be ready to serve with such dishes as need a tomato sauce when time is too limâ€" ited to prepare it. 9% About FOR WINTER WINDOWS CULINARY HINTS House the $3 I "Blykins has his own Way in his “No,†he replied. “Once in three house." “ch. But his wife always or tour years a. British warship com- tells him what it is going to be be- es hither, bringing the Governor of forehand.†Jamaica. on a. tour of inspection. In Whilst Wire is an article that is used by everybody, it is amazing how few people know anything about its manufacture. This observation is prompted by the reading of a. neat pamphlet entitled “Wire, Its Manu- facture and Uses," circulated free by the North-American Securities Com- pany, Temple Building, Toronto. It contains a complete history of the wire industry, and a description and halfâ€"tone engravings of the various processes and machines used in the manufacture of wire and its immedi- ate products, such as wire fencing, wire nails, etc. The book, which is mailed free on application, also con- tains a description of the plant of the Imperial Steel & Wire Company, Limited, now in course of erection at Collingwood. This company is er- ecting at that point one of the ï¬nest wire plants on the continent. The ultimate output will be 100 tons of wire daily; 500 skilled workmen will be employed, and the ground area covered by the buildings will occupy ï¬ve acres. This company is oï¬ering $40,000 of the ï¬rst block of $100,- 000 of the company's stock for sale. The stock is 510 shares cumulative preferred 7 per cent., with a bonus of one share common for every share of preferred. Some $60,000 has al- ready been subscribed. Those inter- ested in the vast industrial progress of this country should send for the pamphlet, and those who have sur- plus capital available to invest in the growing industries of the coun- try cannot do better than put some of it in such a staple industry as wire. ano easuy blown away. Ants Don’t. Like Theseâ€"Do you know that oil 01' cinnamon will ban- ish the little red unis? If they inâ€" fest your refrigerator or cupboard, just put a few drops on a paper outâ€" side. There is no harm from put-- ting the cinnamon inside the cup- board, only it will make the food taste somewhat. However, that is preferable to ants. For the little black ants, We have never found any- thing as good as gasoline. Just ï¬ll an ordinary oil can, such as you use for the sewing machine, with gaso- line, and squirt it around the ants' headquarters. Take care not to alâ€" low ï¬re near it. Wire Company Erecting 8. Plant to Turn Out 100 Tons of Wire Daily â€"Looking for the Northwest Trade. To save tomato seeds, choose toâ€" matoes which When cut open Show the largest proportion of meat and the smallest of seeds. Scoop out the seeds with a spoon into a, sieve, and separate by holding the sieve in Water and rubbing the pulp through, leaving the seeds clean and ready for drying. Spread on cloth and expose to sun and air. Keep out of a. strong wind, as the seeds are light and easily blown away. A correspondent says her canned mulberries always spoiled until she took to adding several teaspoonfuls of good cider vinegar to each can, since which they have kept perfectly. If you have old cans with imperfect tops you can use them without rub- bers if you will run sealing Wax arbund the seam. Borax has a good many uses, espeâ€" cially in the laundry. It is excellent to use in Washing flannels, a table- spoonful to six quarts of Water. It keeps them soft. It helps hold the color of colored goods, and prevents White clothes from turning yellow. A housekeeper claims to have dis- covered that beets make a good sub- stitute for apples in mincemeat, and advocates canning them for the purâ€" pose. After the mincemeat is made she says it is hardly possible to tell the difl'erence. save for a red tinge that disappears When the pies are baked. The handsomest geraniums and cyclnmen blooms I have ever seen were grown in the simplest surround- ings, in a. sunny hall window, and near them were perfect specimens of Norfolk Island pine, and strong Easter lilies. One plant was there which ought to be included in every collection, because it‘looks so Christ- masyâ€"the Jerusalem cherry. It is lovely with' thick waxen foliage and a. wealth of scarlet berries. For foliage, nothing is better than that family of fernsâ€"Nephrolepisâ€"to which belong Bostoniensis, Piorsonii and Furcnns. Sansoveria Zealanica accommodates itself to almost any conditions, Anthoricum is easy to manage, and Latanla. Borbonica is the hardiest of the palms, and one of the lmndsomest. This list is alâ€" ready comprehensive enough to ï¬ll several windows, but one may sup- plement it with other things just as good. For bloom in the windows. my ox~ perience has taught me to Value o.\-~ ulis boWeii, with its immense sham- rockâ€"like leaves, and exquisite pink blossoms. Buttercup oxalis, while not. so elegant looking, is a more vigorous grower and bloomer. Linum tryginum is a treasure, covering its leafy branches with golden yellow blossoms in richest profusion, and looking indeed like a bit of prisoned sunshine. Plumag Capensis gives plenty of bracts of dainty blue flow- ers, and callus and all of the Dutch bulbs are desirable. such foliage plants as are, not too exacting-- of conditions. ANOTHER BIG INDUSTRY. HINTS TO HOUSEKEEPERS “Do ships often call here and bring you news of the outside world ‘2†he was asked. A SNARE OF THE EVIL ONE. The spirit of SmiteThem-Hip-and- Thigh Tompkins and his fellows still pervades the little commonwealth, but it has its advantages, On the other West Indian Islands, from half to two-thirds of the children are born out of wedlock, and half the population steals the other half’s crop. On the Caymans, the morals are of the best, and neither theft nor any other crime is practiced. There is not a single policeman in the archipelago, and no need for one. “What would you people do to one of your number if he or she went wrong ‘2†a patriardhial Cayman Is- lander Was once asked. “Verily,†he replied, in the slow, grave archaic speech of his people, “the thought hath never been pre- sent with me. In my life of more then threeâ€"score years the Lord hath preserved us from that calamity. I know not what we would do. But such an one could not live among us thereafter." Just as they have kept the old English methods of government, so they have kept the old English cusâ€" toms and manners. The women dress like the Puritan maids of 011- ver Cromwell’s time. That is be- cause they never see a foreign wo- man or a fashion paper. Daughters have dressed like their mothers for generations. They have had no other way, and even if they had, a. new-l‘angled idea would have been frowned upon as Their descendants toâ€"day are noniâ€" inally subject to the Governor of Jamaica, but they make their own laws and govern themselves through elected overseers and vestrymen. All the other colonies in the West In- dies are autocratically ruled by ofliâ€" cials sent out from England, but the Caymanians are as independent as the Canadians or the Australians. own again these men found the times out of point. They were deprived of their oflices and harshly treated by the Royalist authorities. Unwilling to “how the knee to Baal,†they sold their possessions, bought a. ship and sailed away to colonize the Caynians and live as they pleased, unhindered by kings or governors. They were another shipload of Pilgrim Fathers. The Caymans were desert islands, occasionally used by buccaneers for reï¬tting and provisioning their ships. The Ironsides made short work of these gentry, and had the islands to themselves. They established a. patriarchal form of government. tillâ€" ed the ground, built houses and vilâ€" lages, and sailed the neighboring seas in ships of their own construcâ€" tion, They hoisted the British flag, but practically they were an inde- pendent people. W‘hcn Cromwed had England and Europe under his heel_, he sent out an expedition which captured Jama- ica from the Spaniards. Some of the men in that expedition were Vet- erans of Naseby and Marston Moor, and they were naturally advanced to the highest ofl‘ices in the new colony. But when Charles II. came to his own again these men found the Limes out of point. They were deprived of their ofï¬ces and harshly treated by the Royalist authorities. RECENT ARRIVALS . The original settlers were some of Cromwell’s Ironsides, and the manâ€" ners and virtues of that stem breed of men survive in their de- scendants to this day. Unlike the other islands of the West Indies, they are inhabited mainâ€" ly by white people. There are no negroes in the smaller Caymnns, and only a small minority of them in Grand Cayman, and those are The Cayman Islands are three in numberâ€"Grand Cayman, Little Cayâ€" man. and Cayman Brac. 0n the ï¬rst over a thousand people dwell. and they have even a couple of small towns, called Georgetown and Bod- den Town. On the second there are about a hundred residents, and on the third, a. barren rock jutting sharply out of the placid surface of the Caribbean, only a couple of famâ€" ilies dwell. The Caymaniuns, tucked away and isolated from the rest of the world on tiny islands in the Caribbean Sea, between Jamaica and Cuba, have succeeded in establishing that ideal commonwealth of which philosophers and statesmen have dreamed. Crime, immorality and disease are unknown among them; they have just as much civilization as is good for them, and no more; and they hold fast, to priâ€" mitive ideas of duty and religion, and practice the old-fashioned virâ€" tues. "What splendid-looking men !" ex- claimed a tourist, as he watched half a. dozen sailors unloading turtâ€" les from a small schooner anchored in the harbor of Kingston, Jamaica. Not one of them was less than six feet tall, and two were giants. Well built, tanned by the tropical sun. brawny, handsome, frank oi coun- tenance, and agile as cats, they looked the ideal sailor. "Don't you know who they are ?" said a Jamaican friend to the tour- ist. “They are Cayman Islanders. No wonder you admire them. I sup- pose that, physically and morally, they are about the ï¬nest race of men in the World." Women of the Cayman Islands Dress the Same as in Crom- ‘ALK AND CONVERSATION THE SAME FOR CENTURIES. GULDN Y HF IRUNSIDES 2 Same as i well’s Time I No one ever doubted his courage, however, and by the advice of the late Queen Victoria, who was made acquainted with his incapacity in lthe saddle! he was forbidden to <mount anything but the quietest horse that could be procured. The queen also insisted that he must take no part ill-hunting or in any form of sfport' in which there was an Ielement of danger. His majesty has done more. than any man in Europe to promote and encourage horse racing, yet he is noâ€" toriously a. poor horseman, and dur- ing his military career he had many a nasty tumble. In his subaltern days in the crack regiment, the Tenth hussars, he was continually falling out of the saddle, and if it had not been for his rank and posiâ€" tion the riding master of his comâ€" pany would have pronounced him a hopeless failure. The intense love for all kinds of sport by the king of England has by no means rendered him anything approaching a capable performer in any branch of it himself. He never could learn to play cricket, which, strangely enough, was a peculiarity also of both of his brothers, the duke of Connaught and the late duke of Edinburgh. With the money obtained by the sale of the turtles, the Caymanians buy flour, rice, cloth, pork and other supplies for their families and neigh- bors at home. Until a, few years ago they never used money, but transacted all their business by barter. The growth of their turtle ï¬shery compelled them to adopt a currency. Cayman postage stamps have only been used for a. year or two, and they are much prized by collectors. The mailsâ€"a. new instituâ€" tionâ€"are carried at irregular interâ€" vals by the turtle schooners. King Edward Often Fell Off His Eorse. ' Lately the Nicaraguans have given up their attempts to suppress the ï¬shery, and now they are trying to collect a tax on each turtle caught. But the Caymanians send the tax collectors limping home with bruised slbins and broken heads. After the turtles have been fought for and won, they are taken to Jamaica. by the schoonei‘s, and sold to merchants there, who ship them in ocean liners to New York, Bos- ton, Philadelphia. and London. The Nicaraguan government does not want, to have any Caymanians killed in these aflrays, lest the Briâ€" tish government should take serious oï¬ence, and the soldiers do not, therefore, use their rifles. They try to arrest the Cuymanians, whose oars and boat stretchers are more than a. match for clubbed guns. But the Caymanians can generally take good care of themselves. Seldom a month passes without their having a. ï¬ght on the beach with Nicaraguan officials and soldiers. Nine times out, of ten the Caymanians Win the battle and carry off their turtles in triumph to their schooner, leaving half a. dozen Nicaraguans stunned and senseless on the sand. Turtle ï¬shing is no easy task. Squalls and hurricanes are frequent in the Caribbean, and many a. Cay- man sailor has perished with his schooner, or lingered miserably in an open boat under the blazing tropical sky, until he died of hunger and thirst. Innumcrable coral reefs and sandbars add to the dangers of navigation, especially along the Ni- caraguan coast, where the turtles are caught as they bask upon the beach. The Nicaraguans are another peril. They strongly object to the Cayman- ians catching turtles on their terri- tory and try to mete out to them the punishment awarded to seal poachers in Siberian waters. The Nicaraguan and British governments are always nagging at one another on the subject, and at the present moment they are engaged in a. more than usually bitter controversy over it. there are no hardier or more fearless sailors than they. Shippers in all the ports of the West Indies and the Spanish Main are eager to give them charters. They usually work for themselves, however, catching turtles on the Central American coast. They are the turtle ï¬shers-inâ€"chicf to the world. The green turtle soup esâ€" teemed by the Aldermen of London and by the patrons of the best res- taurants in all the cities of the Unitâ€" ed States is placed upon the table through the energy and during of these simple, plain-living Cayman- ians. Themselves the least luxur- ious of people, they provide the world with one of plies, ovcrd for many months." But if the Cuynmnia‘ns do n many visitors. they do a lot. iting themselves. One of their cipal industries is shipbuilding which they are experts. schoonors are the stuunchcst swiftest in the Caribbean Sea blown hit? my life I have There was a If men ich 0 they told imple Wnys‘ ITS GREATEST LUXURIES. NOT A CENTAUR was a. 1 ago whit being on Cl X‘S re compelled to eat their Would be an epidemic of 111 reat 1nd see in zen but three itish steamer 1f but I) I‘l‘ “he owner w s own countr ed amon rd a. timber 1m 3 others. 1‘ many for sup- se and not get of vis- ir prinâ€" yacht l‘hoir and and HS in Season'sonce-oaoeoo‘cooolood tâ€"l perience satisfied of the f dinm‘y f SILO THE CORN. My opinion is that it would pay farmers to build a cheap stave silo and convert a portion of their late corn into silage this year, especially if they have young stock on their farms or can procure young stock at reasonable prices to feed this Winter, writes Mr. E. D. Funk. I am not yet ready to say that it is the 'best for older cattle, i.e., feeding cattle, nor have I any thoughts of saying that it is good feed for them. I have not yet proved that to my own satisfaction. Through the college of agriculture We have been conducting experiments along that line on our farm and we expect to have some very interesting and valuable ï¬gures which will come out in bulletin form when the ex- periment is fully completed. I would not advise going to too much expense in putting up a per- manent silo right at; the start, for the reason that What will suit one farmer will not always be applicable to his neighbor, and therefore we must choose for ourselves. My exâ€" perience has been so far, that I am satisï¬ed that the silo will be a part of the feeding apparatus for the or- dinary farmer in the future. 009.9@9980999999990099990 The fertilizing constituents in food and litter, less those used in form- ling new animal tissue, were com- pared with those recovered in the two manures. The comparison is especially interesting because of the increasing use of the covered shed method in Pennsylvania. The trampled manure suiTered little less of fertilizing constituents. though less than twoâ€"ï¬fths of the dry matter of food and litter was recov- ered in the nanure. The covered shed manure lost oneâ€"third of its nitrogen, one-fifth of its potash, and one-seventh of its phosphoric acid. Only oneâ€"third of the dry matter of food and litter Was recovered in the manure. The potash and phosphoric acid losses must be explained by seepage of liquid manure into the clay floor. The loss of nitrogen is, however, chiefly due to volatilization of carbonate of ammonia. The money value of the fertilizer constituents lost by the second as compared with the ï¬rst method, is equivalent to $2.50 for each steer stabled for six months. Therefore, manure, if prepared upon a tight floor and With such proportion of litter that it can he trampled into a. compact mass, loses very little, if any, of its fertilizer constituents so long as the animals remain upon it. This method of preserving steer ma:- nure is therefore distinctly superior to that of the covered shed, though the latter method may not always exhibit as great loss as that observ- ed in this experiment. The manure from the box stall was formed upon a cement. floor, and was kept under the animals, compacted by their trampling, until the close of the expirement; that from the ani- mals tied in the stalls and watered in the barnyard was, on the conâ€" trary, daily remorved and stored in 8. compact heap under conditions close- ly approximating those of a. covered manure shod, except that; it. was not subject to trampling by the stock. In 1899-01, three series of steer feeding experiments Were made at the Pennsylvania l'lxperiment Ste.â€" tion, comparing the gains obtained from animals kept without tying in a Lox stall and from those tied as usual in ordinary stalls, the former being watered in the stall, the latter turned out daily to water. The re sults showed that by the former incâ€" thod a, very large saving in cost. of attendance is secured, without any decrease in the gain of live weight. or any disadvantage, as respects the quantity of food required to produce it. The relative economy of the two methods is, however, not fully dem- onstrated until the value of the re- sultant munures is known; for these din'er materially in the conditions of their preservation. Ill 1899-01 QGNQEERS PA 1N. SE1 $6035 ï¬Ã©i POSITIVELY CURES Rheumatism Neuralgia Lumbng‘o Backache Sciatica Sprains Bruises Soreaess « Stiffness A“. .â€" LOSSES 1N MANURE uld pay ave silo leir late specially on their