RIH++++++++++++++++++§ CHESTNUT COOKERY. Chestnuts must be blanched before they can be used in any recipe. Le- move the shells, place the nuts in boiling water, and let, them stay ten or ï¬fteen minutes. Pour off the wa- ter when they will easily slip fro n the covering. Do this before begin fling with any recipe. Chestnut Soup.â€"Put a, quart of chestnuts in a soup kettle and cover with a. quart; of stock. Add a slim of onion, 3. bay leaf, :1 pinch of colâ€" rery seed or a celery top, and cook slowly until the chestnuts are tender. Fricassec of Vealâ€"~Have two ounces of pork cut in thin slices and a pound of veal cut into small pieces. Fry the pork to a good brown and take out of the pan, putting the Veal, which has been rolled in flour, into thu hot fat. Brown well on both sides, take out, draining; carefully, Press through then through pint of milk each of butter gether, stir in .add pepper an Stewed Kidneysâ€"Draw the thin white skin from one beef kidney or two pairs of sheeps’ or lambs'. Wash and soak for an hour in salted wa- ter. Put them in a stew pan with a pint of water and skim carefully When they begin to boil. 'l‘urn down the flame so that the water will only bubble slightly for two hours. l‘ut one tablespoonful of butter over the ï¬re in a small pan, add a level table- spoonful of flour, and stir unfil smooth and brown. Stir this int) the pan containing the kidneys, add seasonings, and cook for half an hour longer. It may be necessary to and a little more water. Serve on slices of toast. of shelled til tender colander add a te: red pcpp¢ tar. and Chestnut Man-ons.-â€"Chop boiled chestnuts ï¬ne, with a liLLIe orange water, and press through a sieve. To each pint add one ounce of dissoh'ed gelatin, four tablespoonhlls of ï¬rmly Whipped cream, and one tablespoon of granulated sugar. Serve chilled. and tolerate it for a long time. There is no oil, not excepting butter,_ so easily digested and absorbed by the system as cod liver oil in the form of Scott’s Emulsion, and that is the reason it is so helplul in consumption where its use must be continuous. Q} We will send you a sample free. q There is no speciï¬c for consumption. Fresh air, ex- ercise, nourishing food and Scott's Emulsion will come pretty near curing it, if there is anything to build on. Mil- lions of people throughout the world are living and in good 011 one lung. 6} From time immemorial the doctors prescribed cod liver oil for consumption. Of course the patient could not take it in its old form, hence it did very little good. They can take SCOTT’S EMULSEON hostnut 'oronto, MEAT DISHES FOR TWO. and a little onion juice if and shape in tiny Squares :2; and bread crumbs, and V milk with a ' f butter aud flour stir in the chest: *pper and salt to PIX/‘1‘ onsummhen ‘1 and blanched 1‘, Grain and p1 or potato mas aspoonful of sz nsts )oonful of salt, a d a. tablespoonful of little onion juice if that this a form of Croquet.th ; colander sieve. f a tablespoonful )ur rubbed Loâ€" stnut pulp and v ï¬rst, Thickcn tnuts ï¬le (121 if lik but (i, )(l and stir in two scant tablespoonl'uls of flour, rubbing it smooth in the fat and stirring until brown. Add a. pint and a half of water gradually, stirring all the time. Put the brownâ€" ed Veal into it and simmer for half an hour. Chicken Pieâ€"Cut up enough cook- ed chicken to make a. pint and a half, Season it with salt and pep- per and put two tablespoonfuls uf butter into a frying pan and place on the ï¬re. Stir into this two small tablespoonfuls of flour. Add to this gradually a pint of stock or water in which you have stirred cold gravy. Stir the chicken into the sauce and set away after turning into a shal- low baking dish. When it is cool roll the paste in the same shape as the top of dish only a. little larger. Make a hole in the center, cover the meat. and bake slowly for one hour. Fruit Mufï¬nsâ€"Sift together two cups of sifted flour, half a teaspoon- ful of salt, three level teaspoonfuls of baking powder, and two rounding tablespoonl'uls of sugar. Beat one egg until light, add to it a scam. cupiul of milk, and pour them over the dry ingredients; add two table- spoonfuls of melted butter, stir just, long enough to mix; add one cupiul of dried currants or any kind of fresh berries, drop in greased gem pan and bake ï¬fteen minutes in a quick oven. Graham Mufï¬nsâ€"Mix with thin cream to a still batter a pint of gragam flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, half a toaspeonful of salt, half a, teacupful of brown sugar and one egg. If cream is not obâ€" tainable, use milk and butter as large as an egg. Bake in small tin..- pint place in a pal apart. Bake in twelve minutes Lablespoonful of butter (11: LlirOUgh carefully; add threeâ€"J of a cup of milk, stir quickly dough with a knife; turn out bom‘d, I'oll gently back and until niéely floured. Roll out half an inch thick, brush eucl lightly with melted butter, p1 together, one on top of anotb: place in a pan about, half a] apart. Bake in a. quick oven spoo or imufï¬n rings only c1031 the on. “What kind of a. ï¬nish would you make for the bottom 01 a. clntn skirt," asks a. correspondent, “om: would you put in any bottom sti:'i«-n- ing‘?" The ï¬nish would dopendwarv largely on the weight of the nlateri.ll in the skirt. For a very heavy Clot" Ishould put the bottom of the ski 0m}ch as it Should be in the ï¬nish- ed garment, 1 of an inch length. This have stitched lian cloth or while light in good amount over and busted firmly into place after which it would be praised wiil a hot iron, on the wrong side, 0 course, and with a. damp cloth be tween the iron and the goods. The] the facing would be basted to it taking small plaits in the top when ever necessary. The top of the fat ing would be turned over a half inc] to the inside. If the facing; is to b stitched on. it is now rnmzv fnv H. alter whicl' a hot iron com‘sc, am tween the the facing taking sma of thc If the skirt is made of nledi'Jm weight cloth I would make a. sell hem on the bottom of it, but instead or turning the hem in at the ton, which would make it bulky, I would stitch a row of silk binding over the raw edge of the hem after the latter had been carefully hasth and plai - hit MI S C ELI ‘du win ,ctly as garment HOW TO FINISH A UK car 11] 11y thr r ï¬ve mim \rve at om Biscuitsâ€"E flour, thre 1g powde l of salt. Souffleâ€"4i until ‘ligh fully. small ar lig‘ JOUE longer: thal narrow m to it. a. f weight of we would taV 0V in anilla ,‘gs to )uudir. a. fac mate 1t thc re in bout han ' would thc id 1 EC SKIRT IPI undl 1d 1' fourt desir four mdlng ; one scam. over talllcâ€" 1‘ just cupfcl Id Cf lee 4 Iini and th be mired for their picturesque qualities, despite the modern luminaries of gas and electricity. To clean a, lamp, one cluster is cessary for the stand and one for chimney and globe, a lamp mop, old pair of gloves, soft tissue pa oil filler, and a little bristle brus Lamps should always be aLLei to by daylight, to avoid accidc The materials should be kept a] on account of the odor of the o For this reason it is wise to Sp] a piece of oilcloth on the table. Proceed with the cleaning in ordc it with a the end Find New Health Through the of Dr. Williams’ Eink Pills an d ' When you see a young girl pale and ailing and wasting away, you know that budding womanhood is making new demands upon her blood supply which she cannot meet. Month after month her health, her strength, her very life. is being drained away. No food and no care can do any good. Common medicine cannot save her from broken health and a 1101)::â€" loss decline. New blood is the one thing that can make her a healthy, cheerful, rosyâ€"checked girl. And Dr. \Villiams’ Pink Pills actually make new blood with every dose. That. IS blo a day's illnc Dr. William: the great :41 uS( Alice 11(1 not ith outh ( xould 1 OCCasi II If xking‘ new pp!) which d Remove and dust, t] Dust and brush any the reflector. \‘ed to boil in a little soda wa- thcn rubbed clean and dried with It cloth. Dust appear to L1 in my I) sumo“ am m1 dcbilit i1 il wl‘ {ub the t( paper to 103 and ick up ju 011' wh< out g‘i Vc BLO ODLESS GIRLS.- 110 f 1‘ IIOVG to health trouble )fton 1 11 ohm pad of ith we the ecessary uti'ul 111 111 li DID 1n b o \v do )p surfacc 3d from a the burm the since Pink the) breathlos h ave a ‘ )VV a1 lV'C uptc t‘ha‘ mve a drop of good (1y. I consulted a 3111 p101 oqm '.xoqoop ', but, his treatment a particle. To acd 11') at 1f ‘ak I could h red from fre 3115 of dizzine adaches, and xt 1x 1111C HQ rvoir lent t1) Th 3 proof 0. cure. ‘ Miss Ci Itinuous would ah relief. Us until chimr I was fully m. I have not had I cannot praise ’ills enough for have done me " 1‘} full every Lh ‘lobe an oil ink )p or a stick is leather at, ,h e strc Dr. Williams' 11g onLyâ€"thej . is all they They don't V don't both- )f and my ut of order. of fraxm mx‘x‘eC and 111 1ou1d the pills and this 1‘. I conâ€" il I had washin ised me ills, and ‘t bennht d bits queut , pe sh. acd way, only the did Among the Parsoes of India the re- cent agitation to iiiduCe them to disâ€" pose of their dead by cremation in~ stead of exposing them to be deâ€" voured by vultures on their “towexs of silence" has awakened only indig- nation, says at Bombay corresponâ€" dent. They are not prepared to ibandon a. custom which is hallowed to them by hoary antiquity and as- sociated with their most hallowed religious rites. Though in European minds the ._ 7 3% @m Natural Green eyion Tea has Placed it on to; Packet! only in sealed lead packets, the same a deiicioas Salada Black Tea. til-ï¬e, 50: and 60:: per lb. AT ALE. GROCERS. thOl practiccr of gottir as p “Your people,†said a. Parsee to 1110, “Put your dead underground, where they provide a. banquet for worms. We put, ours above ground, where their flesh is eaten by vultur as. The ultimate result is the same. The bones alone are left. But there is a great difference in what takes before the skeleton stage is reached, and that dill'erence is all in favor of our method. Before consigning the bodies of your dead to the earth you inclose them in cofï¬ns. You dare not allow your imaginations to picture the hor- rible changes that there take place before nature recovers what she Kev». of silence" as 1 them, are never tary point of vi parably superior and with us they “But,†I sug‘g4 the work even I; “Dr worms," 3 “ Vhou you Chx [nation we Pars< low your excelle tion should than can b substitution ence." trees built pedi tion 'u r “ARE 10 morally imagl arsees themsol ost cultivated Th ble changes that tl‘ {ore nature recovers e do not seek to 1‘ s. The vultures do uiLiuusly. There 1‘ y Their Way of Burying the Dead Is More Sanitary Than the Christian. |ught s to the unit of '. and a pro SEES REFUSE T0 ABAN- BON THEIR CUSTOMS. 'cfcrable to buryi‘n 1cticed by Christian )EFEL'SE from ti 0V W'WER feast on the bodi< dead would excite of x‘cpugxmnce and hrist ‘ead, 111 ga rm wit be 111‘; )n for {11‘s :1 European minds llowing feathered S( 3 of Halal 9 situ‘ @5551} AL'W There is no pu an burial grounfl are often sourcn re dokhmas, or “1 you poctically er sucn. From a View they are i or to your come my are equally s: OF CUSTOM mr 1t: 0F SlLENï¬E silence ( ' hill, U ml in lch( in fave Jr to wet no putrcf :rounds, minds the red SCaVc 1â€" ?s of their the deepest, disgust, as MFA are into the \YOI‘K L own 1;! he tow< 5.25933. S113. lino-wig, :2 Sal} nty 0 III- cavern beneath On the third day aft friends and relatives ag: at the house where the lived, and thence proc “temple of ï¬re," Standix lived, and thence proceed to the “temple of ï¬re." Standing before the urns in which the “celestial ï¬res" are kept burning, priests recite prayers for the soul of the departeLL His son, or adopted son, kneels beâ€" fore the high priest and promises '(lue performance of all religious rites and obsequies to the dead. Friends and relatives then hand the priest a. list. of contributions to various charities which have been subscribed as a memorial otl‘ering. This concluded the ceremony of “rising: from mournâ€" Nothing so dcm‘ n.an cnslaves the x a cross or WakefL bed and walk him 1y bm little hot :1 baby (lay urns are Dr a1 His fore which have been memorial otl‘ering the ceremony of “ ing," or the "r dead.†On each sary of the death orialeuneral cover. ed. In an iron fr: the house shrubs : tivated, thus lit memory of the dc: fore these iron 171' said two or three The I’al‘sees are the Uroc nun who arc They are highly ] given to charity, an known among them woth which eep or (lurin ies becau 1nd ceremony of "rising from mournâ€" ' or the "resurrection of the †On each recurring anniver- of the death of a Parsee mem- ‘xfuneral ceremonies are perform- In an iron framework erected in house shrubs and flowers are cul- ted, thus literally keeping the ory of the dead man green. Beâ€" these iron frames prayers are two or three times a day. e Parsees are a. small set. They ber altogether about 82,000, ol m 72,000 live in or near Bombayr t of the remaining 10,000 are d in Persia. As a people the} remarkably intelligent and trust- lhy, with n. genius for business '11 fairly rivals that of the Jews.- ' are highly prosperous, much n to charity, and beggars are un. DEATH HY bowels 1L1 feve will 51 1:1" stro 1g stronger a'nd better every Just what mothers need to baby healthy and make him oumlly is Baby’s Own Tablets, cure all stomach, bowel and lg troubles and thus promote ,l healthâ€"giving sloop. Mrs. MISERABLE NIGHTS ause it is $0 its ston from \' :movod 1‘} H Williar Ont. said the WASN’T CALLED hich they are after- I)y a. subterran- In) IVER )mlizcs an infant Iarents as to take 1 baby from the up and down the ght. The baby not wellâ€"generalâ€" mach is sour, its :stod and its skin dly 'aln n (1 90% itl' night, every (1 to recite al‘teLL 25 beâ€" zs due 5 and '. and a. 'L tiling death cmble man the fa the ï¬res' ' mote Mrs. “My stomâ€" f the and Own hout O “'n If