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OU-El NgIPJLAIsrP JQ’Cnßja'-A-X.: FiaiPAlT, DECEMBBB 8, 1899. M H®wit *®LDj[iy f^MAMZIAIcJjjg 1 IRISH CHAIN QUILT. Our Grandmother* Werf Very Fond 1 of This Attractive and Easily Constructed Pattern. Cut nine-inch squares of light and dark cloth. Divide each of these Into two triangles; from the right-angle corner of each of these triangles cut a ■three-inch square. To the hypotenuse or base of the dark apex-gouged tri angle thus obtained join the bases of smaller llght-colored.triangles made by dividing three-inch squares. Into the IRISH CHAIN QUILT. spaces between these fit four small, dark triangles of the same size. This will give half of the block. Make the pther half by reversing the colors, and join the two by their long sides. To join ~ the blocks, fit the points made by cut ting out the three-inch squares from a dark triangle into the corresponding space of the light side of another block, •—Ohio Farmer. VICTORIA AS HAUSFRAU. The Queen of Great Britain and Ire land Is to a Larare Extent Her Own Housekeeper. Notwithstanding the enormous amount of business with which she has to deal, the queen is - to a large extent her own housekeeper. The first thing every morning a paper of suggestions )from the clerk of the kitchen is placed before her, from which in her cwn hand she orders the menus of the day, both for herself and such of her grandchil dren as may be with her. These menus are at once sent to the kitchens, gardens and other departments concerned, to obtain the viands required; and their contents duly entered, together with the quantites of mutrials used, in the books which are kept in the royal kitchen. The queen’s chef receives a salary of £6OO per annum, and has as satellites four master cooks, two yoemen of the kitchen, two assistant cooks, six ap prentices, and six kitchen maids, be . sides and other lesser lights. In addition to the great kitchen at ! Windsor, there are the greenroom, for Ivegetablcs, and the confectionery and jpastry kitchen. This last is a most im portant department, controlled by a confectioner with six assistants, and fitted in the mos& complete manner.. :All her majesty’s favored cakeß, bis cuits, pastry, etc., are made here, and |sent by special messengers several !tlmes a week to whichever of her resi dences the court may be staying at. All stores at Windsor are under prop er supervision, no materials being jserved without proper requisition tigned by the head of the department oncerned. Not a bag of dog biscuits |can even be ordered for the kennels un jess on the printed form. In fact, the |whole establishment is practically as jmethodically conducted as any great [London business. This method, which was evolved by her majesty and the late jprince consort out of the chaos which 'descended from the days of George IV v does away with waste, extrava gance, and moreover enables her majes ty to exercise that wise control over her finances which enables her to keep the grandest establishment on relative 1 *;) the smallest royal income in Eurrpe.— E. M. .Tessop, in Pall Mall. ’Z.-N'L MANY USES. Same Suicseslloni Which Economical Housekeeper* Will Not Neg- Icct to Fat In Practice. There are many fats that can be used |ln cooking. All of these should be saved by themselves for culinary purposes. Fresh pork fat should always be saved, ;as it is as nice as lard for frying. Mut iton and lamb fat, however, is strong mnd of no culinary value. Beef fat is Valuable for frying, but should be mixed iwhen tried out with about half its buik ioi\lard or tried out in chicken fat. A combination of various meat fats used jin the kitchen makes a better medium than pure lard uud is more i. Butter is the poorest fat H’. It eann.it lie stieeessfiilly frying, as doughnuts and are fried, beeause it burns be heated to the proper Kei p two se| urale j:.i - Bits, one for coarse fats, k tier. rin.se jars of a ith straight side. are the best iui tne pur ;pose. For keeping soap fats a lard Ipail of the size that holds five pounds iwhen filled is the cheapest and most ■convenient to use. Try out all the ■pieces of fat until only scraps are left. ■Fry a slice of raw potato in it to clarify .it if the fat is used in cooking, and pour It into the jar in which the general fat is kept. Save chicken fat, which is delicate enough to use in place of olive oil for dressing, in a small jar by itself. ■Turkey fat is too strong to use in cook ing, but, like lamb and mutton fats, it should be tried out, but strained into the soap fat. It pays to keep this fat clean and to strain it as it is tried out from time to time. It is easy to keep a supply of soft soap in the house from this source, which will be very valuable for house cleaning and washing up greasy pots and kettles, even if it is used for no other purpose.—N. Y. Trib une. i I THE ART OF FACE WASHING. J Boiled Wnler at Itlßlit Helps to Pre serve the Smoothness and Clear ness of the Skin. The face, exposed as it is to every form of floating corruption, needs most intelligent and unremitting care. It is also the theater of the emotions, where hate, envy, jealousy, anger and all the unlovely traits play their mimic part. Bad facial habits, scowling, squinting, grimacing leave here their indelible lines. , Sighed n faded beauty, ns she gazed at her white, shapely shoulders and prematurely lined face: “Ah, me! 1 have literally an old head on young shoulders. I wonder why it is?" One does not have to search far for the an swer. The face bears the brunt of the battle of life. Women do not realize the value of an, unruffled brow and serene countenance until too oft indulgence in I unhappy emotions has fixed their fatal footprints there. The* utterance of “prunes and prisms” is not so utterly absurd as it appears at first thought. It carries a bit of a lesson. It repre sents a desire to “look pleasant,” as the photographers caution a .sitter. Why not try to imagine one’s self be fore a perpetual camera? The predom inant spirit that lies back of the coun tenance molds the tractable tissue into its own likeness as years roil on, so that “he who runs may read.” Washing the face every night in hot water that has been boiled to soften it, followed by cold water and a gentle massage, will undeniably smoottj out incipient lines and greatly retard the formation of new ones. The epidermis is a horny substance, containing not one particle of water, therefore water cannot penetrate it, Oil and vapor will. They soften the pores and loosen all undesirable accu mulations. Every night, before going to bed, a short time should be devoted to the facial bath. If the skin, be impreg nated with blackheads ifnd pimples, rub in well a little olive or sweet almond oil, allowing it to remain on about ten minutes. Wash off in hot, boiled wa ter and pure soap, using plenty of fric tion. Rinse in hot water until ail traces of soap have been removed. Then dash on plentifully cold water ill which a pinch of soda has been,dissolved. A few drops of benzoin added to the water makes a milky, fragrant both, nnd acts as a tonic and whitener to the skin. Dry the face thoroughly upon <i soft towel, rubbing upward and backward toward the ear. If the skin feels at all harsh finish with a tiny bit of cold cream to replace the natural oil re moved by the hot bath and friction. A youthful skin does not require the cream and subsequent massage, but it is of indispensable value to an aging face. If faithfully and intelligently pursued this simple treatment, in conjunction with hints above given, will refine coarse and greasy skins, eradicate mi nor cases of eruptions, restore fresh ness and color to faded faces and erase many lines caused by time, worry and facial expression.—Ledger Monthly. DECORATION NOTES. Pretty Materials for Cnrtnins and Hanslnjra Are Now Easily Obtainable. There are many pretty materials on the market for making sash curtains, but, after all, Scotch madras, the genu ine sort, holds its own for attractive ness, especially in its ecru tint or deep cream, which harmonizes with nearly all colorings in furnishing. Scotch madras showing the design* covering its ground well and leaving but little ground to show is the most ar tistic in self-colors. Scotch madras in stained glass coiorin mil. vm, ventioD'* ties’ig-us is the most decorative Drapery one can have for windows. Never were cretonnes and chintzes more beautiful than they are this sum mer, nor more varied in the style of their designs. For large houses the all-over rampant poppy ami thistle de signs in low tones of their natural col ors on a cream ground are lovely. Extremely beautiful are the cotton liberty velvets; their texture is ex quisitely soft and their designs and col orings are in keeping. Liberty velvet of dull blue ground shows an all-over swaying lotos design with stems and flowers in shades of indigo blue. Some of the beautiful chintzes and soft-finished cretonnes, as also the repped cretonnes, may be put to very decorative uses in the way of applique work. For example, large poppy de signs, hollyhocks and peonjfs and their stems and leaves may be cut from the cretonne and applied, for instance, to a iinen curtain as a frieze. A beautiful treatment fora gray linen curtain is to lay under the top a bor der of orange-colored twill and to work a bold scroll design in outline for cut work, and then to cut away the gray to show the orange twill as a design.—La dies’ World. Cold Fish Served with a Stare. Fish en vinaigrette is made by boil ing carefully a nice fresh fish. When done lake it from the tire and stand aside to coo). When cold dish neatly on a large platter and squeeze over it the juice of two lemons. Have ready two hard-boiled eggs, the whites and yolks chopped very fine, but separate ly, also suflicient chopped parsley to make two tablespoonfnls. J’ut around the fish a ring of the yolks of the eggs, then a. ring of the whites, then a ring of capers, then again the yolks and whites, and on the outer edge put a row of fresh parsley or lettuce leaves. Bprinkle the entire fish with finely chopped parsley and serve it with sauce vinaigrette or with mayonnaise dress ing.—Ladies’ Home Journal. Slack on Corners. Loafers and postage stamps are usu ally stuck on corners.—Chicago Daily ( News. HIS SON HIS COMMANDER. Unusual Reversal of Family Author ity Crops lip In a Colorado RefflLent. Out of the hurry and bustle of the ; war there has come one of the most j remarkable cases of the reversal of fam ; ily authority ever known to military ‘ men. A son is a commissioned officer in a regiment, while the father is a pri vate in the same regiment. The son gives the father commands; the father executes the orders; he touches his hat when he passes his boy during duty. i On the rolls of the First Colorado in-1 I fantry appear the name of Ben Lear, second lieutenant, aged 19, and Benja min Lear, Sr., private, aged 44. The father is proud of the success of his j son and never tires of boasting to his fellow privates. | Lieut. Lear is a fine specimen of the j young American soldier. He has all j the good qualities that are known as “Western.” He has go and push and grit, a very intelligent mind and an aptness for his work. He laughed when asked about the family relations in th‘e regiment. “Why, my dear fellow,” he exclaimed, “don’t you know that in a regiment there are no family relations? Here we are all officers or privates or band men, and that ends the whole business. But, seriously, the curious relations which I am bound to maintain with my own father are ridiculous, and if he did not have if finb sense of humor I himself they would be well-nigh insup portable. “He comes in here with a message, for instance, and stopping at the dooi he stands at salute until I have time or am in a disposition to receive him by acknowledging his salute. Then he does the goose-step and comes into my tent, where he must stand at atten tion until the business is finished; then be must salute again before he goes j out. Altogether it is laughable, be- j cause I am a stickler for discipline, even though it does involve my own father. “When it is father’s turn to carry wood, draw rations, or do police duty, it is my task to issue those orders to the old gentleman, and he touches his cap and replies: ‘Yes, sir,’ as respect fully as you please. “When the call for volunteers came . I was a first sergeant in the Colorado national guard and volunteered. I went with my company to Denver and we were mustered in, I kept my old rank of first sergeant in the First Col orado infantry. “When the regiment was recruiting father came to headquarters and want ed to enlist. I persuaded him not to join,*and when I left I was sure that father would stay at home, where he was badly needed on his paper. But when the recruiting officer went back to Denver for more men you can judge pf my amazement to find my father in the fisst batch sent up.” N. Y World. It takes but a minute to overcome tick ling in the throat and to stop a cough by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. This remedy quickly cures all forms of throat and lung troubles. Harmless and pleas ant to take. It prevents consumption. A fimous specific for grippe and its after effects. Eli T. Reynolds, WOMAN OF THE ANGELUS. How Millet’s Model Lives la Hei Peasant Cottage at llarblxon, Near Paris. Barbizon, a littJe village in the midst of the forest of Fontainebleau, a short distance from Paris, has become a goal of pilgrimage fpr many admirers oi Millet’s work, and particularly for those who know that the woman who suggested to the great painter his fa mous picture of “The Angelus” still lives there in a little cottage a stone’s throw from where she was born. Mere Adele’s home is a small vine-clad cot tage, in which she lives a frugal but comfortable life, troubled only by the overinquisitive tourists and by her rheumatism. She must have been an attractive woman once, for even now, although she has witnessed the passing of more than, tbree-sppre years and ten, • there are traces of former beauty in her wrinkled face. Mere Adele is a lady, though she has worn her fingers blunt by toil, and hei fcorn. ‘s, Wat <wi4ak CVt siA bo* 1 > bad to bear. When she looks at you hei smile is like a benediction, nnd the i beautiful things of earth ure not lost upon her. Her manner is cheerful, as 1 one who feels she has not lived in vain i If questioned closely she will tell you of the day when the great artist came through the dense forest with his wife and children, leaving behind him the gay pify of Paris with its schools oi painting and jts models. She knows a great deal of the very bal'd days which followed for Jean Francois Mljlet—the toil, the anxiety, the disappointments. She nursed his five children, and did tiie little field-work in the garden ad joining the cottage. When he saw his (purse-girl, Adele, and her father rever ently bowing their heads in prayer nl the ringing of the Angelus he con ceived the picture which. If not hjs best work, is yet the best known, and tbe one most appreciated by the people. Merp Adele calls herself a child of God. She looks it ii) (hp painting, and she lives it every day in her humjflp pottage. —Edward A. Steiner, in Woman’s Home Companion. WMr*- Sympathy l Needed. “I don’t know,” said Mr. Spaggs, as he came In from the lawn apd sot hijnspii down on tbe porch and fanned'himseii vigorously. “I don’t know why so much ado should be made about that poem concerning ‘The Man with the Hoe.’ ” “Why, my dear, think of the toil ot centuries which bows him down, speak ing hereditarily.” “Oh, pshaw, that’s nothing. What fhp painters and poets ought to work ,st, and excjtp gjfnpalhy fpr, is the man with the lawn mPKcr-”—Pjttsbnrfb Chronicle. Love. Should your best girl decline to par take of iee cream at your expense after you have dropped a mild hint pertain ing to the scarcity of the almighty dol lar —that is love.—Chicago Daily News. “I was nearly dead vvitie dyspepsia, tried doctors, visited mineral springs, and fjew worse. I used Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. That Cured tne ” It digests w hat you eat. Cute* indigestion, sour stomach, heartburn aud all forms of ,3yspepsia. Eli T. Reynolds. ( HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Item That Mar Prove of Great In terest to the Hoaee ■>* wife. If anybody can make a perfect cup of tea -it is the clever demonstrator who gets a large salary from one of the large tea companies for showing just how the fragrant leaf should be brewed to achieve perfection. “Scald your •nrthen teapot,” says this woman, suit ing the deed to the word, “just so, and never, never use a tin teapot under any circumstances. Measure out the tea. I allowing a half teaspoonful for each ! mp of boiling water, reducing the pro portions when several cups are re quired or increasing them if the tea ■ used is not up to the standard or if the I drinker prefers it extra strong. Have | fresh water that has just come to a boil for the first time. Put the tea in a ! cloth strainer and pour on the bubbling boiling water. Cover closely with a tea eozy and let the tea brew on the back yf the range or at the table from three to five minutes. If the tea is to stand for some time remove the strainer with the tea leaves, else the fragrant aroma is wasted and the tannin extracted.” Quince jelly may be made in quantity or a little at a time, as the circum stances of the case determine. Wipe the fruit carefully, removing all the stems and the fuzz, as well as any parts not perfectly fair nnd sound, tfse the best parts of the fruit for canning, preserv ing or baking, as the cores, skins and harder portions or the small, knotty quinces will answer quite as well for jelly. The seeds especially must be utilized, as they contain a large portion of gelatinous substance. Cover with plenty of water nnd boil until *lll6 pulp is soft.' Wash well, nnd drain over night preferably. The next morijng measure the juice and put over to boil. When it reaches the boiling point, add an equal quantity of hot sugar; skim | nnd boil three or four minutes until it begins to jell in the spoon. Roll the jelly glasses In hot water, nnd fill with the scalding liquid, which should be crystal clear and of a rich red. There is a science in the ’putting away of food in stcrercom or ice box that is too often neglected by the other wise particular housekeeper. The slice of breakfast ham is often carelessly left in juxtaposition with the dinner roast, which spoils the flavor of the latter. A dish of cold boiled onions,is thought lessly set near the butter, which fit once absorbs (ts distinctive odor with out advantage to itself. Celery is laid near the creum pitcher and turnips or boiled cabbage set by tile cooling cus tard for supper. Through such care lessness and ignorance the loss is some times quite great. Milk, cream and but ter should be kept much as possible from all food, as they too readily ab sorb any flavor at hand. Meat or poul try should not rest against each other, but be arranged so that the air can cir culate about them. If meat and poultry are to Jiang, they .should be suspended with the choicest part down, that the juices may settle there.—Washington Star. ' Miss Annie E. punning, Tyre, Mich , says, *‘l suffered a long time from dys pepsia; lost flesh and became very weak. Kodol Dyspepsia ure completely cured me.” It digests what you eat and cures all forms of stomach trouble.' It never fails to give immediate relief in the worst cases. Eli T. Reynolds. GAY COLORS REIGN. The Coming: Garments Will Be Rain bow-lined—Charms of the New Trlmmlnffs. This is the only time of the year when pll yypmen tire impervious to the spell of tbe bargain counter, Wbe re tb c fFPsJi est and newest wares ore displayed there the earnest seekers after fashion able attire are gathered together. They have all rallied nobly to the standard of the crepon on one hand, and of the heather mixture tweeds on the other, and the charm of these fabrics is very evidently due to their engaging colors, for, with plaids setting the pace, this promises to be n veritable rainbow win ter. Ordinarily the American woman Is n conservative creature as regard's thf radiance of her plumage in tine au tumn find ouj pf doors, but sopa'e change of flenct {ms been worked), and. the pos tume thpt reflo/lfvs ps many US five dif -1 Yer'ent tones is by high and unques tioned authority regarded as in excel lent taste. Shoe, changeable, and striped crepons take precedence, and a beautiful brown example of this weave, diagonally lined in inch-wide bands of corn flower blue, nnd the whole costume enriched with green bronze buttons and touches of flame-colored velvet, is displayed by one importer as a noble example worthy of frequent imitation. Some of these ere pons, it is well to mention, are so woven as to show transparent spaces in light ly silk slips, thprpby adding more cheer ful webbed silk or woo) threads, and this necessitates their erection upon colored tones to the already multi colored costumes. Let it be borne in mind, however, that various as are the colors used they never clash, nnd that a crepon wrought half of silk and half of wool is not regarded as suitable for a street gown. It serves for the theater, afternoon calls, chtlrch and luncheon purposes, and nearly all such toilets are trimmed on the skirt. —Chicago In ter Ocpap. Mushrooms Stewe<(. Peel and scrape the jnside of the flaps and rub (he buttons with a piece of flannel pnd salt, sprinkle salt over them, and put in U sauce pan with some whole pepper; simmer over e slow fire, and when done, stir In a little butter and flour, and two tablespoon fills of cream, and boil together for a moment or two, and serve with sippets of toast. —Boston Globe. Frosen Almond Custard. A half pound of blanched almonds, to which six tablespoonfuls of sugar have beep addpd,'roiled wil {i a custard made of (he yolks of four pggs and a pfnjf of sweetened milk, wiij make a dpjjcjpps dish. When the whole is cold pound it to a paste, adding a quart of cream. After straining this put It into a freezer until ready to serve.— N. Y. Tribune. Mr. J. Sheer, Sedaiia, Mo., saved his child's life by One Minute Cough Cure. Doctors had gfvej) her up to die with croup. It’s au infallible dure for coughs, i colds, grippe, pneumonia! bronchitis and throat and lung troubles. Relieves at puce. Eli T. Reynolds. THE MORNING AFTER. “Is your husband botanizing?” “No, he is looking for the pipe And tobacco be threw away when he swore off smoking last njght.”—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Her Preference. “Which do you prefer,” said the call er, “golf or whist?” “Golf,” answerd Mrs. Blykins promptly. “It fatigues my husband so much when he plays it that he doesn't talk about it in his sleep.”—Washing ton Star.’ More Important. Mrs. Catterson —What a pity you have no children. Mrs. Hatterson—l don’t know. If I did have, I wouldn’t be a\>le to take such an active part in the mother's | congress.—Brooklyn Life. So Coy. Jack—Didn’t Miss Footlite’s costume strike you as being rather immodest? Tom —Not a bit of it. On the con trary, it seemed to shrink from observa tion.—N. Y. Journal. The Headlong Career. “How are you getting on with your automobile?”- “I can start it all right, but J can’t stop it unless I run into something.” —Chicago Daily Record. How He Knew. Husband —You sharpened, your lead pencil last night, didn’t you? Wife—llow do you know? Husband—l’ve just been trying to shave myself.—Tit-Bits. Prepared. Castleton —Hello, I never saw that clock in the drawing room before. Harold—No, but when sister heard you were coming she had it moved in. —Detroit Free I’ress, The One Day Cold Cure. For cold in the head and snre throat nso Ker mott's Chocolates Laxative Qulni-the “One Day Cold Cure." Ell T. Keynolds’ Pharmacy i An I | imperfect skin , is always caused by , , bad blood. Remove the , cause 1 Improve your , i blood. How? By tak- , i ing the blood purifier , i that has stood the test , , for thirty years , Johnston’s Sarsaparilla 1 QUART BOTTLE. I 1 It has thousands of 1 happy friends. Quart 1 Bottles sell every- i 1 where at si. I “THB MICHIGAN DRUG COMPANY,” I Detroit, Mich. ' J SLlverette. for Liver ills, The Famous Little Liver Pills. ■ ELI T. REYNOLDS’ PHARMACY. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Itartificially digests the food aud aids Nature in strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It is the latest discovered digest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach It in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea. Sick Headache,Gastralgia,Cramps,ana all other results of imperfeetdigestion. Prepared by E C DcWltt & Co.. Chicago. ELI T. REYNOLDS. ! SIOOO In Gold rnrr A $950 PIANO rntt The Gentlewoman of hew York City wants an agent in ycuv town Ji g> ol Cameras, Bicycles, Seising Machine-., iNs.ka, Wii ol Dishes. Rings, Watches, Shirt ard Silk U ! Handkerchiefs, etc.; in fact, about tfo humlrcU useful | and ornamental articles and household netcwiim j can be secured without costing c tie ccr.t Ai - - *m| attractive plan of securing subscribers shhiui the I objectionable features of canvassing. tiooo.oojM bold | Given Aiay Fret A $950.00 PIANO I We send our complete outfit and easy plan for ! raising clubs Free* aho our Mammoth pM.a ( List: 7 you wilfbe surprised and delighted with the high quality and great- assortment ed our preivi< m Goid-Sr? s fis; 5 IT* r? postal card ro-day forfliir p*m6it*ry'; t*o >iot Everything will be sent you Fro* GENTLEWOMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY, OffltfMesnMin aaMlai, I wfc C’s*. K, f. BUSINESS and SHORTHAND COURSES, WILMINGTON, DELAWARE. Write for it today (it is free)—the new, illustrated ratal, i,. f i.. , n inttact >n Commercial and Shorthand College. Parents and >oun* i ■ shows how young men and young women are train*d in • fear .;m , . best paying positions. The BUSINESS and SHORTHAND toarw tb*> Mf methods, the delightful “HOMES” provid If■ >r tt. j ’ *•% . p=t* nt • illes, the beautiful penmanship, the expert trar.hr * -ratal. r r •* ih tf r ten; Fourteenth year. Mainly Individual instruction. S'a'rr- rev. > < > s,.rt> > young men and young women .from net . Pa., Md v, * *,i last year. NEVER SUCH A DEMAND TOR GRADUATES cost of living low. Write today for the catalogue to II 9 >; * ton, Del., —no other catalogue like It.. They banish pain I No matter what the matter is, one will do you a good, and you can j et ten for live cents 3 A new style packet containing nc* an**. i* r b’ s- ■- -r . W at someUrut; stores-FonrivKCMtrH. n> * a 7 cal. Ono dozen of the flve-oenfc e.u-ious . V \ to the niPAXH CUEMK AL C'OWiMt. 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