AUSTRIAN TROOPS IN THE CARPATHIAN SNOWS
Austrian troops in the tops of the Carpathian mountains trudging through the thick snow.
KAISER REVIEWING TROOPS IN VERDUN REGION
The latest photograph of the kaiser, reviewing his troops near Verdun. Little has been heard of the kaiser’s
activities during the past few months, but he Is still visiting the different fronts. The photograph shows the kaiser
at the left, taking the sulute.
LITTLE SISTER JOY AT RED GROSS WORK
1 Pressed in a Red Cross uniform. Sister Joy, the five-year-old daughter
of Dr. C. A. Macdonald, spends busy days in the wards of Dunguvel, where
she is u. great favorite with everyone. Dungavel is the duke of Hamilton's
shooting box In Scotland, and stands 800 feet high In the Ayrshire moor, an
Ideal spot for a hospital. It Is for naval men only, and accommodates ten
officers and ninety xuen.
UNDER FIRE WITH THE TURKS
One of the few pictures to reach this country showing Turkish troops
under fire. This photograph was taken in the first-line trenches in Galicia,
’•nd shows the Turks fighting the Russians.
ELBKftT OOUHTY TKIBUNK.
YOUTH BIG BANK CHIEF
Guy (Emerson was recently elected
vice president of the National Bank of
Commerce of New York. He is only
thirty years old and is the youngest
man In New York to hold such a re
sponsihie position. Emerson gradu
ated from Harvard law school In 1911.
RISING ABOVE AFFLICTION
Paralyzed from her shoulders down,
her useless little shrunken hands lying
quite still on a pillow in front of her,
a small girl dreams of the day when
she will be a famous artist. And
these dreams have brought her a new
power or sense, for this little stricken
one has learned to use her uiouth to
hold her pencils and brushes while she
draws the pictures that are the delight
and pride of the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Hos
pital of St. Giles. The cripple, Ethel
Toussaint, the brave little artist. Is
Just fourteen years old. For seven
years, ever since an attuck of Infantile
parulysis, she has been unable to move
her body. But her mind was busy and
her will to become an artist has
caused her to overcome almost insur
mountable obstacles.
Sardinian Superstition.
In Sardinia the peasants deoornte
the youngest child In their midst with
red popples, to signify the death that
Jesus would die.
THE
KITCHEN
CABINET
Whether its worth while going
through so much to learn so little, as
the charity boy said when lie got to
the end of the alphabet, la a matter o
taste. I rather think It Isn’t. —Pickwick
Papers.
THINGS WORTH KNOWING.
To remove grease marks from wnll
paper—Make a paste fuller s earth
and ammonia, cover the
spot and let dry; brush
off with a clear, stiff
brush. For delicate pa
per, fold powdered
French chalk In a gauze,
lay the chalk pad on the
paper over the spot and
press with a hot iron;
there should be no mark,
but the grease will have disappeared.
To make shoes waterproof—Melt
beeswax, add a little sweet oil to thin
It. Before the shoes are worn, warm
the soles and pour the wax on with a
teaspoon and hold It close to the heat
to dry In, adding all the leather will
take.
Nickel on stoves should be well
greased with vaseline and wrapped In
paper when It is to be packed from
season to season. When needed to
use. wash In hot soapsuds.
By adding salt to gasoline when
cleenlng spots from garments, there
will be no ring left.
Use warm water to sprlnkie clothes,
and they will be ready to iron much
sooner.
Lemon Juice and salt will remove
ordinary rust stains. Expose to the
bright sunshine and repeat the appli
cation until the spot is removed.
Scorch stains wet with soapy water,
then pat in the sunshine, will become
white again.
Ink stains will often respond to a
treatment of soar milk.
It Is an old saying that “It is a poor
pie that will not grease Its own tin.”
but a cuctard or Juicy pie will bake
better and brown on the bottom if the
pan Is buttered a little before putting
the crust in.
To make a good broom holder, take
two large empty spools, two nails an
Inch longer than the spools, put
through them and drive the nails, leav
ing a space between the spools for the
broom to hang In.
When the stove is cracked, especially
if a coal stove, It is quite necessary
that it be mended at once, to avoid
escaping gas. Mix together equal
parts of wood ashes and salt with wa
ter to make a paste, fill the cracks
when the stove Is cold. It hardens
very soon.
When the metal tip comes ofT from
the shoe laces, wax the -end well and
sew over and over with fine thread. It
will answer as well and often longer
than the tip.
It is very strange how like men are
to one another In some things, though
their characters are as different as can
be.
CHOICE DISHES.
Try using buttermilk instead of
sweet milk for the coffee cuke; It will
be creamy and of
delicious flavor.
Buttermilk for
dumplings, using
baking powder Is
also good.
Choice Popovers.
—Break three
eggs Into a bowl;
add half a tea-
spoonful of salt and a cupful each of
milk and sifted flour. Beat until
smooth with a Dover egg beater. Have
ready hot iron, gem pans, well
greased, fill the cups two-thirds full
with the mixture. Set Into a hot oven
and bake nbout 35 minutes. The deep
er the cups the more the cakes will
puff.
Steamed Fruit Pudding.—Sift to
gether one cupful of whole wheat flour,
half a cupful of white flour, half a
teaspoonful of salt, one tenspoonful
of soda and n half a teaspoonful of
mace. Beat one egg, add a half cup
ful of molasses, half a cupful of milk,
four tnhlespoonfuls of melted shorten
ing and a cupful of figs, dates or rais
ins cut in pieces. Mix all together and
turn Into a buttered mold. Steam two
hours. Serve hot with hnrd sauce.
Potatoes a la Gal If.—Cut raw pota
toes into the desired size and thick
ness. Boil for five minutes. Drain off
the water and place the potatoes in on
earthen baking dish with a little oil,
butter, finely cut ham, pepper and salt
and grated cheese. Cover and let cook
until the potatoes are done.
Apple Tapioca Pudding.—Cook a
cupful of quick cooking tapioca In
.Toiling salted water until transparent.
Core eight to ten apples and set them
In a baking dish; fill the centers with
cinnamon and sugar, pour over the
tapioca nnd hake until the apples are
tender. Serve hot with cream and
sugar. The apples may be quartered
nnd plnced over the top of the pud
ding. Peaches, pears or other fruit
may be used in place of apples If so
desired.
Chocolate cup cakes covered with
orange frosting or n chocolate layer
cake with an orange filling nnd frost
ing Is a most delicious combination.
To prevent mayonnaise from cur
dling, add one tenspoonful of cold wa
ter to the egg yolk before beginning to
beat It. t
In journeys as In life. It is a great
deal easier to go down hill than up.
Some people are always grumbling
because roses have thorns. Why not .
be glad that thorns have roses?
HELPFUL HINTS.
When putting down matting if It
must be turned in at the sides of the
room. wet it with
salt and water
until thoroughly
damp, then it can
be turned smooth
ly, .will give a
much neater fin
ish and not break.
When crochet-
ting run a hat pin
through the bnll and stick it on a sofa
cushion, then it will never roll away
or get soiled.
An ordinary match slightly mois
tened and rubbed over ink spots on
the fingers will remove them quickly.
By stitching around the top of a new
stocking with a fine stitch using silk
thread, one may avoid the dropped
stitches which are so annoying. Wash
ing silk hose after each wearing will
double the life of the hose.
To make cottage cheese quickly, pour
boiling water Into a bowl of clabbered
milk, then let it drain in a sieve. Sea
son with salt, butter and cream.
An embroidered front of an old
shirtwaist will make a dainty little
apron. Cut it out carefully, cut out
the top for the band and shape the bot
tom as desired.
Most cooks find in keeping
cheese moist without molding. Place
It in a crock, sprinkle it well with salt
and it will keep for some time with
out molding.
A handful of salt thrown into the
rinsing water will keep the clothes
from freezing on cold days while they
are being hung. Put the clothes pins
Into n dripping pan and heat them hot
before going out and comfort will at
tend you.
Crude oil Is one of the best of hair
tonics but one which is not pleasant
to apply. Give It a good trial, then
wash the hair.
Sour Beef.—This Is a good way to
use a tough piece of beef which re
sists ordinary cooking: Brown the
meat in a little fat, add flour, then
pour on a pint of water or stock, add
two onions, salt, pepper, Worcester
shire sauce and a tablespoonful of
vinegar. Cook slowly until the meat
Is tender. Use a tnblespoonful of vine
gar to two pounds of meat, adding
more If it is not very strong.
Cook rice, add two or three sliced
bananas and serve with a thin custard
for a sauce.
There is no substitute for thorough
going, ardent and sincere earnestness.
The hardest and best-borne trials
are those which are never chronicled
In any earthly record and are suffered
every day.—Dickens.
GOOD TABLE THINGS.
If you have never tried potnto cake
It Is worth the effort, as it Keeps moist
longer than cakes made
in the ordinary way.
Take two cupfuls of
sifted sugar, one cupful
of shortening nnd cream
them together. Add grad
ually two-thirds of a
cupful of sweet milk,
two cupfuls of flour, sift-
ed with two teaspoonfuls
of baking powder; one-lmlf of a ten
spoonful of cinnamon nnd a half cup
ful of cocoa. To this mixture add one
cupful of mashed potato, seasoned as
If to serve; one cupful of nut meats,
four well-beaten eggs nnd a tenspoon
ful of vanilla. Beat well and bake In
a loaf or in layers.
Salad Par Excellence.—Slice six to
matoes. three cucumbers, two npples;
chop three green peppers and one
onion. Put into a salad bowl, rubbed
with a cut clove of garlic; one cupful
of olive oil, one-half cupful of vinegar,
one tenspoonful each of mustard and
Worcestershire sauce, one tenspoonful
of brown sugnr. one-quarter of a ten
spoonful of paprika, one tenspoonful
hf salt. Beat well. Serve with wafers
and Roquefort cheese.
Potato Croquettes.—Bent the yolk
of an egg until thick, add two table
spoonfuls of cream, then work It Into
two cupfuls of mashed potatoes. Shape
Into rolls or any desired form, brush
with the white of an egg. und hake a
golden brown. Serve as a garnish with
parsley for any meat dish.
Potato Pancakes.—To one cupful of
cold mashed potato add a cupful of
milk. Sift together one cupful of flour,
one teaspoonful of sugar and salt to
season, two tenspoonfuls of baking
powder; beat well, add a tablespoon
ful of butter, and fry as Serve
with sirup.
Potato Cakes.—Season two cupfuls
of mashed potato with pepper nnd salt.
Sift In oue cupful of flour nnd one ten
spoonful of baling powder. Add
enough milk to mnke a soft dough,
flour well, roll out and cut into cakes!
Lay on a greased griddle and cook
covered a few minutes to let them rise,
then when brown on the bottom turn
nnd brown on the other side. When
done, split open, butter nnd serve hot.
FALLING HAIR MEANS
DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottla
of Danderine Right Now —Also
Stops Itching Scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff —that awful scurf.
There Is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of its luster, Its strength and its very
life; eventually producing a feverish
ness and itching of the scalp, which
if not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, loosen and die —then the
hair falls out fast. A little Danderine
tonight—now—any time —will surely
save your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, and after
the first application your hair will
take on that life, luster and luxuriance
which is so beautiful. It will become
wavy and fluffy and have the appear
ance of abundance; an incomparable
gloss and softness, but what will
please you most will be after just a
few weeks’ use, when you will actual
ly see a lot of fine, downy hair—new
hair —growing all over the scalp. Ady.
For reachlug flies on ceilings there
has been invented a long-handled swat
ter, operated by a spring.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOItIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
The Slam government savings bank
has 1,380 depositors with $138,977 to
their credit.
CUTICURA COMPLEXIONS
Are Usually Remarkably Soft and
Clear—Trial Free.
Make Cuticura Soap your every-day
toilet Soap, and assist it now and then
as needed by touches of Cuticura Oint
ment to soften, soothe and heal. Noth
ing better to make the complexion
clear, scalp free from dandruff and
hands soft and white.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, DepL L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
BEES MAKE HIVE OF HOUSE
Four Swarms Removed From Building
When a Fifth Arrives at lowa
Home.
Four swarms of wild bees recently
huve removed from tin; two-story house
of Earl Berryman on the East side of
Rockwell City, the Cedar Rapids (la.)
Gazette says. Three of them were lo
cated under the shingles on three cor
ners of the building und one was back
of the weather boarding near the eaves
on the south side of it. About three
bushels of combs were removed, but
the amount of white comb honey was
not nearly so great as the fine yield
this year from good hives in the neigh
borhood. f
A fifth swarm arrived und endeav
ored to gain an entrance to the build
ing at the eaves on the south side.
Failing to find a suitable openiug, this
Bwarm clustered within and around a
four-inch drain tile lying in the grass
aear the building.
A Comprehensive Comment.
“This is our baby,” burbled Proud
pop. “What do you think of him?”
“Ah! A very seldom sort of infant,
I should say,” politely replied Philo
Pumpelly.—Kansas City Star.
Equal Advantage.
“I went to a tea fight the other day.”
“Well, I saw a coffee mill.”
Before
Drinking
Coffee,
You
Should
Consider
Whether *
Or Not It Is
Harmful
“There’s a Reason” for
POSTUM