rf . .AT-. v C J3U' The .GomffloneK LFRIL 27, 1906' Vh t$ tgers move the laces gently up and wn so (he soapy water runs through. ie meshes and carries tnit the dirt; Us soon as this water loofcs dark. Rat lace into cleau suds and repeat the process, until the lace looks clean id the water is not discolored. "Use clean, cold water to rinse them in, and, if desired, dip the laces through a- blue water that helps to whiten -them. If the laces are very old and look lifeless, put them through .a thin starch- made rrom gum arable jfknd water; which will give them fresh ness. Do not rub the nets while cleaning, and when clean, pin It in shape on the drying board and set in the sun to dry and whiten as it dries. "When, removed from the drying board, the lace should be crisp and fresh look ing. If the lace should look yellow after the washing, rub it all over with white soap after putting through the blue water, and lay it out fiat on a china platter, in the sun. Generally, this treatment will bleach it out with one trial? but if not, repeat until it whitens. For cleaning black lace at home, hruBh it thoroughly with a soft whisk to get out all the loose dust, then dip it through ordinary drinking tea, in which a little melted white soap has been poured. When it is clean, rinse through clear tea and soak in ft a tea preparation for several hours heforo drying. This last tea is maue Nof one teaspoonful of gum arabic, i me same 01 ary tea, iu wmuu uu , point of boiling water, letting them cook over a slow fire into v. kind of thin jelly, strain through a cloth and use. Dip the lace in and out of this preparation for several minutes, then t put to dry, stretching out the edges ti and figures in the pattern with pins on a smooth surface, when dry, tne lace should . be perfectly clean and r freefrom all spots, crisp as new. In order to succeed perfectly in. this A-BUSY WOMAN Can Do the Work of 3 or 4 If Well Fed An energetic young woman living just outside of N. Y. writes: "I am at present doing all the house work of a dairy farm, caring for 2 children, a vegetable and flower gar den, a lanre number of fowls, besides I; managing an extensive exchange busi ness through the mails and pursuing rav recular avocation as a writer tor several newspapers and magazines (designing fancy work for the latter) t. anu an tne energy auu uuimy to uu this I owe to Grape-Nuts food. - "It was not always so. and a year , mm -orhpn the shock of mv nursing r, baby's death utterly prostrated me land deranged my stomach and nerves ?o that I could not assimilate as mucn jis n mouthful of solid food, and was fn even worse condition mentally, he : would have been a "rash propnet wno would have predicted that it ever v would be so. "Prior to this great grief I had t suffered for years with impaired digestion, insomnia, agonizing cramps. in the stomach, pain in tne suie, con stipation, and other bowel derange ments, all these were familiar to my daily life. Medicines gave me no re lief nothing did. until a few months ; ago, at a friend's suggestion, I be- f. gan to use ijrape-xuis iuuu, uuu auu- sequently gave up coffee entirely and I adopted Postum Food coiiee at an my meals. "Today 1. am free from all tne troubles I Jiave enumerated. My i digestion is simply perfect, I asslm- f ilate my food without tne least uis- tress, enjoy sweet, restful sleep, and .have a buoyant feeimg ot pleasure m mv vnrlnri rhiHos. Tn fact. I am a piew wpmanfi,entirely made over, and f I repeat, I owe it all to Grape-Nuts Band Postunr- Coffee." Name given by f Postum Co., Rattle Creek, jUicn. iTiiere's a reason. Keati tne uuie ft "The Road to Well vine, m i - . v- work, one will p'erienau. Ex. do better through . ex- ' Rugs and Carpets Red carpets, while pretty for cer tain bright" effects, are diflioult ' to keep looking well because 'gf , their readiness to show tsvery' speck 'of lint or' other' light 'deposit. Pretty patterns, with delicate designs on solid ground show soil much sooner than a mixed design, and one snould choose colors that will give a bright, clean effect to the room hi' which they are to serve, Short lengths of carpets may often be had quite 'cheaply at the large caVpet house's, as in heavy consign ments there are often a few yards slightly damaged on outside of roll, or sometimes only an insignificant flaw in the weave, or a soiled spot, or broken thread which renders the length unsaleable, yet can be readily overcome by a little cleaning, or darn ing, and thus serve for rugs. Three ply ingrains are gdod, but Will not lie in place as well as the heavier Brussels. Affairs of the Garden ' In the-work of transplanting, or setting out of plants, planting seeds, etc., one must do more or less hand ling of the soil, and the hands will become rough and grimy and hard to get clean by ordinary means. Be fore washing, one should rub into the hand thoroughly some kind of grease lard will do; let it. stay 6n the hands, rubbing them as in soap suds, for a few minutes, then wash them in soft warm soap suds, and dry with corn meal. It pays to use good, vegetable oil soap on the Tiands, at all times, but particularly when one is out in tile open at work. Gloves, or mittens for garden work may be made of any soft, thick "cloth; or an old pair of cotton (not woolen) socks or stockings may be put into shape- for the- work. At many of the city and village stores', gloves made of drilling or canton flannel can be had for from five to ten cents the pair,, and, at this price, it is cheaper to buy than to make. But if one has more time than money, onertfali may be bought,, ripped apart tor a pattern, and others may thus be made as wanted. They wear well, and save! the hands very much. Do not forget to transplant your let tuce. If allowed to grow up in the bod where it is sown, it does not make nice heads; but if set out In rows "so it can be "cultivated, the tiny plants being gix to ten Indies apart, they will head up like a cab bage, with beautifully tender inside leaves. A good treatise on practical gardening is a necessity to any one who wishes to make the most of time, labor .and land. Almost any agricul tural paper can tell you where one may be'obtained, ana what work is the most practical. -" sand and 'sawdust Well Jnto the fur, and then beat it out nvziinight rattan sticks. Fon.tho ermine and other llhf furs, treat? similarly wfth . plaster 'or Paris -and corn 'stflrgh, or prioi qoYif rauai. -mis will rresnen and. clean, as ,wll as tsoften.- . Jpsie. Thanks tor Hie plan of the flower gaiSlen. I am afraid 'the aver age farmwifb will find it di'fiicdlt to get the wire fencing, or the man to look after it Pin money is not al ways plentiful in l he farm wife's pocket. It may help some one, how ever, and 1 will givo it. - - Requested Recipes Cream Puffs. Boil together oho cupful of water and one cupful of flour (the flour to be stirred into the water wliile boiling). Let cook two minutes, remove from the stove and, When cool enough so that you can press your finger.into the dough with out burning, add three eggs, One at a time, beating them in separately. Drop by spoonfuls in Well-buttered gem-tins and bake twenty minutes, or until well-browned, in a hot oven. This will make a dozen puffs. For the filling: One egg, three table spoonfuls of sugar, two teaspoonfuls of corn starch and a pinch of salt. Beat all together, stir into a cup of boiling milk, cook until it thickens, remove from the stove, flavor with a teaspoonful of any flavor liked, and when' puffs and filling are cool, open the puffs on top and fill as many as you wish. H. G. D. Oat Meal Cookies. One cup of but ter, one cup of sugar, three eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sweet milk, three fourths 'teaspoonfuls of soda, half tea spoonful of salt, spide to taste, two cupfuls .oat meal flour and, if liked, chopped nuts may 15e added. Drop with a spoon on buttered tins. Bake in moderate oven. O. L. Query Box ; ,7. S. Prepared" rennei, can be had, with directions for using, from your druggist. . H. H., and others Thanks for in formation regarding the reliability of the "water-glass" method of keeping eggs. Mother. Make .the little one's every day dresses of brown linen or crash the ".Holland" linen of our mothers' time. 4- AVJM. P. Some, one has been "jol lying" you about the cocpanuts. They are shipped as . they grow on the trees. Lonesome r-It .would be better for you to buy a work on needlecraft and fancy-stitches; then you can study them at your leisure. Get it through your book dealer.. , , Errata. In our issiio of April 6 in the article on preserving eggs, the types made me say "salipati of soda," Tt -should be "silicate." - . - Prnncie. For the dark furs, rub hot EXPLAINING EARTHQUAKES Writing for the Omaha WorldHor old, General B. F. Test,, well known throughout the west, says: - The San Francisco earthquake is one of the : features of meteorology affecting the earth since the creation, Rain, snow, tornadoes, hurricanes, cyclones, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are all meteorological, and they are produced by the same cause. It is true some earthquakes .are lo--cal. An explosion or a passing loco motive will jar the earth in their im mediate vicinity, but it takes some thing more to shake a continent. Since the. discovery of radium it is claimed all of the different elements are re solvable into one, and that one is electricity. This claim has been dem onstrated, in part, by light and heat. Electricity will produce both, and both are resolvable into electricity. Gravitation is magnetic or magnetism and primarily magnetism is electric ity. Gravitation attracts, so does a magnet, and a magnet becomes an electro-magnet when imbued with electricity. The sunlight is magnetic; so is the moonlight. Both Will draw the faces of plants toward them, as we see in the sunflower, the daisy and other plants. An electric brush light will exert the same power over tender plants if placed in a conservatory at night. Hence the sunlight and moon light are electric or electro-magnetic, as you will. The sun and moon ai'0 also magnets because they affect the earth and other celestial bodies, as-r well as the atmosphere and the tides. The remaining members of the solar system are magnets because they af fect each other, as well as the sun, moon and the earth. Through this electric power the sun forces the planets around it at different veloci ties, and the planets in turn, absorb ing this power from the sun, move their satellites around them as well as influencing each other, and throw a , powerful influence, qvor comets iy cater the solar system. Tho WEwWMk. influenced h&p DoweV fiirJ orTHtfctro.fliagnotf :in space, called -by some nsrrbnomcfs the Thrtm of God. That it ift"fuperior to the. sun is shown nv: tlm nnie ,the cinrth always pointing ftTfiife same tm-ecuon tiio north pole forthe 'north wesT. and the south jwliUw tIiesoutii east. Moving with-, different velocities around the auu, the planets approach and recede from each other. As they approach each necessarily affects- the other. This way demonstrated in flic discovery of the planet Neptune. When close together they are said to be in conjunction. Those coirjunc- nVU;? qualified in regard ?? cer tain bodiesVenus, Mercury and the mpon. When Venus and Mercury pass between the earth and the sun they aro In inferior conjunction. When the sun passes between them and tho earijithey are in superior conjunction. When tho moon passes between tho earth and the sun w say it is new moon. When the earth passes" be tween the moon and the sun it is full moon. The planets whose orbits aro farther than the earth's are in opposition when tho earth Is between hem and the sun. u f8 impossible to describe the power tho sun exerts to throw these bodies around it, but it is mormons. Take the planet Ju piter, it is 1,200 times larger than the earth, yet the sun forces it to turn itself over in less than ten hours Don't Be Downed Many a man, young and old, has given way to discouragement be cause he thought he was "n. good," when the trouble was that he was trying to do the wrong work. But if you are ambi tiousintelligent, capable of development in sales-' manship and Want to be your own man,- and the wearied man of no 'Mob' then we can be helpful to you and you tn lis. "NTn "inh" vnn ever had is as potential, is as Dig lor tne tuture, as large in what it leads to, as a connection with the aales department of The Ladies' Home Journal and The Sat urday Evening Post. 'flfi'e commissions arc large-, as large on new sales us on old, pay able at once, and apply alike on regular prize distributions of 5,000.00 a month ana" special awards of nearly rc.o,ooo,oo in the year. Write and ask how. . .. The Curtis Publishing Compahv 1872-K Cherry St., Philadelphia, Pa. - i 1 'i l -i P - -'W -u.jiWlifj feW , ;