IIFII 111 1 iuIJ , Quests of Big New York Hotel Caught in Death Trap. SCENE OP WILD PANIC Ncajly a Score of People Arc Killed and Forty-two Injured. Gotham Hostelry , Crowd ed with Guests and SiRhtscers , Burns ttnpid Spread of Flames Cuts Off ICscap by the Elevators and Stair ways Men and Women T cap from Windows of Upper .Floors to an Awful Death. The Windsor Hotel , occupying a square 311 Fifth avenue , between Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh streets , in Xcw York , for acarly thirty years one of the most fam- > us hotels ill this country , if not in the world , was completely destroyed by fire Friday afternoon , and at least eighteen persons .were burned to death , and prob ably more than half a hundred were in jured. There were rescues by the score , some of them the most thrilling imagina ble. Among the rescued were Mrs. Abner MeKinley , wife of the brother of the President ; their da lighter , and Miss Helen McKinlyy , the sister of the President. From the roof and windows , from the ire escapes and cornices , frenzied men ind women threw themselves to the pave- aient five , six , seven stories below. Be wildered guests within the roaring fur- aace were carried down to death by fallIng - Ing walls , and all the while 50,000 human beings watched the tragedy. THE ILL-FATED WIXDSOR HOTEL , XEW YOKE. Massed into solid lines , men and women Hied side streets , avenues and doorsteps , here to watch the parade of the day , but 'ated to witness the most grewsome fire STew York has ever known. The roll of dead is long. Private homes around the place of sacrifice became field hospitals spacious mansions , including the Jay Gould home , were made tempo : rary morgues. ' John Fey , a waiter employed at the \Viudsor Hotel , in a statement made after { he fire to Coroner Bausch declared that : { he hotel was burned through the gross carelessness of a guest. The waiter was In a corridor of the second floor , walking toward 47th street , when he saw a man near the end of the corridor strike a match to light his cigar. The man threw > ( he match to the floor and walked on with out waiting to see that it had gone out. Fey noticed the action , and he also no ) ticed that the match was still blazing when it left the man's hand. When the waiter reached the spot the lace curtains were ablaze. He tried to extinguish the flame , but it was quickly up the curtain ' and caught the woodwork. The carpet raught fire , and the walls seemed to burn ike tinder. Fey gave the alarm and ran V b fiu fiV fie V s c h n t ! hf tlUl Ul WAUKKX F. I.ELAXD. 'roprictor of the Hurncrt Windsor Hotel , Made bi Insane by the Loss of His Wife and Daughter. , " biO 1 flown stairs and out of the building to reach a firebox. O ) An hour after the fire started the ruin w was complete. At ten minutes after 3 si o'clock the head of the parade reached tl 4Gth street and Fifth avenue , opposite the le f Windsor. An instant later a policeman leT ? " j" saw a tiny blaze and a puff of smoke in w . " a bow window in the drawing room on the dc dcw second floor , on the 4Gth street side. He w turned in an alarm. Before he could re ot turn to the hotel the drawing room was otas ' a sheet of flames. The room had been crowded with guests watching the parade. fc i / - , When the curtain ignited for that is said se * to have been the start of the fire instant to panic came over all. Men and women tobj ifed to the stairways and the flames leaped rein after them. Up the stairs and elevators in sped the guests up air and light shafts to raced the flames. In an incredibly short time the whole as building was enveloped in dull , roaring et tongues- fire and heavy stifling smoke. et 'It seems as if the fire must have been etw burning under the floor a d in the walls , w for on no other hypothesis can the sud denness of its spreading be accounted for. al The width of the corridors made it easy in to run , and the guests filled them in their lo rush for the streets. The elevators , al th though they were run until aflame , lit brought comparatively few down in safe ty. The road out of the death trap was down the splendid marble stairs. And down these stairs poured a terrified pro cession. Meanwhile through the tangled mol outside the fire engines had forced their way. It was after the first wild rush tha : swept so many to safety down the broat staircase that the most awful events of the great fire occurred. All of the wom en had not sprung "from their rooms with the first alarm. Some had stopped to dress , some to gather their most precious belongings. And these were doomed Then , too , there were sick persons in the house , bedridden men and women. When these belated ones got into the corridors they were for the most part bounded by walls of fire. Up the great central well roared the flames. Right at the stairways , the logi cal and accustomed avenues to the streets , were the terrible sentries , curling and swirling with threats to all who dared to pass that dread picket line. Then these belated guests took to the fire escapes , throwing open windows and reaching their arms out to the sea of people who groaned below. Many of those who came to the windows dews were saved at last by daring firemen and citizens. But the fire was too swift , the time too short. While the firemen were helping some to safety , others felt the touch of the red hand upon them from behind , and threw themselves from the windows. The firemen displayed the ut most heroism and daring in saving life at the most imminent risk. * The Windsor was the resort and dwell ing place of rich people , and there may have been half a million dollars' worth of jewels alone lost by the women who lived there. Among the dead are the wives of millionaires , as well as the maids , who were shut off in the top story. Abner Mc Kinley , brother of the President of the United States , with his wife and daugh ter , Miss Mabel McKinley , occupied a suite of rooms on the ground floor of the hotel. Among the dead are Mrs. Warren Leland - land , wife of the Windsor's proprietor , and her daughter , Miss Helen Lelaud , and Mrs. James S. Kirk , widow of the million aire soap manufacturer of Chicago. Panics Within , Panics "Without. The fire occurred in the middle of the afternoon , when Fifth avenue was jam- ned with people from curb line to house iue , and from curb to curb with St. Pat- ick's Day paraders. To this fact is due , perhaps , some of the loss of life and a rood deal of the serious injury to person , ! or the crowd interfered with the police md the firemen ; but so suddenly did the ire start , and so quickly did it sweep hrotigh the big hotel from floor to floor , 'rom street to roof , from side to side , if here had been no crowd there , and noth- ng to hamper the work of the officials , here would still have been many acci- lents and some fatalities. With such iwful rapidity did the fire spread , once it started , that people no higher up in the milding than the floor above the street lad to fly for their lives. Only by a search f the ruins will the extent of the dis- ister be known , and so complete was the vreck wrought by the fire that this will c a long and tedious work. The fire started , according to the best nformation , in a dining room. It was lue , it is almost certain , to the careless ossiug of a match into a lace curtain. Be- 'ore an alarm could be sent in to the fire lepartment the building was doomed. Had t been a tinder box the fire could not have aken hold quicker and completed the vork of demolition in less time. Yet the mildiug has been called fireproof. It was itted , according to the building and fire fficials , with all of the equipment for u ise in case of fire that the law requires , n t had sufficient fire escapes and the halls a vere equipped with electric alarms and s vith colored globes that should have a hewn everybody how to reach the es- d apes. Yet they might almost as well not o lave been there , for of all the persons eiT escued not than T more half a dozen were aken down by means of the fire escapes , \ \ rhile scores jumped or slid down murder- tlP us rope escapes , which burned their P lands and compelled them to drop many eet above the street. Within two hours of the discovery of a he fire the hotel itself was a total wreck , u ud the walls had fallen out on every side uc xcept the eastern side , where adjoining yr mildings shored them up. Those two 3f ours were as full of thrilling incidents 01 s any that Fifth avenue ever witnessed. lu ver 25,000 , and perhaps 50,000 , people 01 rere jammed together In the smallest 01Ol pace that they could be jammed in , "and liey saw women and children and men 4 ( aping from the windows of the , hotel. hey saw firemen climbing up the outer rails with scaling ladders and bringing own panic-stricken and often struggling 'omen. They saw rescues almost with- reT ut number , and they cheered the firemen redi s they worked. For a time the mob di wamped the police and surged back and orth through the streets , now rushing to ee this unfortunate falling to death , now witness another caught in the life nets IKfil y the firemen , and again to look in hor- fil or upon another impaled on the iron rail- filSi igs that surrounded the hotel , or dashed death on the"huge iron flower urns. Si This mob was as panic stricken almost ce : the people-in the hotel. They scream- ju as unfortunate after unfortunate leap- th out ; they mingled their cheers now and Pi gain with the cries for aid of the people CO : -ho did not jump. The loss on the hotel is estimated at bout $1,000,000. Several adjoining build- igs were damaged considerably , but the ofA ss on these is comparatively small. All ofW lie papers and books of the hotel are be * W eved to have been saved. prS S ( BECKER TELLS ALL , Killo Hia Wife with a Hatchet and Jiurns Her Body. August A. Becker , the Chicago wife murderer , made a second confession to the police Tuesday night. In a detailec statement to Inspector Hunt he told of a crime so revolting that for some time even the police oflicials refused to be lieve it. In the presence of Chief of Police Kip- ley , Inspector Hunt , Captain Lavin and Assistant State's Attorney Pearson the burly sausage maker broke down and said he had killed his wife by striking her on the head with a hatchet in the kitchen of his home. He then cut the body to pieces and boiled it in a large kettle. After watching the disintegration of the re mains for several hours , and when noth ing was left that resembled a human body Becker says he took what remained and burned it in a red-hot stove , the jfire hav ing been prepared by him. The bones , which would not burn , he buried on the prairie near his home. Becker asserts the crime was not pre meditated , but that he quarreled with his wife , and in the heat of passion he struck her on the head with the hatchet. Only one blow was needed to cause death and after that had been struck the sausage maker says he thought of the way to dis pose of the remains of his wife in order to destroy all chance of detection. August A. Becker killed his wife Jan. 27 , but was not arrested for the murder until after he had married a 17-year-old girl named Ida Sutterlin. When Becker brought his wife home it caused gossip , which reached the ears of the police , and finally led to Becker's arrest. At first Becker denied having killed his wife , stat ing that she had left him and gone to Mil waukee. Under pressure he finally made a false confession , in which he said that he had pushed his wife into the lake at the foot of the Randolph street pier. This was not believed , and until Tuesday night the true story of how Becker killed hia wife was not known. TOOK 400 PRISONERS. General "Whcaton Inflicts Heavy Lessen on Filipino ; ; . Gen. Lloyd Wheaton , commanding the United States flying column , attacked and defeated a force of 2,000 Filipinos at Pasig Wednesday afternoon , inflicting a heavy loss upon them. The American loss was slight. The Americans captured 350 Filipinos. Many bodies of rebels killed in the engagement floated down the river. Gen. Wheaton's brigade continues the work of clearing out the rebels around Pasig. The Washington volunteers cap tured and burned Pateros , meeting with a sharp fire from the enemy while crossing the river. The fighting was like that of the last week , the insurgents occasionally making a stand , but eventually fleeing. The progress of the Americans' advance has been slow. Three thousand insurgents moved down Tuesday night to towns of Pasig and Pa teros , on shore of Laguanda bay , fronting Wheaton's troops on Pasig river line. By heavy fighting Wheaton dislodged and drove them back , taking 400 prisoners and inflicting heavy loss in killed and wounded. His loss was very moderate. He now occupies these rowus with suffi cient force to hold them. Oflicials at the War Department are gratified over the victories of Gen. Whea ton , and predict further successful ad vances in the near future. It is under stood that the policy of Gen. Otis is to drive the insurgents without cessation in to the uncultivated region before the rainy season sets in. There they will have noth ing to subsist on , and it is thought they will lay down their arms. This has been prevented heretofore by a general belief among them that they would be shot or imprisoned if they surrendered. : , , It has been determined to withdraw all the volunteer troops from Cuba with all possible dispatch , orders to this effect hav ing been issued by the Secretary of War. There are two reasons for this decision , one being the reorganization of the army , and the other because the unsanitary con : ditions which will exist in Cuba at the be L ginning of the rainy season. It is expect ed to have all the volunteers out of the island within a mouth and certainly by : May 1. There are now about 25,000 vol [ unteers and when these are withdrawn regulars will not be sent to relieve them ) at once , as the President wishes to garri son < Cuba with as small a number of troops as possible on account of the health con ditions. This movement will begin at once and all the volunteers will be return ed as soon as transports can be supplied. When the troops reach this country they will be mustered out at the port at which they arrive , and given two months' extra pay , together with their fare home. " The customs receipts' the government are : climbing daily , according to the treas > ury bureau of statistics. They are now coming in at the rate of 9300,000 ji day , h more than half the daily expenditures hy the government , as shown by the rec ords of the last few years. During the v latter part of the year 1898 the war rev a enue tax brought in $55,280,831 ; the duty tea amounted to $2,779,787 , and the Pacific Railroad sales footed up'$14,841- n 101. All told the total receipts of the iirr rear 1898 were $442,631,251. rr rrsi si Senator Fairbanks of Indiana was the it ecipient of a Spanish sword , gilt handle , Foledo blade , the gift of a grateful sol- Her whose discharge he had procured. ; ; h Under the new army bill there .will be L01 second lieutenants appointed , and Eltl ; tl icarly 20,000 applications are already iled. " * " " " Colonel Charles L. Jewett , former speaker of the Indiana Legislature , re- 0 ] ently from Manila , \vhere he went as udge advocate , expresses the opinion that si he work of reducing the recalcitrant Fili- lines is an arduous one and will require onsiderable time. ei " " eia The grand reception of the Daughters a the American Revolution at Corcoran Gallery was a gala event of the iVashington social season. Among those P resent were General Miles and Admiral d 5chley , whs received nn ovation. JOSEPH MEDILL DEAD. Veteran Chicago Newspaper Man Em pires in San Antonio. Joseph Medill , for almost half a century editor of the Chicago Tribune and formei Mayor of Chicago , died at his winter home in San Antonio , Texas , Thursday. The great journalist was 70 years old. and the cause of death is assigned simply as oil ! age , with its attendant weaknesses. Mr. Medill decided last fall that he could not risk the severely cold wcathei in Chicago and went to San Antonio. The deaths of his wife and his favorite daugh ter , Josie , were shocks from which , it is believed , Mr. Medill never recovered and he had been growing perceptibly weaker for the last three years. Joseph Medill was born in St. John , X. B. , April 0 , 1823. His parents , who were of Scotch-Irish descent , moved to Stark County , Ohio , in 1831 , establishing themselves upon a small farm near Mas- sillon. Joseph helped his father with the work and made his pocket money by get ting up clubs of subscribers for the New York "Weekly Tribune. In the winter asd spring for several years he taught school. The law had great attractions for the young man and in 1840 he was admitted to the bar in New Philadelphia , Oliio. Mr. Medill did not engage long in the practice of law. Becoming interested in politics and having a natural bent for writing he determined to enter journalism. In 1849 he bought the Coshocton Whig , which he renamed the Republican. It was a free-soil whig paper. In-the win ter of 1854-55 Mr. Medill sold his Ohio paper and , going to Chicago in May , bought a large interest in the Chicago Tribune , a paper which was then almost bankrupt. It was placed on a paying basis by the new owners. In 1874 Mr. Medill secured full control of the paper and through it made a fortune. NEW LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS , Herbert Putnam , Head of Boaton'9 Public Library , Appointed. Herbert Putnam of Boston , has been appointed congressional librarian by Pres ident McKinley. Since he became head of the Boston public library in 1895 that in stitution has been greatly improved a high compliment to the librarian's merits , for Boston has always prided itself on its library. Mr. Putnam began his career as custodian of books in 1884 , when he was called to Minneapolis to take charge of the Athenaeum Library in that city. When HlittBliKT PUTNAM. Minneapolis created her public library the jooks of the Athenaeum were used as a melons. There were but 12,000 volumes n the collection. Seven years of labor on Mr. Putnam's part swelled the number to 50,000 choice books and lifted the new ibrary to the fifth place in circulation imong the concerns of its kind in Amer- ca. The new director of the National Library is a lawyer and a man of high mlture. He knows not merely the titles ) f books , but their contents , too. He islet lot yet 40 years old. NINE NEGROES SHOT. Bloody Work of a Masked 3Iob of "Whites at Palmetto , Ga. Early Thursday morning a mob of nasked men stormed a little house used is a jail at Palmetto , Ga. , and shot nine icgroes. Four were killed outright and he other five were badly wounded. There vas great excitement and Gov. Chandler vas called on for troops , the militia from Atlanta arriving about 11 o'clock. Two fires of incendiary origin have late- y occurred. Fourteen business houses in ill were destroyed. Nine negroes were irrested on suspicion and taken to John son's warehouse to await preliminary- rial. The mob rode into the town about o'clock. The little house was near the center of the town. The guard was call- id upon to turn over the nine negroes held here for trial on the charge of arson. Jpon his refusal he and his assistants vere quickly overpowered. The negroes egged for mercy to the leaders , but the ippeals were passed over , and drawing juns those of the mob who managed to ret inside the building quickly shot the u'isoners down. Lord Salisbury was the first English remier to visit Australia. Gen. Sir Arthur Cotton is one of Eng- and's oldest soldiers , being in his 90th ear. The Prince of Wales' breakfast never aries. It always consists of tea , toast tnd one egg. Prof. Blumentritt , through whom Agui- laldo and his colleagues have been mak- ng their cause known to Europe , is a nember of the faculty of an Austrian uni- ersity , and has made a thirty years' tudy of the Philippine archipelago and ts history. Don Carlos has taken a curious and r triking advantage of the foreign "post- ard craze" to further his cause , having iad some printed with portraits of him- . elf and his wife , with fac simile signa- l ures below , under which communica.- ions are written. ' i Count and Countess Boni de Castellane lave just leased for three years , with the iption of purchase , the Chateau de Ma- ias , belonging to the Due de Noailles. Dhree million dollars will be spent in re- itoring the estate. c Queen Victoria possesses two of the old * ist watches in the world. Both have silt rer dials , and are about as large as half f crown , one being a blind man's watch j ind the other a repeater. Mr. Hall Gaine shows that carelessness ermitted to genius in his dress , but Lon- lon has few more handsomely Downed " \ yemen than Mrs. Caine. 1 TWINS MURDERED BY LAW. According to African Superstition Their liiriu Proves Witchcraft. Miss Slessor , of the United Presby terian mission at Old Calabar , was a passenger on the Elde Dempster liner Orou , which left Liverpool recently , and had with her four black children whose case reveal a painful part of West African history. Miss Slessor has now worked for twenty-two years in Old Calabar. The children are aged , respectively , 2 , 3 , 5 and 10 years , and each is one of twins appointed at one time to die , in accordance with a super stitious custom prevailing in the Niger coast protectorate. In the course of an interview Miss Slessor said that all twins born were , according to the native laws , to be put immediately to death , and it is only those who have been rescued by the missionaries and placed beyond the reach of the native power who have so far escaped. The children in the Oren were four of these. Altogether , Miss Slessor has herself saved the lives of fifty-one twins. AVhen the twins are born they are at once taken from the mother , and , if no one interferes , they are taken by the feet and head and have their backs broken across a native woman's knee , in the same way as one would break a stick. The bodies are then placed in an earthenware receptacle and taken to the bush , where they are devoured by the flies , insects or animals. Sometimes the little victims are put in these re ceptacles alive , and are then eaten alive in the same way. The mother becomes an outcast. If she does not at once take her own life , she has to flee to the bush. If she ventures near the town or village , she must see that she does not remain in the path when any other native is coming. Her presence , ac cording to the superstition , would de file the place for others. She must not drink from the same spring , must not touch anything even belonging to her own relatives , and there is little cause for wonder that she takes away her life , which has become a living death. Miss Slessor is accompanied on the Oren by Miss Mclntosh , and together they are going to establish a home for these native twins. The natives' su perstition is that the birth of twins is the result of witchcraft and deviltry. Formerly the mother , as well as the children , was put to death. The inter vention of the white missionaries and traders had saved her life. Miss Slessor said : "It is really impossible to at once put an cud to the horrible native customs. There could be no better governors than we have at present. Sir Ralph Moor and Sir Claude Mae- donald have helped us all they can. We don't want them to kill the natives , to make them abolish the shocking practice. We iiope by saving the chil dren and bringing them up like other children to show the natives that they are wrong in their belief. It is their religious belief that makes them kill their children. " London Chronicle. LUCKY DEUCE Or SPADES. Remarkable Kun of Xnclc , but All for the Other Man. One by one the old superstitions are being torn from us. People nowadays 1 walk ostentatiously under ladders and ! suffer no evil consequences. Friday jo is quite a popular day for the com mencement of a long journey , and sit ting down thirteen at dinner is fre- quentlj' unattended with untoward re sults. A deeply rooted superstititon among card players is a belief in the lucky properties of the two of spades. The present writer's faith , however , t was severely shaken by a phenomenal o coincidence which occurred only a few o days ago. S Sitting down to a game of whist , he P thoroughly shuffled both packs of PE Pg cards , and happened to notice that the E two of spades was the bottom card of n one of the two packs. t "This ought to bring me luck , " he Iic remarked to his friends. Iia He then took up the second pack , and a was astonished to find that the two of spades was also at the bottom of that. Words failed to express his fl amazement when , in drawing for partfl ners and deal the cards had been " shuffled again he once more drew * the two of spades. The odds against this triple event occurring - curring must be enormous , but more c , was to follow. The deal fell to the writer , and the turn-up card was the n inevitable two of spades ! q After this the dealer felt justified in a believing he was in for a good evening. a As a matter of fact , he lost six rub bers in succession. London Mail. rj Mr. Gladstone's Nose. Lord Sherbrooke , -when Mr. Lowe , displayed a classical clearness and fi [ brightness of speech. When he was contemptuous his sentences had teeth \ in them , which left their mark upon a the mind. In the gray of a morning in afl 1868 , when the Liberals had deserted fl Mr. Gladstone , and left him with only f ( a majority of five on a question of ti state , Mr. Gladstone , with his usual tiJ high spirit , at once resigned. The alarmed deserters thought they might reassure him by a vote of confidence in him , and as Mr. Lowe emerged into si the lobby they asked his opinion of the ir idea. His answer was , "I think , iitl gentlemen , that you cannot unpull a tltl man's nose , " which ended that project. tl iiA He Stood Corrected. A\ "I sentence the prisoner to be lynch A1) ed , " said the rural justice. "But you can't do that , yer honor , " objected the lawyer for the defense. "Come to think of it , " said the jus tice , "you air right ; fer my bailiff in tl forms me they ain't three yards o' rope 31 in town ! " Atlanta Constitution. ii Iu iiti Invention of the Ballet. ti tiIi The ballet is said to have been in Ii vented by the Duchess of Maine ID 6 6o Paris. of How to Kemove Stains * Ink. Dip in boiling water , rub with salts of sorel and rinse well. Blood. Soak in cold water. For ticking and thick goods make a. thick paste of starch and water. Leave till dry and brush off. Scorch. Dip in soapsuds and lay in the sun. If fibers are not much in- jnreil , dip repeatedly in saturated solu- .tion of borax and rinse. Paint. Turpentine for coarse goods , benzine or naphtha for fine. Grease. Moisten with strong ammo nia water , lay blotting paper over and iron dry. If silk , use chloroform to re store color or cover with powdered French chalk and iron. Fruit Boiling water as above. If ineffectual , rub with a solution of oxalic acid and rinse in warm water. Coffee. Lay the stained portion of the cloth over a bowl and pour boiling water through it. To Wash inankcta. It is not compatible with sanitary principles to have blankets that are constantly slept under dry-cleaned ; they should be washed. Cut in fine pieces some good soap and boil to a jelly with soft water. Put some of the boiled soap in warm soft water , to which add two large tablespooufuls of borax , this being to every tub of water. This makes good lather , in which give the blankets two washings , after which rinse them in plenty of warm water , slightly blued. Wring out thor oughly , giving a vigorous shaking and hang out to dry. Take them in if weather is inclement , place them in the clothes basket , cover with a cloth and stand in kitchen. They should be given four or five days of sunshine that they may be thoroughly dried. Bpitomist. Oatmeai Scones. These are largely used by ( he Scotch peasantry in place of bread , and are baked on a griddle suspended over au open fire. A frying pan over a slow lire ir.ay be substituted for a griddle. Take two pounds of oatmeal , a tablespoonful - spoonful of salt , a tablespoonful of lard and enough water to make a stiff dough. Rub the lard into the oatmeal and add the salt and water. In roll ing , the palm of ihe hand should bo used instead of a rolling pin ? Press the dough into a round cake about a quar ter of an inch thick , cut into segments and cook on the griddle until a light brown. Oatmeal scones properly pre pared will keep for weeks. Stuffed Cabbaxrc. Scald the cabbage until the bones iose their crispness. Open the heart to ihe very center. Have nearly a cupful of rice ; add a cupful of chopped meat , and season with salt and pepper. Put a teaspoonful of this mixture in the center of the cabbage ; fold over the cf first little leaves , then add another layer : of the mixture and fold over the second leaves and so on. Tie in a piece of cheese cloth and throw in boiling water ( with a little salt ) , simmer gen tly one hour , remove the cheese cloth , drain dish and pour over a pint of cream sauce or drain butter sauce. Oysters a la Ponlette. Put three dozen freshly opened oys ters < in a saucepan , with a pine of their own liquor carefully strained. Add one ounce of butter , half a teaspoouful of salt ; and the same quantit3 * of black pepper. Parboil for three minutes , gradually stirring in a half-pint of Hollandaise sauce , and stew for two minutes , being careful not to allow it to < boil. Before removing the oysters irom the range , put in a teaspoonful of chopped parsley and the juice of half lemon. Then stir slightly and serve. Baked Prune Pudding. Stone half a pound of prunes or dates nnd chop fine. Add half a cupful of almonds mends bleached and chopped , and the crumbs of a quarter of a loaf of bread. Beat one egg well , soften a heaping tablespoonful of butter , and add sweet ening as desired. Put in a bulered pud ding dish and fill it up Avith milk , stir ring carefully. Cover and bake three- quarters of an hour , then let it brown and serve with sugar and cream , or any kind of pudding sauce. Home Made Gintrer Ale. A simple way of making plain ginger ale is to boil fresh ginger root in water , . one ounce of the root to each gallon of water. Just as you take it from the ire , and after it is quite spicy , add the graded yellow rind of half a lemon. When cold , strain ; add to each gallon pound of sugar and the spice of two lemons. Dissolve half a yeast cake , add ( it to the mixture and let It ferment for about three hours. Bottle , cork , and tie down the corks. Ladies' Home Journal. Steak Smothered with Onions. Have ready a sufficient quantity of sliced onions , and when the steak is re moved from the spider turn the onions into it at once , covering it closely to let the vegetables cook in the grease and their own juice. Set the platter of meat into the oven to keep warm. The onions will cook in five minutes and may then turned over the meat on the platter. Send to the table at once. Kat Spinach. It is claimed that spinach is the most healthful of all vegetables , and pos sesses great medicinal and strengthen ing properties. The salts of potassium it give it emollient and laxative vir tues. It is said to be excellent for the liver , and freshens the complexion. Spinach is also used as a part in , some the modern popular tonics.