University of South Carolina Libraries
KILLED AT CROSSING FATAL CRASH OF TRAIN INTO WAGON NEAR GAFFNHY. Mr. S. VT. Wyntt Ix>st His L4fc. Ono miii FuL:tUy Hint nuii Another i Hurt. A. most distressing accident oc.mred at Heaver Dam Church, three jniU*? south of GafTney. Monday, when N'? 17, the Southern's vestibule 'Iniited, ran into a team of mnlea and wag a at the railway c"oss!ng, near the church. The wag(n was occupied hy S. \V. Wyatt anil fcis two sons, Hamlet and l.uther. The father was killed instantly, l.uther. the eldest son. was fatally h lured, and the other boy was only slightly hurt. Iloth mules were killed and the wugon was torn into kindling wood. Hoth of the boys were taken- into Spartanburg on the train and an inquest is being held over the dead man. The crossing where the aocident ecurod is near an abrupt curve, where the engineer could not possibly see any distance in front of his train. It is said by some that the engineer did not whistle nor riityj the bell for t.he crossing. Fragments of the mules were earrie a distance of five hundred yards. Wyatt was an lnlustrious and hardworking mar. and leaves a large fam*"y. l.uther was then taken to the hosat Spartanburg Monday immediately nfter the fearful accident. He went to sleep at 8 o'clock and was perfecttly conscious at the time. He is :i0 years of age. H1b injuries J are as fallows: Three broken ribs, upper teeth krookel otit, skull frnc- | tured in three plnres, lower lip cut | ff and is supposed to be internally ivjured. Physicians do not believe | there is any hope for him. iIiAMH<01tl> SHOOTS IM>AHI)Kli. Alleged lluit Victim lloHcntotl Insult to His Wife. Because he remonstrated with his landlord for having, n? he claimed j slapped Mrs. Lawson'B face, James. H. hdWBon, a hoarder, was shot and , killed in n Boston, Mass., boarding kc use Monduy night. James F. tkvrreli. the proprietor of the house, was ariested and charged with murder. l.Hwsoa. who was 28 years old, and kailed from Nashville, Tenn., bad keen stopping at the house with his , wife for several weeks. Sunday a ' quarrel took place between Farrell and Mrs. I^awson, in which Farrell is said to have struck the woman. Monday night when Laws?n spoke to Farrell about the matter, Farrell It is wileged, drew a revolver and fired two shots at lawson, both of which took effect, killing him in fanttjr. ItHNH(2AI)K DEMOCRATS. Who V<it?>d for Lorimer IK'nouniyil for I Bo. Democrats from all parts of the . State of Illinois gathered at Lincoln and vigorously denounced the action , ?f fhoee Democratic members of the Stale ljO,^i?'.ature who deserted their party's oholce for United States Senator sud cast their votes for Win. Lorimer. The resolutions also commend the twenty-four members of the Legislature who demonstrated their loyalty in. upholding the honor f the Democratic party l?y their unwavering adherence to the primary omlnee of their party for United States Senate. The resolutions concluded with an Invitation to honest and patriotic men "to come to the rescue of the State and drive from power the present Republican oligarchy, and thereby restore good government to the people." Killed One, Wounded Another. Peter Lander, colored, aged about six. shot and instafitly killed his j brother, John, aged 9, at the home f Jonas McCullough. at Chester, on Thursday afternoon, and perhaps fa tally wounded John McCullough, al- j so about a years of ape. The young- . er Lander boy was playiros? with a I pun, which was discharged. The load | tore oft the left side of John Lander's dead and wounded McCullough in the same manner, thouph not so seriously. The schooting was accidental. Negro Cj'IlI to Teach Wliih*. The appointment of Mary Malison a girl of negro and Indian blood, as teacher in a prlmarv sc.hool at Ell/.- ! I nbeth, N. J., has aroused the white : res'denta and protests are being sent j to the niemt>ers of the board of ed- j ucat ion. Attack on l>c|M?t Master. Sympathizers with the strikers male a demonstration in front of the tenth street union station at Niagara Kails, N. Y., Tuesday night. Two men were assaulted. The men injured arc depot master Smith, who wan beaten and is in charge of a doctor, and n conductor named Lewall, who came in on a train about !* o'clock. He was struck iu ?he face and knocked down. v HANGED IIIMKELF IN SIIEI). William Fulirer, Aged Aiken Faimcr, Commits Suicide. Mr. William Fulmer. an old and respected farmer of the Shiloh section, of Aiken County, committed suicide Sunday night by hanging himself in the buggy s.hed of one of his neighbors. For some time he had been in a melancholy state of mind and only recently, it is reported. made an unsuccessful attempt to kill hfms?-lf. Saturday night, after a long rain storm, he left his home and wantered off to some unknown place. Sunday he spent the day with .Mr. .1 (viu m.sbee, who dvos several miles from Mr. Fulmer. and towards night lie complained of feeling bad. Sayin? that lie was going to the home of another of his neighbors, he left the house a one. an:! until found dead, was not heard of again. nday niorni "g. some one going to \tr. Huabee's she! to feed, found Mr. Fulmer hanging over the rear of the buggy with a driving rein looped around his neck. Judging from the surroundings he had run the line over the rafter above, looped it around bis neck and jumped off. Mr. Fulmer was somewhat feebleminded nhd had at one time been an inmate of the State Hospital at Columbia. His family is a prominent one iu that section and they .have the sympathy of many friends. FOHTl Ni: (X)MKS I'NSOl'CJHT. A Tiuin Nurse is (llviin Fifty Thousand Hollars. Despite the unexpected bestowed upon her of a fortune of fifty thousand dollars, Mrs. J. S. llollins, a trailed nurse of Altanta, announced j Monday that she had no intention of g.ving up her work among the sick. Mrs. llollins' benefactor is Dr. Herbert H. VVyming, a prominent physician, of I,cs Angeles, Cai., whom she met a little more than three years ugo in Savan.nuh, t?a., immediately following her graduation as a nurse. The doctor wrote her a few days ago that he had decided to make her a present of $50,000 and the! money would reach her In a few days. Mrs. llollins admitted that I>r. Wymieig has a very likeable son. j Harry, who the Doctor wishes her to marry. "He has always liked me and has often jokingly told me that I had better marry Harry and he would make me wealthy, but 1 never had any idea that he would give me so much money." HUN DOWN AT 1*AST. hrotixt Who Kxtracted Fortune from His Hridc. Charged with swindling a Brooklyn woman out of $13..r>00 and several valuable bonds after marrying her. Dr. Henry B. Keeler, sa'd on e to hare been a prominent (? > ha n dentist, wus arrested in Detro.t oil Tuesday. In company with him. a woman is held at police headquai tenwho, it is jiilegjt. posed t-' his sister, and assisted in getting the money. According to the police the authoroties of American and Europe have been searching the world for the pair. The doctor was at Detroit for treatmnet. Two years aeo, at Ocean drove he is alleged to have met Mrs. Wilhclmina L.ynclt, whom he married. Di?l Not Commit Suicide. A dispatch from Tampa, Fla., says ari autopsy held on the bodv of Will Ellison, the slayer of two otter negroes and who it was supposed suicided revealed that tlie negro died from suspended heart action as a result of over stimulation. It is the opinion of physicians that the excessive use of cocaine caused the ncgroe's death. Eva Ellison (he wife of the negro, is expected to die at any moment. Policeman Hyman, it is now expected, will recover, none of the small sh?t entering his breast penatrating a vital spot. Tornado Hits Texas. Two persons were killed, one seriously injured and property damaged to the extent of between $11,000 and J4.000, as the results of a tornado that blew through one corner of Italy, Texas, at 6.45 o'clock Monday evenlng. The dead: M. Poacli and son, Charles. Poa^h and his son (were crushed beneath the wreckage I of their home. Explosion in Quarry. I Five men. all foreigners, known [by numbers, were killed in the quarry of the Nazareth, Pa.. Portland J Cement company by the premature explosion of a charge of dynamPe. This is the same quarry in which seven men were killed in a similar manner a few weeks ago. Hies of Injuries. I Charles L. Register, a young farmer of Warsaw, Duplin county, N. C., who was assaulted Sunday afternoon hy* Walter Way. a young white nr.an of Wilmington, die I there Tuesday night at the hospital from the injuries received. The difficulty arose over a dispute concerning a 21 oents bottle of whiskey. WOMAN BETRAYS _ \ AN EMIIEZZIjKK AND UK IS ARRESTED BY OFFICERS. f vj S , r v He Was A ltank Cusliicr and Had v Stolen due Hundred Thousand ' I 1 Dollars. 1 < Eluding the police of several cities t and .riwte detectives for more than f two mcr.t.hs, .1. Howard Lowery, alias j James 11. Johnson, wanted in Uti- i t a. X. Y., on a charge of embezzling j s more than $100,000 from the lltiru ? City National Hank, was betrayed Si into the hands of a detective ( at Philadelphia by a woman and tak- v en to New York state betore the lc- j, cal authorities were aware of what ^ was going on. His arrest is the re- t ward of patience and perseverance j on the part of Daniel J. Kelleher. a . detective of Die New Yoik office of < the American Bankers' Association, v Lowery was a n< te teller in the bank i atul disappeared last April while an j examiner was going over the bank's j, books. 1 Kelleher, after a long time, got a c cine which left to several cities and I then to Wilmington, Del. He learn- j ed that a woman was in correspon- i dence with the former teller and he ? | spent many days in Wilmington be- ^ fore he learned her address and then \ kept tabs on her for nearly a week t before his vigil was rewarded. On t Tuesday night as he was standing in ; an alley near the woman's house. f he noticed her leave with a suit case t in her hands. He followed her to ( the railroad station and then into t a train. Confronting her with the information he had, he forced her to te'i lx>wery's address in the city. That | done, he took the woman back to Wilmington, leaving a guard to see that she should not be able to communicate with Lowery. Then he went to Philadelphia with \ another detective. They stationed themselves near a house on North * lGOUi str--?t, where the woman said Lowery was living, and were on 1 guard about five hours, when the * man they wanted caine out. Stepping up to him. Kelleher told him 1 he was under arrest. Lowery was Rt.nni.ed for n nwiniont V...I I.I.. ' ? ....... .v , i#uk iiuilivij S recovered. IX>ST LIFE IN SlItF. 21 fi Heroic Efforts of Young I.adios Full- < ? ?1 to Save Hint. I At Atlantic City, N. J., Daniel Gal- * lagher, aped 28. a janitor at the s Foster home for children, in Lous- c port, was drowned Wednesday while 1 bathing in the surf near the home, ' despite the efforts of a number of ( young women nurses from the in- e stitution who formed a human chain s anl tried to effect his rescue. The 1 1 nurses were on the beach with their 1 charges when Gallagher, who was some distance out in the water, cried for help. No other men were near, and grasping each others hands sev- ' I eral of the young women rushed through the surf toward the struggling bather. A strong undertow, however, quickly carried the drowning man out to sea. One of the young women was swept off her feet out was rescued bv her companions TIMED TO GET AWAY. I Young Man Probably Fatally Injur Ml by a Ia*np. At Chicago John Olowaki, aged ' twenty-five, was probably fatally , injured last night when he jumped out of a rear window of the second lloor of a building at 849 Milwaukee avar.iu. The police learned that , Olowski had gone to the ofilee of Mine. Zoro. After having his "fortune told" he refused to pay the fee. Mine. Zoro then locked him in the room while she went in search of a policeman. In the menntime Olowski opened the window and jumped into the alley. POOH, FOOLISH MAX. Accused His Wife of Octroying Him and Suicides. Accusing his wife of bestowing up* on him a "Judas kiss" and of instigating his arrest as a fugitive from justice. William Lyons hanged himself with his leather belt and ended his life in his cell in a police station at Washington. I). P., Tuesday. Lyons' alleged offense was the operation of a hand-book. He was taken into custody or an old charge and his arrest had n<> e.-m-.??? ccn' raids. Sold for a Song. Tho naval yacht Hornet, a steel vessel of 4lf> tons, built for Henry M. Flagler and purchased by the government for $117,500 at the outset of the Spanish war, will ho sold to Nathan S. Stern of New Orleans for $5,100 I to in Cuini1 at l.ast. Reports from the farming country between Cheyenne and the Webraskuline, state that t.he heaviest rain of the season fell early Monday Iv.m: it' ' mate ity of crops threatened by prolonged drouth. lA'RKD DY A RASCAL*. Yarning to Young Women to Bewnre of Strange Men. A special to the News and Courier rom Richmond, Va., tells a sad stoy about a young girl from this tnte. The dispatch says a young toman, IT years old, said to be the loug.bter of a cotton planter near taw pens. S. C.. is detained in Rich lond by the police and is under the are of the Associated Charities here, until such time as she is sent or by her parents or earns enough oouey to buy a ticket hack to her onie. She wishes to get hack as oon as she can, according to her tatements. T.he story tlie girl is ile.ged to have told is a pathetic >ne. According to the police. she rent to Hicbmoiifi in company with man. whose name the authorities lo not divulge. lie was a stanger o the young country girl, and they net when on a train, and she was n route lo her parent's liotue, from Spartanburg. She is alleged to have teen lured away by smooth and false alk of he stranger. She says ho iroposed that she go to Richmond, ind she followed him, after arriving iving as his wife at a boarding louse there. The man left Friday night, tellng the girl to come to Petersburg, nit the landlady became suspicion*, ind called in a policeman, and the :1 r 1 was taken to the police station, vhere arrangements were made f r >er care. There is no charge against he girl, but the oflicers are Bearding for the man, who will be charg>d with an ugly offense when found ['he giri is pretty and uuoophisticit d. and has evidently been imposed ipon. HOl'KH IN POKKH (i.lME. 'ouml Unconscious ill a Stag Hotel By His Friends. J. J. Powers and Tom Xowell went o Hanile*. N. C.. to spend Sunday, ['.hoy registered at a Stag Hotel, vhlch is kept by Herman Rohman. donday a freight conductor, a Anglian and a yard switchman awoke in heir rooms without money and sick, laving 110 recollection of their light's work except the memory that hey were sitting in a stud poker tame in the Stag Hotel with Powers ind Nowell and Bohinan dealing. The case of Engineer S. L. Brown h worse. Upon his non-appearance it home, one of his friends applied it the Stag Hotel and was denied ntrance. W. H. Taut heard of it ind accompanied by J. E. Irenhart ind C. I). Bradshaw. all brother engineers of Brown, forced an entrance it 11 o'clock and carried the unonscious form of the engineer o the waiting automobile of Dr. f"l. ?\ Kinsman, then the maohine was iriven to the Brown home and, sev ral hours later after hard work, the dcT man was better. The matter was eported to the police and Powers md Nowell are now in the city jail. SHOT AT BASE BALL (iAME. Third Brother to Meet Death in Violent Form. Robert Hudson was shot througn :he heurt and instantly killed, Ernest Hudson, aged 19, son of Robert Hudson, was shot through the abdomen. and R. A. Walk, a constable, was shhot through the arm at a base nan game at Max Meadows, Va. Frilay when Constable George AI ford went to arrest the eider Hudson. Young Hudson may recover. Walk went tot the assistance of Alford, ind Ernest Hudson went to his father's aid. Walk surrendered and taken to the county jail at Wpthevllle. Two brothers of Robert Hudson het sifilar deaths to that which bofilll him. Charles Hudson was killed some years ago at Max Meadows. and Richard Hudson was killed at Coeburn, Va. (X1TTOX BEING ItlSIIKO. The South Being Brained of All Available Cotton. As a result of the scarcity of spot cotton which the so-called July squeeze has brought about in New York, the South is being drained of practically all available cotton. Coastwise shipments from Savannah, New Orleans, Mobile and Galveston have been heavy for a week or more, and with the jump of July op*' to lf?..">3 In the New York market Saturday, the highest price recorded since the Sully campaign in 19l):i, telegraphic orders began to pour into Memphis, New Orleans, Houston and other spot centers calling for t.he shipment on special trains of all oottnn llmt """' ' ?" 1 ?.. ? <?! ? witiu in.* nunHI Had Close Call. Mr. Fleece Young, of Clinton, had a close call recently. lie lay down beneath an oak to take a nap. A thunder storm approached and as he arose and walked away, the lightning struck the tree, tearing It ad 1 to pieces and splintering the very root 011 which his head rested. Thaw (acts $1I,H<M>. Final distribution of the balance of the estate of WlHiuin Thaw was fade in the Orphans court in Pittsburg, last week. Il.trrv K. Thaw received $11,&9U.U9 a.-, ma share. \ HOUSEHOLD NOTEi>. ? Clear spruce balm, obtainable at any drug store, dissolved In alconol. makes a good varnim for pictures. After writing a name on linen wi.h indelible ink, to make it so washing will not rt n the color. press tue writing with a wa m iron. Win n litis is done, the letters never blur. To embroider an initial upon ? pair of s lk stockings, she a gh.s* eg* into ilit> inrk'n; and thaw tin stooging firmly ov?- it whlh out fining the letter. T 'Is gives u perfect ot I'.ne. Vim w 11 mat great impi o. t meut in a one-seam si-.?ve thai ts to hi itt .ci.* !o the ton; if yon will slightly round I he edge of the sleeve that ion es o?e: he elbow. This is it"t obsi rved on he load si ere that !i!s sue;:It o the arm. lint it g- >'es decided coo.,oil to 'he arm at I he elbow. In making a stencil pat? rn. it: lead of vvt'ghfing tin muierial witii iions to keen it perfectly straight, get a handful of button drawing pins. 01 tailor's pins, and fasten me material .ecurely to a large boson or tii.oti tli kitchen lal !*?. iMt plenty of sn.ootli papers beneath the- iruiertul. Pin the pattern tip on the goods, anil >uu will have better sueress witii ilie work. Plate powder tttar will not .-cratch the IInest polish on silver is made o! whiting. Pour over the whiting enongii water to dissolve it and add -otne ammonia. I.et i no sidittn nt settle. pour off the water and let the whiting dry. When dry it ran tie ap piled to the smoothest silver and -odd. It should lie rubbed with a sott chamois or eotlou clteh. A pretty garnish ran be made with the inner leaves of hnsssel spruits. If the new fountain p -n leaks around the joined ends put ilu- st rew *!.u in melted eandh grease Join the wo pieces and ii will not Irak. If a mnil is iurritd 10 tin- opera, I thin while gloves should be slipped over tile d? Ir ately tinted ones to keep thou elean, for inu.f linings ge. badly soiled. A small niedieine botlle is eseful for bold tug embroidery needles. Keep it in the work basket. If one has a pice of rooting slate and will heat it in the oven, it >an he placed under the bread pan and the winter bread will rise more quickly. Cover well in keep in the beat. Tn mnLp :t unul fiiUi- ?*?? pint of broken in :iu old tin bucket and rover with one gallon of boiling water. I'm the bin kel into a second v? s?l of water and the glue will dissolve without horning. When it Imlls add enough sifted saw dust to make a good putty. Fill the floor cracks with this, smooth with steel wood scraper or thin-hladed ease knife. It Is claimed a splendid ironing hoard cover is made by tacking burlap to the hoard, and then covering it with a double thickness of old white flannel. This makes a firm, month cn cring which never wriuk ?s like the blanket covering. A leather bag of ronvenU lit siy.< hould be made to keep very tine minted scissors in, for it not only protects ihe sharp ends but saves ihc minds. When laundering starched articles in winter, always add borax to the starch and the cuffs will not lose shape. A relish made of one can of pimentoes, mixed with finely chopped celery, is well liked. II i.- covered with French dressing and serv? d on lettuce leaves. As an addition to j> 11 y. lake a handful <?r (us. wmh i.Ih iii el ,n and plump them with tepid v ai'-r. It takes a few hours to do this, ( ovr litem w ith straw berry gelatine. The figs can be cut and mixe i with broken IM!. ! m -o' A woman who likes fads, yet does noi care ior nil1 a? i U!Ui.ia> t<>u o: odu hits of bric-a-brac, pr.A based a plain silver nup'.tin rlns; which si". ;?!<? s with her on her travels. and ai each city win re site made en e.\t? nded visit, she has the name <n the city, ilatc, etc., engraved up on tin ring. It is getting full of names and is very irtistic. Save one or two f r! s wings They are the best lin;.-iie* in tin wot Id to use around a store, 11 rl thej are splendid for s ,-ccping closet shelves. Wcght th. wing tip with an iron until it dries. When hooks become badly soiled on the edgf's if not gilt edg d. clom the book tightly. tin n erase tlte murk? with an ink eraser. Tlii will cut of! all rough edges, all soiled marks and leave the book very eh an. in making a glace card ornament i! the cards gets soiled with tee hamk or Irom mucilage, you <vu dampen a white c!o h and wipe oh' the surface of the card, leaving jt pert??eil\ clean Ho not rii 1> (lie card, lot the shinj surface is very tain, much I'.Ue a ven eer. I in- ? u: it'll II t l\ l): it .1 tirn? ' hair lias he i: trend valuable in l if ( sick room to plif-r* Im<1. of the imalid j ti Ik il. To candy fruit for Immediate use, j make a :-yrup w 1) < li will crackle in a lass of water, i) li t?i?'iof fruit i vith a f ?rk into the I a ft" v. tl.i-n ?lto|> j nto a plate of o.vtl sii^ar. I ae i spoon to dip ,i ley fr til. Buy a course blanket if you tin :ot l>ave one if tl Keep it to place it li e floor vv.C t. ?- 11- i > i.- jilayitrR i here, l-ut t},i< to. on it and if it is j tecessary to tjui klv < V n i to room i of toys. pi- k up tin* blanker. A little dt'inty e:\ed on m dish of 1 ! salad eoi: i-ted e.f a small piece of j cheese lit d be. v.< :: i4._ two halves of tin English walU' t. i - Removing Ink Stains. It Is a very easy mntter to rentov* tuk spots from white material. but many heroine discouraged because the first application of some reliable ink remover fei s to bring good results. The finest material, socli at ntousseline, cambric and longclotb. hold stain* much longer than u cheaper fabric, for which reasou it is necessary to apply stronger solutions. Pure household ammonia will remove ink from a handkerchief, table cover or any white article which does not contain silk or a color. Put tliu article in an earthen wash bowl, pour ammonia over the ink iu:d leave it for 15 or HO minutes; take it out of the bowl, wring out the amnion a. wipe the bowl and renew the process; then wash with lukewarm water. Peroxide of hydrogen, applied alternately with ammonia and dried in me Klin, will remove very bad blemishes. l emon iuice can be applied to white silk. and should it be a silk with a bine mark, the lemon v i 1 rot injure the rotor, but it wou'd fs !e praetioally an> other color than blue. A very thin white Paris muslin dress was splashed with the entire eontents of an Ink hotile, hut the ?> r immediately put the dress Into a crock of sour buttermilk and let it soak over night. While the blemishes were not entirely obliterated, and it was nerrssnry to soak the drees in fresh buttermilk for several bonis more, it finally cninj* out purr nnit white and thr entire dress bleached hv the process. Irk marks on velv? t nrpet ran h? removed with warm skimmed in'lk. Scrub the carpet the san.e as with water and. when dry, wash the smit with hi nr.ine to remove tlie greasy appearnn-e. S.?It will absorb irk from a table cuvir and prevent It from spreading, but It is not a reliable agent for the removal of had stains. Pure < Ider vinegar, oralic arid, cream of tartar, a weak solution of muriatic arid or jave'.le water can he depended upon to remove aU Mack ink stairs. Ammonia will weaken red ink stains, which should afterwards lie treated wi'h borax and then washed in a boil suds. When these powerful ink eradlcators' are used, it is absolutely necessary to thoroughly rinse .lie articles in several waters. Making Coffee. The secret of pood coffee is an Immaculately clean coffee p?t. ftesb boiling water and good material. It is better to pay a little more for your coffee and use less in quantity than would be necessary in the cheaper grades. The coffee pot should be thoroughly washed ?nd scalded after every meal and coffee never allowed to stand In it. If it gets discolored, put a little baking soda in it once & week or so, fill with cold water at.d let it come to the boiling point. Take care that the spout and strainer aie perfectly cleaned. Rinse and dry thoroughly. Pnllke most cooking litem Us, which do bitter work when their newness has woi n off, a coiTre [>m is iieiitT wnen now. wnettter made uf tin, granileware. nickel or alumtonm. Many good housekeepers adviMgte frequent renewals front tlie 10-eenl store, discarding the old coffee pots as soon as they heeonie discolored and strong. These are bet'er in lite end titan the most expensive coffee percolator that is not kept luintnciilate. The tinu -honored rtt'e for making coffee is a tabiespoonful for each person and one for the pot. Put the en (Tee in the clean pot, pour in a few spoonfuls of cold water to wet it, add a clean, froshlv broken egg shell if \o*.t have it, or a toasq>oonfnl of the white of egg. pour on the boiling water and let it jus! eon.e to the boll. Take away front the fire, give a scro i| -.Kit e or stir the grounds dov.n, film replace and let it come again just to the bo','. i)o litis three litnt-s in sue pssion, then push Itttek on the stove t?? settle and clear. Some persons prefer to make the coffee by the old-water method In litis case cover tie coffee with the required amount of cold vaicr, allow it to reach the boiling point, then proceed as before. The coffee must not lie allowed ft> boil hard, but merely reach the boiling point etch time. If not perfectly pIa'.ii- *1 11 It ? ?*?? <4 ? ? '? ' ? ...... ....... . rq.l 1 11/ fHHir HI it tablesponnful of co d wat or. The Young Housekeeper. The one reason why some your?: women do not learn to do their own looking is because they consider 't beneath the dignity of a lady to do so. It is a verv foolish thought and. even if it were true, it would be ver* uncomplimentary to real Indies nn? prefer the management of their own culinary apartments. We know that most woman of great means employ cooks, because their social posit lot demands a great'deal of their time, but it is a well known fact that many women in the wealthiest families make their own rakes, sauces, pud* dings and the fancy dishes which grace the tables at their most elaborate buffet funetions. There is nothing degrading in the work; In fart, it Is a discredit to the woman who ?ay* she ran not prepare a meal: It may n> ver be no ssary ior a woman to do her own kit'hen work, but tt is ndvlsah'e that she should ken* he rudiments of the art. for If ;< > otran Is left without a maid, the man of t! ?> ho - n-u-t hrcrme x modern tohirs'iv t' ? oe in hi ov n 1 ?> <n n*-' i h'* ow n [i;t i r lilkf Hit; IO <k i SI IwiH'.l. V. i'ii