New York by Pea and Pencil. SahtfMisii Detags la Holiday Time A New ffesc ef the Uppteg Nuisance. SL Jefe's Mov kg Pictures. Pfrom Our New York Correspondent.) OR some cause which Is not yet apparent the re cent holiday sea son was marked by a flamboyan cy of expression unusual to Go tham. This year the swagger set seems to hare relapsed Into the primitive, four footed way of manifesting 1 1 s Joy over the re turn of the bless ed season, con ducting itself nft cr nn lde.illr.cd quadrumnnous fashion. What I i am actually trying to sny Is that some of the holiday doings of our Idle rich have been of a nature which might have called a blush to the cheek of I well. Sardalinpalus. I One of the most novel and least ob-, 1wittitnnl iln csinlnl cflinta nf I Ii t a .1 i-k- scriptlon was n "pajauia party." Yes, they did tho guests all appeared clad In this sure enough "evening dret-s." The company Included n score of men and women who r,ce daylight through Fifth avenue windows when they Fee It at nil, and the other guests well. iuu h un iul) itijuuiitn ill i'iufiii I couldn't have been an out and out hardship for them. One of the Litter , was an Interesting young person who , was arrested recently while attempt ing to do a remarkable pas soul in , "The Queen of the Moulin House" 1 Now, this play Itself Is a literary j there exists n wide difference of opin ion. To Illustrate this in a homely fashion, let me state that Jacobus rinmtn finilo if nniMnllT' ntliinnrl til hi-a Rnncn ctt nrtnrmMnHnTV wliile T pt. perience wie neeu 01 iresii nir ueiure 111 lirai ni-i is til it. i .liiiiui 111:11 :in 11IS 111L1V K t'.YIIlHUllMl lit 111C 111UL nil. .1 ::i-(iiius i,:iiiiiii if, it'iiuit-ii ill in- TiTnpminioii wiiii ivmrirpriior-irer 11 fino nil innr i mil miiiniiii-ii uiiii 1111 hi. prefer to look elsewhere. Of one nmg, nowever, l am quite certain he vmini? nerson was permitted to do lie dance at tho nalama nartv with- I am not a believer In the innate am obliged to admit that the theory s supported by some strenuous evl lence. llecontly I was lunching at a tmi.Llll.lll1. Ill IUU 1IIVNIU l .1.1 "UtLU ins a reputation for pacifying a max- mum appetite at a minimum price. Vt an adjacent table two young men i-riT-ri llciiaclii- t wrt nlntoc n "linnf Vltbout any special effort on my part fllllll UJ III Ult-V UL'll! bill 1IIU 1111UI1L. he matter of tipping. "Yes, I believe iu the system," one f them declared without any visible licrrupiion oi me Dusmess ol uie luiiieui. i aiwii.in ill mtr uuuci 1111 1?. llt'.Lll. . MUilia. 1L IIL'LlUa LU 10k as If I should have to break mv lie Tniinv ' "I'm not exactly on," tho other man ged to get in ahead of a fresh con- gnment of the luscious legumes. "Why, it's just this way," came the ;iNiii';ii(irv li.iii i. it ijl'ii i iri:u a KH IT II IH11T1T III SPi . IIlVMflt I1K1I1U. de somebody "who Is just about rriiiirfi wii ii nis iiiivti. - u w . unit: nies out of ten restaurant patrons loir plate and leave the place. Often- Uiail IIML ililT VVillH-i. 10 all. UUiiU . .. i 1 II lltll" Illil. ISt-l III If lillHlt" U1IL11 lid 'turns to remove the debris. Well, UCil I .1111 tuiric vuu.-5ii t. r. 4b ien. Wlicn lie does find It, tucked TirPINO. rejoiced thereat and when I see m again I am greeted with a smile. perfection. Yes, I almost alwaya the waiter." 'Bobbing Peter to pay Paul, Isn't it?" okml the other, but not with evident nnnmvfll. i - I1UL ab aia awc ti . i-- ttvw - - j ins that's coming to blm. It is only . A M 1 11 mpkln pie and two glosses of but- Ilk. With two such consciences d two such digestions what will the treat be? two whole days Gotham was . m . a- m HI A. Ita was a cruel one. If the mayor Issued an order to close the hun- of places of public worship In greater city there could have been cijf teas luuiguaui pniun, itw , . i . i . ,. n.i ring picture habit Is so prevalent ns and balds Its Ttetias la so I I j-iMii-r 7V I . TM " "SEX . !IL J-- III X7 I II II i-JbS ' 1 ' ,1 I I Mm I II ft WV I 111! ' I8MT drm a grip that no mayor who la am bltlons to serve another term would ta brave enough to discourage It. After bis recent action It will be unnecessary for Mayor McClellan to disavow his in tention of becoming a candidate for re- TUB HO VINO riCTUBS HABIT. election. The picture show Is not al ways exactly what it should be. The camera does not always discriminate in its choice of a subject for exploita tion and beneath the manipulation of a hand devoid of Judgment is apt to re veal matters which better might be concealed, but that the picture show is educative in a profitable way who will deny? It is not to be affirmed that the mov ing picture show as it is conducted In Gotham is free from blemishes. At the present time the best pictures lire pared for these exhibitions arc made In I Paris, and the subjects seem to In? left to those who make tbcni. Now, with I ..ill nnr lnlAti(li.n nrltlnlen 1 . I .. I photographer. It may 1 said Out the pictorial taste of the gay capital Is n il precisely that of, say, Mr. Anthony , Conistock. The latter gentleman's n ilons of what constitutes art have licet formed iu a climate whose variable temperature makes Imperative the u-o of dranorv. and nlentv of It. In Pari..' one soon heroine-? I less acutely noli-1 tiillve to tlies' j sudden charses j and in time an ! j;els wllhout dr;--! peryarenlmoston u par Willi tho.-e' nil clad In tho i regulation nn sell Barb. Then there I nnot her niistaU' which Ihofu v,i. i have been sup plying the Ami-r-lean market with moving picture subjects h a v c fallen Into they have failed t dlscrimliuitc be tween the some what elastic mor al perception o" the native Pari A"(ii:l.S WITHOUT miArrnv. I j ft " w Man and the ethereal code which pre- fool out vails on Cotham's east side. It Is thli j When the doctor called he was told failure which has made all of the trou that bis services were no longer re lile. So in future, Mr. Photographer quired and the reason given. He hur fur the moving picture show, nleaso be rled home and questioned the servant cure that your subjects are clad com-1 fort ably and do not reveal them in sit nations which conflict with the Amer ican legal taste. In a word, avoid real ism and nil will be well. Oue of the real grievances of the : Cotham general public Is that It can-1 r.ot assist Trinity church in the man-1 agement of its business affairs. It bus I bean protesting its willingness to do so for about a century, but its proffers have met vtlth the silence that Is a feature of the business policy of the beneficiaries of old Anneke .fans, xuus lar the corporation tfftP known as the vestry of Trinity church parish has managed to con duct its affairs without any spe cial reference to the remainder of Gothani.and there is extant a suspi cion that it has not beggared it self by so doing. The recent an nouncement that the corporation had made up Its mind to sacrifice old St. John's chapel. In Vnrlt-k street on the altar of the mam mon of trade brought forth a storm of disapproval. Sentiment arrayed itself against the nllesed sordidncss. and all at once the doomed chapel took on an architectural and historical value that had never been suspected during its long years of practical neglect by the innRii nubile. All the old stories of the mediaeval business policy of the corporation were resurrected and the charge that It regarded humanity sole ly from a commercial viewpoint was reiterated. Xow, without going Into the matter exhaustively, if is the fact that old St. John's Isn't worth so much attention. It is the product of an age when Amer ican architecture was remarkable for nothing save Its unllkcness to all ex isting models, and the rubberneck wag ons have never included It in "seeing New York." StllL were I the Trinity corporation I shouldn't removo It just now. By the same token, were I the general public I shouldn't vorry a great deal If It were removed. The Salvation Army has proposed an easy way out of the difficulty by offering to take the chapel and make it popular after the army's own peculiar fashion. This offer may not appeal to Trinity la a theological way, but Its acceptance would go for toward confounding those who charge tho corporation with Illib erally. 8TUYVESANT BBOWN. No Romanoe. ' "Kiss anybody under the mistletoe this year?" "No; I didn't try." "Don't care for such things?" "Under the nose is good enough for me." p4 FOR THE CHILDREN Tho Black Cockatoo. There Is a wonderful cockatoo la one of the Islands of the Indian ocean near New Guinea. It Is as large as a full grown pheasant and. Is of a jet black color. The bird Is remarkable for Its Immensely strong bill and tho clever manner In which It la used. Tho bill ts as hard as steel, and the upper part has a deep notch. Now, the favorite food of this cock atoo Is the canary nut, but there Is wonderful Ingenuity required to get at It, for the nut Is something like a Bra zil nut, but It Is ten times as bard. In fact. It requires the blow of a heavy hammer to crack It It is quite smooth and somewhat triangular In shape. Nature appears to have given the possession of the wonderful bill some Intelligence to direct Its powers, for the cockatoo takes one of the nuts edgewise In its bill and by a carving motion of Its sharp lower beak makes a small notch on It This done, the bird takes bold of the nut with Its claws and, biting off a piece of leaf, retains It In the deep notch of the up per part of the bill. Then the nut Is sclccd between the upper and lower parts of the bill and is prevented from slipping by the peculiar texture of the leaf. ft 1 I n t.Mt- (! piece of the shell of the nut The I bird then seizes the nut In Its claws and pokes the long, sharp point of Its shar pick bill Into the hole and picks out the ker- nel bit bv bit His Reason Why. Once upon a time n learned doctor had a foolish servant, who always went with him to visit the sick. One day ho was called to the bedside of a very ill patient and after examining the man the doctor said that he had been eating oysters and that he must stop or he would die. When they left the house the servant asked the doctor how he knew that the sick man had been eating oysters. "Because," said the learned man, "I saw the empty shells under the bed." Some time after this the doctor was very busy, and a call came for his im mediate service. In bis stress he sent the servant to visit the patient who was very bad, just to tell him that he would come as soon as possible. The servant arrived, and, as he had fre- quently beard his master do, he asked i numerous questions; then, as bis eyes wandered about the room, he said, "Sir, you may die, for you have eaten a horse." "How dare you?" exclaimed the man's wife, and In anger she drove the "Why were you such a fool?" he asucd. I To which the servant replied, "I knew be bad eaten a horse, because I saw the harness under the bed." "Grevfriars Bobby, An interestlntr monument has been erected near Greyfrlars cemetery, Ed- lnbureh. bv the late Baroness Burdett- Coutts, in memory of a dog's devotion. ' you have never sprayed, begin by writ Thls dog followed its master's remains 1 ing to your state experimental sta to the cemetery in 1S5S; from that day tion for Its spraying bulletins. Don't and night after night for thirteen j spray feebly, but do the job thor years It guarded the grave and only , oughly. , left it to visit a restaurant near at "Trees may be healthy and blossom, hand for Its dluner. At the fire of the j year after year and no fruit be form- j 1 o'clock gun from the castle Bobby ed. This condition can be remedied , left the grave and returned immedi ately after a hasty meal at the restau rant On Sundays he dined from scraps laid In a certain place by him on Fridays and Saturdays. Ho died in 1872. The facts are well authenticated and were reported proni- ( iuently In the newspapers during the dog's lifetime. A Phosphorous Lamp. Get a small vial of clear glass and Into it put a piece of phosphorus about the size of a pea. Then pour in "r , cork cork until one-third full some pure ollv heated to the boiling point and the vial tightly. To get light at any time you have only to remove tho cork and let some air get Into the vial and then put in the cork again. This will cause the whole empty space In the , vlal t0 become luminous, the light be Ing strong enough to enable you to see ' the tlme uy a watch or a clock. When i tue lis1 grows dim take out the cork again and then replace it as before. In I eold weather it may be necessary to i warm the vial between the hands to take the chill out of the oil. Chicago News. The Riddler. What Is the largest room to the 1 world? The room for Improvement i Why is the street car like the heart ' of a mother? Because there Is always room for one more to be taken In. Why arc teeth like verbs? Because they are regular, Irregular and defec tive. Why la a man just imprisoned like a boat full of water? Because he re quires balling out A Cube Defined. At a village school examination, says the Youth's Companion, the pupils wero asked to define a cube. On one of the papers the teacher found the following definition; "A cube Is a fig ure that Is a square wide and a square long and the same on the top and bot tom also." Bring the Brush. Oh, hrta tie brash and brlns the comb. For here la little Frowilehead, And father soon Is oomlnx homo And most not see a towzleheadl So well brush, brush, brush. And we'll comb, comb, comb) Around the finger twirl the hair And brush and comb and curl the hair Till goae is Uttle Prowslehead And Curlylocki Is here Instead. Emlle Poulsea In Baby Ffapa. MONEY IN OLD ORCHARDS. Profitable Fruit Croo From Run Down Farms. A woman who ownsnml manages large orchards in the centra' part ol New York state furnishes Interesting Information which will be of interest In all states where fruit Is raised. She says: 'Within the last two months I've had as many as twenty letters from women asking for advice nbout in vesting in fruit trees. Most of these women are thinking of Investing in farms or small country places where there are already what they term old. run down orchards. They-como to me to find out If they can ever make those old trees bear. "According to my experience, an apple tree In this climate has to b.s pretty far gone to be ready for the ax I mean, of course, when It is a gooj variety. The trouble with the apple trees which we see on these old placer. Is that they need care and attention. "They have been allowed to stand year after year with their roots cov ered by sod. They are actually dying of thirst and starvation. If one will only study the difference in the color or me leaves or trees growing iu n ,!IU,, orchard and In one allowed to! un hi trass in iiimxiiiiiim'r lie win or starvation nna uiirsi. 1 " "rst "ns ' ao wim such nn I in in. u n is in jiioiv it il I . ii it nas been In sort for a number of years there will be many roots near Iho sur face. Do not be afraid of hurting the , trees by cutting these roots with the plow. "This plowing should be done early in 1 lie spring and should bo repeated several times during the first rens"!i. If the roots are so thick that you an ' not plow, then chop up the sod with a disk harrow. If the land Is Iro rough even for that turn In begs, rirop a few grains of com here and there In crowbar holes and leave the , rest for the hogs. . Trees In such neglected orchards always need pruning. This shouM Lv done when the trees are dormant. February Is usually the best month. "If the tree has not been pruned for Kevcral years, do not tnfcc out all the useless wood at one time. Let some of It go over. Now. pruning Is something that should never be carelessly done. Th primings should all be burned and the ashes scattered about" the roots of the trees. "After this severe pruning you will get a big crop of water sprouts In the glimmer. Hub them off promptly. After this first pruning it will be nec essary to prune a little every season. As n rule, there Is enough plant food in the soli If it is only put in shape so that the trees can use It. If. However, mis suiium urn lk: iul- tuBi:. j then a fertilizer containing nitrogen Is the best tonic. A liberal dressing: of barnyard manure Is the very best way of supplying this nitrogen. Nl- . I . ! , .. . 1 . . I . ...... , ! trate of soda Is also good. "I have found it impossible to raise i cood fruit without a spray pump. If lli two ways. One way is to graft ' about every third tree in every third j row with a pollen Hearing arir-iy. , The other and sometimes the more' convenient is to replant certain rows , with pollen bearers. When setting out , new orchards I always plant every j fourth row with pollen bearers , "Fortunately it Is only In isolated j orchards of a single variety that such j conditions prevail. In fruit growing haJf ft me Qf Uje cnd of tu0 lsand mirkor moves up or down. districts where several varieties are , Ucre W(J gw th(j great advautage of a mirror which can be readily adjust ralsed and bees are kept a total fall- ,., .. vn,1P ,n,lrI.K cd to anv desired heicht Attached to l ,10St t0 i'nPof'We- 11 n J , "T" "CCf a,7 P Z'w , wm pay a fruit grower, especially in a new country, to be on the Sale side. A Homemade Barrel Header. A simple and handy device for the farm Is that shown In the accompany ing cut.- It is of special value where the article contained In the barrel should be safely secured either In ship- HANDY BARBEXj HEADER. ping or in storage. IU utility in other respects will be recognized at a glance. The barrel header is so simple In its construction that any directions as to bow to make it would be superfluous. Rheumatism In Cows. Cows are subject to rheumatism, says n writer, and it affects them to the legs between the knee and the hip. The following treatment is recom mended by the writer: First of all provide a comfortable, warm, dry, well ventilated stable and well lighted, but protected from strong drafts. There should be an abundance of clean, dry bedding. The food should be soft easily digestible, slightly laxative, and the water clean, pure and cool. Give half an ounce of saltpeter three times a day. At the outset of the treatment give one pound of epsom salts to half a gallon of water and occasional smaller doses afterward to keep the bowels open. If you can locate the pain rub flally wits camphorated spirits. MY PUNKIN PIETY. Race Tvo grown old I oft sit down And shed repentant tear Because I was a dreadful kid Back in my early years. Dear mother trusted me bo far. But I was always near 'Where'er she put tho cooky Jar, And, strange, they'd disappear. The doughnuts, tarta and sugar cake, Caka roosters. Jumbles, snaps How quickly they would their leave take! It was the rats perhaps. One day ma made a punkln pie A bully pie, oh. myl I watched her mix the eggs and thhun And winked the other eye. I cannot lie. I stole that pie. And. nudging Brother Jack. I hustled for the kitchen door. But mother called me back. I had the pie shoved up my back. It slipped down on my chair. It was my luck, alack, alack. To sit down on It square! My mother laughed until she cried. I cried until I laughed. They called me "Punklns" "Punkln head." Oh, my, how I was chaffed) I'm called a pious saint today. Of names I've a variety. But mother oft recalls to me My early punkln piety. C M. B. FOR BONE CUTTER BUYERS. When you buy a bone cutter, get It onJa' Probation may save tribulation. Our first bone cutter turned bard enough to give a mule nervous prostra tion. Wo kicked. Flcre are pointers for your prollt Buy a machine that stands perpen-1 and divide Into oblong cakes tbree dlcular on legs. i fourths bv one-half bv three Inches: j Tho cutter that is screwed to n bench I la a nuisance. 1 The maehfne with part of knives not I In play wastes time and muscle; but, , worst of all and cursed by many, is the bone cutter where one band must press on a lever to control the feed while the other turns the crank. Therefore get a cutter with automat ic feed that is so adjusted that it makes the knives cut deep into a soft bone and case up on a bard ouc and thus never sta11. 'wnlle the follower falls straight Into tho hopper, the hopper having a hinged side for easy cleaning. with tho cutter plate right underneath, Tho follower should not rest on the knives; tho knives should not require starch as usual, then open up the gar sharpening often and should be easily I mcnt wen an(j alp down once Into removed and replaced. clcar -water. When dry slightly damp- The cutter should not require a man's cn i Warm water and roll up for a few strength; it should cut tendons and '. minutes. Garments starched in this gristle off slick, cut no chunks and splinters, but shave fast or slow, line or coarse as adjusted, with reasonable exertion. Order a heavy balance wheel to save exertion: beware of lightweight ma- chines and exposed cogs and lubricate with machine suop oil. A machine that cuts vegetables, corn. ! dr-r,and K,re bono n,"ce son P?0 'or Itself and brings good profit, for the similar to the one shown in the accom style described seldom needs repair. , panying illustration is used. There Is a rack for towels, etc., a comb tray and FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. I Pigeons are at their best for racing I when from two to five years old. Aft- f er that their age tells, as It does with "humans." The turkey breeders of Indiana and Illinois were puzzled over the late ar rival of the grasshoppers. Tlicy didn't get there till the middle of August but to their sorrow found all the tur keys lined up to receive them. The largest incubator in the world Is at the Atlantic Duck farm, Long Talnl Tfa .i.mlt,- 1 ICt OAO illll.t. .., i fiO.OOO hen eggs, and the cost for run- 1:l it twenty-four hours Is CO cents. Long Island, only 120 miles long and f) lnes w,d0i oJ s f duck i ram;hes 350000 UucWiKS :l year. At Sneonk i3 U)ti iarKCht ,luc.!; faifra in te wUh a capacIty of 70i000 duck. Uags X(JW york consumcs oq per . f d fe d ,a wIth,u Tuo wlntcr i3 quietly and quickly Posing. Don't push'your breeders for ; uoa arkct f , Tno Uatculug , ,., . . ... , i season win ue iiere in a snort wuiie, and then woruout layers will lay few fertile eggs for hatching. In the new year let us adopt and n,..Hi. I. rnmllttlnn Vm rr. ,....vi.i. . . w 1 in' to be gooder and gooder and good er!" 1 When you Dud a better method 1 adopt it and give the man who Intro i duced it the credit If you have given people your old method and they have lr In lien nnrlfi- tlinm ir nnu ImiirnT-o- it in use notify them of any improve ment on the same or inform them of the more profitable plan you have adopted in its place. This wins re spect. British egg wholesalers claim that 00 per cent of stale eggs are white, wmie American storage men ciaim that the brown shelled eggs, having thicker and heavier shells, keep longer. Is this all rot or not? Brethren, it's the smell, not the shell, that's the sell and keeps your eggs from tasting well. A hen in Blslng Sun, Pa., laid an egg with a letter "II" on it Wo ad vise her in time to omit the letter "S," for it will put her owner under sus picion of selling storage eggs, and then her cackler will bo cut off. There la continuous advertising for well equipped poultry managers. Good Inducements are offered. The Ameri can ben bos opened up an honorable and well paying occupation for many men and women. She'll be a political issue yet The Minnesota state fair housed its poultry show to a magnificent new building, with stoglo coops for all fowls. Thafs the way to draw big exhibits. FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Baked Orange Pudding. One cup, of sugar, a large tablespooa ful of butter, two eggs and one and a half cups of milk, two cups of floor and two teaBpoonfuls of baking pow der; flavor with the grated rind of two largo oranges. Bake until a go Idea brown In a brisk oven. Serve with tbs following sauce: Four large tablcspooB fula of sugar, two of butter and one of flour. Cream these three Ingredients together until perfectly smooth. Best the white of one egg to a troth sad add It Ponr over the mixture half a cup of boiling water, stirring the mix ture until It Is creamy and allowlac no lumps to form. Hare prepared, tws large oranges from which all the pod and skin hare been removed and chop them In small pieces. Bemove t& sauce from the fire and add these oranges. Serve the pudding hot Hand Lation. One-half pint of rainwater, two ounces of cologne, two ounces of al cohol, two ounces of glycerin, two ounces of rose water, one-eighth of an ounce of gum tragacanth. Dissolve the gum tntgacanth In the water, add the other Ingredients, bottle, shake well; ready for use; elegant for the bands In cold weather or where job have to use hard water. Ouchette Potatoes. Peel, slice and cook until tender In just enough water to cover; let drip and place in a warm saucepan; mash with three yolks and a little flour; roll out on a board sprinkled with flour i ...... - try on both sides in nutter to a golden brown and serve as garnish for roosts. To Banish Rats and Mice. It is claimed that rats or mice can be compelled to vacate premises by using a mixture of chloride of time and water at the places frequented by these animals. Some of the mixture ought to be poured into the holes. Rats have a great aversion to the odor of chloride of lime and betake themselves at once ( aa far ns possible from it Rinse Starch. A method of starchinc infants' fine dresses and all dainty fabrics: First way Iron beautifully and are of the proper stiffness. An Adjustable Mirror. In every household some member finds fault with the nositlou of the i mirror Intended for general use. For Bome the mirror is too high, for others too low. Unfortunately all cannot be I Pleased unless an adjustable mirror the wall Is the support which holds the , cross arm, the latter carrying the mlr- , ror, etc. This cross arm slides on a tnnfhnil lnr ntirl iu lielil in nnsitlon bv - - " a ratchet pinion. This ratchet pinion , locd against rotation, but only ! n.n1c?tt to prevent accl- UU11UU iltlllll Ul luu 1UI.U. IIVUI .u UU justed position. Thus tho mirror can be quickly raised or lowered to the po 1 sitlon most suitable to the user. A French Steak. VMnin n tlilflr cirlnln ctnfilr In Vifilrln,. , whch a few ms of BUCt nave f - been browned. Salt, pepper it and add a few tiny bits of lemon and suet. Cover with a thin layer of sliced on ions and on this pour tomato catch up. Bake about half an hour. Tho onions should be brown, but the steak rare Experience will govern this. Handy Stain Remover. Spots can be removed from almost any delicate material by rubbing for five minutes with a piece of soft flan nel. The wool absorbs whatever has made the spot and docs not leave a ring, as do cleansing fluids. Potato Mucilage. A good mucilage can be made from potato peelings. ,Put as many peelings as desired In a kettle, cover with wa ter, boll an hour, strain, then add half a teaspoonful of alum. This will keep indefinitely. To Freshen Stale Nuts. When nuts have becomo. too dry to be good remove the shells, let stand overnight to equal parts of water and milk, then dry in tho oven. They will taste perfectly fresh. Cur For Chilblains. Chop raw onions fine, make a poul tice and place next to the feet or parts affected at night