Science Guards Baby's Dinner. $ An bjcct Lesson to Young Mothers Regarding the Proper fc Care of the Nursing Bottle. Tlint the ntirnliiff bottle, either di rectly or Indirectly, Is the cause of the majority of deaths of Infants Is the consensu of opinion among the best medical niithorltles. Much ns hns been written and prayed and preached Against It, there are few mothers who regard the. nursing bottle with the proper amount of fear which It ln fiires In the man of science. "Always remember that there Is a risk a (treat risk however enrcful yon are. In bringing "P your baby on the lwttle." was the advice given a young mother the other day by Mrs. M. C. Dunphy, the superintendent of Randall's iHltmd, New York City. The you nit mother. Hie wife of a well-to-do Harlem tradesman, had pone over to the Island to llnd out how milk and milk bottles and nursing nip ples were really sterilized. She had read In the papers and the magazines hundreds of directions, and none of them scei.ied to agree, or else the di rections were not worded plainly. Her threc-months'-old baby was not thriv ing, and she very wisely determined to have somebody show her exactly how to sterilize milk and bottle and nurs ing nipples. Like hundreds of other would-be scientific mothers, this one had been "'sterilizing" milk by simply Immers ing the bottles In water and allowing them to remain until the water rem lied the boiling point, and as a matter of fact the milk was thereby rendered ?von more dangerous than before It had boon sterilized. The mother was then shown I y sim plified process how she could prepare her baby's milk at home with the Joy ful certainty that after sterilizing It was absolutely pure and germ proof. At Randall's Island they have the most complete facilities for the sue- I 1 oO1 ,V ' cessl'ul rearing of "bottle babies" of nny place In the world. The first pro cess consists of straining the milk, which Is done by a patent separator, for Ilandall's Island Is raising Just now 140 babies on the bottle. The straining of the milk Is a most Important feature, and can be done quite as well at homo as at Randall's Island. Mrs. Dunphy showed the young mother how. Taking two yards of cheese cloth which had already been boiled twenty minutes, she folded this Into a little bundle about eight Inches square, laid It In nn earthenware pie plate and placed the pinto in a hot -oven, where it remained until the top fold began to get brown. A coarse towel was also put In the oven at the en mo time. Nine little squares were cut out of the cheese cloth with bright clear sels ors. Three of these squares were tied over a common milk strainer, the milk was poured through Into another simi lar strainer, similarly fixed with steril ised cheese cloth, und still through an other strainer. It Is appalling how much dirt and dust there is even in the cleanest milk. A correct Ml" tlfm PtmiNQ THE JJOmjisJ INTO THE BOILER. milk was then put into a largo ;ht bottle, and the bottle set luto i got very cold, but not to freeze. J sufficiently cold It was poured in eight ounce nursing bottle not one of the old-fashioned death-dealing horror with n long ruhlier tube, but with Just n single rubber nipple. Mrs. Dunphy tilled ten bottles, the requisite number for one baby. The bottles were Inserted In cylinders, bound together for convenience by a tin band. These cylinders can be made b nny tinsmith for twenty-flve or thirty cents per set of ten. The bottles, corked up tightly, the cylin ders were set in n pnri-clnln kettle full of lukewarm water. Just large enough to hold them without allowing them THE COOL1NU to wabble.. The kettle was placed on n cook stove and the water allowed to bubble and boll around the bottles for not less than twenty minutes. Then It was pronounced sterilized. Lifting the cylinders out of the ket tle, they were set In n sink nnd the cold Witter faucet turned on. It is very Important that the milk should be thus cooled nnd In running wnter before being put li the Icebox; If put In the Icebox immediately after taking from the boiling water the milk gets cold too quickly, and all the beneficial results of the sterilizing are neutral ized. The milk must then bo kept on Ice until time for feeding the baby, when the bottle Is ngiiin immersed In hot water until the milk Is heated to 08 degrees, or the warmth of mother's milk. After feeding, just ns quickly ns pos sible, the bottle nnd nipple must be rinsed in cold water, then put In a ket tle with a piece of horns and allowed to boll for twenty minutes. While the bottles wero boiling Miss Margaret McCarthy, the assistant su pervising nurse, allowed the young mother how to sterilize the bottles nnd nipples after they came out of the water, . "Never lay a bottle on Its side, but turn It up," said Miss McCarthy, "Many mothers Imagine If they have boiled nipples and laid them on the window sill to dry In the sun that nil tho germs are destroyed. That Is all wrong. The warm sunshine only warms the little stray germs Into life." Two folds of the sterilized choeso cloth wero then laid on a piece of clean, unpaintcd board a kneading bonrd Is a good thing and the bottles, necks downward, wero dropped Into tho Interstices of a wire rack and al lowed to drain on to the cheesecloth. The nipples were dried with a piece of tho same sterilized material and -then wrapped In cheesecloth. The remain der of the cheesecloth was folded up In the sterilized towel and put away until time to go through the same pro cess lu the evening. The milk should be prepared twice a day mornings and evenings; that is, enough should be prepared at one time In the morning to last nil day, and in the evening to last until next morn ing. More than that should never be sterilized, because, while the milk may keep sweet a much longer time it loses much of its nutritive power if allowed to grow the lease bit stale. If baby appears to be not thriving, and the mother can determine this by weighing it carefully every other day, then Its milk Is not agreeing with it, and A physician should be consulted Immediately. The healthy baby will Increase In weight between certain ages, while at others It will remain al most uniform, but it will never lose weight. The falling off In weight of even nn ounce or two means some thing, and what this something Is nono but the physician should determine. In Just what proportions to dilute the milk after it has neen sterilized nnd bottles and nipples made germ proof, Is a question often asked by mothers through the columns of news- riiOOESH. papers. No general rule can be formu lated to answer this question. That Is something which the physician alone can det?rmlne. The formula that will agree perfectly with one baby often proves the death of another. Each baby requires individual attention, and the wise mother will avoid any thing except professional advice re garding the preparation of her baby's milk. If the mother nt homo will guard tho nursing bottle for one mite of a baby with ns much rigor ns Mrs. Dunphy and her assistants look to tho bottles for their 142 babies, tho death rate among city children might be reduced DRAINING THIS BOTTLES OH STERILIZED CHEE8B CLOTH. to a minimum within tho next two years. The Randall's Island babies, poor little waifs picked up In doorways, railway stations, deserted warehouses and occasionally fished out of damp, leaky old scows or garbage cans, wax strong and flourish on a bottle diet, while the child of well-to-do parents, living in a comfortable home, often dies of neglect that is, neglect of the milk bottle. The Randall's Island babies are In- vnr'ably more dead than nllve when they reach tho hospital. Every so of ten when tLe shabby little bundle Is unrolled on arrival It Is discovered that the little feet are stiff and cold, and many a feeble life ebbs out ere the boat that carries tho frail burden Is moored to the landing. And still a larger percentage of these babies live and grow Into strong. hearty children than any other class of bottle-fed Infants, not because they are pampered HUd cared for like hot house flowers, for where there are 142 babies there Is no time for pampering, but because the milk bottle is feared, as It must be by all conscientious mothers. New York Herald. , A Little MUtake in Medali. The chief ofllcer of a Yorkshire yeo manry regiment, while congratulat ing one of the troops on its appear nnce, made a stirring allusion to tho medals worn by some army veterans In the ranks. One of the men, a na tive of Wharf dale, afterward went home In n very thoughtful frame of uilnd, and ucxt morning he came on parade with several medals on bis breast. Suld the ofllcer,"I didn't know you had been In the regulars." "No, I ain't," said the man. "Well, how about the medals, then, my good fel low? They can't be yours." The man promptly answered: "Cuu't theyl Aye, but they be. My old coo won 'em all lit Otley Show." Upper Whnrfdnle. Fos-Huutlus rarmoi, There are still In Eiigluud two rep resentatives of the old-time fox-bunt-tug parson. These are the Iter E. lug parson. These are the Rer. E. uolds, who are respectively masters of the Cattistock and Conlston pucka. mm 17'. I A UNIFORM FOR WOODMEN. Dm For Cold Wmthrt Adopted hy Montana Foreter, The forest superintendents nnd woodsmen In Montana have recently adopted a uniform, ns shown In the ac companying photograph, which Will be worn by them whllo ranging In tho public forest reservations In that State during the winter. These uniforms have been submitted to the Secretary of tho Interior nnd tho Commissioner of the General Land Office, nnd efforts A MONTANA WOODMAN. may he made to have all Government forest employes furnished with similar clothing. These men are exposed to much bad weather. A suitable uni form Is certainly essential to their per forming their duties satisfactorily. Now that the forest reservations have become a source of revenue to the Government, tho duties of the for esters are more Important, nnd their Instructions are more rigid. In 1S!)8 there was cut and sold about $300,000 worth of timber from Western forest reserves. With proper care of the for ests and an efficient corps of men to guard against forest fires, It is ex pected that this revenue will steadily Increase. Timber Is in every country nn Im portant natural product, nnd In this country it hns been especially plenti ful, but up to within four or five years the American forests were nllowed to run down nnd left in n bad condition. Since Commissioner Ringer Ilermnn became the official head controlling the forests many schemrs have been instituted to repair the damaged for ests, nnd their present Improved con dition Is largely due to his strenuous efforts. One of his most recent schemes Is tho telephono system, which was established In California last spring. This system was only an experiment, but In nil probability it will eventually be extended to nil for est reserves In the United States New York Tribune. RUBBER BISCUITS. The Shape In Which the l'ara Frodnct U Khliietl, To form tho biscuits, the natives take long stakes of wood, sometimes pointed at the end, and quite frequent ly shaped like a paddle, dip them luto the sap buckets or basins, holding thcra In the smoke after each dipping until the successive films of rubber solidify nrouud them. A biscuit of Tarn rubber, therefore, represents the slow and laborious accumulation of hundreds of dippings, so that qulto a stretch of tho imagination would be necessary to nrrlvo nt the number of dippings required to form the huge Tara biscuit Illustrated herewith, which weighs 1120 pounds, and mens. ures four feet five Inches In height. ri'BUEU BISCCIT. three feet five Inches in diameter and nluo feet four inches in circumference, Such Immense masses of crude rubber are said to ucttially represent a loss to the grower, beljg used principally by importers for exhibition purposes. Sometimes tho natives use a stoue as a nucleus, and, to prevent this method of securing an Illegitimate profit, thtf biscuits are split In halves before ship ment so as to reveal the-stake bolo running through the middle. Silent llallroad Signal. Railway whistles inflict tortures on so mauy people that Austria has Intro duced a system of slleut signaling. Belgium Is trying compressed' air whis tles Instead of steam, aud Germany experiment with- Uwrus, THE REALM New York City. - No mntter how many jackets and coats a woman may possess her wnrdrolK! Is incomplete without a capo that can be utilized TUCKED CAFE. for theatre wear nnd all those occa sions which mean removing the out side wrap. The smnrt May Mnnton model Illustrated includes all the latest features and Is comfortable nt the samo time thnt It Is easily made. As shown, the material Is doe colored satin-faced cloth, with yoke of darker velvet and trimming of embroidered nppllque, while the cape Is lined with fancy taffeta In light shades, but cloth of any color, drnp d'ete, Henrietta or penu de sole can be substituted, with nny trimming nnd lining preferred. The pointed yoke nnd high, flaring collar are cut together, but In sections, which allow of a perfect fit. The cloth thnt makes tho cape proper Is laid alt around In backward turning pleats, forming nn inverted plent at the centre back. Each pleat is stitched Its entire length one-half Inch from tho edge to form tho narrow tucks. The pleats are then laid narrower at tho top nnd widening tow; rd the bot tom and are pressed and tacked on the underfold to position. Tho cape por tion Is attached to A shallow yoke of lining, over which tho yoke collar Is laid. The stitching not alone Is ornn- DOUBLE BI1EA.6TED ETON. mental, It holds the pleats In a way to avoid all clumsiness, yet allows them to flare sufficiently for grace, but It may be omitted and tho edges left plain. To mnko this cape for a womnn of medium size six yards of material twenty-one Inches wide, three nnd a quarter yards forty-four Inches wldo or three and a quarter yards fifty inches wide, with ono nnd an eighth yards of velvet for collar, will be re quired. Double-Breaated Eton Jacket. Every possible variation of tho Etou Jacket Is shown among the Imported gowns. Tho stylish May Mnnton mod el shown In the large engraving Is ad mirable for both separate Jackets nnd suits. For tho latter use cloth of all sorts Is appropriate, os is velvet, which Is much worn for occasions of formal dress. For general wear heavier cloth' nnd heavy cheviot have the preference, although black velvet Is to have nn extended vogue for visiting and church wear. As shown, the Jacket is de signed for a costume of soft tan col ored broadcloth, with bauds of white, edged with tiny silk ball button trim ming that matches tho cloth. With the skirt is worn a deep draped bodice belt of soft silk, which la shown nt the back, where tho Jacket slopes up to produco the fashionable short walsted effect, " "' . Tho back Is seamless and fits with perfect smoothness; the fronts are lifted by menus of single darts nnd lap one over the other in double-breasted stylo. At tho tipper edge of tho right front nre three ornamental buttons that, with the buttonholes, keep tho jacket closed. At tho neck Is a stand ing collar, with double flaring portion that rest against the hair. The sleeves nre two-seamed nud llaro over the hands. To make this jacket for a woman of medium size three and three-quarter yard of material twenty-one inches wide,, two yards forty-four Inches wldo, or one aud a half yards fifty Inches wide,- will be required. The Bayadere KHeel, Wide pieces vt lace Insertion are applied in dlugoual lines across the klit ot a taffeitf. silk gown, thus glv- m. OF FASHION. 3: Ing It a modified Hayadere aspect. This effect should not be attempted by n very short womnn, as the ar rangement of lines tends to make the figure look abbreviated. With such! a gown tho same Idea should be car rled out on the -bodice. The waist should bo cut double-breasted across the chest nnd fasten on the left side. This Is the best model for displaying diagonal Hues of Insertion on m bodice. Mndliih Fens. ' The smnll fans which will be ear rled with handsome gowns show the cut-out effect of so ninny other things. There nre white Inee flowers on black net, the net showing only on closest examination and the flowers standing oft by themselves, conventionalized tu lips perhaps, or beautiful flour de lis with a few silver spangles to brighten them, set In black handles. Or the black lnce fans will have spangles of gold nnd handles of gold and black. White for fcf filter VeaS Ttire white toilets are to be as popu lar during the winter season ns they have been during the summer, and are being prepared In rlotli ns often ns In lighter mnterlnls for house and even ing wear. The white cloth gown and white felt bnt. In combination with heavy furs, will be n favorite fnd ot the woman to whom expense and dur nblllty nre of no concern. J Ren nulla nn Mnfl. Sen gulls nre used for the body of till (Ton muffs and fancy smnll cape collars to match; one gull on either shoulder, the heads pointing down on the bust. Two birds nre also used for the muff with chiffon frills nt either end. Illark nnd (told. Black velvet embroidered with gold Is used for decoration on the new rough materials. Zybellnc Is especially pretty ornamented In this way. ladlea' Morning Jacket. A simple breakfast jacket mnkes an essential part of every wardrobe. There arc days and hours when even a shirt waist Is Irksome, nnd nothing takes the pluce of a Jacket that Is per fectly comfortnhlo nnd easy, yet does not degenerate Into the negligee that can bo worn lu bed or dressiug room only. The tasteful May Manton mod el sliown Is suited to flannel of various weights aud qualities, from the fine French to the simple outing, and nil wnshuhle stuffs. As Illustrated, It Is made of the Scotch sort that contains just enough cotton to nllow of wash ing without harm. In cream white, with stripes of blue, nnd Is trimmed with fancy blue braid about tho scal lops. Tho jacket Is fitted loosely nt the front, but Is snug enough for neatness nnd style. The backs are cut In French stylo with a curved seam at the centre nnd nre joined to tho fronts by broad under. arm gores that nro pimped to give a graceful outline to tho figure. At tho'neck Is n deep turn over collar thnt can be worn with a simple ribbon tie. The sleeves are two-seamed, snug without lining tight, and flare becomingly over the hands. To make this jacket for a woman of IJORWNQ JACKET. medium size three aud five-eights yards twenty-seven inches wide, or two and three-quarter yards thirty two Inches wide,, will be required. mm