Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 24, 1912, Page 14

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me & clue a8 to Who is Who? I lived there nearly twenty years., I might know you all -Best wishes, QUEEN BESB. EASY WAY OF BLAGKING A STOVE Dear Sisters: Aunt Jerusha asks where all the mas and grandmas are. 1 can answer for one Ma, I hope .there are not many of the Sisters who TWIL 1 yanl® ssd: Josian ot Gie Dear Soctal Cornerites: T have req * close of a very hot day, “if it ain't tmghto the corner with a let ¢ g again. I don't be- y 7 . | 8o0d things, 3 stoves the old fashioned way of put- SR meslin/glet th Auntie: So glad you came In fey ting on with a brush and polishing. | lieve I will try to go. This hot weather . Most people nowadays rub the stove|has taken all the ambition out of me, : with a greased woolen rag and occa- | and the last time we went the topic sionally, where the parts get red,|weas ‘How much should a Christian sprinkle a little blacking on and rub | think of personal appearance? and I shall try your way of the rag over it. It looks just as well | after the meetin’ I wondered if any of making & shortcake, for 1 think iy | as the other. the speakers or any of the /listeners L might be &n way. | ‘With the tight fitting skirts one| would change their appea: e in the Rose W. 1.".' 1‘""‘ mm‘ ( needs tight petticoats. Imade ons as|least on ascount of cumsid o Dave heard, used and seen di ) nice at much less expense than those | sul they cook but never heard of bought in the shops. I sewed stooking | Samantha?’ and, bes i MANY A WOMAN WHO ACTS LIKE A LADY . 1 B one that would fry, roast, or bake, legs together, the small ends &t the “T don’t know,” sed I, “but I often L+ N ot tE1) e Whetd 1 oan Al EAR IURAL d finished with ilk ruffle, wish I had the gift of & my ; read. DOESN'T P! NA w% Aot B ige-. wiiton .I -think may | thoughts In & way that they be find one like yours? ; please some of the Sisters. I am sav- | clearly understood. I can always How to can Huckleberries, or fny EVERY WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY. ing mint, bay, pennyroyal, rose or any | enough, but I am afraid folks think 1 other berries—Pick-over berries, wash . A s them all, I will just tell you which 1 th sweet smelling leaves, drying them, ex- | haven't sed much when I get through.” | U and fill your jars full. Then place the The Builetin wants good home let ters, good bustness letters; £00d help- | pecting to fill a sofa pilipw with them| “Ive got a toplo card in my pocket,” fi“f.’:fi"-y:&m , thioking = moSt|jars in a deep pan or anything desp ful letters of any kind the mind may suggest. They should be In hand and outline some appropriate quotation | sed Josiah, "and now suppose we look | Here's Perseverance’ I s iy enough to come to the top of the cans, Wednesday of each week. Write on b ut cne side of the paper. on the cover. over the topics and you tell me what “When T wi e geragley h.t.r i Fill jars full of boiling water, seal, Address, SOCIAL CORNER EDITOR, Builetin Office, Norwick, Conn. Aline: Thank you for pretty card.|you would have liked to have sed on e M‘:,‘;mm 4 “‘;0 was very | then fill the dish the cans sit in with Do you live in W.? the subjects, had you been given the *“‘r N Tiee Boned Tiiis Sod was | bOllng water and cover all with news- Peggy Anne: Am glad to hear from | gift of eloguence. The first topic on mm n: e house. | O | Pavers, 0id bags, or a rug will do; any- Jou again, | Wax fnst shoutfo {nquire | the cacd i ‘Batience’s P Sondr iy S ) gt 4 Giag that Vil st VR _1eeve 2 I have 3 % was asiked m un ne: - g::n“;:r ?:ly“;‘:wfoulldymg‘umqr was | speak on that subject I guess I should | asked for and was given an old rag o THREE PRIZES MONTHLY: $250 to first; $150 to second; $1.00 to third. Awsrd made the last Saturday in each month. cans away for the winter with your Dr. B MA. | hmve to simoly say that it was o much | carpet loom. Someone eite gavo ber a | CulC SRAY L (02D e o oy POEM emply repay th Waterford. needed virtue, and that we grown-ups (bammer and a saw. and with some|{iiongq it Mason jars. 1 never lose SOCIAL CORNER J R Tue effort required to pre- haven’t all learned the lxum o: self- g“’" :‘;fiml:o My in She had |any berriws this way and the berries S —— TIMELY FRUIT RECIPES. control that the little gir] who ran are the same as when first picked, Let Them Pass: Forget Them. Willimantic, HANNAH WHO. to her mother, saying: no other rule or square than her r: 1| *'Mamma, T have just found out|®Pron hem, which she used to measure sisters over tried thix mg?ry sl ;h&it;dg{ugm pes | that I can make me d what I want me | her loom timbers, and from them she , doilies, eto.: Wash Kever mind the things you've heard, | FRANK SENDS DOLLIE A RECIPE. EeiRliants to. made a frame hor a building. Neigh- | and starch them in bolled starch, then Dom’t repeat a single word— oot bo men seei her persistence d fast th Tt them pass, forget them. Desr Sisters of the Social Corner: | Grabapple Sauce—I wipe my spples| i, moms® Christian Teatimeny | B og O et ahiter ros uoe | Zick them ail out and fastan witk ping %o not n:nfl them, tgeye gegxfi?t Eu’Vrs élhl:;’fld all'have our playing spells,| and cut out the bad places and put i tnfnk T should say to that, that |other t;{::dl domod her f00d, so she | any ironing and when dry will look ‘orth; & moment's u H are esseptial in makin; £ i some- | Was 5&) from rhouse. E; -n..,:fm not much mischief wrought, wbat"h should be. The man or Evolrine-3 ;}t‘;;njli:t tsgofi:tlfiv;::: st:n c?roaletl::m 1&,’,‘;";&2“&?};&2? ?:nxsneefl.neg. “Here's 'T'l_m Duty g‘;oBdn' Pleasant. '&:‘: ::::.- h:pl’ot:]; ?111:::)' i Let them pass; forget them. :dv.;egoca.n enjoy an innocent laugh{tender; crush gently in my potato and it brings to my mind a stery I % otiur;:n 'Iits‘g;xr d‘zlhty to be p]sfll’nt, A geod way to wish tumblers and ind whet someons said, P m:chm’? to frolic rarely be- | masher and put in a clean kettle With | have 1n an old scrapbook of & man 3 i o l:.tgummln‘olli‘ save time: wash my tumblers in ot i and disappointments’ which ave. som | coveet” st worr toae oM £00d &1d | griving through the country, coming to | SO with an ever dorarg’» |l good soapsuds, rinse therh well, then % them ‘;:ss' forget them. mon to “11750 Take a vfia‘:}gn‘m& z:ge::, ol;n?h:o l&tg’e‘?“fllnten“;?x]?h:uog: anmfaxmhouse md]gw‘cht;v: r;,'}infih?g ifl: EDon'l o:h’n to;{: on ?H.onqty' drain them either on a towel or on the y b s an o : They were unking and untrue, =~ |children and iet labor tale'care of it- | hot and when it 18 000l set in 8 GATK| actaerrn Shy man sod to the Fasmer: | bed Jostah, “as you know I can't tnler. Rl etiag Uhaew RS e0ur the shut And deserve no thought from you; self for a while. All work and no| place. “‘It must be a long distance from |ate underbanded doings, but it does o T Be among the very few play still makes Jaok a dull boy. " anil Shis b seemi sometimes as though honesty, | 87¢ nice and clear and no lint left en Who will never mind them. Dear Chatterbox: Acard s to come| . S0Ur Apple Jelly—I pare and core | school and from mestin' and the farm- | o'l oG 8, 38 TIOVER homeety: | them. A great time saver if you have et A your Way, sure; and I shall remem- | SnOugh real sour apples to fill my ket | erxsPloct = o g gey anjand sum foolish folks seem to think | many of them at a time to wash. lor pDeopi 8say ber other sist tle; add a cup of water and cook ten- ords unkind from dey to day— | bright day, o " C27dS 80me| gor. “then T press them through my Let them pass; forget them. Dalits, Diear: : This ia what -1;lave| Pofato mastep-and St neasly as muen 4 the religion I ever had was that hymn that honesty is only Indulged in by your mother used to sing when things h it thote Who Ain’t smart enough to bo| oui oS, Who, (ke peanuts it they will dishonest. To me such reasoming is i Ao b oo th-m.nd :l,l“twmm Balance matters - sed went right and when they went wrong. . they will never buy by E Kind words for Jfifi’fia"z‘;fi‘.’. fi} . S ’::mu“’ tops of lemp chimneys: | F0E4T, a:id:‘gpfi ‘:,’,‘3 figglzmrl*uxtt ;:d?x:: When she was tired and when she was | o7 2, Par with t!h&idu nm‘a t bemflao You get them by the pound raw, and WOl S w&apv and soda on a flannei cloth glasses hot. rested. Amazin’ sweet voice she had, 1 . Wrn of o ‘:’m are stand- | von get one-half as much more than A them . forget t;r lch has been dampened; rub the always singin’ this hymn ag if she be- | g g:‘ our t;‘i e Chinese must be|you do by the quart roasted. They are Let pass; forg em, tops thoroughly and the work is done. To Can Sour Apples—I pare and|jigoved every word: “There's a land that stan e!l!ls:_o:’ de r Elmds. ten cents a. pound. I lfke raw peanuts Amd it you have said a word, texI‘ ‘é?;'pem, ;:n‘: soetdca g S c?:?t?vo cunas n;n, - .:ng“tl: fif;::d‘t:rr 18, pplrer DIGAYandips MO L o telchln;" of LhI: stukw%t Iglul::n ?r: O ey ) ) 3 3 of sugar 0] . < St md' m m;"l‘te heard, I have a candy-pail cover for a %a.n boiling hot, in ghnnt cans, with new | * o ik an lent, Pass 3 ¥ “‘Say, do you see that little over | should ‘walk in our integrity’ and ‘lead ‘ o fi;erfai; the st beiwee thfi two | quiet and peaceable lives in all godli-| When you buy a mew lamp chimney, thet; and swestens up the sink. Swoet Apples—Pare and core a ket- | hills? Well, every night in the year, | ness and honesty. jost put It in o pan of water encugh Maybe someone’s heart will blesd— m“di';bii"d Tox ton-aiaKis aud wyots tle full of sweet apples, add one cup | about, no matter what the weather is, ow I think we have talked enough | to cover it, let come to a bo. on meat-board, and soaa Bow another kind of seed, d, P and soda cleans | rubbers. ugar n 1 In the i est. before night shets down, there's | for this evening, so if yon will wind | set it off of the stove and ceo e m—ffl‘;‘::;d&diee' Review. ; ‘gmd hot mesn o stay il the clock gf h‘:;agg;t:&dm;n: cl:lgaggo: eax:hu:fl' ju little bright spot there; sometimes it | the clock I think we will go to bed.” wfi:;.‘ ’:t .hlrduns thpe. vtv::r of 1t Bent in by A DREAMER. ; ra%une of the committes is forgotten, | CINDAMON, clove and allspice. Boil shows more'n it does others. You can SAMANTHA. mice reci tender and can hot. My kettle makes ANSWERS AND INQUIRIES. Moosup. LS (ama v, Apple Pie—I line a deep pie tin wiflé BAMANTHA: Card received and g good crust and fill level with slice WML £ Chitietbo. CORNFLOWER'S WAY OF MIXING S apma‘;itsprmkje Lhic;: w{;"ilsun{' add just a little butter and a little nut- CHATTERBOX: Five postals re- DRI, meg-and cover with a crust and bake eeived and mailed as you directed. Dear Editor and Sisters: I am glad | Well FRANK—Postal card mailed as you | that &r sister, Mrs. Robinson, has Apple Shortcake—Stew the apple Mieacted. !snat:lted d;:fsrmg%il?nczh; ‘l‘l:i?sofeéz; and sweteten to tt.':\sfte] and add a tea- BUNFLOWER—Postal card sent as o o . spoon of extract of lemon or orange. et for root beer sounds so good that I in- | Butt, 1 light hot shortcake and ee = tend to make some, but make it as a TEEhlE el e s syrup and not ferment 1t; the it spread thick with the apple. It is nice H n use i HEALTH SUSTAINING MEATLESS | by adding a little oold water. syeorn. | 1 COVET With sweet cream. g DISHES. ed to taste, I think it will be good. Apple Slump—Fill the kettle a third By the way, how many know that|full of sliced sour apples, add a cup Hire's Root Beer Extract makes a very | Of sugar, a cup of water and a little Dear Bisters of the Soclal Corner: I|pleasant drink by adding a teaspoon | NUtmeg; cover with a drust and boil am pending in a few excellent recipes|to a glass of cold, sweetened water? |until the «<rust is cooked. Don’t un- for making cheese dishes—at least we| Sumshine: I shall try your tomato|COver or let it stop beiling. Crust— think they are excellent, and would | marmalade when my tomatoes begin|TWo cups of flour, salt, ice cream spoon FRANK. B ——— can indulge with impunfty. The sour water, or whay, I8 very good to freshen over-salt corned beef, and makes it more tender; leave beef in over night, rinse, and cook as al- Ways. l\”’ofih}ng is without some use. Will tbring a plate of curd cakes to next ‘Wood Box social. Yours in Corner, - Plain Rarebit—Omne-half pound of cheese cut fins, 2 tablespeons butter, 1-4 teaspoon salt, a few grains cay- enne, 1-2 cup cream, 2 egg volks, 12 zephyrettes (crackers). This 18 very nice, as I have tried it. Indian Pudding—One-third cup In- dian meal, 1 quart milk, 1-3 cup mo- lasses, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tea su- gar. Bcald the milk, pour slowly o the meal, add the molasses, salt an ginger. Bake in a slow oven two hours, serve with butter or cream. The gin- ger may be omitted If destred. If baked too rapidly it will whey. Boston Brown Bread—Ome cup rve meal, 1 cup Indian meal, 1 cup Grah flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 3 1-2 teaspoo: baking powder, 3-4 cup molasses, 1 3- cups milk. “ Measure the meal an we have good plants for the house, For slipping ordinary plants 1 break off branches about three inches long, taking pains to tear the branch out of the stem. Then I piace the slips in water until tiny rootlets appear. Then I place them in bed or pot and press dirt firmly around them. If these are kept well watered they us- uaily lve. However, some plants are too deli- cate to survive under this rather rough t, so I place the slip in a dish contaming a wet mud of lght sand. Then a Jelly tumbler is invert- ed over the plant and it is placed in the sun, where it usually commences to take root in the sand. One of the most pecullar plants to slip and at the same time one of the B 8 Yantfo, CHOICE OF HAIRPINS, Dear Editor and Social Corner Sis- ters: A good deal 18 said about the kind of hairpins to use that won't irri- tate the scalp. As scalp diseases are in flour after sifting. Add the salt an like to bhave you try them. to ripen, and am going to put up some | Of s0da and two of cream tartar, wet ?hue’ Snma utnwtework'pxo’iez;t‘;ps Lo g:;;ngfaumm e gy ’s, e ltzha.ldng ,"0"“' |fl.nd n':“ ;"m‘l Ad Meat is relished by most people, yot %:kla by the recipe given by One of | With sweet milk. Do nat get Into the habit of thinking| o slip the Rex Begonia, it is only | o LoLasses and milk. Turn into & ’ it is not necessary for a well balanced em. well buttered steamer and steam thres and one-half hours.. The water must boil constantly whils cooking. Water may be substituted for milk with sat« isfactory results. BIDDY. Baked Sour Apples—Fill a tin with |2 suitable hairpin is anything that meal. Foods which are to be served| J. E. T.: I wish some one would fill| gound apples fr(f:z ‘which the cores|Wwill hold the hair. If this notion were in place of meats should be rich in|my pails for me when I go berrying. | have been removed, fill the holes with | not so widespread thers would not be protein and faf, and should also be| Sunshine: You can buy spikenard |sugar and bake soft. Cool and cover |So many freakish looking heads and savory. Cheese naturally suggests it- | root at the druggist’s for five cents an| with cream. cut and split hair. self as a subatitute for meat, since it | ounce, and you had better do it rather| Aunty of Willimantic will have to| Hairpins are wrong Mn several ways. is rich in the same kinds of nutriments | than run the risk of mistaking some| guess again, for although I do live | They may be ornate, which is in poor which meat supphies. | poisonous plant for . That is why| where there are huckleberries there is | taste; or too rough, or too cheap, which In substituting cheese for meat, es-|I think most people will continue to| not a single C or S in my whole name. |1s ruination to the hair. pecial pains should be taken to serve | procure thelr medicines where poisons necessary to secure a fresh leaf of the plant and place it in a fruit-jar of water, so that the leaf rests on the surface and the stem fis totally im- mersed. After about three or four weeks the olq leaf entirely decays and a bud starts from its base and rootlets form on the stem. This plant will grow if placed in dirt. Tolland County. DEPENDASLE, SEASONABLE REC- ETTA BARBER. Some women won't Wear anything| ™ We make our callas bloom the entire IPES. dishes that will be relished by the fam- | are labeled. It is hard for one un- —— but tortoise shell pins Mn thelr hair.|year py repotting them in the spring S — ily. versed in the lore of field and woods to GREEN GRAPES This no doubt is a luxury, as most hair|{ znq keeping them well watered until| To the Editor and Soclal Corned distinguish the helpful from the 0% s, 3 0 is glven to shedding pins at wholesale Cheese and Vegetable Soup.—Two cups | parmful. - August 1 when the jars are turned on | Sisters: This is a lovely, cool morn- o+ AR gree rates, their sides and the plants are left|ing and I think we can all appreciate ::?ri&a,wrx’m m‘a&x’;gfi fi:fiief Xfifif CORNFLOWER. be?lr;-e"thg;a F’rei;e.l l)}'l({)i one nkjir; Disf Th‘*"% is ‘t’mu:g ?‘°W'°"er"_hmf without water for thres or four weeks, | it, after the extrems heat of a few & very liitle mace, two tanespoons of R sauce I cut each grape in the middle T&fi;o%ueineoss ofltmhe nm{ace. Then they are turned up and repotted | days—just right to sit down to write butter, two tablespoons flour, 11-2 UTILIZING A SMALL ROOM. with af slh?rg knife (and Ltllxsl pgt)sucldl Leaspe calded " an awin 0D as one woul n1ink) and fl“‘r&mflogsm uahu:.::l mkm:ié: Dear Sisters of the Social Corner: | take out the seeds until I fill my ket- wvegetables a short time in half the|Perhaps in some home there is a tiny|tle (two quarts when done), add flve beiter; add the stock and the mace, | little Toom too smail to use as a bed- | cups of sugar and a cup of water and beiling 15 or 20 minutes; swrain and |To0m, and more often used as a store- | cook until the syrup thickens on the add the milk; thicken with fiour cook- | FoOm. kettle. I turn hot water in the cams, ed in the remaining butter. Just be-| I have in mind just such a home,|turn the water out and fill with the fore serving stir in the cheese and|2nd the little room was Jocated on the | hot sauce. I keep the cans wrapped in rich soil having plenty of fertilizer and covered over with a coat of moss (gathered in the woods), and, if copi- ously watered, they bloom all winter, 2 A CO-SOLID, TESTED PUDDING RECIPES, Dear Sisters of Social Corner: Here- a few seasonable recipes, that I have not yet seen in print: Canning Succotash—Take nice tan- der corn, spiit the kernels and scrape them out. I also cut some off without splitting the kernels. Then put in the cans first a layer of corn, then the beans, and so on untfl the can is tul] When you cannot afford real shell, the next éhotoe is a celluloid pin. This is smoother and less unsightly than rubber; and not so ugly or so Injurious as metal pins. The latter should not be worn by women whose hair is very fine, or whose scalp perspires. ‘Where a pin shows, =s is the case ook Rkl it dn Taalted. second floor. It contained one window.|in cloths until cool. . with the present mt’;‘z’fl:&m_ with I send a few pudding recipes: fitf;ll:?m::nl ;!nt't:e ot:p“::: ;‘;‘t It had been used to store away trunks| For Jelly I fill the kettle with green |sible buy real shell, H" y Gasid | 18laeh Bread Pudditic"One-Hathhao 1ok . Aveii tight, But in Cheess and Tomato Salad—Stuff cold | and also for preserves and jeiles. grapes and add a cup of water and |er pins be imitation. mmettunms ook | ot of ::{ w'| t“{ ing—One-! h l”lh"l ot 108 Bathe pu‘ tomatoes with cream cheese and serve| The house changed ownership, and|cook soft; then I crush them In my |led, kept from extreme houié g‘) oot °rt pint of berries, strain th 7 ",’ A th“d k of the m. Fiil on lettuce leaves with i'rench dress-|this little store room was transformed | wire potato masher and put what goes ll?:t "f"m":’“‘y‘fle’;:;‘sened these Pins ?: m.n‘:ll ::un.:e:“::‘d gg: s:n.ll:ylgm;fi lete Kt’bgl tor :h::: hZurl' then ':“d' g into such a cozy little den that I de- | through easy in a clean kettle with an . 4 L & sl i Do not crowd your hair with pins.| bowl, mofsten well with hot berry |the rubbers om, screw the tops down Scrambled Eggs with Cheese—Half cided to tell you about it. equal amount of sugar and cook until i i than are mec- pound grate The walls were hard finished and|it thickens; then I put it warm into |Most women wear more Cosnocte, CauL epen, O ltinted a soft cream color. The wood- | jelly glasses and cover when cool. | essary. . ‘:“n"";’wmmwfzfif fl‘fflfi’; work was painted white. This gave| Mine keeps good in a cool, dark place, m?x’!‘n ;Zr ?;flb: glfmm" e + gga slightly, mix them with the other ;‘:}2& ”fig’n‘i’;gb”gmi)];gsrfilt:gm For Blackberry Jelly 1 line the|ed; over-pinning breaks the hair and ingredients, and oock over a very SloW |\ 4" v for gl furnishings: Three Tasher svith & thin cloth, because of |yrritates sensltive scalps. i3 cheese may 'h:‘:eltsd by fxoxe Ll?xfis :hh: goods prints were passpartoued and grgpe e 2 it o thg mtha.l a.lglsin?:onsplcueu, s wviihd tood. value thig|hung on the walls, one an Pt T L kS oemesins thoas tokt e nearly : | Hunting Scene, another Love’s bor a erry ortcake—N e cake of size dish is squal to WO Femuds O Lost, figvm the painting by V Reg-|rich biscuit dough. When baked cut Some women tl;ftect ht\]:l:ie ak::fl 013 beel. A T gianini, and The Speaking Well. with a sharp knife, buttér and cover |th end of their s le'th gc!ldt dr Dear l?larldg Sister’ 1 bid you wel~ An oak writing desk was purchased | thick with berries that have been well | ded with jewels, or a rropgiee % m] f“’ “;w"";ré:; ‘ufd h"-flit?v?ry" for trading stamps, and a desk chair|sugared. Serve warm. 4;‘))\!1‘1:‘1 metom‘t;; 3; u;omucl’\ i s e was made from an ordinary oak kitch- - IO nioe coat sweater, ana will send you en chair and a disused piano stool, The ‘Bla:kbcrry W}ne—l fill a glass jar | more time. diredtions if you want them. hair with fresh berries and then press in would mak: the chair, and : n| What gave me the idea was one day X SAIEE & sugthy antl )t?lses \:;f;:ls::x?id 1‘;;:? was removed | S much sugar as the jar will holdand | joet week In treating a diseased scalp cle for the Social Corner but I will cover. As the juice comes out I turn ention was drawn to the hair- send them by mail if you say you from the plano stool and the BCTeW |j; of and bottle it and it is mice for g:;s“utsed I picked a number up and would Ntk e y part.fastened fo the chair. Tt was then | gickness. 1 put a spoonful in hot)] Liawed wmy patient just how her hair . pe i ggg Biven two Coats of | water, add a little sugar, and it is a | wap it for ome inch en a hair, all oak colore: -a-lac; 3 | ¢ for bowel trouble. she yvou would scarcely believe it; but it PRI el Seosne over her head, and told her unless juice, then more bread and juice till all 1s used. Cover dish and set away to cool. Serve cold, with plain or whipped cream or custard sauce. I do not flavor the sauce as I think it gietrum from the flavor of the pud- ng. Lemon Rice Pudding—One cup of rice bolled soft in water. ‘Add a pint of cold milk and a piece of butter the size of an egg, volk of four eggs and grated rind of a lemon; mix and bake half an hour. After the pudding is baked and cool, beat the white of 4 eggs in nearly a pint of sugar and the juice of a lemon, Pour this over and brown. Apple Puff Pudding—Peel, core and fill with sugar six large or eight small apples. Bake slowly ang cool In serv- tight; let them boll one hour longer, and it will kesp for a year. T hsv‘ some In my cellar just as nice as when first canned. Canned Bests—Take beets about as large as an egg, boll about an hour, then put them in cold water, rub ofi the skin, put in jars, flll with cold water, with a teaspoon of salt on top, let them boil for an hour in the botlef and you will have beets in winter, as nice as when taken right out of the garden. Now is the time when the childre are calling for apple dumplings an: the grown-up ones, also. Let me give vou my rule for making one, it ia als nice for chicken and veal potple, am light as a sponge, Light Dumplings—Take one quart AUNT NANCY, € ing dish. Beat whites of 2 egges, a|of flour, two teaspoons cream of tar- if it were purchased BTTA BARBER. |gjq away with those pins # wouldn't pinch of cream of tartar and 3 table- | tar and one of soda, mix with a spoon TIMELY RECIPES AND SUGGES- 'fgg::dt;: Epd. e P do any good to !int;‘e it; mdn‘w;y”:lh‘; spoons powdered sugar; heap one or|as stiff as b e sflr it, drop in a . i -|HOW TO MAKE E trouble was brought on mo two spoonsful on each apple and brown | stralner pan t rst well gry TIONS, A small foa.kutable and chair com (] JUNFERMENTED Pins than by neglect. in'the oven. Berve with custard mads | put over:s dish of Befling “t"““di; i e pleted the furniture. | GRAPE JUICE, Tet me advise any sister to look after Dear Sisters of the Social Corner: This room was Papa’s den, for his o of an egg yolk. Half this recipe is enough for a small family. Pineapple Tapioca Pudding—Wash 1-2 cup pearl tapioca and put in double boller with a scant quart cold water and a pinch of salt. Cook until as clear as starch. Stir often to prevent lumping. Remove from fire and put in dish in which vou intend to serve cook in fifteen minutes, This win de for a hurry dinner iIf your apples ar: stewed beforehand, and very nice fe‘ meats. Canned Huckleberries—For & quart can, take three pints of berries, stew them in a pan, just let them come te a good boil, do not Fut any sugar | if for pies, as the pls is muveh bett her scalp; keep it clean and healthy; and if ygu have children don't neglect their scalps. Just before a shampoo, massage a lttle olive or swest oil into the scalp; let it remain for one night, timel ) g 5| own exclusiye use. . ;:etn "l:‘ei? a‘:m;h::h(i;:gr:erl»f ‘;;'Z';g;“: On the table was placed his jar of Editor of the Social Corner: For the 3 tobacco, an ash tray and his pipes; in|Sister who wished recipe for unfer- b 6 a_convenient place wero his ‘siippers | mented grape juice I send the follow- Try Peach Souffle for a dessert. One|and his smoking jacket; and a long | Ing: of feeding the quart of preserved peaches, one-half | linen bag for cane and umbrellas hung Unfermented Grape Juice—Wash W‘ e "m‘?.‘fl:fl"g‘;fl warm water oup sughar, scant: white of four eggs; | on the back of the door. The writing grapes (wild ones batter), set over slow d eastile soap; rinse well ome -half omp sugar. Drain the syrup | desk was supplied with pens, pencils, fire, and let come to a b'crn' mash and an h from the peaches, remove stones, add | blotters, stamps, different sized paper : % With best wishes. into a colander i ZRN, |it. Add 1-2 eup of sugar and a 10- |t0 Season them as you want them; sugar and mash with a fork. Beat|and cards; and Papa often declared gg:; l;fidoaafi;e a;xme;: E‘:"n;}':;‘u;';: FRO! cent can of -!msided pf;:‘ppl& When | heat the cans in het water, fill with thie whites to a stiff froth, add the sec- | there gne no place i“l‘h;" V(Vi”"d dearer | if you want it clear; pouring a lttla| M2IRe: cold, whip cream and spread on top. Ee be’ael! and seal. Thess will keep ond half cup sugar and combine mix- | to him than his own little den. # 1 do: 1 4 s ] ha our own pre d pine- y. tures. Bake 20 minutes in a buttered Otga, o | Taker Wl do; 9t Jice Oa/stova aent; If you have your own preserved pine- | indefint : allow one cup of sugar to one pint of | THE CARE AND CULTIVATION OF dish. Serve at once with plain or juice; when it comes to the boiling pped cream. LANTS. i QUEEN BESS BELIEVES COUNTRY | point take off scum that may arise. i Sorambled Tomatoes on Toast is an- | . Seal in air tight bottle, or put in fruit apple, use a large cupful instead of the above, Pudding Sauces—Tablespoon of but- Quick Sponge Cake.—Two eggs, ane- cup of sugar, beat five minutes, one cup of sifted flourh‘ with one teasposm ream tartar, one-half teaspoon of so- LIFE IS BEST. 5 Friends: You/|ter, 1 cup sugar, 1 egg, grated rind|® other way to serve that very delightful Jars. Dear Social Corner da with a little salt, a teaspoon and healthy “fruit” or vegetable, as 25 AR . Will keep for years. see T am bound to keep sending n my | and juice "l: °’;° lelmeodn._l ubl:upoon O o fIAVors i ttilil is th, o you may care to term it. Peel and cut Dear Editor and Social Corner Sis- MAINE LOVER. thoughts until told that I am not|corn starch dissolv in a little cold 5 oro o tomaitoe yma jeces : ters: 1T wonder how many of the Sis- This week I want to tell you M hot oil or butter ltox:"‘ two a;idthu;(;lg tors will say with me that they are w s :'t?;::fd}nv cfiltivated flowers which I mimtes, seasoning with salt and pep- | 5124 they are living on a farm this| WHAT | DO WITH SOUR MILK. help my mother take care of. el =33 o~ | weather, and think with plty of those : Iy T e 1t ot o . ve ready three eggs beaten | . = o las? c Social Cormer Editor and Cornerites: | Theoda: n y Hving in the crowded citles? I am : 5 ultivated flowers as you » turn in with the tomatoes and | 11o1key) every day of my life that T|When sour milk is well lobbered I put | interested in c A3 o fbossing and stirring;until set.| o1 "1 o6 opliged to bring up my boys | It in a clean cloth bag, tie the bag up |are with herbs and wi ; (3wzrs,fi Serve on buttered toast. in' the city. : tight; leave a little space for air he- th-s. Robinson: q:ex:m st ildren will 1 ; tween milk and top of bag; put inco|the “small be The chil like salndw!c‘hes % It seems to me that most of the Etatmer or. éve OF soplandiir; plical to ‘have¥a corpect: aualysis: soon, . I which are spread with fiz paste and|farmers nowadays plan to retire as £ty e - hat any of these so- : i ¢ vn. | OVer kettle boiling water till the whey, | hardly think that any o sprinkled with ground peanuts, The|80on as possible and move to town. o inks” ntain alcohol in figs are boiled until they can be mash- | This sete an example for the sons|OF Water in milk, is mostly out, and the | called “soft drinks’ V_co a : eod into a paste, and then seasoned | which they are in a hurry to follow. | contents of the bag feel firm as light | any form, after having been properly lightly with lemon juice. Oftentimes they get there before he 7:%931? :t‘;‘;g‘hé fitg‘:i’; g}‘lualftext'hth:taz up fe‘xfl*;‘;’i- all probably kiow, ~Augnst o = N “ 2 " As every one knows, a bath is the gg;: oIn b?‘k‘:’:";a:'fmw:v:“:}l;gu]x(;e‘:egfig out in clean pan and salt to taste. I|is the proper month fér “slipping,” re- most useful and refreshing of restora-|them in every way possible that the |add a handful of caraway seed. If too| potting and otherwise preparing bed- tives, Here is a recipe floramedlt(gnal farm s not merely a place to work|dry, put a spoon or two of cream or|ding plants for winter. By bedding bath for the nervously worn and those water, 1 cup of boiling water. Boil together a few moments and serve. South Canterbury. C. OF C. mixed put in 1-2 cup of boiling water (I sometimes use boiling milk in place of the water). I hope we shall soon hear from geme of the old writers, Nat, Jane Ann, Cherisette and Elizabeth, and others. Maine Lover: Write another stery. We all fully enjoyed your picnie, Lebanon. ANTIT A LETTER FROM THE SHORE. Dear Socials: I thought TI'd drop vou a line or two t?da.v 1o tell you of our vacation, on this island far away. IR v e A rest 1 long had needed and Ed | It takes'a shrewd man to get rien was tired, too, and so we're stopping A 4n spite of his wife. here, dear, with not a thing to do; e | except that in the morning we must run along the shore and gather up the firewood and bring it to the door. Then Ed goes for the water, 'Tis a ile away, but he always gets | Nervous strat Endured and grow rich, sacrificing many pleas- | new milk in, then knead over till it|plants, I mean begonias, ;;mlr:lnl;nus, :x;;i }:u ::alfa,.whz:h b :t usyn.llg:h: Pl: ation who cannot obtain sleep. It is the pre- | yres in order to do so, but that it is | will hold together. £ ivies, heliotropes, ete, whic ave R S S A e Py mem mnm"m.m scription of an old physician. Take | the best place God ever made on which I had a tin tube made 33-4 inches|been planted out of doors during the d;:“t 5 u:;‘ o N e:t e el ,{i Derya ¥ four ounces of sea galt, spirfts of am-| o Jive free, broad, helpful, healthy, | across the ends and 14 inches long, cost | summer., We have elght different ape- | that is, k ; bu 3 Pa, writes: “For several yemes | nerveus prostration, and was utterly wretched. 1 Iived il bread and beef | :: bum:e m);:»mluauwnl et e 0 euything eise. . I took meny - edies, but obtalned po redef -El monda, two oumces; spirits of camphor | human ves. There are thousands of | 10 cents; put my curd into tube and|oles of begonlas; two kinds of cac- two HBuMOI: of pure alcohol, elght | gueh lives being Itved today upon |1?e press down, & little, with a wooden po- | tus, one of which ts the night lell)Hh wunces, and sufficlent hot weter to|farm, tn the opsn of (God's sunshina |tato masher, then turn the tube on one | ing cereus, and which s now flling 1rake @ Tull guart of the Nquid Dis-| And it Is because of this faot that this|side and push out ebout an irich in|the yard with its fragrance (it is in solye the sea salt In hot water and let | sountry 18 great and good—and grow. | thickness of the curd; cut carefully | bloom this evening): and about twen- perchance, It mlgses us, we on clams and cunners feast, Then, after break- fust's over, we walk to-the P, O, to get the papsrs gnd letters, 'Tis but & mile or s0, "Tl§g time then to ook it stand until cool, Pour into the-al-|ing petter, with sharp, thin-bladed lkuife into|ty-five kinds of geraulums, bestdes|dmner, if there is wood on hand; if :auk :nd;-iuq;::fl. mnl.:"‘" cohol the of ammronla and cam- nf,, H, K.—Have you glven um the |cakes; place on large platier, or clean | many small plants, not, we go and get it, as we find it on | to Fain at once, vared. phor; the salt water, shake well|initial of your last hame? I have an|board, with cloth over hoard; don't let | We find it most convenient to alip | the strand, Pure, rieh bload good, strong nerves, and this s why Hood's Barsa- which parifies enriches the and bottle for use, With a soft sponge | {dea. I know you, Don't you Iive right | them touelt each other; gun dry on|all of our plants in early fall and Then, after dinner's over, we walk M) in this mizture wet -over the|in the village? Isn't the person who | top of veranda or high bex two days, | leaye most of the old plants outdnars, out on the pler, and watch the boat in H - T aking In at night; t er gecond | moving the small new plants into the | lJanding, and ges o it's brought here, cures so many Mseases, | i %% m r#hm 1!:4:::!”:!!;03:;1 go o oo tilteh L.Ly. s e S bow l:v‘!ndmv for the winter, By slip- " And then we have our supper, and then Get “'W in or 4 freling that fglows will Can't the Willlmantlc Sisters glve Very digestible for weak afomach; pins early snd using large branches Wwe g0 to bed, and fght the skests fill SDesolgted tabiets -called h ‘

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