Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 27, 1901, Page 28

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20 FIGHTING — LONDON ~ SLUMS Greatest Municipal Battle Against Filth and Orime Ever Waged. TEN MILLION DOLLARS IN THE POT ) Grimy Hovels in Which 40,000 People Live Into Model Apnrtments=How the Work is Done. —_— room boxing that subeequently reigned in | - LONDON, Jan, f.~Byety American olty | that foom. A bloody nose ;”x‘ ‘r:nwlv:-'n"(’\‘;{ It one may judge from the newspaper ac PP o hve one of those municipal [ breliminarica; no ono regarded the 1088 Of | ccunts, the Omaba messenger boy difters sores A slum will doubtless be in- | % t00fh OF Lwo, &A% the Douts ©Mos. & |materially from those of other cities—espe- o @ ¢ 1| ways “went" il the knockout came. Even | 1 0o h ? New Yotk and Ct o Veorew the huge experiment slow oid | 4 clally from those of New York and Chicago .| the parson's strict rule of no swearing or | . 5 h London is undertaking. And parenthetically | ere the boy with the lettered cap talks ondon is und bad language scarcely affected the popularity A . it may be observed that a city that is spend- | : . - with a marked Chimmy Fadden jargon of the p He was always there, and, as yns on m! pal improve that s most bewildering and which, in its | | time went on, even the most hardened men mor s of up-to-date printed form, {8 made up mostly of apostro in the district recognized the fact that thelr i and golng fn | o L0 e as N0 “softy." as they put It.|Phes. In Omaha, however, it Is different more municipal trading | P L Here he speaks much like other people th 18| And 80 he got his first hold on them. The e M€ SPeaks Hch 15 411 NeaTny other y ‘h{:u | story of how he won the whole district to | > age. ue ’“ k “-‘]‘"" b -‘."‘H e : Bot as ¥l L D on1s nothing | TésDect and aimost to love him is too long | oY Bro Goselh bave to eall 18 WA 1o experiment now on I8 00UIE | (Ll here, but now In the spot whers | LTPFeLET in order (o carry on & conversa IosnL Than LTE e ““‘ homes of | #1001 the worst part of the “Old Nichol" | !IC0 WA AIN Sk 14 prd A wiping o e program | Ptands Dr. Jay's famous church—with 8 1% relvon. of Wi ssephct I (e quwen about 40,000 people. A ’“’"“flf'n an- | OXing room in its basement! Dr. Jay it l" 'l[‘"‘“: \ ”““";“ "'r h;. "("‘" L BRSO DaTog discuudd, fua | YOI, WEOOpped thw Lomdon Ovunty couneil | 8 RS S8 i WAL KEnEtt B 8 R oo other $10,( YL i e Wy sy | O tO PeDUIIAING ‘S euTvn, T Sto¥y ot | SR CRERRE SIEGY L ASE SRR O N LR Ry O O et 15 the Bats yed | 100 10N BT Wha 11 by Avtktir Morvieon | SEPSERESSL _EN L SORE HD SERERL. BILINE schemes will be planned to the N esity | In his novel, “A Child of the Jago," of |tions every day that could be woven into & and more millfons spent until the necessity | o " re Tyle oF pather Jay,” as he s |BOVel with good effect. He gets hard for spending money In this way in lmnvhm} and the city bave be- | hall have disappeare come & landlord on an unprecedented scalo. That of course, be at the time when | the last of Loudon's world-famous slums | has been wiped out and rebullt. When that | duy will dawn no one is prepared to eay. Probl f Housing the Po Today th 16ing’”" problem is the worst | that London has to face, but its powerful councll, which has done several arkable things already and which Ily unlimited wealth to draw ermined that over-crowded, and lum areas must Ko 0 ready attacked, razed and re built one of the worst slums in London; | geveral other notorious ones are now being | torn down and stll others are doomed. | Medical inspectors in the county council's employ are penetrating into the city's flithiest corners and condemning them. Th: wretched creatures who swarm in them are | paid a small sum of money and turned out, aft which the slum comes down. I'he “beforo takiug” phase of the coun- | ell's herolc remedy 1s a mass of closely | packed hovels, qualid, unlighted and un ventila ached through grimy, winding alleys, in which the police dare to go only in force The “after taking” 1s blocks of | trim cottages or apartment bulldings, weparated from the other, equipped lterally “every modern convenience,” in- | cluding a perfect system of drainage nl\wlj every essential for cooking Th apart- | ments are well lighted by day with large | either by gas or el where a penny windows; at night tricity, on the slot system, dropped fn produces gas for six hours. N ut band is a park or playground for recr und baths and washhouses for cle line These “model dwellings,”” mo to rent at prices which even very | over, are poor pecple can afford to pay. A8 8008 |\ pi0h 'y 500 people live or die. In the rooms |station as the county e wH.n v:‘f‘lun:\:: '.’II‘I“:;N“,.’(’;“, of such hovels the pri gat atticle of fus | Shaskey's Big T o ey (mmedlatelY | nivure is generally the bed, which nearly [ Fred, Sharkey—DId I ever tell you of the O A othingmen's homes of thig |fills the apartment, and which serves for |time I’ worked a guy for a 32 tip? Well, l“',‘,"”’l' A “”“‘":‘“'. ‘I‘“.’:’I"N ‘ot former | the Whole family, no matter how numerous |you see, it happened this way. He'd only slum distric (he London county council |1t may be. As many as can, generally the |been going with the girl about a week, and B et 1116 over $5.000,000. Tollowing | [4BeF. mother and any “guest” who may be | I took a note out to her house on Franklin B ot 1t 15 now bullding houses | ©PIOYIDE thelr hospitality, with, say, three [street, near Thirty-seventh, to ask her to of the same kind which will cost over |°f the older children, occupy the top of (go to the theater. When I rung the bell $1.600,000, and to clear the new distpicts [the bed. The rest of the family sleeps fan old dame with spectacles and spit curls which the council's Inspectors have con- {under it. Generally every article of cloth- ‘dn\\n the side of her face came to the door demned and which aro to be febuilt wil | IU8 recks with flith. The windows of the jand I give her the note. She read it, and 600000 more Tie houses already | FOOM: concealed behind grimy curtains, are [T could see she was mad all right. She built accommodute more than 10,000 people; those now building and those arranged for wiil give dwellings for 80,000 more. They will be fnished and occupled in five years from no Expa nw 1's Hounds, The second scheme which the council is laying out takes another way of curing the sume disease of overcrowding. This s by acquiring tracts of land in the country just out of London, building model dwellin there, and conneeting them with the work ing centers of the city by light rallways. The detalls of this scheme have not been settled, but members of the council tell me that perfecting it will cost probably $10, Of course these operations, gigantic as they are in the amount of money they cost, | are only the beginning of the work of get- | ting rid of London's slums, but everything points to this vast undertaking belog car- | ried out to the end. The best reason for this bellef is that the council is no longer divided on this subject. Until a compara tively short time ago a large numbes of 18 n embers had little faith in the schemes that the body was in tho act of carrying out, | but success bas converted these doubters, | and hereafter the council will work as a | unit in this direction. Naturally, it is not | planning to spend the millions of the city of London without expecting to get them back again. The power of money-spending that was granted to the council by Parlias ment is on the condition that thelr opera 15 shall be so conducted that at the end of sixty years every house bullt shall have paid for itself | ehitar THE OMATIA DAILY | had nin skt erasned m by an tron gracine | IRIALS OF A MESSENGER BOY i e st atratd ot them. - | Some of His Quaint Experiences as Told that ho could, on occasion, be a militant | by Himself. Christian. Then he set to work to find out | what eport they liked b © any kind \l\l‘ e discovered that It was boxing. So he opened | SOMETIMES HE STRIKES 1T RICH a large room with every facility for the | practice of the manly art, including gloves - and nvited the men to como there and spar. | fiis Homesty Does N " | They cked to it, an honer which the ',.w Being Rich in pee htre dominom, heokers 4nd chese son:| 18 HS Diters from A D, 7. Luds of Larger Cltle stituted the attractions, It was no drawing | now affectionately known In the “Jago,” |kDocks; he works all hours of the day and {a n prominent figure, and whieh is dedicated |BIEht; he mingles with all classes, from to bim, the highest to the lowest, and before he What & Topteal slam (8 Like, |‘rmlnu(|s from the “usiness” becoies an A kol iiiide | excellent judge of human nature, all of Rt ','fr‘h_,‘;‘y‘:','w:!:fl el | Which is in itselt a good capital for be idea of the other congested London districts /08108 the broader dealings of later lite with which the county council is either | A & School of His Owa. dealing or gotting ready to deal. The houses | While other boys, were bullt 8o that thelr ground floors were [more fortunate, are more than a foot below the |Per cent marks on al nerally considered t school getting high bra and psychology sometimes street level, aud in building them a cheap |he is attending a little college of his own sort of mortar, known as “Billy sweet,” | Which teaches how to parry the blows in had been used, a distinguishing feature of |1ifé’'s prize ring. And if he is a sensible this substance being that it never dried. In|boy he comes out of the ordeal much Im- the district there was no street more than |proved by the hard lessons he has learned. twenty-eight feet wide, Most of the| Here are a few actual experiences res thoroughfares were mere alleys. No house [lated by Omaha messenger boys boasted a front door, no house was ever re- | Jimmie McNeill (“Mickie de Kid") paired and such backyards as had once | I've gone up against lots of quesr existed had been roofed over to make new [ones. One time I went out to Sheely st dwellings. People slept out on the side- |tion for a bloke at the Karbach hotel. It walks to avoid one kind of vermin in the cent run, and when I got back he houses and burned candle stumps to scare |banded me a dime and told me to keep the off another kind. The death rate in the [chan district was forty per thousand, and it is| Ray Van Warmer—I run over a dog one no exaggeration to say that every man in |time at Nineteenth and Douglas streets the slum was somo kind of a criminal. At|and killed it. It pretty near killed me, one time there were sixty-four ticket-of-|too, and T was lald up for a week, but the leave men there, and when once a criminal, [ woman that owned the dog wanted to have either a thief or murderer, had slipped be- |me arrested tween the two posts that marked the en- | Earl Dennis (“Ham, jr.")--One time trance to what Arthur Morrison called the [about 3 o'clock one morning—I had to take “Jago,” the police gave up the pursuit.|a lunch cart from Sixteenth and Farnam In the slum there was what was known as a |streets down to Thirteenth and Harney. The “royal family,” who kinged it over the |man that owned it was sick or something. district, but there was also a pretender and |1 started with it, trying to draw it along his gang, and when the two cliques met |behind my wheel, but the blame thing got in battle, which they often did, the district |awsy from me ana went rattiiing down th literally ran with blood hill, throwing lunch every which way. Just The average rate of population per acre [as I was overtaking it a copper came out in London s about fifty-seven—in some of |of a doorway and wanted to arrest me— these slum districts in reach In one id 1'd stolen the cart, and I had to put of them there are fifty-four dwellings, in |up a pretty stiff spiel to keep out of the never washed, and the room is in practical |asked me to come in and wait, and in about darkness. Sometimes two families “go |twenty minutes she came back with a billie #nooks” on the same room and bed, the |docks in a little pink envelope and told first using It from 7 until midnight and |me to take 1t to his nibs. Well, then decamping, when the second retires [T was dead wise t the old girl in the warm bed. Children of such dis- |had scribbled that note herself, and I was tricts, sent to school and falling asleep in [wise that she told him to steer clear of thelr seats, complain that they had 1o [that house, but I kept it under my hat, and 8leep the night before, as they had to fight | delivered the pink envelope. And say—his ‘the bugs” all night long. Three rooms |nibs was sore. “Who did you give the in such a dwelling were visited. In the [note to?” he says. I don't know a thing," first lived a man, woman and six children, I seys. “Did you see Miss—er—the young who rented a little cupboard of an annex |lady?" he says, and, “I'm deaf and dumb to two more grown persons; In the second [and blind,” I says. And say! 1 worked lived a father, mother and three grown-up |him that way till I made him cough up a while the third was occupled by |cartwhecl; then I told him, and he was so the parents and four children, to say noth- | tickled he gave me another bone. That ing of an adult “lodger.” | was the b touch 1 ever made. Plan of Action. | Then the manager told a story of Arthur This is the sort of thing that the London |Tinker, a messenger boy who was too mod- County Council is now practically unani- |est to tell it himself. One night last week mous in endeavoring to get rid of. The |Arthur was delivering message in an principal criticism that has been made of | eastern suburb, when his wheel fell in a the councilmen’s system s that when they {rut and he was thrown violently to the pull down one of these slums and bulld | grou dislocating his thumb. Although model dwellings on the site, the people who | he suffering intense pain, he bravely come into the new are not those who were |continued his trip, delivered the message driven out of the old officlal of the 1 asked a prominent council his opinlon in the and returned, and not until he pa ticket to the clerk did his nerve fail. matter. | he fainted, and was He sald: "It is true, we don't get back | Altogether the life of a messenger boy the people we turn out, but our theory fs |is not enviable. There is a bright spot in that as we are gradually wiping out the |it once in a while, but on the whole it has | worst slums, the refugees from each will |almost as many ups and downs as the career have to locate in a district that is a lttle [of an elevator boy better than that from which they nare evicted, and so, as we work along, rebuild- ““A dozen on the shell,”” some celery and a ing district by district, we expect that even | Pint of Cook’s Imperial Extra Dry Cham- | 1 his Then nt home in a hack, | cooking classes if they BEE: SUNDAY, JANUARY 2%, 1901, ““ Man Is as old as he feels, and Woman as old as she looks DP. Greene’s Nervura Malkes Health and Beauty for Women. Remember! Not Age, but Disease, Weakness and Ill Health Make Women Look Old! Vou cannot look your best unless you feel your best—that is, unless vou feel well strong, vigorous, with pure blood, strong and steady nerves. g If you have no appetite, poor digestion, are bilious and constipated, your skin will be dark, sallow, pimply, with unhealthy pallor. If you are sleepless, nervous, irritable, despondent, with nerves all on edge, feel as if you could fly, and are startled at every sound,—these nervous troubles will certainly line your face with wrinkles like age, make you look haggard, hollow-eyed, take the lustre from your eyes and the elastic spring from your step. If you suffer from female troubles, the dragging pain, the aching head, the tired limbs, the utter weakness, prostration and misery will turn youth to old age unless cured at once. Beauty Means Good Health, and Good Health Always Means Beauty for Women. DR. GREENE’S NERVURA BLOOD AND NERVE REMEDY Always Makics Good Looks Because It Always Makes Good Health. Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy will make youn look and feel oung. It will restore your energies, vivacity and enjoyment of life, 1t will make rosy oL Lright eyes, and fine complexion. "It will give a rounded form, the grace and elasticity of perfect womanhood, and the kind of youth that is not measured by years, and which ought to last till past fifty. It is a veritable fountain of youth for weak, fad- wonderful improvement in m ing and despondent women. — health, low lool I left my face. My friends hardly f=] know me. 1 have gained in flesh, and am like a different person.” Dr. Greene's Nervura Cured That Dark and Sallow Look.” Mrs. William Bartels, 289 East 87th St., New York City, says : “Dr. Greene's Nervura madea ‘ My Face Broke Out with Pim- ples, but Dr. Greene’s Ner- vura Cured Me."” Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, of 236 Hartwell's Ave.. Providence, R. 1., says : “My face broke ont with pim. ples, and 1 was almost giving tp in despair when I got Dr. Greene's Nervura, Now T am' well apd strong, thanks to this wonderful remedy." Take Dr. Greene’s Nervura For Your Health, Your Strength, Your Beauty. Beauty of face, of form and feature belong enly to good health. It Ls possible to every woe- man who takes the matterin hand inteliigently. Use the wonderful restorative, Dr. Greene’s Nervura, and get advicé from Dr. Greene, the successful specialist in these matters. He will tell you why all this is so, and show you how to avoid the stumbling blocks that bar woman’s way to happiness. You may consult Dr. Greene without cost by calling or writing to him at his office, 35 West 14th Street, New York City. Don’t throw away your health and beauty. Write to Dr. Greene to-day. dividual lunch pail ha satisfactory. In not proved entirely many cities lunches are prepared and served in the school building and this arrangement seems to have met with considerable success. Before this service was provided many of the children bought lunches consisting of pies, chocolate eclairs, doughnuts, etc., from the nearby bakeries, articles hardly suitable for a child's midday meal. In the school lunch rooms hot pur nd cream soups are served, milk, cocoa and sandwiches, with, sometimes, fruit and light desserts, These are sold at the lowest possible prices, som times no charge at all being made. In some schools the children bring fruit and san wiches and are served with one hot dish from the school lunch roow An experiment places—combining the lunch room and cook- ing classes, but has b isfactory, as justice ¢ has been made in several ) found most unsat annot be done to the are obliged to fur nish food for the luncheons. It has been found most expedient to engage a capable, intelligent woman, one understanding the the lowest of them will be raised gradually, | PAgne is a lunch for the gods. [ | given and the children should be obliged to | flavor with orange juice or ittle by little, to cleanliness, and order, | relative values of foods, v ho has charge of This m;]m.; of the ,:;-..!\ ‘1’.} J .:”vln:-; I&oa dacent Hiviaat ‘.“.fiiiii.:\.N.D."la?C"["" C“m‘- lunch room, prepares the menus and an especially new part of the Londo MARSHALL LORD. HEN has a general oversight of the children dur. county council's work, but its great im A by | — ‘ ing the luncheon hour portance today les in the dimensions to " ~ § Practical Suggestions About Foodand the ] It Gy i 3 ciel e for luncheon should e for the future. The council began to re- [ 8 4 o8 8 o o best in the wo xtends round the | @eeeeeressesss eoee et sle stead of rushing through the i Bt ot Mol i 1 Wi T !n'nrlh ‘n‘:‘m.-' n‘,:‘m.' '.x'u;n round th | @ ++++@ |cat slowly, instead of rushing through t what ft could do only after it had under- [cot s L5 thY o perfect "“_"‘I““‘ outs, | Daily Men | meal in five minutes, as many of them fe taken and successtully accomplished the |yiram, Cparne brulses. sores, mn].q"huu«. AONDAY inclined. Here Is a chance to meulcate the feat of tearing down the 014 Nichol." m\ 3 P s and a t«k\l\ Pr ;I’ 3 ‘\ Lol 4 S | rudimentary principles of good table man |eruptions. Only infallible pile cure. Z5c a Tanes Niewed with Raising, |ners and to emphasize the value of con It the - o] ¥ Shorediteh, one of the worst slums In Lon- | yo "at Kunn & Co's Cereal. Cream | sideration for their fellow pupil don, and installing & model village, with ato Omelet Muflins, [SSHEREEA. SOFARRIE. 201N AU AR R Bt e —_— e TS Atter all, there is a great fascination in | Misgt t Work in the Worst Sl SRE 111 et S Panned Ovater’ Colory Salad the old-fashioned lunch basket or lunch This district was known as the “Boundary | out means, would like to marry beautiful e i :;ler]x}h l“x‘n’d”ll‘k]-”\lIrn[-lh;;|\:v” |‘n“v“jx m-‘nn”“.‘: Street Area,’ and it came to be purified | girl of 18 worth $11,000,000. No trifiers need T oloE 1L ARA eiok ised 1 : largely through the efforts of u single re- | apply.” Mutton ble. Rice. | ope nlu-a i I;m- ! myl .u],"l»u’ )y some par 4 5 p String Beans ticular tidbit which mother has slipped in ma © clergyman of the Church of Eng- | Clare Mentagu's great k eyes glowed Apple Fritters, Fruit Sauce, for the child’s delectation & land, nanied A. Osborne Jay. Almost fresh | as she read these words | Goffee In preparing a child’s portable luncheon ) 3 ¥ 1 I en | he cried oyously BREAKFAST {1t dainty in appearance People think hun v el Ihose worthy men had | Then a stadow fiitted across her glorlous Baked ~Apple ry children will ¢ nythir nd so they organized “culture clubs,” distributed soup | countenance. yparen oA 15 . A B v amb Chops French Fried Potatoes, will, most of them—but, is it not better to tickets with liberality, and done what pa | If he is all that he claims to be," she Griddle Cakes Honey | accustom them, to secing food neatly and 1sh visiting they dared, but they never got | mused, “how does it happen that he need Coft carefully served nearcr to the peoplo of the district than | advertive for a wife? Mioatant XIMREL: L 2 j Sy was mecessary to be most humiliatiogly | Gradually her misgivings undermined thus | Bread Rolls ' Orange Marmatado “d‘”;h“ SE Aloava Buliahie (or lunak victmized by them. 1t was a tough place. | the sweet vision that had risen before her, Ten [DARKALN. ACURS. Lhiay 6AR) 3. N0 oNpIlY OAN Tho last policeman who had entered It |until it lay in rulns at her fee o Bt |rled. To keep ihem from drying. wiap in Potted PlgeonS4m, Houllion. paraffined paper. Meat sandwiches are not § B ronmed Turnins Cosn Soums, |#8 Wholesome, where children have meat Coffee Cream. |at dinner, as those made of fruit, eggs or L] L] | — | fish. Delicious sandwiches are those made WEDNESDA Y of whole wheat bread, with cream e IREAKFAST 1 ARy | with the addition of a few chopped nuts, a Cereal Crea iittle orange rmalade or a bit of jam. Here is & bottle which is familiar in thousands of homes. Hashed Rrown Potaioes asines i AlIEe mAYeuADIAG 4 Coffee are sp ing. Nut and fig For half a century it has had a perinanent place as a family LUNCT § "] medicine. Time has not dimmed its reputation, or popue "*"I"”k !“l}\l‘l"' Fish, 3 larity. It has advanced in spite of many imitations. * Cranberry Jelly "Crispea Crackers. X (] DINNER T Chicken Fricassee weet Potats Balls, ’ Rice with Parmesan Cheese = Artichok nc Orange and Apple Salad 10 Bavarian Cream 4 Coftoe am 18 the standard remedy for School Children's Lunch o | - Since the afternoon school session has 34 Dyspepsla, Bliliousness, Constipatiom, Nervouse | .51\, 1 it wemton, "8 | a4 ness, Sleeplessness and Kidney Disorders, | covsider what the school children shall eat ‘N m for their noon lunches and a » the most bl bi] It is Amerioa's famous family medicine. convenient way of serving them. When the P . afternoon session was shortened the noon w Plaie W Sold by D_ru"lsm and Dealers generally, with & Private |recess was also necessarily shortened, and ties, b5l Revenue Stamp over the neck of the bottle. now only those pupils living near the school | bullding can go bome at moon. The in- Known and Prized for its nutritive and refreshing quali- A drink for a Prince at less than a cent a cup. Sold at all grocery stores—order it next time. liked by andwiches are alw children When thoroughly heated into fine piecos. Fruit is casy to carry and pleases the little through add two tablespoonfuls of any kind pupil. A baked custard 1o a little cup In a |of hot pepper sauce Pure Food ple cakes the basket In putting up the lunch do not may form part of the contents of |y without breaking it up, in plenty of water until it is tender. Then drain. | Mince an onion and brown a good color in | aroni None but Advertising of Thoroughly Re. liable, Pure and Healthful Foods Wil pack the articles too closely. Line the basket with |a little butter; add half a pint of tomatoes Be Accepted for These Columns paraffined paper and wrap each article sep- |and half a pint stock; season well with pep- ately. Do not have the sandwiches so |per, salt and celery salt. Let boil about large that they bave to be crowded in and |fiftcen minutes, then rub through a coarse are made mussy in consequence. Place a | sieve. Return fo the fire and add a cup of lean linen napkin or a new paper one just |any cold, cooked meat, cut in very small e . inside the cover pieces. When meat 18 thoroughly heated | [ After each time of using the basket should | through put this mixture in a baking dish Codfish, e be aired and frequently scrubbed with with alternate layers of the macaronl, soapsuds and dried in the sun; in this way which should not be ghopped, but curled 1it is worn out With a little thought on the part of the crumbs mixed with a little grated cheese. Brown in a rather quick oven a fritter mother the child's daily school luncheon | Fruit and Nut Drops—Separate four eggs can be fried may be made very attractive and suited to| and beat the yolks to a cream; add two successively in the needs of the little growing frame. tablespoonfuls of lemon julce and heat again until like thick cream. of nut meat and a cup of dates Add one cup stoned and * Rec WESSO "rrm:- Cut stale Jnonge cake linmI thin | pounded to a smooth paste or cream. Beat slices, moisten each slice with brandy or | 411 together. until thoroughly mixed. Then | Wine, then spread with raspberry jam; 14y | fo1q in the whites of the four eggs heaton oDORLEss two picces together like a sandwich. Make | 1o a stiff froth and twe tablespoonfuls of v custard of one quart of milk and the| prowned, whole wheat our. Butter baking | yolks of five cggs. Sweeten to taste and tins and drop the mixture in spoonfuls | leaving space between each one of about {an inch. Bake ten or fifteen minutes, until perfectly well done Chocolate Cookles. vanilla. Bes four egg whites to a stiff froth v little powdered Sprinkle chopped almonds and bits of ¢ | | | | dusting in ugar to sweeten - Cream quarter of a | led truit over the cako siices. P ur over | pound of butier, adding gradually one cup ["":,”":,',““_“Q"T'"::, A istard, anc e €00is hea of ight brown sugar Beat one egg very ¢ A pefore serving. two ounces of grated chocolate over hot v,. ain an | Crispea Crackers — Select large soda | water and add to mixture. Sift two and :',?,'““,,.""'.,,‘.: | crackers; butter well and place in a very | one-third cups of flour with a pinch of salt e sl aie hot oven until crisp and golden brown | and two level teaspoontuls of buking pow- ing work. Ask your Deviled Almonds—Blanch and shred two- [ der. Add this with four tablespoonfuls of | friendly grocer for thirds of a cupful of almonds. Heat ona | milk to other ingredients. Mix thoroughly, | Wesson's Cooking tablespoonful of butter until it sizzles au then let dough get thoroughly chilled before and Salad Ols. aute the almonds until they are a delicate | rolling out. Cut into small, round cak brown, then d two tablespoonfuls of chut and bake in a moderately hot oven, ney, four tablespoonfuls of chopped ¢t um one saltspoon of pepper. Serve hot L LR The Master Grain Staff Food pound of macaroni in plenty of water 4 aSter rain ta 00 lted, until tender. Drain and blanch Melt four level tablespoonfuls of butter in saucepan, add a small onion, sliced fine, own slightly and remove from butter. Let butter brown and then add four level tablespoonfuls ef flour tir until smooth nd brown a good ¢ r Add to this two water, in which the macaroni was boiled cason with salt and cayenne; stir and cook Made by the Expert Fathers of Cereal Products, until it boils, then add the macaroni cut The BATTLE CREEK SANITARIUM FOOD CO. It Builds Hardy Nerve and Muscle Strength For hig, strong men, little children and invalids. The starch in this food has been turned to dextrine and true sugar, thereby saving the stomach this work, which is necessary before nutrition can result, Eat Granola and Live Live well and be well while you live, Every package of genuine Granola bears a picture of the Battle Creek Sanitarium, Sold by all grocers, Beware of imitations, Drink CARAMEL CEREAL and sleep well—it leaves the nerves STRONG, Send 3c for Granola sample to fhah BATTLE CREEX, Battle Creek Sanitarium Food Co. ™} | |} i

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