Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
z THE SUNDAY CALL - Valuable Tkems of Interest to the Practical Holsekeeper = Good Cooking Brings Good Healih. place on pleces of buttered serve with mc.ted butter. FRIED SMELTS—Clean, dip in beaten egg and roll in cracker crumbs. Fry in very hot fat and serve with any sauce used for fish. KIDNEY SAUTE—Brown an onion with a small plece of butter. Place the slices of kidney in the pan and allow to cook slowly. Season with a pint of red wine, salt and pepper and one cube of sugar. Cook until tender. 5 FRIED CHICKEN—Cut the chicken in small pieces, dip in flour and fry in hot pork fat. When the chicken is done make a gravy of two cups of milk, a large tablespoonful of flour. Season with salt and pepper.. Lay the pleces of chicken on toast and pour over all the gravy. immediately. TRIPE COOKED WITH OYSTERS— Cut half a pound of tripe or as much as toast and Serve @P0P0809 090 &0 &0P0P0S0P0 o 3 CONDUCTED BY 3 DEBORAH DEANE ¢ o o 990906060606 0 00902004 Place In 0H0 S pepper and plenty of butter oven a few moments and serv CUTLETS FRIED—Salt and pepper the cutlet; dip in beaten egg and then cracker crumbs. Fry in hot fat, but fry slowly. BROILED KIDNEYS—Split the kidneys lengthwise. Broil over a clear fire; baste with butter while cooking. When done pour over them melted butter and season with pepper and salt. To this list may be added chipped beef, coafish cooked in cream and ham and bacon. They are seen often on a breakfast table, while the pre- ceding dishes are not. > W)ake Sood Co'/fdo. How to make good coffee is one of the problems seldom solved in domestic life. The coffee belong: to the chincona family. The leaves are light-green and about five inches long. The flowers are Choice Receipts Well Worth Jrying. sugar the peaches, putting them in a serv- ing dish and chilling in the ice box. Be- fore serving heap with whipped cream. FROZEN PEACHES—Mash twelve or fourteen peaches to a puip, add one pint each of sugar and water; mix well and freeze. All frozen mixtures are better if allowed to stand three or four hours be- fore using. PEACH CUSTARD-—One tablespoonful of cornstarch, one and a half pints of milk, half & ¢ of sugar, one teaspoonful of butter, yol of two eggs. When cus- tard has cooked thick and creamy set it aside to cool. Peel half a dozen large peaches, cut in small pleces and add them to the cold custard. Beat the whites of two eggs_to a stiff froth, sweeten gener- ously, add two tablespoonfuls of finely minced peaches, spread over the custard and serve at once. PEACH PUDDING—One cup of sugar, one of milk, three of flour, two eggs, one- you need into small pleces. Place on White, very fragrant and grow in clust- half cup of butter, two teaspoonfuls bak- s(o\'o.,ca\‘%r )l: » ";'er to which a table- ers. The fruit is at first green in color ing powder.” Thi honld b Dread over spoonful of salt has heen added. Cook for and then when ripening turns from green IPE powder. s sho e spre; thirty minutes. Take out the picces 10 ‘red. The fraft contains two seeds, & broad, shallow pan. On top of this bat: ter place peaches, halved, peeled tripe and add_to_the liquid, butter rown _tig] These s are Snd pepper. THiClGh with Abhr:” P AU T seeded. In the hollows put sugar, a bit tripe. back, adding a dozen or more DPurchase your coffee freshly roasted, Of butter and a drop of vanilla. Bake oysters, heat oysters through and serve. grind It or have it ground and mixed and cat warm with milk. BEEF HASH—Use meat which has been With, that is if you like, the proper pro- FRIED l.'l‘.A( H CREAM-—Place one left over. Chop fine and ndd half as much Dortion of chicory. Keep the ground cof- pint of milk In a double boiler. Beat to- potatoes and one apple chopped fine. fee in air-tight glass jars so that nor P Lot s, add ?’ 5000 haif .u};flof Beason with butter, salt, pepper and a Of its flavor is lost. ‘The addition c and beat dgain, then add one table. little minced celery. Serve on toast with ¢hicory is merely a matter of taste. =ho .Hly\n flour, h\u}1n)ll‘~\!n-qx1f\'=ls of a poached or fried egg. Eight Od\u of ten people ;; sifke it : Ltl;;‘:t?";"l‘; ‘a”x{;r]\tl:(;;‘fis kulé‘l‘r;lf);-l_ f:tg NC J W ce vhic contains it. S N 8 e . & s MINCED = HAM—Use cold boiled ham. yowt, aripk, cofiec wWpich, CORGNE i the boiling milk with a larz= ~ap of fincly Mince half a pound. Place in a frying That is, if they know it Fure Ja¥a Or i popoed peaches. Let cook about fifteen pan g N e apwhrgv(l: Tee: minuces and pour In a shallow, greased B hot e faces of toast and it . NOw for the coffee pot. To those who Pan. en cold turn out and cut in When hot place on pleces of toast, and if | NOW for the coffe pot. 'To hese W0 girips, ‘aip in beaten egg and _cracker liked, serve with poached eggs. crumbs, fry in smoking hot fat, drain on P B parboy fashioned filter pot is used. But I main- n 3 d SEROIIID SV SBIBRE S O Aol tai wnd) dlways il that. gaftce made BERSRN dubt pithepulTlered. sugaribe: L A R et gt ta s Wifhout egrwhias & JAiferént favor: 1t $OreRCCCiRE (0 table. : s e ey oo 1ong s not so good. It lacks richness. So I - & . e e O e use the plain, every-day coffee pot. For ¢ brown. Serve WIth four people 'use a good-sized cupful of Sweet Piekles. o Jeave the COffee. Beat one cgg and mix thoroughly it ran n“ht:‘he :“ffm o u}l:n“f‘("fflyv pfilmfldn; THE PICKLE—Mix one teaspoonful n 0 cups of cold water. v h of allsplce, green ginger and cinna- plec BN poPaBin ek 2 - ot each o spice, g ging| nd cinna H Sone place on a hot dish, season with sait, omg,to & boll, then flll the pot with boll® 1on; half a teaspoonful of nutmeg and n Inviting Stdeboard. @n @rtistic Sideboard. | o more, then set on back of stove to set- them in an earthen jar and vine, ] cloves; put pour in one quart of boiling ho Cover and let Stir often. A s L s If it does not settle readily nough = | pour in a littie cold water. Have the | By Marion ftarland~ | Serve, allow to settle and strain again. | Just one more word, Be eure that the A the stove add four pounds of suser and water used in making coffec is fresh. B 00 s¢ t e. Use t e water that has been boiled for Y Marion Farland~ pickle the fol el the fruit and v length of time. It makes coffee in- Then boil in the ers v ments; set away to o e The word comes to us from the Span- It shonld be & _ penil offense | e Aae - IIE Jars Peack Desserts. ish, and is defined by our English lexi- o do any work "of whatever de. cographers as “a short midday nap.” 1he ] ours of 2 and 3 in | e aha ek s _ | eom i midany, LU6 the afternoon, and each man, woman and | (1O A . z aches make delicious desserts If pre- | geeper root fs in the Latin sessum, “to ciod*GIO00" 800 SOCR A0, WOIRT, ic) | sized. tomatoes, - | and_skin pared efully and servea da. ily. The |sit,” or sessitare, “to sit long.’ are ‘few an members of the household. And after this | : ; D osme 1w following recelpts are we.. worth trylng, | It sults ray present purpose to make a manner should the sanitary season be|40d CoOk twenty minutes: o s sayi doirn | now that peaches are cheap: composite of the definitions that shall spent. St Sk o s Ren Jeratand cover Dealing with the house mother, as the r to them? Line CH COBBLER. a Kl'flnfle;co\'ur what the siesta should mean thelr stemmed g 1t wero | aripping-pan or other baking-pan with a | and be: L A e T —Scald and skin mention. Per irdodly | Tich crust— a crust too rich for biscuit | A pause in the day's occupations” be. moxt surely followed by the T [ the pea ng the 1,1".51; to a boll the compller, th of th Ahe collSe. d not rich enough for ples; pare and | ;o “shan knit up at least the cuff of the _She must retire to her room and let | and m"’x‘i(_ aches "H,‘ubmxl_n = abng e a for these Semsations of | quarter some firm, julcy peaches and | boaciotty v OF Sare: a breathing spell 0Wn her hair, exchange her dress for a|uies, Dout SE R oot tions mig 1 speak by wd (6] slandiibemion end' in tho-pasteldined, phn /|t o s = eovo 0L CELaI R es - loose wrapper, when she has removed her | Minu . pac peaches a e fluence g: Ahe Ny e ¥ Pan, | paif way up the long hill of dafly toil; a gtaye: don a pair of lo s, dis- | and cover with the pickle, seal and . i werj | crowding them closely together and mak- | 1,osening of the tension of the human ma- pose herself as luxuriou s “KBE out a 4o¥ell | ing a second layer if the pan be deep. To | by “h interim between forenoon and upon bed, lounge or r PICKLED BLACKBERRI At end | the parings add water and boil for ten oon, devoted honestly, openl. think of nothing, so far the pic te add the be S thing in the g! superior’s le of | minutes; st . add r and be gain giously to rest, pure and simple the full number bf minutes pres | cook slo for fifteen minutes. Put ware look to the consistency of a thin syrup. Pour | onb oney B2 FeSt B e : d law. If she cannot make a vacuum of her | glasses and set away. Blackberr pi ss! o w i memory T tell off | this ey £ 5t “wi ¢ To do nothing confessedly and mind, let her read in modera { led in this way are very nice to asses ng memory I can tell of| this syrup o e but- | ately for an hour, or for half that lightest novel she can lay her h: v mutton. ey S Or vk v r and bake Send to the table as baked. | 15 an tmpropriety in the sight of our aver- without exerting herself to look for it.| PICKLED APPLE s lings . who he pan. Serve with rich cream. | age housewife, a misdemeanor in the es- She should empty her mind of c turn- | best, the the large enter P BETTY Mix three caps of fine | timation of her busy husband. He may ing it upside down to drain out the dregs. e b Pty o 3 For the next hour she should belong en- th s, one- a cup of granu- | whittle a stick and she twiddle her 100 to herself. and hav | Boil th both r . one heaping teaspoonful of | {humbs while gossiping with a neighbor y across the v owdered 0 a das) fes b S a > cern except to relax physical, mental and | apples it cloverly: ross the way 2re powdered cinnamon and a dash of $alt| for half as long again without offense to moral muscles. If the light fiction should | peat. h b bt = interest her to the extent of making her | pickle mutes for in with the crumbs. conscience. Not one in five hundred of ve In mind one of the best and most ' ter and Sprinkle “‘what comes next in the s after a Dishes for Breakrast. | ty F who could d women I ever knew, whose a layer of these in the bottom of a deep |either sex has the moral courage to s care c ory” it| If 2W._wee soc we you are g “tremble! tion_for able M Pudding dish which has been well but: | I make it a rule to get an hour's clear ShoUId be laid by as unfit for the pur. | pickles be covered w d your chair m was the k of some, the tered, then add a layer of peeled and | i ek o (o dlitier) tevery (Mag ) Co50 She nE(ig hands Hmsaentiyishe. will fithe Auice and Do A ) prise and Marth: etored. begthes: | Continine thus urbll| T Sy afrer duncago - din v day, grow drowsy; the book will slide from the | pickie to cover tk w a bowstring in his puted the dear sc s ok e dish is full, having crumbs on top. | P4 1 miss it sadly when I do not lax fingers, the eyelids close, and sleep— | most carefully pocket. If you are not gave more advi s ‘must be baked about forty minutes, | have it.” ihee ure. . Th a care of appear. s, which are as hind her back, ing closely covered for half that time. | A woman upon whom I was urging the blessed thing, does. as many of the hile hot with sweetened cream or * slesta as a work of necessity and mercy Beloved from pole to pale . cooking awa The dupe k. fold me that she was “opposed upon prin- carry on the good work to fulfillment. the on and society of one PUDDING—One dozen ripe | ciple to forming any habit the Interrup- _Leaving Utopia and theory, I would| The latest nt census in India her compeers sooner than part one pint of cream, one cupful |tion of which would make her uncom- observe that the length of the slumber— | showed girls betw: five and tha. crum one-half cupful of su- | ble. the genuine ‘“‘nap”—is not so important | nine who were already mar- Another not live without gar, cne wineglassful of white wine and | “If I take a rest at a certain hour every as the reality of the loss of cious- | ried, ¢ %) had become widows. suggestion throws Heat the cream, pour over the | day I should be sleepy always at that ness. Ten minutes will ioosen | that would be incon- the Invisible screw at the baseé of the bak for two hours. a own anc Beat the | hour, and someti ne ¥ to warr of the eggs with the sugar, add | veniént, you know.” brain as an hour. siness or moistened crumbs and_ cream, and | I retorted that the same objection ap- The busiest literary woman I know as-| y secret t . Knowing the while, \in; stir In the peaches mashed to | plied to the formation of any habit, such, cribes the sustained vigor of bodily and T g room s sad soul hances to be against a pulp and the wine d just before bak- | for instance, as eating on luncheon or mental powers that enables her to work fectbaicod ¢ keeping her promise not to share it |ing add the whites beaten to a stiff froth. | taking a daily bath, or a brisk constitu- at sixty as earnestly and happily as at A e of “our With her factot I the baking pan with pastry if pre- | tional, or combing the hair, or brushing forty to the slesta never intermitted, ex- 5 25 o > 5 Ellen is th m_friend of a third: | f or ba the pudding without it. | the teeth. cept under the stress of necessity, for mes or Al who has caught Bridget is the hand, t lor | Se ith cream. 1 remarked, moreover, in my haste, thirty-flve years. » door ajar or through a k and colleague of a fourth. n-' BAKED PEACHES—Wash and wi; r‘}\whal 1 beg leave to repeat here at'my “I seldom really sleep a quarter of an - sinner in serving up the o her second rate a tes that | nice ripe peaches, place in a shallow bak- | leisure—that, in my opinion, not one of hour,” she says. “Sometimes I only lose | kitchen ¢ The dome ithful much of | Ing dish with just enough water to pre- |the practices I enumerated was more e elf for five minutes and e iy s histories | vent them sticking, sprinkle with sugar, | sential to my health of mind and body over. Then I have a rapid ba 3 s, AT p . In t she— bits of butter and grated nutmeg. To be | than the midday rest hou Were I am good for another half LOIE FULLE VESIOTIeX ant o e o of the misca no step of |eaten etable. |a dictator I would enjoin it by law, She has condensed the life iving secret| Uses the best food tissue builar, ek among people with whom importanc. g her. PEA Pare, quarter and |and enforce it by the ccnstabulary. into two words, “Lose myself.’ BRAHMAN TOILET CREAM. i @ HOME COMFORTS. IN CALIFORNIA CAMP LIFE &— i S P, S Sy S e AT SR G G B N 5 » “The above are from camp scenes at Lark-|gree of comfort and convenience excelled|cept gas. The term ‘‘camping out” usually|tures, however, demonstrate that at Lark=- spur, where the _season has just closed. The!only in the best of city homes, while ‘‘the suggests all sorts of discomforts contingent spur the advantages of outdcor life were kitchen and dining-room scenes show a de-|mansion” has all the comforts of home ex- |upon roughing it in the open. These pic= | combined with those of a city home.