THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 
Ki LI Nts 
NEW BOOK 
[ NCREDIBLE AG it 
seems, considering 
the range of his work, 
Kipling has again 
touched high-water 
mark in an entirely 
new kind of story. By 
his magic the reader | tesieNncn Nee stg? posse 1 
sees pass before mlm The Ins So Song Book. Net, $1.20,” Postage, 12 cent 
The Day’s Work. $1.50 
knights and robbers | trebistvood'ssy._ 1.5 
SEPTEMBER, 1906 
v2) 
v2) 
BOOS 183 Ve 
RUDYARD KIPLING 
A Delightful Wine eras 
RK IN though you have to buy the grapes 
in. small baskets, it is worth while 
making grape Juice for winter use. Although 
we bought our grapes this way, often paying 
twenty-five cents for a small basket, the juice 
did not cost us more than ten cents a quart, 
which is one-fifth of what it costs in the stores. 
Concord grapes are most generally used in 
making unfermented grape juice, but it is so 
dark, and the flavor is very strong. We 
therefore also tried Delaware, Niagara and 
Catawba, singly and in combinations. 
Out of fifteen variations the following 
were most to our liking: Catawba alone; 
Catawba and Niagara; Catawba and Dela- 
ware; Catawba, Niagara, and Concord; 
Catawba, Niagara, Concord and Delaware; 
Delaware and Niagara; Delaware and Con- 
cord; Delaware, Concord and Niagara. - 
The Niagara juice alone was colorless and 
unattractive in appearance. The Delaware 
juice alone had a muddy look. 
The recipe is as follows: Pick the grapes 
from the stems. To three quarts of picked 
grapes add one quart of water, and cook until 
the grapes are broken up. Strain through 
cheesecloth and then through flannel. Add 
sugar, and boil up; be careful not to get it too 
sweet, or it will be like syrup. One or two 
teacups of sugar to two gallons of juice will 
suffice, according to the sweetness desired. 
Bottle the juice hot, and seal securely. This 
will keep two years in a dark place. 
Another way is to do up the juice without 
water, adding one scant teacup of sugar to 
eight pounds of grapes. 
We save work by making a first grade and 
= a second grade. For the first grade we use 
FRANK NORRIS’S the juice that easily runs through the straining 
BOOKS cloths, and return the material left to the 
stove, with another quart of water. ‘This is 
$1.25. Postage, 12 cents strained through cheesecloth only, and used 
A Deal in Wheat. 61-50 as “second grade.” It does well enough if 
The Pit. $1.50 used soon, and saves much handling in the 
The Octopus. $1.50  Straining. , d 
A Man’s Woman. $1.50 The cost varies according to the season, and 
Puck of Pook’s Hill. 
Traffics and Discoveries. $1.50 
The Five Nations. Net, $1.40. Postage, 14 cents 
Willie Winkie. $1.50 
From Sea to Sea. Two Volumes. $2.00 
The Light That Failed. $1.50 
Soldier Stories. $1.50 
shall have happened 
three thousand years.” A more fascinating 
book, especially for young readers, would be 
hard to imagine. 
PUCK OF POOK’S HILL 
Plain Tales from the Hills. $1.50 
yall : The Kipling Birthday Book. $1.00 
and pirates in some of Rrdfceo. Bele 
the most exciting 
Departmental Ditties and Ballads and Barrack-Room 
Ballads. $1.50 
The publishing event of the year: Ready October #th 
Illustrated in color by Arthur Rackham. $1.50 
Life’s Handicap: Being Stories of Mine Own People. $1.50 
events in old English 
Soldiers Three. The Story of the Gadsbys, and In Black 
oe OP 
COUNTRY LIFE THE WoRLD’S WORK ae 
IN AMERICA FARMING 
Under the Deodars, The Phantom ’Rickshaw and Wee 
history —“though it ite Three. The 
DOUBLEDAY. PAGE & Co. NEW YORK. 
THE GARDEN 
MAGAZINE 
The Incomplete 
Amorist 
The story of Eustace Vernon, master 
of the art of painting and of another 
art, and how he played with fire once 
The Responsibilities of the Novelist. Net, 
ely) offen: “E, NESBIT.” McTeague. $1.50 the kind of grape used. One year we made 
EC é ; 1.50 Blix. A twelve quarts from $1.27 worth of grapes in 
Illustrated by Underwood, $1.50. Moran of the Lady Letty. $1.00 four varieties. Another year three twenty- 
couener rare Te ons’ Wom (©) Th Ganoen ee five cerit baskets of Concords made eight 
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &Co. NEw YorRK. - 
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY 
quarts of juice in the two grades. 
New York. ALBERT R. Mason. 
