"A Kaiamazee 
Direct to You 
H. rulrped 
Plumbinq-Pipe-Fittinqs 
Wholesale Prices 
October 28, 1922 
festive sugar cake: cluee it to one-third by boiling; add the 
cup raisins, cut fruit and simmer very gently until the 
<, VL* cup nut meats, syrup is absorbed, and they are semi- 
poou of boiling \va- transparent, then remove to plates, 
salt. Break up the sprinkle with granulated sugar and dry 
bowl, with the wa- off in a cool oven. A little Lemon or 
u\ Stir frequently, ginger root heightens the flavor. If 
aid the other ingle- packed away in a wooden box, these 
een healed through sweetmeats will keep indefinitely. 
* two or three min- 0. This is of the nature of a funny 
suitable mold, well valentine, a tall bottle dressed in red 
* top thickly with tissue paper, a paper sunbonnet on her 
imulute frosting. cork head, and around her neck a placard 
,-pan box"—a ripe with this sage advice: 
'ram 'full 'of tomato What arc leauly and style? 
aid warden Your When you talce the great step 
a hard, sharp pen- Lou, ‘ out 1 0r u !,irl u:ho has Plenty of pep! 
was full grown, but The bottle is filled with pepper hash, 
nils out in beautiful warranted to tickle any masculine palate. 
One dozen green and one dozen red. or 
mixed yellow and red peppers. (One or 
* caring — two out of the 24 should be of the hot 
or sharing. variety.) Remove seeds and put through 
a food chopper, together with one dozen 
togram or pet name onions; cover with boiling water and let 
ml touch. A small them stand for 10 minutes; drain and 
stead of the squash, repeat. After draining the second time, 
tare the figs, choose add one pint of vinegar, cups of 
ear tomatoes; scald sugar, three tablespoons of salt. one 
otind add % lb. of tablespoon of celery seed. Cook 15 min- 
nnd over night. In tiles, boltle and seal. 
’ the svrun and re- raciiel f. daiilgrex. 
r Get > 
Wholesale 
k Prices > 
Money saved is as good as money 
earned. Save 25 to 40% on your stove, 
range or furnace at Kalamazoo. Our cata¬ 
log shows you how—send for it today. 
Learn about our big special offer to old and 
new customers. Cash or easy payments. 
Figure it out for yourself. Who can make prices as 
low as the manufacturer? No matter where you buy 
your stove, range or furnace someone must first get it 
from the factory. Why don’t YOU get the wholesale 
manufacturer's price and save money? The Kalama¬ 
zoo Catalog shows you the way 
r’New > 
Styles 
Lowest 
^ Prices > 
--„----- r . 24-liour shipments. 
30 days' trial —money back guarantee* Pipelcss 
Furnaces$52.95and up. 
Send for Catalog No. 114 
KALAMAZOO STOVE 
Kalamazoo, Mich. 
Over 50 styles 
and rizes 
Human Interest Notes 
T^EEPS every room delightfully comfortable in the coldest weather. 
Burns little coal or wood. Is thoroughly durable and reliable. 
Installed in one day. No pipes in the cellar, will not spoil fruit or 
vegetables. Send for free copy of "Warmth and Comfort,” 
UTICA HEATER COMPANY, 111 Whitesboro St., UTICA, N. Y. 
^Mother 0 
f My coffee is hand-picked. I use 
only large, uniform, 6ound cof¬ 
fee berries that are fully ripe. 
The.coffee is carefully roasted : 
not too mueli—which makes it 
bitter,- not too little — which 
makes it indigestible — b u t 
JUST RIGHT TO DRINK! 
My coffee is delicious, satisfy¬ 
ing and healthy Soothes the 
nerves and helps digestiou. 
too can DRINK ALL YOU WANT 1 
Send only $1.00 (check, money order or cash) for 8-lb. 
trial order... Money bnekl if It does notipleasc you. 
JAU postage paid by me. 
ALICE FOOTE MACDOUGALL 
Dept. A 73 Front Street. New York, N. Y. 
Men folks don’t know how much trouble 
winter underwear makes. 
They think of it in terms of warmth and 
comfort—they don’t have to worry about 
the rips and ravels and lost buttons and 
the way it goes to pieces in the wash. 
If you want to save'a lot of bother this 
winter, just give father a hint. 
Next time he goes to the store, tell him to 
look at a suit of HIGH ROCK Fleece 
Lined Underwear. 
Don’t tell him to buy it—just get him to 
loo A at it. We are sure he will like the 
warm, soft, downy fleece next the skin. 
And if he decides to buy it, you will appre¬ 
ciated durability and you will both have 
a lot more comfort this winter. 
If the dealer cannot show him the garments, drop 
us a postal and we'll send you a folder describing 
them and will include an actual sample of th« 
fabric »o you can both see just how fine U is. 
The Dome is easy to remember— 
Optimist and Pessimist 
“ ’Twixt optimist and pessimist the dif¬ 
ference is droll; 
The optimist sees the doughnut, the pes¬ 
simist the hole.” 
Wouldn’t the makers make the dough¬ 
nuts mostly holes if it were not for the 
pessimist? I. K. L. 
Yes. they would—another kind of "hot 
air" charged at flour prices. But the 
ordinary doughnut without any hole is 
apt to be a very soggy performance. It 
is the hole in the doughnut or "cruller’’ 
that lets in the air and heat and gives 
thorough cooking. Too many proposi¬ 
tions are like the soggy doughnut—they 
need air, and the pessimist often lets 
it in. 
HIGH ROCK 
HIGH ROCK KNITTING CO, 
PHILMONT, N- Y. 
The Life of the Peddler 
If you want to know whether the man 
that ‘bought your produce on Paterson 
market that night, earned his part, of 
what he got for it. I Suggest you begin 
where JOU left off that morning, and take 
a load and follow him the next day. Stick 
to it. till it is all disposed of, shouting your 
assortment on the street, and dickering 
with the women who stick their heads out 
of the back upstair* windows, and offer 
them bargains attractive enough to bring 
them down to the street, onrl such as will 
clean your wagon in time to get a supper 
and sleep enough to get back on the mar¬ 
ket for the next morning. 
The price the man in the store asks 
for tomatoes or peaches if the top charge, 
because the customer goes intending to 
buy and hand over the cash. The huck¬ 
ster has to make a low figure even to get 
a head out of the window, and then his 
work lias only begun. To get the corner 
of the old woman's handkerchief Untied is 
a bigger job, I think the actual prices 
paid on the average by all classes of con¬ 
sumers for produce* will average MM per 
cent less than the top store prices which 
are. always quoted as cost to consumers. 
I have gone downtown in the city and 
bought a week’s supply of oranges and 
lemons or bananas at 5c per doz. many a 
time Saturday night at nine o’clock and 
waited for the peddler to make his last 
bid to clean out his stock before pulling 
down his torch, and I had plenty of com¬ 
pany on the sidewalk waiting for the 
same purpose, and they were not people 
who live on 7 street, either. 
Still a much larger per cent of these 
hucksters die owning a city block than 
of the men who own or rent the stores 
and get the prices always given as the 
final charge for the farmer's stuff. 
To my mind there is no better way to 
get all there is in farm produce near city 
markets than for a farm to raise enough, 
or enough farmers to combine, to put a 
good huckster on and keep him busy 
New Hampshire. A. j.tt. 
wife's or mothers ^ 
wash tub into a 
WASHING MACHINE 
Natural Yarn Cotton Socks. Not dyed or 
bleached- Just as they come from the 
machines. Real comfort for 
tender, swollen or blistered 'jtjjMt 
feet. Give twice the wear of 
dyed stockings. Send 20 cents 
for single pair; 95 cents for half fy .A 
dozen; or$1.80 per dozen. Sizes T Uj 
9J4-U/4- Prices west of the Mis- • : t 
sissippi River. $1.00 for half 
dozen or $1.90 per dozen. Si ale If, 
size of shoe. J, 1 . 
Woodchucks and Divorce 
The daily papers state that Mrs. Ce¬ 
celia Rornback of Connecticut obtained 
a divorce from her husband for "intoler¬ 
able cruelty" and laziness. 
“Mrs. Rorabnck was willing to stand 
a trifle of laziness, she said, but she got 
quite provoked when her husband used 
to shoot woodchucks and bring them home 
for the family to eat. This, she said, was 
too much, and after she had tried to eat 
woodchuck n few times she brought suit 
for divorce." 
At about the same time woodchuck 
meat was selling in the Johnson City 
market at MO cents a pound! Many peo¬ 
ple cat woodchuck. It is a clean animal 
—a vegetarian—and ought to be as good 
as rabbit meat. There has always been 
a prejudice against woodchuck, though 
if the ordinary citizen could be. served 
with one, properly cooked, without know¬ 
ing what it was, he would call for more! 
AUNT DINAH’S QUILTING BATTSES; 
Women Agents wanted In alt localities to takt* orders. 
We deliver to the oiiHtuiuoi'. Send for particular* of our 
selling plan. SHARTC-HEWTON WOOLEN CD., Dept M, Homer, N.I. 
ETHICUS MEDICINE 
HEALTH PROTECTION ON THE FARM 
Send for tree booklet. ETHICUS PROMPT TREATMENT 
KIT, luc., (Dopl. F) IBIS Broadway, Raw Vork City 
Natural Yarn 
Hosiery Mills 
Fleetwood Penna U.S.A. 
Ill Wool Knitlingffara SSTlflMSi'K 
a pound. Post age paid on live dollar orders* Writ** for 
sampled. II. A. HART LETT - Harmony, Mfttlne 
EDMONDS’ POULTRY 
ACCOUNT BOOK 
“Taking a Little Child" 
Every year, at this season, we begin to 
have letters from women who say they 
desire to take a little child into their 
homes. In many cases the husband joins 
with the wife in this wish. Winter is 
coming. Many of these women live in 
lonely places, and have large houses 
which formerly overflowed with youth. 
This desire of the middle-aged to have 
young life about them often conies with 
irresistible power at this season. Me 
We save you 20 to 35 per cent 
on all standard water or steam 
pipeand fittings. We pay freight 
to yourR. R. stMtion ond guar¬ 
antee satisfaction. 
Save yourself money on 
plumbing supplies, water sys¬ 
tems, gasoline engines, roofing, 
pulleys, belting and machine 
tools. We save money by cutting 
out in-between profit and book¬ 
keeping. You get that saving. 
Get our catalog and prices now. 
SMYTH-DESPARD CO. 
801 Broad Street Utica, N. Y. 
If you keep only ten or a dozen liens, 
there will be Satisfaction and Profit 
in knowingjnst howtbe account stands. 
Tin's book will tell tlie whole story. 
The account may be begun at any time, 
and the balance struck at any time. 
Simple and Practical. 
Price, $1.00 - - To Canada, $1.25 
For sale by 
RURAL NEW-YORKER 
333 West 30th St., New York 
