1905. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
9o3 
The Rural Patterns. 
No head covering is prettier for the lit¬ 
tle children than just such caps and hood 
as these illustrated. Both caps are in 
Russian style. The plain one as illus¬ 
trated combines white broadcloth with 
astrakhan cloth and is trimmed with braid 
and pompon, while the full one is shown 
with band of plush, crown portion of 
cloth. Many other materials, however, 
might be suggested, the fur plushes being 
6216 Child’s Caps and Hood, 1-2-4 years 
particularly well liked for the bands and 
in many instances for the entire cap 
with the plain crown. The little hood is 
one of the most becoming for small girls 
and appropriately can be made of either 
velvet or cloth with trimming of fur, 
swansdown or some pretty banding. Il¬ 
lustrated, however, the material is broad¬ 
cloth with trimming of beaver fur. The 
quantity of material required for the 
plain cap is % yard of broadcloth with (4 
yard of astrakhan cloth ; for the full cap 
94 yard of broadcloth with (4 yard of 
plush and for the hood 34 yard of broad¬ 
cloth with 1*4 yard of fur. The pattern 
5215 is cut in sizes for children of 1, 2 
and 4 years of age; price 10 cents. 
A gymnasium suit is called for in many 
schools. The model shown combines all 
the best features. Serge, flannel or bril- 
liantine all are appropriate with collar, 
cuffs and shield of white, as illustrated, 
or of the material trimmed, as may be 
liked. The suit is made with the blouse 
and the bloomers. The blouse is drawn 
on over the head and can be made with 
621 i Girl s Exercise Suit, 8 to 10 year#. 
or without the applied yoke, while, also, 
its sleeves can be tucked at the wrists or 
left plain as may be liked. The sailor 
collar finishes the neck and beneath it the 
shield is attached. The bloomers are 
generously full, plaited at the belt and 
drawn up below the knees by means of 
elastic inserted in the hems. The quan¬ 
tity of material required for the medium 
size (12 years) is 6(4 yards 27, 4 yards 
44 or 3(4 yards 52 inches wide, with 54 
yards 44 inches wide for shield, collar 
and cuffs and (4 yard of silk for tie. The 
pattern 5212 is cut in sizes for girls of 8, 
10. 12, 14 and 16 years of age; price 10 
cents. 
White Fruit Cake. —The whites of 16 
eggs, one pound each of sugar, flour and 
butter, one grated cocoanut, one pound 
chopped citron, one pound chopped 
blanched almonds, one wineglass of rose 
water, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow¬ 
der. Flour citron and almonds well; 
bake carefully. 
The Bookshelf. 
Few periodicals offer their readers 
what the Youth’s Companion does. 
The contributors for 1906 will in¬ 
clude Madame Curie (the discoverer of 
radium), Luther Burbank (the “Wizard 
of Horticulture”), Hon. Grover Cleve¬ 
land, Helen Keller, Margaret Deland, 
Capt. A. T. Mahan, Lady Henry Somer¬ 
set, Commander R. E. Peary, Rev. Dr. 
John Watson (Ian Maclaren), Sir Edwin 
Arnold, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jus¬ 
tice D. J. Brewer (of the United States 
Supreme Court), the Duke of Argyll, 
Justin McCarthy, Rider Haggard, Robert 
Grant, F. A. Vanderlip, Herbert Putnam 
(Librarian of Congress! Richard White- 
ing (author of “No. 5 John Street”), 
Pres. H. S. Pritchett (of the Massachu¬ 
setts Institute of Technology), Sir H. H. 
Johnston, and Prof. L. H. Bailey (of the 
Cornell College of Agriculture). The sou¬ 
venir calendar, which this year depicts the 
“Minute Men” of old Concord, is partic¬ 
ularly handsome. The weekly visits of 
this clean, handsome and wholesome mag¬ 
azine are welcome to old and young alike. 
Fair Margaret, A Portrait, by F. Mar¬ 
ion Crawford. This story of a great sing¬ 
er, written with all Mr. Crawford’s charm 
of expression, contains a number of real 
personages, well known in London, Paris 
and Brussels, and here presented under 
a thin disguise. Margaret Donne, the 
wonderful lyrical soprano, who makes 
her debut as Margarita da Cordova, re¬ 
calls a lady now at the front rank in oper¬ 
atic circles, while the royal personage in¬ 
dicated in a stirring little adverture when 
Margaret makes her debut is well known 
for his commercial shrewdness, his pa¬ 
tronage of art, and his shady personality. 
The story is all too short, but we shall 
doubtless hear more in the future of the 
young prima donna’s career; the book 
seems to close with a promise of contin¬ 
uation. The wonderful Greek millionaire 
Constantine Logotheti and the English 
man of letters, Lushington, both devoted 
to Margaret, and each one seeking to di¬ 
rect her life into opposing channels; 
Mine. Bonanni, the great singer, with her 
irresponsible emotions, and Mme. De 
Rosa, the famous singing teacher, are all 
cleverly drawn. Mr. Crawford’s famil¬ 
iarity with the life he depicts, his consci¬ 
entious workmanship and keen powers of 
analysis make him always interesting and, 
unlike many other writers of fiction, he al¬ 
ways has a story to tell. We think many 
readers will look forward to some further 
episode in the career of “Fair Margaret.” 
Published by the Macmillan Company, 
New York; price $1.50. 
A DIMPLE MAKER. 
Find a child with dimples 
and chubby arms and legs 
and you find a healthy *child. 
Find one with drawn face 
and poor, thin body and you 
see one that needs Scott’s 
Emulsion. Your doctor will 
no doubt tell you the child is 
fat-starved—its food is not 
nourishing it. 
Nothing helps these thin, 
pale children like Scott’s 
Emulsion. It contains the 
very element of fat they need. 
It supplies them with a per¬ 
fect and quickly digested 
nourishment. Scott’s Emul¬ 
sion brings dimples and 
rounded limbs. 
SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl Street, New York. 
TELEPHONE 
Facts for Farmers 
8 end for free book 102-A. It contains 
telephone facts that are money-savers 
Stromberg - Carlson Tel. IHfg. 
Co., Rochester, N.Y., Chicago,!!) 
“Rush Market Reports” in "Rush Time" 
mean greater profits for you. 
WILLIAMS FARM TELEPHONE 
is for BUSINESS. Pays for itself in a short 
time. Gives permanent service. You can build 
your own lines—we furnish telephones and all 
line material. Write to-day for complete infor. 
mation. The Williams Tele hone & ouppl Co*. 
78 Central Avenue, Cleveland. O. 
EDdystonE 
PRINTS 
Simpson-Eddystone Prints 
The Standard calicoes of the United States for over 
half a century. Your grandmother used Simpson 
' " Prints. They were good then because the character 
of the manufacturer was stamped on the materials 
and entered into their making. To-day they are 
better than ever before—the old-time high ideals 
have been maintained and Eddystone improved art 
and machinery have raised the standard of Simpson 
Prints still higher. 
Ask your dealer for Simpson-Eddystone Prints. 
In Blacks, Black-and-Whites, Light Indigo Blues, 
and Silver-Greys ; Shepherd Plaid effects and a large 
variety of new and beautiful designs. 
Thousands of first-class dealers sell them. 
The Eddystone Mfg Co (Sole Makers) Philadelphia 
Mo. 750 
Price #8.60 
It Will Save You Money 
It is well known that bone meal, ground shells and cracked 
corn are excellent for poultry. Increase egg production in 
your flock, by grinding your own poultry food, and save money 
by utilizing much that would otherwise be waste. 
ENTERPRISE 
Bone, Shell and Corn Mills 
grind any combination of roots, bark, dry bone, shells, corn or 
grain. Save their cost in grinding bone meal for fertilizer. Mills 
are equal to steel ana have a capacitv of i*4 bttshel$ 
of cornper hour. Weight 60 lbs. Mill shown in cut 
$8.50. With or without pulley attachment 03 desired. 
Look for the name “Enterprise.’* full information on lequest. 
THE ENTERPRISE MFG. CO. of PA.. 263 Dauohin St.. Philadelphia, Pa. 
No Hand Can Knead Like 
This Bread Maker 
D ID you ever think how much labor the Knitting Machine 
saves? It formerly required one thousand women to 
do with their needles what one Knitting Machine can 
do today. The Knitting Machine knits better and more 
uniformly than the most expert woman can knit by hand. 
Now that’s the way with most machines—they do better 
work with less effort than ordinary hand work, because ordinary 
hand work is always uncertain. 
For hand work depends on the individual—and the individual 
may not feel just right certain days, and consequently will take 
less interest in the work to be done—particularly if that 
work he at all difficult —like making Bread, for instance. 
For it is not an easy thing to make bread—you 
must fuss with Flour and Water—get your hands all 
messed, and then must knead Dough 20 to 30 minutes, 
which is very hard work, as you know. 
Then you’re apt to accidentally get Germs into 
the Dough from your hands and have your Bread 
turn sour,—or you may not mix your materials prop¬ 
erly—or you may not knead sufficient Air into the 
Dough, and your Bread won’t “raise.” 
Now, how would you like to have your Bread 
turn out invariably Better than what you consider 
Good hand-made Bread, Mrs. Housewife—and not 
have to work so hard? 
Well, you can do it with the Universal Bread 
Maker, for you see the human element—the element 
of Chance— doesn’t enter into consideration when 
you use the Universal to make Bread. 
All you have to do is to just prepare your 
liquids (yeast, etc.)—pour them all into the 
Universal Bread Maker, then sift in the 
proper amount of Flour, and turn the 
handle just 3 minutes. At the end of that 3 
minutes the Kneading Rod of the Universal 
Bread Maker—the most wonderful thing 
about the machine—a part we have protected by 
patents in every country in the world—will have 
thoroughly mixed all the liquids (yeast, etc.) in with 
the Flour—so that each tiny drop of Yeast moistens 
each tiny particle of Flour. Then the Kneading Rod so 
kneads the Dough that it folds Air into the Dough—all 
through It. In fact—better than any mere human hand could do. 
And because the Yeast and Flour and Air are so thoroughly mixed together the Dough 
blows up well—“Raises” well—for you must have the Yeast and Flour and Air combined so 
as to form the most aerating gas for Dough. And the starch cells will all be broken up and 
made digestible—for Yeast breaks up the starch cells. Then leave the Dough in the 
“Universal” Bread Maker 
all night to raise —you don't have to take it out and put it into a separate Dough Raiser, as some 
people have to do. In the morning it will be beautifully risen. Just give a few turns of the 
handle, so that when you take out the Kneading Rod the Dough clings to it in a sort of ball, 
just as the picture shows. 
When your Bread is baked it will be absolutely uniform in texture—with a fine brown, 
flinty crust, and perfectly digestible, since all the starch cells have been broken up by the 
Yeast. You can have this same delicious Bread day in, day out, for you see it's such a 
simple thing—only taking 3 minutes of your time to make good Bread with the Universal 
Bread Maker. 
Now, the price of the Universal is only S2.00. Just drop in at your hardware dealer's 
and see one—he’ll probably show 
you how it works, if you ask him. 
If you would like to know 
more about the Universal 
Bread Maker, and how it always 
makes perfect Bread in 3 min¬ 
utes, just drop us a postal and 
we will send you our free book. 
Address Landers. Frary & 
Clark. 10 3 Commercial Street. 
New Britain, Conn. 
BURN AIR-IT’S CHEAP’£°ke T 0 it? 
Consume* 81)5 Barrels of Air to 1 gallon 
of Kerosene. Penny fuel, burns like gas,| 
’ hottest lire, won’t explode, saves work and 
fuel bills. No coal, wood, dirt, ashes— no| 
wick, no valves, easy operated , 1 
handsome, durable. Grand 
heater for houses, office, 
'store; no pipes or flues; port¬ 
able, also splendid cooker, 
baker. 18000 Harrison 
Wickless. Valveless Oil-Gas 
and Air Burners sold in one 
month. AGENTS Wanted— 
#40 Weekly. Greatest MONEY MAKER. Guaran¬ 
teed, all sizes, sent anywhere, #8 up. Write, FREE 
proposition, 80 day trial offer. Address only manfrs. 
World Mtfc. Co.,ns World B’ld’g, Cincinnati, O. 
THE HESSLER STILL LEADS. 
Best made and 
most durable box 
on the market, 
Don’t be deceived 
by pictures that 
look like 
“ The Hessler.” 
To get the best, 
insist on having 
the Original Gen¬ 
uine KESSLER 
BOX. not the im¬ 
itation. Agents 
RURAL MAIL BOX. in av0ry 
H. E. HESSLER CO., Syracuse,N.Y. 
your Health and STRENGTH with 
JAYNE S TONIC VERMIFUGE, 
a pleasant, potent, and permanent Invfxoraicr for WOMEN, 
CHILDREN, and MEN, _^ et it from 
your Druggist, 
s* s 
