1906. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
199 
The Rural Patterns. 
The misses’ fancy blouse will be very 
desirable with a skirt to match, for a 
Spring suit, or it may form a separate 
waist The waist is made over a smooth¬ 
ly fitted lining, which is faced to form the 
chemisette and itself is cut in one piece, 
fitted by means of shoulder seams. The 
closing is made invisibly at the back and 
full sleeves also are arranged over 
6266 Misses’Fancy Blouse, 12 to 16 years. 
fitted foundations, which are faced to form 
the deep cuffs. The quantity of material 
required for the medium size (14 years) 
is 4% yards 21, 3 Vs yards 27 or 2% yards 
44 inches wide with Vs yard of all-over 
lace. The pattern 5256 is cut in sizes for 
misses of 12, 14 and 16 years of age; price 
10 cents. 
The popularity of the chemisette ap¬ 
pears to be established and such a blouse 
as this one always finds a welcome place 
It is so.simple that little labor is involved 
in the making, yet is exceedingly stylish. 
As shown the material is voile stitched 
with silk and trimmed with banding, the 
chemisette being of the material, but if a 
more elaborate effect is desired lace or 
muslin, tucked or inserted in lingerie style, 
6259 Blouse with Chemisette, 
32 to 40 bust. 
can be used for this last. The waist is 
made with a fitted lining that is closed at 
the front and itself consists of the fronts, 
the back and the chemisette. The closing 
is made invisibly at the left side. The 
quantity of material required for the 
medium size is 3 V yards 21, V/\ yards 27 
or 254 yards 44 inches wide with 5^4 yards 
of banding. The pattern 5259 is cut in 
sizes for a 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40 inch bust 
measure; price 10 cents. 
Chicken Loaf.— This i9 an excellent 
way to cook an old chicken that would 
otherwise be tough. Cut all the meat 
from the bones and grind fine through 
the meat chopper. A large chicken will 
make three cupfuls of ground raw meat, 
to which add one and one-half cups 
cracker crumbs, one-half cupful ground 
nut meats, two beaten eggs, two level tea¬ 
spoonfuls each of salt and sage, one-half 
teaspoonful of pepper, one-half teacupful 
of milk. Mix and form into a loaf. 
Lover the bones with cold water and 
simmer one hour. Use this broth and a 
t ?, e . s P°onful of butter to baste loaf 
while baking. Bake three-fourths of an 
f*°Ki r ' Th l ck , en grav y ,eft in P an with two 
ta. .espoonfuls of browned flour, season 
and serve in sauce boat. 
A KALAMAZOO 
DIRECT TO YOU 
W HY not save money in your stove and 
range buying? 
Why not get a really good stove or 
range while you are about it? 
Here's a Kalamazoo Royal Steel Range—one 
of the many of the Kalamazoo-direct-to-you 
family. 
It is guaranteed, under a 820,000 bank bond to 
be strictly high grade in every respect. 
The body is made of Wellsville blue polished 
steel—the highest grade steel procurable. 
Not an ounce of scrap iron enters into it. The 
tops and centers are cut and braced in such a 
manner that we guarantee them against warp¬ 
ing for five years. 
The linings are heavy and the flues and all oth¬ 
er parts where it is necessary are lined v/ithgenu- 
ine asbestos, held between two sheets of steel. 
The oven is square and large, with a bottom 
that cannot warp or "buckle.” The oven venti¬ 
lation is perfect, making it a quick and even 
baker. 
The oven is equipped with patented oven ther- 
mometer which gives perfect control of the 
oven's temperature and makes good baking and 
roasting an easy matter. It saves time, trouble, 
and fuel, and is guaranteed not to get out of 
order. 
The hot water reservoir is large; is 
lined with white enamel and is easily re¬ 
moved for cleaning. 
The fire box is equipped with either a 
duplex or a dock ash grate as desired, 
and either hard or soft coal or coke or 
wood may be used for fuel. 
It is handsomely finished, all the orna¬ 
mental parts being heavily nickeled. We 
do all our own nickel-plating, and do it 
right. 
The riveting, the mounting, the finishing, are 
all done by hand, by expert workmen, and we 
guarantee that there is not a better designed, a 
better made, a better finished, or a more dura¬ 
ble stove or range in the world, than is the 
Kalamazoo. 
Oven 
Thermometer 
Please Remember: 
We are actual manufacturers, not mail 
order dealers. 
We have more than 50,000 customers— 
all satisfied. 
You run no risk, as we give you a 360 
days approval test. 
We pay the freight. 
We make you actual factory prices. 
We sell you a stove or range not ex® 
celled by any in the world. 
Quality is our first consideration, and our 32 
years experience in building and selling stoves 
and ranges has taught us how to make a range 
which we can put in comparison with any other 
in the world. 
Quality should also be your first consideration. 
You cannot afford to buy a poor range at any 
price, especially —and herds the point — 
When you can buy this high grade Kalamazoo 
—or any other of the Kalamazoo line of ranges, 
cook stoves, base burners and heating stoves of 
all kinds —at a price lower than your dealer pays 
for stoves and ranges not the equal of the Kala¬ 
mazoo. Please read that again. 
Yon get a Kalamazoo, freight prepaid, 
on a 360 days approval test, guaranteed 
under a $20,000 bank bond, with privi¬ 
lege of returning to us at any time within 
360 days, if it shows any faults or defects 
—and all at a less price than your dealer 
pays for many stoves and ranges not 
nearly so good. 
Here’s the secret: 
We are manufacturers—actual manu¬ 
facturers and we sell to you direct from 
our factory at lowest factory prices, saving you 
all dealers', jobbers', agents’, and middlemen’s 
profits and commissions. 
We have more than 50,000 customers in all 
parts of the United States. Their letters show 
that they have saved from $5 to 840 by 
buying a Kalamazoo direct from our factory. 
We will be glad to send you the names of our 
customers in your vicinity. Let them tell you 
what they think. 
The Kalamazoo line is complete— embracing 
ranges, cook stoves, base burners and beaters 
for fuel of all sorts, all of late design, handsome 
pattern and beautiful finish. 
Send for our catalogue. 
You will find in it the stove or range exactly 
suited to your purpose, and you will be able to 
purchase it at a money-saving price. 
Don't you think it a proposition worth looking 
into? Let us send you our free catalogue and 
price list. You’ll be interested and pleased. 
Ask for Catalogue No. 114. 
Kalamazoo Stove Co., Mlrs., Kalamazoo, Mich. 
7/u 
Zactrutii 
Wife 
And the 
Telephone 
When considering the advantages of a 
telephone on the farm, and whether or not 
to buy one, don’t forget the wife. Of course 
the telephone is a “time-saver” for the farm¬ 
er, it removes the necessity for so many 
trips to town, and gives him more time for 
work, but above all don’t overlook the com- 
.. ... W auu a nucsscHgt 
if occasion compels her to call for aia or 
assistance in a hurry. It will relieve the 
dry monotony of many a dreary day and 
drive lonesomeness away. The story is told 
of a line inspector, out in Illinois, who one 
clay found a woman rocking and knitting, 
with the receiver of her telephone tied onto 
her head, so that she might hear all the con¬ 
versation that passed over the line. That 
poor woman was not "nibby,” she was just 
lonesome. Hundreds of farmers’ wives 
know what it means to be lonesome — to 
yearn for companionship. Think what a 
relief the telephone will be to your wife. 
what a sense of security 
it will give her just to 
feel that she has the en¬ 
tire neighborhood right 
at her elbow when she 
wants them. 
Stromberg- 
Carison 
Telephones 
are best for the farm, 
because they are al¬ 
ways in order. They 
are made right, espe¬ 
cially for such service, 
and they stay right. 
You can buy cheaper 
telephones, but they will cost you more in 
the end. They will be out of fix most of the 
time and will require constant attention to 
keep them "working” at all. To make your 
farm line both practical and profitable, don’t 
experiment with cheap telephones. Buy 
only the best. We would like to help you to 
decide which is best; to do that, let us send 
you our new book, “How the Telephone 
Helps the Farmer,” in which we illustrate 
and describe the process of making a farm 
telephone from beginning to finish, taking 
up particularly the most important or 
essential parts and showing how we make 
them and how the cheap fellows make theirs. 
This will be an object lesson to you that 
may save you a good many dollars and no 
;le 
little disappointment. It tells how to 
interest your.neighbors in building a line, 
and will furnish valuable information you 
cannot afford to be without. It’s free—write 
for it today. A postal will do; just say, “Send 
me!02-N,” and it will come by return mail. 
8TROMBERG-CARLSOM TEL. MFG. CO. 
Rochester, M. Y. 
Chicago, III. 
PRINTS 
Simpson - Eddystone 
Solid Blacks 
Beautiful rich-looking fabrics 
with great intensity of color. 
Do not fade or wash out. The 
standard materials for mourn¬ 
ing dresses. 
Ash your dealer for 
Simpson-Eddystone Solid Blacks. 
Thiee generations of Simpsons 
have made Simpson Prints. 
The Eddystone Mfg Co (Sole Makers) Philadelphia 
SIX BILLION DOLLARS 
were earned last year by the American Farmer— 
he has changed the United States from a debtor 
to a creditor nation. During the last five years 
the value of farms has increased 33 1-3 per cent. 
To-day he is a loaner of money—instead of a* 
borrower. What has brought about this change 
in conditions? Modern methods—time and 
labor-saving devices principally. 
The Williams Farm Telephone 1 1 
as an instance, putsbim in touch profitably, with hia 
M>u «uuvwuvv| ^/uvo Him U"UV,U pi ouua UlJ j VY 1 111 OH 
dealer, freight-agent, repair man, banker, doctor, without 
material cost at a saving of much valuable time and labor, 
If you are interested think it over—and write us for booklet 
^Overtha Wir«.” Tba Williams Telephone ^Supply Co.,78 Central Ave.,Cleveland 
I williams 
UNION 
PACIFIC 
w II 4E 
ONi-mH ^ 
To Many Points In 
California, Oregon, Washington 
VIA 
UNION PACIFIC 
EVERY DAY FROM FEB. 15 TO APRIL 7, 1906 
From 
CHICAGO 
From 
ST. LOUIS 
$ 30.00 
30.50 
For Heavy Loaded Party Lines 
“ELLIOTT” TELEPHONES 
Bona-Fide "World Beaters.” 18 Years Ex¬ 
perience. Extra Powerful High Grade. Guar¬ 
anteed to Ring 25 to 40 Phones on one line, 
loud and clear. Space too small here to name 
many valuable featuresof "ELLIOTT” Phones, 
Be wise, write for elegant Catalog, now ready, 
ask for our Special Offer on First order from 
your section. You’ll not regret It. 
ELLIOTT TELEPHONE & ELECTRIC CO. 
Indianapolis, lod. 
$ 26,001 to Ogden and Salt Lake City. 
33.00 30.00 
to Butte, Anaconda and Helena, 
to Pendleton and Walla Walla, 
to Spokane and Wenatchee, Wash. 
to San Francisco,Los Angeles, San Diego 
and many other California points. 
to Everett, Fairhaven, Whatcom, Van¬ 
couver, Victoria and Astoria, 
to Ashland, Roseburg, Eugene, Albany 
and Salem, via Portland, 
to Portland, or to Tacoma and Seattle. 
AND TO MANY OTHER POINTS. 
Inquire of 
E. L. LOMAX, Gen. Pass. Agent 
Omaha, Neb. 
