1907. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
675 
The Rural Patterns. 
The dainty little French dress shown in 
No. 5740 is made with front and backs 
and is tucked in groups, between which 
the trimming is arranged. It can be fin¬ 
ished with a little square Dutch neck 
as illustrated or made high as liked. 
There are pretty puffed sleeves that are 
6740 Child’s Tucked French Dress* 
2, 4 and 6 years. , 
gathered into bands and the skirt portion 
can be finished with a frill or with a hem 
or made as elaborate as may be liked. 
'1 he quantity of material required for the 
medium size (4 years) is 3j4 yards 27 or 
2 yards 36 inches wide, with 6 yards of 
banding, 3 yards of wide and 3 yards of 
narrow embroidery. • The pattern 5740 is 
cut in sizes for girls of 2, 4 and 6 years 
of age; price 10 cents. 
The coat shown is a very useful model, 
either for some inexpensive cloth or for 
a fine material. The coat is made with 
fronts and back and is laid in inverted 
plaits from the shoulders that are stitched 
fiat for a portion of their length. The 
right front edge is cut to form an exten- 
6741 Girl’s Coat, 4 to 10 years. 
sion at the upper portion and in this ex¬ 
tension a buttonhole is worked that, to¬ 
gether with the button sewed to the under 
side, effects the closing. The sleeves are 
comfortably full and are plaited at their 
upper edges and are finished with pointed 
cuffs at their lower. The quantity of ma¬ 
terial required for medium size (8 years) 
is 3-)4 yards 27, 224 yards 44 or 2 l /s 
yards 52 inches wide with 24 yard of any 
width for the collar. The pattern 5741 is 
cut in sizes for children 4, 6, 8 and 10 
years of age; price 10 cents. 
Some Favorite Recipes. 
Lemon Jelly.—To one-half box of 
Cox’s gelatine add one cupful of cold 
water. Let this stand on the back of the 
stove till dissolved. Then add the juice 
of three lemons and the grated rind of 
one. Add two cups of boiling water, 
two cups of granulated sugar. Let this 
remain on the stove till the sugar is dis¬ 
solved, stirring to prevent scorching. 
Strain through the finest sieve or cheese¬ 
cloth. Put immediately into molds, and 
put in a cold place. If desired, some 
sliced bananas may be added as the jelly 
cools. 
Tomato Soup.—One quart of milk; let 
it come to a boil, season with butter, pep¬ 
per, salt. Heat in a granite basin, one 
cupful of canned tomatoes. When hot 
stir in a scant quarter teaspoonful of 
saleratus, remove immediately from the 
stove, adding the tomatoes to the milk. 
Serve immediately; with this we serve 
small squares of bread which have been 
browned to a crisp in the oven. If pre¬ 
ferred use instead of all milk, one pint 
of water, in which case use more butter. 
Banana an 1 Orange Shortcake.—We 
use for the shortcake the same recipe as 
for strawberry shortcake; one tablespoon¬ 
ful granulated sugar (heaping), four 
tablespoonfuls butter, three teaspoonfuls 
baking powder, one quart of flour. Use 
sweet milk enough to make into a soft 
dough, roll out and bake in square tins, 
cutting tbe dough in squares with a knife, 
so when baked they readily break into 
squares. When ready to serve split the 
nieces, buttering them; then put the ba¬ 
nanas and oranges between the pieces; 
also put the fruit on top of each piece. 
Two large oranges and half a dozen ba¬ 
nanas are what we use. The bananas 
and oranges are cut up and sweetened an 
hour before dinner. In this way the 
fruit is very juicy when served. 
Another favorite dessert is to serve 
squares of sponge cake with floating 
island, the islands dotted with currant 
jelly. The cake is made as follows: 
Three eggs, one tablespoonful of water, 
one cup each of sugar and flour; one tea¬ 
spoonful baking powder, one teaspoonful 
vanila. Floating island.—Stir into one 
quart of boiling milk the yolks of three 
eggs beaten light. This must be done 
ouickly. Sweeten and flavor to taste. 
Whip the whites very light. Add one 
teaspoonful of sugar; lay in spoonfuls in 
a pan of boiling water. Leave them a 
minute or two, then lay them on the 
custard. 
Sugar Cookies.—One cupful of sour 
cream, one-half cup of butter, one egg, 
one heaping cup of granulated sugar, an 
even teaspoonful of saleratus; knead soft. 
HELEN C. ANDREWS. 
Clothing 
Made 
to Order 
at the 
Mill 
Save Half 
Buy your clothing di¬ 
rect from the mill. Cut 
out the dealer’s profits. 
Get two suits for the 
price of one. Suits and 
overcoats 
MADE TO ORDER 
handsomely trimmed 
and guaranteed to give 
satisfaction. Many pat¬ 
terns to choose from. 
Men’s Youth's Suits 
Overcoats 
MADE 
$7d52 
Ladies’ 
Fall 
Dress 
Patterns 
in all 
Shades 
CLEN ROCK 
203 Main St 
and 
Youth’s 
and Raincoats 
TO ORDER 
to $ 18 — 
Women’s dres$ goods 
direct from the mill to 
the wearer at wholesale 
prices. All the newest 
styles and colors. Chev¬ 
iots, Broadcloths, Bril- 
liantines, Panamas, 
Henriettas, Shepherd’s 
Checks, Mohairs. Every 
yard guaranteed. 
EXPRESS CHARGES PAID. 
Write for samples and 
catalogue. 
WOOLEN MILLS, 
, Somerville, N. J. 
DO YOU KNOW 
THE WET WEATHER 
COMFORT AND 
PROTECTION 
afforded by a 
Slicker ? 
Clean-Light 
Durable 
Guaranteed 
Waterproof 
Everywhere 
A J TOWER CO. BOSTON USA. 
TOWER CANADIAN CO LIMITCO TORONTO. CAN. 
Chiclets! Chiclets! Chiclets! 
You can’t say Chiclets too often 
and if your neighborhood Drug¬ 
gist or Confectioner can’t 
supply you with this dainty 
pearl-gray, candy-covered chew¬ 
ing gum when you ask for it, 
write to us and we’ll send you a 
packet for a dime. The better 
kind of stores sell Chiclets in 5c and 
10c packets and in little bags at a 
nickel an ounce. 
FRANK H. FLEER & CO., Inc., 
527 No. 24th Street Philadelphia, U. S. A. 
TEAS AND COFFEES 
AT § PRICE 
Finest Teas 19c, 27c and best 37c a lb. 
Finest Coffees 11c, 13c, 18c & best 26c a lb. 
NO GOODS SOLI) AT RETAIL. 
The supplying of Farmers, Granges, Institutions, 
Clergymen and large Consumers a Specialty, 
For full particulars write CONSUMERS IM- 
FORTING TEA CO., 66 Church Street, 
p. O. Box 290, New York City. 
FUMA 
■ I kills Prairie Dogs, 
' ' Woodchucks,Gophers, 
and Grain Insects. 
“The wheels of the 
gods grind slow but 
exceedingly small.” So the weevil, but you can stop 
the wHh D<i “Fuma Carbon Bisulphide^ SS 
EDWARD R. TAYLOR, Penn Yan, N. Y. 
CORNED BEEF 
^iSAVE HALF YOUR FUEL 
!vl Rochester Radiator 
P 1 *Tg 3 F Fits any ® tove or Furnace. 
Guaranteed to do all we claim 
or money refunded. 
I'. . .VK Write for booklet on heating homes. 
Rochester Radiator Co., 
/ * \ 39 FnrnaM 8t., Koche.t.r, N. Y. 
Price from 
$2.00 to 
$ 12.00 
For hard or 
soft coal, 
wood or gas. 
SAVE ONE-HALF 
Your Paint Bills 
Ingersoll Paints Proved Best by 65 Years’ Use. 
Only Paint Officially Endorsed by the Grange. 
From the Mill Direct to You at Factory Prices. 
You save all Dealer’s Profits, by buying ’’Direct 
from Ingersoll,” and receive full value for your 
money in the Best Paint. 
INGERSOLL PAINT BOOK FREE 
We use only FRESH BEEF, and then nothing 
but the plates. WE GUARANTEE THE 
QUALITY. Everybody orders again, as the 
CORNED BEEF is as we represent. Write for 
prices—will answer promptly. 
GEO. NYE & COMPANY 
Springfield, Mass. 
EYPCII an 0 " ROOFING 
lAulLL steel & SIDING 
Direct To You from our own factory 1 
at lowest factory prices. We are man¬ 
ufacturers and nandle no 2nd hand 
nor short length stuff. Every part of 
our roofing and siding is made in our 
factory from genuine Charcoal Iron, 
Double Refined Puddlecl'kocn or Steel. 
Put on the kind of rootWat wears. 
Ours is guaranteed. I fit lsn’tthe best 
you can buy any where, don’t pay tor 
it, £abj to lay. No experience needed. Tell 
ua about your building and let us quote you 
factory nricei. Write for Metal Goode Catalog 
No. Rbl It Is free. 
THE UNITED FACTORIES CO. 
Cleveland, Ohio. 
Tells the whole story—all about paint and painting 
for durability. How to avoid the trouble and expense 
caused by paints fading, chalking and peeling; valu¬ 
able information free to you, with Beautiful Sample 
Cards. If you want Paint, write me. Do it now. 
1 can save you money. Satisfaction guaranteed. 
VyANTEI) WOMEN AND MEN to gather Ferns 
and Evergreens. Receiving depots in every state. 
Address, BARTON, Wholesale Dealer, Durham, Conn. Dept 8. 
0. W. Ingersoll, 246 Plymouth St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 
QDIWCAI PnnVICC-We offer an exceptional 
DnUIxLll UUUMLO trade in f»ood, clean, fresh 
broken cookies of the same high quality that has made 
our products famous. Sold in boxes of 30 to35 lbs. at 
$1.50 per box, f. o. b. Worcester. Cheek or money 
order must accompany order. 
New England Biscuit Co., Worcester, Mass. 
P RUDENT PEOPLE in every State are 
investing their savings through us. 
Many are natrons of ten to fourteen 
years’ standing who know why and how 
their money earns more and is better safe¬ 
guarded than when locally invested. Let 
us send you their names or put you in 
communication with them. The informa¬ 
tion you will get is well worth the trouble. 
5% a Year 
reckoned from day of re¬ 
ceipt to day of withdrawal. 
Under N. Y. Banking Dept. 
Supervision. 
Assets $1,750,000 
INDUSTRIAL SAVINGS AND 
LOAN CO., 
5 Times Bldg., Broadway and 
42nd St., New York. 
INDRUROID 
ROOFING 
Requires no Coatinc or 
Paint. 
Acid and Alkali Proof. 
Elastic and Pliable 
Always. 
Strong- and Tough. 
Absolutely Waterproof 
Climatic Changes Do Not 
Affect It. 
Practically Fire Proof. 
Can Be Used on Steep or 
Plat Surfaces. 
Any Workman Can Put 
It On. 
No Odor. 
Will not Shrink or Crack 
Eight in Weight. 
Does not Taint Water. 
Write for samplos, prices and 
circulars. 
H. F. WATSON CO. 
ERIE, PA. 
Chicago, Boston. 
Mention R.N.-Y. 
Congo can’t leak, or rust, or rot, or melt in the sun, or 
freeze in the cold, or dry up, or get brittle, or crack, or rip off in a wind. 
Congo can fit snugly on a roof, keep out the rain, the snow, the damp and the . 
cold for many years, with a minimum of care and attention. 
Its strongest point is its durability. Send for a free sample. 
NEVER-LEAK 
Roofing 
BUCHANAN=FOSTER CO., 
532 West End Trust Bldg., PHILADELPHIA. 
CHICAGO and SAN FRANCISCO. 
