1907. 
745 
Four Good Puddings. 
Schoharie Batter Pudding.—Beat to¬ 
gether one cup sour cream, one cup sweet 
milk and one cup flour. Add the yolks of 
three eggs beaten until creamy, a little 
salt and a half-teaspoon of soda. Lastly 
beat the whites of the eggs until stiff, 
add to the batter and bake in a buttered 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
SAVE HALF YOUR FUEL 
5758 Fancy Blouse Waist, 
32 to 42 bust. 
pudding dish in a moderate oven. It is 
nice to spread any kind of fruit in layers 
through this batter, thus varying the pud¬ 
ding. Serve with the following sauce: 
Add to a coffeecup boiling milk a table¬ 
spoon of flour stirred smooth with a little 
cold water or milk. Have ready a small 
cup sugar creamed with a half-cup but¬ 
ter, and when the flour and milk have 
boiled two or three minutes, add the but¬ 
ter and sugar. Stir well, but do not boil. 
Flavor to taste. 
Old Helderberg Pudding.—Mix to¬ 
gether two small cups brown sugar, one 
heaping tablespoon butter, one cup sweet 
milk, three cups flour sifted with one small 
teaspoon of soda and two of cream of 
tartar, a cup and a half of seeded raisins 
and spice to taste. Put into a buttered 
pudding dish and set, closely covered, in 
a steamer. Boil steadily for two hours 
and a half. To make the sauce, stir two 
tablespoonfuls of cornstarch smooth with 
a little cold water, pour over it a cup of 
boiling water, add butter the size of an 
egg, and sweeten to taste. Cook until 
thickened, adding more boiling water if 
necessary. Stir in the beaten white of an 
egg and take at once from the fire. Flavor 
with vanilla and serve with the hot pud¬ 
ding. 
Brown Pudding.—This is given by a 
correspondent of the Chicago Record- 
Herald, who says that the recipe for this 
5756 Nine Gored Box Plaited Walkin 
Skirt, 22 to 30 waist. 
pudding is simple, but unless put together 
as directed it will not be a success. Take 
the weight of three eggs in butter, sugar 
and flour; beat the eggs and sugar to¬ 
gether until light, add the butter, which 
has been softened but not melted, then 
the flour and beat well. Dissolve one-half 
of a teaspoonful of soda in one table¬ 
spoonful of boiling water, add it to the 
batter and beat hard for at least one min¬ 
ute. Beat in four tablespoonfuls of any 
rich preserve, such as strawberries or 
plums cooked until broken; turn into a 
buttered mold and steam for two hours. 
For the sauce, boil together one-third of 
a cupful of the sauce preserve and one 
cupful of water, thicken with one tea¬ 
spoonful of arrowroot, boil for two min¬ 
utes, add one teaspoonful of butter and 
serve with the pudding. 
Chocolate Pudding.—This is delicious, 
and quite uncommon. Line a shallow 
pudding dish with a nice rich paste. Heat 
one pint of milk, stir into it one-eighth 
of a cake of Baker’s chocolate and one 
scant cupful of sugar, and stir until both 
are dissolved. Remove from the fire, stir 
in one-half cupful of cracker crumbs, one 
tablespoonful of butter, and when the 
milk is cool the beaten yolk of three eggs. 
Flavor with a teaspoonful of vanilla, pour 
the mixture into the pudding dish and 
bake in a moderate oven until the custard 
is set. Make a meringue of the whites 
of three eggs and two tablespoonfuls of 
sugar, heap it on the pudding and return 
to the oven until a delicate brown. Serve 
cold. 
The Rural Patterns. 
No. 5758 shows a very attractive fancy 
blouse. The waist is made with the fitted 
lining that is closed at the front and itself 
consists of front and back, of side-fronts 
and side-backs. These latter are laid in 
tucks and trimmed with banding while the 
front and back are faced to give the chem¬ 
isette effect. The sleeves are of moderate 
size and are gathered into fitted cuffs. Th e 
waist is closed beneath the tuck at the 
edge of the left side front. The quantity 
of material required for the medium size 
is 4H yards 21, 4 yards 27 or 2% yards 
44 inches wide with yard of all-over 
lace and 5 yards of banding. The pattern 
5758 is cut in sizes for 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 
and 42-inch bust measure; price 10 cents. 
A graceful box-plaited skirt is shown in 
No. 5756. 1 he skirt is cut in nine gores 
and is laid in box plaits, the edges of 
which meet at the upper portion and 
which conceal the seams. The plaits are 
stitched flat over the hips. The quantity 
of material required for the medium size 
is 11% yards 27, 6 % yards 44 or 52 inches 
wide. The pattern 5756 is cut in sizes for 
a 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30-inch waist measure; 
price 10 cents_ 
Be not uneasy, discouraged or out of 
humor, because practice falls short of 
precept in some particulars. If you hap¬ 
pen to be beaten, return to the charge.— 
Marcus Aurelius. 
BY USING THE 
Rochester Radiator 
Fits any Stove or Furnace. 
Guaranteed to do all we claim 
or money refunded. 
Write for booklet on heating homes. 
Rochester Radiator Co., 
39 Fnmiie© 81., Itorhcster, N Y. I 
Price from 
$•2.00 to 
$12.00 
For hard or 
soft coal, 
wood or gas. 
K5M 
PATENT7„ A „ T INVENT! 
Your Ideas May Bring You a Fortune! 
$1,000,000 offered for One Invention 
FKhE BOOK: gives list of inventions wanted ; tells 
how to protect them. Write for it. 
Patent Obtained or Fee Returned 
Ni> charge lor report to piitcntHbllltv : send 
sketch or model. Patents advertised for sale' free. 
WOODWARD & CHANDLEE, Attorneys, 
1252 F Street, Washington, D. C, 
PD51ER5TEEL 
Order direct from our Stove Factory 
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“The best in the world.’’ Are sold on 3o c 
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I Catalog shows the greatest bargains ever offered. 
JJSTWrite for catalog and s— -'al Fret Trial Offer. 
Hoosior Stove Co., 169 tote SI, 
Marlon, Inu. 
HDQ51ER DAK 
SBt D F0B 0UB FREE STOVE BOOK 
If you want a stove or range of any kind for any purpose, let us send 
‘A. Kedokiwecz: 
OIreot; to You •* 
OtGJSTE»EO 
TRADE.—MARK 
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jobbers and middlemen’s profits. You run nor) ’'-cause wo pay the freight and sell you on 
360 D?IV% Annnnvnl You not • * vnn seta stove or range of 
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right. If not. you get your i) 
ter how much extra you pa 
to suppose that you can sa 
Send Postal For Cs 
amazoo Prices with others- 
and ranges of all kinds fo 
church, halls, lodge room.' 
ouses, clubs and camps, 
ALL SOLD AT ACTUAL . 
Kalamazoo Stove Company, ..._ 
Kalamazoo, Nlich. 
All Kalamazoo cook stoves and ranges are equipped with patent oven 
thermometer which saves fuel and makes baking and roasting easy. 
BIG HEATER OFFER 
HAVE A WONDERFUL " n n d e „?„°ifc 
eight cent offer we want to make to you on 
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THESE TWO PICTURES ft° 0 w «* s ? 
stoves we make, our Best Steel Range and 
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Our Free Stove Catalogue explains all this. 
HERF 1^ OUR OFFER* Cut out and return this ad to us, or on a 
Mt,nt '» u ' jn Urrtn. postal card or in a letter to us say, “Send 
return mall we will send-'— - •* - ... — 
our $1.98 Oak H 
in these pictures, 
WRITE 
US 
NOW 
me your Stove Offer,” and by 
~ le. You will get 
___i world, as shown 
_ _ . _ SUNBURST BASE BURNER. 
YOU WILL GET THE MOST WONDERFUL STOVE OFFER EVER KNOWN. 
OUR NEW PLAN ™ st sto I? in . t i he wo , rld in y° u , r hom e, on such terms, such low price. 
. . , ,, * „ very little cost, no possible risk, such easy and very complete conditions will be fully 
explained. Get our offer and you won t use the old stove next winter, neither would you buy your dealer's 
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notice (don’t put it off a minute), get your pen or pencil and write us * postal card ‘ * 
“Mail me your Free — ———-- — — 
Stove Offer.** Address, 
xv, O.U wo uavc wj uucr iree, Loaay, now as you are reading th s 
a minute) ^etyourpen or pencil and write us a postal card or letter and say. 
SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICAGO 
NEW INVENTION. CLEANS CLOTHES WHILE YOU 
NO WASH BOARDS, WASHING MACHINES OR CHEMICALS. NO WASH DAY. NOTHING LIKE IT. NOT SOLO IN 
HOW SIMPLE, difForfint. prsv Put nn otnrrex _odd 
SEE HOW SIMPLE, different, easy. Put on stove—add 
■water, then soap, then clothes— that’s all. In 5 to 8 minutes, 
clothes clean. Laundries clean clothes without rubbing—EASY 
WAY does same at your home. You can rest or read between v 
batches. Dirt removed automatically except to move knob 
occasionally. Clothes cleaned while you get breakfast. With, 
wash board you rub, then boil 20 to 30 minutes, then rub again. 
Or you boil, then tire yourself running heavy machine, which, 
wears, tears and rubs the clothes—and afterward rub by hand 
anyway. The EASY WAY does alone in one operation the com¬ 
bined work of wash boiler, wash board and washing machine— 
less time, almost no labor—no injury to clothes. 
• WAY creates energy by mechanical manipulation asso¬ 
ciated with hot water, soap suds, heated steam, and scalding 
vapor, utilized as a compound force, all contained in a closed 
compartment. Special operating arrangements. 
Cleans woolens, flannels, blankets, colored clothes, as well as 
white goods, finest laces, curtains, bed clothes. Saves your time, 
fuel, labor, clothes, buttons. Saves your strength, looks, health, 
money. 
WITH EASY WAY, 30, 40, 60 minutes cleans washing which before 
took entire day. 
No rubbing, wear, tear or injury. No soggy, bad smelling, 
heavy wood,—hut all metal, sanitary, light in weight. Easily 
used, cleaned, handled—always ready. Child can use it—no ex¬ 
periment. 
USED BY THOUSANDS WHO PRAISE IT. 
J. McGEE, Tenn., writes:—“One young lady cleaned day’s washing 
»y old "] a ™ od in one hour with Eas Y Wa Y- Another in 45 minutes.” 
E. CRAMER, Tex., writes“Gave Easy Way a thorough trial. After 
10 minutes clothes nice and clean.” ANNA MORGAN. Ills., writes:— 
“1 washed a woolen bed blanket in Easy Way in just 3 minutes, perfectly 
*1: BARRETT > Ark., after ordering 38 Easy Ways, says:— 
You have the grandest invention I ever heard of.” J. W. MEVERS 
Ga., says:—“Find check to cover one dozen Easy Ways. Easy Way 
greatest invention for womanhood, forever abolishing miserable wash 
day. Sells itself.” I. BECK, Ga , writes:—“Enclose order. Easy 
Wav as represented. Worked 4 days—have 16 orders.” J. T. PEAY, 
N. C., says:—“Been out 2 days—sold 17, for which enclose order. 
Everybody is carried away that sees it work.” C. 0. GARRETT 0 . 
writes:—“Showed Easy Way to 7 families, sold 6. Most wonderful’and 
grandest invention.” N. BOUCHER, Mass., writes:—“Enclose order for 
76 Easy Ways. Everybody wants one— best business I ever had.” 
Price, only 86.00, complete, ready to use— sent to any address. 
Not sold in stores* Order now. You won’t be disappointed. Send 
postal card anyhow— full description, valuable information, testi- 
monials—all free. Thirty days’ trial. Guaranteed, everything 
proven, old house, responsible, capital, 8100,000.00. 
HarrisonMfg.Co., 464Harrison Bldg.,Cincinnati l O. 
REST. 
STORES. 
Easy Way as seen by the Artist. 
BEST EVER HAPPENED FOR AGENTS,' SALESMEN. 
MANAGEBS-MES OK WOMEN—at home or traveling, all or part time— 
orders—appointing agents. "EASY WAY” new. Yoibinir 
!J„®World unsuppliea—agents making big money. When operated, people 
tViA«’iSY C ,Y- 8ten i? r i )w< l’o PU8h V 8 ? ueez S;, mi8S engagements, get excited—w.tcli it as 
though a thing of life. 12 see-10 buy. Write today Jor special ayentu’ plan. Act quick. 
