1910. 
-466 
The Rural Patterns. 
The girl’s dress shown in No. 6600, is 
a very attractive model for Summer 
wear, suitable for all wash materials. 
The dress consists of waist and skirt. 
The waist is made with front and back 
portions that are tucked, and the skirt 
is straight and plaited. When the yoke 
G600 Girl’s Dress, 6 to 12 years. 
is used it is applied over the waist and 
the material cut away beneath. The 
sleeves are made in one piece each, fin¬ 
ished with prettily shaped bands. The 
quantity of material required for the 
medium size (10 years) is 6 '/ yards 24 
or 27, V/ yards 32, or V/ yards 44 
inches wide, with Y& yard 27 inches wide 
for trimming for yoke. Pattern 6600 is 
cut in sizes for girls of 6, 8, 10 and 12 
years of age; price, 10 cents. 
The semi-princess dress, No. 6613, will 
be found very desirable for wash ma- 
6613 Semi-Princesse Dress, 
14, 16 and 18 years. 
tcrials. 1 he dress is made with waist 
and skirt. The waist consists of fronts 
and back and is laid in tucks that are 
stitched for full length. The skirt is cut 
in seven gores and the plaited panels are 
joined to the front and side gores. The 
short sleeves are made in sections that 
are overlapped. The long sleeves con- 
THES RURAIv NEW-YORKER 
sist of plain and full portions. The belt 
joins the waist and skirt and the closing 
can be made invisibly or with buttons 
and buttonholes, as liked. The quantity 
of material required for the medium size 
(16 years) is 11/ yards 24 or 27, 7 yards 
32, or 5 yards 44 inches wide. The pat¬ 
tern 6613 is cut in sizes for girls of 14, 
16 and 18 years of age; price, 10 cents. 
Keeping Sausage. 
Will you give a rule for keeping sau¬ 
sage? You gave one once, but I have mis¬ 
laid the paper. >irs. e. j. b. 
We arc not quite sure what the in¬ 
quirer refers to, whether ordinary or 
Summer sausage. Many keep ordinary 
pork sausage by packing in jars and then 
running half an inch of melted lard over 
the top to seal it from the air. Ordinary 
pork sausage, smoked in bags, makes a 
desirable change, and keeps well. Pack 
the sausage meat in small bags of coarse, 
strong muslin, the size selected being that 
most convenient for slicing; small salt 
sacks, well washed, may answer. Close 
the bags, and then smoke, just like 
ham, the amount of smoking depending 
on the family taste. When used, split 
down the seam of the bag for conveni¬ 
ence in cutting the slices, and fry like 
ham. One of our correspondents keeps 
Summer sausage as follows: Use any 
recipe you like best, but use cloth casings 
made from muslin, casing to have a 
diameter of three to four inches, and 
length to fit a baking pan. Casings are 
easily made with sewing machine. 
Smoke the finished sausage to your 
heart’s content. After smoking let sau¬ 
sage dry sufficiently, which takes four or 
five weeks, depending on where hung to 
dry. The sausage should be fit for eat¬ 
ing, which can readily be ascertained by 
cutting one through. When dry enough 
melt a quantity of paraffin—about half 
a pound for a dozen sausages—put in 
baking pan, then place the sausages 
therein and roll about in the hot paraffin, 
one at a time. Hang up in a dry place 
and they will keep nicely and indefinitely. 
are as bright and 
varied in patterns 
and effects as any of the 
12^zc. goods on the ^ 
market. Hamilton colors ’ 
1 have a substantial 
i reputationfor dura- 
/.C'c —A bility, dating from 
1825. 
j Admiral Percales 
T are 36 inches wide, 
' , and sell for 
|\T ONLY IQ CENTS 
\ a yard. If you want 
\\\\w\ something for Shirts, 
Waists, or House 
t',4 Gowns.ask your retailer 
for Admiral Percale, 
' \ l\\\\\ or write us for samples. 
|||, HAMILTON 
\A MFG. CO. 
raSSr\j(A93 Franklin St. 
fu\ATP^ BOSTON 
IRA APrPQ - ’^ 1 ' 1161 ’ 00 " 1 bouse; barn, 40 x 50, 
lot Mill CO nearly new; four miles to railroad 
town; 25 acres timber. $1,800—$000 cash. HALL'S 
FARJI AGENCY, Oxvego, Tioga Co., N. Y. 
When you write advertisers mention Tun 
It. N.-Y. and you'll get a quick reply and 
“a square deal.” See guarantee page 12. 
SAVE HALF Your 
Paint Bills 
By using INGERSOLL PAINT ~ proved 
best by 66 years’ use. It will please you. 
Only Paint endorsed by the “Grange.” 
Made in all colors,—for all purposes. 
Prom the Alill Direct to You at Factory Prices. 
INGERSOLL PAINT BOOK — FREE 
T‘'j\ aU about Paint an.l Painting for Durability, 
now to avoid trouble and expense caused i>\ paints 
fadrng. chalking and peeling. Valuable information 
t-S Wlth s *mr<lo Color Cards. Write me. DO 
IT NOW. I can save you money. 0 
0. W. Ingersoll, 246 Plymouth St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 
RFFK FFPINR lts Pleasures and prnlits. is llio 
u ttrill u theme of that excellent and hand¬ 
somely illustrated magazine. OLKAM.MiS I N BKE 
Cl I.Tl’liE. We send it for six months on trial for 
twenty-live cents, and also send free a tit-page book 
on bees and our bee supply catalog to all who name this 
paper. THE A. I. HOOT CO.. Box 6- r >. Medina, Ohio. 
About 20 Acres Highland Fronts on Bay 
Street; five minutes’ walk from our two depots- 
sixteen acres cleared and in peach trees- all in 
line condition; 100 two, 700 four. 800 live years old. 
Will take one dollar apiece for the trees, giving 
the land to any one that buys it. 
GEORGE H. .VAN NOTE. Bnrnegat, N. J. 
HPO those desiring advice in the purchase of 
farms, their layout and management. Charles 
L. Gold, of West Cornwall. Conn., offers his ser¬ 
vices and will give personal inspection of property. 
M ichigan fruit farms- a forty-eight page illus¬ 
trated nook for three cents in stamps. >1 icm- 
gan Development Bureau, Traverse City. JVi ieh. 
FARMS FOR SALE— Farms suitable any purpose: lei mo 
know your wants. PLUM, 445 Lewis Av., Brooklyn, N. if. 
You’d Rather Wash With an 0. K. 
Than Have A Woman Around 
Why wear yourself out by a whole day over a wash tub 
or why go to the bother and expense of a washwoman around 
the house all day ? With one hour's easy, pleasant work you can 
dispose of the biggest washing with an 
O. K. Gearing Rotary Washer 
Makes clothes •white as driven snow without injury. Runssoeasya 
Child can turn it. Nothing to pet out of order. Never wabbles or warps, 
bteam-proof cover keeps water hot longest. Handsome and durable. 
Vur Guarantee Inside . Send postal today for Free Washer Book. 
H. F. BRAMMER MFG. CO. 
1454 Rockingham Road, Davenport, Iowa 
W e want you to know this wonderful musical instru¬ 
ment as we know it; to hear it and realize as we do the 
height of perfection it has reached in recent years; to en¬ 
joy with us and the thousands upon thousands of Victor 
owners, the world’s best music, played as you have never 
heard it before. 
You can judge how perfect an instrument the Victor is, 
from the fact that the greatest opera singers—those who 
command the highest salaries—Caruso, Calve, Eames, 
Farrar, Gadski, Homer, Melba, Plancon, Schumann- 
Heink, Scotti, Sembrich, Tetrazzini and others, make 
records for the Victor—and only for the Victor. 
In addition to the world’s most famous operatic stars, 
Pryor’s Band, Harry Lauder, Blanche Ring, Josie Sad¬ 
ler, May Irwin, Haydn Quartet, Harry Macdonough, 
Fisk Jubilee Singers, and a host of other noted artists 
and organizations make records exclusively for the Victor. 
You can still further judge the perfection of the Victor 
from the fact that President Taft, besides making records 
for the Victor, has a Victor himself. And so have other 
prominent men, the wealthiest families of America, His 
Holiness Pope Pius X, President Diaz of Mexico, the 
King of England, the Emperor of Germany, the King of 
Italy, the Queen of Spain, the King of Portugal, and 
other sovereigns—with all the money at their command 
they can secure no musical instrument that gives them 
so much pleasure as the Victor. 
Victrola XVI 
$200 and $250 
Victrola XII, $125 
Victor I 
$25 
Other I 
•tyles M 
$10 M 
Victor Talking Machine Co. 
20th and Cooper Sts. 
Camden, J. 
Berliner Grcrnophone Co. 
Montreal 
Canadian Distributors 
sjjSVtgA# To get best results use onlyVic- 
Pm tor Needles ou Victor Records. 
Look for the Victor trademark. 
Master’s Voice,” on the 
W horn and cal inet of every Victor, 
I on every Victrola, and on every 
P Victor Record. 
Not a Victor without the 
— trademark. 
If you have never heard a> 
Victor of the present day, 
send us this coupon —- 
