)910. 
THE RURAL NEW-YOKKER 
1Q3S 
The Rural Patterns. 
When ordering patterns always give 
number of pattern and measurement de¬ 
sired. 
Simple, circular capes are much worn 
by the little girls. This one is made 
with openings in the fronts through 
which the hands can he slipped, and 
can be finished either with a hood or a 
6778 Girl’s Cape with Hood or Rolled- 
Over Collar, 1, 2 and 4 years. 
collar. It will be found suitable for all 
the materials that are used for girls’ 
capes, but this one is made of dark blue 
serge, and is lined with bright red satin. 
The cape is circular and falls in grace¬ 
ful folds. It is fitted by means of darts 
on the shoulders, and the openings are 
supplied with laps. When the hood is 
used it is joined to the neck edge. The 
collar is joined to a band, and the band 
is joined to the cape. For the medium 
size (2 years) will be required 3 yards 
of material 27 or 1)4 yards 44 or 52 
inches wide with 54 of a yard of any 
width for the lining for the hood. The 
pattern 6778 is cut in sizes for girls of 1, 
2 and 4 years of age; price 10 cents. 
The small pictures include 6735, boy’s 
blouse, 6 to 12 years. The quantity of 
material required for the medium size (10 
years) is 54 yard 24, 2)4 yards 32 or 154 
yards 44 inches wide. 6698, tucked over 
blouse with straight gathered tunic, 32 
to 40 bust. The quantity of material 
required for the medium size is 6 yards 
24, 5 yards 27 or 32, 3^4 yards 44 inches 
wide with 1)4 yard of silk for bands. 
6705, Russian blouse coat for misses and 
small women, 14, 16 and 18 years. For 
the 16-year size will be required 6 yards 
of material 24 or 27, 3-)4 yards 44, 3)4 
yard 52 inches wide with -)4 yard 27 for 
trimming. 6710, skirt with pointed tunic, 
22 to 30 waist. The quantity of material 
required for the medium size is 6 yards 
of bordered material 36 inches wide or 
7)4 yards of plain material 24 or 27, 6 
yards 36 or 4)4 yards 44 inches wide 
with 2 yards 24 or 27, 1 yard 36 or 44 
for the gored upper portion, 1)4 yards 24 
inches wide for the bands. 6707, plain 
fitted corset cover, 36 to 46 bust. The 
quantity of material -equired for the 
medium size is 1 yard 36, 1/& yard -*4 
inches wide with 1)4 yards of insertion, 
2)4 yards of beading, 3)4 yards of edg¬ 
ing. Price of each pattern, 10 cents. 
Gluten Bread. 
Can you or any of the large family of 
the Rural readers give us a recipe for 
making gluten bread and other dishes from 
gluten flour? c. i. 
We are unable to answer this ques¬ 
tion, and would like to hear from any 
housekeepers who are using gluten flour. 
It is disappointing to find this subject 
ignored by official bulletins on bread and 
bread-making issued by the United 
States and Ontario (Canada) agricul¬ 
tural departments. 
Four Good Soups. 
Savory Soup.—A delicious soup may 
be made by cooking about three hours 
two cups of soaked beans, three onions 
and three slices of bacon. When very 
soft put through a colander. This makes 
a stock to which seasoning and cream 
or milk is to be added for use. 
Friday Soup.—Melt one-half pound 
butter in a pan, add six onions sliced, 
two heads of celery diced, one-half head 
cabbage, parsley. Cook twenty minutes. 
Stir in three rolled crackers, two quarts 
boiling milk or milk and water. Boil 
gently one-half hour. Before serving 
stir in one egg beaten well and one 
rounding teaspoonful of salt. 
Green Lima Bean Soup.—Slice one 
small onion and brown in two table¬ 
spoonfuls of butter and one tablespoon¬ 
ful of flour; then ado one coffeecupful 
of boiling water, on° bay leaf and one 
coffeecupful of green Lima beans; cook 
until beans are tender, press through a 
sieve into two coffeecupfuls of boiling 
milk; add one-half teaspoonful of salt; 
cook until it thickens. 
Celery Soup.—One pint of celery, 
chopped fine; put it in the double boiler 
with one quart of milk and let it stand 
on the back of the stove, where the 
water just boils in the lower boiler all 
the morning or until the celery is tender. 
Rub through a strainer, return to the 
boiler and thicken it with two table¬ 
spoonfuls of flour, cooked in two table¬ 
spoons of butter. Season with salt and 
pepper and a bit of mace. Chop fine a 
few of the lightest of the celery leaves 
and scatter on top of the soup. 
i.u. nu 1 111 11 1111 H i l! 111 1111 111 n n 11111 1111 i i i i 11 1 1 ui m 1 1 1 ii 1 1 111 ii dj i ii 11 in in 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 mw TT m 11111111 n in i n i ti ti um n 
Gloucester Blueberry Cake. —This 
is not an original rule, but was taken 
from the Chicago Record-Herald some 
years ago, and I will give it just as it 
was printed: Take one cup of sugar, 
rub into this a half cup of butter, add 
two well beaten eggs, half a teaspoonful 
of salt; dissolve one teaspoonful of soda 
in cup of sour milk and add this; sift 
four cups of flour two or three times, 
add all but half cup to flour the berries; 
use one pint of berries, bake about half 
an hour in a hot oven. I put mine 
into three round layer cake pans, and 
serve with a cream sauce made as fol¬ 
lows : One pint of thick, sweet cream, 
one-half cup sugar, one large tablespoon 
of melted butter, flavor to taste. Whip 
cream until it is thick and add other 
ingredients and whip constantly until 
all is smooth and thick. This is really 
fit for a king, with a few queens 
thrown in. e. f. t. 
Drinking water neither makes a man 
sick, nor in debt, nor his wife a widow. 
—John Neal. 
The Original Lindeman Piano, direct 
to you from the Factory, at wholesale 
price. Secure one now, before Christ¬ 
mas, and begin paying afterwards. 
In 
1821 
in 
Dres¬ 
den, Sax- 
ony^William 
Lindeman began making 
the Lindeman Piano, from 
his own scales: and it was soon 
recognized as “a better piano.” 
Thousands of the Lindeman Pianos are 
in use today, to the satisfaction of their 
owners. Their handsome appearance, their 
enduring quality, and their sweet tone prove that 
they have been wisely builded. 
We have searched for a high-grade, everyway satisfactory 
piano to sell by Mail Orders at a low price, and we now offer 
The LINDEMAN E "tr J JOHN WANAMAKER 
We knew the Lindeman to be just right as to quality ,butthe wholesale price 
had been $220, which required that the local dealer sell it at $350, or more. 
(Ordinarily, remember that between the factory and the home there is the Jobber, 
the Wholesaler, and the Local Dealer, each of whom must have a profit; to say 
nothing of the various storage, freight and handling charges.) 
We have at last found a way to get around all these “middlemen profitsFirst, roe take all the pianos the 
factory can make. Second, We are content with such a small profit that we can sell the Lindeman, 
with all the Lindeman excellence, at the former wholesale price, $220. We not only ship it direct 
your home from the factory— it is moved but that one time —but we pay the freight ourselves. 
Every possible saving is thus made for the purchaser. No jobber, no wholesaler, John 
no local dealer, no freight. The saving on this “bed-rock” offer is all yours, Wanamaker 
To show our confidence in it: we shall allow you a free trial fora month, without New V ork 
any payment. At the end of that time you will know that the piano is satisfac- Please send full par- 
tory, or that it is not. If you do not want it, then simply tell us so, and we will se n Th^Undemau 0 Piano° 
advise you how to return it at our expense. If it is satisfactory, you either with Catalog, 
send us $220, or a small sum down and the balance monthly. You 
must be satisfied in this transaction, or else, “no sale.” 
Detach and mail coupon. jr Name 
to 
202 
JOHN WANAMAKER New York 
p. o. 
A Kea&KV&ZOS 
Direct to You 
T tv A I) K .MARK REGISTERED 
—“And Gas Stoves Too” 
Values shown 
with factory 
prices in this 
book have 
saved 85 to 840 
for over 140.000 
satisfied farm¬ 
ers and home- 
folks. 
—\ 
rr 
Spend One Cent For 
This Big FREE Book 
Wo pay the postago on our Big Free Kalamazoo Book to you—over 
lOOpagos—fully illustrated—gives wholesale prices—explains our plan 
and our high Kalamazoo quality. Sold only direct to homes. Over 
140,000 satisfied customers in 21,000 towns—some near you—to refer to. 
8100,000 bank bond guarantee. Every Kalamazoo sent ready to use— 
handsomely finished and blacked—safe delivery guaranteed. We give you 
—30 Days’ Free Trial 
—360 Days’ Approval Test 
—Freight Prepaid 
Thousands of farmers and town and city people everywhere are our 
regular customers on this plan. You are absolutely protected and safe 
in ordering a famous Kalamazoo from us for 
Cash or Credit 
We trust responsible people—give you time, easy 
payments. 
Write a postal for our book today—shows over 400 
styles and sizes, more than any ten stores can show 
you in stock—and yon save 85 to 840 cash. No better 
stoves or ranges than the Kalamazoo could be made— 
at any price. Prove It before we keep your money. 
Be an independent buyer. Send name for Free Cata¬ 
logue No. 114-. 
Kalamazoo Stove Company, Mfra. 
Kalamazoo, Michigan 
All our oook 
Stoves equipped 
with oven ther¬ 
mometer—makes 
baking easy. 
Over 
400 
Styles 
and 
Sizes 
to 
Select 
From 
Kalamazoo “Radiant” 
Base Burner 
—Over 16,000 In most sat¬ 
isfactory use. Most perfect 
hard coal burner. 
Flannel making lias so greatly advanced that 
to-dav you can duplicate in a ten cent printed 
flannel the prettest effects to be found in tine 
woolen dress materials. 
For instance, J.EKMA FLANNEL (the best of 
the inexpensive flannels) is made in many at¬ 
tractive styles, including 
A black and white jasper 6tripe effect. 
A shadow craquele effect (so fashionable In veil¬ 
ings.) 
Paisley scroll effects, in black and white aa well 
as rich Oriental colors. 
Black and white shepherd’s plaid. 
Somo very pretty diagonal worsted effects 
Fleeced back, fast colors, 10 cent* 
a yard 
If not found write for samples 
PACIFIC MILLS 
BOSTON 
IOWA 
ARCTIC 
So© tho heavy 
gum toe 
cap 
extension heel 
Beacon Falls Means Qualify 
Look for the Cross on every pair. It means 
reliability, wearability, satisfaction. 
Iowa Arctics wear longer and look better, 
because they’re made of the best materials 
from top to toe. Doubly strengthened 
where others are weak. 
See the Samson Extension Heel, the 
armor-plated toe cap. They mean wear. 
Be sure the Cross is on every rubber boot 
or shoe you buy. Sold only through reliable 
dealers. An illustrated booklet describing 
Beacon Falls rubber footwear, 
free if you send your dealer’s 
name. 
THE IOWA MOSCOW 
Beacon Falls Quality in a high four-buckle 
arctic. The soles are the exclusive 
Cross “tough cure,” extra heavy, solid and 
durable. The toe is “armor-plated” with a 
double thickness of pure rubber—a safeguard 
against “snagging.” The famous Samcon 
heel insures strength where it counts most. 
90 per cent, of Rubbers wear out first at the 
heels. The uppers are of cashmerette of finest 
quality, rubber interlined 
and water-proof. 
The lining is genuine wool 
fleece—not cotton shoddy. 
We couldn’t make it better 
—it’s the result of years 
of successful experience. 
Don’t take ordinary makes 
when you can get Beacon 
Falls quality at no greater 
expense. 
Most good dealers have 
them. If yours 
hasn’t, write 
us, mentioning 
his name ana 
will see that 
we 
you are supplied. 
Iowa Moscow 
Beacon Falls Rubber Shoe Co. 
NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO 
Not in a Trait Look for the Cross on every pair. 
