? --w m" " yJ65 v The Commoner. 9 BEPTEMBER 13, 1112 ryqRf?www pockets, and grato the fruit on a "coarse kitchen grater. Put the sugar and water over the fire, stir until the sugar Is dissolved, let boil five minutes, skimming well; then stir in the gated quince pulp and let cook slowly, stirring occasionally, for about thirty minutes, until it is thick, like honey. Put this into jars and seal as usual. This will keep, and improve with age. Peaches and plums make a nice confection. Scald like tomatoes to remove the skin; plunge the peaches into the boiling water and leave for three minutes, then into cold water, and peel and pit with a silver fruit knife. One of the wire baskets used for frying is fine to hold the fruit when put into the boiling water. Have a bowl of cold water to which the juice of half a lemon has been added, and drop each peach into this as it is peeled, to prevent discolora tion. When the syrup reaches the boiling point, skim the fruit out of tho acid water and drop into the boil ing syrup and let cook gently until tender; each quart of ripe peaches will require one-half cup of granu lated sugar to one and one-half cups of water. Put one or two pits in each quart Jar of fruit when cook ing before canning. Be sure to seal air-tight. For baking apples wash and re move tho cores from as many apples as the pan will hold; put in the pan and fill the hole where tho core was removed with granulated sugar and a little dab of butter; pour Into the pan a cupful of water; bake In a moderate oven for twenty minutes, basting occasionally, or cover with another pan. Let the apples stay in the oven as it gradually cools, and the wator In the pan will b like jelly. If tho apples are sweet, more wator is noedod, and 'they will keep their shapo; but tart apples will soften and become mushy if too much water is in tho pan. Whon done, lift onto a platter, sprinkle thickly with sugar, and when cold, aervo. A FOOD CONVERT Good Food the True Road to Health The pernicious habit some persons still have of relying on nauseous drugs to relieve stomach trouble, keeps up tho patent medicine busi ness and helps keep up the army of dyspeptics. Indigestion dyspepsia is caused by what is put into the stomach in tho way of improper food, the kind that so 'taxes the strength of the strength of the digestive organs they are actually crippled. When this state is reached, to re sort to tonics is liking whipping a tired horse with a big load. Every additional effort he makes under the lash diminishes hiB power to move the load. Try helping the stomach by leaving off heavy, greasy, indigestible food and take on Grape-Nuts light, easily digested, full of strength for nerves and brain, in every grain of it. There's no waste of time nor energy when Grape-Nuts is the food. "I am an enthusiastic user of Grape-Nuts and consider it an ideal food," writes a Maine man: "I had nervous dyspepsia and was all run down and my food seemed to me but little good. From read ing an advertisement I tried Grape Nuts food, and, after a few weeks' steady use of it, felt greatly im proved. "Am much stronger, not nervous now, and can do more work without feeling so tired, and am better every "I relish Grape-Nuts best with cream and use four heaping tea spoonfuls as the cereal part of a meal. I am sure there are thousands of per sons with stomach trouble who would fee benefited by using qrape-Nuts. Name given by Posturn Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. There's a reason." Ever read the abooy letter? A sewoqo appears from time to tone. Chey arS genuine, teue, and full of lanuan tatcrcfefc. Requested Rcclpca Mrs. S. C. A. wishes a recipe for a hot salad. Salads are usually served cold and as crisp as possible. Here, however, is a salad made of boiled, or cooked ingredients, which is per haps what she wants. This is com pounded of boiled or baked onions, baked beet-roots, cooked cauliflower, broccoli, celery and French beans, or any of these articles ono happens to have, in quantities to suit tho taste, or in loft-overs; add to these articles a common salad dressing, and, if at hand, a small quantity of endives, lettuce, or chervil, as fresh and crisp as may bo. Melted Butter Cut two ounces of butter into little bits and as soon as melted, add a large toaspoonful of flour and two tablespoonfuls of Bweot milk. Instead of the flour, arrow root, or potato starch may be used. Stir until thoroughly mixed, then add six tablespoonfuls of water, hold over tho fire and shake continuously in tho same direction until it Just be gins to simmer; then lot it stand to boil up. It must cook but an instant, and Bhould be like thick cream. If the butter oils, put a spoonful of cold water to it and stir with a spoon; if it is very much oiled, it should bo poured back and forward from one vessel to another until It Is right again. Beating with a Dover's egg beater will make It perfectly smooth. A Stomach Tonic Peruvian bark, hruiscd, ono and a half ounces; orange peel, bruised, ono ounce; proof spirit, one pint; let these In gredients steep for ton days, shak ing the bottle every day; let alone for two days, then pour off the clear liquid and cork tightly. Dose a toa spoonful in a wine-glass of wator twice a day, whon you feel languid, when tho stomach is empty, about an hour before meals. In low nervous affections arising from a languid cir culation, or where the stomach is In a state of debility from age, or otner weakening cause, this la most ac ceptable. This tends to promote ap petite and aids digestion. Medical Magazine. ter of each row of grains on six cars of corn, and with a dull knife press out the pulp. There should bo one and a half cupfuls. Add to this a cupful of milk, tho yolk of two eggs and half a toaspoonful of salt; then stir in ono cupful and a half of pas try flour that has been sifted with one rounding toaspoonful of baking powder. Fold in tho well beaten whites of tho eggs and bako in gem pans In a moderate oven for about twenty minutes. Servo for breakfast. Excollont. Mrs. M. L. II., Iowa. Caro of Cooking Vessels It is claimed that many mischiefs result from tho breaking and chip ping of tho enamel on cooking ves sels of this material, as the flno, sharp particles go Into tho stomach with tho foods. Ono can not bo too careful of their cooking vessels, and it is absolutely necessary that they bo kept perfectly clean, especially In such hot weathor as wo have In mid summer; but cleanliness pays at all seasons. THE TWO BULL-MOOHEKS When it comes to tho part of bull mooso, it is evident that Brother Roosevelt has nothing on Brother Bryan. They are incontcstably tho two greatest bull-moose statesmen in tho world. Wo forbear to forecast how Brother Bryan will como out at Baltimore whether all tho other delegates will eventually bo pitched out on his formidable webbed antlers, whether somo desperate band of resoluto democrats, bent on savins tho party, will saw away tho under pinning beneath his stall and drop him Into tho cellar, or whether some hardy candldato with spurn will presently Jump on his powerful back, blind him with progressive blinders, and ride him to triumphant victory. We can't guess how it will come out. Wo do not know what finally hap pens when these wild creatures como inextricably up against civilization, and we havo no mind to guess and bo rated as a nature fakir. It is enough to point out tho great advantage Brother Bryan has over his rival bull in being a delegate and present in the convention and ablo to mako his charges on tho floor of tho hall. That adVantago ho gained by not being himself an acknowl edged candldato. Sagamore Hill must be full of pits pawed in futilo wrath by Brothor Bull-moose Roose velt since ho has seen what sensa tions his brother bull has been ablo to compass and by what means. Not that It is certain that Brother Roosevelt could havo done tho like, ovon though unencumbered with can didacy. In vocal feats in a public assemblage ho Is not a match for Brothor Bryan, and With an animal trainer of tho talents of Mr. Root to cope with, and Mayor Harrison's police force confronting him, his field would not havo been as fnvorablo as that at Baltimore. Nevertheless, tho dirt must be flying on Sagamore Hill, Harper's Weekly. LATEST FASHIONS FOR COMMONER READERS Contributed Recipes Creole Corn Peel and cut into quarters four good sized, ripe toma toes; put into a sauco pan with a dozen okra pods washed ana cm into thin slices; cover and stew slowly for twenty minutes; add the pulp of a dozen ears of corn, a lovel teaspoon ful of salt, one sweet pepper chopped fine, a dash of white pepper; cook over hot water, or in a double boiler for fifteen minutes, then add either four tablespoonfuls of cream, or two level tablespoonfuls of butter, and send at once to the table. This forms a most desirable sauce served with chicken.1 Mrs. L. S. Fried Tomatoes Have only solid, nearly ripe tomatoes, not in the least soft; or green tomatoes, Just ready to ripen may be used. Slice without peeling about one-fourt Inch thick; rolj in bread, or cracker crumbs, or in flour; have some butter, lard, dr other frying materials fn the skillet and let get very hot; salt the slices and lay them carefully in the hot fat, and let cook a few minutes, then turn carefully, and cook the other side Take up as soon as tha outer surface is c6qke"d; do not wait until tfiey are so Soft they fall to pieces, frhja makes an xcelfeht breakfast dish. Corn Puffs Score down tho cen- It W m a 0320 DRESS FOR MISSES' AND SMALL WOMEN Cut in flvo sizes, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 years. It requires 41& yards pf 44-lnch material for a lC-yoar size. 0320 MISSES' SUIT WITH NOR FOLK JACKET Cut In 5 sizes, 14, IB, 10, 17 and 18 years. It requires 5 yards of 40 tnch material for tho 18-year size. 0120 BOYS' RUSSIAN SUIT Cut in sizes 3, 4 and 6 years. It requires 3 yards of 44-inch material for the 4-year size. 8874 GIRLS' DRESS Cut in fivo sizes, 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. It requires 3 yards of 44-lnch material for tho 10-year size. 'Q19 I' I n' fOCb jj I THE COMMONER will supply its readers with perfect fitting, seam allowing patterns from the latest Paris and New York styles. The designs aro practical and adapted to the home dressmaker. Full direc tions how to cut and how to make the garments with each pattern. The price of these patterns is 10 cents each, postage prepaid. Our large catalogue containing the illustrations and descriptions of over 400 seasonable styles for ladies, misses and children, mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents. In ordering patterns give ns your same, address, pattern HtfihCer afid size desired. Address THE COMMONER, Patter Department, Lincoln, Nebraska hit. Mniif 4 ii sif JW- aaiAi ...4LaW.u.S.t.