THE HOUSEWIFE, Delaying Work a Minute—High and Low Stools a Great Convenience. feet work uso Housewives can give thelr tired a rest without delaying their one minute gimply by judicious of the high and low stool First the high stoo.. It oned and used often look at the at the stove or doing such litt around the cook stove. any reason known to culinary why such work should not with a long spoon from the able height of the tall stool? little girls in the cooking not Fequired to stand at any more than are the scholars in t} day school. They sit down and the toil is lessened to a most i able extent by that restful and there no damage contents of ! the stirring being carried high ¢ in the us of the should be cushi Just an stands saucepan things hours that a stirring a odd Is there wom 3 iQ scionce be done comfort The are work school their to it, position, the reason of is done to the sauce on tool instead of sual way housewife Dishwashing from a high on an 3 L001 ones tired feet en that low is floor Ing over thenics when pac work day's kneel King a will he list during thes on the The that floor work hinges get ate on picture cord ! the fa boo SLO fortable when footstool joying the luxury of rest porch. Brandied Peaches Without ct large ! wi A rough then pack boiling is Rele nerf with 2 towel t in a with Freel frui mouth BO as water, immersed, th of the jar to retain th until the i fey un i8 2m out with © ates water the peaches and rub off Put a layer of the skinned peaches the bottom of a jar a thick layer of the sugar. Add another layer more sugar and fruit is used, having the last layer. Pour in a close and seal the J keep in a cool, dry, dar] other way of brandying peaches is to can the peaches in thé usual way, but fill in the last two Inches of the far with brandy and cover granulated f peaches, of the bosgt so on until all Of brandy, place. An Zimmet Kuchen, Make a soft sponge of warm milk, flour to make of the right consistency Set to rise overnight In the morning beat In three eggs, a cup of sugar. a large tablespoonful of butter, salt and cinnamon to taste and flour to make a dough that is not stiff Set rise again until light, roll into a sheet an inch in thickness and place in a dripping pan to rise. Before putting into the oven brush the top with milk, gprinkle with sugar and cinnamon and bake to a brown in a moderate oven. one quart of one-half yeast cake and too to nice Walnut-Cake (Loaf). Cream together half a cupful of but ter and a cupful of sugar: add the well-beaten yolks of three eggs beat well. cupfuls of sifted flour and one cupful of milk. Add one cupful of ground walnuts (these may be prepared by! putting through a meat chopper), one teaspoonful of vanilla and the whip ped whites of the eggs and beat for five minutes. Stir in two tablespoon. fuls of baking power, pour Into a well greased loaf pan and bake about three-quarters of an hour in a mod erate oven, Buttermlik Salmon, Baked Can Salmon With Buttermilk, One can salmon, two eggs, two table. spoonfuls melted butter or cottolene, one cup buttermilk with one-half tea spoonful soda stirred into it. Salt and pepper to taste; one-half cupful corn meal and two soda crackers crumbled down. Mix all together, put in greased pudding dish, and bake thalf an hour. This is a delicious dish mnd as light as a feather. Enough for five people, Enough to Tempt Most Jaded Appetite, Striped Cake—W hite Part.-—-—One- half cupful butter, one cupful sugar, one-half cupful sweet milk, two cup- spoonfuls baking powder, whites of i i Dark Part.—One cupful brown tablespoonful molasses, cupful butter, one-half cup- milk in which dissolve one- teaspoonful soda, two cupfuls of one tablespoonful of cinnamon allspice Drop a spoonful of Kind in a well greaged cake dis} light Try sugar, one one-half ful sour walt flour. and first the ternately cake shall #80 that it has striped cake Small « part, then the da to drop it 1 well streaked the appearance thrpugh of a be Une one tablespoon of of ‘akes molasses, pint of New pound melted vr brown but. leans gar, one ter, two tablespoons soda, sour milk, one-half cinnamon, cloves and alls] nutmeg, pinch of grated orange and lemon; t tin cup of teaspoon each of oe, one mace, and one flour ingre- the make : igh Mix the dients the night before Hof ming roll ong; add flour do and in out thin and «i in ob more flour if needed, as nak & ing in tends to placed palm of ! find your hand fs blistered. while the hand na Helps for the Housekeeper. reen bli that have may be renewed by rubbing with a rag saturated with it i inds become attain a good for it be hot and glaze on linen r CCOSSAry to be damp, for iron to ised To clean carved ivory make a of sawdust damped with water of lemon juice the carving. Let and then br for great pr to be past and lay this dry ish it off with ry Vhen washing glassware do not put it in hot water be liable expansion Even delicate gi be washed In very hot if slipped In edgewise bottom crack first, as it sudden can water will to from Ase safely A Convenient Dryer, As great a boon as women vacuum cleaner to be, few have learned to pu When they buy home use they revel over the clean house they will keep, with never a thought as to clean clothes and a clean scalp Instead of laboriously brushing your taflor sult with a whisk, stand in front of the vacuum cleaner and every dust and dirt is lifted minutes know a comparatively t it to one personal Huge for icle of afew but out in Shampoos are simplified cleaner as a dryer git in front of it, is dry in a surprisingly short time. by Put on Blueberry Biscuit, Add a cup of blueberries to the ordi nary baking powder tea biscuit, made from a quart of flour, three heaping of baking powder,’ a little and two scant cups of sweet milk. Make the biscult as soft as pos sible and with as little handling, and bake in a quick oven. These are de- licious for luncheon or tea. The ber ries should be washed, dried and rolled in flour before adding them to the dough. Carrot Conserve, Wash and scrape half dozen firm ear. rots, put through meat chopper and cut a. small as peas. Boll half hour in slightly salted water, then drain, and to each pint add two cups of light brown sugar and the julce and half the grated rind of one lemon. Cook slowly tll clear, about 1% hours. This is an agreeable novelty with a decided for eign flavor. AA Pe —————_— Det the iron ga in the NNN GIVE GIANTS HARD BATTLE Fle and Sallee 8t. L« Jack ster of Chicago Always Prove Stumm bling Block. t-handed batsmen righ Jack Pfiester, handed pitching harder than his left. handed batsmen are hitting right-hand. ed pitching. Merkle and Meyerg have been driving in more runs than the first three lead-off men. PLAYERS EAT FAR TOO MUCH Overeating Has Done More Marm to Baseball Than Anything Else, Says Manager Griffith, Every careful baseball mansger watches his players closely in regard to what they eat. It's easy” enough to tell when a player has been drink ing, but it is hard for the managers to tell, unless they see them eating, just when a player has overeaton, All managers agree that overeating fs a mighty bad thing for a ball play. ¥ 1 NOT SPEEDY ON THE BASES Manager Jennings y Cate Around Dep hers in lores Lack of Getting Diamond Speed | skip came broke int i been know, then | to | for ame catching rik John J. McGraw used to! catch if, but 1 think reason thoy ! ; p in be ding and de 3 and or mys make squatting « velops the shortens tt Just right got rule you has © bat when over and see if $ « look Few of them over atte: up speci on the base lines Winning Teams Are Always Hustling for Every Little Point—Team Work Necessary, ay JOHN O'CONNOR. (Copyright, 19, by Joseph B Keeping every player on his toes every minute every game is what wins—and this regardless of our own showing so for this season. Whenever players begin their heels to the ground, either fic ng, hitting or running the bases, are getting of ball ZATIeN ing teams | have played teams ute Bowles.) of to Such to lose i All the winn aged, ave been for and ¢ ant Perso min heel ne realize the runner, with » feet no matter how good they the coach be done. arity A a Jack O'Connor, ied aggressive and 1 these Good team work, nencess and a little a team a long pitching will won, of 4 in oat in ill carry ory § B2O0G Beck of Bos has three-base made eight seven hits and | doubles mpire “Bill xX bas Dineen eball groun says d is improv Umpire Guthrie of the American as sociation has resigned. The salary | was not alluring enough to attract this | young arbiter, it is said Clarke Griffiths has been doing al and says that he found hothing that looked good to him in the Eastern league. Jack Sparks, the Philadelphia pitch er, released by Manager Doolin re cently, will finish the season with the Chattanooga team of the Southern league Jake Beckley, the old-time Nation. al league player, and later a valuable man in the American association, is a candidate for a position as umpire in that league, Some one started the report that Barney Dreyfuss was after Kitty Bransfield again. Barney denies the story emphatically, for he once chased the Philadelphia first baseman off his team. Tris Speaker, center flelder for the Boston American league club, made six hits the other day in two games against Cleveland. He got a triple and two doubles and scored two runs in each game, I luck is certainly pursuing the White Sox this year, Among the men who have been out of the game for extended periods are Sullivan, the oatcher; Zelder, Gandil, Walsh, Payne, and now Blackburn ls Injured, | Physical Disabilities of Leading Play. ers Worry Enthusiasts at Newport, jsiasts are wondering will be of the thir t'eth national tournament to be held at Newport, R. Ll. in view of the pkyeical digabilities which have over leading players lam A. Lar the national hurt a tendon in his leg match for the Metro intely and it is enthu guicome Tennis hat the ned, Ww champion, the semi-final ipignship politan chan iy handicap him if he should have to play strenuously at Newport. William J. Clothier, the ex-national champion, has just recovered from an attack of typhoid fever; Gustave F. Touchard, who began the season so brilliantly, Is threatened with appen. dicitis and it is said that Maurice BE MelLoughlin, the young and dashing California player, finds himself affect ed by the humid weather on the sonst, Johnson Has Slow Ball, Too. After owning the fastest pitched ball in captivity, says Detroit Times, Walter Johnson goes out and devel ors a slow thing that approaches the plate with all the unconcern of a stone rolling down hill and then wafts into airy nothingness like the money you bet on “also ran” Willis and Mathewson Excel, Victor Willis who began with Bos. ton im 1898, has pitcled 242 winning games in the National league, Mathow. son's mark is 250 odd. MUN’ AW-PAW hii PILLS I want any person who suffers with bil constipation, indigestion or any blood allment, to try my Paw Faw Liver Pills. | guarantee th ey will purify the 4 put the liver and stomach oto a ul condition and will iousness aud constipation, or 1 will refund Jour money Munyon's Homeoputhic Home 63rd and Jeflerson Sts, Phils, Pa. henithf bil positively cure LOTE OF THEM, Faults in American Character. Gress general in America neists upon and 14 sey di 68 dE LIA experi ind A independ sound Books “ease the but ent observation is the source of knowledge in science Might Do It. know anything bt gst askea th the yellow fingers the indy crustily, “get Yonkers Do varst md 4 potato You with old with the em 0 States And some rose until they people never appreciate a encounter the thorn TO if and comfortable Post Toasties are in the pantry ready to serve right from the package. No cooking required; just add some cream and a little sugar, Especially pleasing these summer mornings with berries or fresh fruit. One can feel cool in hot weather on proper food. “The Memory Lingers” POSTUM CERRAL ©O., Lad Battle Oreck. Mich, cool \
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers