199 and “Shoodle!” Favorite By EDITH Pastry. % HE market news informs us that cherry pie season is here. Every | once in a while you hear of a voting | contest in regard to the most popular American foods. I think if they were conducted on a | seasonal basis, that cherry ple would be well at the head of the list of fa- vorite dishes. It might be a two-crust pie or a deep dish pie. Either Is a perfection If it is properly made Nothing disappoints me so much, how- ever, as to order cherry pie and get a floury sauce around the frult instead of the sirup giving sauce which ft should have, So much julce cooks out of the cher ries that it is a problem to prevent its soaking into the bottom crust. To prevent this, 1 mix one tablespoonful of sugar with one flour and sprinkle it over the bottom crust before adding the cherries and the rest of the This absorbs enough of the but does not change the texture and flavor of the sirup. Sometimes an yolk or is mized with the before it Is sprinkled over the fruit. Cherry ple, by the way, needs plenty of sugar—— almost as much as rhubarb When you try, leave the edge around Put on the top crust and the lower crust over the edge before pressing it down. Another way is to cut the two crusts evenly and to bind the edge with another strip of pastry. Cherry pie, like all ples, must have a very hot oven at first; after fifteen minutes lower the temperature so that the fruit will be done by the time the pastry is brown. [1 forgot to mention that the top crust must be slit in sev eral places to allow the steam to es cape. My aunt used to make a paper funnel to put in the center to draw the juice to this point Individual, or large deep dish ples, fire easy to prepare, The stoned fruit is put into the dishes In alternate lay- ers with the sugar and the pastry put on the top of the dish. Sometimes a few raising are added with the cher ries, Raising are also used with cherries | as a filling for a one-crust ple. A mer ingue is spread over the top after the pie is baked and then It is returned to the oven-—a slow oven this time to set and brown the meringue. A lattice of strips of pastry may be used instead of the meringue, Cherry cobbler, snowballs which are really steamed dumplings, baked dumplings and cottage pudding with cherry sauce are other good desserts made with this fruit. Preserves or —— HAPPY DAYS AGAIN tablespoonful of sugar juice 4 4 two sugar line your plenty of « pan with xtra | pas astry and dar way fold w jam made from cherries is one of the most satisfactory of all such products, Results are certaln and nothin better for winter use. Baked Cherry Pudding. 6 thin slices of bread Butter a 3 cups stoned cherries 1 cup sugar Butter the slices of bread on the loaf before cutting and line a buttered baking dish with the buttered side of the bread toward the dish. Fill cher ries and sugar, cover with bread and bake in a moderate oven (375 degrees | Fahrenheit) half an hour, i Pastry, cups flour 15 teaspoon salt 14 cup fat Cold water 13% Sift together the flour and salt. Cut the fat with two case knives. For a large quantity a wooden bowl and chopping knife may When add at one side of the bow] one tablespoonful of cold water and stir in much the flour and as the water will take up. Continue this un- til you have four or five balls of dough and some dry flour left in the bowl Press together with your fingers. [If all the dry flour Is not taken up add a little more water. Chill and roll Cherry Jelly, cups sugar in be used fine of fat 614 1 cup liquid pectin < cups juice Stem three Add until dis solved, cover and cook slowly ten min- utes. Let drip through Jelly bag. Measure juice, add sugar and stir over fire until it boils. Add pectin and boil rapidly one minute, Cherry Pie 3 cups stoned cherries 1 eup sugar 1 tablespoon but*sr 1 tablespoon flour well about Do not pit, water, stir and crush pounds ripe cherries. one-half cupful Line with a fa pan with pastry, sprinkle | tablespoonful of flour mixed Elephant Is Victim of Love for Drink New York~Patsy, the elephant. is dead-—na victim of the demon wa- ter, His demise was reported by Mrs. Nellie J. Dutton, of Sarasota, Fla. only woman circus owner, on her return from South America, “Water was his weakness,” Mrs Dutton reminisced, “and what a ca pacity he had. One morning on the trip we found the swimming pool dried up, Patsy bad been on a spree during the night” In Venezuela a scarcity of water developed, Patsy sulked because his 150-gallon-a-day ration was cut. Soon he became 80 weak with long ing that he could only stagger at a snail's pace. And one day he lay down, sucked up two pails of wa- ter, and died, “And with Patsy gone,” coneclud- ed Mrs. Dutton, “our show went on the rocks" with a tablespoonful of sugar, and add the cherries and sugar In lavers. Dot with butter, cover with an upper crust, and bake in a hot over (450 degrees Fahrenheit) for ten minutes. Then lower the temperature and bake until the cherries are soft, ©. Bell Syndicate ~WNI J Berviee, ‘My Neighbor § LEY ¢ Asa Hero of 40 Years Ago to Get New Monument Fort Worth.- he saved the lives of a score of per to be erected to Al Hayne, British en gineer, Here on a inte a biazing leave until 1800), ter was in thea he visit he and sure refused to all SCA i Hayne lingered too jump. He brol landed leap, forced to woth ankles in the } at: ily life lost, An old smoke smeared to 1 weather monument him is to be re ust erected near er stood be Tree Rings Show Dry Eras Suffered by Utah Utah. —Drout} Lake City, . come at more serious summers, F. WW, Mule, n hie learned from a study A study have arious much of cross sections of cores ranging from © to 18 years in length be “The years 1883 to 1850 were par ticularly drouth stricken in Utah” he explained. “The trees show by thelr growth that in 1901 to 1905 we exper enced another such period We are said. as in the past” Women Safest Drivers Sait Lake City~Women are safer and more conscientious drivers than men, even if they did teach the “weak. er sex” the art, a drivers’ license ex amination lst revealed. Of 75 exami nations given by the Utah state high way patrol, ten failed. All were men il — This well, which struck drilled on the farm oll at 400 feet, may of an oll rush In Bridgeville, ich has been studying the within a radius of several By L.L STEVENSON When Mayor Fiorello H, Ls ed the cit hat, DO Bn year the tug Macom laid up, swank The a MOAT ig. Wis we coun fit feast, Often fireboats and always played patio the day or hear with reporters, Fler A, at the foot of Man. attan island, was the place where the down and then Broadway up Those lines held back throngs, driven trivmaph up ticker amd torn books whitened the sir. was in ns tape telephone paper back to November city practically of the “false thought of throwing torn the windows of an office bu proved popular, that daring the ries A. Lindbergh on his re from his solo flight over the At. lantic, waste were swept up by such stree! as were not busy plaring - * - 9 1018. With insane because the driven armistice,” sone one paper from } ding. The inspiration 80 lar, indeed, welcom given Chas turn cleaners in the band there the re : In connection with the Macom, Was 8a mayor's committee for ception of distinguished i ittee, Grover A. Whalen chairman for so long that he has rid den times on Macom than anyone in New York. In a silk hat, cutaway coat, striped gray trous ers and white spats, and with a gar denia in his buttonhole, Mr. Whalen seemed to typify New York as he shook the hand of queens, princes, great soldiers, great statesmen and great athletes. But for some reason or other, Mayor Walker deposed him and the late Major Deegan got his place. The present administration restored him and be was the city's visitors that comm more the elee fleet. And then Mayor LaGuardia took the Macom away from him, - » - The aldermen were not included in the fleet welcomers. That caused some hard feelings, But they were soothed by a special trip around the island LY 0% His tom also idow follow i » Ella Stewart, 3 aren years came who taught the Roose Mt youngsters, and lied for ance of x So be dige recently Also the shrank to she ap attend. 2 mere Gespite iis memories, it wil retirement, the school inued How It Started Ry Jean Newltor “All Things to All Men” HE origin record of this pl has a long use In our ire and is fou in the mos {exis original use the apostie chapter nine ¢ became | as in the weak: 1 made all things to all men that 1 might by al am means sotge ” «WNT gave i © Bell Syndicate Bervice Safety F irst Campaigns Old Stuff Back in 1808 first the advent were old one of a recently "hliadeliphia. — Safety not start with the automobile. They stuff in 180K, as revealed in collection of children's books paigns did of The old book published In that year containe @& number of “cautionary stories in verse.” One example was: | “Miss Helen was always too giddy to | heed ' What ber mother had told her to shun, | For frequently over the street in full | speed She would cross where the carriages run.” The moral, of course, was reached in the final verse when the young lady who disobeyed her mother was struck by one of the many carriages. OVERPAID “He's getting $10,000 a year, and isn't worth it. No man is” “] quite agree with you. I'm get ting only $20 a week, too.” Traffic Menaced Pompeil Anclent Pompell had trafic regula tions and trouble with its reckless chariot drivers, One of the Prettiest of Frocks Designed for the Little Lady PATTERN 9887 - iz 30-inch fabric FIFTEEN CENTS feoins preferred) pattern. Be write your NAME, ADDRESS, the NUMBER and RIZE Send your order to Sewing Pattern Department, 232 West Eight eenth New York, N. Y. sure to Circle Street Street, UNAVAILABLE Had ry 100 t It on Authority about Tor he's engs a velitl is good “Where di “I've been ta with famil both 0 With Profits? Father—What do want now? Haven't 1 just set up your husband in business? Married Daughter but wants you to bay him out! you -Yes, Harry That Ended Him Mabel — Did painter who stained your front door to look like mahogany do a good job? Edith--He shall pever darken my door again. that Doubtful ®Are you sure this is the man who stole your car?” “l was until your crossexamina. tion, Now I don't know If 1 ever owned a car”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers