io THE SCRANTOST TRIBUNE-SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1902. or bruising; heat, or cook threo liour In tha oven mid Sfak " Like, mother used to make! NONE SUCH Is not "store" mince met Me other trends, condensed And "xvtl". Ftfase suosHtatcs. Insist on gttHng vhtt 1'CH tsk for. Write Mentll-Soile Co., Syracuse, N. Y., If yoat grocer ctnnot svpoty y"- Valuable pttmiuxt liito"tBt7 Roger s Bros." silverware enclosed. lUrfSWW1"'" Turkish riliui. Thrmv a tiound of rice tnto n ttmrt of boiling writer, nddhiR a few grains of stitlt. Hot ovur a slow lire and when all the water Ih absorbed, pour (illicitly over t ho rice olRht otthcen of bolllnp: butter. Cover the pun closely to pre vent the h ten in from escaping1 nnd pet It over a moderate fire for nearly half an hour; then xtlr up lightly with a silver fork to sepnrate the grahm. Ar range H In a dome shape In the center of a hot dish. nice Fllnii. Mull one cut) rice In a quart of patt ed water nearly done, drain and throw Into a pint of boiling chicken broth; add half n cup of tomato pulp. When done, add two tnblespoonfuls of melted butter, call and puprlea to taste, and one teafmootiful of curry, press Into a heated, buttered mould: then turn out on a hot dlsdi and serve. 0 Turkish Pllnu. Put one cup of slewed, strained to- TABLE AND KITCHEN. PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS EAT AND HOW TO ABOUT WHAT TO PREPARE FOOD CONDUCTED BY LIDA AMES WILLIS, MARQUETTE BUILDING. CHICAGO. TO WHOM ALL INQUIRIES SHOULD BE ADDRESSED. SATURDAY. r.nK.wci'WPv. Sliced tl.iniinni. Oram. 'renm"il Pried Ilo"f. Ueinuin Kileil Potuloc. Coin Pone. Coffee. UWCII. Fried Oyster.-. Kca Honed VntaloiM. Brown Hreml. Cocoa. niNNKIl. Hurley fti-otli. llie.irlf il I.umli Chop. Stilus Kcaas. .Maslicd Piilntoos. Tomatoes Stuffed -n It li Celery. Apple Snow. Cnlfco. SUNDAY. hui:aki'a.st. Fruit. Cereal. Cream. Biolled P. I ids on Pried .Mut-li. Creamed Mushroom?. Roll-. Coffee. DIXXKIt. Carrot Soup. Chicken Chartreuse. Mashed Potatoes Tomato and Okrns. . Egg Slu.v. .Crape Sherbet. Cake. Coffee. SlIPPHU. I.ob.-tcr a In Xuwliiirg. Brown Dread and Lettuce Snnilwiche.4. Lemon Gingerbread. Or.ipe .lnlee. MONDAY. Kit ISA K FAST. Piled J'enehes. Cream. Tirol led Bnioii anil Una. Hashed Potatoes. Muffins. Coffee. M.-NCfl. (.'lam Chowder. Kcs Toast. Cnen.i. Fruit. DINNKU. Potato Soup. Veal Loaf. Ilrov.n Suuec. l:.ulterert Carrots. String Ileiui". Let I uce. Peach Shorte.Uce. Coffee. TUESDAY. p.ri:akpast Baked Pears. t'ream. Panned Ham. ('roam CSisivv. Thole Wheat Mttllhi.-. Coffee. LCXCli. Srolled Tomatoes. drown Siiuco. Illeo Croo.iiette, Slewed Fruil. Cocoa. DIXXKlt. Clear Tomato Soon. Polled Chicken. . Onlim Sauce. Puked Potatoes. Ciiulillower. Tomato and Pepper Salad. Cheese. Wafers. i 'ofl'eo. HOW TO MAKE A PILAU. Varieties of thirf dish arc very com mon among all the populations dwell ing in countries bordering' on or near the Mediterranean, from Spain to the Levant. II consists chielly of rice lightly boiled in broth of a fowl or veal. This basis is very susceptible of various slight modifications and addi tions of fowl or lamb, or fowl and lamb mixed, or capon, or turkey. Some put thin slices of bacon, or grated beef or bam, a little curry powder, fried onions, mushrooms, etc., Into the pllnu pot; but this is not admissible In limit ing the true oriental creation, as a pi lau is strictly a Mussulman dish. The true Turkish pilau, or pilaff: "Turdali Pilawo." is made of rice boiled for live minutes in water, drained; then placed In a slewpan with butter, salt and pep per to taste, stirred well, adding- by de grees, about half a pint of good fowl broth. In about fifteen or twenty min utes the rice should be properly done and each grain swelled out and separate. However a dish of boiled rice having a. sort of culinary allinity to veal, and poultry, is well fitted to form a whole some basis for dishes Into which those meats may bo introduced, furnishing' pleasant flavor and odor to an other wise rather insipid dish. llieo is well lilted also, to he. the ve hicle for producing innumerable flavors and odors, as well as color at the table and capable of furnishing' various dishes, according to treatment, and the materials for addition that are avail able in tile different localities. A Keai Indian Pilau. The following- is a recipe for pilau brought from India by an English ofll eer: Take ono ccr (12 ok.) of good rice, ono seer of butter, two fowls, half a pound of sultana raisins, about three tablespoonfnls of almonds, one ounce ot a. mixture of allspice, powdered mace, cardamons, cloves; one tolah (one-fortieth of a pound) of saffron, two ounces ginger, one ounce of salt, half an ounce of whole black pepper, ono whole onion, one pound of dhley (cutds). Boil the rice until it is half done; fry the onion brown in the but ter, take out, put in the raisins and fry, or boll them. Then cut the fowl to pieces and rub with the ginger and dhley, and allow to remain for two hours. Put some butter in the bottom of a casserole, over this a layer of rice, and distribute over this somo of the onion, raisins and almonds; sprinkle with saffron and water, then put in a layer of meat, and sit on alternately till the vessel is tilled: then pour the butter over It; cover the casserole and close it with paste so that no steam will escape; put It between a. slow top mato In a saucepan with one cupful ot slock, highly season with snlt, pepper, minced onion and green peppers. ttoll and add one cupful of washed rice; stirring' lightly with a fork until ab sorbed, then add small hair cup of but ter. Steam In a double boiler for twenty minutes. Remove the cover and put a folded napkin over the top of boiler to allow the sleatn to escape. Serve tis a vegetable villi cold cooked meat or poultry. Mutton Pilau, Sultana Style. Wash one pound of rice, put It in a cloth and tie up. leaving room for the lice to swell. Cut iiuarter of a pound of the best part of mutton in small pieces, put them In a saucepan with one quart of water; place over the file, until It bolls. Then skim the liquor; move to the side of the lire and sim mer for half an hour: strain the liquor off Into a basin, add four ounces of butter to the meal and fry until nicely browned. Ilcturu the liquor to the saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of peeled pistachios and one tablespoon fnl of washed currants: add a small quantity of mixed spices. Mince two ounces of mutton and fry It In butter until browned, then add to the other ingredients. When the liquor boils put in the rice, place over a moderate fire anil simmer until soft. When done ar range tastefully on u hot dish and serve at once. Chicken Pilau. .Select a chicken weighing about two pounds, singe and draw it, wipe well Willi damp cloth: cut into twelve parts of equal size. Put these into a stew pan Willi an ounce ot butter and brown: add one chopped onion, one green pep per and cook six minutes, stirring light ly with a silver fork. Add a pint ot rich chicken broth and half a cup of tomato sauc; add two ounces of dried mushrooms, Unit havo boon soaked in water for several hours, or else use a dozen canned mushroom". Season with salt and pepper and halt a teaspoonful of diluted saffron. When all ingred ients arc thoroughly mixed, tuliS half a pint of well washed, uncooked rice ami three tablespoonfuls of grated Parme san ehece. Cook for twenty minutes more, then serve. 1 i i nil in nm ii mtjlVf' "' ' "hi i ' ' " Why :vrmt ros ' i i w.ia ' Hfrbfst family laxative It is pure. It is gentle. It is plcasaut. It is efficacious. It is not expensive. It is good for children. It is excellent for ladies. It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe under all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world oiv It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you haves tiie best laxative the world produces. B2 Its component parts arc all wholesome. It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects. It is wholly free from objectionable substances. It contains the laxative principles of plants. It contains the carminative principles of plants. It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste, Alt are pure. All are delicately blended. All are skillfully and scientifically compounder. Kurdik (to mufti ffTVJ'C HBMK9 IHHKa buy the genuine. I OHS fVRlllf j JBraJMSi Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to the originality and simplicity of the combination. To cct its beneficial effects Manufactured by San Frsxnctoco, Cal. Louisville, Ky. New York. N. V, FOB SALE BY ALL LEADING DBUQQIBTS Pilau of Fowl. Truss one fowl for boiling; put Into a slewpan with three pints of cold water, and let boil gently until tender. Wash and soak one pound of rice in three waters, drain dry and fry in half a pound of butter until it begins to color, then return to saucepan with throe bay leaves, a level tablespoonful of whole cloves, a little mace, and salt. Add til," fowl and water in which It was boiled aim let simmer slowly until It Is quite dry. Then arrange In mound shape on a hoi dish with two onions sliced and fried strewed over the top and some hard boiled eggs cut In half, placed around the edge of the dish. Inquiries Answered. (V; gladly furnish recipe-? through the household columns for any of the dishes mentioned in the menus, but us our space is limited and requests are very numerous wo cannot give more than two recipes In same issue to any one correspondent, For desired infor mation you wish furnished by mall, send self-addressed and stamped en velope. For any special recipes, etc., sent in this manner a small charge will be made according- to nature of request aflffF nrr ,AD f VERY fSftv Vw-irVit 9J XRJ&amiiSKk Mmsmm straw tvtniHSXU r 1 From the Cane to the Can through a scientific process of refining', & our own, everything is clone which will in any way add to the purity, richness and flavor of DUFF'S Refined Molasses For baking qualities no other molasses approaches Duff's Refined. The lightest, sweetest, richest flavored cooking follows its use; and gingerbread, gingersnaps, brown bread, have culinary charms before unknown. For general table use, as on griddle cakes, or bread, it is unequaled. Ask your grocer for Duff s Refined. Try DUFF'S REFINED TAFFY, made from DUFFS REFINED MOLASSES, Booklet of choice rcclpei, free on requeit. F. DUFF SONS, Pittsburg. ' rfBEST fOR HtMfJ Wmmm ii and time consumed In furnishing such matter.) Plain Sweet Drop Cakes. The most economical drop cakes are those made without butter, of course. The following recipe Is for sponge drop cakes and very nice: Reat four egg yolks very light: add gradunlly half a cup of powdered sugar and heat again; then add a tcaspnonful of lemon juice. Heat the white of the eggs to a stifr dry froth, with a pinch of salt added to them and carefully told them Into the baiter. .Measure three-quarters of a cupful of sifted flour. Sift again, twice, and stir carefully into the cake mix ture. Drop by spoonfuls on a well but tered pan: sprinkle over with coarse granulated sugar and bake in a slow oven for twelve or fifteen minutes. Chicken Patties. Take the white meat of a boiled foul and cut into dice: add a can of mush- rooms drained irom their liquor and cut ill halves. Melt two tablespoonfuls butter and stir in two tablespoonfuls of flour: when smooth add a pint of victim or ricn miiK; stir until It cooks i rather thick, then add the chicken and i mushrooms and let it gel thoroughly heated through, season to taste with salt and white pepper and just bcfoie taking from the fire the sherry, allowing- quarter of a cupful to every plnL of chicken. Do not cook after adding Ihe wine, hut let the mixture gt thorough ly heated: then fill the little puff paste ij.mj l-umjs, which Simula oe neaieii thoroughly In the oven before they are filled. You can buy those cases if you do not wish to make them. Beef Stew with Dumplings. Take two pounds of beef suitable for stewing; the neck plec preferred, two onions, two large potatoes, two quarts of water and two tablespoonfuls of Hour, t'ttt the beef into inch squire. I...-.,, ,. ,,k .uitnj ,,, tin- uvi-l l.ll 111 H frying pan and when hot put In the onions sliced thick, and stir and cook about ten minutes over a brisk fire. Dredge the meat welt with the Hour and put It in tins fat nnd stir until well browned: then add a teaspoonful ot salt nnd quartrr of a teaspoonlul of pepper and the water, which must be boiling, simmer until meat is tender, about one and one-hair bouts, then add the pota toes cut in thick slices: simmer until potatoes tire very nearly done; then drop the dumpling batter by largo 'spoonfuls on top of stew; cover and let boll for ten minutes; do not lift tho cover In the meantime or they will fall. I 'so baking- powder biscuit recipe for the dumplings, only makes It soft enough to drop from tho spoon. Or you can make up Into tiny biscuit ami strew on top of the stew, Serve with the dump lings on top of the stew. Glazed Carrots. Parboil two bunches of spring carrots In salted water for ten minutes. Drain them anil plunge into cold water; drain again nnd wipe dry: then put thein in a deep saucepan with two ounces of fresh butter, two ounces of sugar and two cups of good consomme or clear beef or veal stock. Cover the saucepan and let boll gently for half an hour. Then set them over a brisk lire anil re duce the liquor to a glaze (like jelly). Arrange them on end, In pyramid shape, on a hot dish and pour drawn butter sauce around them; sprinkle a Utile minced parsley over the sauce! pour the glay.e over tho carrots and servo at once, while very hot, 1 IHRU i IllHnL I nsi' A Seasonable Recipe (Cut ' This Out) The human body is built out of the food eaten. A weak ness in the constitution means that one or more elements of the body have not been nourished sufficiently or have been over-nourished at the exDense of other element!?. Shredded JVholc Wheat Biscuit nourishes all the different, ele ments of the body in correct proportion. Here is one of the many delightful ways in which Shredded . wi oic t'ieai his- , ??. !.'- 0rft''. .-" 4',S OlUl lb LtbCU. Pare, core and quarter -l large anules : cook (&1 tender with A cup of water; add y2 cup of sugar and s away to cool, tun ice ; of any .trelatini- iellv Shredded Wheat Biscuit, the stewed apples: pour 'Z of an inch of the jelly into a long, shallow pan, let harden; then place the biscuit sandwiches end lo end on the jelly and cover with the remaining jelly. Set awajto harden. Serve with cream. rwiy seasoiiaoie nun can oe useci instead of apples. Split Shredded Whale Wheat UUcult and toaxt It for breakfast. SIIRUDDKD WHOr.K WHKAT WSCUIT UmjM by all grocers. Send for "The VI tut Question" (Cook Hook, Illustrated tncolort-,) l'r e. Address The NATURAL FOOD CO. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. WASpVJIJ' ji.-. ... ,'.vBetfsasaui2" j:.'. feCHtnw m inrrnTvrTVTTririlif( I ti BSi&SSSS&k'':?3!?iiMH r -'.rf2TM.SS&-,fcO-.0'--A-.W tte v ivmA.A ?miWimMWjtiiivSAmEWM' v 14fe :i h immmmmmmz3 "Fift, , ,. m&zmmms5satimr piZurtrmm' mmi fit with-rS PP?i jandwicn i mssrn . leij 'a-" Made with H REDDED BISCUIT vcjsucrauM.'iKi mrvnoaiaa-J NO POISON Has Ever Been Found in the Enamel of AGATE NICKEK-STEEL .VMW2U UC&0 TheBLUE LABEL Protected by Declslcn of United States Court Pasted on Every Piece PROVES IT. If substitutes arc offered, write us This traile-ninrk is on every piece of genuine Agate Ware. HHOOKLVX. flpeclnl to tho Scrantou Tribune. Urooltlyn, Nov. 0. P.ev. ami airs. O. It. Jlogers have gone to tfor.tnton to speiitl the winter with relatives. Miss Ilitttle .McMillan lias rottunei) from u visit at Nicholson. Her brother, M, 1 1. McMillan, nccomimnleil Iter anil ppent a few days here. Morillen r'or has Rime to Willow drove, N. J., to work. Ills family ex pect lo move there soon. Mrs. A. U. titerlliiK vlslteil her sister at Nicholson, last week. Levi Ktcjihoiis has roiic to niifi'alo tn work Waile Jiarnes, of State college, came homo to vole anil spent a few days in town. AIlss Knima Mldrldge spent Suiitluy with liietuis here. Mr. and Mrs. Frank In town Wednesday. Everett Kly visited Carbomlnlo last week. Hew James Palmer ing relatives In flrooklyn. llev, It. 1 1. Kobcrts Is assisting meetliiBS ut Nicholson. The Ladles Aid society of the I'nl versallst church will meet with Mrs. A, 8. Wuldle. November 13. for dinner, The donation at tho Methodist Epis copal parsotiuge for Itcv. Smith, last Ki'ldnv fivfniiiir. ivum utII it il.ttirlpd iiml Hciijamlu were bis brother In has been vlsli- with IlKCi !$$' C $) Wmm ySfflEfiS $1.00 Will Buy the Best Stiff Bosom Garner's Percale SHIRT In Neat Patterns That Skill and Experience Can Produce AT CONRAD'S Look at the New Patterns Received This Week, 305 LACK'A AVENUE. MAKE 1520 KINDS S'jIiI t.y WrM-i'lM Donavlmeiit and House. luiiutijtiia Sluro". bVml for new lloulilei. BALANCE S. GROSjnAN MFG, CO. IM'.WYO'IK JIOSTON CIIICAOO (I I FOOTG & FULLER CO., I 140-143 WASHINGTON AVENUE. ' S0RANT0N, PA. I Complete line of the genuine I & , G. Manufacturing Company's Agate Niekle Steel Ware. " Lubricate Your Hachinery by Scientific Hethods and save SIXTY I'BU t'ICNT of c pauses. We inuko u specially of pro per hi- In hunts for propei purposes. Tho Sanderson Oil nnd Specialty Co., 1 Race Street, City, ' f iPW 1 m l I je - vWrm PIS, RUDDY, HIES Jhe L, R., D. & M. Shoe for Ladies A hand-made shoe of su perior quality that sells for $3.00 And not only weai'8 better than many litfjher priced idioes, hut holds Its shape and always looks dressy, STY1.K A-Vicl Kid Vamp, m.t Kill top, patent leather tip. STY1.K U-Cnamel vamp, mat kid tup and toe, STYU'3 (i-Vh-l Kid vamp, top and toe. A MURPHY .330 Lackawanna Avenue. Next Door to new First National Bank Building. ? I a success Irt every way. 1