MARY 
 MARY AT THE FARM  
 AND  BOOKS OF RECIPES  COMPILED DURING HER VISIT AMONG THE  "PENNSYLVANIA GERMAN"   
   STAND FAST  GRANT  ENDOWMENT FUND  BEATRICE V. GRANT  MSU 1929 - 1965  PROFESSOR of FOODS & NUTRITION  COLLECTOR of RARE COOKERY BOOKS  Her private collection of rare cookery books was donated  by her sister, Dr. Rhoda Grant, to the MSU Libraries, May 1984  
   Elizabeth Treffinger  Given by Mary Dietz  April, 1968  
   
   MARY AT THE FARM  AND  BOOK OF RECIPES  COMPILED DURING HER VISIT AMONG THE  "PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS"  BY EDITH M. THOMAS  WITH ILLUSTRATIONS  We love our Pennsylvania, grand old Keystone State; Land of far famed rivers, and rock-ribbed mountains great. With her wealth of "Dusky Diamonds" and historic valleys fair, Proud to claim her as our birth-place; land of varied treasures rare.  PRINTED BY  JOHN HARTENSTINE  NORRISTOWN, PA.  1915  
   COPYRIGHTED. 1915  BY  EDITH M.THOMAS  
   PREFACE  The incidents narrated in this book are based on fact, and, while not absolutely true in every particular, the characters are all drawn from real life. The photographs are true likenesses of the people they are supposed to represent, and, while in some instances the correct names are not given (for reasons which the reader will readily understand), the various scenes, relics, etc., are true historically and geographically. The places described can be easily recognized by any one who has ever visited the section of Pennsylvania in which the plot (if it can really be called a plot) of the story is laid. Many of the recipes given Mary by Pennsylvania German housewives, noted for the excellence of their cooking, have never appeared in print.  THE AUTHOR.  
   THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO MY FRIENDS WITH GRATITUDE FOR THEIR MANY HELPFUL KINDNESSES. 
  An illustration of a tree. 
  "HE WHO HAS A THOUSAND FRIENDS HAS NEVER A ONE TO SPARE."  
   THE HOUSEKEEPER'S SYMPHONY  "To do the best that I can, from morn till night, And pray for added strength with coming light; To make the family income reach alway, With some left over for a rainy day; To do distasteful things with happy face, To smile instead of frown at Fate, Which placed me in a family always late For meals; to do the sewing, mending and The thousand small things always near at hand, And do them always with a cheerful heart, Because in life they seem to be my part; To know the place of everything and keep It there, to think, to plan, to cook, to sweep, To brew, to bake, to answer questions, To be the mainspring of the family clock. (Or that effect) and see that no tick, tock Is out of time or tune, or soon or late, This is the only symphony which I Can ever hope to operate."  MARION WILEY.  
   CONTENTS    PAGE  I Mary's Letter Received at Clear Spring Farm...... 9  II Mary's Arrival at the Farm....................... 13  III Schuggenhaus Township............................ 18  IV John Landis...................................... 22  V The Old Farm-House and Garden.................... 24  VI Mary Confides in "Aunt Sarah" and Gives Her Views on Suffrage for Women.. 29  VII Professor Schmidt................................ 37  VIII Uses of An Old-Fashioned Wardrobe................ 39  IX Poetry and Pie................................... 46  X Sibylla Linsabigler.............................. 51  XI New Colonial Rag Rugs............................ 56  XII Mary Imitates Navajo Blankets.................... 60  XIII "The Girls' Camp Fire" Organized by Mary......... 66  XIV Mary Makes "Violet and Rose Leaf" Beads.......... 72  XV Mary and Elizabeth Visit Sadie Singmaster........ 74  XVI The Old Parlor Made Beautiful (Modernized)....... 77  XVII An Old Song Evening.............................. 85  XVIII A Visit to the "Pennsylvania Palisades" 95  XIX Mary Is Taught to Make Pastry, Patties and Rosenkuchen.... 108  XX Old Potteries and Decorated Dishes............... 115  XXI The Value of Wholesome, Nutritious Food.......... 122  XXII A Variety of Cakes Evolved From One Recipe....... 125  XXIII The Old "Taufschien"............................. 130  XXIV The Old Store on the Ridge Road.................. 132  XXV An Elbadritchel Hunt............................. 136  XXVI The Old Shanghai Rooster......................... 138  XXVII A "Potato Pretzel"............................... 141  XXVIII Faithful Service................................. 145  XXIX Mary, Ralph, Jake anil Sibylla Visit the Allentown Fair.. 151  XXX Fritz Schmidt Explores Durham Cave............... 155  XXXI Mary's Marriage.................................. 157   ILLUSTRATIONS   PAGE  Mary (Frontispiece)..................................... 1  Aunt Sarah.............................................. 11  The Old Spring House.................................... 12  The Old Mill Wheel...................................... 19  The Old Mill............................................ 20  Old Corn Crib........................................... 24  The New Red Barn........................................ 24  The Old Farm-House...................................... 25  Ralph Jackson........................................... 34  Rocky Valley............................................ 35  Professor Schmidt....................................... 37  Frau Schmidt............................................ 38  Old Time Patch-Work Quilts.............................. 42  Old Time Patch-Work..................................... 44  Home-Made Rag Carpet.................................... 45  A Hit-and-Miss Rug...................................... 56  A Brown and Tan Rug..................................... 57  A Circular Rug.......................................... 58  Imitation of Navajo Blankets............................ 62  Rug With Design......................................... 62  Rug With Swastika in Centre............................. 63  Home Manufactured Silk Prayer Rug....................... 65  Elizabeth Schmidt--"Laughing Water"..................... 69  Articles in the Old Parlor Before It Was Modernized..... 79  Other Articles in the Old Parlor Before It Was Modernized 83  Palisades or Narrows of Nockamixon...................... 95  The Canal at the Narrows................................ 97  The Narrows, or Pennsylvania Palisades.................. 99  Top Rock................................................ 100  Ringing Rocks of Bucks County, Pennsylvania............. 102  High Falls.............................................. 103  Big Rock at Rocky Dale.................................. 104  The Old Towpath at the Narrows.......................... 106  Old Earthenware Dish.................................... 115  Igraffito Plate......................................... 116  Old Plates Fund in Aunt Sarah's Corner Cupboard......... 117  Old Style Lamps......................................... 118  Old Taufschien.......................................... 130  The Old Store on Ridge Road............................. 133   ILLUSTRATIONS--(Continued)   PAGE  Catching Elbadritchels.................................. 136  Old Egg Basket at the Farm.............................. 138  A Potato Pretzel........................................ 141  Loaf of Rye Bread....................................... 143  A "Brod Corvel," or Bread Basket........................ 144  Church Which Sheltered Liberty Bell in 1777-78.......... 151  Liberty Bell Tablet..................................... 153  Durham Cave............................................. 154  The Woodland Stream..................................... 156  Polly Schmidt........................................... 158  An Old-Fashioned Bucks County Bake-Oven................. 162   
  
  MARY  A picture of a woman. 
  
   
 
  
  MARY AT THE FARM AND BOOK OF RECIPES  CHAPTER I.  MARY'S LETTERS RECEIVED AT CLAER SPRING FARM. 
  An illustration of a tree with few leaves and many branches. On the trunk is a mailbox. 
  ONE morning in early spring, John Landis, a Pennsylvania German farmer living in Schuggenhaus Township, Bucks County, on opening his mail box, fastened to a tree at the cross-roads (for the convenience of rural mail carriers) found one letter for his wife Sarah, the envelop addressed in the well-known handwriting of her favorite niece. Mary Middleton, of Philadelphia.  A letter being quite an event at "Clear Spring" farm, he hastened with it to the house, finding "Aunt Sarah," as she was railed by every one (Great Aunt to Mary), in the cheery farm house kitchen busily engaged kneading sponge for a loaf of rye bread, which she carefully deposited on a well-floured linen cloth, in a large bowl for the final raising.  Carefully adjusting her glasses more securely over the bridge of her nose, she turned at the sound of her husband's footsteps. Seeing the letter in his hand she inquired: "What news, John?" Ouickly opening the letter handed her, she. after a hasty perusal, gave one of the whimsical smiles peculiar to her and remarked decisively, with a characteristic nod of her head: "John, Mary Midleton intends to marry, else why, pray tell me, would she write  of giving up teaching her kindergarten class in the city, to spend the summer with us on the farm learning, she writes, to keep house, cook, economize and to learn how to get the most joy and profit from life?"  "Well, well! Mary is a dear girl, why should she not flunk of marrying?" replied her husband; "she is nineteen. Quite time, I think, she should learn housekeeping--something every young girl should know. We should hear of fewer divorces and a less number of failures of men in business, had their wives been trained before marriage to be good, thrifty, economical housekeepers and, still more important, good homemakers. To be a helpmate in every sense of the word is every woman's duty, I think, when her husband works early and late to procure the means to provide for her comforts and luxuries and a competencying she may, in time, become as capable a housekeeper and as good a cook as her Aunt Sarah; and, to my way of thinking, there is none better, my dear."  Praise from her usually reticent husband never failed to deepen the tint of pink on Aunt Sarah's still smooth, unwrinkled, youthful-looking face, made more charming by being framed in waves of silvery gray hair, on which the "Hand of Time," in passing, had sprinkled some of the dust from the road of life.  In size, Sarah Landis was a little below medium height, rather stout, or should I say comfortable, and matronly looking; very erect for a woman of her age. Her bright, expressive, gray eyes twinkled humorously when she talked. She had developed a fine character by her years of unselfish devotion to family and friends. Her splendid sense of humor helped her to overcome difficulties, and her ability to rise above her environment, however discouraging their conditions, prevented her from being unhappy or depressed by the small annoyances met daily. She never failed to find joy and pleasure in the faithful performance of daily tasks, however small or insignificant. Aunt Sarah attributed her remarkably fine, clear complexion, seldom equalled in a woman of her years, to good digestion and excellent health; her love of fresh air, fruit and clear spring water. She usually drank from four to five tumblerfuls of water a day. She never ate to excess and frequently remarked: "I think more people suffer from over-eating than from insufficient food." An advocate of deep breathing, she  
  AUNT SARAH  A portrait of an older woman dressed in early twentieth century clothing. 
   spent as much of her time as she could spare from household duties in the open air.  Sarah Landis was not what one would call beautiful, but good and whole-souled looking. To quote her husband : "To me Sarah never looks so sweet and homelike when all 'fussed up' in her best black dress on special occasions, as she does when engaged daily household tasks around home, in her plain, neat, gray calico dress."  This dress was always covered with a large, spotlessly clean, blue gingham apron of small broken check, and she was very particular about having a certain-sized check. The apron had a patch pocket, which usually contained small twists or little wads of cord, which, like "The Old Ladies in Cranford," she picked up and saved for a possible emergency.  One of Aunt Sarah's special economies was the saving of twine and paper bags. The latter were always neatly folded, when emptied, and placed in a cretonne bag made for that purpose, hanging in a convenient corner of the kitcken.  Aunt Sarah's gingham apron was replaced afternoons by one made from fine, Lonsdale cambric, of ample proportions, and on special occasions she donned a hemstitched linen apron, inset at upper edge of hem with crocheted lace insertion, the work of her own deft fingers. Aunt Sarah's aprons, cut straight, on generous lines, were a part of her individuality.  Sarah Landis declared: "Happiness consists in giving and in serving others," and she lived up to the principles she advocated. She frequently quoted from the "Sons of Martha," by Kipling:   Lift ye the stone or cleave the wood, to make a path more fair or flat, Not as a ladder from earth to heaven, not as an altar to any creed, But simple service, simply given, to his own kind in their human need."  "I think this so fine," said Aunt Sarah, "and so true a sentiment that I am almost compelled to forgive Kipling for paying 'The female of the species is more deadly than the male.'"  Aunt Sarah's goodness was reflected in her face and in the  tones of her voice, which were soft and low, yet very decided. She possessed a clear, sweet tone, unlike the slow sweet tone, unlike the slow, peculiar drawl often ending with the rising inflection peculiar to many country folk among the "Pennsylvania Germans."  The secret of Aunt Sarah's charm lay in her goodness. Being always surrounded by a cheery atmosphere, she benefited all with whom she came in contact. She took delight in simple pleasures. She had the power of extracting happiness from the common, little every-day tasks and frequently remarked, "Don't strive to live without work, but to find more joy in your work." Her opinions were highly respected by every one in the neighborhood, and, being possessed of an unselfish disposition, she thought and saw good in every one; brought out the best in one. and made one long to do better, just to gain her approval, if for no higher reward. Sarah Landis was a loyal friend and one would think the following, by Mrs. Craik, applied to her:  "Oh, the comfort, the inexpressible comfort, of feeling safe with a person--having neither to weigh thoughts nor measure words, but pouring them all right out, just as they are--chaff and grain together, certain that a faithful hand will take and sift them, keep what is worth keeping and then with the breath of kindness blow the rest away."   She was never so happy as when doing an act of kindness for some poor unfortunate, and often said, "If 'twere not for God and good people, what would become of the unfortunate?" and thought like George McDonald. "If I can put one touch of rosy sunset into the life of any man or woman (I should add child) I shall feel that I have worked with God."  Aunt Sarah's sweet, lovable face was the first beheld by many a little, new-born infant; her voice, the first to hush its wailing cries as she cuddled it up to her motherly breast and oft with loving hands, softly closed the lids over eyes no longer able to see; whom the Gracious Master had taken into His keeping.  One day I overheard Aunt Sarah quote to a sorrowing friend these fine, true lines from Longfellow's "Registration" :"Let us be patient, these severe afflictions not from the grounf arise, but oftimes celestial benedictions assume the dark disguise."  
  THE OLD SPRING HOUSE  An illustration of an small, old house in the middle of a clearing. There is a large tree standing next to it and in the distance other buildings can be seen. 
  
  
  CHAPTER II.   MARY'S ARRIVAL AT THE FARM  The day preceding that of Mary's arrival at the farm was a busy one for Aunt Sarah, who, since early morning, had been preparing the dishes she knew Mary enjoyed. Pans of the whitest flakiest rolls, a large loaf of sweetest nut-brown, freshly-baked "graham bread," of which Mary was especially fond; and array of crumb-cakes and pies of every description covered the well-scrubbed table in the summer kitchen, situated a short distance from the house. A large, yellow earthenware bowl in the table contained a roll of rich, creamy "smier kase" just as it had been turned from the muslin bag, from which the "whey" had dripped over night; ready to be mixed with cream for the supper table. Pats of sweet, freshly-churned butter, buried in clover blossoms, were cooling in the old spring-house near by.  The farm bouse was guiltless of dust from cellar to attic. Aunt Sarah was a model housekeeper; she accomplished wonders, yet never appeared tired or flurried as less systematic housekeepers often do, who, with greater expenditure of energy, often accomplish less work. She took no unnecessary steps; made each one count, yet never appeared in haste to finish her work.  Said Aunt Sarah, "The lack of system in housework is what makes it drudgery. If young housekeepers would sit down and plan their work, then do it, they would save time and labor. When using the fire in the range for ironing or other purposes, use the oven for preparing dishes of food which require long, slow cooking, like baked beans, for instance. Bake a cake or a pudding, or a pan of quickly-made corn pone to serve with baked beans, for a hearty meal on a cold winter day. A dish of rice pudding placed in the oven requires very little attention, and when baked may be placed on ice until served. If this rule be followed, the young housewife will be surprised to find how much easier will be the task of preparing a meal later in the day, especially in hot weather.   The day following, John Landis drove to the railroad station several miles distant, to meet his niece. As Mary stepped from the train into the outstretched arms of her waiting Uncle, many admiring glances followed the fair, young girl. Her tan-gold naturally wavy, masses of hair rivaled ripened grain. The sheen of it resembled corn silk before it has been browned and crinkled by the sun. Her eyes matched in color the exquisite, violet-blue blossoms of the chicory weed. She possessed a rater large mouth, with upturned corners, which seemed made for smiles and when once you had been charmed with them, she had made an easy conquest of you forever. There was a sweet, winning personality about Mary which was as impossible to describe as to resist. One wondered how so much adorable sweetness could be embodied in one small maid. But Mary's sweetness of expression and charming manner covered a strong will and tenacity of purpose one would scarcely have believed possible, did they not have an intimate knowledge of the young girl's disposition. Her laugh, infectious, full of the joy of living, the vitality of youth and perfect health and happiness, reminded one of the lines: "A laugh is just like music for making living sweet."  Seated beside her Uncle in the carriage, Mary was borne swiftly through the town out into the country. It was one of those preternaturally quiet, sultry days when the whole universe appears lifeless and inert, free from loud noise, or sound of any description, days which we occasionally have in early Spring or Summer, when the stillness is oppressive.  Frequently at such times there is borne to the nostrils the faint, stifling scent of burning brush, indicating that land is being cleared by the forehanded, thrifty farmer for early planting. Often at such times, before a shower, may be distinctly heard the faintest twitter and "peep, peep" of young sparrows, the harsh "caw, caw" of the crow, and the song of the bobolink, poised on the swaying branch of a tall tree, the happiest bird of spring; the dozy, drowsy hum of bees ; the answering call of lusty young chanticleers, and the satisfied cackle of laying hens and motherly old biddies, surrounded by broods of downy, greedy little newly-hatched chicks. The shrill whistle of a distant locomotive startles one with its clear, resonant intonant, which on a less quiet day would pass unnoticed, which on a less enjoyed to the full the change from the past months of confinement  in a city school, and missed nothing of the beauty of the country and the smell of the good brown earth, as her Uncle drove swiftly homeward.  "Uncle John," said Mary, "tis easy to believe God made the country."  "Yes," rejoined her Uncle, "the country is good enough for me."  "With the exception of the one day in the mouth, when you attend the 'shriners' meeting' in the city," mischievously supplemented Mary, who knew her Uncle's liking for the Masonic Lodge of which he was a member, "and," she continued, "I brought you a picture for your birthday, which we shall celebrate tomorrow. The picture will please you, I know. It is entitled, ' I Love to Love a Mason, 'Cause a Mason Never Tells.'"  They passed cultivated farms. Inside many of the rail fences, inclosing fields of grain or clover, were planted numberless sour cherry trees, snowy with bloom, the ground underneath white with fallen petals. The air was sweet with the perfume of the half-opened buds on the apple trees in the near-by orchards and rose-like pink blossoms of the "flowering" crab-apple, in the door yards. Swiftly they drove through cool, green, leafy woods, crossing a wooden bridge spanning a small stream, so shallow that the stones at the bottom were plainly to be seen. A loud splash, as the sound of carriage wheels broke the uninterrupted silence, and a commotion in the water gave evidence of the sudden disappearance of several green-backed frogs, sunning themselves on a large, moss-grown rock, projecting above the water's edge; from shady nooks and crevices peeped clusters of early white violets; graceful maidenhair ferns, and hardier members of the fern family, called "Brake," uncurled their graceful, sturdy fronds from the carpet of green moss and lichen at the base of tree trunks, growing along the winter's edge. Partly hidden by rocks along the bank of the Stream, nestled a few belated cup-shaped anemones or "Wind Flowers," from which most of the petals had blown, they being-growth in the woods, in passing, could be seen the small buds of the azalea or wild honeysuckle, "Sheep's Laurel," the deep pink buds on the American Judas tree, trailing vines of "Tea Berry," and beneath dead leaves one caught an occasional glimpse of fragrant, pink arbutus. In marshy places beside the creek,  sawying in the wind from slender stems, grew straw-colored, bell-shaped blossoms of "Adder's Tongue" or "Dog Tooth Violet," with their mottled green, spike-shaoed leaves. In the shadow of a large rock grew dwarf huckleberry bushes, wild strawberry vines, and among grasses of many varieties grew patches of white and pink-tinted Alsatian clover.  Leaving behind the spicy, fragrant,"woodsy" smell of winter-green, birch and sassafras, and the faint, sweet scent of the creamy, wax-like blossoms of "Mandrake" or May apple, peeping from beneath large, umbrella-like, green leaves they emerged at last from the dim, cool shadows of the woods into the warm, bright sunlight again.  Almost before Mary realized it, the farm house could be seen in the distance, and her Uncle called her attention to his new, red barn, which had been built since her last visit to the farm, and which, in her Uncle's estimation, was of much greater importance than the house.  Mary greeted with pleasure the old landmarks to her on former visits. They passed the small, stone school house at the crossroads, and in a short time the horses turned obediently into the lane leading to the barn-a country lane in very much a tangle of blackberry vines, wild rose bushes, by farmers called "Pasture Roses," interwoven with bushes of sumach, wild carrots and golden rod.  Mary insisted that her Uncle drive directly- to the barn, as was his usual custom, while she was warmly welcomed at the farm house gate by her Aunt. As her Uncle led away the horses, he said, "I will soon join you. Mary, 'to break of our bread and eat of our salt.' as they say in the 'Shrine.'"  On their way to the house. Mary remarked : "I am so glad we reached here before dusk. The country is simply beautiful! Have you ever noticed, Aunt Sarah, what a symphony in green is the yard? Look at the buds on the maples and lilacs--a faint yellow green--and the blue-green pine tree near by; the leaves of the German iris are another shade; the grass, dotted with yellow dandelions, and blue violets; the straight, prim, reddish-brown stalks of the peonies before the leaves have unfolded, all roofed over with the blossom-covered branches of pear, apple and 'German Prune' tree. Truly, this must resemble Paradise!"  "Yes." assented her Aunt,"I never knew blossoms to remain on  the pear trees so long a time. We have had no 'blossom shower' as yet to scatter them, but there will be showers tonight, I think, or I am no prophet. I feel rain in the atmosphere, and Sibylla said a few moments ago she heard a 'rain bird' in the mulberry tree."  "Aunt Sarah," inquired Mary, "is the rhubarb large enough to use?"  "Yes, indeed, we have baked rhubarb pies and have had a surfeit of dandelion salad or 'Salat,' as our neighbors designate it. Your Uncle calls 'dandelion greens' the farmers' spring tonic; then and ' celadine ' that plant you see growing by the side of the house. Later in
the season it bears small, yellow flowers not alike a very small buttercup blossom, and it is said to be an excelent remedy for chills and fevers, and it tastes almost as bitter as quinine. There are bushels of dandelion blossoms, some of which we shall pick tomorrow, and form them make dandelion wine."  "And what use will my thrifty Aunt make of the blue violets," mischievously inquired Mary. 
  "The  violets ," replied her Aunt, "I shall dig up carefully with some earth adhering to their roots and place them in a glass bowl for a centrepiece on the table for my artistic and beauty-loving niece; and if kept moist, you will be surprised at the length of time they will remain 'a thing of beauty' if not a 'joy forever.'And later, Mary, from them I'll teach you to make violet beads." 
  "Aunt Sarah, notice that large robin endeavoring to pull a worm from the ground. Do you suppose the same birds return here from the South every summer?"  "Certainly, I do."  "That old mulberry tree from the berries of which you made delicious pies and marmalade last Summer, is it dead?"  "No; only late about getting its Spring outfit of leaves." 
  
  CHAPTER III.   SCHUGGENHAUS TOWNSHIP.  "Schuggenhaus," said Sarah Landis, speaking to her niece, Mary Midleton, "is one of the largest and most populous townships in Bucks County, probably so named by the early German settlers, some of whom, I think, were my father's ancestors, as they came originally from Zweibrucken, Germany, and settled in Schuggenhaus Township. Schuggenhaus is one of the most fertile townships in Bucks County and one of the best cultivated; farming is our principal occupation, and the population of the township today is composed principally of the descendants of well-to-do Germans, frequently called 'Pennsylvania Dutch.'"  "I have often heard them called by that name," said Mary. "Have you forgotten, Aunt Sarah, you promised to tell me something interesting about the first red clover introduced in Bucks County?"  "Red clover," replied her Aunt, "that having bright, crimson-pink heads, is the most plentiful and the most common variety of clover; but knowing how abundantly it grows in different parts of the country at the present time, one would scarcely have believed, in olden times, that it would ever be so widely distributed as it now is.  "One reason clover does so well in this country is that the fertilization of the clover is produced by pollenation by the busy little bumble-bee, who carries the pollen from blossom to blossom, and clover is dependent upon these small insects for fertilization, as without them clover would soon die out."  "I admire the feathery, fuzzy, pink-tipped, rabbit-foot clover," said Mary; "it is quite fragrant, and usually covered with butterflies. It makes such very pretty bouquets when you gather huge bunches of it."  "No, Mary, I think you are thinking of Alsatian clover, which is similar to white clover. The small, round heads are cream color, tinged with pink; it is very fragrant and sweet and grows along  the roadside and, like the common white clover, is a favorite with bees. The yellow hop clover we also find along the roadside. As the heads of clover mature, they turn yellowish brown and resemble dried hops; sometimes yellow, brown and tan blossoms are seen on one branch. The cultivation of red clover was introduced here a century ago, and when in bloom the fields attracted great attention. Being the first ever grown in this part of Bucks County, people came for miles to look at it, the fence around the fields some days being lined with spectators, I have been told by my grandfather. I remember when a child nothing appeared to me blue flowers. I also remember the fields of broom-corn. Just think! We made our own brooms, wove linen from the flax raised on our farm and made our own tallow candles. Mary, from what a thrifty and hard-working lot of ancestors you are descended! You inherit from your mother your love of work and from your father your love of books. Your father's uncle was a noted Shakespearean scholar." 
  THE OLD MILL WHEEL  A photograph of an old mill with a large wheel and a shed attached. 
   Many old-time industries are passing away. Yet Sarah Landis was a housewife of the old school and still cooked apple butter or "Lodt Varrik," as the Germans call it; made sauerkraut and hard soap, and baked old-fashioned "German" rye bread on the hearth, which owed its excellence not only to the fact of its being hearth baked but to the rye flour being ground in an old mill in a near-by town, prepared by the old process of grinding between mill-stones instead of the more modern roller process. This picture of the old mill, taken by Fritz Schmidt, shows it is not artistic, but, like most articles of German manufacture, the mill was built more for its usefulness than to please the eye. 
  THE OLD MILL  A photograph of an old mill with a mill wheel and trees surrounding the area. 
  "Aunt Sarah, what is pumpernickel?" inquiry Mary, "is it like rye bread?"  "No, my dear, not exactly, it is a dark-colored bread, used in some parts of Germany. Professor Schmidt tells me the bread is usually composed of a mixture of barley flour and rye flour. Some I have eaten looks very much like our own brown bread. Pumpernickel is considered a very wholesome bread by the Germans--and I presume one might learn to relish it, but I should prefer  good, sweet, home-made rye bread. I was told by an old gentleman who came to this country from Germany when a boy, that pumpernickel was used in the German army years ago, and was somewhat similar to 'hard tack,' furnished our soldiers in the Civil War. But I cannot vouch for the truth of this assertion."  "Aunt Sarah," said Mary later, "Frau Schmidt tells me the Professor sends his rye to the mill and requests that every part of it be ground without separating-making what he calls 'whole rye flour,' and from this Frau Schmidt bakes wholesome, nutritious bread which they Call 'pumpernickel.' She tells me she uses about one-third of this 'whole rye floor' to two-thirds white bread flour when baking bread, and she considers bread made from this whole grain more wholesome and nutritious than the bread made from our fine rye flour." 
  
  CHAPTER IV.   JOHN LANDIS.  The Bucks County farmer, John Landis, rather more scholarly in appearance than men ordinarily found in agricultural districts, was possessed of an adust complexion, caused by constant exposure to wind and weather; tall and spare, without an ounce of superfluous fat; energetic, and possessed of remarkable powers of endurance. He had a kindly, benevolent expression; his otherwise plain face was redeemed by fine, expressive brown eyes. Usually silent and preoccupied, and almost taciturn, yet he possessed a fund of dry humor. An old-fashioned Democrat, his wife was a Republican. He usually accompanied Aunt Sarah to her church, the Methodist, although he was a member of the German Reformed, and declared he had changed his religion to please her, but change his politics, never. A member of the Masonic Lodge, his only diversion was an occasional trip to the city with a party of the "boys" to attend a meeting of the "Shriners."  Aunt Sarah protested. "The idea, John, at your age, being out so late at night and returning from the city on the early milk train the following morning, and then being still several miles from home. It's scandalous!"  He only chuckled to himself; and what the entertainment had been, which was provided at Lulu Temple, and which he had so thoroughly enjoyed, was left to her imagination. His only remark when questioned was: "Sarah, you're not in it. You are not a 'Shriner.'" And as John had in every other particular fulfilled her ideal of what constitutes a good husband, Sarah, like the wise woman she was, allowed the subject to drop.  A good, practical, progressive farmer, John Landis constantly read, studied and pondered over the problem of how to produce the largest results at least cost of time and labor. His crops were skillfully planted in rich soil, carefully cultivated and usually harvsted earlier than those of his neighbors. One summer he raised potatoes so large that many of them weighed one pound each, and  new potatoes and green peas, fresh from the garden, invariably appeared on Aunt Sarah's table the first of July, and sometimes earlier. I have known him to raise cornstalks which reached a height of thirteen feet, which were almost equaled by his wife's sunflower stalks, which usually averaged nine feet in height.  Aunt Sarah, speaking one day to Mary, said: "Your Uncle John is an unusually silent man. I have heard him remark that when people talk continuously they are either very intelligent or tell untruths." He, happening to overhear her remark, quickly retorted:  "The man who speaks a dozen tongues, When all is said and done, Don't hold a match to him who knows How to keep still in one."  When annoyed at his wife's talkativeness, her one fault in her husband's eyes, if he thought she had a fault, he had a way at saying, "Alright, Sarah, Alright," as much as to say "that is final; you have said enough," in his peculiar, quick manner of speaking which Aunt Sarah never resented, he being invariably kind and considerate in other respects.  John Landis was a successful farmer because he loved his work, and found joy in it. While not unmindful of the advantages possessed by the educated farmer of the present day, he said, " 'Tis not college lore our boys need so much as practical education to develop their efficiency. While much that we eat and wear comes out of the ground, we should have more farmers, the only way to lower the present high cost of living, which is such a perplexing problem to the housewife. There is almost no limit to what might be accomplished by some of our bright boys should they make agriculture a study. Luther Burbank says, 'To add but one kernel of corn to each ear grown in this country in a single year would increase the supply five million bushels.'" 
  
  CHAPTER V.   THE OLD FARM HOUSE AND GARDEN.  The old unpainted farm house, built of logs a century ago, had changed in the passing years to a grayish tint. An addition had been built to the house several years before Aunt Sarah's occupancy. The sober hue of the house harmonized with the great, gnarled old trunk of the meadow willow nearby. Planted when the house was built, it spread its great branches protectingly over it. A wild clematis growing at the foot of the tree twined its tendrils around the masstive trunk until in late summer they had become almost covering it with feathery blossoms. 
  Old Corn Crib  A photograph of a building in a field. 
  Near by stood an antique arbor, covered with thickly-clustering vines, in season bending with the weight of "wild-scented" grapes, their fragrance mingling with the odor of "Creek Mint" growing near by a small streamlet and filling the air with a 
 deliious  fragrance. The mint had been used in earlier years by Aunt Sarah's grandfather as a beverage, which he preferred to any other. 
  The New Barn  A photograph of a large barn with a fence around the parameter. 
 
  From a vine clambering up the grape arbor trellies, in the fall of the year, hung numerous orange-colored balsam apples, which opened, when ripe, disclosing bright crimson interior and seeds. These apples, Aunt Sarah claimed, if placed in alcohol and applied 
  THE OLD FARM HOUSE  A photograph of a two story house with a front porch and several trees surrounding it. 
    externally, possessed great medicinal value as a specific for  rheumatism . 
  A short distance from the house stood the newly-built red barn, facing the pasture lot. On every side stretched fields which, in summer waved with wheat, oats, rye and buckwheat, and the corn crib stood close by, ready for the harvest to fill it to over-flowing. Beside the farm house door stood a tall, white oleandor, planted in a large, green-painted wooden tub. Near by, in a glazed earthenware pot, grew the old-fashioned lantana plant, covered with clusters of tiny blossoms, of various shades of orange, red and pink.  In flower beds outlined by clam shells which had been freshly whitewashed blossomed fuchsias, bleeding hearts, verbenas, dusty millers, sweet clove-scented pinks, old-fashioned, dignified purple digitalis or ioxglove, stately pink Princess Feather, various brilliant-hued zinnias, or more commonly called "Youth and Old Age," and as gayly colored, if more humble and lowly, portulacas; the fragrant white, star-like blossoms of the nicotiana, or "Flowering Tobacco," which, like the yellow primrose, are particularly fragrant at sunset. Geraniums of every hue, silver-leaved and rose-scented; yellow marigolds and those with brown, velvety petals; near by the pale green and white-mottled leaves of the plant called "Snow on the Mountain" and in the centre of one of the large, round flower beds, grew sturdy "Castor Oil Beans," their large, copper-bronze leaves almost covering the tiny blue forget-me-nots growing beneath. Near the flower bed grew a thrifty hush of pink-flowering almonds; not far distant grew a spreading "shrub" bush, covered with fragrant brown buds, and beside it a small tree of pearly-white snowdrops.  Sarah Landis loved the wholesome, earthy odors of growing plants and delighted in her flowers, particularly the perennials, which were planted promiscuously all over the yard. I have frequently heard her quote:"One is nearer God's heart in a garden than any place else on earth." And she would say. "I love the out-of-door life, in touch with the earth; the natural life of man or woman." Inside the fence of the kitchen garden were planted straight rows of both red and yellow currants, and several gooseberry bushes. In one corner of the garden, near the summer kitchen, stood a large bush of black currants, from the yellow, sweet-scented blossoms of which Aunt Sarah's bees, those  "Heaven instructed mathematicians," sucked honey. Think Aunt Sarah's buckwheat cakes, eaten with honey made from currant, clover, buckwheat and dandelion blossoms!  Her garden was second to none in Bucks County. She planted tomato seeds in boxes and placed them in a sunny window, raising her plants early; hence she had ripe tomatoes before any one else the neighborhood. Her peas were earlier also, and her beets and potatoes were the largest; her corn the sweetest; and, as her asparagus bed was always well salted, her asparagus was the finest to be had.  Through the centre of the garden patch, on either side to the walk, were large flower beds, a blaze of brilliant color from early Spring, when the daffodils blossomed, until frost killed the dahlias, asters, scarlet sage, sweet Williams, Canterbury bells, pink and white snapdragon, spikes of perennial, fragrant, white heliotrope blue larkspur, four o'clocks, bachelor buttons and many other dear, old-fashioned flowers. The dainty pink, funnel-shaped blossoms of the hardy swamp "Rose Mallow'" bloomed the entire Summer, the last flowers to be touched by frost, vying in beauty with the pink monthly roses planted near by.  Children who visited Aunt Sarah delighted in the small Jeru-salem cherry tree, usually covered with bright scarlet berries which was planted near the veranda, and they never tired pinching the tiny leaves of the sensitive plant to see them quickly droop, as if dead, then slowly unfold and straighten as if a thing of fire.  Visitors to the farm greatly admired the large, creamy-white, lily--like blossoms of the datura. Farthest from the house were the useful herb beds, tilled with parsley, hoarhound, sweet marjoram, lavender, saffron, sage, sweet basil, summer savory and silver-striped rosemary or "old man," as it was commonly called by country folk.  Tall clusters of phlox, a riot of color in midsummer, crimson-eyed, white and rose-colored blossoms topping the tall stems, and clusters of billiant-red bergamot. Near by had been growing, from time immemorial, a cluster of green and white striped grass without which no door yard in this section of Bucks County was considered complete in olden times. Near by, silvery plumes pampas grass gently swayed on their reed-like stems. Even the garden was not without splashes of color where, between rows of vegetables, grew pale, pink-petaled poppies, seeming to have  scarcely a foothold in the rich soil. But the daintiest, sweetest bed of all, and the one that Mary enjoyed most, was where the lilies of the valley grew in the shade near a large, white lilac bush. Here, on a rustic bench beneath an old apple tree, stitching on her embroidery, she dreamed happy dreams of her absent lover, and planned for the life they were to live together some day, in the home he was striving to earn for her by his own manly exertions; and she assiduously studied and pondered over Aunt Sarah's teaching and counsel, knowing them to be wise and good.  A short distance from the farm house, where the old orchard sloped down to the edge of the brook, grew tall meadow rue, with feathery clusters of green and white flowers; and the green, gold-lined, bowl-shaped blossoms of the "Cow Lily," homely step-sisters of the fragrant, white pond lily, surrounded by thick, waxy, green leaves, lazily floated on the surface of the water from long stems in the bed of the creek, and on the bank a carpet was formed by golden-yellow, creeping buttercups.  In the side yard grew two great clumps of iris, or, as it is more commonly called, "Blue Flag." Its blossoms, dainty as rare orchids, with lily-like, violet-veined petals of palest-tinted mauve and purple.  On the sunny side of the old farm house, facing the East, where at early morn the sun shone bright and warm, grew Aunt Sarah's pansies, with velvety, red-brown petals, golden-yellow and dark purple. They were truly "Heart's Ease," gathered with a lavish hand, and sent as gifts to friends who were ill. The more she picked the faster they multiplied, and came to many a sick bed "sweet messengers of Spring."  If Aunt Sarah had a preference for one particular flower, 'twas the rose, and they well repaid the time and care she lavished on them. She had pale-tinted blush roses, with hearts of deepest pink; rockland and prairie and hundred-leaf roses, pink and crimson ramblers, but the most highly-prized roses of her collec-tion were an exquisite, deep salmon-colored "Marquis De Sinety" and an old-fashioned pink moss rose, which grew beside a large bush of mock-orange, the creamy blossoms of the latter almost as fragrant as real orange blossoms of the sunny Southland. Not far distant planted in a small bed by themselves, grew old-fashioned, sweet-scented, double petunias, ragged, ripple, ruffled corollas of white, with splotches of brilliant crimson and purple,  their slender stems scarcely strong enough to support the heavy blossoms.  In one of the sunniest spots in the old garden grew Aunt Sarah's latest acquisition. "The Butterfly Bush," probably so named on account of its graceful stems, covered with spikes of tiny, lilac-colored blossoms, over which continually hovered large, gorgeously-hued butterflies, vying with the flowers in brilliancy of color, from early June until late Summer.  Aunt Sarah's sunflowers, or "Sonnen Blume," as she liked to call them, planted along the garden fence to feed chickens and birds alike, were a sight worth seeing. The birds generally confiscated the larger portion of seeds. A pretty sight it was to set a flock of wild canaries, almost covering the tops of the largest sunflowers, busily engaged picking out the rich, oily seeds.  Aunt Sarah loved the golden flowers, which always appeared to be nodding to the sun, and her sunflowers were particularly fine, some being as much as fifty inches in circumference.  A bouquet of the smaller ones was usually to be seen in a quaint, old, blue-flowered, gray jar on the farm house veranda in Summertime. Earlier in the season blossoms of the humble artichoke, which greatly resemble small sunflowers, or large yellow daisies, filled the jar. Failing either of these, she gathered large bouquets of golden-rod or wild carrot blossoms, both of which grew in profusion along the country lanes and roadside near the farm. But the old gray jar never held a bouquet more beautiful than the one of bright, blue "fringed gentians," gathered by Aunt Sarah in the Fall of the year, several miles distant from the farm. 
  
  CHAPTER VI.   MARY CONFIDES IN AUNT SARAH AND GIVES HER VIEWS ON SUFFRAGE FOR WOMEN.  "There's no deny'n women are foolish, God A'mighty made them to match the men."  A short time after her arrival at the farm Mary poured into the sympathetic ear of Aunt Sarah her hopes and plans. Her lover, Ralph Jackson, to whom she had become engaged the past Winter, held a position with the Philadelphia Electric Company, and was studying hard outside working hours. His ambition was to become an electrical engineer. He was getting fair wages, and wished Mary to marry him at once. She confessed she loved Ralph too well to marry him, ignorant as she was of economical housekeeping and cooking.  Mary, early left an orphan, had studied diligently to fit herself for a kindergarten teacher, so she would be capable of earning her own living on leaving school, which accounted for her lack of knowledge of housework, cooking, etc.  Aunt Sarah, loving Mary devotedly, and knowing the young man of her choice to be clean, honest and worthy, promised to do all in her power to make their dream of happiness come true. Learning from Mary that Ralph was thin and pale from close confinement, hard work and study, and of his intention of taking a short vacation, she determined he should spend it on the farm, where she would be able to "mother him."  "You acted sensibly, Mary," said her Aunt, "in refusing to marry Ralph at the present time, realizing your lack of knowledge of housework and inability to manage a home. Neither would you know how to spend the money provided by him economically and wisely, and, in this age of individual efficiency, a business knowledge of housekeeping is almost as important in making a happy home as is love. I think it quite as necessary that a woman who marries should understand housekeeping in all its varied branches  as that the man who marries should understand his trade or profession; for, without the knowledge of moans to gain a livelihood (however great his love for a woman), how is the man to hold that woman's love and affection unless he is able by his own exertions to provide her with necessities, comforts, and, perhaps, in later years, luxuries? And in return, the wife should consider it her duty and pleasure to know how to do her work systematically; learn the value of different foods and apply the knowledge gained daily in preparing them; study to keep her husband in the best of health, physically and mentally. Then will his efficiency be greater and he will be enabled to do his 'splendid best' in whatever position in life he is placed, be he statesman or hod-carrier. What difference if an honest heart beat beneath a laborer's hickory shirt, or one of fine linen? 'One hand, if it's true, is as good as another, no matter how brawny or rough.' Mary, do not think the trivial affairs of the home beneath your notice, and do not imagine any work degrading which tends to the betterment of the home. Remember, 'Who sweeps a room as for Thy law, makes that and the action fine.'  "Our lives are all made up of such small, commonplace things and this is such a commonplace old world, Mary. 'The commonplace earth and the commonplace sky make up the commonplace day,' and 'God must have loved common people, or He would not have made so many of them.' And, what if we are commonplace? We cannot all be artists, poets and sculptors. Yet, how frequently we see people in commonplace surroundings, possessing the soul of an artist, handicapped by physical disability or lack of means! We are all necessary in the great, eternal plan. 'Tis not good deeds alone for which we receive our reward, but for the performance of duty well done, in however humble circumstances our lot is cast. Is it not Lord Houghton who says: 'Do not grasp at the stars, but do life's plain, common work as it comes, certain that daily duties and daily bread are the sweetest things of life.' I consider a happy home in the true sense of the word one of the greatest of blessings. How important is the work of the house-mother and homemaker who creates the home ! There can be no happiness there unless the wheels of the domestic machinery are oiled by loving care and kindness to make them run smoothly, and the noblest work a woman can do is training and rearing her children. Suffrage, the right of woman to vote; will it not take  women from the home? I am afraid the home will then suffer in consequence. Will man accord woman the same reverence she has received in the past? Should she have equal political rights? A race lacking respect for women would never advance socially or politically. I think women could not have a more important part in the government of the land than in rearing and educating their children to be good, useful citizens. In what nobler work could women engage than in work to promote the comfort and well-being of the ones they love in the home? I say, allow men to make the laws, as God and nature planned. I think women should keep to the sphere God made them for--the home. Said Gladstone, 'Woman is the most perfect when most womanly.' There is nothing, I think, more despicable than a masculine, mannish woman, unless it be an effeminate, sissy man. Dr. Clarke voiced my sentiments when he said:'Man is not superior to woman, nor woman to man. The relation of the sexes is one of equality, not of better or worse, of higher and lower. The loftiest ideal of humanity demands that each shall be perfect in its kind and not be hindered in its best work. The lily is not inferior to the rose, nor the oak superior to the clover; yet the glory of the lily is one and the glory of the oak is another, and the use of the oak is not the use of the clover.'  "This present-day generation demands of women greater efficiency in the home than ever before. And Mary, many of the old-time industries which I had been accustomed to as a girl have passed away. Eletricity and numerous labor-saving devices make household tasks easier, eliminating some altogether. When housekeeping you will find time to devote to many important questions of the day which we old-time housekeepers never dreamed of having. Considerable thought should be given to studying to improve and simplify conditions of the home-life. It is your duty. Obtain books; study food values and provide those foods which nourish the body, instead of spending time uselessly preparing dainties to tempt a jaded appetite. Don't spoil Ralph when you marry him. Give him good, wholesome food, and plenty of it; but although the cooking of food takes up much of a housekeeper's time, it is not wise to allow it to take up one's time to the exclusion of everything else. Mary, perhaps my views are old-fashioned. I am not a 'new woman' in any sense of the word. The new woman may take her place beside man in the business world and prove equally  as efficient, but I do not think woman should invade man's sphere any more than he should assume her duties."  "Aunt Sarah. I am surprised to hear you talk in that manner about woman's sphere," replied Mary, "knowing what a success you are in the home, and how beautifully you manage everything you undertake. I felt, once you recognized the injustice done women in not allowing them to vote, you would feel differently, and since women are obliged to obey the laws, should they not have a voice in choosing the lawmakers? When you vote, it will not take you out of the home. You and Uncle John will merely stop on your way to the store, and instead of Uncle John going in to write and register what he thinks should be done and by whom it should be done, you too will express your opinion. This will likely be twice a year. By doing this, no woman loses her womanliness, goodness or social position, and to these influences the vote is but another influence. I know there are many things in connection with the right of equal suffrage with which you do not sympathize.  "Aunt Sarah, let me tell you about a dear friend of mine who taught school with me in the city. Emily taught a grammar grade, and did not get the same salary the men teachers received for doing the same work, which I think was unfair. Emily studied and frequently heard and read ahout what had been done in Colorado and other States where women vote. She got us all interested, and the more we learned about the cause the harder we worked for it. Emily married a nice, big, railroad man. They bought a pretty little house in a small town, had three lovely children and were very happy. More than ever as time passed Emily realized the need of woman's influence in the community. It is true, I'll admit, Aunt Sarah, housekeeping and especially homemaking are the great duties of every woman, and to provide the most wholesome, nourishing food possible for the family is the duty of every mother, as the health, comfort and happiness of the family depend so largely on the 
 common sense  (only another name for efficiency) and skill of the homemaker, and the wise care and thought she expends on the preparation of wholesome, nutritious food in the home, either the work of her own hands or prepared under her direction. You can 
 not  look after those duties without getting 
 outside  of your home, especially when you live like Emily, in a town where the conditions are so different from living as you  do on a farm in the country. Milk, bread and water are no longer controlled by the woman in her home, living in cities and towns; and just because women want to look out for their families they should have a voice in the larger problems of municipal housekeeping. To return to Emily, she did not bake her own bread, as you do, neither did she keep a cow, but bought milk and bread to feed the children. Wasn't it her duty to leave the home and see where these products were produced, and if they were sanitary? And, knowing the problem outside the home would so materially affect the health, and perhaps lives, of her children, she felt it her distinctive duty to keep house in a larger sense. When the children became old enough to attend school, Emily again took up her old imtrest in schools. She began to realize how much more just it would be if an equal number of women were on the school board."  "But what did the husband think of all this?" inquired Aunt Sarah, dubiously.  "Oh, Tom studied the case, too, at first just to tease Emily, but he soon became as enthusiastic as Emily. He said. 'The first time you are privileged to vote, Emily, I will hire an automobile to take you to the polls in style.' But poor Emily was left alone with her children last winter. Tom died of typhoid fever. Contracted it from the bad drainage. They lived in a town not yet safe-guarded with sewerage. Now Emily is a taxpayer as well as a mother, and she has no say as far as the town and schools are concerned. There are many cases like that, where widows and un-married women own property, and they are in no way represented. And think of the thousands and thousands of women who have no home to stay in and no babies to look after."  "Mary, Mary! Do stop to take breath. I never thought when I started this subject I would have an enthusiastic suffragist with whom to deal."  "I am glad you started the subject, Aunt Sarah, because there is so much to be said for the cause. I saw you glance at the clock and I see it is time to prepare supper. But some day I'm going to stop that old clock and bring down some of my books on 'Woman's Suffrage' and you'll be surprised to hear what they have done in States where equal privileges were theirs. I am sure 'twill not be many years before every State in the Union will give women the right of suffrage."   After Mary retired that evening Aunt Sarah had a talk with her John, whom she knew needed help on the farm. As a result of the conference, Mary wrote to Ralph the following day, asking him to spend his vacation on the farm as a "farm hand." Needless to say, the offer was gladly accepted by Ralph, if for no other reason than to be near the girl he loved.  Ralph came the following week--"a strapping big fellow," to quote Uncle John, being several inches over six feet.  "All you need, young chap," said Mary's Uncle, "is plenty of good, wholesome food of Sarah's and Mary's preparing, and I'll see that you get plenty of exercise in the fresh air to give you an appetite to enjoy it, and you'll get a healthy coat of tan on your pale cheeks before the Summer is ended."  Ralph Jackson, or "Jack," as he was usually called by his friends, an orphan like Mary, came of good, old Quaker stock, his mother having died immediately after giving birth to her son. His father, supposed to be a wealthy contractor, died when Ralph was seventeen, having lost his fortune through no fault of his own, leaving Ralph penniless.  Ralph Jackson possessed a good face, a square, determined jaw, sure sign of a strong will and quick temper; these Berserker traits he inherited from his father; rather unusual in a Quaker. He possessed a head of thick, coarse, straight brown hair, and big honest eyes. One never doubted his word, once it had been given. 'Twas good as his bond. This trait he inherited also from his father, noted for his truth and integrity. Ralph was generous to a fault. When a small boy he was known to take off his shoes and give them to a poor little Italian (who played a violin on the street for pennies) and go home barefoot.  Ralph loved Mary devotedly, not only because she fed him well at the farm, as were his forefathers, the "Cave Men," fed by their mates in years gone by, but he loved her first for her sweetness of disposition and lovable ways; later, for her quiet unselfishness and lack of temper over trifles--so different from himself.  When speaking to Mary of his other fine qualities, Aunt Sarah said: "Ralph is a manly young fellow; likeable, I'll admit, but his hasty temper is a grave fault in my eyes."  Mary replied, "Don't you think men are very queer, anyway, Aunt Sarah? I do, and none of us is perfect."  
  RALPH JACKSON  A portrait of a clean cut man dressed in a suit and tie. 
    To Mary, Ralph's principal charm lay in his strong forceful way of surmounting difficulties, she having a disposition so different. Mary had a sweet, motherly way seldom met with in so young a girl, and this appealed to Ralph, he having never known "mother love," and although not at all inclined to be sentimental, he always called Mary his "Little Mother Girl" because of her motherly ways.  "Well," continued Mary's Aunt, "a quick temper is one of the most difficult faults to overcome that flesh is heir to, hut Ralph, his temper and learn to control it, knowing that unless he does so it will handicap him in his career. Still, a young girl will overlook many faults in the man she loves. Mary, ere marrying, one should be sure that no love be lacking to those entering these sacred bonds. "Tis not for a day, but for a lifetime, to the right thinking. Marriage, as a rule, is too lightly entered into in this Twentieth Century of wasy divorces, and but few regard matrimony in its true holy relation, ordinated by our Creator. If it be founded on the tower of enduring love and not ephemeral passion, it is unassailable, lasting in faith and honor until death breaks the sacred union and annuls the vows pledged at God's holy altar."  
  ROCK VALLEY  An illustration of a Valley with large Rocks and Trees. 
  "Well," replied Mary, as her Aunt paused to take breath, "I am sure of my love for Ralph."   "God grant you may both be happy," responded her Aunt.   "Mary, did you ever hear this Persian proverb? You will understand why I have so much to say after hearing it.   "Says a proverb of Persia provoking mirth; When this world was created by order divine. Ten measures of talk were put down on the earth. And the woman took nine.' "  Speaking to Mary of life on the farm one day, Ralph laughingly said: "I am taught something new every day. Yesterday your Uncle told me it was 'time to plant corn when oak leaves were large as squirrels' ears.' " Ralph worked like a Trojan. In a short time both his hands and face took on a butternut hue. He became strong and robust. Mary called him her "Cave Man," and it taxed the combined efforts of Aunt Sarah and Mary to provide food to satisfy the ravenous appetite Mary's "Cave Man" developed. And often, after a busy day, tired but happy, Mary fell poplar outside her bedroom window.  But country life on a farm has its driveions. One of Mary's and Ralph's greatest pleasures after a busy day at the farm was a drive about the surrounding country early Summer evenings, frequently accompanied by either Elizabeth or Pauline Schmidt, their nearest neighbors.  One of the first places visited by them was a freak of nature called "Rocky Valley." situated at no great distance from the farm.   
  PROFESSOR SCHMIDT  An illustration of an Old Guy with White Beard, holding a Folded Paper in his Hand. 
 
 
   CHAPTER VII.  PROFESSOR SCHMIDT.  A small contury place named "Five Oaks," a short distance form "CLear Spring" farm, was owned by a very worthy and highly-educated, but rather eccentric, German professor. He came originally from Heidelberg, but had occupied the position of Professor; a perfect Lord Chesterfield in manners. Very tall, thin almost to emaciation, although possessed of excellent health; refined, scholarly looking; a rather long, hooked nose, faded, pale-blue eyes; snowy, flowing "Lord Dundreary" whiskers, usually parted in the centre and twisted to a point on either side with the exceedingly long, bony lingers of his well-kept, aristocratic-looking white hands. He had an abrupt, quick, nervous manner when speaking. A fringe of thin, white hair showed at the lower edge of the black silk skull cap which he invariably wore about home, and in the absence of this covering for his bald head, he would not have looked natural to his friends.  The Professor always wore a suit of well-brushed, "shiny" black broadcloth, and for comfort old-fashioned soft kid "gaiters," with elastic in the sides. He was a man with whome one did not easily become acquainted, having very decided opinions on most subjects. He possessed exquisite taste, a passionate love of music, flowers and all things beautiful; rather visionary, poetical and a dreamer; he was not practical, like his wife; warm-hearted, impulsive, energetic Frau Schmidt. who was noted for her executive ability. I can imagine the old Professor saying as Mohammed has been quoted as saying, "Had I two loaves, I would sell one and buy hyacinths to feed my soul." Impulsive, generous to a fault, quick to take offense, withal warm-hearted, kind and loyal to his friends, he was beloved by the the students, who declared that "Old Snitzy" always played fair when he was obliged to reprimand them for thrir numerous pranks, which ended sometimes. I am  Obliged to confess, with disastrous results. The dignified old Professor would have raised his mild, blue, spectacled eyes in astonishment had he been so unfortunate as to have overheard the boys, to whom he was greatly attached, call their dignified preceptor by such a nickname.  The Professor's little black-eyed German wife, many years younger than her husband, had been, before her marriage, teacher of domestic science in a female college in a large city. "She-was a most excellent housekeeper," to quote the Professor, and "a good wife and mother."  The family consisted of "Fritz," a boy of sixteen, with big. innocent, baby-blue eyes like his father, who idolized his only son. who was alike a joy and a torment. Fritz attended the university in a near-by town, and was usually head of the football team. He was always at the front in any mischief whatever, was noted for getting into scrapes innumerable through his love of fun, yet he possessed such a good-natured, unselfish, happy-go-lucky disposition that one always forgave him.  Black-eyed, red-cheeked Elizabeth was quick and impulsive, like her mother. A very warm and lasting friendship sprung up between merry Elizabeth and serious Mary Midleton during Mary's Summer on the farm, although not at all alike in either looks or disposition, and Elizabeth was Mary's junior by several years.  The third, last and least of the Professor's children was Pauline, or "Pollykins," as she was always called by her brother Fritz, the seven-year-old pet and baby of the family. A second edition of Fritz, the same innocent, questioning, violet-blue eyes, fair complexion, a kissable little mouth and yellow, kinky hair, she won her way into every one's heart and became greatly attached to Mary, who was usually more patient with the little maid (who, I must confess, was sometimes very willful) than was her sister Elizabeth. Mary, who had never been blessed with a sister, dearly children, and thought small "Polly" adorable and never wearied telling her marvelous fairy tales.   
  FRAU SCHMIDT  An illustration of a Middle Aged Lady Standing in a Garden. 
  
 
   CHAPTER VIII.  USES OF AN OLD-FASHIONED WARDROBE.  Shortly after Mary's advent at the farm she one day said: "Aunt Sarah, the contents of this old trunk are absolutely worthless to me; perhaps they may be used by you for carpet rags."  "Mary Midleton!" exclaimed Aunt Sarah, in horrified tones, "you extravagant girl. I see greater possibilities in that trunk of partly-worn clothing than, I suppose, a less economically-inclined woman than I ever would have dreamed of."  Mary handed her Aunt two blue seersucker dresses, one plain, the other striped. "They have both shrunken, and are entirely too small for me," said Mary.  "Well," said her Aunt, considering, "they might be combined in one dress, but you need aprons for kitchen work more useful than those little frilly, embroidered affairs you are wearing. We should make them into serviceable aprons to protect your dresses. Mary, neatness is an attribute that every self-respecting housewife should assiduously cultivate, and no one can be neat in a kitchen without a suitable apron to protect one from grime, flour and dust."  "What a pretty challis dress; its cream-colored ground sprinkled over with pink rose buds!"  Mary sighed. "I always did love that dress, Aunt Sarah. 'Twas so becoming, and he-he-admired it so !"  "And HE, can do so still." replied Aunt Sarah, with a merry twinkle in her kind, clear, gray eyes, "for that pale-green suesine skirt, slightly faded, will make an excellent lining, with cotton for an interlining, and pale green Germantown yarn with which to tie the comfortable. At small cost you'll have a dainty, warm spread which will be extremely pretty in the home you are planning with HIM. I have several very pretty old-style patchwork quilts in a box in the attic which I shall give you when you start housekeeping. That pretty dotted, ungored Swiss skirt will make dainty, ruffled sash curtains for bedroom windows. Mary, sometimes  small beginnings make great endings; if you make the best of your small belongings, some clay your homely surroundings will he metamorphosed into what, in your present circumstances, would seem like extravagant luxuries. An economical young couple In-ginning life with a homely, home-made rag carpet, have achieved in middle age. by their own energy and industry, carpets of tapestry and rich velvet, and costly furniture in keeping; but, never--never, dear, are they so valued, 1 assure you, as those inexpensive articles, conceived by our inventive brain and manufactured by our own deft fingers during our happy Springtime of life when, with our young lover husband, we built our home nest on the foundation of pure unselfish, self-sacrificing love."  Aunt Sarah sighed; memory led her far back to when she had planned her home with her lover, John Landis, still her lover, though both have grown gray together, and shared alike the joys and sorrows of the passing; years. Aunt Sarah had always been the perfect "housemother" or "Haus Frau," as the Germans phrase it, and on every line of her matured face could be read an anxious care for the family welfare. Truly could it be said of her. in the language of Henry Ward Beecher: "Whoever makes home seem to the young dearer and happier is a public benefactor."  Aunt Sarah said earnestly to Mary, "I wish it were possible for me to impart to young, inexperienced girls, about to become housewives and housemothers, a knowledge of those small economics, so necessary to health and prosperity, taught me by many years of hard work, mental travail, experience and some failures. In this extravagant Twentieth Century economy is more imperative than formerly. We feel that we need so much more these days than our grandmothers needed; and what we need, or feel that we need, is so costly. The housemother has larger problem? today than yesterday.  "Every husband should give his wife an allowance according to his income, so that she will be able to systematize her buying and occasionally obtain imperishable goods at less cost. Being encouraged thus to use her dormant economical powers; she will become a powerful factor in the problem of homemaking along lines that will essentially aid her husband in acquiring a comfotable competency, if not a fortune. Then she will have her husband' s interest truly at heart; will study to spend his money carefully, and to the best advantage; and she herself, even, will  be surprised at the many economies which will suggest themselves to save his hard-earned money when she handles that money herself, which certainly teaches her the saving habit and the value of money.  "The majority of housewives of today aren't naturally inclined to be extravagant or careless. It is rather that they lack the knowledge and experience of spending money, and spending it to the best advantage for themselves and their household needs.  " Tis a compulsory law in England, I have heard, to allow a wife pin money, according to a man's means. 'Tis a most wise law. To a loyal wife and mother it gives added force, dignity and usefulness to have a sufficient allowance and to be allowed unques-tioningly to spend that money to her best ability. Her husband, be he a working or professional man, would find it greatly to his advantage in the home as well as in his business and less of a drain on his bank account should he give his wife a suitable allowance and trust her to spend it according to her own intelligence and thrift.  "Child, many a man is violently prejudiced against giving a young wife money; many allow her in run up bills, to her hurt and to his rather than have her. even in her household expenditure, independent of his supervision. I sincerely hope, dear, that your intended, Ralph Jackson, will be superior to this male idiosyncrasy, to term it mildly, and allow you a stated sum monthly. The home is the woman's kingdom, and she should be allowed to think for it, to buy for it, and not to be cramped by lack of money to do as she thinks best for it."  "But. Aunt Sarah, some housewives are so silly that husbands cannot really be blamed for them and preventing them from frittering it away in useless extravagance."  "Mary, wise wives should not suffer for those whoe are silly and extravagant. I don't like to be sarcastic, but with the majority of the men. silliness appeals to them more than common sense. Men like to feel their superiority to us. However, though inex-perienced. Mary, yon aren't silly or extravagant. and Ralph could safely trust you with his money. It makes a woman so self-re-specting puts on her oil her m to have money to do as she pleases with, to be trusted, relied upon as a reasoning, responsible being. A man, especially a young husband, makes a grave mistake  when he looks upon his wife as only a toy to amuse him in his leisure moments and not as one to be trusted to aid him in his life work. A trusted young housewife, with a reasonable and regular allowance at her command, he she ever so inexperienced, will soon plan to have wholesome, nutritious food at little cost, instead of not knowing until a half hour before time what she will serve. She would save money and the family would be better nourished; nevertheless, I would impress it on the young housewife not to be too saving or practice too close economy especially when buying milk and eggs, as there is nothing mure nutritious or valuable. A palatable macaroni and cheese; eggs or a combination of eggs and milk, are dishes which may be substituted occasionally, at less expense, for meat. A pound of macaroni and cheese equals a pound of steak in food value. Take time and trouble to see that all food be well cooked and served, both in an attractive and appetizing manner. Buy the cheaper cuts of slewing meats, and by long, slow simmering, they will become sweet and tender and of equal nutritive value as higher priced sirloins and tenderloins.  "But, Mary, I've not yet finished that trunk and its contents. That slightly-faded pink chambray I'll cut up into quilt blocks. Made up with white patches, and quilted nicely, a pretty quilt, lined with white, will be evolved. I have such a pretty design of pink and white called the "Winding Way." very simple to make. The beauty of the quilt consists altogether in the manner in which the blocks are put together, or it might be made over the pattern called "The Flying Dutchman." From that tan linen skirt may be made a laundry bag, shoe pocket, twine bag, a collar bag and a table runner, the only expense being several skeins of green embroidery silk, and a couple yards of green cord to draw the bags up with, and a couple of the same-hued skirt braids for binding edges, and." teasingly. "Mary, you might embroider Ralph Jackson's initials on the collar and laundry bag."  Mary blushed .rosily red and exclaimed in an embarrassed manner most bewitchingly, "Oh!"  Aunt Sarah laughed. She thought to have Mary look that way 'twas worth teasing her.  "Well. Mary, we can in leisure moments, from that coarse, white linen skirt which you have discarded, make bureau scarfs, sideboard cover, or a set of scalloped table mats to place under hot dishes on your dining-room table. I will give you pieces of 
  A-12 Pine Tree Quilt A-13 Tree of Life A-14 Pineapple Quilt A-15 Enlarged Block of Winding Way Quilt A-16 Lost Rose in the Wilderness A-17 Tree Quilt  This is a picture of six quilts. A-12 has a triangle shaped pine tree made of geometric shapes. A-13 has an asymmetrical tree with round fruits hanging on the branches. A-14 has a repeating pattern of large leaves and pineapples. A-15 is an enlarged image of a pattern of curving lines. A-16 has a flower surrounded by branches and a border of vines. A-17 has what resembles a willow tree made from geometric shapes. 
   asbestos to slip between the linen mats when finished. They are a great protection to the table. You could also make several small guest towels with deep, hemstitched ends with your initials on. You embroider so beautifully, and the drawn-work you do is done as expertly as that of the Mexican women "  "Oh, Aunt Sarah, how ingenious you are."  "And, Mary, your rag carpet shall not be lacking We shall tear up those partly-worn muslin skirts into strips one-half inch in width, and use the dyes left over from dyeing Easter eggs. I always save the dye for this purpose, they come in such pretty bright colors. The rags, when sewed together with some I have in the attic, we'll have woven into a useful carpet for the home you are planning."  "Oh! Aunt Sarah," exclaimed Mary, "do you mean a carpet like the one in the spare bedroom?"  "Yes, my dear, exactly like that, if you wish."   "Indeed I do, and I think one like that quite good enough to have in a dining-room. I think it so pretty.It does not look at all like a common rag carpet."  "No, my dear, it is nothing very uncommon. It is all in the way it is woven. Instead of having two gay rainbow stripes about three inches wide running through the length of the carpet, I had it woven with the ground work white and brown chain to form checks. Then about an inch apart were placed two threads of two shades of red woolen warp, alternating with two threads of two shades of green, across the whole width, running the length of the carpet. It has been greatly admired, as it is rather different from that usually woven. All the rag carpets I found in the house when we moved here, made by John's mother, possessed very wide stripes of rainbow colors, composed of shaded reds, yellows, blues and greens. You can imagine how very gorgeous they were, and so very heavy. -Many of the country weavers use linen chain or wrap instead of cotton, and always use wool wrap for the strips."  "Aunt Sarah, I want something so very much for the Colonial bedroom I should like to have when I have a home of my very own."  "What is it dear? Anything, c'en to the half of my kingdom " laughingly replied her Aunt.  "Why, I'd love to have several rag rugs like those in your bedroom, which you call 'New Colonial' rugs."   "Certainly, my dear. They are easily made from carpet rags. I have already planned in my mind a pretty rag rug for you, to be made from your old, garnet merino shirtwaist, combined with your discarded cravenette stormcoat.  "And you'll need some pretty quilts, also," said her Aunt.  "I particularly admire the tree quilts," said Mary.  "You may have any one you choose; the one called 'Tree of Paradise,' another called 'Pineapple Design,' which was originally a border to 'Fleur de lis' quilt or 'Pine Tree,' and still another called 'Tree of Life,' and 'The Lost Rose in the Wilderness.'"  "They are all so odd," said Mary, "I scarcely know which one I think prettiest."  "All are old-fashioned quilts, which I prize highly," continued her Aunt. "Several I pieced together when a small girl. 1 think old-time patchwork too pretty am! useful an accomplishment to have gone out of fashion.  "You shall have a small stand cover like the one you admired so greatly, given me by Aunt Cornelia. It is very simple, the materials required being a square of yard-wide unbleached muslin. In the certre of this baste a large, blue-flowered handkerchief with cream-colored ground, to match the muslin. Turn up a deep hem all around outside edge' cut out quarter circles of the handherchief at each of four corners ; baste neatly upon the muslin, leaving a space of muslin the same width as the hem around each quarter circle; briarstitch all turned-in edges with dark-blue embroidery silk, being washable, these do nicely as covers for small tables or stands on the veranda in Summertime."  "Aunt Sarah," ecstatically exclaimed Mary, "you are a wizard to plan so many useful things from a trunk of apparently useless rags. What a treasure Uncle has in you. I was fretting about having so little to make my home attractive, but I feel quite elated at the thought of having a carpet and rugs already planned, besides the numerous other things evolved from your fertile brain."  Aunt Sarah loved a joke. She held up an old broadcloth cape. "Here is a fine patch for Ralph Jackson's breeches, should he ever become sedentary and need one."  Mary reddened and looked almost offended and was at a loss for a reply.  Greatly amused, Aunt Sarah quoted ex-President Roosevelt:  
  A-18 Fleur DeLys Quilt A-19 Oak Leaf Quilt A-20 One Block of Fleur DeLys Quilt A-21 Winding Way Quilt A-22 Tulip Quilt A-23 Flower Pot Quilt  This is a picture of six quilts. A-18 has fleur delys design on each of the four quarters of the quilt. A-19 has nine blocks of four oak leaves each, arranged in three rows of three. A-20 is an enlarged view of one of the fleur delys designs from A-18. A-21 is the whole picture of the winding way quilt shown in A-15. A-22 has four flowers with their stems towards the center and their flowers at the corners. A-23 shows a very ornate potted plant with a border of flowering plants. 
    " 'Tis time for the man with the patch to come forward and the man with the dollar to step back,'" and added. "Never mind, Mary, your Ralph is such an industrious, hustling young man that he will never need a patch to step forward. I prophesy that with such a helpmeet and 'Haus Frau' as you, Mary, he'll always be most prosperous and happy. Kiss me, dear."  Mary did so, and her radiant smile at such praise from her honored relative was beautiful to behold. 
  OLD RAG CARPET  A picture of a tightly woven, multi-shade rug. 
 
  
  CHAPTER IX.  POETRY AND PIE.  "Aunt Sarah," questioned Mary one day, "do you mind if I copy some of your recipes?"  "Certainly not, my dear," replied her Aunt.  "And I'd like to copy some of the poems, also. I never sail-any one else have so much poetry in a book of cooking recipes."  "Perhaps not," replied her Aunt, "but you know, Mary, I believe in combining pleasure with my work, and our lives are made up of poetry and prose, and some lives are so very prosy. Many times when too tired to look up a favorite volume of powms,it has rested me to turn the pages of my recipe book and find some helpful thought, and a good housewife will always keep her book of recipes where It may be readily found for reference. I think. Mary, the poem 'Pennsylvania,' by Lydia M. D. O'Neil, a fine one, and I never tire of reading it over and over again. I have always felt grateful to my old schoolmaster, Professor T---, for teaching me, when a school girl, to love the writing of Longfellow. Whittier hear him repeat 'Thanatopsis,' by Bryant, and 'The Builders,' by Longfellow. The rhymes of the 'Fireside Poet' are easily understood, and never fail to touch the heart of common folk. I know it appears odd to see so many of my favorite poems sandwiched in between old, valued cooking recipes, but, Mary, the happiness of the home life depends so largely on the food we consume. On the preparation and selection of the food we eat depends our health, and on our health is largely on the food we eat depends our prosperity. Who is it has said, 'The discovery; of a new dish makes more for the happiness of man than the discovery of a star'? So, dearie, you see there is not such a great difference between the one who writes a poem an dthe one who makes a pie. I think cooking should be considered one of the fine arts-and the woman who prepares a dainty, appetizing dish of food, which appeals to the sense of taste, should be considered as worthy of  praise as the artist who paints a fine picture to gratify our sense of sight I try to mix all the poetry possible in prosaic everyday life We country farmers wives, not having the opportunities of our more fortune city sisters, such as witnessing plays from Shakespeare, listening to symphony concerts etc., turn to 'The Friendship of Books,' of which Washington Irving writes 'Cheer us with the true friendship, which never deceived hope nor iti-scrled sorrow.' "  "Yes," said Mary, "but remember, Aunt Sarah, Chautauqua will be held next Summer in a near-by town, and, as Uncle John is one of the guarantors, you will wish to attend regularly and will, I know, enjoy hearing the excellent lectures, music and concerts."  "Yes." replied her Aunt. "Chautauqua meetings will commence the latter part of June, and I will expect you and Ralph to visit us then. I think Chautauqua a godsend to country women, especially farmers' wives; it takes them away from their monotonous daily toil and gives them new thoughts and ideas."  "I can readily understand, Aunt Sarah, why the poem, 'Life's Common Things," appeals to you; it is because you see beauty in everything. Aunt Sarah, where did you get this very old poem, 'The Deserted City?"  "Why, that was given me by John's Uncle, who thought the poem fine."  "Sad is the sight, the city once so fair! An hundred palaces lie buried there; Her lofty towers are fallen, and creepers grow O'er marbled dome and shattered portico.  Once in the gardens, lovely girls at play, Culled the bright flowers, and gently touched the spray; But now wild creatures in their savage joy Tread down the flowers and the plants destroy.  By night no torches in the windows gleam; By day no women in their beauty beam; The smoke has ceased-the spider there has spread His snares in safety-and all else is dead."   "Indeed, it is a 'gem.' " said Mary, after slowly reading aloud parts of several stanzas.  "Yes," replied her Aunt, "Professor Schmidt tells me the poem was written by Katidasa (the Shakespeare of Hindu literature), and was written 1800 years before Goldsmith gave us his immortal work, 'The Deserted Village.'"  "I like the poem, 'Abou Ben Adhem and the Angel,' " said Mary, "and I think this true by Henry Ward Beecher:  " 'Do not be troubled because you have not great virtues, God made a million spears of grass where He made one tree; The earth is fringed and carpeted not with forests but with grasses. Only have enough of little virtues and common fidelities. And you need not mourn because you are neither a hero nor a saint.'  "This is a favorite little poem of mine, Aunt Sarah. I'll just write it on this blank page in your book."  There's a little splash of sunshine and a little spot of shade. always somewhere near, The wise bask in the sunshine, but the foolish choose the shade. The wise are gay and happy on the foolish, sorrow's laid. And the fault's their own, I fear.  For the little splash of sunshine and the little Spot of shade Are here for joint consumption, for comparison are made; We're all meant to be happy, not too foolish or too staid, And the right dose to be taken is some sunshine mixed with shade.  "Aunt Sarah, I see there is still space on this page to write another poem, a favorite of mine It is called 'Be Strong,' by Maltbie Davenport."  Be Strong! We are not here to play, to dream, to drift; We have hard word to do, and loads to lift. Slum not the struggle; face it, 'tis God's gift.   Be Strong ! Say not the days are evil-who's to blame? And fold the hands and acquiesce-Oh, shame! Stand up, speak out, and bravely, in God's name.  Be Strong! It matters not how deep intrenched the wrong, How hard the battle goes, the day how long; Faint not, fight on! Tomorrow comes the song.  LIFES COMMON THINGS.  How lovely are life's common things, When health flows in the veins; The golden sunshine of the days When Phoebus holds the reins;  The floating clouds against the blue; The fragrance of the air; The nodding flowers by the way; The green garss everywhere;  The feathery beauty of the elm, With graceful-swaying boughs, Where nesting songbirds find a home And the night wind sighs and soughs;  The hazy blue of distant hill, With wooded slope and crest; The crimson sky when low at night The sun sinks in the West;  The thrilling grandeur of the storm, The lightning's vivid flash, The mighty rush of wind and rain, The thunder's awful Crash.  And then the calm that follows storm, And rainbow in the sky; The rain-washed freshness of the earth- A singing bird near by.   And oh, the beauty of the night! Its hush, its thrill, its charm; The twinkling brilliance of its stars; Its tranquil peace and calm.  Oh, loving fatherhood of God To give us every day The lovely common things of life To brighten all the way ! {Susan M. Perkins, in the Boston Transcript.)  ABOU BEN ADHEM AND THE ANGEL.  Abou Ben Adhem-may his tribe increase- Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace And saw, within the moonlight of his room, Making it rich and like a lily in bloom, An angel writing in a book of gold. Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said: "What writest thou ?" The vision raised his head, And with a look made of all sweet accord, Answered: "The names of those who love the Lord." "And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so," Replied the angel. Abou spoke low, But cheerily still, and said, "I pray thee, then, Write me as one that loves his fellow-men." The angel wrote and vanished. The next night I came again, with a great, wakening light, And showed the names whom love of God had blessed, And, lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest.  LEIGH HUNT. 
  
  CHAPTER X.  SIBYLLA LINSABIGLER.  A very original character was Sibylla Linsabigler, who had ken a member of the Landis household several years. She was Aunt Sarah's only maid servant, but she disliked being referred to as a servant, and when she overheard "Fritz" Schmidt, as he passed the Landis farm on his way to the creek for a day's fishing, call to Mary:"Miss Miidleton, will you please send the butter over with the servant today, as I shall not return home in time for dinner?" Sibylla said, "I ain't no servant. I'm hired girl. What does that make out if I do work here? Pop got mad with me 'cause I wouldn't work at home no more for him and Mom without they paid me. They got three more girls to home yet that can do the work. My Pop owns a big farm and sent our 'Chon' to the college, and it's mean 'fer' him not to give us girls money for dress, so I work out. "Taint right the way us people what has to work are treated these days." said Sibylla to herself, as she applied the broom vigorously to the gay-flowered carpet in the Landis parlor. "Because us folks got to work ain't no reason why them tony people over to the Perfessor's should call me a 'servant.' I guess I know I milk the cows, wash dishes, scrub floors, and do the washin' and ir'nin' every)' week, but I'm no servant.' I'm just as good any day as that good-fer-nothin' Perfessor's son," continued Sibylla, growing red in the face with indignation. "Didn't I hear that worthless scamp, Fritz Schrnidt, a-referrin' to me and a-sayin' to Miss Midleton fer the 'servant' to bring over the butter? Betch yer life this here 'servant' ain't a-goin' to allow eddicatcd people to make a fool of her. First chance I get I'll give that Perfesser a piece of my mind."  Sibylla's opportunity came rather unexpectedly. The gentle, mild-mannered Professor was on good terms with his sturdy, energetic neighbor, John Landis. and frequently visited him for a neighborly chat. On this particular day he called as usual and found Sibylla in the mood described.   "Good afternoon, Sibylla," said the Professor, good-naturedly. "How are you today?"  "I'd be a whole lot better if some people weren't so smart," replied Sibylla, venting her feelings on the broom. "Should think a Perfesser would feel himself too big to talk to a 'servant'."  "On the contrary, my dear girl, I feel honored. I presume you are not feeling as well as usual. What makes you think it is condescension for me to address you ?" asked the genial old man, kindly.  "Well, since you ask me, I don't mind a-tellin' you. Yesterday your son insulted me. I won't take no insult from nobody. I am just as good as what you are, even if I hain't got much book larnin'."  With this deliverance, Sibylla felt she had done full justice to the occasion and would have-closed the interview abruptly had not the Professor, with a restraining hand, detained her.  "We must get to the bottom of this grievance, Sibylla. I am sure there is some mistake somewhere. What did my son say?"  "Wel1, if you want to know," replied the irate domestic, "I'll tell you. He called me a 'servant.' I know I'm only a working girl, but your son nor nobody else ain't got on tight to abuse me by callin'me a'servant'."  "Ah! I see. You object to the term 'servant' being applied to you," said the Professor, comprehendingly. "The word 'servant' is distasteful to you. Yon feel it is a disgrace to be called a servant I see I see!" In a fatherly way. the old man resumed: "In a certain sense we are all servants. The history of human achievements is a record of service. The men and women who have helped the world most were all servants--servants to humanity. The happiest man is he who serves. God calls some men to sow and some to reap ; some to work in wood and stone; to sing and speak. Work is honorable in all, regardless of the capacity in which we serve. There is no great difference, after all, between the ordinary laborer and the railroad president; both are servants, and the standard of measurement to be applied to each man is the same. It is not so much a question of station in life as it is the question of efficiency. Best of all, work is education. There is culture that comes without college and university. He who graduates from the college of hard work is as honorable as he who takes a degree at Yale or Harvard; for wisdom can be  found In shop and foundry, field and factory, in the kitchen amid pots and kettles, as well as in office and school. The truly educated man is the man who has learned the duty and responsibility of doing something useful, something helpful, something to make this old world of ours better and a happier place in which to live. The word 'servant,' Sibylla, is a beautiful one, rightly understood The greatest man who ever lived was a servant. All His earthly ministry was filled with worthy deeds. When man man pleaded with him to rest He answered. 'My father worketh hitherto, and I work.' When one of Christ's followers desired to express the true nature of his work and office, he called himself a servant, He used a word, 'doulos,' which means, in the Greek language, a slave or a bond-servant. By the word 'doulos' he meant to say that his mission in life was to work, to do good, to serve. This man was a great preacher, but it is possible for any one to become a 'doulos' in so far as he is willing to serve God and his fellowman. You see. Sibylla, the spirit of Christian work and brotherly love is the spirit of 'doulos.' The word has been transformed by service and unselfish devotion to duty. Great men who have blessed the world, and good and noble women who have helped to uplift humanity, have done it through service. It is just as honorable to bake well, and cook well, and to do the humblest daily tasks efficiently as it is to play well on the piano and talk fluently about the latest books."  At the conclusion of the Professor's little talk on the dignity of labor. a new light shone in Sibylla's eyes and a new thought gripped her soul. The spirit of "doulos" had displaced her antipathy toward the word servant.  "I'll take that butter over to the Perfesser's home right away," she said to herself.  Before leaving Sibylla, the Professor quoted from the "Toiling of Felix." by Henry Vandyke:  Hewing wood and drawing water, splitting stones and cleaving sod, All the dusty ranks of labour, in the regiment of God, March together toward His triumph, do the task His hands prepare; Honest toil is holy service, faithful work is praise and prayer."   They who work without complaining, do the holy will of God.  Heaven is blest with perfect rest, but the blessing of earth is toil.  Sibylla Linsabigler was a healthy, large-boned, solidly-built, typical "Pennsylvania German" girl. Her clear, pinkish complexion looked as if freshly scrubbed with soap and water. A few large, brown freckles adorned the bridge of her rather broad, flat nose. She possessed red hair and laughing, red-brown eyes, large mouth, which disclosed beautiful even, white teeth when she smiled, extraordinary large feet and hands, strong, willing and usually good-natured, although she processed of a quick temper, as her red hair indicated. Kind-hearted to a fault, she was of great assistance to Aunt Sarah, although she preferred any other work to that of cooking or baking. She kept the kitchen as well as other parts of the house, to quote Aunt Sarah, "neat as a pin," and did not object to any work, however hard or laborious, as long as she was greatly attached to both Aunt Sarah and Mary, but stood rather in awe of John Landis, who had never spoken a cross word to her in the three years she had lived at the farm.  Sarah Landis, knowing Sibylla to be an honest, industrious girl, appreciated her good qualities, thought almost as much of Sibylla as if she had been her daughter, and treated her in like manner, and for this reason, if for no other, she received willing service from the girl.  Sibylla, a swift worker at all times, never finished work so quickly as on Wednesday and Saturday evenings, when she "kept company" with Jake Crouthamel. "Chake." as Sibylla called him. was a sturdy, red-faced young farmer, all legs and arms. He appeared to he put together loosely at the joints, like a jumping-jack, and never appeared at ease in his ill-fitting "store clothes." He usually wore gray corduroy trusers and big cowhide boots, a pink and white striped shirt and red necktie.  Sibylla did not notice his imperfections and thought him handsome as a Greek god.  Jake, an honest, industrious young fellow, worked on 3 near-by  farm owned his own carriage, and had the privilege of using one of the farm horses when he wished, so he and Sibylla frequently took "choy rides," as Sibylla called them.  Jake Crouthamel was usually called "Boller-Yockel," this name having been accorded him on account of his having delivered to a purchaser a load of hay largely composed of rag-weed. The man called him an old "Boller-Yocked" and the name had clung to Jake for years. 
  
  CHAPTER XI.  "NEW COLONIAL" RAG RUGS.  Several days had elapsed since that on which Mary's Aunt had planned to use the contents of her trunk to such good advantage, when Mary, coming into the room where her Aunt was busily engaged sewing, exclaimed:"Don't forget, Auntie, you promised to teach me to crochet rag rugs!" 
  A "HIT-AND-MISS" RUG  A picture of small circular rug with a dark center and border and lighter material between. 
  Indeed, I've not forgotten, and will make my promise good at once." said Aunt Sarah. "We shall need quantities of carpet rag, cut about one-half inch in width, the same as those used for  making rag carpet. Of course, you are aware, Mary, that heavier materials should be cut in narrower strips than those of thinner materials. You will also require a long, wooden crochet needle, about as thick as an ordinary wooden hook at one end, similar to a common bone crochet needle, only larger, For a circular rug, crochet about twelve stitches (single crochet) over one end of a piece of candle wick or cable cord; or, lacking either of these, use a carpet rag of firm material; then draw the crocheted strip into as small a circle as possible, fasten and crochet round and round continuously until finished. The centre of a circular or oblong rug may be a plain color, with border of colored light and dark rags, sewed together promiscuously, called Hit and Miss.' 
  A BROWN AND TAN RUG  A picture of a circular rug with concentric rings of brown and tan with a pin-wheel design in the center. 
  "Or you might have a design similar lo a 'Pin-wheel' in centre  of the circular rug. with alternate stripes, composed of dark and light-colored rags.  "I'd like one made in that manner from different shades that harmonize, browns and tans, for instance," said Mary.  "You may easily have a rug of that description," continued her Aunt. "With a package of brown dye. We can quickly transform some light, woolen carpet rags I possess into pretty shades of browns and tans. 
  RUG  A picture of a circular rug made of concentric circles of varying shades from light to dark and back to light again. 
  "For a circular rug, with design in centre resembling a pinwheel, commence crocheting the rug same as preceding one. Crochet three rows of one color, then mark the rug off into four parts, placing a pin to mark each section or quarter of the rug. At each of four points crochet one stitch of a contrasting shade. Crochet once around the circle, using a shade similar to that of the centre of rug for design, filling in between with the other shade. For the following row, crochet two stitches beneath the one stitch (not directly underneath the stich but one stich beyond), filling in between with the other color. The third row.  add three stitches beneath the two manner as preceding row, and continue, until design in centre is as large as desired, then crochet 'Hit or Miss' or stripes. Do not cut off the carpet rags at each of the four points after crocheting stitches, but allow each one to remain and crochet over them, then pick up on needle and crochet every time you require stitches of contrasting shade. Then crochet several rows around the rug with different shades until rug is the required size. The under side should be finished off as neatly as the right, or upper side. Mary, when not making a design, sew the rags together as if for weaving carpet. When crocheting circular rugs, occasionally stretch the outside row to prevent the rug from curling up at edges when finished, as it would be apt to do if too tightly crocheted. If necessary, occasionally add an extra stitch. Avoid also crocheting it too loosely, as it would then appear like a ruffle. The advantage of crocheting over a heavy cord is that the work may be easily drawn up more tightly if too lose." 
  
  CHAPTER XII.  MARY IMITATES NAVAJO BLANKETS.  On her return from an afternoon spent at Professor Schmidt's, Mary remarked to Aunt Sarah, "For the first time in my life I have an original idea!"  "Do tell me child. what it is!"  "The 'New Colonial' rag rugs we have lately finished are fine, but I'd just love to have a Navajo blanket like those owned by professor Schmidt; and I intend to make a rag rug in imitation of his Navajo blanket."  "Yes," answered her Aunt. "I have always greatly admired them myself, especially the large gray one which covers the Professor's own chair in the library. The Professor brought them with him when he returned from "Cutler's Ranch' at Rociada, near Las Vegas, New Mexico, where he visited his nephew, poor Raymond, or rather, I should say, fortunate Raymond, an only child of the Professor's sister. A quiet, studious boy, he graduated at the head of his class at an early age, but he inherited the weak lungs of his father, who died of consumption. Raymond was a lovable hoy, with a fund of dry humor and wit-the idol of his mother, who, taking the advice of a specialist, accompanied boy, as a last resort, to New Mexico, where, partly swing to his determination to get well, proper food and daily rides on the mesa, on the back of his little pinto pony, he regained perfect health, and today is well, happily married and living in Pasadena, California, so I have been told by Frau Schmidt, who dearly loves the boy."  "But Mary, forgive an old woman for rambling away from the subject in which you are interested-Navajo blankets. Ever since we planned to make a rug with a swastika in the centre, I have been trying to evolve from my brain (and your Uncle John says my bump of inventiveness is abnormally large) a Navajo rag rug for the floor of the room you intend to furnish as Ralph's den, in the home you are planning Well my dear a wooden  crochet hook in your deft fingers will be the magic wand which will perform a miracle and transform into Navajo blankets such very commonplace articles as your discarded gray eiderdown kimona, and a pair of your Uncle's old gray trousers, which have already been washed and ripped by Sibylla, to be used for making carpet rags. These, combined with the gray skirt I heard you say had outlived its day of usefulness, will furnish the back-ground of the rug. The six traiangles in the centre of the rug, also lighter stripes at each end of the rug, we will make of that old linen chair-cover and your faded linen skirt, which you said I might use for carpet rags; and should more material be needed. I have some old, gray woolen underwear in my patch lag, a gray-white, similar to the real Navajo. The rows of black with which we shall outline the triangles may be made from those old, black, silk-lisle hose you gave me, by cutting them round and round in one continuous strip. Heavy cloth should be cut in 
 very  narrow strips. Sibylla will do that nicely; her hands are more used to handling large, heavy shears than are yours. The linen-lawn skirt you may cut in strips about three-fourths of an inch in width, as that material is quite thin. I would sew rags of one color together like carpet rags, not lapping the ends more than necessary to hold them together. The rug will be reversible, both sides being exactly alike when finished. I should make the rug about fifty-three stitches across. This will require about six and one-fourth yards of carpet rags, when sewed together, to crochet once across." I think it would be wise to cut all rags of different weight materials before commencing to crochet the rug, so they may be well mixed through. I will assist you with the work at odd moments, and in a short time the rug will be finished."  The rug, when finished, was truly a work of art. and represented many hours of labor and thought. Km Mary considered it very fascinating work and was delighted with the result of her labor--a rug the exact imitation of one of the Professor's genuine Indian Navajo blankets, the work of her own hands. and without the expenditure of a penny.  Mary remarked : "I do not think all the triangles in my rug are the exact size of the paper pattern you made me, Aunt Sarah. The two in the centre appear larger than the others."   "Well," remarked her Aunt, "if you examine closely the blankets owned by Professor Schmidt, you will find the designs  on the ones woven by Navajo Indians are not of an equal size."  "Tis said Navajo blankets and Serapes will become scarce and higher in price in the future, on account of the numerous young Indians who have been educated and who prefer other occupations to that of weaving blankets, as did their forefathers; and the present disturbance in Mexico will certainly interfere with the continuance of this industry for a time. 
  IMITATION OF NAVAJO BLANKET  An image of a rectangular rug with six triangles lined up pointing towards the center. 
  "Mary, while you have been planning your Navajo rug, I have been thinking how we may make a very attractive as well as useful rug. You remember, we could not decide what use to make of your old, tan cravenette stormcoat? I have been thinking
  RUG WITH DESIGN  An image of a rectangular rug with an elongated hexagon in the center. 
   we might use this, when cm into carpet rags, for the principal part of the rug, and that old, garnet merino blouse waist might be cut and used for the four corners of a rug, and we might have gay stripes in the centre of the rug to form a sort of design, and also put gay gay stripes at each end of the rug.  "And you might crochet a rug, plain 'Hit or Miss.' of rather bright-colored rags."  "Yes." said Mary, "I think 1 will crochet a swastika in the centre of a rag. as you suggest, of bright orange, outlined with black, and a stripe of orange edged with black at each end of the rug to match the centre. Don't you think that would be pretty, Aunt, Sarah?" 
  "HIT-OR-MISS" RUG WITH SWASTIKA CENTRE  A picture of a speckled rug with a swastika in the center. 
  "Yes, indeed, but Mary. don't you think the swastika would show more distinctly on a rug with a plain background?"  "Perhaps it would." replied Mary, "but I think I'll crochet one of very gayly-colored rags, with a swastika in the centre."  A "PRAYER RUG" OF SILK SCRAPS.  "Aunt Sarah." said Mary. "do tell me how that pretty little rug composed of silk scraps is made.   "Oh. that 
 silk  rug: 'twas, given me by Aunt Cornelia, who finished it while here on a visit from New York. I never saw another like it, and it has been greatly admired. Although pos-sessed of an ordinary amount of patience, I don't think I'll ever make one of for myself. I don't admire knitted rugs of any description,  neither do I care for braided rugs. I think the crocheted ones prettier. But, Mary, this, small silk rug is easily made should you care to have one. I will commence knitting one for you at once. You will then find a use for the box of bright-colored silks you possess, many of which are quite too small to be used in any other manner. Professor Schmidt calls this a 'Prayer Rug.' He said: 'This rug. fashioned of various bright-lined silks of orange, purple and crimson, a bright maze of rich colors, without any recognizable figure or design. reminds me of the description of the "Prayer Carpel" or rugs of the Mohammedans. They are composed of rich-hued silks of purple. ruby and amber. "Tis said their delicacy of shade is marvelous and was suggested by the meadows of variegated flowers.' But this is a digression; you wished directions for making the rug.  "Use tiny scraps of various bright-hued silks, velvets and satins, cut about 3 1/2 inches long and about one-half inch in width. Ends should always he cut slanting or bias; never straight. All yon will require besides the silk scraps, will be a ball of common cord or twine, or save all cord which comes tied around packages, as I do, and use that and two ordinary steel knitting needles. When making her rug, Aunt Cornelia knitted several strips a couple of inches in width and the length she wished the finished rug to be. The strips when finished she sewed together with strong linen thread on the wrong side of the rug. She commenced the rug by knitting two rows of the twine or cord. (When I was a girl we called this common knitting 'garter stitch.) Then. when commencing to knit third row, slip off first stitch onto your other needle; knit one stitch, then lay one of the tiny scraps of silk across or between the two needles; knit one stitch with the cord. This holds the silk in position. Then fold or turn one end of silk back on the other piece of silk and knit one stitch of cord to hold them in place, always keeping silk on one side, on the top of rug, as this rug is not reversible. Continue in this manner until one row is finished. The knit once across plain with cord, and for next row lay silk scraps in and knit as before. Always knit one row of the cord across plain after knitting in scraps of silk, as doing this holds them firmly in position. Of course." Mary, you will use judgement and tastein combining light and dark, bright and dull colors. Also, do not use several scraps of velvet together. Use velvet, silk and satin alternately. Should any  scraps of silk be longer than others after knitting trim off evenly so all will be of uniform size. When her rug was finished, Aunt Cornelia spread it. wrong side uppermost, on an unusued table, covered it with a thick boiled paste, composed of flour and water, allowed it to dry thoroughly, then lined the rug with a heavy piece of denim. This way done to prevent the rug from curling up at edges, and caused it to lie flat on floor; but I think I should prefer just a firm lining or foundation of heavy burlap or denim."  "Thank you, Aunt Sarah, for your explicit directions. I cannot fail to know just how to knit a silk rug, should I ever care to do so. I think the work would be simply fascinating." 
  A SILK PRAYER RUG  A picture of a speckled, shaggy silk rug 
 
  
  CHAPTER XIII.  THE GIRLS' CAMFIRE, ORGANIZED BY MARY.  One day in early June, when all nature seemed aglow with happiness, we find Mary earnestly discussing with Elizabeth Schmidt the prosaic, humdrum life of many of the country girls, daughters of well-to-do farmers in the vicinity.  "I wish," said Mary, wrinking her forehead thoughtfully, "I could think of some new interest to introduce into their lives; some way of broadening their outlook; anything to bring more happiness into their commonplace daily toil; something good and helpful for them to think about."  All at once Mary, who was not usually demonstrative, clapped her hands, laughed gleefully and said:"I have it, Elizabeth. The very thing! Suppose we start a 'girls' campfire,' right here in the country? I don't think we shall have any trouble to organize."  "And you, because you understand all about it, will be the Guardian," said Elizabeth.  At first Mary demurred, but, overcome by Elizabeth's pleading, finally gave a reluctant consent. They then made out a list of the girls they thought might be willing to join, Mary promising to write at once for a handbook. They separated, Elizabeth to call to see the girls, and Mary to interview their parents. Their efforts were rewarded with surprisingly gratifying results, for many of the girls, and Mary to interview their parents. Their efforts were rewarded with surprisingly gratifying results, for many of the girls had read about the "Campfire Girls" and were anxious to become members.  One afternoon, several weeks later, had you gone into the old apple orchard, at the farm, you would have seen thirteen eager young girls, ranging in age from fourteen to sixteen listening intently to Mary, who was telling them about the "Camptire Girls." What she told them was something like this:  "Now girls, we are going to have a good time. Some of our good times will be play and some work. When you join, you will  become a 'Wood Gatherer,' and after three months' successful work, if you have met sertain qualifications, you will be promoted to the rank of 'Fire Maker.' Later on, when you come to realize what it means to be a 'Torch Bearer,' you will be put in that rank. The first law which you learn to follow is one which you must apply to your daily life. It is: Seek beauty, give service, pursue knowledge, be trustworthy, hold on to health, glorify work, be happy. 'The Camp Fire' has meant so much to girls'I have known, for their betterment, and has been so helpful in many ways, you surely will never regret becoming a member of the organization, or be anything but happy if you keep their laws. There will ne no dues, except the cost of your ceremonial costume, epaulettes and honor beads. The latter are quite inexpensive. The honors are divided into several classes, and for each honor a bead is given as symbol of your work. A special colored bead is given for each class. We shall meet about once every week. The monthly meeting is called the 'Council Fire.' I will tell you later about the 'Wohelo' ceremony. By the way, girls, 'Wohelo' stands for work, health and love. You see, the word is composed of the first two letters of each word."  The girls appeared to be greatly interested, and Mary felt very much encouraged. Some of the girls left to talk it over with the homefolks, while others, wishing to learn more of the organization, plied Mary with numerous questions. Finally, in desperation, she said: "Girls, I will read you the following from the 'Camp Fire Girls' Handbook, which I received this morning:  " 'The purpose of this organization is to show that the common things of daily life are the chief means of beauty, romance and adventure; to aid in the forming of habits making for health and vigor, the out-of-door habit and the out-of-door spirit; to devise ways of measuring and creating standards to woman's work, and to give girls the opportunity to learn how to "keep step," to learn team work, through doing it; to help girls and women serve the community, the larger home, in the same way they have always served the individual home; to give status and social recognition to the knowledge of the mother, and thus restore the intimate relationship of mothers and daughters to each other.'  "Well, girls," said Mary, as she laid aside the book. I think you all understand what a benefit this will be to you, and I will  do all in my power to help you girls, while I am at the farm this summer. It is too late to tell you any more today. The information I have given you will suffice for the present. Three cheers for our Camp Fire! which will be under way in two months, I trust."  The members of "Shawnee" Camp Fire held their first Council Fire, or Ceremonial Meeting, the second week in July. The girls, all deeply interested, worked hard to secure honors which were awarded for engaging in domestic duties well known to the home, for studying and observing the rules of hygiene and sanitation, and for learning and achievements in various ways. They held weekly meetings and studied diligently to win the rank of Fire Maker.  A girl, when she joins, becomes a Wood Gatherer; she then receives a silver ring.  The weeks pass swiftly by. and it is time for another Camp Fire. The girls selected as their meeting place for this occasion farmer Druckenmuller's peach orchard, to which they walked, a distance of about three miles from the home of Elizabeth Schmidt. They left about two o'clock in the afternoon, intending to return home before nightfall, a good time being anticipated, as they took with them lunch and materials for a corn-roast.  The peach orchard in question, covering many acres, was situated at the foot of a low hill. Between the two flowed an enchanting, fairy-like stream, the cultivated peach orchard on one side, and on the opposite side the forest-like hill, covered with an abundance of wild flowers.  When the afternoon set for the Council Fire arrived, had you happened to meet the fifteen merry, chattering girls, accompanied by two older girls. Mary and Lucy Robbins (the country school teacher), as chaperones, wending their way to the orchard, you, without a doubt, would have smiled and a question might naturally have arisen regarding their sanity. They certainly possessed intel-ligent faces, but why those queer-shaped Indian dresses? And such an awkward length for a young girl's dress! And why was their hair all worn hanging in one braid over each shoulder, with a band over the forehead ? Why so many strings of gaudy beads around their necks? These questions may all be answered in one  
  ELIZABETH SCHMIDT "LAUNCHING WATER"  A picture of a girl dressed in Native American clothing standing next to a stone pillar. The image is set in an ornate beaded border with feathers. 
   single sentence: The girls are dressed in Ceremonial Costume  A great many delays along the way were caused by girls asking the names of the different wild flowers and weeds they noticed in passing. One of the girls stopped to examine a prickly-looking plant about two feel high. with 1ittle blue flowers growing along the stem, and asked if any one knew the name of it. They were about to look it up in a small "Flower Guide" owned by one of the girls. when some one said : "Why. that is a weed called 'Vipers Bougloss.'" They also found cardinal flower, thorn apple, monkey flower and jewel-weed in abundance, wild sunflower, ginseng, early goldenrod. "Joe-pie-weed," marshallow, black cohosh and purple 1oose-trifle. The girls also noticed various birds.   On a tall tree one of the girls espied a rose-breasted Grosbeak, care in this part of Bucks County. They all stopped and watched for a short time a white-bellied Nut-hatch. The girls were startled as a Scarlet Tanger flew past to join his mate, and they at last reached their rendezvous, the orchard.  By half-past three they were all seated in a circle waiting for the ceremonics to begin. Mary Midleton, their Guardian, stepped to the front, saying: "Sunflower. light the fire." Sunflower, through several months of daily attainment, had become a Fire-maker and was very proud of the Fire-maler's bracelet she was entitled to wear. Sunflower was given that name because she always looked on the bright side of everything ; she looked like a sunflower, too, with her tanned face and light. curly hair.  All the girls had symbolical names, given them. "Lark" was so named because of her sweet voice and because she loved to sing; "Sweet Tooth," on account of her love for candy; "Quick Silver." because she was quick, bright and witty; "Great Buffalo," a girl who was very strong; Elizabeth Schmidt, "Laughing Water." so named because she laughed and giggled at everybody and everything; "Babbling Brook." because it seemed an utter impossibility for her to stop talking; "Burr," because she sticks to ideas and friends; "Faith," quiet and reserved; "Comet," comes suddenly and brings a lot of light; "Black Hawk," always eager at first, but inclined to let her eagerness wear off: "Pocahontas,' because she never can hurry; Ginger Foot." a fiery temper; "Gypsy," so named on account of her black hair; "Bright Eyes," for her bright, blue eyes; "Rainbow." for her many ways, an because she is pretty.   As "Sunflower" took the matches and knelt by the pile of wood and lighted the fire, she recited the Ode to the Fire:  "Oh, Fire! Long years ago, when our fathers fought with great beasts, you were their protector. From the cruel cold of winter you saved. When they needed food, you changed the flesh of beasts into savory meat for them. Through all ages your mysterious flame has been a symbol of the Great Spirit to them. Tonight we light this lire in remembrance of the Great Spirit Who gave you to us."  Then the girls sang the chant or chanted:  Wohelo for aye, Wohelo for aye, Wohelo for aye, Wohelo for work, Wohelo for health, Wohelo, Wohelo for love.  Then they recited the Wood-gatherer's Desire:  "It is my desire to be a Carnpfire Girl and keep the law of the Camp Fire, which is 'To Seek Beauty, Give Service, Pursue Knowledge, Be Trustworthy, Hold onto Health, Glorify Work. Be Happy.' "  None had yet attained the highest rank, that of Torch Bearer, won by still greater achievement, the Camp having been organized so recently. Their motto was "The light which has been given to me, I desire to pass undimmed to others."  "Gypsy," the secretary, then read the "Count" for the last meeting and called the roll, and the girls handed in the list of honors they had won in the last month. Some amused themselves playing games, while others gathered more wood.  At five o'clock the corn and white and sweet potatoes were in the fire roasting. A jolly circle of girls around the fire were busily engaged toasting "Weiners" for the feast, which was finally pronounced ready to be partaken of. The hungry girls "fell to" and even-thing eatable disappeared as if by magic; and last, but not least, was the toasting of marshmallows,'speared on the points of long, two-pronged sticks (broken from near-by trees). which were held over the fire until the marshmallows turned a delicate fawn  color. When everything had been eaten, with the exception of several cardboard boxes, corn cobs and husks, the girls quickly cleared up. Then, seated around the fire, told what they knew of Indian legends and folklore.  Noticing the sun slowly sinking in the West, they quickly gathered together their belongings and started homeward singing, "My Country, 'tis of Thee, Sweet Land of Liberty."  Thus broke up the second Council Fire, and in the heart of each girl was the thought of how much the Campfire was helping them to love God and His works. 
  
  CHAPTER XIV.  MARY MAKES "VIOLET" AND "ROSE LEAF" BEADS.  "Aunt Sarah." exclaimed Mary one day "you promised to tell me exactly how you made those 'Rose Beads' you have."  Yes, my dear, and you must make the beads before the June roses are gone. The process isvery simple. If you would have them very sweet, get the petals of the most fragnact rose. I used petals of the old-fashioned, pink 'hundred leaf' and 'blush rosed.' Gather a quantity, for you will need them all. Grind them to a pulp in the food chopper, repeat several times and place the pulp and juice into an iron kettle or pan. This turns the pulp black, which nothing but an iron kettle will do; cook, and when the consistency of dough, again as large as the size you wish your beads to be when finished, as they shrink in size when dried, and make them of uniform size, or larger ones for the centre of the necklace, as you prefer. Roll in the palms of your hands until perfectly round, stick a pin through each bead, then stick the pins into a bake board. He careful the bead does not touch the board, as that would spoil its shape. Allow the beads to remain until perfectly dry. If they are to have a dull finish, leave as they are. If you wish to polish them, take a tiny piece of vaseline on the palm of the hand and rub them between the palms until the vaseline is absorded. Then string them on a linen thread. Keep in a closed box to preserve their fragrance. Those I showed you, Mary. I them still.'"  "Did you know, Mary, that beads may be made from the petals of the common wild blue violet in exactly the same manner as they are made from rose leaves?"  "No, indeed, but I don't think the making of beads from the petals of roses and violets as wonderful as the beads which you raise in the garden. Those shiny, pearl-like seeds or beads of sil-very gray, called 'Job's Tears,' which grow on a stalk resembling  growing corn ; and to think Professor Schmidt raised those which Elizabeth strung on linen thread, alternately with beads, for a portiere in their sitting-room."  "Yes, my dear, the beads must be pierced before they become hard; later they should be polished. Did you ever see them grow Mary? The beads or 'tears' grow on a stalk about fifteen inches high and from the bead or 'tear' grows a tiny, green spear resembling oats. They are odd and with very little care may he grown in a small garden."  "They certainly are a curiosity," said Mary. 
  
  CHAPTER XV.  MARY AND ELIZABETH VISIT SADIE SINGMASTER.  Farmer Landis, happening to mention at the breakfast table his intention of driving over to the "Ax Handle Factory" to obtain wood ashes to use as a fertilizer, his wife remarked, "Why not take Mary with you, John ? She can stop at Singmaster's with a basket of carpet rags for Sadie. I've been wanting to send them over for some time." Turning to Mary, she said: "Poor little, crippled Sadie! On account of a fall, which injured her spine, when a small child, she has been unable to walk for years. She cuts and sews carpet rags, given her by friends and neighbors, and from their sale to a carpet weaver in a near-by town, helps her widowed mother eke out her small income."  "I'd love to go see her." said Mary. Elizabeth Schmidt also expressed her willingness to go, when asked, saying: "I am positive mother will add her contribution to the carpet rags for Sadie. I do pity her so very much."  "Yes," said Mary's Aunt, "she is poor and proud. She will not accept charity, so we persuade her to take carpet rags, as we have more than we can possibly use."  On reaching the Singmaster cottage, the girls alighted with their well-filled baskets, Mary's Uncle driving on to the "Ax Handle Factory," promising to call for the girls on his return. The sad, brown eyes of Sadie, too large for her pinched, sallow face, shone with pleasure at sight of the two young girls so near her own age, and she smiled her delight on examining the numerous bright-colored patches brought by them. Thinking the pleasure she so plainly showed might appear childish to the two girls, she explained: "I do get so dreadfully tired sewing together so many dull, homely rags. I shall enjoy making balls of these pretty, bright colors."  "Sadie." Mary inquired, "will you think me inquisitive should I ask what the carpet weaver pays you for the rags when you have sewed and wound them into balls?"    "Certainly not," replied Sadie. "Four cents a pound is what he pays me. It takes two of these balls to make a pound," and she held up a ball she had just finished winding.  "Is 
 that all  you get?" exclaimed Elizabeth.  "Have you ever made rag rugs?" inquired Mary.  "No. I have never even seen one. Are they anything like braided mats?"  "Yes, they are somewhat similar to them, but I crochet mine and think them prettier. I have made several, with Aunt Sarah's assistance. I'll come over and teach you to make them one of these days, should you care to learn, and I'm positive you will find ready sale for them. In fact. I've several friends in the city who have admired the ones I have, and would like to buy rugs for the Colonial rooms they are furnishing. Sadie, can you crochet?"  "Oh, yes. I can do the plain stitch very well."  "That is all that will be necessary. You will become very much interested in inventing new designs, it is very fascinating work, and it will be more remunerative than sewing carpet rags. Aunt Sarah will send you more carpet rags if you require them, and should you wish dull colors of blue or pink, a small package of dye will transform white or light-colored rags into any desired shade, to match the furnishings of different rooms. I think the crocheted rugs much prettier than the braided ones, which are so popular in the 'Nutting' pictures, and the same pretty shades may he used when rugs are crocheted."  When Fanner Landis came for the girls, he found them too busily engaged talking to hear his knock at the door. During the drive home Mary could think and talk of nothing but Sadie Sing-master, and the rugs she had promised to teach her to make at an early day. Elizabeth, scarcely less enthusiastic, said : "I've a lot of old things I'll give her to cut up for carpet rags."  Reaching home, Mary could scarcely wait an opportunity to tell Aunt Sarah all her plans for Sadie's betterment. When she finally did tell her Aunt, she smiled and said: "Mary, I'm not surprised.You are always planning to do a kind act for some one. You remind me of the lines, 'If I Can Live,' by Helen Hunt Jackson." And she repeated the following for Mary:   IF I CAN LIVE.  If I can live To make some pale face brighter and to give A second luster to some tear-dimmed eye, Or e'en impart One throb of comfort to an aching heart, Or cheer some wayworn sou! in passing by ;  If I can lend A strong hand to the fallen, or defend My life, though bare, Perhaps, of much that seemeth dear and fair To us of earth, will not have been in vain.  The purest joy, Most near to heaven, far from earth's alloy, Is bidding cloud give away to sun and shine; And 'twill be well If on that day of days the angels tell Of me, she did her best for one of Thine. 
  
  CHAPTER XVI.  THE OLD PARLOR MADE BEAUTIFUL (MODERNIZED).  When John Landis came into possession of "Clear Spring" Farm, where his mother had lived during her lifetime, she having inherited it from her father, the rooms of the old farm house were filled with quaint, old-fashioned furniture of every description. "Aunt Sarah," on coming to the farm to live, had given a personal touch and cheery, homelike look to every room in the house, with one exception, the large, gloomy, old-fashioned parlor, which was cold, cheerless and damp. She confessed to Mary she always felt as if John's dead-and-gone ancestors' ghostly presences inhabited . the silent room. The windows were seldom opened to allow a ray of sunlight to penetrate the dusk with which the room was always enveloped, except when the regular weekly sweeping day arrived; when, after being carefully swept and dusted, it was promptly closed. A room every one avoided, Aunt Sarah was very particular about always having fresh air and sunlight in every other part of the house but his one room. The old fireplace had been boarded up many years before Aunt Sarah's advent to the farm, so it could not be used. One day Mary noticed, while dusting the room (after it had been given a thorough sweeping by Sibylla, Aunt Sarah's one maid servant), that the small, many-paned windows facing the East, at one end of the parlor, when opened, let in a flood of sunshine; and in the evening those at the opposite end of the long room gave one a lovely view of the setting sun-a finer picture than any painted by the hand of a master. Mary easily persuaded her Aunt to make some changes in the unlivable room. She suggested that they consult her Uncle about repapering and painting the room and surprise him with the result when finished.   Aunt Sarah who never did things by halves, said : Mary, I have long intended 'doing over' this room, but thought it such a great undertaking. Now, with your assistance, I shall make a dean sweep of these old, antiquated heirlooms of a past generation.  This green carpet, with its gorgeous bouquets of roses, we shall have combined with one of brown and tan in the attic. Your Uncle shall take them with him when he drives to town and have them woven into pretty, serviceable rugs for the floor."  "And, oh! Aunt Sarah," cried Mary, "do let's have an open fireplace. It makes a room so cheery and 'comfy' when the weather gets colder, on long winter evenings, to have a fire in the grate. I saw some lovely, old brass andirons and fender in the attic, and some brass candlesticks there also, which will do nicely for the mantel shelf over the fireplace. I'll shine 'em up, and instead of this hideously-ugly old wall paper with gay-colored scrawley figures, Aunt Sarah, suppose we get an inexpensive, plain, tan felt paper for drop ceiling and separate it from the paper on the side wall, which should be a warm, yellow-brown, with a narrow chestnut wood molding. Then this dull, dark, gray-blue painted woodwork; could any one imagine anything more hideously ugly? It gives me the 'blues' simply to look at it. Could we not have it painted to imitate chestnut wood? And don't you think we might paint the floor around the edges of the rug to imitate the woodwork? Just think of those centre panels of the door painted a contrasting shade of pale pink. The painter who did this work certainly was an artist. A friend of mine in the city, wishing to use rugs instead of carpets on her floors, and not caring to go to the expense of laying hardwood floors, gave the old floors a couple of coats of light lemon.or straw-colored paint, then stained and grained them a perfect imitation of chestnut, at small expense. The floors were greatly admired when finished, and having been allowed to dry thoroughly after being varnished, proved quite durable. I will write to rny friend at once and ask her exactly how her floors were treated."  "Now, Mary, about this old-style furniture. The old grandfather clock standing in the corner, at the upper end of the room, I should like to have remain. It is one hundred and fifty years old and belonged to my folks, and, although old-fashioned, is highly valued by me."  "Of course," said Mary, "we'll certainly leave that in the room."   "Also," said Aunt Sarah, "allow the old cottage organ and large, old-fashioned bookcase belonging to your Uncle to remain. He has frequently spoken of moving his bookcase into the next  
  A-24 Seed Wreath A-25 Wax Fruit A-26 Old Parlor Mantel A-27 Old Clock A-28 Boquet of Hair Flowers  A-24 is a framed crescent moon shape made from seeds. A-25 is an arrangement of wax fruit on a stand. A-26 is a mantel displaying several pictures. A-27 is a grandfather clock. A-28 is a delicate looking arrangement of flowers. 
   room, when he was obliged to come in here for books, of which he has quite a valuable collection."  "Oh," said Mary, "no need of that. We will move Uncle John in here, near the bookcase, when we get our room fixed up. Aunt Sarah, we will leave that old-fashioned table, also with one leaf up against the wall. and this quaint, little, rush-bottomed rocker, which I just dote on."  "Why, dear," exclaimed Aunt Sarah, "there are several chairs to match it in the attic, which you may have when you start housekeeping for your very own. And," laughingly, said her Aunt, "there is another old, oval, marble-topped table in the attic, containing a large glass case covering a basket of wax fruit, which you may have."  "No, Aunt Sarah," said Mary, "I don't believe I want the fruit, but I will accept your offer of the table. Well, Aunt Sarah, 1 know you won't have this old, black what-not standing in the corner of the room. I do believe it is made of spools, strung on wire, as supports for the shelves; then all painted black, imitation of ebony, 1 suppose. It must have been made in the Black Age, at the same time the old corner cupboard was painted, as Uncle John told me he scraped off three different layers of paint before doing it over, and one was black. It was originally made of cherry. It certainly looks fine now, with those new brass hinges and pretty, old-fashioned glass knobs."  "Yes, Mary," replied her Aunt, "and there is an old corner cupboard in the attic which belonged to my father, that you may have, and, with a very little labor and expense, Ralph can make it look as well as mine. It has only one door and mine possesses two."  "Aunt Sarah," exclaimed Mary, "you are a dear! How will I ever repay you for all your kindness to me?"  "By passing it on to some one else when you find some one-needing help," said Aunt Sarah.   "Such a collection of odd things, Aunt Sarah, as are on this what-not I never saw. Old ambrotypes and daguerreotypes of gone and forgotten members of the 'freinshoft,' as you sometimes. say. I don't believe you know any of them."  "Yes, the red plush frame on the mantel shelf contains a pic-lure of John's Uncle, a fine-looking man. but he possessed 'Wanderlust' and has lived in California for many years.   "Oh, you mean the picture on the mantel standing near those twin gilded china vases, gay with red and blue paint?"  "Yes; and that small china and gilt stand with little bowl and pitcher was given me when a small child."  "Suppose I bring a basket and we will fill it with articles from the mantel and what-not," said Mary, "and cany them all to the attic, until you have a rummage sale some day. We'll burn these 'everlasting, and 'straw' flowers, and pampas grass, and this large apple stuck full of cloves. Here is a small china dog and a little china basket with a plaited china handle decorated with gilt, and tiny, pink-tinted china roses. And these large, glass marbles containing little silver eagles inside; also this small, spun-glass ship and blue-and-pink-striped glass pipe. Aunt Sarah, some of you: ancestors must have attended a glass blowers' exhibition in years past."  "This branch of white coral, these large snail shells (when a ling the roar of the ocean), and this small basket, fashioned of twigs and tendrils of grape vine, then dipped in red sealing wax, certainly is a good imitation of coral, and this plate, containing a miniature ship composed of green postage stamps, we will place in your corner cupboard."  "And, Aunt Sarah, I suppose this deep, glass-covered picture frame containing a bouquet of hair flowers, most wonderfully and fearfully made, was considered a work of art in days past and gone, as was also the crescent in a frame on the opposite side of the room, composed of flowers made of various seeds of grain and garden vegetables. Those daisies, made of cucumber seeds with grains of red corn for centres, and those made of tiny grains of popcorn with a watermelon seed in centre, are cute. The latter look like breastpins with a circle of pearls around the edge. And this glass case on the table, containing a white cross, covered with wax tube roses, ivy leaves, and fuchsias drooping from the arms Of the cross, sparkling with diamond dust! The band of green Chenille around its base matches the mat underneath, composed of green zephyr of different shades, knitted, then raveled to imitate moss, I suppose; and, no doubt, this marble-topped table has stood here for fifty years, in this same spot, lor the express purpose of holding this beautiful (?) work of art."   "The hair flowers and the seed wreath were made by John's sister." replied Aunt Sarah.  "Aunt Sarah," exclaimed Mary, "I've an original idea. This oval, marble-topped table has such strong, solid legs of black waltop made of wood at the planing mill? Wait; I'll get my tape measure. About thirty-two inches in diameter will do. The new top we shall stain to match the walnut frame, and it could be easily fastened to the table with a couple of screws; and, after the marble top has been well scoured, we'll use it in the kitchen as a bake board on which to roll out pic crust."  Her Aunt as usual acquiesced to all Mary's suggestions.  "You're a dear, Aunt Sarah!" exclaimed Mary, as she gave her a hug. "and I'll embroider big, yellow daisies with brown centres of French knots on gray linen for a new table cover. Won't they look just sweet?"  "Yes, Mary, and I'll buy a large, new lamp with a pretty shade, as I feel sure your Uncle will like to sit here evenings to read his papers and farm journals."  "And don't forget the Shriners' little magazine, 
 The Crescent , which amuses him so greatly. Aunt Sarah, I do wish those stiff, starchy-looking, blue-white Nottingham lace curtains at the windows had grown yellow with age. They would be ever so much prettier and softer looking, and they are such a pretty, neat design, too."  "Oh!" replied her Aunt, "that may be easily remedied. I'll just dip them into a little weak liquid coffee and that will give them a creamy tint, and take out the stiffness."  "Now," said Mary, "what shall we do with these stiff, ugly, haircloth-covered chairs and sofa?"  "Why," replied Aunt Sarah, "we shall buy cretonne or art cloth, in pretty shades of brown and tan or green, to harmonize with the wall paper, and make slip covers for them all. We could never think of dispensing with the sofa. It is a very important article of furniture in German households. The hostess usually gives the person of greatest distinction among her guests the place of honor beside her on the sofa."  "These chairs have such strong, well-made, mahogany frames it would be a pity not to use them. Now," continued Mary, "about the pictures on the wall. Can't we consign them all to the  attic? We might use some of the frames. I'll contribute unframed copies of 'The Angelus' and 'The Gleaners,' by Millet; and I think they would fit into these plain mahogany frames which contain the very old-fashioned set of pictures named respectively 'The Lovers,' 'The Declaration, 'The Lovers' Quarrel and 'The Marriage.' They constitute a regular art gallery. I'll use a couple of the frames for some small Colonial and apple blossom pictures I have, that I just love, by Wallace Nutting. Mine are all unframed; 'Maiden Reveries,' 'A Canopied Roof and a 'Ton of Bloom,' I think are sweet. Those branches of apple trees, covered with a mass of natural-looking pink blossoms, are exquisite."  "Yes," remarked Aunt Sarah, "they look exactly like our old Baldwin, Winesap and Cider apple trees in the old, south meadow in the Spring, And, Mary, we'll discard those two chromos, popular a half century ago, of two beautiful cherubs called respect-iveiy, 'Wide Awake' and 'Fast Asleep,' given as premiums to a popular magazine. I don't remember if the magazine was 'Godey's,' 'Peterson's or 'Home Queen'; they have good, plain, mahogany frames which we can use."  "And, Aunt Sarah," said Mary,"we can cut out the partition in this large, black-walnut frame, containing lithograph pictures of General George Washington, 'the Father of his Country' (we are informed in small letters at the bottom of the picture), and of General Andrew Jackson, 'the hero of New Orleans.' Both men are pictured on horseback, on gayly-caparisoned, prancing white steeds, with scarlet saddle cloth, edged with gold bullion fringe. The Generals are pictured clad in blue velvet coats with white facings of cloth or satin vest and tight-fitting knee breeches, also white and long boots reaching to the knee. Gold epaulettes are on their shoulders, and both are in the act of lifting their old-fashioned Continental hats, the advancing army showing faintly in the background. How gorgeously they are arrayed! We will use this frame for the excellent, large copy you have of 'The Doctor' and the pictured faces of the German composers-Beethoven, Wagner, Mendelssohn, Haydn, Schubert and Mozart, which I nave on a card with a shaded brown background will exactly fit into this plain frame of narrow molding, from which I have just removed the old cardboard motto 'No place like home,' done with green-shaded zephyr in cross-stitch."   
  A-29 An Old Sampler A-30 Old Woven Basket A-31 Wax Cross A-32 Old Spinning Wheel  A-29 is framed sampler. A-30 is a basket of shells. A-31 shows a small table with an ornate wax cross on it. A-32 shows a small wooden spinning wheel. 
   "Now, Mary, with the couple of comfortable rockers which I intend purchasing, I think we have about finished planning out room."  "If you are willing, Aunt Sarah, I should like to make some pretty green and brown cretonne slips to cover those square sofa pillows in place of the ones made of small pieces of puffed silk and the one of colored pieces of cashmere in log cabin design. I do admire big, fat, plain, comfortable pillows, for use instead of show. And we must have a waste paper basket near the table beside Uncle John's chair. I shall contribute green satin ribbon for an immense bow on the side of the basket. Oh! Aunt Sarah ! You've forgotten all about this odd, woven basket, beside the what-not, filled with sea shells. I don't care for the shells, but the basket would make a lovely sewing basket."  "You may have the basket, Mary, if you like it. It came from Panama, or perhaps it was bought at Aspinwall by John's Uncle, many years ago, when he carne home on a visit from California, by way of the Isthmus, to visit old friends and relatives. John's Mother always kept it standing on the floor in one corner of the room beside the what-not."  "Aunt Sarah, why was straw ever put under this carpet?"  "The straw was put there, my dear, to save the carpet, should the boards on the floor be uneven. My Mother was always particular about having cut rye straw, because it was softer and finer than any other. It was always used in those days instead of the carpet linings we now have. I remember sometimes, when the carpet had been newly laid, in our home, immediately after house cleaning time the surface of the floor looked very odd; full of bumps and raised places in spots, until frequent walking over it flattened down the straw This room happens to have a particularly good, even floor, as this part of the house was built many vears later than the original, old farm house, else it would not do to have it painted."  "Aunt Sarah, may I have the old spinning wheel in the attic? I'd love to furnish an old Colonial bedroom when I have a home of my very own. I'll use the rag carpet you made me for the floor, the old-fashioned, high-post bed Uncle John said I might have, and the 'New Colonial' rugs you taught me to make."  "Yes, my dear, and there is another old grandfather's clock  in the attic which you may have; and a high-boy also, for which I have no particular use."  "Aunt Sarah, we shall not put away this really beautiful old sampler worked in silk by Uncle John's grandmother when a girl of nine years. It is beautifully done, and is wonderful, I think. And what is this small frame containing a yellowed piece of paper cut in intricate designs, presumably with scissors?"  "Look on the back of the picture and see what is written there, my dear," said her Aunt.  Mary slowly read:" This is the only picture I owned before my marriage. I earned the money to buy it by gathering wheat heads.' "  "It belonged to my grandmother," said Aunt Sarah. "In old times, after the reapers had left the field, the children were allowed to gather up the wheat remaining. and, I suppose, grandmother bought this picture with the money she earned herself, and considered it quite a work of art in her day. It is over one hundred years old." 
  
  CHAPTER XVII.  AN OLD SONG EVENING  Aunt Sarah and Mary spent few idle moments while carrying out their plans for "doing over" the old parlor. Finally, 'twas finished. Mary breathed a sigh of satisfaction as the last picture was hung on the wall. She turned to her Aunt, saying, "Don't you think the room looks bright, cheery and livable?"  "Yes," replied her Aunt," and what is more essential, homey, I have read somewhere, 'A woman's house should be as personal a matter as a spider's web or a snail's shell; and all the thought, toil and love she puts into it should be preserved a part of its comeliness and homelikeness forever, and be her monument to the generations."  "Well, Aunt Sarah," replied Mary, "I guess we've earned our monument. The air that blows over the fields, wafted in from the open window, is sweet with the scent of grain and clover, and certainly is refreshing. I'm dreadfully tired, but so delighted with the result of our labors. Now we will go and 'make ready,' as Sibylla says, before the arrival of Ralph from the city. I do hope the ice cream will be frozen hard. The Sunshine Sponge Cake, which I baked from a recipe the Professor's wife gave me. is light as a feather. 'Tis Ralph's favorite cake. Lets see; besides Ralph there are coming all the Schmidts Lucy Robbins. the school teacher, and Sibylla entertains her Jake in the kitchen. I promised to treat him to ice cream; Sibylla was so good about helping me crack the ice to use for freezing the cream. We shall have an 'Old Song Evening' that will amuse every one."  Quite early as is the custom in the country, the guests for the evening arrived ; and both Mary and Aunt Sarah felt fully repaid for their hard work of the past weeks by the pleasure John Land evinced at the changed appearance of the room.   The Professor's wife said, "It scarcely seems possible to have changed the old room so completely."   Aunt Sarah replied, "Paint and paper do wonders when combined with good taste, furnished by Mary."  During the evening one might have been forgiven for thinking Professor Schmidt disloyal to the Mother Country (he having been born and educated in Heidelberg) had you overheard him speaking to Ralph on his favorite subject, the "Pennsylvania German." During a lull in the general conversation in the room Mary heard the Professor remark to Ralph: "The Pennsylvania Germans are a thriftly, honest and industrious class of people, many of whom have held high offices. The first Germans to come to America as colonists in Pennsylvania were, as a rule, well to do. Experts, when examining old documents of Colonial days, after counting thousands of signatures, found the New York 'Dutch' and the Pennsylvania 'German' were above the average in education in those days. Their dialect, the so-called 'Pennsylvania German' or 'Dutch,' as it is erroneously called by many, is a dialect which we find from the Tauber Grund to Frankfurt, A. M. As the German language preponderated among the early settlers, the language of different elements, becoming amalgamated, formed a class of people frequently called 'Pennsylvania Dutch'."  Professor Harbaugh, D.D., has written some beautiful poems in Pennsylvania German which an eminent authority, Professor Kluge, a member of the Freiburg University, Germany, has thought worthy to be included among the classics. They are almost identical with the poems written by Nadler in Heidel-berger Mundart, or dialect.  Mary, who had been listening intently to the Professor, said, when he finished talking to Ralph: "Oh, please, do repeat one of Professor Harbaugh's poems for us."  He replied, "I think I can recall several stanzas of 'Das Alt Schulhaus an der Krick.' Another of Professor Harbaugh's poems, and I think one of the sweetest I have ever read, is "Heemweeh.' Both poems are published in his book entitled 'Harbaugh's Harfe,' in Pennsylvania German dialect, and possess additional interest from the fact that the translations of these poems, in the latter part of the same book, were made by the author himself."   "Oh, do repeat all that you remember of both the poems," begged Mary.  The Professor consented, saying; "As neither you nor Mr. Jackson understand the Pennsylvania German dialect, I shall  translate them for you, after repeating what I remember 'Heem-week means Homesickness, but first I shall give you 'Das Alt Schulhaus an der Krick'."  *DAS ALT SCHULHAUS AN DER KRICK.  Heit is 's 'xactly zwansig Johr, Dass ich bin owwe naus; Nau bin ich widder lewig z'rick Un schteh am Schulhaus an d'r Krick, Juscht neekscht an's Dady's Haus.  Ich bin in hunnert Heiser g'west, Vun Marbelstee' un Brick, Un alles was sie hen, die Leit. Dhet ich verschwappe cenig Zeit For's Schulhaus an der Krick.  Der Weisseech schteht noch an der Dhier- Macht Schatte iwwer's Dach: Die Drauwerank is ah noch grie'- Un's Amschel-Nescht-guk juscht mol hi'- O was is dess en Sach!  Do bin ich gange in die Schul, Wo ich noch war gans klce'; Dort war der Meeschter in seim Schtuhl, Dort war sei' Wip, un dort sei' Ruhl,- Ich kann's noch Alles seh'.  Die lange Desks rings an der Wand- Die grose Schieler drum; Uf eener Seit die grose Mad, Un dort die Buwe net so bleed- Guk, wic sie piepe rum !   Oh horcht, ihr Leit, wu nooch mir lebt, Ich schreib eich noch des Schtick: Ich warn eich, droll eich, gebt doch Acht, Un memmt uf immer gut enacht, Des Schulhaus an der Krick!  THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE AT THE CREEK.  Today it is just twenty years, Since I began to roam; Now, safely back, I stand once more, Before the quaint old school-house door, Close by my father's home.  I've been in many house since, Of marble built, and brick; Though grander far, their aim they miss, To lure heart's old love from this Old school-house at the creek.  The white-oak stands before the door, And shades the roof at noon; The grape-vine, too, is fresh and green; The robin's nest!-Ah, hark!-I ween That is the same old tune!  'Twas here I first attended school When I was very small; There was the Master on his stool, There was his whip and there his rule- I seem to see it all.  The long desks ranged along the walls, With books and inkstands crowned; Here on this side the large girls sat, And there the tricky hoys on that- See! How they peep around!   Ye, who shall live when I am dead- Write down my wishes quick- Protect it, love it, let it stand, A way-mark in this changing land- That school-house at the creek.  HEEMWEH.  Ich wees net was die Wrsach is- Wees net, warum ich's dhu: 'N jedes Johr mach ich der Weg Der alte Heemet zu; Hab weiter nix zu suche dort- Kee' Erbschaft on kee Geld; Un doch treibt mich des Heemgefiehl So schtark wic alle Welt; Nor'd schtart ich ewe abun geh, Wie owe schun gemeldt.  Wie nacher dass ich kumm zum Ziel, Wie schtarker will ich geh, For eppes in mei'm Herz werd letz Un dhut m'r kreislich weh. Der letschte Hiwel schpring ich nuf, Un ep ich drowe bin, Schtreck ich mich of so hoch ich kann Un guk mit Luschte hin; Ich seh's alt Schtee'haus dorch die Beem, Un wott ich war schun drin.  Wie gleich ich sclle Babble Beem, Sie schtehn wie Brieder dar; Un uf'm Gippel-g'wiss ich leb! Hockt alleweil 'n Schtaar! 'S Gippel biegt sich-guk, wie's gaunscht- 'R hebt sich awer fescht; Ich seh sei' rothe Fliegle plehn, Wann er sei' Feddere wescht;   Will wette, dass sei' Fraale hot Uf sellem Baam 'n Nescht!  Guk! werklich, ich bin schier am Haus!- Wie schnell geht doch die Zeit! Warm m'r so in Gedanke geht, So wees m'r net wie weit. Dort is d'r Schap. die Walschkornkrip, Die Seiderpress dort draus; Dort is die Scheier, un dort die Schpring- Frisch quellt des Wasser raus; Un guk! die sehm alt Klapbord-Fens, Un's Dheerle vor'm Haus.  Zwee Blatz sin do uf dare Bortsch, Die halt ich hoch in Acht, Bis meines Lebens Sonn versinkt In schtiller Dodtes-Nacht! Wo ich vum alte Vaterhaus 'S erscht mol bin gange fort. An sellem Rigel dort: Un nix is mir so heilig nau Als grade seller Ort.  Was macht's dass ich so dort hi' guk, An sell End vum der Bank! Weescht du's? Mei' Herz is noch net dodt, Ich wees es, Got sei Dank! Wie manchmal sass maiDadydort, Am Summer-Nochmiddag. Die Hande uf der Schoos gekreizt. Sei Schtock bei Seite lag. Was hot er dort im Schtille g'denkt? Wer mecht es wisse-sag?   HOME-SICKNESS  I know not what the reason is; Where'er 1 dwell or roam, I make a pilgrimage each year, To my old childhood home. Have nothing there to give or get- No legacy, no gold- Yet by some home-attracting power I'm eversome controlled; This is the way the homesick do, I often have been told.  As nearer to the spot I come More sweetly am I drawn; And something in my heart begins To urge me faster on. Ere quite I've reached the last hilltop- You'll smile at me, I ween!- I stretch myself
high as I can, To catch the view serene- The dear old stone house through the trees With shutters painted green!  How do I love those poplar trees; What tall and stately things! See! on the top of one just now A starling sits and sings. He'll fall!-the twig bends with his weight! He likes that danger best. I see the red upon his wings,- Dark shining is the rest. I ween his little wife has built On that same tree her nest.  See! really I am near the house; How short the distance seems! There is no sense of time when one   Goes musing in his dreams. There is the shop-the corn-crib, too- The cider-press-just see! The barn-the spring with drinking cup Hung up against the tree. The yard-fence-and the little gate Just where it used to be.  Two spots on this old friendly porch I love, nor can forget, Till dimly in the night of death My life's last sun shall set! When first I left my father's house, One summer morning bright, My mother at that railing wept Till I was out of sight! Now like a holy star that spot Shines in this world's dull night.  What draws my eye to yonder spot- That bench against the wall? What holy mem'ries cluster there, My heart still knows them all! How often sat my father there On summer afternoon; Hands meekly crossed upon his lap, He looked so lost and lone, As if he saw an empty world, And hoped to leave it soon.  At the conclusion of his recital, Mary heartily thanked the Professor, and, at his request, obediently seated herself at the old, but still sweet-toned cottage organ, and expressed her willingness to play any old-time songs or hymns requested, and saying, "I know Aunt Sarah's favorite." commenced playing, "My Latest Sun is Sinking Fast," followed by "This Old-Time Religion," "Jesus, Lover of My Soul," "One'of the Sweet Old Chapters," "Silver Threads Among the Gold" and the sweet old hymn, "In the Summer Land of Song," by Fanny Crosby.   At John Landis' request, she played and sang "Auld Lang Syne," "When You and I Were Young, Maggie," "Old Folks at Home" and "Old Black Joe."  Lucy Robbins, when asked for her favorites, replied: "In the Gloaming," "The Old, Old Home." "The Lost Chord" and "Better Bide a Wee."  The Professor then asked his daughter Elizabeth to give them the music of a song from German Volkslied, or Folk Song, with the words of which all except Mary and Ralph were familiar. Professor Schmidt sang in his high, cracked voice to Elizabeth's accompaniment the words of the German song, beginning:  Du, Du liegest mir in Herzen Du, Du liegst mir in Sinn Du, Du machst mir vicl Schmerzen Weist nicht wie gut ich Dir binn Ja, ja, ja, ja, Du weist nicht wie gut ich Dir bin.  The young folks all joined in the chorus. Fritz Schmidt asked Elizabeth to play "Polly Wolly Doodle" for little Pollykins, which Fritz sang with gusto. Fritz then sang the rollicking German song, "Lauderbach," to an accompaniment played by Mary, and followed by singing "Johnny Schmoker," with appropriate gesttures in the chorus commencing "My Pilly, Willy Wink, das is mein fifa," etc., ending with "My fal. lal, lal, my whach, whach, das ist mein doodle soch," which he emphasized by shrugging his shoulders, to the no small enjoyment of the young floks, who thought the silly, old German song no end of fun. This was followed by a favorite college song, "Mandalay," by Fritz.  Then Elizabeth Schmidt played and sang a pretty little German song called "Meuhlen Rad," meaning The Mill Wheel, taught her by her mother.   MEUHLEN RAD.  In einen kuhlen grunde Da steht ein meuhlen rad; Mein libste ist versch wunden, Die dort gcwhoned hat: Sie hat mir treu versprochen,   Gab ihr cin ring dabei; Sie hat die treu gebrochen, Das ringlein sprang entzwei.  She translated it for the benefit of Ralph and Mary: "In a cool, pleasant spot, stands a mill. My loved one, who lived there, has disappeared. She promised to be true to me, and I gave her a ring. She broke her promise and the ring broke in two."  Fritz then caught his little sister Pauline around the waist and waltzed her to one end of the long room, saying: "Mary, play the piece, Tut On Your Old Gray Bonnet,' and Pollykins and I will do the cakewalk For you."  Polly, who bad become quite a proficient little dancer under her sister's teaching, was very willing to do her share in the evening's entertainment, and it was pronounced a decided success.  Mary then said, "I'll play my favorite schottische, composed by our old friend, the Professor. I have not yet procured a copy of his latest piece of music, 'The Passing of the Dahlias.' I think it is still with the publishers."  Mary, after playing "Rock of Ages," left the room to see about serving refreshments. when Elizabeth Schmidt took her place at the instrument. After playing "The Rosary," she turned to Ralph, who had been greatly amused by the German songs on the program, all of which were quite new to him. and said: "What shall I play for you?"  He replied.'" 'My little Irish Rose'-no, I mean 'The River Shannon.'"  "Don't you mean 'That Grand Old Name Called Mary?'" mischievously inquired Fritz Schmidt, who could not refrain from teasing Ralph, which caused a laugh at his expense, as all present were aware of his love for Mary. Elizabeth, to cover Ralph's confusion. quickly replied: "I'll play my favorite 'The End of a Perfect Day.'"   The party was pronounced a success, and broke up at a late hour for country folks. Before leaving, Mary's Uncle said:"Now, let's sing 'Home Sweet Home.' and then all join in singing that grand old hymn. 'My Country. 'Tis of Thee,''to the new tune by our friend, the Bucks County Editor"   
  PALASADES OR NARROWS OF NOCKAMIXON  A picture of a boat going down a river. 
 
  
  CHAPTER XVIII.  A VISIT TO THE "PENNSYLVANIA PALISADES," AS THE "NARROWS" OF THE DELAWARE RIVER ARE CALLED.  All hailed with delight Aunt Sarah's proposal that the Schmidt and Landis families, on the Fourth of July, drive over to the Narrows, visit Aunt Sarah's old home at Nockamixon, and see the "Ringing Rocks" and "High Falls." situated a short distance from the rocks, near which place picnics were frequently held. John Landis readily agreed to the proposed plan, saying, "The meadow hay and clover art cut. and I'll not cut the wheat until the fifth day of July."  The third of July was a busy day at both farm houses, preparing savory food of every description with which to fill hampers for the next day's outing. Small Polly Schmidt was so perfectly happy, at the thought of a proposed picnic, she could scarcely con-tain herself. and as her sister Elizabeth said, "did nothing but get in every way." Little Polly, being easily offended, trudged over to the Landis farm to see Mary, with whom she knew she was a great favorite.  The morning of the Fourth dawned bright and clear. Quite early, while the earth was still enveloped in a silvery mist, and on the lattice work of filmy cobwebs, spun over weeds and grass,dewdrops, like any diamonds sparkled and glistened. until dissolved by the sun's warm rays, the gay party left home for the "Palisades" were quite a distance from the farm, to drive being the only way of reaching the place, unless one boarded the gaso-line motorcar, called the "Carmicht? Express" by farmers living in the vicinity of Schuggenhaus Township.  There is something indescribably exhilarating about starting for an early drive in the country before sunrise on a bright, clear morning in midsummer when the earth is awaking. the sky and the ocean, the river and forest, the mountain and plain." Who has not felt the sweet freshness of early morning before "the sunshine is all on the wing" or the birds awaken and begin to chatter and  to sing? There is a hush over everything; later is heard the low-ing of cattle, the twitter of birds and hum of insect life, proclaim-ing the birth of the new day. Passing an uncultivated field, over-grown with burdock, wild carrots, mullein, thistle and milk weed, Mary alighted and gathered some of the pods of the latter, inclos-ing imitation of softest down, which she used later for filling sofa pillows.  "Look at those pretty wild canaries!" exclaimed Aunt Sarah, "yellow as gold, swinging on the stem of a tall weed."  "Professor Schmidt, can you tell me the name of that weed?" questioned Mary. "I have always admired the plant, with its large leaves and long, drooping racemes of crimson seeds.  "That," replied the Professor, "is a foreign plant, a weed called Equisetum from 'Equi,' a horse, and 'Seturn'-tail. The country folk hereabout call it 'Horsetail.' It belongs to the Crptogamous or flowerless plants. There are only four specimens of this plant in America. I, too, have always greatly admired the plant."  The Professor was quite a noted botanist. There were few flowers, plants or weeds of which he was ignorant of the name or medicinal value. Another bird lazily picked seeds from the thistle blossoms. "See," exclaimed Aunt Sarah, "one bird has a spear of grass in its mouth!"  "Yellow star grass," said the Professor, "with which to make a nest. They never mate until the last of June, or first part of July. The tiny, little robbers ate up nearly all my sunflower seeds in the garden last summer."  "Well," replied Mary, "you know, Professor, the birds must have food. They are the farmer's best friend. I hope you don't begrudge them a few sunflower seeds. I love birds. I particularly admire the 'Baltimore Oriole,' with their brilliant, orange-colored plumage; they usually make their appearance simultaneously with the blossoms in the orchard in the south meadow; or so Aunt Sarah tells me. I love to watch them lazily swinging on the high branches of tall trees. On the limb of a pear tree in the orchard one day, I saw firmly fastened a long, pouch-like nest, woven with rare skill. Securely fastened to the nest by various colored pieces of twine and thread was one of smaller size, like a lean-to added to a house as if the original nest had been found too small to accommodate the family of young birds when hatched.  The oriole possesses a peculiar, sweet, high-whistled trill, similiar to this-"La-la-la-la,' which always ends with the rising inflection."  Fritz Schmidt, who had been listening intently to Mary, gravely remarked, "An oriole built a nest on a tall tree outside my bedroom window, and early every morning, before the family arise, I hear it sing over and over again what sounds exactly like 'Lais Die Beevil!' which translated means 'Read your Bible'."  "Even the birds are 'Dutch,' I believe, in Bucks County," said Fritz. "I think these must be German Mennonites, there being quite a settlement of these honest, God-fearing people living on farms at no great distance from our place." 
  THE CANAL AT THE NARROWS  A picture of some buildings clustered around a canal. 
  As they drove along the country road, parallel with the Delaware River, just before reaching the Narrows, Mary was greatly attracted by the large quantities of yellow-white "sweet clover," a weed-like plant found along the Delaware River, frowing luxuriantly, with tall, waving stems two or four feet high. The clover-like flowers, in long, loose racemes, terminating the branches, were so fragant that, like the yellow evening primrose, the scent was noticeable long before one preceived the flowers. And, strange to tell, sweet slover was never known to grow in this locality until the seed was washed up on the bank of the  river some ten or twelve years previous to the date of my story, when the Delaware River was higher than it was ever before known to be.  "The first place we shall visit," said Aunt Sarah, "will be my grandmother's old home, or rather, the ruins of the old home. It passed out of our family many years ago; doors and windows are missing and walls ready to tumble down. You see that old locust tree against one side the ruined wall of the house?" and with difficulty she broke a branch from the tree saying, "Look, see the sharp, needle-shaped thorns growing on the branch! They were used by me when a child to pin my dolls' dresses together. In those days, pins were too costly to use; and look at that large, flat rock not far distant from the house! At the foot of that rock, when a child of ten, I buried the 'Schild Krote Family' dolls, made from punk (when told I was too big a girl to play with dolls). I shed bitter tears, I remember. Alas! The sorrows of childhood are sometimes deeper than we of maturer years realize."  "Why did you give your family of dolls such an odd name, Aunt Sarah?" questioned Mary.  "I do not remember," replied her Aunt. "Schild Krote is the German name for turtle. I presume the name pleased my childish fancy."  "Suppose we visit my great-great-grandfather's grave in the near-by woods. I think I can locale it, although so many years have passed since I last visited it."  Passing through fields overgrown with high grass, wild flowers and clover, they came to the woods. Surprising to say, scarcely any underbrush was seeen, but trees everywhere-stately Lebanon cedars, spruce and spreading hemlock, pin oaks, juniper trees which later would be covered with spicy, aromatic berries; also beech trees. Witch hazel and hazel nut bushes grew in profusion. John Landis cut a large branch from a sassafras tree to make a new spindle on which to wind flax, for Aunt Sarah's old spinning wheel (hers having been broken), remarking as he did as, "My mother always used a branch of sassafras wood, having five, prong-like branches for this purpose, when I was a boy, and she always placed a piece of sassafras root with her dried fruit."  The Professor's wife gathered an armful of yarrow, saying, "This is an excellent tonic and should always be gathered before  the flowers bloom. I wonder if there is any boneset growing anywhere around here."  Boneset, a white, flowering, bitter herb, dearly beloved and used by the professor's wife as one of the commonest home remedies in case of sickness, and equally detested by both Fritz and Pauline. 
  THE NARROWS OR PENNSYLVANIA PALISADES  A picture of a horse drawn wagon on a road walled by very tall trees. 
  Mary gathered a bouquet of wild carrot, or "Queen Anne's Lace," with its exquisitely fine, lace-like flowers with pale green-tinted centres. Mary's Uncle could not agree with her in praise of the dainty wild blossoms. He said:" Mary, I consider it the most detested weed with which I am obliged to contend on the farm."   After quite a long, tiresome walk in the hot sun, they discovered the lonely grave, covered with a slab of granite surrounded by a small iron railing and read the almost illegible date-"Seventeen Hundred and Forty" Ralph said,"If he ever sighed for a home in some vast wilderness, his wish is granted." It certainly was a lonely grave in the deep woods, and gave all the members of the party a sad and eerie feeling as they wended their way out into the sunlight again, to the waiting carriages, and
  TOP ROCK  A view from a cliff that looks out over a river. 
   were soon driving swiftly along the Narrows, as they have been called from time immemorial by the inhabitants, although I prefer the name of Pennsylvania Palisades, as they are sometimes called.  Said Professor Schmidt:"Numerous tourists visit the Narrows every year. The Narrows are said to resemble somewhat the Palisades on the Hudson. I have seen the latter and think these greatly resemble them and are quite as interesting and picturesque."  "The name Narrows is derived from the fact that at this place the Delaware River has forced itself through the rocky barrier," continued the Professor, "hedged in on one side by cliffs of perpendicular rock, three hundred feet high, extending some distance along the river, leaving scarcely room at some places for the river and the canal. Some quite rare plants frow here, said to be found in few other localities in teh United Sates. You see hte highest flat rock along the Narrows? It is called 'Top Rock' and rises to a height of more than three hundred feet. We shall drive around within a short distance of it; then, after passing a small house, we are obliged to walk across a field of ploughed ground; follow the well-beaten path between trees and undergrowth, and 'Top Rock' is before us. Stepping upon the high ledge of rock projecting out over the road beneath, we discover it may also be reached by following a precipitous path and clinging to bushes and trees, but none of the party venture. Recently the body of a man who had been searching for rare birds' eggs on the side of this self-same rock was found dead on the path below the rocks. What caused his fall is not known. No wonder Aunt Sarah says it makes her dizzy when you boys skip stones across the river while standing on the rock."  The beautiful view of the Delaware River and the scenery on the opposite side was something long to be remembered. While the party were going into raptures over the beautiful sight, Professor Schmidt turned to Mary and remarked:"In those rocks which rise in perpendicular bluffs, several hundred feet above the level of the river, are evidence that prehistoric man may have inhabited the caves in these same walls of rock along the Delaware. From implements and weapons found, it does not require any great effort of imagination to believe the 'Cave Man' dwelt here many centuries ago."  Fritz Schmidt was much interested in his father's conversation,  and from that time on called Ralph Jackson Mary's "Cave Man."  Leaving Top Rock, the party wended their way back to the waiting carriages in the road, and drove to the "Ringing or Musical Rocks." They had been informed that their nearest approach to the rocks was to drive into the woods to reach them. Passing a small shanty at the roadside, where a sign informed the passerby that soft drinks were to be obtained, the party dismounted and found, to their surprise, a small pavilion had been erected with bench, table and numerous seats composed of boards laid across logs, where camp meetings had formerly been held. As the large trees furnished shade, and a spring of fresh water was near by, they decided to "strike" camp and have lunch before going farther into the woods.  Aunt Sarah and the Professor's wife spread a snowy cloth over the rough wooden table, quickly unpacked the hampers, and both were soon busily engaged preparing sandwiches of bread, thinly sliced, pink cold ham and ground peanuts, fried chicken and beef omelette' opeing jars of home-made pickles, raspberry jam and orange marmalade.  "Oh!" said Said Pauline," I'm so hungry for a piece of chocolate cake. Let me help shell the eggs, so we can soon have dinner."  Here's your fresh spring water," called Fritz, as he joined the party, atin pail in his hand. "We had such an early breakfast, I'm as hungry as a bear."  The party certainly did full justice to the good things provided with a lavish hand by Frau Schmidt and Aunt Sarah. All were in high spirits. The Professor quoted from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam--  Here with a loaf of bread beneath the bough, A flask of wine, a book of verse and thou, Beside me singing in the wilderness, And wilderness is Paradise enow.  Ralph cast a look ar Mary, unnoticed by any one else, as much as to say,"The old tentmaker voiced my sentiments."  After the hampers had been repacked and stowed away in the carriages, they with the horses were left in the shade while the party walked to "High Falls," at no great distance from the  
  RINGING ROCKS OF BRIDGTON TOWNSHIP BUCKS COUNTY, PA.  A picture of a man standing in a vast feild of large rocks. 
   camp. "High Falls," a beautiful waterfall about thirty feet high and fifty feet wide, is situated several hundred feet east of the Ringing Rocks. The water, before dashing below, passes over a large, solid, level floor of rock. After gazing at the Falls and picturesque surroundings, they searched through the woods for the Ringing Rocks, a preculiar formation of rocks of irregular shape and size, branching out from a common centre
  HIGH FALLS  A picture of a waterfall. 
   in four directions. The rocks vary in size from a few pounds to several tons in weight. Arriving there, Aunt Sarah said:"Ralph, you will now find use for the hammer which I asked you to bring." Ralph struck different rocks with the hammer, and Fritz Schmidt struck rocks with other pieces of rock, and all gave a peculiar metallic sound, the tones of each being different. The rocks are piled upon each other to an unknown depth, not a particle of earth being found between them, and not a bush or spear of grass to be seen. They occupy a space of about four and a half acres and are a natural curiosity well worth seeing. The young folks scrambled over the rocks for a time, and, having made them ring to their hearts' content, were satisfied to return to camp and supper. 
  BIG ROCK AT ROCKY DALE  A picture of a pile of very large boulders. 
  "Not far distant from High Falls," said John Landis, when all were comfortably seated near the table, with a sandwich in hand,"is a place called Roaring Rocks, also a freak of nature. I remember, when a boy, I always went there in the fall of the year, after the first hard frost, to pick persimmons. The water could be distinctly heard running underneath the rocks at a considerable depth."  Ralph Jackson remarked to Aunt Sarah:"I never imagined  there were so many interesting, natural features right here in Bucks County."  Oh, yes," exclaimed the irrepressible Fritz Schmidt, "we have a few things besides pigs and potatoes."  "Yes, Ralph," said the Professor, "there are still several places of interest you will like to see. "Stony Garden' is another very interesting freak of nature. It is about two and a half miles from the small town of 'Snitzbachsville,' as Fritz calls the hamlet, and 'tis a wild spot. About an acre is covered with trap rock. The stones are of odd shapes and size and appear as if thrown into the forest in teh wildest confusion. No earth or vegetation is found about them. 'Tis said the rocks are similiar to those found at Fingal's Cave, Ireland, and also at the Palisades on the Hudson, and are not found anywhere else in this section of the country."  "And Ralph," said Fritz," I want to show you 'Big Rock,' at Avondale. where a party of us boys camped one summer for two weeks. Oh! but I remember the good pies given us by a farmer's wife who sold us milk and eggs, and who lived just across the fields from our camp."  "I think," said John Landis,"it is time we began hitching up our horses and starting for home. We have a long drive before us, and, therefore, must make an early start. Sarah, get the rest of the party together and pack up your traps."  At that moment the professor came in sight with an armful of ferns, the rich loam adhering to their roots, and said:"I'm sure these will grow." LAter he planted them on a shady side of the old farm house at "Five Oaks," where they are growing today. Professor Schmidt, after a diligent search, had found clinging to a rock a fine specimen of "Seedum Rhodiola," which he explained had never been found growing in any locality in the United States except Maine. Little Pauline, with a handful of flowers and weeds, came trotting after Mary, who carried an armful of creeping evergreen called partridge berry, which bears numerous small, bright, scarlet berries later in the season. Ralph walked by her side with a basket filled to overflowing with quantities of small ferns and rock moss, with which to border the edge of waiter on which Mary intended planting ferns; tree moss ot lichens, hepaticas, wild violets, pipsissewa or false winter-green, with dark green, waxy leaves weined with a lighter shade of  green; and wild pink geraniums, the folige of which is prettier than the pink bossoms seen later, and they grow readily when transplanted.  Aunt Sarah had taught Mary how to make a beautiful little home-made fernery. By planting these all on a large waiter, banking moss around the edges to keep them moist and by planting them early, they would be growing finely when taken by her to the city in the fall of the year-a pleasant reminder of her trip to the "Narrows" of the Delaware River. Frau Schmidt brought up the rear, carrying huge bunches of mint, pennyroyal and the useful herb called "Quaker Bonnet." 
  THE OLD TOWPATH AT THE NARROWS  A picture of a horse drawn buggy on a road with buildings in the background. 
  Driving home at the close of the day, the twinkling lights in farm house windows they swiftly passed, were hailed with delight by the tired but happy party, knowing that each one brought them nearer home than the one before. To enliven the drowsy members of the parly. Fritz Schmidt sang the following to the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," improvising as he sang:  The moon shines bright on our "old Bucks County home," The meadows with daisies are gay, The song of the whipporwill is borne on the breeze, With the scent of the new mown hay. Oh! the Narrows are great with their high granite peaks, And Ringing Rocks for ages the same;  But when daylight fades and we're tired and cold, There's no place like "hame, dear alt hame."  The last lingering rays of the sun idealized the surrounding fields and woods with that wonderful, afterglow seen only at the close of day. The saffron moon appeared to rise slowly from behind the distant tree-tops, and rolled on parallel with them, and then ahead, as if to guide them on their way, and the stars twinkled one by one from out the mantle of darkness which slowly enveloped the earth. The trees they swiftly passed, when the moonbeams tounches them, assumed gigantic, grotesque shapes in the darkness. Mary quoted from a favorite poem, "The Huskers," by Whittier:  'Till broad and red as when he rose, the sun Sank down at last, And, like a merry guest's farewell, the day In brightness passed.  And lo! as through the western pines, On meadow, stream and pond, Flamed the red radiance of a sky, Set all afire beyond.  Slowly o'er the eastern sea bluffs, Amilder glory shone, And the sunset and the moon-rise Were mingled into one!  As thus into the quiet night, The twilight lapsed away, And deeper in the brightening moon The tranquil shadows lay.  From many a brown, old farm house And hamlet without name, Their milking and their home tasks done, The merry huskers came.  "You mean 'The Merry Picknickers Came,'" said Fritz Schmidt. as Mary finished," and here we are at home. Good night, all." 
  
  CHAPTER XIX.  MARY IS TAUGHT TO MAKE PASTRY, PATTIES AND "ROSEN KUCHEN."  Mary's Aunt taught her to make light, flaky pastry and pies of every description. In this part of Bucks County a young girl's education was considered incomplete without a knowledge of pie-making. Some of the commonest varieties of pies made at the farm were "Rivel Kuchen," a pie crust covered with a mixture of sugar, butter and flour crumbled together; "Snitz Pie," com-posed of either stewed dried apples or peaches, finely mashed through a colander, sweetened, spread over a crust and this covered with a lattice-work of narrow strips of pastry laid diamond-wise over the top of the pie; "Crumb" pies, very popular when served for breakfast, made with the addition of molasses or without it; Cheese pies, made of "Smier Kase;" Egg Custard, Pumpkin and Molasses pie.  Pies were made of all the different fruits and berries which grew on the farm. When fresh fruits were not obtainable, dried fruits and berries were used. Pie made from dried, sour cherries was an especial favorite of Farmer Landis, and raisin or "Rosina" pie. as it was usually called at the farm, also known as "Funeral" pie was a standby at all seasons of the year, as it was invariably served at funerals, where, in old times, sumptuous feasts were provided for relatives and friends, a regular custom for years among the "Pennsylvania Germans " and I have heard Aunt Sarah say, "In old times, the wives of the grave-diggers were always expected to assist with the extra baking at the house where a funeral was to be held."  It would seem as if Bucks County German housewives did not like a dessert without a crust surrounding it.   The Pennsylvania German farmers' wives, with few exceptions, serve the greatest variety of pies at a meal of any class of people I know; not alone as a dessert at twelve o'clock dinner, but frequently serve several different varieties of pie at breakfast and at each meal during the day. No ill effects following the  frequent eating of pie I attribute to their active life, the greater part of which, during the day, was usually spent in the open air, and some credit may be due the housewife for having acquired the knack of making 
 good  pie crust, which was neither very rich nor indigestible, if such a thing be possible.  The combination of fruit and pastry called pie is thought to be of American invention. Material for pies at a trifling cost were furnished the early settlers in Bucks County by the large supply of fruit and vegetables which their fertile farms produced, and these were utilized by the thrifty German housewives, noted for their wise management and economy.  The Professor's wife taught Mary to make superior pastry, so flaky and tender as to fairly melt in one's mouth; but Mary never could learn from her the knack of making a dainty, crimped edge to her pies with thumb and forefinger, although it looked so very simple when she watched "Frau Schmidt" deftly roll over a tiny edge as a finish to the pie.  Mary laughingly told the Professor's wife (when speaking of pies) of the brilliant remark she marie about lard, on first coming to the farm. Her Aunt Sarah, when baking pies one day, said to her, "Look, Mary, see this can of snowy lard, rendered from pork, obtained from out fat pigs last winter!"  "Why, Aunt Sarah!" exclaimed Mary, "is lard made from pork fat? I always thought lard was made from milk and butter was made from cream."  The Professor's wife possessed, besides a liking for pies, the German's fondness for anything pertaining to fritters. She used a set of "wafer and cup irons" for making "Rosen Kuchen," as she called the flat, saucer-like wafer; and the cup used for serving creamed vegetables, salads, etc., was similiar to pattie cases.  "The 'Wafer and Cup Irons,'" said Frau Schmidt, "were invented by a friend of mine, also a teacher and an excellent cook, besides; she gave me several of her original recipies, all to be served on wafers or in patties. You shall have a set of the irons when you start housekeeping. Mary. You will be sur-prised at the many uses you will find for them. They are somewhat similiar to Rosette Irons, but I think them an improvement. They are pieces of fluted steel fastened to a long handle and one is cup-shaped. This latter is particularly fine for making  patties. Then the cup may be filled and served on saucer-like wafers, which I call "Rosen Kuchen," or the "Rosen Kuchen" may be simply dusted with a mixture consisting of one cup of sugar, one teaspoonful of cinnamon and a quarter teaspoonful of powdered cardamon seed, and served on a plate, as dainty cakes or wafers."  Aunt Sarah, when cooking fritters, always used two-thirds lard and one-third suet for deep frying, but "Frau Schmidt" thought food fried in oil more digestible and wholesome than when fried in lard. The patties or wafers were easily made. "Frau Schmidt" placed the long-handled iron in hot fat, the right temperature for frying fritters. When the iron was heated she quickly and carefully wiped off any surplus fat, then at once dipped the hot wafer iron into a bowl containing the batter she had prepared (the recipe for which she gave Mary), then dipped the iron into the hot fat; when the batter had lightly browned she gently dropped it from the iron onto brown paper, to absorb any fat which might remain. These are quickly and easily pre-pared and, after a few trials, one acquires proficiency. Pattie cases or cup-shapes are made in a similar manner. They are not expensive and may be kept several weeks in a cool, dry place. When wanted for table use, place in a hot oven a few minutes to reheat. They make a dainty addition to a luncheon by simply dusting the "Rosen Kuchen" with pulverized sugar. Creamed vegetables of any variety may be served on them by placing a spoon of cream dressing on top of each, over which grate yolk of hard boiled egg; or use as a foundation on which to serve salads; or serve fruit on them with whipped cream. The patties or cups may be used to serve creamed chicken, oysters, or sweetbreads if no sugar be used in the batter. These pattie cases are exactly like those sold at delicatessen counters, in city stores, and are considered quite an addition to a dainty luncheon. They are rather expensive to buy, and we country housewives cannot always procure them when wanted, and they may be made at home with a small amount of labor and less expense.  "The Germans make fritters of almost everything imagina-ble," continued the Professor's wife. "One day in early Spring I saw a German neighbor gathering elderberry blossoms, of which she said she intended making fritters. I asked her how they were  made, being curious, I will confess. She sent me a plate of the fritters and they were delicious. I will give you her recipe should you care for it. Mary, have you ever eaten a small, sweet wafer called 'Zimmet Waffle?' My mother made them at Christmas time, in Germany. Should I be able to procure a small 'waffle,' or should I call it wafer, iron, in the city, I will teach you how they are made. I think them excellent. My mother made a cake with vanilla. A piece of dough the size of a small marble was placed in the wafer iron, which was then pressed together and held over the fire in the range, by a long handle, until the wafer was crisp and brown. They are delicious and will keep indefinitely."  The Professor's wife finished speaking to Mary, and turned to her daughter Elizabeth, saying. "It is time I mix the dough if we are to have 'Boova Shenkel' for dinner today. I see the potatoes have steamed tender."  "Oh, goody!" said Pauline, "I just love 'Boova Shenkel!'"  "Then," said her Mother, "run down into the cellar and get me three eggs for them, and Mary, I'll write off the recipe for you, if you wish it, as I feel sure you'll like them as well as Pauline. And Elizabeth, dust powdered sugar over this plate of 'Rosen Kuchen,' and you, Mary and Pauline, leave this hot kitchen and have lunch out in the 'Espalier,' as your Father calls it."  "I think," said Mary to Elizabeth, after they were seated in the shade, prepared to enjoy the "Rosen Kuchen," "this little, natural, home-grown summer-house is the oddest and prettiest little place I've ever seen."  "Yes." assented Elizabeth, "Father said he made it as nearly like as possible to a Urge one at Weisbaden, no great distance from his old home in Germany. He says the 'Frauer Esche,' meaning Weeping Ash, at Weisbaden, had tables and benches placed beneath spreading branches of the tree, and picnics were frequently held there. This one was made by the larger branches of the Weeping Ash, turing downward, fastened by pieces of leather to a framework nailed to the top of posts in the ground, about two yards apart, surrounding the tree. The posts, you notice, are just a little higher than an ordinary man, and when the leaves thickly cover the lops and sides, protecting one from  the sun rays, it is an ideal Summer-house. We frequently sit here evenings and afternoons: Mother brings her sewing am! Pauline her doll family, which you know is quite numerous."  The Professor's wife not only taught Mary the making of superior pastry and the cooking of German dishes, but, what was of still greater importance, taught her the value of different foods; that cereals of every description, flour and potatoes, are starchy foods; that cream, butter, oil. etc., are fat foods; that all fruits and vegetables contain mineral matter; and that lean meat, eggs, beans, peas and milk are muscle-forming foods. These are things every young housekeeper should have a knowledge of to be able to plan nourishing, wholesome, well-balanced meals for her family. And not to serve at one time a dish or rice, cheese and macaroni, baked beans and potatoes. Serve instead with one of these dishes fruit, a vegetable or salad. She said "beans have largely percentage of nutriment and should be more commonly used." She also said graham and corn bread are much more nutritious than bread made from fine white flour, which lacks the nutritious elements. Indian corn is said to contain the largest amount of fat of any cereal. It is one of our most important cereal foods and should be more commonly used by house-wives; especially should it be used by working men whose occupation requires a great amount of physical exercise. Partially in cold weather should it be frequently served, being both cheap and wholesome.  The Professor's wife laughingly remarked to Mary, "When I fry fritters or 'Fast Nacht' cakes, Fritz and Pauline usually assist such a large number of them in disappearing before I have finished baking, I am reminded of 'Doughnutting Time,' by J. W. Foley. Have you never read the poem? I sometimes feel that it must have been written by me."   * "DOUGHNUTTING TIME."  Wunst when our girl wuz makin pies an' dough nuts--'ist a lot We stood around with great, big eyes, 'cuz we boys like 'em hot; And w'en she dropped 'em in the lard they sizzled 'ist like fun And w'en she takes 'em out, it's hard to keep from takin' one.  (*The poem, "Doughnutting Time." from "Boys and Girls." published by E.P. Dutton, by permission of the author, James W. Foley.)   And 'en she says: "You boys'll get all spattered up with grease." And by-um-by she says she'll let us have 'ist one apiece; So I took one for me, and one for little James McBride, The window's only orfunt son, 'ats waiting there outside.  An' Henry, he took one 'ist for himself an' Nellie Flynn, 'At's waiting at the kitchen door and dassent to come in, Becuz her Mother told her not; and Johnny, he took two, 'Cus Amey 
Brennan likes 'em hot, 'ist like we chinnern do.  'En Henry happened 'ist to think he didn't get a one For little Ebenezer Brink, the carpet beater's son, Who never gets 'em home, becuz he says, he
ain't quite sure, But thinks perhaps the reason wuz, his folkeses are too poor.  An 'en I give my own away to little Willie Biggs 'At fell down his stiars one day, an' give him crooked legs, 'Cuz Willie always seems to know w'en our girl's goin' to bake. He wouldn't ast for none. Oh, no ! But, my ! he's fond of cake.  So I went back an' 'en I got another one for me, Right out the kittle smokin' hot, an' brown as it could be; An' John he got one, too, becuz he give his own to Clare, An' w'en our girl she looked, there wuz 'ist two small doughnuts there.  My! she wuz angry w'en she looked an' saw 'ist them two there. An' says she knew 'at she had cooked a crock full an' to spare; She says it's awful 'scouragin' to bake and fret an' fuss, An' w'en she thinks she's got 'em in the crock, they're all in us.  The Professor's wife gave Mary what she called her most useful recipe. She said, "Mary, this recipe was almost invaluable to me when I was a young housekeeper and the stricktest economy was necessary. Sift into a bowl, one cup of flour, one even teaspoonful of baking powder (I use other baking powders occasionally, but prefer 'Royal'), then cut through the flour either one tablespoonful of butter or lard, add a pinch of salt, and mix into a soft dough with about one-half cup of sweet milk. Mix dough  quickly and lightly, handling as little as possible. Drop large spoonfuls of the batter in muffin pans and bake in a quick oven for tea biscuits; or, sift flour thickly over the bread board, turn out the dough, roll several times in the flour, give one quick turn with the rolling-pin to flatten out dough, and cut out with small cake cutter. (I prefer using a small, empty tin, 1/2-pound baking powder can, to cut out cakes.) Place close together in an agate pan and bake, or bake in one cake in a pie tin and for short-caked; or place spoonfuls of the dough over veal or beef stew and potatoes or stewed chicken, and cook, closely covered, about fifteen minutes. Of course, you will have sufficient water in the stew pan to prevent its boiling away before the pot-pie dumplings are cooked, and, of course, you know, Mary, the meat and potatoes must be almost ready to serve when this dough is added. Then I frequently add one teaspoonful of sugar to the batter and place spoonfuls over either freshly stewed or canned sour cherries, plums, rhubarb or apples. In fact, any tart fruit may be used, and steam, closely covered, or place large tablespoonful of any fruit, either canned or stewed, in small custard cups, place tablespoonfuls of batter on top and steam or bake, and serve with either some of the stewed fruit and fruit juice, sugar and cream, or any sauce preferred."  "The varieties of puddings which may be evolved from this one formula," continued the Professor's wife, "are endless, and, Mary. I should advise you to make a note of it. This quantity of flour will make enough to serve two at a meal, and the proportions may be easily doubled if you wish to serve a large family."  "Then, Mary, I have a recipe taken from the 'Farmers' Bulletin' for dumplings, which {book error in spacing} Ithink fine. You must try it some time. Your Aunt Sarah thinks them 'dreadfully extravagant.' They call for four teaspoonfuls of baking powder to two cups of flour, but they are perfect puff balls, and this is such a fast age, why not use more baking powder if an advantage? I am always ready to try anything new I hear about."  "Yes," replied Mary, "I just love to try new recipes. I will experiment with the dumplings one of these days. Aunt Sarah syas I will never use half the recipes I have; but so many of them have been give me by excellent and reliable old Buck County cooks, I intend to copy them all in a book, and keep for reference after I leave the farm. 
  
  CHAPTER XX.  OLD POTTERIES AND DECORATED DISHES.  One day, looking through the old corner cupboard, Mary exclaimed. "Aunt Sarah, you certainly possess the finest collection of quaint old china dishes I have ever seen. I just love those small saucers and cups without handles; yes, and you have plates to match decorated with pinkish, lavender peacock feathers, and those dear little cups and saucers, decorated inside with pink and outside with green flowers, are certainly odd; and this queerly- shaped cream jug, sugar bowl and teapot, with pale green figures, and those homely plates, with dabs of bright red and green, they surley must be very old!" 
  Old Earthenware Dish  A picture of a dish that is decorated with flower designs. 
  "Yes, dear, they all belonged to either John's mother or mine. All except this one large, blue plate, which is greatly valued by me, as it was given me many years ago by a dear old friend, Mary Butler, a descendant of one of the oldest families in Wyoming Valley, whose forefathers date back to the time of the 'Wyoming Massacre,' about which so much has been written in song and story."  "The very oddest plates in your collection are those earthenware dishes, especially that large circular dish, with sloping sides and flat base, decorated with tulips."  "Yes. Mary, and it is the one I value most highly. It is called sgraffito ware. A tulip decoration surrounds a large red star in  the centre of the plate. This belonged to my mother, who said it came from the Headman pottery at Rockhill Township, about the year 1808. I know of only other two others in existence at the present time; one is in a museum in the city of Philadelphia and the other one is in the Bucks County Historical Society at Doylestown, Pa. The other earthenware plate you admire, containing marginal inscription in German which when translated is 'This plate is made of earth, when it breaks the potter laughs,' is the very oldest in my collection, the date on it, you see, is 1786. Those curved, shallow earthenware pie plates, or 'Poi Schissel,' as they are frequently called in this part of Bucks County, I value, even if they
  SGRAFFITO PLATE Manufactured by One of the Oldest Pennsylvania German Potters in 1786  A picture of a plate that has an image of two men standing next to each other in the center. 
  are quite plain and without decoration, as they were always used by my when baking pies, and I never thought pies baked in any other shaped dish tasted equally as good as hers. These pie plates were manufactured at one of the old potteries near her home. All the old potters have passed away, and the buildings have crumbled to the ground. Years ago, your mother and I, when visiting the old farm where the earlier years of our childhood were passed, stopped with one of our old-time friends, who lived 
  OLD PLATES FOUND IN AUNT SARAH'S CORNER CUPBOARD  Five pictures of various plate collections. 
    directly opposite the old Herstine pottery, which was then in a very dilapidated condition; it had formerly been operated by Cornelius Herstine (we always called him 'Neal' Herstine).  "Together we crossed the road, forced out way through tangled vines and underbrush, and, peering through windows guiltless of gladd, we saw partly-finished work of the old potters crumbling on the ground. The sight was a sad one. We realized the hand of time had crumbled to dust both the potter and his clay. Still nearer my old home was the McEntee pottery. From earliest childhood our families were friends. We all attended the 'Crossroads' School, where years later a more modern brick structue was built, under the hill; not far distant from 'The Narrows' and the 'Ringing Rocks.' Yes, Mary, my memory goes back to the time when the McEntee pottery was a flourishing industry, operated by three brothers, John, Patrick and Michael. When last I visited them but few landmarks remained."  "Was there a pottery on your father's farm, Aunt Sarah?" inquired Mary.  "No. The nearest one was the McEntee pottery, but the grandson of the old man who purchased our old farm at my father's death had a limekiln for the purpose of burning lime, and several miles distant, at the home of my uncle, was found clay suitable for the manufacture of bricks. Only a few years ago this plant was still in operation. My father's farm was situated in the upper part of Bucks County, in what was then known as the Nockamixon Swamp, and at one time there were in that neighborhood no less than seven potteries within two miles of each other."  "Why," exclaimed Mary, "were there so many potteries in that locality?"  " 'Twas due, no doubt, to the large deposits of clay found there, well suited to the manufacture of earthenware. The soil is a clayey loam, underlaid with potter's clay. The old German potters, on coming to this country, settled mostly in Easter Pennsylvania, in the countries of Bucks and Montgomery. The numerous small potteries erected by the early settlers were for the manufacture of earthernware dishes, also pots of graded sizes. These were called nests, and were used principally on the farm for holding milk, cream and applebutter. Jugs and pie plates were also manufactured. The plates were usually quite plain, but they reduced  occasionally plates decorated with conventionalized tulips, and some, more elaborate, contained besides figures of animals, birds and flowers. Marginal inscriptions in English and German decorate many of the old plates, from which may be learned many interesting facts concerning the life and habits of the early settlers. I think, judging from the inscriptions I have seen on some old plates. it must have taxed the ingenuity of the old German potters to think up odd, original inscriptions for their plates."  "Aunt Sarah, how was sgraffito ware made? Is it the same as slip-decorated pottery ?"  "No, my dear, the two are quite different. The large plate you so greatly admired is called sgraffito or scratched work, sometimes called slip engraving. It usually consists of dark designs on a cream-colored ground. After the plates had been shaped over the mold by the potter, the upper surface was covered by a coating of white slip, and designs were cut through this slip to show the earthenware underneath. This decoration was more commonly used by the old potters than slip decorating, which consisted in mixing white clay and water until the consistency of cream. The liquid clay was then allowed to run slowly through a quill attached to a small cup, over the earthenware (before burning it in a kiln) to produce different designs. The process is similar to that used when icing a cake, when you allow the icing to run slowly from a pastry tube to form fanciful designs. I have watched the old potters at their work many a time when a child. The process employed in the manufacture of earthenware is almost the same today as it was a century ago, but the appliances of the present day workmen are not so primitive as were those of the old German potters. Mary, a new pottery works has been started quite lately in the exact locality where, over one hundred years ago, were situated the Diehl and Headman potteries, where my highly-prized, old sgraffito plate was manufactured. I hear the new pottery has improved machinery for the manufacture of vases, flower pots, tiles, etc. They intend manufacturing principally 'Spanish tiles' from the many acres of fine clay found at that place. The clay, it is said, burns a beautiful dark, creamy red. As you are so much interested in this subject, Mary, we shall visit this new pottery some day in the near future, in company with your Uncle John. It is no great distance from the farm. Quite an interesting story I have heard in connection with a pottery  
  A-38 Schmutz Amschel A-39 Antiquated Tin Lantern A-40 Schmutz Amschel A-41 Fluid Lamp A-42 Candle Mould  Five pictures of various household objects. Among them a punched tin lantern and a cndle mold. 
   owned by a very worthy Quaker in a near-by town may interest you, as your father was a Philadelphia Quaker and Ralph's parents were Quakers also."  "Yes. indeed, Aunt Sarah! I'd love to hear the story."  "This Quaker sympathized with the colored race, or negroes, in the South. This was, of course, before slavery was abolished. You don't remember that time, Mary. You are too young. It is only history to you, but I lived it, and when the slaves ran away from their owners and came North to Philadelphia they were sent from there, by sympathizers, to this Quaker, who kept an underground station. The slaves were then placed, under his direction, in a high 'pot wagon,' covered with layers or nests of earthenware pots of graded sizes. I heard the driver of one of these pot wagons remark one time that when going down a steep hill, he put on the brake and always held his breath until the bottom of the hill was reached, fearing the pots might all be broken. The wagon-load containting earthenware and slaves was driven to Stroudsburg, where the pots were delivered to a wholesale customer. Here the runaways were released from their cranmped quarters and turned over to sympathizing friends, who assisted them in reaching Canada and safety. I have frequently met the fine looking, courtly old gentleman who owned the pottery, and old Zacariah Mast, the skilled German potter whom he employed. They were for many years familiar figures in the little Quaker town, not many miles distant. Both passed away many years ago."  Mary, who still continued her explorations of the corner cupboard, exclaimed: "Oh! Aunt Sarah! Here is another odd, old plate, way back on the lop shelf, out of sight."  "Yes, dear, that belonged to your Uncle John's mother. It has never been used and was manufactured over one hundred years ago at an old pottery in Bedminister Township, Bucks County. Some of those other quaint, old-fashioned plates also belonged to John's mother. Your Uncle loves old dishes and especially old furniture; he as so anxious to possess his grandfather's old 'Solliday' clock. In the centre of the face of the clock a hand indicated the day of the month and pictures of two large, round moons on the upper part of the clock's face (resembing nothing so much as large, ripe peaches) represented the different phases of the moon. If new moon, or the first or last quarter,  it appeared, then disappeared from sight. It was valued highly, being the last clock made by the old clockmaker; but John never came into possession of it, as it was claimed by an elder sister. I value the old clock which stands in the parlor because 'twas my mother's, although it is very plain. This old cherry, corner cupboard was made for my grandmother by her father, a cabinetmaker, as a wedding gift, and was given me by my mother. Did you notice the strong, substantial manner in which it is made? It resembles mission furniture."  "Do tell me, Aunt, what this small iron boat, on the top shelf, was ever used for? It must be of value, else 'twould not occupy a place in the cupboard with all your pretty dishes."  "Yes, dearie, 'twas my grandmother's lamp, called in old times a 'Schmutz Amschel' which, translated, means a grease robin, or bird. I have two of them. I remember seeing my grandmother many a time, when the 'Amschel' was partly filled with melted lard or liquid fat, light a piece of lampwick hanging over the little pointed end or snout of the lamp. The lamp was usually suspended from a chain fastened to either side. A spike on the chain was stick into the wall, which was composed of logs. This light, by the way, was not particularly brilliant, even when one sat close beside it, and could not be compared with the gas and electric lights of our present day and generation. That was a very primitive manner of illumination used by our forefathers.  "Mary, did you notice the gayly-decorated, old-fashioned coffee pot and tea caddy in the corner cupboard? They belonged to my grandmother; also that old-fashioned fluid lamp, used before coal-oil or kerosene came into use; and that old, perforated tin lantern also is very ancient.  "Mary, have you ever read the poem, 'The Potter and the Clay?' No? Then read it to me, dear, I like it well; 'tis a particular favorite of mine. I do not remember by whom it was written."  THE POTTER AND THE CLAY.  
 (Jeremiah xviii. 2-6.)  
 The potter wrought a work in clay, upon his wheel; He moulded it and fashioned it, and made it feel, In every part, his forming hand, his magic skill, Until it grew in beauty fair beneath his will.   When lo ! through some defect, 'twas marred and broken lay, Its fair proportions spoiled, and it but crumbling clay; Oh, wondrous patience, care and love, what did he do? He stooped and gathered up the parts and formed anew.  He might have chosen then a lump of other clay On which to show his skill and care another day, But no; he formed it o'er again, as seemed him good; And who has yet his purpose scanned, his will withstood?  Learn thou from this parable of God's great grace Toward the house of Isreal, His chosen race; He formed them for His praise; they fell and grieved Him sore, But He will yet restore and bless them evermore.  And what He'll do for Israel, He'll do for thee; Oh soul, so marred and spoiled by sin, thou yet shall see That He has power to restore, He will receive, And thou shalt know His saving grace, only believe.  Despair not, He will form anew thy scattered life, And gather up the broken parts, make peace from strife; Only submit thou to His will of perfect love, And thou shall see His fair design in Heaven above. 
  
  CHAPTER XXI.  THE VALUE OF WHOLESOME, NUTRITIOUS FOOD.  "Yes, my dear," said Frau Schmidt (continuing a conversation which bad occurred several days previously between herself and Mary), "we will have more healthful living when the young housewife of the present day possesses a knowledge of different food values (those food products from which a well-balanced meal may be prepared) for the different members of her household. She should endeavor to buy foods which are most nourishing and wholesome; these need not necessarily consist of more expensive food products. Cheaper food, if property cooked, may have as fine a flavor and be equally as nutritious as that of higher price.  "And, Mary, when you marry and have a house to manage, if possible, do your own marketing, and do not make the mistake common to so many young, inexperienced housewives, of buying more expensive food than your income will allow. Some think economy in purchasing food detrimental to their dignity and to the well-being of their families; ofte nthe ones most extravagant in this respect are those least able to afford it. Frequently the cause of this is a lack of knowledge of the value of different foods. The housewife with a large family and limited means should purchase cheaper cuts of meat, which become tender and palatable by long simmering. Combine them with the different vegetables, cooked in the broth, and serve as the principal dish at a meal, or occasionally serve dumplings composed of a mixture of flour and milk, cooked in the broth, to extend the meat flavor. Frequently serve a dish of rice, hominy, cornmeal and oatmeal, dried heans and peas. These are all nutritious, nourishing foods whem properly cooked and attractively served. And remember, Mary, to always serve food well seasoned. Mary a well-cooked meal owes its failure to please to a lack of proper seasoning. This is a lesson a young cook must learn. Neither go to the other extreme and salt food too liberally. Speaking of salt, my dear, have you read the poem, 'The King's Daughters,' by Margaret Vandegrift? If not, read it, and then copy it in your book of recipes."   "THE KING'S DAUGHTERS."  The King's three little daughters, 'nearth the palace window straying.  Had fallen into earnest talk that put an end to playing; And the weary King smiled once again to hear what they were saying; "It is I who love our father best," the eldest daughter said; "I am the oldest princess," and her pretty face grew red; "What is there none can do without? I love him more than bread."  Then said the second princess, with her bright blue eyes aflame: "Than bread, a common thing like bread! Thou hast not any shame!  Glad am I, it is I, not thou, called by our mother's name; I love him with a better love than one so tame as thine, More than--Oh! what then shall I say, that is both bright and fine?  And is not common? Yes, I know. I love him more than wine." Then the little youngest daughter, whose speech would sometimes halt,  For her dreamy way of thinking, said, "Nay, you are both in fault. 'Tis I who love our father best. I love him more than salt." Shrill little shrieks of laughter greeted her latest word, As the two joined hands exclaiming, "But this is most absurb!" And the King, no longer smiling, was grieved that he had heard, For the little youngest daughter, with her eyes of steadfast grey, Could always move his tenderness, and charm his care away; "She grows more like her mother dead," he whispered day by day, "But she is very little and I will find no fault, That while her sisters strive to see who most shall me exalt, She holds me nothing dearer than a common thing like salt."  The portly cook was standing in the courtyard by the spring. He winked and nooded to himself, "That little quiet thing Knows more than both the others, as I will show the King." That afternoon, at dinner, there was nothing fit to eat. The King turned angrily away from soup and fish and meat, And he found a cloying sweetness in the dishes that were sweet; "And yet," he muttered, musing, "I cannot find the fault;   Not a thing has tasted like itself but this honest cup of malt." Said the youngest princess, shyly: "Dear father, they want salt."  A sudden look of tenderness shone on the King's dark face, As he sat his little daughter in the dead queen's vacant place, And he thought: "She has her mother's heart; Ay, and her mother's grace;  Great love through channels will find its surest way. It waits not state occasions, which may not come or may; It comforts and it blesses, hour by hour, and day by day." 
  
  CHAPTER XXII.  A VARIETY OF CAKES EVOLVED FROM ONE RECIPE.  "Aunt Sarah," questioned Mary one day, "will you tell me how it is possible to evolve a number of cakes from one recipe?"  "Certainly I will, my dear," said her Aunt. "For instance, take the simple recipe from which I have for years baked layer cake. You may have other recipes given you, equally as good, but I feel positive none better. The cake made from this recipe is not rich enough to be unwholesome, but a good, reliable, inexpensive, easily-made cake, with which I have never had a failure.  "The recipe, as you know, consists of 1 1/4 cups of granulated sugar, 1/2 cup of a mixture of butter and sweet lard (or use all butter), 1.2 cup sweet milk, 2 cups flour and 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder. 3 eggs  The simplest manner of baking this cake is in two square cake pans. When baked, take from pans and ice each cake with a boiled chocolate icing and put together as a layer cake, or ice each cake with a plain, boiled white icing and, when this is cold, you may spread over top of each cake unsweetened chocolate, which has been melted over steam after being grated. When cake is to be served, cut in diamonds or squares. Or add to the batter 1 cup of chopped hickory nut meats, bake in 2 layers and cut in squares.  "For a chocolate loaf cake, add two generous tablespoonfuls of unsweetened melted chocolate to the batter just before baking. If you wish a chocolate layer cake, use the same batter as for the chocolate loaf cake, bake in two layer pans and put together with white boiled icing.  "Or, add to this same batter one scant teaspoonful of cinnamon, ginger, 1/2 teaspoonful of grated nutmeg and cloves, a cup of raisins or dried currants, and you have a small fruit cake.  "Or, add a small quantity of thinly-shaved citron to the original recipe, flavor with lemon, bake in a loaf and spread a white  icing flavored with lemon extract over top of cake, and you have a lemon cake.  "Or, add chocolate and spices to one-half the batter (about one-half as much chocolate and spices as were used in batter for fruit cake) and place spoonfuls of the light and dark batter alternately in a cake pan, until all batter has been used, and you will have a cheap, old-fashioned Marble cake.  "Or, bake cake over original recipe, in two-layer pans, placing between layers either tart jelly, a creamy cornstarch filling, grated cocoanut, apple cream filling, or you might even use half the recipe given for the delicious icing or filling for Lady Baltimore cake.  "Lastly, bake small cakes from this same recipe. Mary, you should have small pans for baking these delicious little cakes, similar to those I possess, which I ordered made at the tinsmith's. I took for a pattern one Frau Schmidt loaned me. They are the exact size of one-quarter pound boxes of Royal baking powder. Cut the box in three pieces of equal height, and your cakes will be equally as large in diameter as the baking powder box, but only one-third as high. I think I improved on Frau Schmidt's cake tins, as hers were all separate. I ordered twelve tins, similar to hers, to be fastened to a piece of sheet iron. I had two of these iron sheets made, containing twenty-four little pans. I place a generous tablespoonful of the batter in each of the twenty-four small pans, and cakes rise to the top of pans. Usually I have batter remaining after these are filled. Ice all the cake except the top with a white boiled icing or chocolate icing. These small cakes keep exceedingly well, and are always liked by young folks and are particularly nice for children's parties."  "Speaking of cakes, Aunt Sarah," said Mary, "have you ever used Swansdown cake flour? I have a friend in the city who uses it for making the most delicious Angel cake and she gave me a piece of Gold cake made over a recipe in 'Cake Secrets,' which comes with the flour, and it was fine. I'll get a package of the flour for you the first time I go to the city. The flour resembles a mixture of ordinary flour and cornstarch. It is not a prepared flour, to be used without baking powder, and you use it principally for baking cakes. I have the recipe for both the Gold and Angel cakes, with the instructions for baking same. They are as follows:   ANGEL CAKE.  "For the Angel cake, use one even cupful of the whites of egg (whites of either eight large or nine small eggs); a pinch of salt, if added when beating eggs, hastens the work. One and one-quarter cups granulated sugar, 1 cup of Igelhart's Swansdown cake flour. Sift flour once, then measure and sift three times. Beat whites of eggs about half, add 1/2 teaspoonful of cream of tartar, then bear whites of eggs until they will stand of their own weight. Add sugar, then flour, not by stirring, but by folding over and over, until thoroughly mixed. Flavor with 1/2 teaspoonful of vanilla or a few drops of almond extract. As much care should be taken in 
 baking  an Angel Food cake as in mixing. Bake in an ungreased patent pan. Place the cake in an oven that is just warm enough to know there is a fire inside the range. Let the oven stay just warm through until the batter has raised to the top of the cake pan, then increase the heat gradually until the cake is well browned over. If by pressing the top of the cake with the finger it will spring back without leaving the impression of the finger, the cake is done through. Great care should be taken that the oven is not too hot to begin with, as the cake will rise too fast and settle or fall in the baking. It should bake in from 35 to 40 minutes' time. When done, invert the pan and let stand until cold before removing it. Should you see cake browning before it rises to top of pan, throw your oven door open and let cold air rush in and cool your oven instantly. Be not afraid. The cold air will not hurt the cake. Two minutes will cool any oven. Watch cake closely. Don't be afraid to open oven door every three or four minutes. This is the only way to properly bake this cake. When cake has raised above top of pan, increase your heat and finish baking rapidly. Baking too lond dries out the moisture, makes it tough and dry. When cake is done it begins to shrink. Let it shrink back to level of pan. Watch carefully at this stage and take out of oven and invert immediately. Rest on centre tube of pan. Let hang until perfectly cold, then take cake carefully from pan. When baking Angel cake always be sure the oven bakes good brown under bottom of cake. If cake does not crust under bottom it will fall out when inverted and shrink in the fall."  "I never invert my pans of Angel cake on taking them from oven," said Mary's Aunt, "as the cakes are liable to fall out even if  the pan is not greased. I think it safer to allow the pans containing the cakes to stand on a rack and cool without inverting the pan.   "Suppose, Mary, we bake a Gold cake over the recipe from 'Cake Secrets,' as eggs are plentiful; but we haven't any Swans-down flour. I think we will wait until we get it from the city."  GOLD CAKE.  Yolks of 8 eggs; 1 1/4 cups granulated sugar, 3/4 cup of butter, 3/4 cup water, 2 1/2 cups of Swansdown cake flour, 2 heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder. 1/2 teaspoonful lemon extract. Sift flour once, then measure. Add baking powder and sift three times. Cream butter and sugar thoroughly; heat yolks to a stiff froth; add this to creamed butter and sugar, and stir thoroughly through. Add flavor, add water, then flour. Stir very hard. Place in a slow oven at once. Will bake in from 30 to 40 minutes. Invert pan immediately it is taken from oven.  Mary, this batter may also be baked in layers with any kind of filling desired. The Angel cake receipe is very similar to an original recipe Frau Schmidt gave me; she uses cornstarch instead of Swansdown flour and she measure the eggs in a cup instead of taking a certain number; she thinks it more exact.  "Aunt Sarah, did you know Frau Schmidt, instead of using flour alone when baking cakes, frequently uses a mixture of flour and cornstarch? She sifts together, several limes, six cups of flour and one cup of cornstarch, and uses this instead of using flour alone.  "I dearly love the Professor's wife--she's been so very good to me," exclaimed Mary.  "Yes." replied her Aunt, "she has very many lovable qualities."  Mary's liking for bright, energetic Frau Schmidt was not greater than the affection bestowed on Mary by the Professor's wife, who frequently entertained Mary with tales of her life when a girl in Germany, to all of which Mary never tired listening. One Aunt, a most estimable woman, held the position of valued and respected housekeeper and cook for the Lord Mayor of the city wherein she resided. Another relative, known as "Schone Anna," for many years kept an inn named "The Four Seasons," noted for  the excellent fare served by the fair chatelaine to her patrons. The iinn was made famous by members of the King's household stopping there while in the town during the Summer months, which was certainly a compliment to her good cooking. One of the things in which she particularly excelled was potato cakes raised with yeast. Frau Schmidt had been ggiven a number of these valuable recipes by her mother, all of which she offered to Mary. One recipe she particularly liked was "Fast Nacht Cakes," which the Professor's wife baked always without fail on Shrove Tuesday (or "Fast Nact" day), the day before the beginning of Lent. This rule was as "unchangeable as the law of Medes and Persians," and it would have been a very important event, indeed, which would have prevented the baking of these toothsome delicacies on that day. 
  
  CHAPTER XXIII  THE OLD "TAUFSCHIEN."  Aunt Sarah had long promised to show Mary her Grandmother's "Taufschien," and she reverently handled the large old family Bible, which contained between its sacred pages the yellowed
  BIRTH AND CHRISTENING CERTIFICATE OLD TAUFSCHIEN  A picture of a page that has birth and cristening information along with pictures of angels and birds. 
  paper, being the birth and christening certificate of her grandmother, whom we read was born in 1785, in Nockamixon Township, was confirmed in 1802, and was married in 1805 to the man who was later Aunt Sarah's grandfather. The old certificate was signed by a German Reformed minister named Wack, who history tells us was the first young man of that denomination to be  ordained to the ministry in America. Folded with this "Taufschien" is another which has never been filled out. This is printed in German. Pictures of women, perhaps they are intended to represent angles, with golden wings, clothed in loose-flowing crimson drapery and holding harps in their hands; birds with gayly-colored plumage of bluish green, crimson and yellow, perched on branches of what presumably represent cherry trees, also decorate the page. Religious hymns printed on the "Taufschiens," encircled with gay stripes of light blue and yellow, dotted with green, further embellish them. On one we read:  "Infinite joy or endless woe, Attend on every breath; And yet, how unconcerned we go Upon the brink of death."  Mary, this old 'Taufschien' of my grandmother's is one of my most cherished possessions. Would you like to see your Uncle's old deed, which he came into possession of when he inherited the farm from his father?"  Carefully unfolding the stiff old parchment or pigskin deed, yellowed and brown spotted with age, Mary could faintly decipher the writing wherein, beautifully written, old-fashioned penmanship of two hundred years ago stated that a certain piece of land in Bucks County, Beginning at a Chestnut Oak, North to a post; then East to a large rock, and on the South unsettled land, which in later years was conveyed to John Landis.  "This deed," said Mary's Aunt, "was given in 1738, nearly two hundred years ago, by John, Thomas and Richard Penn, sons of William Penn by his second marriage, which occurred in America. His eldest son, John Penn, you have no doubt heard, was called 'The American,' he having been born in this country before William Penn's return to Europe, where he remained fifteen years, as you've no doubt heard."  At the bottom of the deed a blue ribbon has been slipped through cuts in the parchment, forming a diamond which incloses what is supposed to be the signature of Thomas Penn.  "Aunt Sarah, I am not surprised that you value this old deed of the farm and these 'Taufschiens' of your grandmother. I should frame them, so they may be preserved by future generations." 
  
  CHAPTER XXIV.  THE OLD STORE ON THE RIDGE ROAD.  Aunt Sarah found in Mary a willing listener when talking of the time in years past when her grandfather kept a small "Country Store" on the Ridge Road in Bucks County. She also remembered, when a child of ten, accompanying her grandfather on one of his trips when he drove to Philadelphia to purchase goods for his store.  "They had no trolley cars in those days?" asked Mary.  "No, my dear, neither did they have steam cars between the different towns and cities as we have now."  "At grandfather's store could be bought both groceries and dry goods. The surrounding farmers' wives brought to the store weekly fresh print butter, eggs, pot cheese and hand-case, crocks of apple-butter, dried sweet corn, beans, cherries, peach and apple 'Snitz,' taking in exchange sugar, starch, coffee, molasses, etc. My father tapped his sugar maples and mother cooked down the syrup until thick, and we used that in place of molasses. They also took in exchange shaker flannel, nankeen, indigo blue and 'Simpson' gray calico, which mother considered superior to any other, both for its washing and wearing qualities. The farmers who came occasionally to the store to shop for different members of the family frequently bought whole pieces of calico of one pattern, and," affirmed Aunt Sarah. "I knew of one farmer who bought several whole pieces of one pattern with rather large figures on a dark wine ground, resembling somewhat the gay figures on an old paisley shawl. He said 'twas a good, serviceable color, and more economical to buy it all alike, and remarked: 'What's the difference, anyway? ' Calico is calico.' From the same piece of calico his wife made dresses, aprons and sunbonnets for herself and daughters, shirts for the farmer and his sons (the boys were young, fortunately), and patchwork quilts and comfortables from the remainder."  "Rather monotonous, I should think," said Mary. "I am surprised  his wife did not make him wear coat and trousers made from the same piece of calico."  "The dry goods," continued Aunt Sarah, "retained the scent of coffee, cheese and dried fruits some time after being purchased, but no one minded that in those days. I still remember how perfectly wonderful to me when a child appeared the large, wide-mouthed glass jars containing candy. There were red and white striped mint sticks, striped yellow and white lemon sticks and
  THE OLD STORE ON RIDGE ROAD  A picture of people in front of a store. 
  hoarhound and clear, wine-colored sticks striped with lines of white, flavored with anise-seed. One jar contained clear lemon-colored 'Sour Balls,' preferred by us children on account of their lasting qualities, as also were the jujubees, which resembled nothing so much as gutta percha, and possessed equally as fine flavor; also pink and yellow sugar-frosted gumdrops. In a case at one end of the counter were squares of thick white paper covered with rows of small pink, also white, 'peppermint buttons,' small sticks, two inches in length, of chewing gum in waxed paper, a white, tasteless, crystalline substance resembling paraffine. What longing eyes I frequently cast at the small scalloped cakes of maple  sugar, prohibitive as regards cost. They sold for a nickel, and I was always inordinately fond of maple sugar, but the price was prohibitive. I seldom possessed more than a penny to spend in those days, and not always that. Father raised a large family, money was never plentiful, and we relished the plain, cheap candies usually sold in those days more than many children of the present day do the finest and most expensive cream chocolates, to many of whom in this extravagant age a dollar is not valued more highly than was a penny by us in years gone by. And 'Candy Secrets!' I don't believe you know what they are like. I've not seen any for years. They were small, square pieces of taffy-like candy, wrapped in squares of gilt or silver paper, inclosing a small strip of paper containing a couple of sentimental lines or jingle. Later came 'French Secrets.' They consisted of a small oblong piece of candy about an inch in length, wrapped in tissue paper of different colors, having fringed ends, twisted together at either end. These also inclosed a tiny strip of paper containing a line or two. Small, white candy hearts contained the words in pink letters, 'Little Sweetheart,' 'I Love You,' 'Name the Day,' etc. These were invariably distributed among the young folds at small parties and created no end of merriment."  "Mary, old as I am, I still remember the delight I experienced when a little, rosy-cheeked urchin surreptitiusly passed me aroudn the corner of my desk at the old 'Cross Roads School' a 'Secret,' with the words, 'Do you love me?' My grandmother always kep a supply of hoarhound and peppermint lozenges in her knitting basket to give us children should we complain of hoarseness. My, but 'twas astonishing to hear us all cough until grandmother's supply of mints was exhausted. I think, Mary, I must have had a 'sweet tooth' when a child, as my recollectiosn seem to be principally about the candy kept in my grandfather's store. I suppose in those early days of my childhood candy appealed to me more than anything else, as never having had a surfeit of sweets, candy to me was a rare treat. I remember, Mary, when a little child, my thrifty mother, wishing to encourage me to learn to knit my own stockings, she, when winding the skein of German yarn into a ball, occasionally wound a penny in with the yarn. I was allowed to spend the penny only after I had knitted the yarn and the penny had fallen from the ball. What untold wealth that penny represented! And planning how to  spend it was grater pleasure still. Many a pair of long, old-fashioned, dark blue and red-striped stockings were finished more quickly than otherwise would have been done without the promised reward. I became proficient in knitting at an early age," continued Aunt Sarah; "a truly feminine occupation, and as I one time heard a wise old physician remark, 'Soothing to the nerves,' which I know to be true, having knitted many a worry into the heel of a sock. I learned at an early age the value of money, and once having acquired the saving habit, it is not possible to be wasteful in later life." 
  
  CHAPTER XXV.  AN ELBADRITCHEL HUNT.  Fritz Schmidt, like many another Bucks County boy, had frequently heard the rural tale of a mythical bird called the "Elbadritchel," supposed to be abroad, particularly on cold, dark, stormy nights, when the wind whistled and blew perfect gales around exposed corners of houses and barns. 'Twas a common saying among "Pennsylvania Germans," at such times, " 'Tis a fine night to catch 'Elbadritchels.' " 
  CATCHING ELBADRITCHELS  A picture of a man standing near a crop field with a board in his hands. 
  For the information of those who may not even have heard of this remarkable creature,it is described as being a cross between a swallow, a goose and a lyre bird. Have you ever seen an "Elbadritchel ?" No one has to my certain knowledge so I cannot vouch for the truth of this description of it.  Fritz Schmidt had never thought to question the truth of the tale. So, when one cold, stormy night several boys from neighboring  farms drove up to the Schmidt homestead and asked Fritz to join them in a hunt for "Elbadritchels," he unhesitatingly agreed to make one of the number, unaware that he had been selected as the victim of a practical joke, and, as usual, was one of the jolliest of the crowd. They drove through a blinding downpour of rain and dismounted on reaching a lonely hill about three miles distant. They gave Fritz a bag to hold. It was fashioned of burlap and barrel hoops, inside of which they placed a lighted candle, and Fritz was instructed how to hold it in order to attract the "Elbadritchel." They also gave him a club with which to strike the bird when it should appear.  The boys scampered off in different directions, ostensibly to chase up the birds, but in reality they clambered into the waiting wagon and were rapidly driven home, leaving Fritz alone awaiting the coming of the "Elbadritchel." When Fritz realized the trick played on him, his feelings may be better imagined than described. He trudged home, cold and tired, vowing vengeance on the boys, fully resolved to get even with them. 
  
  CHAPTER XXVI.  THE OLD SHANGHAI ROOSTER.  Much of Aunt Sarah's spare time was devoted to her chickens, which fully repaid her for the care given them. She was not particular about fancy stock, but had quite a variety-White Leghorns, Brown Leghorns, big, fat, motherly old Brahma hens that had raised a brood of as many as thirty-five little chicks at one time, a few snow-white, large Plymouth Rocks and some gray Barred one. The 
 latter  she 
 liked  particularly because she said they were much more talkative than any of the others; they certainly did appear to chatter to her when she fed them. She gave them clean, comfortable quarters, warm bran mash on cold winter mornings, alternating with cracked corn and "scratch feed" composed of a mixture of cracked corn, wheat and buckwheat, scattered over a litter of dried leaves on the floor of the chicken house, so they were obliged to work hard for their food. 
  Old Egg Basket  A picture of a basket of eggs. 
  A plentiful supply of fresh water was always at hand, as well as cracked oyster shell. She also fed the chickens all scraps from the table, cutting all meat scraps fine with an old pair of scissors hung conveniently in the kitchen.  She was very successful with the little chicks hatched out when she "set" a hen and the yield of eggs from her hens was usually greater and the eggs larger in size than those of any of her neighbors. This I attribute to her excellent care of them, generous diet, but principally to the fact of the elimination of all the roosters among the flock during the season between the "first of May and December first," with one exception. "Brigham," an  immensely large, old, red Shanghai rooster, a most pompous and dignified old chap. A special pet of Aunt Sarah's, she having raised him from a valuable "setting" of eggs given her, and as the egg from which "Brigham," as he was called, emerged, was the only one of the lot which proved fertile, he was valued accordingly and given a longer lease of life than the other roosters, and was usually either confined or allowed to roam outside the chicken yard during the summer months; in the winter, being a swift runner, he usually gobbled up two shares of food before the hens arrived. That accounted for his great size. The old rooster was also noted for his loud crowing.  One day in early Spring, John Landis came into the house hurriedly, saying, "Sarah, your old Shanghai rooster is sick."  "Yes," answered his wife, "I missed hearing him crow this morning; he is usually as regular as an alarm clock."  She hurried to the barnyard, picked up poor Brigham, wrapped him carefully in a piece of blanket and laid him in a small shed. The next morning she was awakened by the lusty crowing of Brigham, who was apparently as well as ever. The next day the same thing happened. Aunt Sarah found him, as she supposed, in a dying condition, and the following morning he was fully recovered. It was quite puzzling until one day John Landis came into the kitchen laughing heartily and said, "Sarah, I am sorry to inform you of the intemperate habits of your pet, Brigham. He is a most disreputable old fellow, and has a liking for liquor. He has been eating some of the brandied cherries which were thrown into the barnyard when the jug containing them was accidentally broken at house cleaning time.  "Well, Sarah, old Brigham was not sick at all-only "ingloriously' drunk." In the fall of the same year Aunt Sarah spied Brigham one day on top of one of the cider barrels in the shed busily engaged eating the pummace which issued from the bung-hole of the barrel. John Landis, on hearing of Brigham's last escapade, decided, as the rooster was large as an ordinary turkey, to serve him roasted at Mary's wedding.  Fritz Schmidt remarked one day in the presence of Sibylla: "Chickens must possess some little intelligence; they know enough to go to bed early. Yes, and without an 'alarm clock,' too, Sibylla, eh?"  She walked away without a word to Fritz. The alarm clock  was a sore subject with her, and one about which she had nothing to say. Sibylla had never quite forgiven Fritz for the prank played on her. He, happening to hear John Landis tell Sibylla a certain hour he thought a proper time for Jake Crouthamel to take his departure Sunday evenings, Fritz conceived the brilliant (?) idea of setting the alarm clock to "go off" quite early in the evening. He placed the clock at the head of the stairs, and in the midst of an interesting conversation between the lovers the alarm sounded with a loud, whizzing noise, which naturally made quicktempered Sibylla very angry. She said on seeing Fritz the next morning: "It was not necessary to set the 'waker' to go off, as I know enough to send 'Chake' home when it's time."  Fritz, happening to tell the story to the editor of a small German Mennonite paper, edited in a near-by town, it was printed in that paper in German, which caused Sibylla, on hearing it, to be still more angry at the Professor's son. 
  
  CHAPTER XXVII.  "A POTATO PRETZEL."  In the early part of September Mary's Aunt suggested she try to win the prize offered at the Farmers' Picnic in a near-by town for the best "Raised Potato Cake." Aunt Sarah's rye bread invariably captured first prize, and she proposed sending both bread and cake with Sibylla and Jake, who never missed a picnic or fair within a radius of one hundred miles. 
  "POTATO PRETZEL"  A picture of a first prize winning potato pretzel. 
  Mary set a sponge the evening of the day preceding that of the picnic, using recipe for "Perfection Potato Cake," which Aunt Sarah considered her best recipe for raised cakes, as 'twas one used by her mother for many years.  On the ray of the picnic, Mary arose at five o'clock, and while her Aunt was busily engaged setting sponge for her loaf of rye bread, Mary kneaded down the "potato cake" sponge, set to  rise the previous evening, now rounded over top of bowl and light as a feather.  She filled a couple of pans with buns, molded from the dough, and set them to rise. She then, under her Aunt's direction, fashioned the "Pretzel" as follows: She placed a piece of the raised dough on a large, well-floured bake board, rolled it over and over with both hands until a long, narrow roll or strip was formed about the width of two fingers in thickness and placed this strip carefully on the baking sheet, which was similar to the one on which Aunt Sarah baked rye bread; shaped the dough to form a figure eight (8) or pretzel, allowing about two inches of space on either side of baking sheet to allow for raising. She then cut a piece of dough into three portions, rolled each as thick as a finger, braided or plaited the three strips together and placed carefully on top of the figure eight, or pretzel, not meeting by a space of about two inches. This braided piece on the top should not be quite as thick as bottom or first piece of the pretzel. She then rolled three small pieces of dough into tiny strips or rolls the size of small lead pencils, wound them round and round and round into small scrolls, moistened the lower side with water to cause them to adhere, and placed them on the dividing line between the two halves of the figure eight. She placed an old china coffee cup without a handle, buttered on outside, in centre of each half of the figure eight, which kept the pretzel from spreading over the pan. With a small, new paint brush she brushed over the top of Pretzel and Buns, a mixture, consisting of one yolk of egg, an equal quantity of cream or milk (which should be lukewarm so as not to chill the raised dough) and one tablespoon of sugar. This causes the cakes, etc., to be a rich brown when baked, a result to be obtained in no other manner.  When the pretzel was raised and had doubled in size 'twas baked in a moderately hot oven.  Mary's surprise and delight may easily be imagined when Sibylla, on her return from the picnic, handed her the prize she had won, a two-pound box of chocolates, remarking, "Mary, you and Aunt Sarah both got a prize-her's is in the box what Jake's got."  The box on being opened by Aunt Sarah contained a very pretty, silver-plated soup ladle, the prize offered for the best loaf of rye bread.   "Aunt Sarah," inquired Mary one day, "do you think it pays a housekeeper to bake her own bread?"  "Certainly, it pays, my dear. From a barrel of flour may be baked three hundred or more one-pound loaves of bread; should you pay five cents a loaf, the bread which may be made from one barrel of flour if bought from a bake shop would cost you fifteen dollars. Now, you add to the cost of a barrel of flour a couple of dollars for yeast, salt, etc, which altogether would not possibly be more than ten dollars, and you see the housewife has saved five dollars. It is true it is extra work for the housewife, but good,
  LOAF OF RYE BREAD  A picture of a half of a flat round loaf of rye bread. 
  wholesome bread is such an important item, especially in a large family, I should advise the thrifty housekeeper to bake her own bread and bake less pie and cake, or eliminate less important duties, to be able to find time to bake bread. From the bread sponge may be made such a number of good, plain cakes by the addition of currants or raisins, which are more wholesome and cheaper than richer cakes."  "I think what you say is true, Aunt Sarah," said Mary.  "Frau Schmidt always bakes her own bread, and she tells me she sets a sponge or batter for white bread, and by the addition  of Graham flour, cornmcal or oatmeal, always has a variety on her table with a small expenditure of time and money." 
  A "BROD CORVEL" OR BREAD BASKET  A picture of a shallow, woven bread basket. 
 
  
  CHAPTER XXVIII.  FAITHFUL SERVICE.  The home-making instinct was so strongly developed in Mary that her share in the labor of cooking and baking became a pleasure. Occasionally she had failures-what inexperienced cook has not?-yet they served only to spur her on to fresh efforts. She had several small scars on her wrist caused by her arm coming in contact with the hot oven when baking. She laughingly explained: "One bar on my arm represents that delicious 'Brod Torte' which Frau Schmidt taught me to bake; the other one I acquired when removing the sponge cake from the oven which Uncle John said 'equaled Aunt Sarah's' (which I consider highest praise), and the third bar received when taking from the oven the 'Lemon Meringue,' Ralph's favorite pie. which he pronounced 'fine, almost too good to eat.'" Mary was as proud of her scars as a young, non-commissioned officer of the chevron on his sleeve, won by deeds of valor.  The lessons Mary learned that summer on the farm while filling her hope chest and preparing her mind for wifehood were of inestimable value to her in later years. She learned not only to bake, brew and keep house, but from constant association with her Aunt she acquired a self-poise, a calm, serene manner, the value of which is beyond price in this swift, restless age.  One day, while having a little heart-to-heart talk with Mary, her Aunt said: "My dear, never allow an opportunity to pass for doing a kind act. If ever so small, it may cheer some sad, lonely heart. Don't wait to do 
 big things.  The time may never come. If only a kind word, speak it at once. Kind words cost so little, and we should all be more prodigal with them; and to a tired, sad, discouraged soul, a kind word or act means so very much; and who is there that has not at some time in life known sorrow and felt the need of sympathy? Were our lives all sunshine we could not feel in touch with sorrowing friends. How natural it is for our hearts to go out in sympathy to the one who says 'I have suffered.'  Give to your friend the warm hand-clasp and cheery greeting which cost us nothign in the giving. 'Tis the little lifts which help us over stones in our pathway through life. We think our cross the heaviest when, did we but know the weight of others, we'd not willingly exchange; and remember Mary, 'there are not crown-bearers in Heaven that were not cross-bearers below.' Have you ever read the poem, 'The Changed Cross?' No? Well, I will give it to you to copy in your book of recipes. Should you ever, in future years, feel your cross too heavy to bear, read the poem. How many brave, cheery little women greet us with a smile as they pass. But little do we or any one realize that instead of a song in their hearts the smiles on their lips conceal troubles the world does not suspect, seeking to forget their own sorrows while diong kindly acts for others. They are the real heroes whom the world does not reward with medals for bravery. 'To stand with a smile upon your face against a stake from which you cannot get away, that, no doubt, is heroic; but the true glory is not resignation to the inevitable. To stand unchained, with perfect liberty to go away, held only by the higher claims of duty, and let the fire creep up to the hear, that is heroism.' Ah! how many good women have lived faithful to duty when 'twould have been far easier to have died!"  "FAITHFUL OVER A FEW THINGS."  Matt. xxv: 23  It may seem to you but a trifle, which you have been called to do; Just some humble household labor, away from the public view, But the question is, are you faithful, and striving to do your best, As in sight of the Blessed Master, while leaving to Him the rest?  It may be but a little corner, which you have been asked to fill; What matters it, if you are in it, doing the Master's will? Doing it well and faithfully, and doing it with your might; Not for the praise it may bring you, but because the thing is right.  In the sight of man you may never win anything like success; And the laurel crown of the victor may never your temples press; If only you have God's approval, 'twill not matter what else you miss, His blessing is Heaven beginning, His reward will be perfect bliss.   Be faithful in every service, obedient to every call; Ever ready to do His bidding, whether in great things or small; You may seem to accomplish little, you may win the praise of none; But be sure you will win His favor, and the Master's great "Well Done."  And when at His blessed coming, you stand at His judgment seat; He'll remember your faithful service and His smile will be Oh! so sweet!  He will bid you a loving welcome, He'll make you to reign for aye, Over great things and o'er many, with Him, through eternal day.  "THE CHANGED CROSS."  It was a time of sadness, and my heart, Although it knew and loved the better part, Felt wearied with the conflict and the strife, And all the needful discipline of life.  And while I thought on these as given to me, My trial tests of faith and love to be, It seemed as if I never could be sure That faithful to the end I should endure.  And thus, no longer trusting to His might, Who says, "We walk by faith and not by sight"; Doubting and almost yielding to despair, The thought arose-My cross I cannot bear.  Far heavier its weight must surely be Than those of others which I daily see; Oh! if I might another burden choose, Methinks I should not fear my crown to lose.  A solemn silence reigned on all around, E'en nature's voices uttered not a sound; The evening shadows seemed of peace to tell, And sleep upon my weary spirit fell.   A moment's pause and then a heavenly light Beamed full upon my wondering, raptured sight; Angels on silvery wings seemed everywhere, And angels' music filled the balmy air.  Then One more fair than all the rest to see- One to whom all the others bowed the knee- Came gently to me as I trembling lay, And, "Follow Me!" He said, "I am the Way."  Then speaking thus, He led me far above, And there, beneath a canopy of love, Crosses of divers shapes and sizes were seen, Larger and smaller than my own had been.  And one there was, most beauteous to behold, A little one, with jewels set in gold; Ah! this methought, I can with comfort wear, For it will be an easy one to bear.  And so, the little cross I quickly took, But all at once, my frame beneath it shook; The sparkling jewels fair were they to see, But far too heavy was their weight for me.  "This may not be," I cried, and looked again To see if there was any here could ease my pain; But one by one I passed them slowly by, Till on a lovely one I cast my eye.  Fair flowers around its sculptured form entwined, And grace and beauty seemed in it combined; Wondering, I gazed and still I wondered more, To think so many should have passed it o'er.  But Oh! that form so beautiful to see, Soon made its hidden sorrows known to me; Thorns lay beneath those flowers and colors fair; Sorrowing, I said. "This cross I may not bear."   And so it was with each and all around, Not one to suit my need could there be found; Weeping, I laid each heavy burden down, As my guide gently said : "No cross, no crown."  At length to him I raised my saddened heart, He knew its sorrows, bid its doubts depart; "Be not afraid," He said, "but trust in Me, My perfect love shall now be shown to thee."  And then with lightened eyes and willing feet, Again I turned my earthly cross to meet; With forward footsteps, turning not aside For fear some hidden evil might betide.  And there, in the prepared, appointed way, Listening to hear, and ready to obey, A cross I quickly found of plainest form, With only words of love inscribed thereon.  With thankfulness, I raised it from the rest, And joyfully acknowledged it the best; The only one of all the many there That I could feel was good for me to hear.  And while I thus my chosen one confessed, I saw a heavenly brightness on it rest; And as I bent my burden to sustain, I recognized my own old cross again.  But, oh! how different did it seem to be! Now I had learned its preciousness to see; No longer could I unbelievingly say: "Perhaps another is a better way."  Oh, no ! henceforth my own desire shall be That He who knows me best should choose for me, And so whate'er His love sees good to send. I'll trust its best, because He knows the end.   And when that happy time shall come Of endless peace and rest, We shall look back upon our path And say: "It was the best." 
  
  CHAPTER XXIX.  MARY, RALPH, JAKE AND SIBYLLA VISIT THE ALLENTOWN FAIR.  Late in September Jake and Sibylla drove to the Allentown Fair. It was "Big Thursday" of Fair week. They started quite early, long before Ralph Jackson, who had come from the city the day previous, to tkae Mary to the Fair, had arisen. 
  SECOND CHURCH BUILDING Sheltered Liberty Bell, 1777-78. Photographed from the print of an old wood cut used in a German newspaper in the year 1840.  An image of a church building. 
  Mary, while appreciating Sibylla's good qualities, never failed to be amused at her broad "Pennsylvania German" dialect.  The morning of the "Fair," Mary arose earlier than usual to allow Sibylla and Jake to get an early start, as it was quite a distance from the farm to the Fair grounds. As they were about to drive away, Sibylla, alighting from the carriage, said, "I forgot  my 'Schnupftuch.' " Returning with it in her hand, she called, as she climbed into Jake's buggy, "Gut-by, Mary, it looks fer rain."  "Yes," said Jake, "I think it gives rain before we get back yet The cornfodder in the barn this morning was damp like it had water on it."  And said Mary, "The fragrance of the flowers was particularly noticeable early this morning." Jake, as it happened, was no false prophet. It did rain before evening.  Later in the day, Mary and Ralph drove to a near-by town, leaving horse and carriage at the hotel until their return in the evening, and boarded a train for Allentown. On arriving there, they decided to walk up Hamilton Street, and later take a car out to the Fair grounds. As they sauntered slowly up the main street, Mary noticed a small church built between two large department stores and stopped to read a tablet on the church, which informed the passerby that "this is to commemorate the concealment of the Liberty Bell during the Revolutionary War. This tablet was erected by the Liberty Bell Chapter of the Daughters of the Revolution."  The First Zion's Reformed Church was founded in 1762. In front of the Church a rough block of granite, erected to the memory of John Jacob Mickley, contained the following inscription:"In commemoration of the saving of the Liberty Bell from the British in 1777, Under cover of darkness and with his farm team, he, John Mickley, hauled the Liberty Bell from Independence Hall, Philadelphia, through the British lines, to Bethlehem, where the wagon broke down. The Bell was transferred to another wagon, brought to Allentown, placed beneath the floor of the Second Church building of Zion's Reformed Church, where it remained secreted nearly a year. This 
 tablet  was placed by the order of the Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, June 2nd, 1907, under the auspices of the Pennsylvania Daughters of the Revolution."  This was all very interesting to a girl who had been born and reared in Philadelphia; one who in earliest childhood had been taught to love and venerate the "old Bell."  Ralph was quite as interested in reading about the old Bell as was Mary, and said: "Did you know that the City of Philadelphia purchased the State House property which included the Bell, in 1818, in consideration of the sum of seventy thousand  dollars? No building is ever to be erected on the ground inside the wall on the south side of the State House, but if is to remain a public green and walk forever?" 
  Liberty Bell Tablet, Zion's Reformed Church, Allentown, Pa.  A picture of a large upright stone with a plaque on the front. The stone is under a canopy made from draped American flags. 
  "No," replied Mary, "I did not know that. I don't think we will see anything of greater interest than this at the Fair."  "I understand," said Ralph, "this is the third church building  built on this site, where the original church stood in which the Bell was secreted."  Mary, possessing a fair share of the curiosity usually attributed to the female of the species," on noticing the church door standing ajar, asked Ralph to step inside with her, thinking to find the caretaker within; but no one was visible. A deep silence reigned in the cool, dim interior of the House of God.  One could almost feel the silence, 'twas so impressive. Slowly they walked up the wide church aisle and stood before the quaint baptismal font. A stray sunbeam glancing through one of the beautiful, variously-colored memorial windows, lighted up the pictured saint-like faces over the chancel, making them appear as if imbued with life. Mary softly whispered to Ralph, as if loath to profane the sacredness of the place by loud talking, "I seem to hear a voice saying, 'The Lord is in His holy temple.' " Quietly retracing their steps, they, without meeting any one, emerged into the bright sunlight and were soon in the midst of the turmoil and traffic incident to the principal business street of a city.  The young folks boarded a trolley and in a short time reached the Fair grounds, which offered many attractions to Ralph as well as Mary. The latter was interested in the fine display of needlework, fruits, flowers and vegetables of unusual size. Aunt Sarah's bread won a prize. A blue ribbon attached to Frau Schmidt's highly-prized, old-fashioned, patchwork quilt, showed it to be a winner. Ralph, being interested in the pens of fancy chickens, prize cattle, etc., Mary reluctantly left the woman's department of fancy work, and other interesting things, and accompanied him. On their way to the outlying cattle sheds they noticed two lovers silting on a bench. Upon a second glance they were convinced that it was Jake and Sibylla. Jake, beaming with happiness, said, "Sibylla vos side by me yet?" They were busily engaged eating a lunch consisting of rolls with hot "weiners" between the two halves, or, as Jake called them, "Doggies," munching pretzels and peanuts between sips of strong coffee, both supremely happy. A yearly visit to the Allentown Fair on "Big Thursday." was the event in their dull, prosaic lives.  
  DURHAM CAVE  A picture of a hillside with a large cave opening. 
  
  
  CHAPTER XXX.  FRITZ SCHMIDT EXPLORES DURHAM CAVE.  It appeared to be nothing new for Fritz Schmidt to get into frost, he, in company with a number of boys, drove to Durham. not many miles distant from his home, in search of persimmons. the crop of which, on account of the severity of the preceding winter, old farmers had predicted would be exceedingly heavy.  Fritz did not tell the boys of his intention to explore a cave which he had been told was in the neighborhood, thinking it would be a good joke to explore the cave first, then tell the boys later of his adventure.  The old gentleman from whom Fritz gained his information relative to the cave aroused the boy's curiosity by saying, "Very many years ago, a skeleton was found in Durham cave and one of the bones, on examination, proved to be the thigh bone of a human being. How he came there, or the manner of his death, was never known." I large room in the cave is known as "Queen Esther's Drawing Room," where, tradition has it "Queen Esther," or Catharine Montour, which was her rightful name, at one time inhabited this cave with some of her Indian followers.  Fritz accidentally stumbled upon the mouth of the cave. None of the other boys being in sight, Fritz quickly descended into the cave, which was dark as night. By lighting a second match as quickly as one was burned, he explored quite a distance, when, accidentally dropping his box of matches, the burning match in his hand, at the same moment, flickered faintly, then went out, leaving Fritz in darkness. Imagine the feelings of the boy, as he groped unsuccessfully on the floor of the cavern for the lost match box. Finally, he gave up in despair. Fritz was not a cowardly boy, but while searching for the matches, he, without thinking, had turned around several times, lost his bearings and knew not in which direction to go to reach the opening of the cave. He heard strange noises which he imagined were bats flopping their wings.   There appeared to be something uncanny about the place, and Fritz devoutly wished himself out in the sunshine, when the quotation he had frequently heard his father use came into his mind; "More things are wrought by prayer as he had been taught to pray at his mother's knee, but more earnestly than he had ever prayed before his life, that God would help him find his way out of the cave, believing that his prayer would be answered. And who shall say it was not answered? For, stumbling onward in the darkness, not knowing if he were coming toward the cave's entrance or going in the opposite direction, he eventually hailed with joy a faint streak of light which he followed, and it soon brought him to the mouth of the cave. He was surprised on joining his companions to find they had not been alarmed at his absence. He had been in the cave only thirty minutes, but to him it had seemed hours. Fritz says to this day he has a horror of Durham Cave or "The Devil's Hole," as it was formerly called.  
  THE WOODLAND STREAM  An illustration of Woods with a Small Stream Running Down in the Middle of it. 
  
 
   CHAPTER XXXI.  MARY'S MARRIAGE.  His vacation ended, after a busy season at the farm, Ralph Jackson returned to his work in the city, strong and robust. He had acquired the coat of tan which Mary's Uncle had predicted. Physically strong as the "Cave Man" of old, he felt capable of moving mountains, and as was natural, he being only a human man, longed for the mate he felt God had intended should one day be his, as men have done since our first gardener, Adam, and will continue to do until the end of time.  When visiting the farm, an event which occurred about every two weeks, Ralph constantly importuned Mary to name an early day for their marriage.  Mary, with a young girl's impulsiveness, had given her heart unreservedly into the keeping of Ralph Jackson, her first sweet-heart. Mary was not natually cold or unresponsive, neither was she lacking in passion. She had had a healthy girlhood, and a wholesome home life. She had been taught the conventional ideals of the marriage relations that have kept the race strong throughout the centuries. Mary possessed great strengh of character and fine moral courage. Frequently, not wishing to show her real feeling for the young mam; too well poised to be carried off into the wrong channel, defended and excused by many over-sentimental and light-hearted novelists of the day, she sometimes appeared almost indifferent to the impetuous youth with warm, red blood leaping in his veins, who desired so ardently to possess her.  Mary's Aunt had taught her the sancity of parenthood, also that women are not always the weaker sex. There are times when they must show their superiority to "mere man" in being the stronger of the two, mentally if not physically, and Ralph Jackson knew when he called Mary "wite" she would endow him with all the wealth of her pure womanhood, sacredly kept for the clean-souled  young man, whose devotion she finally rewarded by promising to marry him the second week in October.  Sibylla Linsabigler, a good but ignorant girl, accustomed to hearing her elder brothers speak slightingly regarding the sanctity of love and marriage, was greatly attached to Mary, whom she admired exceedingly, and looked up to almost as a superior being. She unconsciously imitated many of Mary's ways and mannerisms, and sought to adopt her higher ideals of life and standard of morals.  One Sunday, as Jake Crouthamel was spending the evening with Sibylla, as was his usual custom, he attempted some slight familiarity, which annoyed Sibylla greatly. Jake, noticing the young girl's displeasure at his action, remarked, "I think me Sibylla, you are stuck up yet" (a grave fault in the Bucks County farm hand's opinion).  "No, Chake," Sibylla replied, "I ain't, but Mary, she say a man gives a girl more respect what keeps herself to herself before she is married, and I lofe you Chake and want that you respect me if we marry.  Fritz and Elizabeth Schmidt, on hearing the news of Mary's approaching marriage, promptly begged the privilege of decorat-ing the old farm house parlor for the expected ceremony. They scoured the surrounding woods and countryside for decorations; along old stone fences and among shrubbery by the roadside they gathered large branches of Bitter Sweet. Its racemes of orange-colored fruit, which later in the season becomes beautiful, when the orange gives place to a brilliant red, the outer covering of the berry turns back upon the stems, forming one of the prettiest pictures imaginable in late Autumn, They also gathered branches of feathery wild clematis, which, after the petals had fallen, resembled nothing so much as a cluster of apple seeds, each seed tipped with what appeared like a tiny osprey feather. From the woods near the farm they gathered quantities of trailing ground pine and rainbow-tinted leaves from the numerous brilliant scarlet and yellow maples, which appeared brighter in contrast to the sober-hued trees of shellbark, oak and chestnut.  The wedding gifts sent to Mary were odd, useful and numerous. The Campfire Girls, to whom she became endeared, gave her a "Kitchen Shower," consisting of a clothes basket (woven by an old basketmaker from the willows growing not far distant)- 
  POLLY SCHMIDT  An illustration of a Small Girl in a White Dress. 
    filled to overflowing with everything imaginable that could possibly be useful to a young housekeeper, from the half dozen neatly-hemmed linen, blue ribbon tied, dish clothes, to really handsome embroidered articles from the girls to whom she had given instruction in embroidery during the past summer.  Sibylla's wedding present to Mary was the work of her own strong, willing hands, and was as odd and original as useful 'Twas a "door mat" made from corn husks, braided into a rope, then sewed round and round and formed into an oval mat. Mary laughingly told Sibylla she thought when 'twas placed on her kitchen doorstep she'd ask every one to please step over it, as it was too pretty to be trod on, which greatly pleased the young girl, who had spent many hours of loving thought and labor on the simple, inexpensive gift.  Mary received from Professor Schmidt a small but excellent copy of one of the world's most famous pictures, "The Night Watch," painted by Rembrandt, in 1642.  "My dear," said the old Professor, "I saw what was said to be the original of this painting, the property of Queen Wilhelmina of Holland, at the St. Louis Exposition in 1904. It was in a small, separate building. The size of the picture was fifteen feet by twenty feet. It is the largest and best known of Rembrandt's works. It acquired the wrong title of 'Night Watch' in a period when, owing to the numerous coats of vanish and the effect of smoke and dust, it had gotten so dark in appearance that only the most lucid parts could be discerned. Nowadays, nobody doubts-that the light falling from the left on the boisterous company is that of the sun. The musketeers are remarching out of the high archway of their hall, crossing the street in front of it, and going up a bridge. The architecture of the building is a product of Rembrandt's imagination. The steps, also, which we see the men descending, were put there simply to make those at the back show out above those in the front ranks. The march out was to he above all a portrait group. Sixteen persons had each paid their contributions, a hundred guilders on the average, to have their likenesses transmitted to posterity, and every one of them was therefore to be fully visible."  "It is certainly a wonderful picture," said Mary, "and while I have seen few pictures painted by old masters, I think, even with my limited knowledge of art, I cannot fail to appreciate this excellent  cellent copy, and I thank you heartily, Professor, and shall always be reminded of you when I look at this copy of a great work."  Mary would not go empty-handed to Ralph at her marriage. Her "hope chest" in the attic was full to overflowing, and quite unique in itself, as it consisted of an old, in fact ancient, wooden dough-tray used in times past by Aunt Sarah's grandmother. Beside it stood a sewing table, consisting of three discarded broom handles supporting a cheese-box cover, with wooden cheese-box underneath for holding Mary's sewing; stained brown and cre-lonne lined. Mary valued it as the result of the combined labor of herself and Ralph Jackson. A roll of new, home-made rag carpet, patchwork quilts and "New Colonial" rugs, jars of fruit, dried sweet corn, home-made soap, crocks of apple butter, jellies, jams and canned vegetables all bore evidence of Mary's busy summer at the farm.  The day of Mary's marriage, the twelfth of October, dawned clear and bright, sunshine warm as a day in June. In the centre of the gayly-decorated old farm house parlor, wearing a simple, little, inexpensive dress of soft, creamy muslin, we find Mary standing beside Ralph, who is looking supremely satisfied and happy, although a trifle pale and nervous, listening to the solemn words of the minister. Ralph's "I will" sounded clearly and distinctly through the long room. Mary, with a sweet, serious, faraway look in her blue eyes, repeated slowly after the minister, "I promise to love, honor and"-then a long pause. She glanced shyly up at the young man by her side as if to make sure he was worth it, then in a low, clear tone, added, "obey."  Ralph Jackson certainly deserved the appellation "Cave Man" given him by Fritz Schmidt. He was considerably more than six feet in height, with broad, square shoulders, good features, a clear brain and a sound body. He had never used intoxicants of any description. He sometimes appeared quite boyish in his ways, for on account of his matured look and great size he was frequently judged to be older than he really was.  Aunt Sarah had provided a bounteous repast for the few friends assembled, and while looking after the comfort of her guests tears dimmed the kindly, gray eyes at the thought of parting from Mary.  Small Polly Schmidt, as flower girl at the wedding, was so excited she scarcely knew if she should laugh or cry, and finally  compromised by giving Mary what she called a "bear hug," much to Mary's amusement. Fritz gravely said:"Allow me to congratulate you, Mr. Jackson," and turning to Mary," I wish you a beautiful and happy life, Mrs. Jackson." Mary blushed becomingly on hearing her new name for the first time.  Bidding farewell to friends, Mary and Ralph, accompanied by her Uncle, were driven by "Chake" to the depot in a near-by town, where they boarded the train for the little, newly-furnished home in the suburbs of Philadelphia, the deed of which was Mary's wedding gift from her Uncle, in appreciation of her faithful service on the farm during the summer and for the brightness she had brought into his life and the lives of those with whom she had come in contact, as every one at the farm had felt the captivating charm and winning sweetness of the young girl.  As the train came in sight, the old gentleman, in a voice husky with emotion, bade the young couple, just starting the journey of life together, an affectionate farewell, and repeated solemnly, almost as a benediction, "Es Salamu Aleikum."  
 
  MARY'S COLLECTION OF RECIPES 
  SMALL ECONOMIES, "LEFT-OVERS" OR "IVERICH BLEIBST" AS AUNT SARAH CALLED THEM.  "The young housewife," said Aunt Sarah to Mary, in a little talk on small economies in the household, "should never throw away pieces of hard cheese. Grate them and keep in a cool, dry place until wanted, then spread lightly over the top of a dish of macaroni, before baking; or sprinkle over small pieces of dough remaining after baking pies, roll thin, cut in narrow strips like straws, and bake light brown in a hot oven, as 'Cheese Straws.'"  Wash and dry celery tips in oven, and when not wished for soup they may be used later for seasoning. The undesirable outer leaves of a head of lettuce, if fresh and green, may be used if cut fine with scissors, and a German salad dressing added. The heart of lettuce should, after washing carefully, be placed in a piece of damp cheese cloth and put on ice until wanted, then served at table "au natural," with olive oil and vinegar or mayonnaise dressing to suit individual taste. Should you have a large quantity of celery, trim and carefully wash the roots, cut them fine and add to soup as flavoring. Almost all vegetables may be, when well cooked, finely mashed, strained, and when added to stock, form a nourishing soup by the addition of previously-cooked rice or barley. Add small pieces of meat, well-washed bones cut from steaks or roasts, to the stock pot Small pieces of ham or bacon (left-overs), also bacon or ham 
 gravy  not thickened with flour may be used occasionally, when making German salad dressing 
  AN OLD FASHIONED BUCKS COUNTY BAKE OVEN  An illustration of a Traditional County Bake Oven. A women is Putting a Bread to be Baked Inside it. 
    for dandelion, endive, lettuce or water cress, instead of frying fresh pieces of bacon.  It is a great convenience, also economical, to keep a good salad dressing on hand, and when the white of an egg is used, the yolk remaining may be added at once to the salad dressing (previously prepared). Mix thoroughly, cook a minute and stand away in a cool place. Young housekeepers will be surprised at the many vegetables, frequently left-overs, from which appetizing salads may be made by the addition of a couple tablespoonfuls of mayonnaise, besides nut meats, lettuce, watercress, celery and fruit, all of which may be used to advantage. A good potato salad is one of the cheapest and most easily prepared salads. A German dressing for dandelions, lettuce or potatoes may be prepared in a few minutes by adding a couple of tablespoonfuls of salad dressing (which the forehanded housewife will always keep on hand) to little hot ham or bacon gravy. Stirring it while hot over the salad and serving at once.  A cup of mashed potatoes, left over from dinner, covered and set aside in a cool place, may be used the next day, with either milk or potato water, to set a sponge for "Dutch Cake" or cinnamon buns with equally good results as if they had been freshly boiled (if the potatoes be heated luke-warm and mashed through a sieve); besides the various other ways in which cold boiled potatoes may be used.  Fruit juices or a couple tablespoonfuls of tart jelly or preserved fruit may be added to mincemeat with advantage. Housewives should make an effort to give their family good, plain, nourishing, wholesome food. The health of the family depends so largely on the quality of food consumed. When not having time, strength or inclination to bake cake, pies or puddings, have instead good, sweet, home-made bread and fruit; if nothing else, serve stewed fruit or apple sauce. Omit meat occasionally from the bill of fare and serve instead a dish of macaroni and cheese and fruit instead of other dessert. Serve a large, rich, creamy rice pudding for the children's lunch. When eggs are cheap and plentiful make simple custards, old-fashioned cornmeal puddings, tapioca, bread puddings and gelatine with fruits. These are all good, wholesome, and not expensive, and in Summer may be prepared in the cool of the early morning with small outlay of time, labor or money. Plan your housework well the day before and have  everything in readiness. The pudding may be placed in the oven and baked while preparing breakfast, economizing coal and the time required for other household duties.  Every wife and mother who does her own housework and cooking these days (and their number is legion) knows the satisfaction one experiences, especially in hot weather, in having dinner and luncheon planned and partly prepared early in the morning before leaving the kitchen to perform other household tasks.  Another small economy of Aunt Sarah's was the utilizing of cold mashed potatoes in an appetizing manner. The mashed potatoes remaining from a former meal were put through a small fruit press or ricer to make them light and flacky. To one heaped cup of mashed potatoes (measured before pressing them through a small fruit press) she added 3/4 cup of soft, stale bread crums, 1/4 cup of flour sifted with 1/4 teaspoonful of baking powder. Mix in lightly with a fork yolk of one egg, then the stiffly beaten white, seasoned with salt and a little minced onion or parsley, or both. With well-floured hands she molded the mixture into balls the size of a shelled walnut, dropped into rapidly boiling water and cooked them uncovered from 15 to 20 minutes, then skimmed them from the water and browned in a pan with a little butter and served on platter with meat, a pot roast or beef preferred. From the above quantity of potatoes was made five potato balls. 
 
   THE MANY USES OF  STALE BREAD   Never waste  stale bread,  as it may be used to advantage in many ways. The young housewife will be surprised at the many good, wholesome and appetizing dishes which may be made from  stale bread,  with the addition of  eggs  and  milk.   Take a half dozen slices of  stale bread  of equal size and place in a hot oven a few minutes to become crisped on the outside so they may be quickly toasted over a hot fire, a delicate brown. Buttter them and for breakfast serve with a poached  egg  on each slice.   A plate of hot, crisp, nicely-browned and butted toasted is always a welcome addition to the breakfast table.  Serve creamed  asparagus  tips on slices of  toast  for luncheon.  The economical housewife carefully inspects the contents of her  bread  box and refrigerator every morning before planning her  meals for the day, and is particular to use scraps of  bread  and leftover  meat  and vegetables as quickly as possible. Especially is this necessary in hot weather. Never use any food unless perfectly sweet and fresh. If otherwise, it is unfit for use.  Loaves of  bread  which have become stale can be freshened if wrapped in a damp cloth for a few minutes, then remove and place in a hot oven until heated through.  For a change,  toast  slices of  stale bread  quite crisp and serve a plate of hot, plain  toast  at table, to be eaten broken in small pieces in individual bowls of  cold milk.  Still another way is to put the stiffly-beaten  white of an egg  on the centre of a hot, buttered slice of  toast,  carefully drop the  yolk  in the centre of the beaten  white  and place in hot oven a few minutes to cook. Serve with a bit of  butter  on top, season with  pepper  and  salt.  Serve at once.  Another way to use  stale bread  is to  toast  slices of  bread,  spread with  butter,  pour over 1 cup of hot  milk,  in which has been beaten 1  egg  and a pinch of  salt.  Serve in a deep dish. Or a cup of hot  milk  may be poured over crisply-toasted slices of buttered  bread,  without the addition of an  egg.  
 
   "BROD GRUMMELLA"  In a bowl containing 1 cup of soft  bread crumbs  pour 1 cup of  sweet milk,  then add the slightly-beaten  yolks of three eggs,  a little  pepper  and  salt,  then the stiffly-beaten  whites  of the three  eggs.  Place in a frypan a tablespoonful of  butter  and 1 of  lard  or  drippings;  when quite hot pour the omelette carefully in the pan. When it begins to "set" loosen around the edges and from the bottom with a knife. When cooked turn one side over on the other half, loosen entirely from the pan, then slide carefully on a hot platter and serve at once. Garnish with  parsley.  
 
   CROUTONS AND CRUMBS  Still another way is to make croutons. Cut  stale bread  into small pieces, size of dice, brown in hot oven and serve with soup instead of serving  crackers.  Small pieces of  bread  that cannot be  used otherwise should be spread over a large pan, placed in a moderate oven and dried until crisp. They may then be easily rolled fine with a rolling-pin or run through the food chopper and then sifted, put in a jar, stood in a dry place until wanted, but not in an air-tight jar. Tie a piece of cheesecloth over the top of jar. These crumbs may be used for crumbing  eggplant,   oysters,   veal  cutlets or croquettes. All should be dipped in beaten  white of eggs  and then in the crumbs, seasoned with  salt  and  pepper,  then floated in a pan of hot  fat  composed of 2/3  lard  and 1/3  suet.  All except  veal  cutlets. They should be crumbed, not floated in deep  fat,  but fried slowly in a couple tablespoonfuls of  butter  and  lard.   Also fry  fish  in a pan of hot  fat.   Shad  is particularly fine, prepared in this manner (when not baked). Cut in small pieces, which when breaded are floated in hot  fat.  If the  fat  is the right temperature when the  fish  is put in, it absorbs less  fat  than when fried in a small quantity of  lard  and  butter.  
 
   "ZWEIBACH"  Cut  wheat bread  in slices not too thin. Place in a warm, not hot, oven, and allow it to remain until thoroughly dry and crisp. Place in a toaster or a wire broiler over a hot fire and  toast  a golden brown and allow it to remain in the oven until toasted. Keep in cool place until used. Zweibach is considered more wholesome than fresh  bread.  
 
   "GERMAN"  EGG BREAD   Cut  stale bread  into slices about 3/4 inch thick. Cut slices in half, and soak for a few minutes, turning frequently, in the following mixtures: 1 pint of  sweet milk,  3  eggs,  1 teaspoonful  flour  mixed smooth with a little of the  cold milk  and a-pinch of  salt  Fry half dozen slices of thinly-sliced  bacon  in a pan. Put  bacon,  when fried, in oven to keep hot. Dip the slices of soaked  bread  in fine,  dried bread crumbs  and fry quickly in the  bacon fat  (to which has been added one tablespoon of  butter ) to a golden brown. Serve at once on the same platter with the  bacon,  or instead of  using  bacon fat,  fry the crumbed  bread  in sweet  drippings  or a tablespoonful each of  lard  and  butter.  This is an appetizing and either  currant  or  grape.  
 
   CREAMED  TOAST   Partly fill a large tureen with slices of crisply-browned and  buttered toast.  (Slices of  bread  which have become dry and  hard  may be used for this dish.) When ready to serve, not before, pour over the toasted slices 1 quart of hot  milk  which 1 tea-spoonful of  flour  or  cornstarch  has been added, alter being mixed smoothly with a little  cold milk  or  water  and cooked a few minutes until, thick as crearn. Add also a pinch of  salt.   If  milk  is not plentiful, prepare one pint of  milk  and dip each slice of  toasted bread  quickly in a bowl of  hot water;  place in a deep dish and quickly pour over the hot  milk,  to which a table-spoonful of  butter  has been added, and serve at once. 
 
    BREAD  AND ROLLS   Bread,  called the "Staff of Life," on account of its nutritive value, should  head  the list of foods for human consumption.  Bread  making should stand first in the "Science of Cooking," as there is no one food upon which the comfort, health and well-being of the average family so largely depends as upon good  bread.  There is absolutely no reason why the housewife of the present day should not have good, sweet, wholesome, home-made  bread,  if good  yeast,  good  flour  and common-sense are used. The  milk  or wafer used to mix with  flour  for making  bread  sponge should be lukewarm. If too hot, the loaves will be full of holes and coarse grained. If too cold the  bread,  chilled, will not rise as it should have done had the liquid used been the right temperature. Good  bread  may be made by using  milk,   potato water  or  whey  (drained from  thick sour milk ), and good  bread  may be made by simply using  lukewarm water.  I prefer a mixture of  milk  and  water  to set sponge.  Milk  makes a finegrained,  white bread,  but it soon dries out and becomes stale.  Bread  rises more slowly when  milk  is used. When  mashed  potatoes  are used, the  bread  keeps moist a longer time. Should you wish extra fine,  white,  delicate  bread,  add one cup of sweet  cream  to the liquid when setting sponge. When  milk  is used the dough is slower in rising, but makes a creamy-looking and fine-flavored  bread.  When one Fleischman  yeast cake  is used in any recipe the ordinary half-ounce cake of compressed  yeast  is intended, twenty-eight cakes in a pound. These are usually kept in a large refrigerator in a temperature of 44 degrees and should not be kept longer in the home than three days in Summer or six days in Winter, and should always be kept in a cool place until used, if the cook would have success when using.  Use the best  hard,  Spring  wheat flour  obtainable for baking  bread,  or any sponge raised with  yeast,  as this  flour  contains a greater quantity of gluten and makes  bread  of high nutritive value.   Winter wheat  maybe used for cake-making and for baking pastry with excellent results, although costing less than Spring  wheat.   Always sift  flour  before using, when setting sponge for  bread.   flour.  "Aunt Sarah" always cut several gashes with a sharp knife on top of loaves when ready to be placed in oven. She also made several cuts across the top of loaves with a hot knife when set to rise to allow gas to escape. If an impression made on a loaf of  bread  with the finger remains, the  bread  is light. If the dent disappears, then the loaf is not light enough to be placed in the oven; give it more time to rise. An experienced cook, noted for the excellence and size of her loaves of  bread,  said she always inverted a pan over the pan containing loaves of  bread  when set to rise, and allowed the  bread  to remain covered after being placed in the oven. Loaves will rise to a greater height if this is done. Remove the covering to allow loaves to brown a short time before taking them from the oven. "Aunt Sarah" frequently placed four loaves in her large roasting pan, covered the pan, when set to rise, and allowed the cover to remain until loaves Were nearly baked. She brushed the top and sides of loaves with melted  butter  When set to rise to allow of their being broken apart easily. A more crusty loaf is secured by placing each loaf singly in medium-sized  bread  tins.  Aunt Sarah considered Fleischrnan's compressed  yeast  the best commercial  yeast  in use, both quick and reliable, but thought better  bread  was never made than that made by her mother, as  she had been taught to make it in years past, by the old-fashioned and slower "sponge method." She was invariably successful in making sweet, wholesome  bread  in that manner. She used homemade  potato yeast  or " cornmeal yeast cakes, " under different names, always with good results.  Good  bread  may be made either by the old-fashioned "sponge" method or "straight." Sponge method consists of a batter mixed from liquid  yeast  (usually home-made  potato yeast  is used) and a small part of the  flour  required for making the  bread.  This batter was usually set to rise at night and mixed up in the centre of a quantity of  flour,  in an old-fashioned wooden dough tray. The following morning enough  flour  was kneaded in to form a dough, and when well-raised and light, this dough was formed into loaves and placed in pans for the final rising. The more easily and more quickly made "straight" dough, when using Fleischman's compressed  yeast,  is mixed in the morning and all the ingredients necessary are added at one time. It is then set to rise and, when the dough has doubled in bulk, it is kneaded down and when risen to once and half its size, shaped into loaves, placed in pans to rise and, when risen to top of pans, bake.  Better  bread  may be made from  flour  not freshly milled.  Flour  should be kept in a dry place; it improves with moderate age. Stand  flour  in a warm place to dry out several hours before , using if you would have good  bread.   When baking  bread  the heat of the oven should not he too great at 
 first , or the outside of the  bread  will harden too quickly and inside the loaves will not be thoroughly baked before the crust is thick and dark. The temperature of the oven and time required for baking depend upon the size of the loaves, yet the  bread  should be placed in rather a quick oven, one in which the loaves should brown in about fifteen minutes, when the heat may be reduced, finishing the baking more slowly.  Small  biscuits  and rolls can stand a much hotter oven and quicker baking than large loaves, which must be heated slowly, and baked a longer time. A one-pound loaf should bake about one hour. On being taken from the oven,  bread  should be placed on a sieve so that the air can circulate about it until it is thoroughly cooled. In the 
 Farmers' Bulletin  we read: "The lightness and sweetness depend as much on the way  bread  is made as on the materials used." The greatest care should be used in preparing  and baking the dough and in cooking and keeping the finished  bread.  Though good housekeepers agree that light, well-raised  bread  can readily be made, with reasonable care and attention, heavy, badly-rasied  bread  is unfortunately every common. Such  bread  is not palatable and is generally considered to be unwholesome, and probably more indigestion has been caused by it than by any other badly-cooked food. As compared with most  meats  and vegetables,  bread  has practically no waste and is very completely digested, but it is usually too poor in proteins to be fittingly used as the  sole  article of diet, but when eaten with due quantities of other food, it is invaluable and well deserves its title of "Staff of Life."  When the housewife "sets"  bread  sponge to rise over night, she should mix the sponge or dough quite late, and early in the morning mold it at once into shapely-looking loaves (should the sponge have had the necessary amount of  flour  added the night before for making a stiff dough).  Being aware of the great nutritive value of  raisins  and  dried currants.  Aunt Sarah frequently added a cup of either one or the other, well- flour ed, to the dough when shaping into loaves for the final rising.  Aunt Sarah frequently used a mixture of  butter  and  lard  when baking on account of its being more economical, and for the reason that a lesser quantity of  lard  may be used; the  shortening  qualities being greater than that of  butter.  The taste of  lard  was never detected in her  bread  or cakes, they being noted for their excellence, as the  lard  she used was home-rendered, almost as sweet as dairy  butter,  free from taste or odor of  pork.  She always beat  lard  to a  cream  when using it for baking cakes, and salted it well before using, and I do not think the small quantity used could be objected to on hygienic priciples.  I have read " bread  baking" is done once every three or four weeks, no oftener, in some of the farm houses of Central Europe, and yet  stale bread  is there unknown. Their method of keeping  bread  fresh is to sprinkle  flour  into a large sack and into this pack the loaves, taking care to have the top crusts of  bread  touch each other. If they have to lie bottom to bottom, sprinkle  flour  between them. Swing the sack in a dry place. It must swing and there must be plenty of  flour  between the loaves. It sounds more odd than reasonable, I confess. 
  	
   "BUCKS COUNTY" HEARTH-BAKED  RYE BREAD     (AS MADE BY AUNT SARAH)    1 quart  sweet milk  (scalded and cooled).  1 tablespoonful  lard  or  butter.   2 tablespoonsful  sugar.   1/2 tablespoonful  salt.   1 cup  wheat flour.   3 quarts  rye flour  (this includes the one cup of  wheat flour ).  1 Fleischman  yeast cake  or 1 cup of  potato yeast.    
  "BUCKS COUNTY" RYE BREAD  An Illustration of a Piece of Rye Bread. 
  Pour 1 quart of luke-warm  milk  in a bowl holding 7 quarts-Add  butter,   sugar  and  salt,  11/2 quarts  rye flour  and 1 cup of  yeast,  or one Fleischman's  yeast cake,  dissolved in a little  lukewarm water.  Beat thoroughly, cover with cloth, and set in a warm place to rise about three hours, or until it almost reaches the top of bowl. When light, stir in the remaining 1 1/2 quarts of  rye flour,  in which one cup of  wheat  is included; turn out on a well- flour ed bake hoard and knead about twenty minutes. Shape dough into one high, round loaf, sprinkle  flour  
 liberally  over top and sides of loaf, and place carefully into the clean bowl on top of a 
 well- flour ed  cloth. Cover and set to rise about one hour, when  it should be light and risen to top of bowl. Turn the bowl containing the loaf carefully upside down on the centre of a hot sheet iron taken from the hot oven and placed on top of range. A tablespoonful of  flour  should have been sifted over the sheet iron before turning the loaf out on it. Remove cloth from dough carefully after it has been turned from bowl and place the sheet iron containing loaf 
 immediately in the hot oven , as it will then rise at once and not spread. Bake at least sixty minutes.  Bread  is seldom baked long enough to be wholesome, especially  graham  and  rye bread.  When baked and still hot, brush the top of loaf with  butter  and wash the bottom of loaf well with a cloth wrung out of  cold water,  to soften the lower,  hard -baked crust. Wrap in a damp cloth and stand aside to cool where the air will circulate around it. Always set  rye bread  to rise early in the morning of the same day it is to be baked, as  rye  sponge sours more quickly than  wheat  sponge. The  bread  baked from this recipe has the taste of  bread  which, in olden times, was baked in the brick ovens of our grandmother's day, and that  bread  was unexcelled. I know of what I am speaking, having watched tny grandmother bake  bread  in an old-fashioned brick oven, and have eaten hearth-baked  rye bread,  baked directly on the bottom of the oven, and know, if this recipe be closely followed, the young housewife will have sweet, wholesome  bread.  Some Germans use Kumel or  Caraway seed  in  rye bread.   Aunt Sarah's loaves of  rye bread,  baked from the above recipe, were invariably 3 1/2 inches high, 14 1/2 inches in diameter and 46 inches in circumference and always won a blue ribbon at Country Fairs and Farmers' Picnics.  In the oven of Aunt Sarah's range was always to be found a piece of sheet iron 17 inches in length by 16 inches in width. The three edges of the sheet iron turned down all around to a depth of half an inch, the two opposite corners being cut off about a half inch, to allow of its being turned down. It is a great convenience for young housewives to possess two of these sheet-iron tins, or "baking sheets," when baking small cakes or cookies, as being raised slightly from the bottom of the oven, cakes are less liable to scorch and bake more evenly. One sheet may be filled while baking another sheetful of cakes. In this manner a large number of cakes may be baked in a short time. This baking sheet was turned the opposite way, upside down, when baking a loaf of   rye bread  on it, and when the loaf of  bread  was partly baked the extra baking sheet was slipped under the bottom of the one containing: the loaf, in case the oven was quite hot, to prevent the bottom of the  bread  scorching.  Wheat bread  may be baked in the same manner as  rye bread,  substituting  wheat flour  for  rye.  These baking sheets may be made by any tinsmith, and young housewives, I know, would not part with them, once they realize how invaluable they are for baking small cakes on them easily and quickly. 
 
   "FRAU SCHMIDT'S" GOOD  WHITE BREAD  (SPONGE METHOD)  To one quart of  potato water,  drained from  potatoes  which were boiled for mid-day dinner, she added about 1/2 cup of finely-mashed hot  potatoes  and stood aside. About four o'clock in the afternoon she placed one pint of lukewarm  potato water  and mashed  potatoes  in a bowl with 1/4 cup of  granulated sugar  and 1/2 a dissolved Fleischman's  yeast cake,  beat all well together, covered with a cloth and stood in a warm place until light and foamy. About nine o'clock in the evening she added the reserved pint of (lukewarm)  potato water  and l/2 tablespoonful of  salt  to the  yeast  sponge, with enough warmed, well-dried  flour  to stiffen, and kneaded it until dough was fine-grained. She also cut through the dough frequently with a sharp knife. When the dough was elastic and would not adhere to molding-board or hands, she placed it in a bowl, brushed melted  lard  or  butter  over top to prevent a crust forming, covered warmly with a cloth and allowed it to stand until morning. Frau Schmidt always rose particularly early on bake day, for fear the sponge might fall or become sour, if allowed to stand too long. She molded the dough into four small loaves, placed it in pans to rise until it doubled its original bulk. When light she baked it one hour.  Bread  made according to these directions was fine-grained, sweet and wholesome. She always cut several gashes across top of loaf with a sharp knife when loaves were set to rise, to allow gas to escape. 
 
   EXCELLENT " GRAHAM BREAD "  At 6.30 A.M. place in a quart measure 1/2 cup of sweet  cream   and 3 1/2 cups of  milk,  after being scalded (1 quart all together). When lukewarm, add 1 Flcischman  yeast cake,  dissolved in a little of the luke-warm  milk,  3 tablespoonfuls  sugar  and 1 table-spoonful  salt.  Add 3 cups each of  white bread flour  and 3 cups of  graham flour  (in all 6 cups or 1 1/2 quarts of  flour ). Mix well together and stand in a warm place, closely covered, a couple of hours, until well-risen. Then stir sponge down and add about 2 1/2 cups each of  graham  and of  white flour.  (Sponge for  graham bread  should not be quite as stiff as a sponge prepared from  white flour. ) Set to rise again for an hour, or longer ; when light, stir down sponge and turn on to a well- flour ed board. Knead well, divide into four portions, mold into four small, shapely loaves, brush with soft  butter,  place in well-greased pans, set to rise, and in about one hour they should be ready to put in a moderately-hot oven. Bake about fifty minutes.  Graham bread  should be particularly well-baked. Brush loaves, when baked, with  butter,  which makes a crisp crust with a nutty flavor.  Should  cream  not be available, one quart of scalded  milk,  containing one tablespoonful of  butter,  may be used with good results. If  cream  be used with the  milk,  no  shortening  is required in the  bread.   Bread  is considered more wholesome when no  shortening  is used in its preparation. 
 
    GRAHAM BREAD  (AN OLD RECIPE)   2 cups  sour milk   1/2 cup  molasses.   2 cups  sweet milk  or  water.   1 tablespoonful melted  butter.   1 teaspoon  soda  (Salaratus)  Pinch of  salt.    Graham flour.    Stiffen about as thick as ordinary  molasses  cake. Bake at once. 
 
   "MARY'S" RECIPE FOR  WHEAT BREAD    1 cup  sweet milk  (scalded ).  1 cup  cold water.   1 cake Fleischman's  yeast  (dissolved in a small quantity of luke- warm water ).   1 1/2 teaspoonfuls  sugar.   1 rounded teaspoonful  salt.   1 tablespoonful  butter.    Flour,  about 1 1/2 quarts.   This makes good  bread  and, as  bread  is apt to chill if set over night in a cold kitchen, or sour if allowed to stand over night in summer, set this sponge early in the morning. Stiffen with  flour  and knead about 25 minutes ; place the dough in a covered bowl in a warm place to rise about two hours and when well-risen and light, knead and stand one hour. Then mold into shapely loaves, place in pans, brush tops of loaves with melted  butter,  and when doubled in bulk, in about 45 minutes put in an oven which is so hot you can hold your hand in only while you count thirty, or if a little  flour  browns in the oven in about six minutes, it is hot enough for  bread.  The oven should he hot enough to brown the  bread  slightly five minutes after being put in. Medium-sized loaves of  bread  require from 3/4 of an hour to one hour to bake. When  bread  is sufficiently baked it can be told by turning the loaf over and rapping with the knuckles on the bottom of the loaf. If it sounds hollow, it is thoroughly baked, and should be taken from the oven. Stand loaves up on end against some object, where the air can circulate around them, and brush a lilte  butter  over the top to soften the crust. An authority on the chemistry of foods cautious housewives against cooling loaves of  bread  too rapidly after taking from the oven, and I should like to add a word of caution against eating fresh breads of any kind.  Bread  should be baked at least twelve hours before being eaten. The sponge for this  bread  was set at 6 o'clock in the morning;  bread  was baked at 10.30.  From 1 pint of liquid, 1 cake of  yeast  and about 1 1/2 quarts of  flour  were made two loaves of  bread.  More  yeast  is required to raise a sponge containing  sugar,   eggs  and  shortening  than 15 required to raise  bread  sponge containing only liquid,  flour  and  yeast.  
 
   "FRAU SCHMIDT'S" EASILY-MADE  GRAHAM BREAD   Should you care to have a couple of loaves of  graham bread  instead of all- wheat,  take a generous cup of the above sponge  before it is stiffened beyond a thick batter, and add one table-spoonful of  brown sugar  or  molasses,  stiffen with  graham flour  (not quite as stiff as when making  wheat bread ), rub  butter  or  lard  on top of dough, cover and set in a warm place to rise. When light, mold into one small loaf (never make  graham bread  info large loaves), place in oblong pan, cover, let stand until light, about 1 1/2 hours, when it should have doubled in size; put in oven and bake thoroughly. When the loaf is taken from the oven, brush  butter  over the top. This keeps the crust moist.  If a wholesome loaf of " Corn Bread " is wished, use fine, yellow, granulated  cornmeal  to stiffen the sponge instead of  graham flour;  do not make dough too stiff. 
 
   WHOLE- WHEAT BREAD    1 pint  boiling water.   1 pint  sweet milk.   1/2 Fleischman's  yeast cake  dissolved in luke- warm water.   1/2 tablespoon  salt.    Flour.    When the  milk  and  water  are lukewarm add the  yeast cake  and  salt.  Then add enough whole  wheat flour  to make a thin batter. Let stand in a warm place three or four hours. Then stir in as much  wheat flour  (whole  wheat ) as can be stirred in well with a large spoon, and pour into well-greased pans. Let rise to double its bulk; then bake from three-fourths to one hour, according to the size of the loaves. This quantity makes three loaves. 
 
    NUT BREAD    3 cups  graham flour.   1 cup  wheat flour.   4 teaspoons  baking powder.   1 cup chopped English  walnuts.   1 cup  sugar.   1 small teaspoon "Mapleine" flavoring (if liked).  1/2 cup  milk.   Pinch  salt.   1/2 cup  flour ed  raisins  (seeded).    Put in a good-sized  bread  pan and bake on hour in a moderate oven. Strange as it may seem, this  bread  is lighter and better if allowed to stand a half hour before being placed in the oven to bake. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S "QUICK  BREAD "  The Professor's wife seldom used any liquid except  water  to set a sponge for  bread.  She seldom used any  shortening.  She taught Mary to make  bread  by the following process, which she considered superior to any other. From the directions given, housewives may think more time devoted to the making of a couple of loaves of  bread  than necessary; also, that too great a quantity of  yeast  was used; but the  bread  made by "Frau Schmidt" was excellent, quickly raised and baked.  The whole process consumed only about four hours' time, and how could time be more profitably spent than in baking sweet, crusty loaves of  bread,  even in these strenuous days when the efficient housekeeper plans to conserve strength, time and labor?  First, two Fleischman's compressed  yeast cakes  were placed in a bowl and dissolved with 4 tablespoonfuls of luke- warm water;  she then added 1 cup of  lukewarm water,  1/2 tablespoonful of  sugar  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt  and stirred all well together. The bowl containing this  yeast  foam was allowed to stand in a warm place, closely covered, one hour.  At the end of that time the  yeast  mixture should be light and foamy. It was then poured into the centre of a bowl containing about 4 1/2 cups of 
 warmed   flour,  mixing the foamy  yeast  with a 
 portion  of the  flour  to make a soft sponge, leaving a wall of  flour  around the inside edge of bowl, as our grandmothers used to do in olden times when they mixed a sponge for  bread  of liquid  flour  and  yeast,  in one end of the old-fashioned wooden "dough tray," using a wooden stick or small paddle for stirring together the mixture.  The bowl containing the sponge was placed in a warm place to rise. In about 15 or 20 minutes 1/2 cup of  lukewarm water  was added to the sponge, stirring in all the outside wall of  flour  until a dough, the proper consistency for  bread,  was formed. The dough was turned out on the molding board and given a couple of  quick, deft turns with the hands for several minutes, then placed in the bowl and again set to rise in a warm place, free from draughts, for 25 or 30 minutes. When light, with hands slightly greased with  butter,  she kneaded the dough a short time, until smooth and elastic, divided the dough into two portions, placed each loaf in warmed, well-greased  bread  pans and stood in a warm place about 1/4 hour. Then turned the contents of  bread  pans onto bake-board, one at a time. Cut each loaf into three portions, rolled each piece into long, narrow strips with the palms of the hands. Pinched ends of the three strips together and braided or plaited them into a braid almost the length of  bread  pan. Placed each braided loaf in a  bread  pan and set to raise as before. When well-raised, brush the top of loaves with melted  butter.  Bake about three-quarters of an hour in a moderately-hot oven. An old-fashioned way of testing the heat of the oven was to hold the hand in the oven while counting thirty. Should one be unable to  bear  the heat of oven a longer time, then the temperature was correct for baking  bread.  Should one be able to allow the hand to remain in the oven a longer time, the heat of the oven should be increased.  As a result of carefully following these minute directions, even an inexperienced housewife should have sweet, wholesome  bread.   Frau Schmidt insisted that rolling portions of dough separately before combining in a loaf, as for braided loaves, caused the  bread  to have a finer texture than if just shaped into round loaves. 
 
   AN " OATMEAL  LOAF"  For a loaf of  oatmeal bread,  place 1 cup of crushed  oats,  or common  oatmeal,  in a bowl, pour over 1/2 cup of hot  milk.  When luke warm, add 1 cup of sponge, or batter, reserved from that raised over night for making loaves of  white bread  ; 1 teaspoonful  butter,  1 teaspoonful  sugar  and 1/2 teaspoonful  salt,  and about 2 scant cups of  white flour.  Knead a few minutes, set to rise in a warm place, closely covered, about one hour or until doubled in bulk. Then knead down and form into a shapely loaf, place in a pan, brush melted  butter  over top (this improves crust) and when raised, doubled in bulk (in about one hour), place in a 
 moderately  hot oven and hake from 40 to 45 minutes.  Raisins  may be added  to this loaf, if liked. Mary preferred this  oatmeal  loaf to  graham bread.   The sponge or batter from which this  oatmeal -loaf was made had been prepared in the following manner:  To 1 1/2 cups of luke-warm  potato water  was added 1 tea-spoonful of  sugar,  1 cake of  yeast;  when dissolved, add 1 1/2 cups of  white bread flour.  Beat all together well, stand closely-covered in a warm place until the following morning. From one cup of this sponge was made one  oatmeal  loaf, and to the other cup of sponge  white flour  was added for a loaf of  white bread  or rolls. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  WHITE BREAD  (SPONGE METHOD)  Prepare the following " Yeast  Sponge" at noon, the day preceding that on which you bake  bread  : Place in a bowl (after the mid-day meal) 1 quart of  potato water  (containing no  salt ), in which  potatoes  were boiled; also two medium-sized, finely-mashed  potatoes , 1 tablespoonful of  sugar  and, when luke warm, add 1 cup of good home-made or  baker's yeast.  Mix all well together; then divide this mixture and pour each half into each of two 1-quart glass  fruit  jars. Place covers tightly on jars and shake each jar well, to mix  yeast  and  potato-water  thoroughly. Stand  yeast  in a warm place near the kitchen range over night. Jars should be 
 covered only  with a napkin. The sponge should become light and foamy. In the morning use this freshly-prepared  yeast  to set sponge for  bread.   When preparing to set  bread,  place in a large bowl 1 pint of  potato water,  1 tablespoonful of  sugar,  1 pint of the  yeast  sponge, 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  and use about 3 pounds of sifted  flour,  well-dried and warmed. Knead from 15 to 20 minutes, until a stiff dough is formed. The dough should be fine-grained and elastic and not stick to bake board. Place dough in the bowl to rise; this should take about four hours. When well-risen and light, knead down and set to rise again, about 1 1/2 hours. When light, mold into three large shapely loaves; place in pans and allow to stand one hour. When loaves have doubled in bulk, are very light and show signs of cracking, invert a pan over top of loaves (if that was not done when loaves were put in pans), and place in a rather hot oven to bake. Brush melted  butter  over loaves of  bread  when  set to rise, it will cause  bread  to have a crisp crust when baked. The old-fashioned way of testing the heat of an oven was to hold the hand in the oven, if possible, while one counted thirty.  The pint of  yeast  remaining in jar may be kept in a cool place one week, and may be used during this time in making fresh " yeast  foam." This should always be prepared the  clay  before baking  bread.  Always prepare double the quantity of " yeast  foam." Use half to set  bread,  and reserve half for next baking.  Bread  baked from this recipe has frequently taken first prize at County Fairs and Farmers' Picnics.  When baking  bread,  the oven should be quite hot when  bread  is first placed therein, when the  bread  should rise about an inch; then the heat of the oven should be lessened and in a half hour a brown crust should begin forming; and during the latter part of the hour (the time required for baking an ordinary-sized loaf) the heat of the oven should be less, causing the  bread  to bake slowly. Should the heat of the oven not be great enough, when the loaves are placed within for baking, then poor  bread  would be the result. This method of making  bread  will insure most satisfactory results, although more troublesome than ordinary methods. 
 
   RECIPE FOR "PULLED  BREAD "  Take a Vienna loaf of  bread,  twelve-hours old, cut away all the crust with a clean-cut knife, then break away gently (with your fingers only) small finger-lengths of the  bread,  place in a moderate oven and brown a golden brown, and it is ready to serve. 'Tis said six loaves will be required for one pound of this pulled  bread.  'Tis easily prepared in the home, but quite costly, when purchased. Many people prefer "pulled  bread " to fresh  bread,  as it it is more wholesome. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S " HUTZEL BROD"   2 pounds  dried pears.   2 pounds  dried prunes.   2 quarts  juice of fruit  and  water.   1 pound  dried currants.    1 pound seeded  raisins.   1 pound blanched and shredded  almonds.   1 pound chopped English  walnut meats.   1 1/2 ounces finely-shredded  citron.   1 1/2 ounces  orange peel.   1/2 ounce chopped  figs.   1 ounce ground  cinnamon.   1/4 ounce ground  cloves.   2 1/2 ounces  anise seed.   6 pounds  flour  (warmed and sifted)  2 cakes compressed  yeast.   1 1/2 cups  sugar.   1 large tablespoon  butter.   1 tablespoon  salt.   4 tablespoons  brandy  or  sherry.    The whole recipe will make 12 loaves of  bread.    This delicious German  bread  was usually made by "Aunt Sarah" one week before Christmas. It may be kept two weeks, and at the end of that time still be good. It is rather expensive as regards  fruit  and  nuts,  but as no  eggs  are used, and a very small quantity of  butter;  and as  bread  containing  fruit  is so much more wholesome than rich  fruit  cake, I think American housewives would do well to bake this German  bread  occasionally. Mary took one-fourth the quantity of everything called for in the recipe, except  yeast.  She used 3/4 of a cake of Fleischman's  yeast  and 1/4 of each of the other ingredients, and from these baked three loaves of  bread.  The  prunes  and  pears  should be covered with  cold water  at night and allowed to stand until the following morning, when, after stewing until tender, the  juice  should be drained from the  fruit  and  water  added to the  fruit -juice to measure two quarts. Remove pits from  prunes,  cut  pears  and  prunes  in small pieces; stand aside. Clean  currants  and  raisins,  blanch and shred  almonds,  chop  walnut meats,   citron,   orange peel  and  figs;  add  cinnamon,   cloves  and  anise seed.  Mix together  flour  and one quart of the  fruit juice;  add the compressed  yeast cakes  (dissolved in a little  warm water ), knead well, set a sponge as for ordinary  bread;  when raised, add the remaining quart of  fruit juice,   sugar,   butter  and  salt.  A small quantity of  brandy  or  sherry  may be added, but if not liked,  fruit juice  may be substituted.  Add the remaining ingredients, and knead thoroughly. Allow  dough to raise from two to three hours and when light form into loaves and allow to stand an hour, when bake. This quantity of dough should be made into twelve small loaves. Should the  flour  and liquid used be warmed before mixing, the dough will raise more quickly. It simplifies the work if the  fruits  and  nuts  be prepared the day before the  bread  is baked. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  WHITE BREAD  AND ROLLS   1 quart  potato water.   1 mashed  potato.   1 tablespoonful  butter  or  lard.   1 tablespoonful  sugar.   1 Fleischman  yeast cake,  or 1 cup good  yeast.   1/2 tablespoonful  salt.    Flour  to stiffen (about three quarts).   At 9 o'clock jn the evening put in a large bowl the mashed  potato,  the quart of luke-warm  potato water  ( water  in which  potatoes  were boiled for dinner),  butter  or  sweet lard,   sugar,   salt,  and mix with  flour  into a batter, to which add the Fleischman's or any good  yeast cake,  dissolved in a little luke- warm water.  Beat well and stir in  flour  until quite stiff, turn out on a well- flour ed bake-board and knead well about 25 minutes, until the dough is smooth, fine-grained and clastic, and does not stick to the bake-board or hands. Chop a knife through the dough several times; knead and chop again. This makes the  bread  finer and closer-grained, or, so Aunt Sarah thought. Knead in all the  flour  necessary when first mixing the  bread.  When sufficiently kneaded, form into a large, round ball of dough, rub all over with soft  lard,  or  butter,  to prevent forming a crust on top and keep from sticking to bowl, and set to rise, closely-covered with a cloth and blanket, in a warm place until morning. In the morning the  bread  should be very light, doubled in quantity. Take out enough dough for an ordinary loaf, separate this into three parts, roll each piece with the hand on the bake-board into long, narrow pieces. Pinch the three pieces together at one end and braid, or plait, into a narrow loaf. Brush over top with melted  butter;  set to rise in a warm place in a  bread  pan, closely-covered, until it doubles in size; or, if preferred, mold into ordinary-shaped loaves, and let rise until  doubled in size, when bake in a moderately-hot oven with steady heat.  Frequently, when the "Twist" loaves of  bread  were quite light and ready to be placed in the oven, Aunt Sarah brushed the tops with  yolk of egg,  or a little  milk,  then strewed " Poppy Seeds " thickly over. The  poppy seeds  give an agreeable flavor to the crust of the  bread.  
 
   AUNT SARAH'S RAISED ROLLS (FROM  BREAD  DOUGH)  A portion of the  white bread  dough may be made into raised rolls. These rolls are excellent without additional  shortening,  or, in fact, without anything else being added. Mold pieces of the  bread  dough into balls the size of a  walnut;  roll each piece flat with the rolling pin, dip in melted  butter,  fold and place close together in a bake pan. Let rise very light, then bake about 15 minutes in a very hot oven. If a teaspoonful of  flour  browns in about two minutes in the oven, it is the right temperature for rolls. 
 
   CLOVER-LEAF ROLLS  Take pieces of the  bread  dough, the size of a  walnut,  cut into three pieces, mold with the hand into round balls the size of small marbles; dip each one in melted  butter,  or  butter  and  lard,  and place three of these in each Gem pan. (These pans may be bought six or twelve small pans fastened together and are much more convenient than when each one must be handled separately when baking). Allow small rolls to become 
 very light , bake in a hot oven, and you will find them excellent. Dipping the rolls in melted  butter  makes them crisp. Serve hot, or place in a hot oven a few minutes until heated through, if served after they have become cold. 
 
   "POLISH"  RYE BREAD  (AS MADE IN BUCKS COUNTY)  This excellent, nutritious  bread,  is made from the whole-ground grain. Every part of the grain is used in the  flour,  when  ground. To bake this  bread,  sift together one quart of this "whole-ground"  rye flour  and two quarts of  white-bread flour.  Early in the morning of the day on which  bread  is to be baked, prepare a thick batter, or sponge, consisting of one quart of  potato water  (or the same quantity of luke-warm, scalded  milk,  or a mixture of the two); add one tablespoonful of a mixture of  lard  and  butter  and two boiled, mashed  potatoes . Two table-spoonfuls of  sugar,  one-half tablespoonful of  salt  and one Fleischman's compressed  yeast cake,  dissolved in a small quantity of  water;  add about five cups of the mixed, sifted  flour,  beat the batter well, and stand in a warm place, covered, from one and a half to two hours. When well-risen and light, stir in balance of  flour  gradually, until all except one cup has been added; then turn onto a bake-board and knead well. This sponge should not be quite as stiff as for  wheat bread.  Turn the dough onto a clean, well- flour ed cloth in a large bowl, set to rise and bake according to directions for baking "Hearth-baked  Rye Bread " or, if preferred, form into loaves, place in  bread  pans and, when light, bake. 
 
   PERFECT BREAKFAST ROLLS  One quart of scalded  milk,  when lukewarm, add the following: 1/2 cup of  butter  and  lard  (mixed), 1  egg,  1 tablespoonful of  sugar,  1 teaspoonful of  salt  and 1 Fleischman's  yeast cake;  add  flour  to form a thick batter; beat all thoroughly. Mix the above at 9.30 P.M., stand in a warm place, closely-covered, over night. The following morning add more  flour;  dough should not be mixed quite as stiff as for  bread.  Allow it to raise in a warm place. When well-risen, place on  bread  board, roll, cut into small  biscuits;  dip each  biscuit  in melted  butter,  fold together, place in pans a distance apart, and when they have doubled in size, bake in a hot oven. 
 
   "AN OLD RECIPE" FOR GOOD  BREAD   This country cook invariably baked good  bread  and always used  potato-water  in preference to any other liquid for setting  sponge. She stood aside  water,  in which  potatoes  had been boiled for dinner (usually about one quart or less) and added two finely-mashed  potatoes . About 3 or 4 o'clock in the afternoon of the day 
 before  that on which she intended baking  bread,  she dissolved one cake of  yeast  (she used the small  cornmeal  commercial  yeast cakes,  sold under different names, such as National, Magic, etc.) in a half-cup of hike- warm water,  added 1/2 teaspoon of  salt  and sufficient wanned, well-dried  flour  to make a thin batter. She placed all in a bowl and stood it in a warm place, closely-covered, until about 9 o'clock in the evening, when she added this sponge, which should be light and foamy, to the  potato water,  which should be lukewarm. She also added 1 tablespoon of  salt  and enough  flour  to make a rather thick batter. Beat thoroughly and allow this sponge to stand, well-covered, in a warm place until morning, when add 1 tablespoon  sugar,  I tablespoon  butter  or  lard  and warmed  flour  enough to make a stiff dough. Turn out on the  bread  board and knead for about twenty minutes, until the dough does not stick to the hands. Place stiffened dough into bowl; allow it to rise until bulk is doubled. Mold into loaves, adding as little extra  flour  as possible. Cut several gashes on top of loaves, brush with melted  butter,  place in  bread  pans, and when loaves have doubled in bulk, place in moderately hot oven and bake about one hour. 
 
   STEAMED  BROWN BREAD   Place in a bowl 3/4 cup  graham flour  and 1/2 cup of yellow, granulated  cornmeal.  Sift into this 3/4 cup of  white flour,  1 tea-spoonful of  baking powder  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt.  Mix all ingredients together to form a batter by adding 1 cup of  sour milk,  in which has been dissolved 3/4 teaspoonful of  soda.  Then add 2 tablespoonfuls of  molasses.  Pour into a well-greased quart can (the tin cans in which  coffee  is frequently sold will answer nicely) cover closely, place in a kettle of  boiling water,  steam about three hours; stand in oven a short time after being steamed. Cut in slices and serve as  bread,  or, by the addition of  raisins  or  currants,  and a little grated  nutmeg  or other flavoring, a very appetizing and wholesome pudding may be served hot, with  sugar  and  cream  or any pudding  sauce  preferred.  
  
   A WHOLESOME  BREAD  (MADE FROM BRAN)  Place in a bowl 4 cups of clean bran and 2 cups of  white flour,  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder,  1 teaspoonful of  salt,  1 tablespoonful of melted  butter.  Mix into a soft batter with 2 cups of  sweet milk;  add 1/2 cup of  molasses.  Fill two layer cake pans and bake in a hot oven about 25 minutes. This is so easily and quickly made. The young housewife may mix, when commencing to prepare lunch, and when the meal is ready to serve the  bread  will be baked, and it is an excellent laxative. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDTS "HUTZEL BROD"   1 quart  dried pears.   1 pint of  pear juice.   1 Fleischman's  yeast cake.   1 scant cup  brown sugar.   2  eggs.   1/4 teaspoonful  soda.   1 pound of soaked  raisins.   3/4 cup of a mixture of  lard  and  butter.   1 teaspoonful of  fennel seed.   Pinch of  salt.   2 teaspoonfuls of ground  cinnamon.    Flour  to stiffen, as for ordinary  bread.    Cover one quart of  dried pears  with  cold water  and cook slowly about 20 minutes until they have cooked tender, but not soft (the night before the day on which the  bread  is to be baked).  Then drain the  juice  from stewed  pears,  which should measure 1 pint; when lukewarm, add 1  yeast cake,  dissolved in a small quantity of luke- warm water,  and" about 3 cups of  flour  and a pinch of  salt.  Stand, closely-covered in a warm place over night to raise.   The following morning, add 1/4 teaspoonful of  baking soda,  dissolved in a little  warm water,  to counteract any acidity of bat-ter.  Cream  together  sugar,   butter  and  lard,  add  eggs  one at a time, then the well- flour ed, diced  pears  also  raisins cinnamon  and  fennel seed,  and enough  flour  to stiffen as for ordinary  bread.  Knead well. let rise; it will require some time, as the  fruit  retards the  raising process When light, turn onto a bake-board, cut into four portions, mold into four shapely loaves, place in pans, brush with melted  butter  and when quite light, place in a moderate oven and bake one hour. This  bread  will keep well several weeks, if kept in a tin cake box.  This recipe is much simpler than Aunt Sarah's recipe for making "Hutzel Brod," but  bread  made from this recipe is excellent. 
 
   "AUNT SARAH'S" QUICKLY-MADE  BROWN BREAD    2 cups of  buttermilk,  or thick,  sour milk.   1/2 cup of  sugar.   1/4 cup of  molasses.   1 tablespoonful of melted  butter.   l  egg.   1 teaspoonful of  soda.   3/4 teaspoonful of  salt.   3 1/2 cups of  graham flour.   1/2 cup of  white flour,  sifted with 3/4 teaspoonful of  baking powder.    The  egg  was placed in a bowl, and not beaten separately;  sugar  and  butter  were creamed together, before being added; then mix in  salt  and  molasses,  and gradually add  buttermilk,  in which the  soda  had been dissolved; then add  white  and  graham flour,  3/4 caps of  raisins  may be added, if liked. Bake in a  bread  pan in a moderately hot oven.  Early in the morning 1 cup of  oatmeal  porridge, left over from that which had been cooked for breakfast, was placed in a bowl and added gradually 2 cups of scalded, luke-warm  milk,  1 tablespoon of a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  1/4 cup New Orleans  molasses  and one Fleischman's  yeast cake,  dissolved in a little of the  milk;  stir in about 3 cups of  bread flour  and stand in a warm place about 1 1/4 hours to rise; then add 3 1/2 cups more of  bread flour  and 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  Stir well with a spoon, and pour  into three small  bread  tins; let rise, when well-risen, bake about 3/4 of an hour in a moderately hot oven. This is a delicious and wholesome  bread  and no kneading is necessary. 1 1/2 cups of the cooked  oatmeal  might be used, then use less  white bread flour  when mixing. 
 
    NUT  AND  RAISIN BREAD    2 cups  buttermilk,  or  sour milk.   1/2 cup  brown sugar.   1 cup  wheat flour.   1 teaspoonful of  soda,  dissolved in a little of the  milk.   1 teaspoonful of  baking powder,  sifted with the  wheat flour.    Mix all together, add one cup of seeded  raisins,  1/4 cup of ground  peanuts  and 1/4 cup chopped  walnut meats.  Bake in an ordinary  bread  pan. 
 
   " SAFFRON "  RAISIN BREAD   For this old-fashioned, "country"  bread,  set a sponge in the evening, consisting of 1 cup of luke- warm water,  1 Fleischman's compressed  yeast cake  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  saffron water,  obtained by steeping 1/2 tablespoonful of  dried saffron flowers  in a small quantity of  boiling water  a short time. Use about 2 cups of  flour  to stiffen the sponge. Cover bowl containing sponge and stand in a warm place until morning, when add the following: 3/4 cup of soft A  sugar,  1/4 cup  lard  and 1/8 cup of  butter  (beaten to a cream); then add one  egg.  Beat again and add this mixture to the well-risen sponge. Add also 3/4 cup of seeded  raisins  and about 1 3/4 cups of  flour.   The dough should be almost as stiff as ordinary  bread  dough. Set to rise about one hour. Then divide the dough and mold into two shapely loaves. Place in oblong  bread  pans. Let rise about 1 1/2 hours. Brush melted  butter  over top of loaves and bake in a moderately hot oven, as one would bake ordinary  bread.   This  bread  is a rich, golden yellow, with a distinctive, rather  bitter,  saffron  flavor, well-liked by some people;  saffron  is not unwholesome.  "Speaking of  saffron bread, " said John Landis, to his niece, Mary, "I am reminded of the lines I was taught when quite a small boy:  "Wer will gute kuchen haben, der muss sieben sachen haben; Eir,  butter  un schmalz, milch, zucker un mehl; Un  saffron  mach die kuchen gehl."  "Of course, Mary, you do not understand what that means. I will translate it for you. 'Who would have good cakes, he must have seven things- eggs,   butter  and  lard,   milk,   sugar  and  flour,  and  saffron  makes the cakes yellow.' " 
 
   RAISED ROLLS   2 quarts of sifted  flour.   1 pint of boiled  milk  (lukewarm).  1 table spoon  sugar.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.  3/4 cake compressed  yeast,  or 3/4 cup  yeast.   1 teaspoon  salt.    At 5 o'clock P.M. set sponge with half or three-fourths of the  flour  and all the other ingredients.  About 9 o'clock in the evening, knead well, adding the balance of the  flour.  Cover and let stand in a warm place until morning. In the morning, roll out about 3/4 of an inch thick, cut into small rolls, place in baking pans far enough apart so they will not touch, and when raised quite light, bake.  Or, take the same ingredients as above (with one exception; take on whole cake of compressed  yeast ), dissolved in half a cup of luke- warm water,  and  flour  enough to make a thin batter. Do this at 8.30 in the morning and let rise until 1 o'clock; then knead enough  flour  in to make a soft dough, as soft as can be handled. Stand in a warm place until 4.30, roll out quite thin; cut with small, round cake-cutter and fold over like a pocketbook, putting a small piece of  butter  the size of a  pea  between the folds; set it in a warm place until 5.30, or until very light; then bake a delicate brown in a hot oven. If made quite small, 70 rolls may be made from this dough.   To cause rolls of any kind to have a rich, brown glaze, when baked, before placing the pan containing them in the oven, brush over the top of each roll the following mixture, composed of-- yolk of 1 egg,  1 tablespoon of  milk,  and 1 teaspoon of  sugar.  
 
   "GRANDMOTHER'S" FINE RAISED  BISCUITS    1 quart scalded  milk  (lukewarm).  3/4 cup of  butter,  or a mixture of  butter  and  lard.   1/2 cup of  sugar.   1 teaspoonful of  salt.   2 Fleischman's  yeast cakes.    Whites of 2 eggs.    Flour.   Quite early in the morning dissolve the two  yeast cakes  in a little of the  milk;  add these, with one-half the quantity of  sugar  and  salt  in the recipe, to the remainder of the quart of  milk;  add also 4 cups of  flour  to form the  yeast  foam. Beat well and stand in a warm place, closely-covered, one hour, until light and foamy.  Beat the  sugar  remaining and the  butter  to a  cream;  add to the  yeast  foam about 7 to 8 cups of  flour,  and the stiffly-beaten  whites  of the two  eggs.   Turn out on a well- flour ed  bread  board and knead about five minutes. Place in a bowl and let rise again (about one hour or longer) until double in bulk, when roll out about one inch in thickness. Cut small  biscuits  with a 1/2 pound Royal  Baking Powder  can.  Brush tops of  biscuits  with a mixture consisting of  yolk of one egg,  a teaspoonful of  sugar  and a little  milk;  this causes the  biscuits  to have a rich brown crust when baked.  Place  biscuits  on pans a short distance apart, let rise until doubled in bulk; bake in a rather quick oven.  From this recipe was usually made 55  biscuits.  One-half of this recipe would be sufficient for a small family.  Mary's Aunt taught her the possibilities of what she called a "Dutch" sponge--prepared from one Fleishman's  yeast cake.  And the variety a capable housewife may give her family, with the expenditure of a small amount of time and thought.  About 9 o'clock in the evening Mary's Aunt placed in a bowl  2 cups of  potato water  (drained from  potatoes  boiled for dinner). In this she dissolved one Fleischman's  yeast cake,  stirred into this about 3 cups of well-warmed  flour,  beat thoroughly for about ten minutes. Allowed this to stand closely covered in a warm place over night. On the following morning she added to the foamy sponge 1 1/2 cups lukewarm, scalded  milk,  in which had been dissolved 1 tablespoonful of a mixture of  butter  and  lard,  2 generous tablespoonfuls of  sugar  and 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  About 6 1/4 cups of well-dried and warmed  flour;  she stirred in a part of the  flour,  then added the balance. Kneaded well a short time, then set to raise closely covered in a warm place 2 1/2 to 3 hours.  When dough was light it was kneaded down in bowl and allowed to stand about one hour, and when well risen she placed 2 cups of light  bread  sponge in a bowl, and stood aside in warm place; this later formed the basis of a "Farmers'  Pound Cake, " the recipe for which may be found among recipes for "Raised Cakes."  From the balance of dough, or sponge, after being cut into 3 portions, she molded from the one portion 12 small turn-over rolls, which were bruised with melted  butter,  folded together and placed on tins a distance apart and when 
 very  light baked in a quick oven.  From another portion of the sponge was made a twist or braided loaf.  And to the remaining portion of dough was added 1/2 cup of  currants  or  raisins,  and this was called a " Currant " or " Raisin  Loaf," which she served for dinner the following day.  The rolls were placed in the oven of the range a few minutes before breakfast and served hot, broken apart and eaten with  maple syrup  or  honey  and the delicious "Farmers'  Pound Cake " was served for supper.  Aunt Sarah baked these on ironing day. The kitchen being unusually warm, as a result of the extra heat required in the range for heating flatirons, caused the dough to rise more quickly than otherwise would have been the case. 
 
   STIRRED  BREAD   Frau Schmidt thought  bread  more easily digested and wholesome if ingredients of a loaf be stirred together instead of kneaded. This is the method she taught Mary. She poured into  a bowl 3 cups of luke- warm water,  added 1 cake of Fleischman's  yeast,  dissolved in a little of the  water;  sifted in gradually about 8 1/2 cups of  flour,  added 1 tablespoonful of  sugar,  1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  mixed all well together with a spoon until a stiff dough was formed, which she molded into two shapely loaves, handling as little as possible; placed in  bread  pans, allowed to stand several hours to raise, and when light baked. Mary said, "This  bread  may be more wholesome than old-fashioned  bread,  which has been kneaded, but I prefer Aunt Sarah's  bread,  well-kneaded, finegrained and sweet," but, she continued, "I will make an exception in favor of Aunt Sarah's 'Stirred  Oatmeal '  bread,  which, I think, fine." 
 
    POTATO BISCUITS   At 6 o'clock in the morning place in a bowl 1 cup of finely-mashed(boiled)  potatoes  (the cup of left-over mashed  potatoes  may be used as a matter of economy). Add 1 cup of  potato water  (the  water  drained from boiled  potatoes ), in which 1/2 cake of Fleischman's  yeast  had been dissolved, add 1 cup of  flour  and 1 teaspoon of  sugar.  Stand in a warm place to raise, from 1 to 1 1/4 hours. At the expiration of that time add to the foamy sponge 1 large tablespoonful of  butter  or  lard,  1  egg  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  beaten together before adding. Add about 2 cups of  flour,  beat thoroughly and allow to raise another hour; then roll out the dough about 1 inch in thickness and cut into small  biscuits,  dip each one in melted  butter  and place on pans, a short distance apart, stand about one hour to raise, when bake in a rather hot oven. These  Potato Biscuits  are particularly nice when freshly baked, and resemble somewhat  biscuits  made from  baking powder.  From this recipe was made two dozen  biscuits.  
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  POTATO YEAST    9 medium-sized  potatoes .  5 tablespoons  sugar.   2 tablespoons  salt.   1 quart  water.     Grate the raw  potatoes  quickly, so they will not discolor, pour over the grated  potato  the quart of  boiling water,  add  salt  and  sugar,  cook several minutes until the consistency of boiled  starch,  let cool, and when lukewarm add 1 cup of good  yeast.  Stir all together in a crock, cover and let stand in a warm place three or four hours, when it is foamy and rises to top of crock, stir down several times, then fill glass  fruit  jars, cover and stand away in a cool place until needed.  This  yeast  will keep about ten days. Use one cup to about three pounds of  flour,  or one quart of liquid, when setting sponge for  bread.  Save one cup of this  yeast  to start fresh  yeast  with. 
 
   PERFECTION POTATO CAKES   1cup of boiled mashed  potatoes   1 cup  sweet milk.   1 cup  water  in which 1 Fleischman  yeast cake  was dissolved.  2 cups soft A  sugar.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard  mixed.  2  eggs.   A little  salt.   About 7 cups of  flour.     Cream  the  sugar,   butter  and  eggs  together. Add mashed  potatoes ,  milk  and cup of  water  containing  yeast,  alternately with the  flour,  until about 7 cups of  flour  have been used, making a dough as stiff as can be stirred with a spoon. Stand, covered, in a warm place by the range until morning. These should be set to rise about nine o'clock in the evening. The following morning take pieces of the dough, on a well- flour ed bake board; roll about one inch thick, to fit in pie tins, place in pie tins to raise; when doubled in bulk spread with melted  butter  and sprinkle  sugar  thickly over top and bake in a moderately hot oven until lightly browned on top. This quantity of dough makes six cakes.  Instead of brushing the cakes with above mixture, place in a bowl 1/2 cup of soft A  sugar,  1/2 cup  flour,  a tiny pinch of  salt  and  baking powder  each and 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter  (not melted), mix all together as crumbly as possible, then the crumbs were sprinkled thickly over tops of cakes, which had been brushed with  a mixture of  milk  and  sugar.  Place cakes in oven when raised; bake 20 minutes.  This recipe was given Mary by an old "Bucks County" cook, noted for the excellence of her raised cakes. 
 
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR  CINNAMON BUNS   Early in the morning mix a sponge or batter consisting of 1/2 cup of  potato water  ( water  drained from boiled  potatoes ) and 1/2 cup of lukewarm, scalded  milk,  one Fleischman's compressed  yeast cake,  dissolved in the 1/2 cup of lukewarm  potato water,  1 teaspoonful  sugar,  pinch of  salt  and about 1 1/2 cupfuls of warmed  flour.  Stand this sponge in a warm place, closely covered, about 3/4 of an hour, to raise. At the end of that time add to the light, well-risen sponge, the following: 3 table spoonfuls of a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  and 1/3 cup of soft A  sugar,  creamed together. Add one large  egg.  Beat well. Lastly, add about 2 cupfuls of  flour.  Mix all together thoroughly, and let raise again about 1 1/2 hours. Divide the well-risen sponge into four portions. Roll each piece with rolling-pin into lengthwise pieces about 1/2 inch thick and spread with one tablespoonful of melted  butter,  scant 2 tablespoonfuls of  brown sugar,  dust over this a small quantity of  cinnamon,  and 1 tablespoonful of  dried currants.  Shape into a long, narrow roll with the hands, on a well- flour ed bakeboard. Cut each roll into five pieces. Pinch one end of each piece together and place each  bun,  cut side down, a short distance apart, in an iron pan which has been well greased, having brushed a little melted  butter  and a sprinkling of  sugar  over pan. Allow these to rise in a warm place as before, about l 1/2 hours, until quite light, as having the extra  sugar,   butter  and  currants  added retards their rising as quickly as would plain  biscuits.   Bake 20 to 25 minutes in a moderate oven.  From this quantity of material was made 20  cinnamon buns.  
 
   "KLEINA KAFFE KUCHEN" (LITTLE  COFFEE  CAKES)   Scant 1/2 cup  lard  and  butter.   2 cups sifted  flour.    2 whole  eggs  and the  yolks  of 2 more.  3 tablespoons  sugar.   1/4 cup  cream.   1/4  milk.   1 Fleischman's  yeast cake.   1/8 teaspoon  salt.   The  yeast cake  was dissolved in the 1/4 cup lukewarm  milk,  a couple tablespoons of  flour  were added and mixed into a batter, and stood in a warm place to rise. The  butter  and  sugar  were stirred to a  cream,   salt  was added, the  eggs  were beaten in, one at a time, next was added the sponge containing the  yeast,  the luke-warm  cream,  and the sifted  flour.   Grease  slightly warmed Gem pans, sift a little  flour  over them, fill two-thirds full with the soft dough, set in a warm place to rise to tops of pans, and when quite light bake in a medium hot oven about 25 minutes. The oven should be hot enough to allow them to rise quickly. Put something underneath the pans in the oven to prevent bottom of cakes from burning. These may be set about 8 o'clock in the morning if cakes are wished for lunch at noon. These are not cheap, as this quantity makes only 12 cakes, but they are light as puffballs. The Professor's wife served them when she gave a "Kaffee Klatch." She doubled the recipe, baked the cakes in the morning, and placed them in the oven to heat through before serving. The cakes should be broken apart, not cut. The cakes made from this recipe are particularly fine. 
 
   GROSSMUTTER'S POTATO CAKES   1 cup hot mashed  potatoes .  1 1/2 cups  sugar.   1 scant cup  butter  and  lard.   1 cup homemade  yeast  or 1  yeast cake  dissolved in 1 cup  lukewarm water.   3  eggs.    Flour.    At 5 o'clock in the afternoon set to rise the following: One cup of  sugar  and one cup of hot mashed  potatoes ; when lukewarm add one cup of  flour  and one cup of  yeast;  beat all together, stand in a warm place to rise and at 9 o'clock in the evening  cream   together 1 cup of a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  1 cup of  sugar,  3  eggs  and pinch of  salt;  add the sponge and beat well. Stir as stiff as you can stir it with a large spoon, cover, set in a warm place to rise until morning, when roll out some of the dough into cakes about one inch thick, put in pie tins to rise, and when light, make half a dozen deep impressions on top of each cake with the forefinger, spread with melted  butter  and strew light- brown sugar  thickly over top, or mix together 1 cup  sugar,   butter  size of an  egg,  2 tablespoons  flour,  2 tablespoons  boiling water,  beat well and spread the mixture on cakes just before placing in oven. Bake the cakes about 20 minutes in a moderate oven. This is a very old recipe used by Aunt Sarah's grandmother, and similar to the well-known German cakes called "Schwing Felders." 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S " BREAD  DOUGH" CAKE   1 cup  bread  dough.  1  egg.   1/2 cup soft A  sugar.   1 tablespoon  lard  or  butter.   1/4 teaspoon  soda.    When her  bread  dough was raised and ready to put in the pans she placed a cupful of it in a bowl and added the  egg,   sugar,   butter,   soda  (dissolved in a little  hot water ); some  dried raisins  or  currants,  and just enough  flour  so it might be handled easily. Put in a small agate pan four inches deep, let rise until light, dust pulverized  sugar  over top and bake about 25 or 30 minutes in a moderate oven.  Double the materials called for, using 2 
 cups  of well-risen  bread  dough or sponge, and you will have a good-sized cake. 
 
   GOOD, CHEAP DUTCH CAKES  To a bowl containing 1 cup of scalded  milk,  add 1 tablespoonful of  lard  and 1 cup of  sugar.  When lukewarm add 1  yeast cake  (Fleischman's), dissolved in 1 cup of  lukewarm water,  and about 5 cups of good  flour.  Set to rise at night about nine o'clock, Early the next morning roll out pieces about one and a half inches  thick, to fit in medium-sized pie tins. Set in a warm place to rise. When light, brush top with melted  butter  and strew  sugar  thickly over and bake from 15 to 20 minutes in a moderately hot oven. These cakes are 
 inexpensive  and 
 good; no  eggs   or 
  butter   being used. 
 
   RECIPE FOR "LIGHT CAKES" (GIVEN MARY BY A FARMER'S WIFE)  In the evening mix a sponge consisting of 1/2 cup of mashed  potatoes , 1/2 cup  sugar,  1 cup of  yeast  or 1 cake of Fleischman's  yeast  dissolved in a cup of  lukewarm water;  1/2 cup of a mixture of  butter  and  lard  and a pinch of  salt  and  flour  to thicken until batter is quite thick. Stand in a warm place, closely covered, until morning when add 2  eggs  and 1/2 cup of  sugar  and  flour  to stiffen as thick as sponge can be stirred with a spoon. Set to rise; when light roll out one inch thick, place in pie tins, brush tops with melted  butter  and  brown sugar,  set to rise, and, when well risen, bake. 
 
    BUTTER  "SCHIMMEL"  Place in a mixing bowl 2 cups of warm, mashed  potatoes  and add 3/4 of a cup of  shortening  (a mixture of  lard  and  butter ), (or use Aunt Sarah's substitute for  butter ); one cup of A  sugar  and 1 teaspoonful  salt.   Beat all to a  cream.  When lukewarm, add 2  eggs  and either 1  yeast cake  dissolved in 1 cup of  lukewarm water,  or 1 cup of  potato yeast;  use about 2 cups of  flour  to make a thin batter. Set to raise over night or early in the morning. When well risen add about 4 cups of  flour.  Make about as stiff a dough as can be stirred well with a mixing spoon. Place soft dough on a bake-board; roll out into a sheet about one-half inch thick; cut into squares about the size of a common  soda cracker;  bring each of the four corners together in the centre like an envelope; pinch together; place a small piece of  butter  (about one-eighth teaspoonful) on the lop where the four corners join. Stand in a warm place to rise. When well risen and light place in the oven. When baked, take from oven, and while hot dip all sides in melted  butter   and dust granulated or pulverized  sugar  over top. These are not as much trouble to prepare as one would suppose from the directions for making. The same dough may be cut in doughnuts with a tin cutter and fried in hot  fat  after raising, or the dough may be molded into small, round  biscuits  if preferred, and baked in oven. 
 
   "BUCKS COUNTY" DOUGHNUTS  About nine o'clock in the evening a batter was mixed composed of the following:  1 cup  milk.   1 cup  hot water.   1 teaspoonful of  sugar.   1 cup  yeast  (or one cake of Fleischman's  yeast  dissolved in one cup of  lukewarm water ).  1 pinch of  salt.   3 1/2 cups of  flour.     Stand in a warm place until morning. Then add 1/2 cup of  butter  and 1 1/2 cups of soft A  sugar,  creamed together, and from 3 to 4 cups of  flour.  The dough should be as stiff as can be stirred with a spoon. Set to rise in a warm place; when light and spongy, roll out on a well- flour ed bake-board and cut into round cakes with a hole in the centre. Let rise again, and when well risen fry a golden brown in deep  fat  and sift over pulverized  sugar.  This recipe will make 45 doughnuts. These are good and economical, as no  eggs  are used in this recipe. 
 
   EXTRA FINE "QUAKER BONNET"  BISCUITS   For these quaint-looking, delicious  biscuits,  a sponge was prepared consisting of  1 pink  milk.   3  eggs.   1/2 cup mixture  butter  and  lard.   1  yeast cake  (Fleischman's).  About 7 cups  flour.     Set to rise early in the morning. When well risen (in about  3 hours), roll dough into a sheet about 1/4 inch in thickness, cut with a half-pound  baking powder  can into small, round  biscuits,  brush top of each one with melted  butter  (use a new, clean paint brush for this purpose), place another  biscuit  on top of each one of these, and when raised very light and ready for oven brush top of each  biscuit  with a mixture consisting of half of one  yolk of egg  (which had been reserved from the ones used in baking), mixed with a little  milk.   Biscuits  should have been placed on a baking sheet some distance apart, let rise about one hour until quite light, then placed in a quick but not 
 too hot  an oven until baked a golden brown on top.  Mary gave these the name of "Quaker Bonnet"  Biscuits,  as the top  biscuit  did not raise quite as much as the one underneath and greatly resembled the crown of a Quaker bonnet.  From this quantity of dough was made three dozen  biscuits.  These are not cheap, but extra fine. 
 
   BUCKS COUNTY  CINNAMON  "KUCHEN"  Explicit directions for the making of these excellent raised cakes was given Mary by an old, experienced Pennsylvania German cook. They were prepared from the following recipe: Early in the morning 1 pint of  milk  was scalded. When lukewarm, add 3 1/2 cups of  flour  and 1 cake of Fleischman's compressed  yeast  (which had been dissolved in 1 tablespoonful of  lukewarm water ). Beat the mixture well. Cover and stand in a warm place to rise. When well risen, which should be in about 2 hours, add the following mixture, composed of 3/4 cup of  sugar  and 1/2 cup of  butter,  creamed together; 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt;  1  egg  was beaten into the mixture, and about 2 cups of  flour  were added, enough to make a dough as stiff as can be stirred with a spoon. Dough should not be as stiff as for  bread.  Let stand about 1 hour. When well risen and light, divide into four portions. Roll out each piece of dough to thickness of one inch. Place cakes in medium-sized pie tins and allow them to stand about one hour. When well risen, doubled in bulk, make half dozen deep impressions on top of each cake with the forefinger. Brush top of each cake with 1/2 tablespoonful of melted  butter.  Sprinkle over 2 tablespoonfuls of soft A  sugar  and sift over a little   pulverized cinnamon,  if liked, just before placing cakes in oven. Bake cakes from 20 to 25 minutes in a moderately hot oven. From this dough may be made four cakes.  Excellent  biscuits  may also be made from this same dough, by simply moulding it into small  biscuits  and place in a pan some distance apart. Let rise and brush tops of  biscuits  with a mixture composed of a part of an  egg yolk,  a tablespoonful of  milk  and 1/2 teaspoonful  sugar.  This causes the  biscuits  to have a rich, brown color when baked.  The sponge from which these cakes or  biscuits  were made was mixed and set to rise at 6 o'clock in the morning, and the baking was finished at 11 o'clock. Sponge should be set to rise in a warm room. If these directions are carefully followed the housewife will invariably have good results. Always use  hard  Spring  wheat  for  bread  or  biscuits,  raised with  yeast;  and  Winter wheat,  which costs less, will answer for making cake and pastry. In cold weather always warm  flour  before baking, when  yeast  is used for baking raised cakes. Soft A  sugar  or a very light brown is to be preferred to granulated. 
 
   MORAVIAN  SUGAR  CAKES  At 5 o'clock P. M. set a sponge or batter, consisting of 1 cup of mashed  potatoes , 2 cups of  sugar,  1 cup of  sweet milk,  scalded and cooled, 1/2 cake of  yeast,  dissolved in 1 cup of  lukewarm water,  2  eggs,  3/4 cup of a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  add 3 cups of  flour,  beat well, stand in a warm place to raise; at 9 o'clock add about 6 cups of  flour.  Stand until morning in a warm place, near the range. The following morning turn out on a  flour ed bake-board, roll out cakes one inch thick, place in pie tins, when ready for the oven; punch half a dozen small holes in the top of cakes, in which place small bits of  butter.  Sprinkle  sugar  over liberally and  cinnamon  if liked. Bake in a moderate oven. 
 
   MARY'S POTATO CAKES   1 cup freshly-boiled mashed  potatoes .  1 cup scalded  sweet milk.    1 cup  sugar.    Flour  about 6 cups.  1 cake Fleischman's  yeast.   2  eggs.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard  mixed.  1/2 cup  potato water.    At 7 o'clock in the morning Mary mixed a sponge consisting of a cup of mashed  potatoes , 1 cup scalded  milk,  1/2 cup  sugar,  1 1/2 cups of  flour  and the cake of Fleischman's  yeast,  dissolved in half a cup of lukewarm  potato water.  This was set to rise in a warm place near the range for several hours until light. Then she creamed together 1/2 cup of  sugar,  2  eggs  and 1/2 cup of  butter  and  lard,  or use instead the "Substitute for  Butter. " Added the creamed  sugar,   butter  and  eggs  to the well-risen sponge and about 4 1/2 cups of  flour.  Sift a couple of tablespoons of  flour  over top of sponge, and set to rise again about 1 1/2 hours. When light, take out pieces of the sponge on a well- flour ed  bread -board, knead for a minute or two, then roll out with a rolling-pin into pieces about one inch thick, place in well-greased small pie tins, over which a dust of  flour  has been sifted, set to rise about 1 1/2 hours. When light and ready for oven brush top with  milk,  strew crumbs over or brush with melted  butter  and strew  sugar  over top; after punching half dozen holes in top of each cake, bake in a moderately hot oven from 20 to 25 minutes until a rich brown, when cakes should be baked. Five  potato  cakes may be made from this sponge, or four cakes and one pan of  biscuits  if preferred. Use soft "A"  sugar  rather than granulated for these cakes, and old  potatoes  are superior to new. Or when these same cakes were raised, ready to be placed in the oven, Mary frequently brushed the tops of cakes with melted  butter,  strewing over the following: 1 cup of  flour  mixed with 1/2 cup of  sugar  and  yolk of 1 egg,  and a few drops of  vanilla.  This mixture rubbed through a coarse sieve and scattered over cakes Mary called "Streusel Kuchen." 
 
   GERMAN  RAISIN  CAKE (RAISED WITH  YEAST )  Place in a bowl 1 cup of  milk,  scalded and cooled until lukewarm ; add 1 tablespoonful of  sugar  and dissolve one cake of  yeast   in the  milk.  Mix in 1 cup of  flour  and stand in a warm place to raise 3/4 of an hour. Then  cream  together in a separate bowl 1/2 cup soft "A"  sugar,  1/2 cup of  butter  or " butter  substitute," add 1  egg  and a pinch of  salt;  stir in 1 1/4 cups of  flour,  1/2 cup of well- flour ed  raisins,  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  vanilla  flavoring. Add the  yeast  mixture and allow it to raise about 2 hours longer. At the expiration of that time turn the well-risen sponge out on a  flour ed bake-board. After giving the dough several deft turns on the board with the hand, place in a well-greased  fruit  cake pan, which has been dusted with  flour.  Stand pan containing cake in a warm place, let rise until very light, probably 1 1/4 hours, when brush the top of cake with a small quantity of a mixture of  milk  and  sugar.  Sift pulverized  sugar  thickly over top. Place the cake in a moderately hot oven, so the cake may finish rising before commencing to brown on the top. Bake about 35 minutes. 
 
   "KAFFEE KRANTZ" (COFFEE WREATH)   1 cup  sugar.   3/4 cup  butter  and  lard.   4  eggs.   1 pint  milk.   1 Fleischman's  yeast cake.   4 cups  flour.     Cream  together the  sugar,   butter,   lard  and  eggs,  add the  milk,  which has been scalded and allowed to cool;  flour,  and  yeast cake,  dissolved in a half cup of  lukewarm water;  beat well. Set this sponge to rise in a warm place, near the range, as early as possible in the morning. This will take about 1 1/2 hours to rise. When the sponge is light add about 3 cups more of  flour.  The dough, when stiff as can be stirred with a spoon, will be right. Take about 2 cups of this sponge out on a well- flour ed bake-board, divide in three pieces, and braid and form into a wreath or "Krantz," or they may be made out into flat cakes and baked in pie tins after they have been raised and are light. Sprinkle  sugar  thickly over top after brushing with  milk  containing a little  sugar,  before placingm oven. These should rise in about 1 1/2 hours. Place in a moderately hot oven and bake from 20 to 25 minutes. This recipe Frau Schmidt translated from the German language for Mary's especial benefit.   This  coffee  wreath is particularly fine if small pieces of crushed rock candy be sprinkled liberally over the top and blanched  almonds  stuck a couple of inches apart over the top just before placing the cake in the oven, after the cakes had been brushed with a mixture of  milk  and  sugar.  
 
   "MONDEL KRANTZ" OR ALMOND CAKE (AS MADE BY FRAU SCHMIDT)   1 pint  sweet milk   3/4 cup  sugar.   3  eggs.   1  yeast cake  or 1 cup  yeast.   1/2 cup  butter.   2 tablespoons rock candy.  1  orange.   2 tablespoons chopped  almonds.    Flour.    Set to rise early in the morning. To the scalded  milk,  when lukewarm, add the  yeast  and  flour  enough to make a batter, cover, set to rise until light, near the range, which will take several hours. Then add the  sugar,   butter  and  eggs  beaten to a  cream,  grated  rind  and  juice of orange,  a couple tablespoons finely-chopped  almonds,  and add enough  flour  to make a soft dough, as stiff as can be stirred with a spoon; set to rise again, and when light, divide the dough in two portions, from which you form two wreaths. Roll half the dough in three long strips on the  flour ed bake-board with the hands, then braid them together. Place a large  coffee  cup or bowl inverted on the centre of a large, round or oval, well-greased pan, lay the wreath around the bowl. The bowl in the centre of the pan prevents the dough from running together and forming a cake. Brush the top of the wreath with a little  milk,  containing teaspoon of  sugar,  over the lop of the wreath, stick blanched, well- dried almonds,  and strew thickly with crushed rock candy or very coarse  sugar.   Let rise until light, then bake. This makes two quite large wreaths.  The Professor's wife told Mary when she gave her this recipe, this  almond  wreath was always served at the breakfast  table on Christmas morning at the home of her parents in Germany, and was always baked by her mother, who gave her this recipe, and it was found on the breakfast table of Frau Schmidt Christmas morning as regularly as was made "Fast Nacht Kuch-en" by Aunt Sarah every year on "Shrove Tuesday," the day before the beginning of the lenten season. 
 
   THE PROFESSOR'S WIFE'S RECIPE FOR "DUTCH CAKES"   2 tablespoons of  butter  or  lard.   2  eggs.   1 cup "Soft A"  sugar.   1/2  yeast cake.   1 pink  milk.   1/2 teaspoonful of  salt.    Flour.    She scalded the  milk,  added  butter  and  eggs,  well beaten, when the  milk  was lukewarm, then added  yeast,  dissolved in a little  lukewarm water,   sugar,   salt  and  flour  to make a thin batter. Beat all together five minutes, stood the batter, closely covered, in a warm place, over night. In the morning, added  flour  to make a soft dough, kneaded lightly for ten minutes, placed in bowl and set to rise again. When light, she rolled out dough one inch in thickness, placed in pie tins, and when raised a second time spread over the cakes the following mixture before placing in oven: 1 cup  sugar,  2 tablespoonfuls of  flour,  2 tablespoonfuls of  boiling water  and  butter  size of an  egg,  beaten well together. Bake 20 minutes. 
 
   "FARMERS'  POUND CAKE " (AS AUNT SARAH CALLED THIS)  Place in a bowl 2 cups of light, well-raised  bread  sponge (when all  flour  necessary had been added and loaves were shaped ready to be placed in  bread  pan for final rising).  Cream  together 3/4 cups of a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  add 2  eggs,  first  yolk,  then stiffly beaten  whites,  also add 1 1/2 cups of A  sugar.  Add this to the 2 cups of  bread  sponge in bowl and beat well until  fully incorporated with the dough, then add 1/2 cup of lukewarm  milk,  in which had been dissolved 1/2 teaspoonful of salaratus.  Beat all together until mixture is smooth and creamy, then add 2 cups of  bread flour  and 1/2 teaspoon of  lemon  flavoring Beat well and add 1 1/2 cups of either  currants  or  raisins,  dusted with  flour.  Pour mixture into an agate pudding dish (one holding 3 quarts, about 2 1/2 inches in depth and 30 inches in circumference). Stand in a warm place 3 to 4 hours to raise; when raised to lop of pan place in a moderately hot oven and bake about 40 minutes, taken from oven, dust with pulverized  sugar  thickly over top of cake.  This cake should be large as an old-fashioned  fruit  cake, will keep moist some time in a tin cake box, but is best when freshly baked. 
 
   GERMAN "COFFEE  BREAD "   1/3 cup  sugar   1/3 cup  butter   1 cup hot  milk   1  yeast cake   2  eggs   2 1/2 cups  flour.    As Aunt Sarah taught Mary to bake this, it was fine. She creamed together in a bowl the  sugar  and  butter,  poured the hot  milk  over this, and when lukewarm, added the compressed  yeast cake,  dissolved in 1/4 cup of  lukewarm water.  She then added two small, well-beaten  eggs,  about 2'/2 cups  flour,  or enough to make a stiff baiter, and 1/2 teaspoonful  salt.  Beat thoroughly, cover and set to rise in a warm place about 1 1/2 hours or until doubled in bulk. This was set to rise quite early in the morning. When light, beat thoroughly and with a spoon spread evenly on top of well-greased, deep pie tins, which have been sprinkled with a little  flour.   Spread the crumbs given below over the top of cakes, cover and let rise 15 minutes and bake a rich brown in moderate oven.  For the crumbs, mix together in a howl 1 heaped cup of fine, soft, stale  bread crumbs,  2 1/2 tablespoonfuls light  brown sugar,  3/4  of a teaspoonful  cinnamon,  pinch of  salt,  1/4 cup of blanched and chopped  almonds,  and 2 tablespoonfuls of soft  butter.  This sponge or dough should be unusually soft when mixed, as the crumbs sink into the dough and thicken it. Add only the quantity of  flour  called for in recipe. 
 
   "FAST NACHT KUCHEN" (DOUGHNUTS)   3 tablespoons  honey.   3/4 quart  milk.   2 quarts  flour.   1  yeast cake.   1/2 cup  butter.   2  eggs.    Without fail, every year on Shrove Tuesday, or "Fast Nacht," the day before the beginning of Lent, these cakes were made. Quite early in the morning, or the night before, the following sponge was set to rise: The lukewarm, scalded  milk,  mixed into a smooth batter with 1 quart of  flour;  add 1 Fleischman's  yeast cake,  dissolved in a very little  water.  Beat well together, set in a warm place to rise over night, or several hours, and when light, add the following, which has been creamed together:  eggs,   butter  and  lard,  a little  flour  and the  honey.  Beat well, and then add the balance of the  flour,  reserving a small quantity to  flour  the board later. Set to rise again, and when quite light roll out on a well- flour ed board, cut into circles with a doughnut cutter, cut holes in the centre of cakes, let rise, and then fry in deep  fat;  dust with pulverized  sugar  and  cinnamon,  if liked. These are regular German doughnuts, and are never very sweet If liked sweeter, a little  sugar  may be added. From this batter Mary- made 18 "fried cakes,' or "Fast Nacht Kuchen," as the Germans call them. She also made from the same dough one dozen  cinnamon buns  and two Dutch cakes. The dough not being very sweet, she sprinkled rivels composed of  sugar,   flour  and  butter,  generously over the top of the "Dutch cakes." The dough for doughnuts, or fried cakes, should always have a little more  flour  added than dough for "Dutch cakes" or  buns;  baked in the oven. If too soft, they will absorb  fat  while frying. 
 
    "KAFFEE KUCHEN" (COFFEE CAKE)   2 cups  milk.   1 heaped cup soft A  sugar.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard.   1  egg.   1 Fleischman's  yeast cake.   Flour.   These German  Coffee  Cakes should be set to rise either early in the morning or the night before being baked. Scald 2 cups  sweet milk  and set aside to cool.  Cream  together in a bowl 1 heaped cup of A  sugar,  1/2 cup  butter  and  lard  and the  yolk of egg.  Add this to the lukewarm  milk  alternately with 6 1/2 cups  flour  and the  yeast cake  dissolved in 1/3 cup  lukewarm water.  Beat all together, and, lastly, add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg.  Cover and set in a warm place to rise over night, or, if set to rise in the morning, stand about 21/2 hours until light. Put an extra cup of  flour  on the bake-board, take out large spoonfuls of the dough, mix in just enough  flour  to roll out into flat cakes, spread on well-greased pie tins, stand in a warm place until light, about 1 1/4 hours. When the cakes are ready for the oven, brush melted  butter  over the top, strew thickly with  brown sugar,  or spread rivels over top, composed of 1/2 cup  sugar,  1/2 cup  flour  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  crumbled together. Strew these over the cakes just before placing them in the oven of range. 
 
   "STREUSEL KUCHEN"  For these German-raised cakes, take 1/2 cup mashed  potatoes  and 1/2 cup of  potato water,  1/2 cup  lard  and  butter  mixed, creamed with 1/2 cup  sugar.  Mix with these ingredients about 3 1/2 cups of  flour  and 1 cup of  yeast.  Set this sponge to rise at night in a warm place, well covered. The next morning add to the light, well-risen sponge, 2  eggs,  1/2 cup  sugar  and about 1 1/2 cups  flour.  Let stand in a warm place until light. Then roll out pieces size of a plate, one inch thick; place on well-greased pie tins, let rise, and when light and ready for the oven brush over tops with melted  butter  and strew over the tops of cakes the following: Mix  1 cup of  flour,  1/2 cup of  sugar  and  yolk of 1 egg.  Flavor with a few drops of  vanilla  (or use  vanilla sugar,  which is made by placing several  vanilla beans  in a jar of  sugar  a short time, which flavors  sugar ). Rub this mixture of  flour,   sugar  and  yolk of egg  through a coarse sieve and strew over tops of cakes.  Or, this same recipe may be used by taking, instead of 1 cup of  yeast,  one Fleischman  yeast cake,  dissolved in 1 cup of  lukewarm water.  Instead of sponge being set to rise the night before the day on which the cakes are to be baked, the sponge might be set early in the morning of the same day on which they are to be baked-exactly in the same manner as if sponge was set the night before; when light, add  eggs,   sugar  and balance of  flour  to sponge, and proceed as before. 
 
   MUFFINS,  BISCUITS,  GRIDDLE CAKE AND WAFFLES  Use 1 scant cup of liquid to 1 good cup of  flour,  usually, for "Griddle Cake" batter. Use  baking powder  with  sweet milk,  1 heaping teaspoonful of Royal  baking powder  is equivalent to 1 teaspoonful of  cream of tartar  and 1/2 teaspoonful of salaratus ( baking soda ) combined. Use either  baking powder  or salaratus and  cream of tartar  combined, when using sweet rnilk. Use 1 teaspoonful of  baking soda  to 1 pint of  sour milk.  Allow a larger quantity of  baking powder  when no  eggs  are used. Have all materials cold when using  baking powder.  When  milk  is only slightly sour, use a lesser quantity of  soda  and a small quantity of  baking powder.  
 
   SALLY LUNN (AS AUNT SARAH MADE IT)  As "Aunt Sarah" made this, it required 1 cup of  sweet milk,  2  eggs,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,  3 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,   flour  to make a stiff batter, about 2 3/4 cups (almost three cups) of  flour  sifted with 3 scant teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Served immediately when taken from the oven, this is an excellent substitute for  bread  for lunch. 
  
   AUNT SARAH'S RECIPE FOR "JOHNNY CAKE"  One and one half cups of  sour milk,  1-3 cup of  shortening  a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,  2 cups of yellow  cornmeal.  1 cup of  white bread flour,  1  egg,  1 teaspoon of  soda,  dissolved in a little  hot water,  a little  salt.  Mix all together, add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg  last. Pour batter in an oblong  bread  tin, bake about 45 minutes in a quick oven. Granulated  corn meal  was used for this cake. 
 
   MARY'S BREAKFAST MUFFINS   3 cups sifted  flour.   1 teaspoon  salt.   1 teaspoon  sugar.   1 tablespoon  butter  and  lard.   1/4 cake Fleischman's  yeast   2  eggs.   2 cups boiled  milk.    Place the  flour,   salt,   sugar,   butter,   lard  and  yeast cake,  dissolved in  water,  in a bowl and mix well; then add the  eggs  and  milk,  which should be lukewarm. Set to rise in a warm place over night. In the morning do not stir at all, but carefully place tablespoonfuls of the  light dough  into warm, well-greased Gem pans, let stand a short time, until quite light, then bake in a hot oven 15 to 20 minutes and serve hot for breakfast. These should be light and flakey if made according to directions. 
 
    RICE  MUFFINS   1 cup cold boiled  rice.    Yolk of egg  and  white  beaten separately  1 teaspoon  sugar.   1/2 teaspoon  salt.   1 cup  sweet milk.   2 cups  flour.   2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.    Put the  rice,   yolk of egg,   sugar  and  salt  in a bowl and beat well together; then add 1 teacup  sweet milk  alternately with the   flour,  in which has been sifted the  baking powder.  Add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg;  bake in muffin pans in hot oven. This makes about fifteen muffins. 
 
    INDIAN  PONE  Beat together, in the following order, 2  eggs,  1 tablespoonful of  white sugar,  1 1/2 cups of  sweet milk,  1 teaspoonful of  salt;  to which add 1 cup of granulated  yellow corn  meal and 2 cups of  white flour,  sifted, with 3 scant teaspoonfuls of Royal  baking powder.  Lastly, add 1 tablespoonful of melted (not hot)  butter.  Pour batter in  bread  pan and bake in a hot oven 25 to 30 minutes. Serve hot. Do not cut with a knife when serving, but break in pieces. When the  stock of bread  is low this quickly-prepared  corn bread  or "pone" is a very good substitute for  bread,  and was frequently baked by Mary at the farm. Mary's Aunt taught her to make a very appetizing pudding from the left-over pieces of  corn bread,  which, when crumbled, filled 1 cup heaping full; over this was poured 2 cups of  sweet milk;  this was allowed to stand until soft; when add 1 large  egg  (beaten separately), a generous tablespoonful of  sugar,  a couple of tablespoonfuls of  raisins,  a pinch of  salt;  mix well, pour into a small agate pudding pan, grate  nutmeg  over the top, and bake in a moderate oven 1 hour or a less time. Serve with  sugar  and  cream.  
 
   "PFANNKUCHEN" (PANCAKES)  Four  eggs, whites  and  yolks  were beaten separately, 2 table-spoonfuls of  milk,  were added; 1 teaspoonful of chopped  parsley;  mix lightly together, add  salt  to season. Place 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter  in a fry pan. When  butter  has melted, pour mixture carefully into pan. When cooked, sprinkle over a small quantity of finely minced  parsley.  Roll like a "jelly roll." Place on a hot platter and serve at once cut in slices. 
 
   "EXTRA FINE"  BAKING POWDER BISCUITS  One quart of  flour,  was measured; after being sifted, was  placed in a  flour  sifter, with 4 heaping teaspoonfuls of Royal  baking powder  and 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  Sift  flour  and  baking powder  into a bowl, cut through this mixture 1 tablespoonful of  butter  and  lard  each, and mix into a soft dough, with about 1 cup of  sweet milk.  1  egg  should have been added to the  milk  before mixing it with the  flour.  Reserve a small quantity of the  yolk of egg,  and thin with a little  milk.  Brush this over the top of  biscuits  before baking.  Turn the  biscuit  dough onto a  flour ed bake-board. Pat out about one inch thick. Cut into rounds with smalt tin cake cutter. Place a small bit of  butter  on each  biscuit  and fold together. Place a short distance apart on baking tins and bake in a quick oven. 
 
   "FLANNEL" CAKES, MADE FROM  SOUR MILK   One pint of  sour milk,  2  eggs  (beaten separately), a little  salt,  1 large teaspoon of melted  butter,  1 teaspoonful of  molasses,  1 good teaspoon of  soda,  sifted with enough  flour  to make a smooth batter. Beat  hard  and then add the 2  yolks  and the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  Bake small cakes on a hot, well-greased griddle. Serve with  honey  or  maple syrup.  
 
   "FLANNEL" CAKES WITH  BAKING POWDER   Sift together in a bowl 1 pint of  flour,  1 teaspoon of  salt,  2 teaspoons of Royal  baking powder,  mixed to a smooth batter, with about 1 pint of  sweet milk.  Add two  yolks of eggs,  1 tablespoon of melted  butter.  Lastly, add the 2 stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  1 teaspoon of baking  molasses  added makes them brown quickly. Bake on a hot griddle, well greased. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S RECIPE FOR WAFFLES  One pint of  sour milk,  1 quart of  sweet milk,  1 teaspoon  salt,  1 tablespoon  butter,   whites of three eggs  and  yolks  of two and 1 teaspoon of  baking soda,  and  flour  to make a rather thin batter. Beat the two  yolks of the eggs  until light and creamy, then add 1/2  teaspoon of  baking powder,  little  flour,  then the  sour milk  with  soda  dissolved in it, stirring all the time. Then add 1 tablespoon of melted or softened  butter,  then the  sweet milk;  beat well; and lastly, add the stiffly-beaten  whites  of the three  eggs.  Bake in hot waffle iron. 
 
   "CRUMB" CORN CAKES  One pint of stale  bread crumbs  (not fine, dried crumbs), covered with 1 pint of  sour milk.  Let stand over night. In the morning add 1 tablespoon of  butter,   yolks of 2 eggs  and a little  salt,  1/2 teaspoon of salaratus (good measure), 3/4 cup of granulated  corn meal,  to which add a couple of tablespoons of  bread flour,  enough to fill up the cup. Stir all well together, add the 2 stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs  and drop with a tablespoon on a hot, greased griddle. Make the cakes small, as they do not turn quite as easily as do  buckwheat  cakes. This makes about two dozen cakes. These are good. 
 
   "GRANDMOTHER'S" RECIPE FOR  BUTTERMILK  WAFFLES  Mix to a smooth batter, 4 cups of  sour buttermilk,  5 cups of  flour,  and add 1 tablespoon of melted  butter,  1 teaspoon  salt,  1 tablespoon of  molasses.  Add the well-beaten  yolks of 3 eggs,  1 1/2 teaspoonfuls of  baking soda,  dissolved in a little  hot water.  Lastly, add the stiffly-beaten whiles of 3  eggs.  Place about 3 tablespoonfuls of the batter on hot, well-greased waffle irons. If  buttermilk  cannot be procured,  sour milk  may be used with good results, providing the  milk  is quite sour. From this quantity of batter may be made twelve waffles. Serve with  maple syrup  or  honey.  
 
    BREAD  GRIDDLE CAKES  To 1 pint of  sour milk  add about 3 slices of  stale bread  and allow the  bread  to soak in this mixture over night. In the morning beat up smoothly with 1  egg yolk,  1 teaspoonful of  soda,  a pinch of  salt  and enough  cornmeal  and  white flour,  in equal quantities,  tities, to make a moderately thin batter. Lastly, add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg,  bake on a hot griddle. Cakes should be small in size, as when baked cakes are less readily turned than other batter cakes. These cakes are economical and good. 
 
   NEVER FAIL "FLANNEL" CAKES   2 cups  thick sour milk  (quite sour).  2 tablespoonfuls  sweet milk.   1  egg.   1/2 teaspoonful  salt.   2 cups  flour.   1 teaspoonful  baking soda  (good measure).   Pour the  milk  in a bowl, add  yolk of egg.  Sift together  flour,   baking soda  and  salt,  four times. Beat all well together. Then add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg,  and bake at once on a hot griddle, using about two tablespoonfuls of the batter for a cake. Serve with  butter  and  maple syrup  or a substitute.  This recipe, given Mary by an old, reliable cook, was unfailing as to results, if recipe be closely followed. The cakes should be three-fourths of an inch thick, light as a feather, and inside, fine, like  bread,  not "doughy," as cakes baked from richer batters frequently are.  From this recipe was made eighteen cakes. 
 
   WAFFLES MADE FROM  SWEET MILK  AND  BAKING POWDER   Sift together 1 quart of  flour,  2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt.  Mix into a batter, a little thicker than for griddle cakes, with  sweet milk;  add  yolks of 3 eggs,  3 table-spoonfuls of melted  butter;  lastly, stir in lightly the 3 stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  Bake on a hot, well-greased waffle iron and serve with  maple syrup.  
 
   "BUCKS COUNTY"  BUCKWHEAT  CAKES  About 12 o'clock noon dissolve 1 cake of  yeast  (the small, round or square  cornmeal  cakes) in 1 pint of  lukewarm water.    Add to this 1 tablespoonful  wheat flour,  1 tablespoonful yellow  cornmeal,  and enough good  buckwheat flour  to make a thin batter. Set in a warm place near the range to rise. About 6 or 7 o'clock in the evening add this sponge to 1 quart and 1 pint of lukewarm  potato water  ( water  drained from boiled  potatoes ), 1 tablespoon-ful of mashed  potatoes  added improves the cakes; add  salt.  They need considerable. Stir in enough  buckwheat flour  to make quite a stiff batter, beat  hard  and set to rise, covered, in a warm place over night. The next morning add 1 teaspoonful salaratus, dissolved in a little  hot water;  1 tablespoonful of baking  molasses  and a little warm  milk,  to thin the batter; or  water  will answer. The batter should be thin enough to pour. Let stand a short time, then bake on a hot griddle. Half this quantity will be enough for a small family. Then use only 1/2 teaspoonful salaratus. Bake golden brown on hot griddle. Serve with  honey  or  maple syrup.  If this recipe for  buckwheat  cakes is followed, you should have good cakes, but much of their excellence depends on the  flour.  Buy a small quantity of  flour  and try it before investing in a large quantity, as you cannot make good cakes from a poor brand of  flour.  
 
   DELICIOUS CORN CAKES  One cup of  sweet milk  heated to boiling point; stir in 2 heaping tablespoonfuls yellow, granulated  cornmeal;  add a tablespoonful of  butter  or  lard  and  salt  to taste. As soon as the mixture has cooled, stir in 1 tablespoonful of  wheat flour.  If the batter should be too thick, stir in enough cold,  sweet milk  to make it run easily from the spoon. Add 1 heaping teaspoonful of Royal  baking powder.  Drop spoonfuls on hot, greased griddle, and bake. This quantity makes cakes enough to serve three people, about sixteen small cakes. This is an economical recipe, as no  eggs  are used. 
 
    RICE  WAFFLES (AS AUNT SARAH MADE THEM.)  Add 1 tablespoonful of  butter  and 1 tablespoonful  lard  to 1 cup of cold, boiled  rice;  2  yolks of eggs,  the  whites  beaten separately  and added last; 2 cups of  flour,  1 teaspoonful  salt  and 2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder,  sifted together; 1 teaspoonful of  sugar  and 1 teaspoonful of  molasses,  and enough  sweet milk  to make a thin batter. Bake in hot waffle irons. With these serve either  maple syrup  or a mixture of  sugar  and  cinnamon.  
 
   "GERMAN"  EGG -PANCAKES (NOT CHEAP)  These truly delicious pancakes were always baked by "Aunt Sarah" when  eggs  were most plentiful. For them she used, 1 cup  flour,  5 fresh  eggs,  1/2 cup  milk.   The  yolks of 5 eggs  were broken into a bowl and lightly beaten. Then  milk  and  flour  were added gradually to form a smooth batter. Lastly, the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs  were added. Large spoonfuls were dropped on a hot, well-greased griddle, forming small cakes, which were served as soon as baked. These cakes require no  baking powder.  Their lightness depends entirely on the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  
 
   "FRAU SCHMIDT'S" GRIDDLE CAKE RECIPE  The Professor's wife gave Mary this cheap and good recipe for griddle cakes: 1 pint of quite sour,  thick milk;  beat into this thoroughly 1 even teaspoon of  baking soda,  1/2 teaspoon each of  salt  and  sugar  and 2 cups of  flour,  to which had been added 1 tablespoon of granulated  cornmeal  and 1 rounded teaspoon of  baking powder  before sifting. No  eggs  were used by the Professor's wife in these cakes, but Mary always added  yolk of 1 egg  to the cakes when she baked them. 
 
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR "CORN CAKE"   1 cup of  white flour.   1/2 cup  cornmeal  (yellow granulated  cornmeal ).  1 cup of  sweet milk.   2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   1 tablespoonful  sugar.    1/2 teaspoonful  salt.  1 tablespoonful  lard.   1 tablespoonful  butter.  1  egg.   Sift together  flour,   salt  and  baking powder,   sugar,  and add 1/2 cup of granulated, yellow  cornmeal,  Mix with 1 cup  milk,  1 beaten  egg,  and the 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter  and  lard.  Beat thoroughly. Add a tablespoonful more of  flour  if not as stiff as ordinary cake batter. Pour in well-greased  bread  tin and bake about 40 minutes in a hot oven. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S DELICIOUS  CREAM BISCUITS   Place in a  flour  sifter 2 cups of  flour,  2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder,  1/2 teaspoonful of  salt  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  sugar.  Sift twice; stir together 1/2 cup of  sweet milk  and 1/2 cup of thick, sweet  cream.  Quickly mix all together, cutting through  flour  with a knife, until a soft dough is formed, mixing and handling as little as possible. Drop spoonfuls into warmed muffin tins and bake at once in a hot oven. Serve hot.  These are easily and quickly made, no  shortening  other than  cream  being used, and if directions are closely followed will be flakey  biscuits  when baked.  Aunt Sarah was always particular to use  pastry flour  when using  baking powder,  in preference to higher-priced " Hard  Spring  Wheat, " which she used only for the making of  bread  or raised cakes, in which  yeast  was used. 
 
   MARY'S MUFFINS   2 cups of  flour.   3 even teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.   2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar.   1 cup of  sweet milk.   2  eggs.   1 tablespoonful of  butter.    Sift  flour  and  baking powder  in a bowl; add 1 tablespoonful of  sugar  and a pinch of  salt;  add the 2  yolks of eggs  to the 1 cup of  milk,  and mix with the  flour  and  baking powder;  lastly, add the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  Place large spoonfuls of the batter  in small Gem pans. Bake in a hot oven 20 minutes. These muffins are fine. 
 
   CORN MUFFINS (AS MADE BY "FRAU SCHMIDT")   2  eggs.   1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar.   1 cup of granulated yellow  cornmeal.   1 1/2 cups of  sweet milk.   3 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.   1 tablespoonful melted  butter.   A pinch of  salt   Beat together  eggs  and  sugar,  add  milk  and  cornmeal  and the  white flour,  sifted, with  baking powder  and  salt;  add the 1 table-spoonful of melted  butter.  Bake 20 minutes in warmed, Gem pans, in a hot oven. Mary's Aunt taught her to utilize any leftover muffins by making a very appetizing pudding from them called " Indian  Sponge" Pudding, the recipe for which may be found among pudding recipes. 
 
    STRAWBERRY  SHORTCAKE (AS FRAU SCHMIDT MADE IT)   1 pint of Hour.  3 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.   2 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  butter  or  lard.   1  egg.   1/2 teaspoon of  salt.    Milk  or  water.   Sift together  flour,   baking powder  and  salt,  and cut  butter  or  lard  through the  flour.  Add 1 beaten  egg  to about 1 cup of  sweet milk,  and add gradually to the  flour,  cutting through it with a knife until a soft dough is formed, mixing and handling as little as possible. Divide the dough into two portions, roll out on Portion quickly and place on a large pie tin; spread the top of cake with softened (not melted)  butter,  lay the other cake on top and bake in a quick oven When baked and still hot, the cakes may be easily separated without cutting; when, place between layers,  and, if liked, on top of the cake, crushed, sweetened  strawberries.  "Frau" Schmidt thought a crushed  banana  added to the  strawberries  an improvement. Serve the hot shortcake with sweet  cream  and  sugar.   Or, the recipe for baking a plain (not rich) layer cake might be used instead of the above. When baked and cooled, spread between the layers the following:  To the stiffly-beaten  white of 1 egg,  add 1 cup of  sugar;  beat well. Then add 1 cup of crushed  strawberries.  Beat all together until the consistency of thick  cream.  Serve cold. 
 
   PERFECTION WAFFLES  Sift together 4 cups of  flour,  2 teaspoonfuls of  baking soda  and 1 teaspoonful of  salt,  four times.  Separate 3 fresh  eggs.  Place the  yolks  in an earthenware mixing bowl. Beat well with a spoon. Then add 3 1/2 cups of  sour milk  or  sour buttermilk  and 1/2 cup of  sour cream,  and 1 tea-spoonful of melted  butter.  Mix a smooth batter with the sifted  flour  and  soda.  Lastly, add the stiffly-beaten  whites of 3 eggs.  Mis the batter quickly and thoroughly. Bake on a hot, well-greased waffle iron and serve at once.  The waffles may be buttered as soon as baked and  sugar  sifted over, or a saucer containing a mixture of  cinnamon  and  sugar,  or a small jug of  maple syrup  may be served with them. Twelve waffles were made from this recipe. 
 
   RECIPE FOR MAKING " BAKING POWDER "  Sift together three times (through a fine sieve) 8 tablespoonfuls of  cream of tartar,  4 tablespoonfuls of  baking soda  (sala-ratus), 4 tablespoonfuls of  flour.   Cornstarch  may be substituted for  flour.  This latter ingredient is used to keep the  cream of tartar  and  soda  separate and dry, as  soda  is made from  salt  and will absorb moisture. This recipe for making a pure  baking powder  was given Mary by Frau Schmidt, who had used it for years with good results. 
  
   FRITTERS, CROQUETTES, DUMPLINGS AND CRULLERS  When cooking any article to be immersed in  fat  use about this proportion: 2 pounds of  sweet lard  to 1 of  suet,  which had been previously tried out. It is cheaper, also more wholesome, to use part  suet  than to use all  lard.  Save all pieces of left-over  fat,  either raw or cooked, from  steaks,  roasts,  bacon  or  ham.  Cut all up into small pieces and place in a pan in the oven until tried out, or put in a double boiler and stand over  boiling water  until  fat  is tried out. Strain and stand aside to be used as  drippings.  To clarify this  fat,  pour  boiling water  over, let cook a short time, strain and stand away in a cool place, when a cake of solid  fat  will form on top, which may be readily removed and used as  drippings,  or it may be added to the kettle of  fat  used for deep frying. Always strain  fat  carefully after frying croquettes, fritters, etc. Should the frying  fat  become dark add to the can of  soap fat  the economical housewife is saving. Return the clear-strained  fat  to the cook pot, cover carefully, stand aside in a cool place, and the strained  fat  may be used times without number for frying. The housewife will find it very little trouble to fry fritters, croquettes, etc., in deep  fat,  if the  fat  is always strained immediately after using, and returned to the cook pot, kept especially for this purpose. Stand on the hot range when required and the  fat  will heat in a few minutes, and if the  fat  is the right temperature, food cooked in it should not be at all greasy. When the housewife is planning to fry fritters or croquettes she should, if possible, crumb the articles to be fried several hours before frying, and stand aside to become perfectly cold. When the  fat  for frying is so hot a blue smoke arises, drop in the fritters or croquettes, one at a time, in order not to chill the  fat  or plunge a frying basket, containing only a couple of fritters at a time, in the hot  fat,  as too many placed in the  fat  at one time lowers the temperature too quickly and causes the fritters to be greasy and soggy. To test the  fat  before dropping in the fritters, if a small piece of  bread  is dropped in the  fat  and browns in about one minute the  fat  is the right tem-perature for frying fritters, and fritters fried at the correct tem-perature should be a rich brown and at all greasy. When removing fritters from hot  fat  place on coarse brown  paper  to absorb any remaining  fat.  Fritters composed of vegetables, or  oysters,  should be served on a platter garnished with  parsley,  and  fritters composed of  fruit,  should have pulverized  sugar  sifted over them liberally. Should a small piece of  bread  brown in the  fat  while you count twenty,  fat  is the correct temperature for frying croquettes, but is too hot for frying crullers or any food not previously cooked. 
 
   KARTOFFLE BALLA (POTATO BALLS)  Boil until tender, 8 medium-sized (not pared)  potatoes ; when quite cold remove parings and grate them; fry one finely-chopped  onion  in a little  butter  until a yellow-brown; add this, also 1  egg,  to the  potatoes , season with  salt  and  pepper  and add  flour  enough to mold into balls; use only  flour  enough to hold the mixture together. The chopped  onion  may be omitted, and instead, brown small, dice-like pieces of  bread  in a little  butter,  shape dumplings into balls the size of  walnuts,  place a teaspoonful of the browned  bread crumbs  in the centre of each and add also a little chopped  parsley.  Drop the dumplings in  salted boiling water  and cook uncovered from 15 to 20 minutes. When dumplings rise to the top they should be cooked sufficiently. when remove from kettle with a skimmer to a platter; cut dumplings in half and strew over them  bread crumbs,  browned in  butter.  
 
   "BOOVA SHENKEL"  For this excellent "Pennsylvania German" dish, which I am positive has never before been published, take 2 1/2 pounds of  stewing meat  ( beef  preferred), season with  salt  and  pepper  and cook slowly several hours until tender.  For the filling for the circles of dough, take 12 medium-sized  white potatoes , pared and thinly sliced, steamed until tender; then add  seasoning  to taste of  salt  and  pepper,  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  2 tablespoonfuls of finely-minced  parsley  and 1 finely-chopped  onion  (small); lastly, add 3  eggs,  lightly beaten together, to the mixture. Allow this to stand while the pastry is being prepared m the following manner:  Pastry-Sift into a bowl 2'/2 cups of  flour  2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  1 generous teaspoonful  of  lard  and 1 of  butter.  Cut through the  flour,  mix with  water  into a dough as for pie crust. Roll thin, cut into about ten circles, and spread some of the mixture on each circle of dough. Press two opposite edges together like small, three-cornered turnover pies; drop these on to the hot  meat  and  broth  in the cook pot, closely covered. Cook slowly from 20 to 30 minutes. Before serving the "Boova Shenkel" pour over the following:  Cut slices of  stale bread  into dice and brown in a pan containing 1 large tablespoonful of  butter  and a couple table spoonfuls of  fat  (which had been skimmed from top of  broth  before "Boova Shenkel" had been put in cook pot), add about 1/2 cup of  milk  to diced, browned  bread;  when hot, pour over the "Boova Shenkel" and serve with the  meat  on a large platter. 
 
    RICE  BALLS WITH  CHEESE   Place 2 cups of cold, boiled  rice,  well drained, in a bowl and add 1/2 cup of  grated cheese,  a little  salt,  1/4 cup  flour  and the stiffly-beaten  white of one egg.  Mix all together and mold into balls about the size of a small  egg.  with a little of the  flour;  then roll them in fine,  dried bread crumbs,  and stand away until perfectly cold. When preparing for lunch, beat the  yolk of the egg  with a little  milk,  dip the  rice  balls into this, then into fine,  dried bread crumbs,  drop in deep  fat  and fry a golden brown. Drain on brown  paper  and serve, garnished with  parsley.  
 
   "KARTOFFLE KLOSE"  One quart of cold boiled, skinned  potatoes , grated. (Boil without paring the day before they are to be used, if possible.) Put into a frying-pan 1 tablespoonful of  butter,  1 finely-minced  onion  (small  onion ), and fry until a light brown. Remove from fire and mix with this: 2 heaped tablespoonfuls  flour,  1 tablespoonful of finely-cut  parsley.  2  eggs  ( whites  beaten separately), and 2 slices of  bread,  cut fine. Add grated  potatoes  and bread crumbs, alternately mixing together lightly with a fork; add the other ingredients, season well with  salt  and  pepper,  form into round balls the size of a  walnut  and drop into a stew-pan of boiling.    Salted water,  containing a teaspoon of butler. Do not cover the stew-pan while they are cooking. As soon as the dumplings rise to the top, skim one out and cut in half to see if it is cooked through. They should take from 15 to 20 minutes to cook. Skim out of the  boiling water  on a platter. Cut each dumpling in half, pour over them  bread crumbs  browned in a pan containing a little  lard  and  butter,  and serve. The  onion  may be omitted and only finely-chopped  parsley  used, if desired, or use both. Or place the halved dumplings in pan containing a little  lard  and  butter  and chopped  onion  (if the latter is liked), and brown on each side, then serve. 
 
    RICE  CROQUETTES (AND  LEMON SAUCE )  Boil 1 cup of well-washed  rice  in 6 or 8 cups of rapidly- boiling water,  until tender. The  rice,  when cooked and drained, should fill 3 cups. Prepare a  cream sauce  of 1 pint of  milk,  3 heaping tablespoonfuls of  flour  and 2 tablespoons of  butter  and 2  egg yolks.  Stir in 3 cups of flaky, cooked  rice,  while  rice  is still hot. When the mixture has cooled, mold into small cone shapes with the hands, stand aside until perfectly cold. Dip the croquettes into the whiles of  eggs,  then roll them in fine,  dried bread crumbs  and fry in deep  fat.  If a cube of  bread  browns in the  fat  in a little longer time than a half minute, the  fat  is the right temperature. Eighteen croquettes were made from this quantity of  rice.    Lemon Sauce -To serve with  rice  croquettes,  cream  together 1/2 cup of  sugar,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,  1  egg,  2 cups of  boiling water  was added and all cooked together until the mixture thickened. When cooled slightly add the  juice  and grated  rind  of one  lemon.  Serve in a separate bowl, and pass with the croquettes. 
 
    CORN OYSTERS   Slice off tips of kernels from cobs of corn and scrape down corn-pulp from  cobb  with a knife. To 1 pint of  pulp  add 2  eggs,  2 heaping tablespoonfuls of  flour,  1/2 teaspoonful of  salt  and a pinch 0f  cayenne pepper  and of  black pepper;  add the 2  yolks  of   eggs,  then stir in lightly the stiffly-beaten  white of eggs  and  flour.  Fry in only enough  butter  to prevent them sticking to the pan. Drop into pan by spoonfuls size of an ordinary fried  oyster,  brown on both sides and serve hot. 
 
    BANANA  FRITTERS  From one  banana  was made 4 fritters. The  banana  was halved, cut lengthwise and then cut crosswise. The batter will do for all  fruits,   clams,   corn or oysters.  Make a  sauce  of the liquor, mixed with same quantity of  milk,  with a tablespoon of  butter  added, chopped  parsley  and  flour  to thicken. When making  oyster  or  clam  fritters use same rule as for  fruit  fritters, using  clam juice  and  milk  instead of all  milk.   For the "fritter batter" sift together 1 pint of  flour,  2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder  and a pinch of  salt.  Stir slowly into it a pint of  milk,  then the well-beaten  yolks of 3 eggs,  and, lastly, the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  Beat  hard  for a few minutes and fry at once in smoking hot  fat.   Orange  sections make delicious fritters, or halves of fresh or canned  peaches  may be used.  Allow the  bananas  to stand one-quarter hour in a dish containing a small quantity of  lemon juice  and  sugar  before putting them in the batter. Lay the slices of  bananas  or sections of  orange  in the batter, then take up a tablespoonful of the batter with one slice of  banana  for each fritter, drop into hot  fat  one at a time,and fry a golden brown. Sift pulverized  sugar  over and serve hot. If a small piece of  bread  browns in one minute in the  fat  it is the right temperature to fry any previously uncooked food. 
 
    PARSNIP  FRITTERS  Scape and boil 5 or 6  parsnips  in  salted water  until tender and drain. If old  parsnips,  cut out the centre, as it is tough and woody. Mash  parsnips  fine, add 1  egg yolk  ( white  beaten separately), and added last a little  salt,  1 large tablespoonful  flour,  1/4 teaspoonful  baking powder,  mold into small cakes, dredge with  flour,  and fry quickly to a golden brown in a tablespoonful of  butter  and one of  drippings.  Serve at once. 
  
   AUNT SARAH'S "SCHNITZ AND KNOPF"  This is an old-fashioned "Pennsylvania German" favorite. The end of a  ham bone,  containing a very little  meat,  was placed in a large kettle with a small quantity of  water,  with "Schnitz," or sliced, sweet,  dried apples,  which had been dried without removing the parings. When the  apples  were cooked tender in the  ham broth;  dumplings, composed of the following, were lightly dropped on top of the  apples  and  broth  and cooked, closely covered, from 15 to 20 minutes. Do not uncover kettle the first ten minutes. When dumplings have cooked place them with the "Schnitz" on a large platter, and serve at once. 
 
   A VERY OLD RECIPE FOR DUMPLINGS, OR "KNOPF"  One and one-half quarts of  flour  was sifted with 2 1/2 table-spoonfuls of Royal  baking powder,  1 teaspoonful of  butter  was cut through the  flour  in small bits, 1  egg  was beaten and enough  milk  or  water  added to the  egg  to mix the  flour  into quite a soft dough. Sometimes instead of molding the dough into balls large spoonfuls were placed over the  apples.  Aunt Sarah had used this recipe for many years. This is a very old recipe, and from it was made a larger quantity than ordinary housekeepers usually require. Half the quantity, about 1 1/2 pints of  flour  to 1 1/4 tablespoonfuls of  baking powder,  mixed according to the directions given in the first part of recipe, would be about the correct proportions for a family of ordinary size.  Aunt Sarah frequently substituted  sour cherries  and a teaspoonful of  butter  was added instead of  ham  and "Schnitz." Dumplings prepared from this recipe may be dropped on stewed  chicken  and  broth  and cooked or steamed make an excellent pot-pie. Should there be more dough mixed than required for dumpings, place a panful in the oven and bake as  biscuits.  More  baking powder  is required when dough is steamed or boiled than when baked in the oven. 
 
   "KARTOFFLE KUKLEIN" (POTATO FRITTERS OR BOOFERS)  Place in a bowl 2 cups grated, pared, raw  potatoes ; drain  off any liquid formed, then add 1 small  onion,  also grated-1 large  egg  or 2 small  eggs,   salt  and  pepper,  1 tablespoonful chopped  parsley,  1/4 teaspoonful  baking powder  (good measure), and a couple tablespoonfuls of  flour  to thicken just enough to make the fritters hold together; then drop by spoonfuls in deep, hot  fat,  and fry a rich brown. The fritters form into odd shapes a trifle larger than a fried  oyster,  when dropped in the  fat.   Should the fritter batter separate when dropped in the  fat,  add more  flour,  but if too much  flour  is added they are not as good as when a lesser quantity is used. Drain the fritters on brown  paper  and garnish the platter upon which they are served with  parsley.  Mary's Uncle was very fond of these fritters. He preferred them to fried  oysters,  and always called them " potato  hoofers." I would not answer for the wholesomeness of these fritters. In fact, I do not think any fried food particularly wholesome. 
 
   ROSETTES, WAFERS AND ROSENKUCHEN (AS MANY BY FRAU SCHMIDT)  Prepare a batter from the following:  1 cup of  sweet milk.   2  eggs.   Pinch of  salt.   1 cup of  flour,  good measure.    Gradually mix the  flour  with the  milk  to form a smooth batter, free from lumps. Add  yolks,  then the slightly-beaten  whites of eggs.  Fasten the long handle to a wafer iron, shaped like a cup or saucer, and stand it in hot  fat,  a mixture of 2/3  lard  and 1/3  suet,  or  oil;  when heated, remove at once, and dip quickly into the batter, not allowing the batter to come over top of the wafer iron, and in about 25 or 30 seconds the wafer should be lightly browned, when the wafer may be easily removed from the iron on to a piece of brown  paper  to absorb any  fat  which may remain. This amount of batter should make about forty wafers. On these wafers may be served creamed  oysters,  vegetables,  chicken  or  fruit.  When using the wafers as a foundation on which to serve  fruit,   whipped cream  is a dainty adjunct. One teaspoonful of   sugar  should then be added to the wafer batter. These wafers may be kept several weeks, when by simply placing them in a hot oven a minute before serving they will be almost as good as when freshly cooked. Or the wafers may be served as a fritter by sifting over them pulverized  sugar  and  cinnamon.  
 
   "BAIRISCHE DAMPFNUDELN"  These delicious Bavarian steamed dumplings are made in this manner: I cake of Fleischman's compressed  yeast  was dissolved in a cup of lukewarm  milk,  sift 1 pint of  flour  into a bowl, add 1 teaspoonful of  sugar  and 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  Mix the  flour  with another cup of lukewarm  milk,  1  egg  and* the dissolved  yeast cake  and  milk  (two cups of  milk  were used altogether). Work all together thoroughly, adding gradually about 1 1/2 cups of  flour  to form a soft dough. Do not mix it too stiff. Cover the bowl with a cloth; stand in a warm place until it has doubled the original bulk.  Flour  the  bread  board and turn out dough and mold into small  biscuits  or dumplings. Let these rise for half an hour,  butter  a pudding pan and place dumplings in it, brushing tops with melted  butter.  Pour  milk  in the pan around the dumplings to about two-thirds the depth of the dumplings; set pan on inverted pie tin in oven and bake a light brown. Serve with any desired  sauce  or stewed  fruit.  Or, after the shaped dough has raised, drop it in a large pot of slightly- salted boiling water,  allowing plenty of room for them to swell and puff up, and boil continuously, closely covered, for 20 minutes. This quantity makes about 30 small dumplings. Should you not wish so many, half the quantity might be molded out, placed in a greased pie tin, and when light, which takes half an hour, bake in a moderately hot oven, and you will have light  biscuits  for lunch.  The thrifty German Hausfraus make fritters of everything imaginable, and sometimes unimaginable. Mary was told one day by a German neighbor how she prepared a fritter she called 
 
    "HELLER BLUTHER KUKLEIN"  She gathered  elderberry  blossoms, rinsed off the dust, and  when free from moisture dipped the blossoms into fritter batter, holding the stem ends, then dropped them into hot  fat,  and when golden brown, drained a minute on coarse, brown  paper  before serving, dusted them with  powdered sugar;   cinnamon  may also be dusted over if liked. Mary pronounced them "fine" after tasteing, and said: "They certainly are a novelty." Perhaps something like this suggested the Rosette Iron, as it is somewhat similar. 
 
   APYL KUKLEIN ( APPLE  FRITTERS)  Pare and core 4 large  tart apples.  Cut each  apple  into about round slices and allow the sliced  apples  to lie a couple of hours in a dish containing 2 tablespoonfuls of  brandy,  mixed with a half teaspoonful of  cinnamon  and a half teaspoonful of  sugar.  Drain the sliced  apples,  then a few at a time should be dropped in the fol-owing hatter, composed of: 1 cup of  flour  sifted with 1/2  tea -poonful of Royal  baking powder,  1/4 teaspoonful of  salt,  add the  yolks of 2 eggs  and 1 cup of  milk  to form a smooth batter, then add the stiffly-beaten  whites of Eggs.  Fry light brown, in deep, hot at, and sift over  powdered sugar.  "Fried  Apples " are an appetizing garnish for  pork  chops; the  apples  should be cored, 
 not pared , but should be sliced, and when cut the slices should resemble round circles, with holes in the centre. Allow the sliced  apples  to remain a short time in a mixture of  cinnamon  and  brandy,  dry on a napkin, and fry in a pan, containing a couple of tablespoonfuls of sweet  drippings  and  butter.  
 
   DUMPLINGS MADE FROM " BREAD  SPONGE"  Aunt Sarah's raised dumplings from  bread  sponge were greatly relished at the farm.  When  bread  sponge, which had been set to rise early in the morning, and all  flour  necessary for loaves of  bread  had been added and loaves were being shaped to place in  bread  tins, Aunt Sarah reserved an amount of sponge sufficient for one loaf of  bread,  added a little extra  salt,  shaped them into small balls, size of a  lemon,  placed them on a well- flour ed board some distance apart to raise; when light (at 12 o'clock, if the dinner hour was 12.20),  she carefully dropped the light balls of dough into a large pot of rapidly boiling, slightly  salted water,  covered closely, and boiled about 20 minutes. (Do not have more than one layer of the dumplings in cook pot, and do not place too close together; allow room for them to expand.)  Test by tearing one apart with a fork. Serve at once, and serve with a roast, to be eaten with  gravy,  with  butter,  or they may be eaten as a dessert, with  jelly  or  maple syrup.   Aunt Sarah frequently added an equal quantity of fine,  dried bread crumbs  and  flour  and a little extra  salt  to a thin batter of  bread  sponge (before all the  flour  required for  bread  had been added), made about as stiff a dough as for ordinary loaves of  bread  ; molded them into balls. When sufficiently raised, boiled them either in  water  or  meat broth  in the same manner as she prepared dumplings ; made 
 only of  flour  .  This is a small economy, using 
  bread crumbs   in place of four, and these are delicious if prepared according to directions. Remember to have a large quantity of rapidly  boiling water  in which to cook the dumplings, not to allow  water  to stop boiling an instant and to keep cook pot closely covered for 20 minutes before removing one, and breaking apart to see if cooked through. These are particularly nice served with stewed  apricots.  
 
   "LEBER KLOSE" OR  LIVER  DUMPLINGS  Boil a good-sized  soup bone  for several hours in plenty of  water,  to which add  salt  and  pepper  to taste and several small pieces of  celery  and sprigs of  parsley  to flavor  stock.  Strain the  broth  or  stock  into a good-sized cook pot and set on stove to keep hot.  For the  liver  dumplings, scrape a half pound of raw  beef liver  with a knife, until fine and free from all veins, etc. Place the scraped  liver  in a large bowl, cut three or four good-sized  onions  into dice, fry a light brown, in a pan containing 1 tablespoonful of  lard  and  butter  mixed. Cut into dice 3/4 to a whole loaf of  bread  (about 2 quarts). Beat 2  eggs  together. add 1 cup of  sweet milk,  season well with  salt  and  pepper,  and mix all together with 1 large cup of  flour.  If not moist enough to form into balls when mixed together, add more  milk.  Keep the mixture as soft as possible  or the dumplings will be heavy.  Flour  the hands when shaping the balls, which should be the size of a shelled  walnut . Stand the pot containing  stock  on the front of the stove, where it will boil, and when boiling, drop In the dumplings and boil, uncovered, for 15 minutes. When cooked, take the dumplings carefully from the  stock  on to a large platter, pour the  stock  over the dumplings and serve.  These are excellent, but a little troublesome to make. One-half this quantity would serve a small family for lunch. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S "OLD RECIPE FOR SCHNIT2 AND KNOPF"  Place a cook pot on the range, containing the end piece of a small  ham;  partly cover with  water.  This should be done about three hours before serving, changing the  water  once. Soak sweet, unpared, sliced,  dried apples  over night in  cold water.  In the morning cook the  dried apples  (or schnitz) in a small quantity of the  ham broth,  in a separate stew-pan, until tender. Remove  ham  from  broth  one-half hour before serving. Sweeten the  broth  with a small quantity of  brown sugar,  and when the  broth  commences to boil add raised dumplings of dough, which had been shaped with the hands into round balls about the size of an ordinary  biscuit.  Cook 25 minutes. Do not uncover the cook-pot after the dumplings have been dropped into the  broth  until they have cooked the required length of time. When the dumplings have cooked a sufficient time carefully remove to a warm platter containing the cooked  apple  schnitz. Thicken the  broth  remaining with a little  flour,  to the consistency of  cream.  Pour over the dumplings and serve at once.  Dumplings-At 9.30 in the evening set a sponge consisting of 1 cup of lukewarm  milk  1 tablespoonful  sugar,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,  1  egg,  3/4 of an  yeast cake,  add  flour  enough to form a sponge (as stiff as may be stirred with a mixing spoon). Set to raise in a warm place over night. In the morning add more  flour  to the risen sponge until nearly as stiff as for  bread.  Form into round dumplings place on a well- flour ed bakeboard to rise slowly. Twenty-five minutes before serving drop dumplings into the hot  broth  in a large cook-pot.   There should be only one layer of dumplings, otherwise they will be heavy. 
  
   "BROD KNODEL," OR  BREAD  DUMPLINGS   3 cups of  stale bread  (cut like dice).  3/4 cup of  flour.   1/2 teaspoonful  baking powder.   3/4 cup  milk.   2 tablespoonfuls  butter.   1  egg.   1 teaspoonful of finely-rninced  parsley.   1/2 teaspoonful finely-minced  onion  (if liked).  Pinch of  salt.   Place two cups of diced  bread  in a bowl and pour over 3/4 cup of  milk.  (Reserve 1 cup of diced  bread,  which brown in 1 tablespoonful of  butter,  to be added to the mixture later.) Allow  milk  and  bread  to stand 10 or 15 minutes; then add I tablespoonful of melted  butter,  1  egg,   flour  and  baking powder,  and  salt;  fried, diced  bread  and  parsley,  and mix all together. With well- flour ed hands form the mixture into balls size of a  walnut,  and drop at once into rapidly boiling  salted water  and cook 15 minutes. Stew pan should be closely covered. When cooked, remove to lings into a pan containing 1 tablespoonful of melted  butter,  and brown on all sides before serving. 
 
   "GERMAN" POT PIE  To serve a family of six or seven, place 2 pounds of  beef  and 4  pork  chops, cut in small pieces, in a cook-pot. Season with a little chopped  onion,   pepper  and  salt.  This should be done about three or four hours before dinner. One hour before serving prepare the dough for pot pie. Pare  white potatoes , slice and dry on a napkin, sift 2 cups of  flour  with 1 teaspoonful of  baking powder,  pinch of  salt,  cut through the sifted  flour,  1 level tablespoonful of  shortening.  Moisten dough with 1  egg  and enough  milk  to make dough stiff enough to handle. (Almost 1 cup of  milk,  including the  egg. ) Cut off a small piece of dough, size of a small teacup, roll thin and take up plenty of  flour  on both sides. Take up all  flour  possible. Cut this dough into four portions or squares. Have the  meat  more than covered with  water,  as  water  cooks away.   Place a layer of  potatoes  on meat (well seasoned), then the pared  potatoes  and small pieces of dough alternately, never allowing pieces of dough to lap; place  potatoes  between. Roll the last layer out in one piece, size of a pie plate, and cover top layer of  potatoes  with it. Cover closely and cook three-quarters of an hour from the time it commences to boil. Then turn out carefully on a platter and serve at once. 
 
   "ZWETCHEN DAMPFNUDELN" ( PRUNE  DUMPLINGS)  In the evening a sponge was prepared with  yeast  for  bread.  All the  flour  required to stiffen the dough for loaves of  bread  being added at this time. The  bread  sponge was stood in a warm place to rise over night. In the morning, when shaping the dough into loaves, stand aside about one pint of the  bread  dough. Later in the morning form the pint of dough into small balls or dump-place until doubled in size. Then drop the dumplings into a cook pot containing stewed  prunes,  a small quantity of  water,  a little  sugar  and  lemon peel,  if liked. The  dried prunes  had been soaked over night in  cold water,  and allowed to simmer on the range in the morning. The  prune juice  should be hot when the dumplings are added. Cook dumplings one-half hour in a closely covered cook-pot and turn out carefully on to a warmed platter, surrounded by  prune juice  and  prunes.  
 
   GREEN CORN FRITTERS  Grate  pulp  from six  ears of corn  ; with a knife scrape down the  pulp  into a bowl, add 2  eggs,  beaten separately, a couple table-spoonfuls of  milk,  1 large tablespoonful of  flour,  1/4 teaspoonful of  baking powder  and a pinch of  salt.  Drop with a spoon on a well-greased griddle. The cakes should be the size of a silver half dollar. Bake brown on either side and serve hot. These should not be fried as quickly as griddle cakes are fried, as the  corn  might then not be thoroughly cooked. 
  
   "MOULDASHA" ( PARSLEY  PIES)  Mash and season with  butter  and  salt  half a dozen boiled  white potatoes , add a little grated  onion  and chopped  parsley.  Sift together in a bowl 1 cup of  flour,  I teaspoonful  baking powder  and a little  salt.  Add a small quantity of  milk  to one  egg  if not enough liquid to mix into a soft dough. Roll out like pie crust, handling as little as possible. Cut into small squares, fill with the  potato  mixture, turn opposite corners over and pinch together all around like small, three-cornered pies. Drop the small triangular pies into boiling,  salted water  a few minutes, or until they rise to top; then skim out and brown them in a pan containing a tablespoonful each of  butter  and  lard.  I have known some Germans who called these "Garden Birds." Stale  bread crumbs,  browned in  butter,  may be sprinkled over these pies when served. Serve hot.   These are really pot pie or dumplings with  potato  filling. Mary's Aunt always called these "Mouldasha." Where she obtained the name or what its meaning is, the waiter is unable to say. 
 
   INEXPENSIVE FROP CRULLERS   Cream  together 1 cup  sugar  and 1  egg,  then add one cup of  milk  alternately with 2 cups of  flour,  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Add 1/2 teaspoonful of  vanilla  and enough  flour  to make a stiff batter.  Take about 1/2 a teaspoonful of the batter at a time and drop into boiling hot  fat,  and brown on both sides; then drain on coarse, brown  paper  and, when cool, dust with pulverized  sugar.   These cakes are cheap and good, and as no  shortening  is used arc not rich. Do not make cakes too large as they then will not cook through readily. 
 
   BATTER BAKED WITH  GRAVY   The Professor's wife gave Mary this recipe, given her by an Englishwoman. The recipe was liked by her family, being both economical and good. When serving  roast beef  for dinner, before thickening the  gravy,  take out about half a cup of liquid from the pan and stand in a cool place until the day following. Reheat  the roast remaining from previous day, pour the half cup of liquid in an iron fry pan, and when hot pour the following hatter in the pan with the  fat  and bake in a moderately hot oven about 25 minutes. Or the batter may be poured in pan about 25 minutes before  meat  has finished roasting.  The batter was composed of 1 cup of  flour,  sifted with 1 small teaspoonful of  baking powder  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  mixed smooth with 1 cup of  sweet milk.  Add 2 well-beaten  eggs.  When baked cut in small pieces, surround the  meat  on platter, serve instead of  potatoes  with roast. The addition of baked dough extends the  meat  flavor and makes possible the serving of a smaller amount of  meat  at a meal. 
 
   "GERMAN"  SOUR CREAM  CRULLERS  One cup  sugar,  1 cup  sour cream,  2  eggs,  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  1 teaspoonful  soda,  pinch of  salt.  About 3 1/2 cups of  flour.  (Use extra  flour  to dredge the bakeboard when rolling out crullers.) This is a very good recipe for crullers, in which the economical housewife may use the cup of  cream  which has turned sour. This necessitates using less  shortening,  which otherwise would be required.  Cream  together  sugar,   butter,  add  yolks of eggs.  Dissolve the  soda  in a small quantity of  sour cream.  Mix  cream  alternately with the  flour.  Add pinch of  salt.  Add just enough  flour  to roll out. Cut with small doughnut cutter with hole in centre. Fry in hot  fat.  Dust with pulverized  sugar.  
 
   "GRANDMOTHER'S" DOUGHNUTS   Cream  together 1 cup  sugar  and 2 teaspoonfuls  butter,  1/2 a grated  nutmeg,  and a pinch of  salt.  Add 2  eggs,  beaten without separating  yolks  from  whites,  and 1 cup of  sweet milk.  Then add 4 cups of  flour  (or 1 quart), prepared as follows: Measure quart of unsifted  flour  and sift twice with 2 generous teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Use this to thicken the batter sufficiently to roll out and use about 1 extra cup of  flour  to  flour  the bakeboard. Turn out one-half the quantity of dough on to a half cup of  flour  on the bakeboard. Roll out dough half an inch thick. Cut out  with round cutter, with hole in centre, and drop into deep, hot  fat.  Use 2/3  lard  and 1/3  suet  for deep frying; it is cheaper and more wholesome than to use all  lard.  When  fat  is hot enough to brown a small piece of  bread white  you count 60, it is the correct temperature for doughnuts. The dough should be as soft as can be handled. When cakes arc a rich brown, take from  fat,  drain well on coarse, brown  paper,  and when cool dust with pulverized  sugar  and place in a covered stone jar. Never use  fat  as hot for frying doughnuts as that used for frying croquettes, but should the  fat  not be hot the doughnuts would be greasy. These doughnuts are excellent if made according to recipe. 
 
   FINE "DROP CRULLERS"   Cream  together 1 1/2 cups pulverized  sugar,  3  eggs,  add 1 cup  sweet milk,  1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  3 1/2 cups of  flour,  sifted after measuring with 2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Drop teaspoon-fuls of this carefully into boiling  fat.   They should resemble small balls when fried. Batter must not be too stiff, but about the consistency of a cup-cake batter.  Roll them in a mixture of  cinnamon  and  sugar  when all have been fried. 
 
  SOUPS AND CHOWDERS  Stock is the basis of all soups made from meat, and is really the juice of the meat extracted by long and gentle simmering. In making stock for soup always use an agate or porcelain-lined stock pot. Use one quart of cold water to each pound of meat and bone. Use cheap cuts of meat for soup stock Excellent stock may be made from bones and trimmings of meat and poultry. Wash soup bones and stewing meat quickly in cold water. Never allow a roast or piece of stewing meat to lie for a second in water. Aunt Sarah did not think that wiping meat with a damp cloth was all that was necessary (although many wise and good cooks to the contrary). Place meat and soup bones in a stock pot, pour over the requisite amount of soft, cold water to extract the juice and nutritive quality of the meat; allow it to come to a  boil, then stand back on the range, where it will just simmer for 3 or 4 hour, Then add a sliced onion, several sprigs of parsley, small pieces of chopped celery tops, well-scraped roots of celery, and allow to simmer three-quarters of an hour longer. Season well with salt and pepper, 1 level teaspoonful of salt will season 1 quart of soup. Strain through a fine sieve, stand aside, and when cool remove from top the solid cake of fat which had formed and use for frying after it has been clarified. It is surprising to know the variety of soups made possible by the addition of a small quantity of vegetables or cereals to stock. A couple tablespoonfuls of rice or barley added to well-seasoned stock and you have rice or barley soup. A small quantity of stewed, sweet corn or noodles, frequently "left-overs," finely diced or grated carrots, the half can of tomatoes, a "left-over" from dinner, add a table-spoonful of butter, a seasoning of salt and pepper, thicken to a creamy consistency with a little cornstarch, add to cup of soup stock, serve with croutons of bread or crackers, and you have an appetizing addition to dinner or lunch.  The possibilities for utilizing left-overs are almost endless. The economically-inclined housewife will be surprised to find how easily she may add to the stock pot by adding left-over undesirable pieces of meat and small quantities of vegetables. One or two spoonfuls of cold left-over oatmeal may also be added to soup with advantage, occasionally. Always remove the cake of fat which forms on top of soup as soon as cooled, as soup will turn sour more quickly if it is allowed to remain. If soup stock be kept several days in summer lime, heat it each day to prevent souring. Pieces of celery onion, parsley, beans and peas may all be added to soup to make it more palatable. Also fine noodles. The yolk of a hard-boiled egg dropped into the soup kettle and heated through, allowing one for each plate of soup served, is a quick and appetizing addition to a soup of plain broth or consomme. 
 
   VEGETABLE SOUP  Slice thinly 3  potatoes , 3  carrots,  3  turnips,  the undesirable parts of 2  heads of celery,  2 stalks of  parsley  and 3  onions.  Look the  onions  in a little  butter  until they turn a yellow brown, then  add the other ingredients. Season well with  salt  and  black pepper,  also a pinch of  red pepper.  Put all together in a stew-pan, cover with three quarts of  water,  stand on range and simmer about three hours. Strain soup into stew-pan, place on range, and when hot add Marklose Balls. 
 
   MARKLOSE BALLS  Take  marrow  from uncooked  beef soup bones,  enough to fill 2 tablespoons, cut fine, add 2  eggs,  1 teaspoonful grated  onion  to flavor,  pepper  and  salt,  stiffen with 1 cup of  bread crumbs,  shape into balls size of marbles, drop into hot  broth  and cook uncovered from 15 to 20 minutes.  Aunt Sarah purchased two good-sized  soup bones  containing considerable  meat.  After extracting 2 tablespoonfuls of  marrow  from the uncooked  bones,  she put the  bones  in a stew-pan with a couple of quarts of  water,  a large  onion,  chopped fine, and a piece of  celery,  and cooked for several hours, then skimmed off scum which arises on top of  broth,  removed the  soup bones  and  meat  and added a couple of tablespoonfuls of grated  carrot,   pepper  and  salt  to taste, cooked a short time, and then added the  marrow  halls, a little chopped  parsley  and a couple of tablespoonfuls of boiled  rice.  Two tablespoonfuls of  marrow  will make about 15 balls, with the addition of crumbs,  eggs,  etc. 
 
    EGG BALLS  FOR SOUP  Mash the  yolks  of 2  hard-boiled eggs  fine and smooth with a little soft  butter.  Beat the  white of 1 egg,  and add with about 2 tablespoonfuls of  flour,   salt  and  pepper.  Mix all together. Use a little  flour  to mold the mixture into balls the size of quite small marbles. Do not make too stiff. Drop these into hot  broth  or soup and cook about five minutes. This quantity will make 12 small balls. 
 
   "SUPPEE SCHWANGEN"  Mary was taught to make these by the Professor's wife. She  beat together either 1 or 2  raw eggs,  1/2 cup  flour,  1 tablespoonful  butter,  a little  salt,  and just enough  milk  to thin the mixture enough so it may be dropped by half teaspoonfuls into hot soup  stock  or  broth.  Cook these small dumplings about 10 minutes. Serve in soup  broth.  
 
    CREAM of OYSTER  BOUILLON  Put two dozen  oysters  through food chopper, cook  oyster liquor  and  oysters  together five minutes, heat 1 pint  milk  and 1 tablespoon  flour,  mixed smooth with a little  cold milk,  and 1 table-spoonful  butter.  Let come to a boil, watching carefully that it does not burn. Pour alll together when ready to serve. Serve in bouillon cups with  crackers.  This recipe was given Mary by a friend in Philadelphia, who thought it unexcelled. 
 
   GERMAN NOODLE SOUP  Place about 3 pounds of cheap  stewing beef  in a cook-pot with sufficient  water  and cook several hours, until  meat  is quite tender; season with  salt  and  pepper.  About an hour before serving chop fine 3 medium-sized  potatoes  and 2  onions  and cook in  broth  until tender. Ten or fifteen minutes before serving add noodle.  To prepare noodles, break 2 fresh  eggs  in a bowl, fill 1/2 an  egg  shell with  cold water,  add the  eggs,  and mix with  flour  stiff as can conveniently be handled. Add a little  salt  to  flour.  Divide dough into sheets, roll on bakeboard, spread on cloth short time and let dry, but not until too brittle to roll into long, narrow rolls. Cut this with a sharp knife into thin, thread-like slices, unroll, drop as many as wished into the stew-pan with the  meat  and cook about 10 or 15 minutes. Place the  meat  on platter and serve the remainder in soup plates. The remaining noodles (not cooked) may be unrolled and dried and later cooked in boiling  salted water  drained and placed in a dish and brown  butter,  containing a few soft, browned crumbs, poured over them when served. The very fine noodles are generally served with soup and the broad or medium-sized ones served with brown   butter.  Germans usually serve with a dish of noodles, either stewed,  dried prunes,  or stewed  raisins.  Both are palatable and healthful. 
 
    CREAM of CELERY   Cook 1 large stalk of  celery,  also the root cut up in dice, in 1 pint of  water,  1/2 hour or longer. Mash  celery  and put through a fine sieve. Add 1 pint of scalded  milk,  and thicken with a tablespoonful of  flour,  mixed with a little  cold milk.  Add 2 table-spoonfuls of  butter,   pepper  and  salt,  and simmer a few minutes. Just before serving add a cup of  whipped cream.  Serve with the soup, small "croutons" of  bread.  
 
    OYSTER  STEW  Rinse a stew-pan with  cold water,  then put in 1 pint of  milk  and let come to a boil. Heat 15  oysters  in a little  oyster liquor  a few minutes, until the  oysters  curl up around the edges, then add the  oysters  to one-half the hot  milk,  add a large tablespoonful of  butter,  season well with  salt  and  pepper,  and when serving the stew add the half pint of boiling hot rnilk remaining. This quantity makes two small stews. Serve  crackers  and  pickled cabbage.  When possible use a mixture of sweet  cream  and  milk  for an  oyster  stew instead of all  milk.  An old cook told Mary she always moistened half a teaspoonful of  cornstarch  and added to the stew just before removing from the range to cause it to have a creamy consistency. 
 
    CLAM BROTH    Clam broth  may be digested usually by the most delicate stomach. It can he bought in cans, but the young housewife may like to know how to prepare it herself. Strain the  juice  from one-half dozen  clams  and save. Remove objectionable parts from  clams,  cut in small pieces, add 1/2 pint of  cold water  and the  clam juice,  let cook slowly about 10 minutes strain and season with  pepper  and  salt,  a little  butter  and  milk,  and serve hot. 
  
    TURKEY  SOUP  Take broken-up  bones  and undesirable pieces of  roast turkey  such as  neck,   wings  and left-over pieces of  bread  filling, put in stew-pot, cover with  water,  add pieces of  celery,  sliced  onion  and  parsley,  cook several hours, strain, and to the strained liquor add a couple tablespoonfuls of boiled  rice,  season with  salt  and  pepper  and serve. Some of the  cold turkey  might also be cut in small pieces and added to the soup. 
 
    CREAM of PEA  SOUP  Cook quarter peck of  green peas  until very lender, reserve one-half cup, press the remainder through a sieve with the  water  in which they were boiled. Season with  salt  and  pepper.  Mix 1 table spoonful of  flour,  1 tablespoonful of  butter  with 1 cup of hot  milk.  Mix  flour  smooth with a little  cold milk  before heating it. Cook all together a few minutes, then add the one cup of  peas  reserved. If soup is too thick add a small quantity of  milk  or  water.  
 
    TOMATO  SOUP  One quart of canned  tomatoes,  1 tablespoonful  sugar,  1  onion,  and a sprig of  parsley,  cut fine, and 1  carrot  and 2  cloves.  Stew until soft enough to mash through a fine, wire sieve. Place one quart of  sweet milk  on the stove to boil. Mix 1 large tablespoonful of  cornstarch  smooth, with a little  cold milk,  and stir into the hot  milk.  Add 1 large tablespoonful of  butter  and 1/4 teaspoonful (good measure) of  soda.  Let cook one minute, until it thickens add 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  Do not add the  milk  to the strained  tomatoes  until ready to serve. Then serve at once. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S  CLAM  SOUP  Chop 12  clams  fine, add enough  water  to the  clam broth  to measure one quart, cook all together about 15 minutes; add 3 pints of scalding hot  milk,  season with 1 1/2 tablespoonfuls  butter  and  salt  and  pepper  to taste. Serve  crackers,  with the soup. 
  
    CLAM  CHOWDER  Cut l/4 pound of rather " fat "  smoked bacon  in tiny pieces the size of dice; fry until brown and crisp. Take 25 fresh  clams,  after having drained a short time in a colander, run through a food chopper and place in ice chest until required. Pour the liquor from the  clams  into an agate stew-pan; add 6 medium-sized  potatoes  and 4 medium-sized  onions,  all thinly sliced; also add the crisp bits of  bacon  and  fat,  which had fried out from the  bacon,  to the  clam juice.  Cook all together slowly or simmer 3 or 4 hours. Add  water  to the  clam liquor  occasionally as required. Ten or fifteen minutes before serving add 1 cup of  hot water  and the chopped  clams  ( clam juice  if too strong is liable to curdle  milk ). Allow  clams  to cook in the  clam broth  10 to 15 minutes. Boil 2 quarts of  sweet milk,  and when ready to serve add the hot  milk  to the chowder, also 1 teaspoonful of chopped  parsley.  One-half this quantity will serve a small family. Serve crisp  crackers  and small pickels, and this chowder, served with a dessert, makes an inexpensive, nourishing lunch.  Put a pint of diced, raw  potatoes  in a stew-pan over the fire, cover with 1 quart of  water,  to which a pinch of  salt  has been added. Cook until tender, but not fine, then add  water  so that the  water  in the stew-pan will still measure one quart should some have boiled away. Place a small iron fry-pan on the range, containing 1 tablespoonful of  sweet lard;  when melted, it should measure about 2 tablespoonfuls. Then add 4 tablespoonfuls of  flour,  a pinch of  salt  and stir constantly, or rather mash the  flour  constantly with a spoon, being careful nor to allow it to scorch. un til a rich brown; add this to the diced  potatoes  and the quart of  water  in which they were boiled, stir until the consistency of thick of the  browned flour  not dissolved in the chowder they will not detract from the taste of it; in fact some are very fond of them Perhaps some folks would prefer this more like a soup; then add more  hot water  and thin it, but be careful to add more  seasoning,  as otherwise it would taste taste, Very few people know the 
 good flavor of browned flavor  peculiarly  its own, and docs not taste of  lard  at all. I would never advocate any  seasoning  except  butter,  but advise economical housewives to try this, being very careful not to scorch the  flour  and  fat  while browning.  A mixture of  butter  and  lard  may be used in which to brown the  flour  should there be a prejudice against the use of  lard  alone. 
 
   BEAN CHOWDER  Another palatable, cheap and easily prepared dish is called Bean Chowder. Small soup  beans  were soaked over night in  cold water.  Pour off, add fresh  water  and cook until tender. Then add  browned flour  (same as prepared for Potato Chowder) and the  water  in which the  beans  were cooked. When ready to serve, the  beans  were added. More  water  may be added until  broth  is thin enough for soup, then it would be called "brown  bean  soup." 
 
   BOUILLON  Buy a  soup bone,  cook with a chopped  onion,  one stalk of  celery  and a sprig of  parsley  until  meat  falls from  bone.  Season with  salt  and  pepper.  Strain the  broth  into a howl and stand aside until perfectly cold. Then remove the cake of  fat  formed on top of soup and add it to  drippings  for frying. The  broth  may be kept several days if poured into a glass jar and set on ice. When wanted to serve, heat 1 pint of  broth,  add 2 tablespoonfuls of  cream  to  yolks of 2 eggs.  Stir well. Pour boiling hot  broth  over the  cream  and  yolks of eggs  and serve at once in bouillon and  yolks of eggs  have been added. This is very nourishing. 
 
   FARMER'S  RICE   One and one-half quarts of  milk,  poured into a double boiler and placed on the range to heat. One cup of  flour  was placed in a bowl; into the  flour  1  raw egg  was dropped and stirred with a knife until mixed then rubbed between the fingers into fine rivels.  It may take a little 
 more   flour;  the rivels should be dry enough to allow of being rubbed fine. When the  milk  commences to boil drop the rivels in by handfuls, slowly, stirring constantly.  Salt  to taste. Let cook 15 minutes. Eat while hot, adding a small piece of  butter  as  seasoning.  This should be a little thicker than ordinary  rice  soup.  This recipe for far-famed "Philadelphia  Pepper  Pot" was given Mary by a friend living in the Quaker City, a good cook, who vouched for its excellence:  The ingredients consist of the following:  1  knuckle of veal.   2 pounds of plain  tripe.   2 pounds of honeycomb  tripe.   1 large  onion.   1 bunch of pot- herbs.   4 medium-sized  potatoes .  1  bay leaf-salt  and  cayenne pepper  to season.  1/2 pound of  beef suet -and  flour  for dumplings.    The day before you wish to use the " Pepper  Pot" procure 2 pounds of plain  tripe  and 2 pounds of honeycomb  tripe.  Wash thoroughly in  cold water.  Place in a kettle. Cover with  cold water  and boil eight hours; then remove  tripe  from  water,  and when cold cut into pieces about 3/4 of an inch square. The day following get a  knuckle of veal,  wash and cover with  cold water -about three quarts-bring slowly to the simmering point, skimming off the scum which arises, simmer for three hours. Remove the  meat  from the hones, cut into small pieces, strain  broth  and return it to the kettle. Add a  bay leaf,  one large  onion,  chopped, simmer one hour; then add four medium-sized  potatoes , cut like dice, and add to the  broth.  Wash a hunch of pot- herbs,  chop  parsley  (and add last), rub off the  thyme leaves,  cut  red pepper  in half and add all to  broth;  then add  meat  and  tripe  and season with  salt;  
 if liked hot , use a pinch of  cayenne pepper.  For the dumplings, take 1 cup of  beef suet,  chopped fine, 2 cups  flour,  pinch of  salt,  mix well together and moisten with enough  cold water  to allow of their being molded or  rolled into tiny dumplings, the size of a small marble.  Flour  these well to prevent sticking together. When all are prepared, drop into soup, simmer a few minutes, add  parsley  and serve at once. 
 
   GERMAN VEGETABLE SOUP  Take 6  potatoes , half the quantity of  onions,   carrots,   turnips,   cabbage  and a stalk of  celery,  cut up into dice-shaped pieces, place all in a stew-pan and cover with a couple quarts of  hot water.  Let cook about two hours, until all the vegetables are tender, then add 1 tablespoonful of  butter,  a large cup of  milk,  and about a table-spoonful of  flour  mixed smooth with a little  cold milk,  cook a few minutes, add a tablespoonful minced  parsley,  and serve. 
 
   A CHEAP  RICE  AND  TOMATO  SOUP  Take one pint of  rice water  which has been drained from one cupful of  rice  boiled in 2 1/2 quarts of  water  25 minutes (the  rice  to be used in other ways), and after the  rice  has drained in a sieve add to the  rice water  1 cup stewed, strained  tomatoes  (measure after being- strained), 1 teaspoonful  butter,  1 teaspoonful  flour  mixed with a little  cold water,   salt,   pepper,  and 1 tablespoonful of the cooked  rice,  and you have a palatable soup, as the  water  in which the  rice  was boiled is said to be more nutritious than the  rice.  
 
    FISH,   CLAMS  AND  OYSTER  (BONED  SHAD )  How many young cooks know how to  bone  a  shad ? It is a very simple process and one becomes quite expert after one or two trials. And it fully repays one for the extra time and trouble taken, in the satisfaction experienced by being able to serve  fish  without  bones.  With a sharp knife cut the  fish  open along he back  bone  on the outside of the  fish,  but do not cut through the  bone,  then carefully cut the  fish  loose along the back  bone  on each side, cut the centre  bone  away with the smaller  bones  branchmg out on each side attached. Cut the  shad  into sizable pieces alter being washed in  cold water  and dried on a cloth to take up all the  moisture. Dip pieces of  fish  into  white of egg  containing a teaspoonful Of  water,  roll in fine,  dried bread crumbs,  season with  salt  and  pepper,  drop in hot  fat,  and fry a rich brown. Serve on a platter, surrounded by a border of  parsley.   Some small portions of the  fish  will adhere to the  bones,  however carefully the  fish  has been boned. The  meat  may be picked from the  bones  after cooking in  salt water  until tender. Flake the  fish,  and either make it into small patties or croquettes.   Shad roe  should he parboiled first and then dredged with  flour  on both sides and fried in  drippings  or a little  butter.  
 
   CROQUETTES OF COLD, COOKED  FISH   Shred or flake cold, cooked  fish,  which has been carefully picked from  bones.  To 2 cups of  fish  add an equal amount of mashed  potatoes , a small half cup of  cold milk,  1 tablespoonful  butter,   yolk of 1 egg,  lightly beaten, 1 teaspoonful of chopped  parsley,  season with  salt  and  pepper.  Mix all well together, and when cold, form in small croquettes. Dip into  white of egg  containing 1 tablespoonful of  water,  roll in fine,  dried bread crumbs  and fry in hot  fat.   Shad,   salmon,   codfish,  or any kind of  fish  may be prepared this way, or prepare same as " Rice  Croquettes," substituting  fish  for  rice.  
 
    SHAD ROE    Shad roe  should be carefully taken from the  fish,  allowed to stand in  cold water,  to which a pinch of  salt  has been added, for a few minutes, then dropped in  boiling water,  cooked a short time and drained. Dredge with  flour  and fry slowly in a couple tablespoonfuls of  butter  and  lard  or  drippings  until a golden brown. Be particular not to serve them rare. Serve garnished with  parsley.   Or the  shad roe  may be parboiled, then broken in small pieces, mixed with a couple of lightly beaten  eggs  and scrambled in a fry-pan, containing a couple of tablespoonfuls of  butter  and sweet  drippings.  Serve at once. Garnish with  parsley  or  water  cress. 
  
   SCALLOPED  OYSTERS  Take about 50 fresh  oysters.  Place a layer of  oysters  in a baking dish alternately with fine, dried crumbs, well seasoned with  pepper  and  salt  and bits of  butter,  until pan is about two-thirds full. Have a thick layer of  bread crumbs  for the top, doited with bits of  butter.  Pour over this half a cup or less of strained  oyster liquor  and small cup of  sweet milk.  Place in oven and bake from 40 to 50 minutes. 
 
   DEVILED  OYSTERS    2 dozen  oysters.   1 cup  rich milk.   3 tablespoonfuls  flour.    Yolks of 2 raw eggs.   1 generous tablespoonful  butter.   1 tablespoonful finely-minced  parsley.    Drain  oysters  in a colander and chop rather coarsely.  Mix  flour  smooth with a little  cold milk.  Place the remainder of the  milk  in a saucepan on the range. When it commences 10 boil add the moistened  flour  and cook until the mixture thickens, stirring constantly to prevent burning, or cook in a double boiler. Add  yolks of eggs  and  butter,  1/2 teaspoonful  salt  and 1/4 teaspoonful of  black pepper  and a pinch of  cayenne pepper.  Then add chopped  oysters,  stir all together a few minutes until  oysters  are heated through. Then turn into a bowl and stand aside in a cool place until a short time before they are to be served. (These may be prepared early in the morning and served at six o'clock dinner.) Then fill good-sized, well-scrubbed  oyster  shells with the mixture, sprinkle the tops liberally with fine-dried, well-seasoned  bread crumbs.  (Seasoned with  salt  and  pepper. ) Place the filled shells on muffin tins to prevent their tipping over; stand in a hot oven about ten minutes, until browned on top, when they should be heated through. Serve at once in the shells. Handle the hot shells with a folded napkin when serving at table. This quantity fills thirteen  oyster  shells. Serve with the  oysters  small  Pickles,   pickled cabbage  or  cranberry sauce  as an accompaniment. 
  
   PLANKED  SHAD   After eating planked  shad  no one will wish to have it served in any other manner, as no other method of preparing  fish  equals this. For planked  shad,  use an  oak  plank, at least two inches thick, three inches thick is better. Planks for this purpose may be bought at a department store or procured at a planing mill. Place plank in oven several days before using to season it. Always heat the plank in oven about 15 minutes before placing  fish  on it, then have plank 
 very hot . Split a nicely-cleaned  shad  down the back, place  skin  side down, on hot plank, brush with  butter  and sprinkle lightly with  pepper  and  salt.  Put plank containing  shad  on the upper grating of a hot oven of  coal  range and bake about 45 minutes. Baste frequently with melted  butter.  The  shad  should be served on the plank, although not a very sightly object, but it is the proper way to serve it. The flavor of  shad,  or, in fact, of any other  fish,  prepared in this manner is superior to that of any other.  Fish  is less greasy and more wholesome than when fried. Should an  oak  plank not be obtainable, the  shad  may be placed in a large roasting pan and baked in oven. Cut gashes across the  fish  about two inches apart, and place a teaspoonful of  butter  on each. Bake in oven from 50 to 60 minutes. Serve on a warmed platter, garnished with  parsley,  and have dinner plates warmed when serving  fish  on them. Do not wash the plank with  soap  and  water  after using, but instead rub it over with sandpaper. 
 
   BROILED  MACKEREL   When  fish  has been cleaned, cut off  head  and scrape dark  skin  from inside. Soak  salt mackerel  in  cold water  over night,  skin  side up, always. In the morning drain, wipe dry and place on a greased broiler, turn until cooked on both sides. Take up carefully on a hot platter, pour over a large tablespoonful of melted  butter  and a little  pepper,  or lay the  mackerel  in a pan, put hits of  butter  on top. and set in a hot oven and bake. Garnish with  parsley.  
 
    CODFISH  BALLS  Soak  codfish  several hours in  cold water.  Cook slowly or  simmer a short time. Remove from fire, drain, and when cold squeeze out all moisture by placing the flaked  fish  in a small piece of cheesecloth. To one cup of the flaked  codfish  add an equal quantity of warm mashed  potatoes ,  yolk of 1 egg,  1 tablespoonful of  milk  and a little  pepper.  Roll into small balls with a little  flour.  Dip in  white of egg  and  bread crumbs,  and when quite cold fry in deep  fat.  Garnish with  parsley.  
 
   FRIED  OYSTERS   Procure fine, large, fresh  oysters  for frying. Drain in a colander carefully, look over, and discard any pieces of shell. Roll each  oyster  in fine,  dried bread crumbs,  well seasoned with  salt  and  pepper,  then dip them in a lightly-beaten  egg,  and then in  bread crumbs.  Allow them to stand several hours in a cool place before frying. Place a few  oysters  at one time in a wire frying basket, and immerse in smoking hot  fat.  Should too great a number of  oysters  be placed in the  fat  at one time it would lower the temperature of the  fat  and cause the  oysters  to become greasy. Drain the  oysters  when fried on heavy, brown  paper,  to absorb any remaining  fat,  and serve at once.  For all deep frying use two-thirds  lard  and one-third  suet,  as  suet  is considered to be more wholesome and cheaper than  lard.  Two items to be considered by the frugal housewife.  If  fat  for deep frying is the right temperature a crust is at once formed, and the  oysters  do not absorb as great a quantity of  fat  as when fried in only enough  butter  and  drippings  to prevent scorching, as they must then be fried more slowly. Serve  pickled cabbage  and  tomato catsup  when serving fried  oysters.  
 
   PANNED  OYSTERS   Aunt Sarah always prepared  oysters  in this manner to serve with  roast turkey.  At the very last minute, when the dinner was ready to be served, she placed 50 freshly-opened  oysters,  with their liquor, in a stew-pan over a hot fire. The minute they were heated through and commenced to curl up, she turned them in a hot colander to drain a minute, then turned the  oysters  into  a stew-pan containing two large table spoonfuls of hot, melted  butter,  and allowed them to remain in the hot  butter  one minute, shaking the pan to prevent scorching, seasoned them with  salt  and  pepper,  and turned all into a heated dish and sent to the table at once. These are easily prepared and are more wholesome than fried  oysters.  
 
    OYSTERS  STEAMED IN THE SHELL  Place well-scrubbed shells, containing fresh  oysters,  in a deep agate pan, which will fit in a kettle containing a small amount of  boiling water.  Cover very closely until the shells open easily. These may be served in the shell with hot, melted  butter,  in a side dish, or they may be removed from the shell to a hot bowl and seasoned with hot  butter,   salt  and  pepper.  
 
   A RECIPE GIVEN MARY FOR " OYSTER  COCKTAIL"  To 2 tablespoonfuls of  tomato catsup  add 1/2 tablespoonful of grated  horseradish,  1/2 tablespoonful of  lemon juice,  1/2 teaspoonful of  tabasco  sause, 1/2 tablespoonful of  vinegar,  1 saltspoonful of  salt.  Stand on ice one hour at least.  To serve-The freshly-opened  oysters  on half shell were placed on a plate, in the centre of which was placed a tiny glass goblet containing a small quantity of the mixture, into which the  oysters  were dipped before being eaten. 
 
    OYSTER  CROQUETTES  Boil 50  oysters  five minutes, drain. When cold, cut into small pieces, add 1/2 cup of  bread crumbs  and mix all together with a thick  cream sauce  composed of 1/2 cup of  cream  or  milk  thickened with  flour,  to which add 1 large tablespoonful of  butter;  season with  salt,  a dash of  red pepper  and 1 teaspoonful of finely-minced  parsley.  Stand this mixture on ice until quite cold and firm enough to form into small croquettes. Dip in  egg  and  bread crumbs  and fry in deep  fat  until a golden brown.   Serve at once on a platter garnished with sprigs of  parsley.  From these ingredients was made 12 croquettes. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT"S WAY OF SERVING " OYSTER  COCKTAILS"  Place in a bowl 2 tablespoonfuls of  tomato catsup,  1 tablespoonful of grated  horseradish,  2 tablespoonfuls of very finely cut  celery juice  and  pulp  of 2  lemons.  Seasons with  salt  and  pepper.  Mix this with  oyster  which have been cut in small pieces. Serve in halves of  lemons,  from which the  pulp  has been carefully removed.  Place on ice a short time before serving. Crisp  crackers  should be served at the same time this is served. 
 
    SALMON  LOAF  One can of  salmon,  from which all  bones  have been removed, 1 cup of  cracker crumbs,  1/2 cup of  milk,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,  which had been melted; 2  eggs  beaten,  salt  and  pepper  to season. Mix all together, bake in a buttered pudding dish one-half hour or until browned on top. Serve hot. 
 
   CREAMED  SALMON   A half cup of canned  salmon,  a left-over from lunch the preceding day, may be added to double the quantity of  cream  dressing, and when heated through and served on crisply-toasted slices of  stale bread,  make a tasty addition to any meal.  Of course, it is not necessary to tell even unexperienced housewives never under any circumstances allow food to stand in tins in which it was canned; do not ever stand food away in tin; use small agateware dishes, in which food, such as small quantities of left-overs, etc., may be reheated. Never use for cooking agate stew-pans, from the inside of which small particles have been chipped, as food cooked in such a vessel might become mixed with small particles of glazing, and such food when eaten would injure the stomach. 
  
    OYSTER  CANAPES   1 cup  cream.   4 tablespoonfuls of  bread crumbs.   1 tablespoonful of butler.  3 dozen stewing  oysters.   Season with  paprika,  tiny pinch of  nutmeg  and  salt.  Boil the  cream,  add  bread crumbs  and  butter.  Chop  oysters  fine, add  seasoning.  Serve hot in pattie cups or on  toast.  Serve small  pickles  or  olives.  Good dish for chafing dish. 
 
  MEAT  Every young housewife should be taught that simmering is more effective than violent boiling, which converts water into useless steam. Even a tough, undesirable piece of "chuck" or "pot roast" may be made more tender and palatable by long-continued simmering than it would be if put in rapidly boiling water and kept boiling at that rate. Meat may be made more tender also by being marinated; that is, allowing the meat to stand for some time in a mixture of olive oil and vinegar before cooking it. In stewing most meats a good plan is to put a large tablespoonful of finely-minced beef suet in the stew-pan; when fried out, add a little butter, and when sizzling hot add the meat, turn and sear on both sides to retain the juice in the meat, then add a little hot water and let come to a boil; then stand where the meat will just simmer but not stop cooking for several hours. The meat then should be found quite tender. Cheaper cuts of meat, especially, require long, slow cooking or simmering to make them tender, but are equally as nutritious as high-priced meats if properly prepared.  To quote from 
 The Farmers' Bulletin:  "The number of appetizing dishes which a good cook can make out of the  meat  'left over' is almost endless. Undoubtedly more time and skill are required in their preparation than in the simple cooking of the more expensive cuts. The real superiority of a good cook lies not so much in the preparation of expensive or fancy dishes as in the attractive preparation of inexpensive dishes, for every day. In the skillful combination of flavors. Some housewives seem to have  a prejudice against economizing. If the comfort of the family does not suffer and the meals are kept as varied and appetizing as when they cost more, with little reason for complaint, surely it is not beneath the dignity of any family to avoid useless expenditure, no matter how generous its income. And the intelligent housekeeper should take pride in setting a good table."  This is such an excellen article, and so ably written and true, that I feel it would be to the advantage of every young housewife to read and profit by it. 
 
    "SAUERGEBRATENS" OR GERMAN POT ROAST   Buy about three pounds of  beef,  as for an ordinary pot roast. Place in a large bowl. Boil  vinegar  (or, if  vinegar  is too sharp, add a little  water,  a couple of whole doves and a little  allspice ) ; this should cover the piece of  meat.   Vinegar  should be poured over it hot; let stand a couple of days in a cool place uncovered; turn it over occasionally. When wanted to cook, take from the  vinegar  and put in a stew-pan containing a little hot fried-out  suet  or  drippings  in which has been sliced 2  onions.  Let cook, turn occasionally, and when a rich brown, stir in a large tablespoonful of  flour,  add 1 1/2 cups of  hot water,  cover and cook slowly for two or three hours, turning frequently. Half an hour before serving add small pared  potatoes , and when they have cooked tender, serve  meat,   gravy  and  potatoes  on a large platter.  The writer knew an old gentleman who had moved to the city from a "Bucks County farm" when a boy, who said that he'd walk five miles any day for a dish of the above as his mother had prepared it in former years.  Mary was surprised at the amount of valuable information to be obtained from the different 
 Farmers' Bulletins  received at the farm, on all subjects of interest to housewives, and particularly farmers' wives. All books were to be had free for the asking.  The dishes Mary prepared from recipes in the 
 Farmers' Bulletin  on "economical use of  meat  in the home," were especially liked at the farm, particularly "Stewed  Shin of Beef " and "Hungarian Goulash" (a Hungarian dish which has come to be a favorite in the United States). 
  
    HUNGARIAN GOULASH    2 pounds top  round of beef.  2  bay leaves.   A little  flour.   2 ounces  salt pork.   2 cups of  tomatoes.   1 stalk  celery.   1  onion.   6 whole  cloves.   6  peppercorns.   1 blade  mace.    Cut the  beef  into 2-inch pieces and sprinkle with  flour.  Fry the  salt pork  until a light brown; add the  beef  and cook slowly for about thirty-five minutes, stirring occasionally. Cover with  water  and simmer about two hours. Season with  salt  and  pepper  or  paprika.  From the vegetables and  spices  a  sauce  is made as follows: Cook in sufficient  water  to cover for 20 minutes; then rub through a sieve, and add to some of the  stock  in which the  meat  was cooked. Thicken with  flour,  using 2 tablespoonfuls (moistened with  cold water ) to each cup of liquid, and season with  salt  and  paprika.  Serve the  meat  on a platter with the  sauce  poured over it.  Potatoes ,  carrots  and  green peppers  cooked until tender and cut into small pieces or narrow strips are usually sprinkled over the dish when served, and noodles may be arranged in a border upon the platter. 
 
     BROILED STEAK    When buying  beefsteak  for broiling, order the  steak  cut 1 inch to 1 1/4 inches thick. Place the  steak  on a well-greased, hot broiler and broil over a clear, hot fire, turning frequently. It will take about ten minutes to broil a  steak  1-inch thick. When  steak  is broiled place on a hot platter, season with  butter,   pepper  and  salt,  and serve at once. Serve rare or otherwise, but serve 
 at once.  Broil  steak  unseasoned, as  salt  extracts  juice  from  meat.   Steak,  particularly, loses its savoriness if not served 
 hot.  What to a hungry man is more nutritious and appetizing than a perfectly broiled, rare, juicy,  steak,  served hot? And not a few young and inexperienced cooks serve thin  steaks,  frequently overdone or scorched containing about the same amount of nourishment a piece of leather would possess, through lack of knowledge of knowing just how. Often, unconsciously, I will admit; yet it is an undisputed fact, that very many young housewives arc indirectly  the cause of their husbands suffering from the prevailing "American compliant," dyspepsia, and its attendant evils. And who that hs suffered from it will blame the "grouchy man" who cannot well be otherwise. So, my dear "Mrs. New Wife," be warned in time, and always remember how near to your husband's  heart  lies his stomach, and to possess the former you should endeavor to keep the latter in good condition by preparing, and serving, nourishing, well-cooked food. 
 
    STEWED  SHIN OF BEEF     4 pounds oh  shin of beef.   1 medium-sized  onion.   1 whole  clove  and  bay leaf.   1 sprig of  parsley.   1 1/2 tablespoonfuls  flour.   1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  butter  or  savory drippings.   1 small slice of  carrot.   1/2 tablespoonful of  salt.   1/2 teaspoonful of  pepper.   2 quarts  boiling water.    Have the butcher cut the  bone  in several pieces. Put all the ingredients but the  flour  and  butter  in a stew-pan and bring to a boil. Set the pan where the liquid will just simmer for six hours, or after boiling for five or ten minutes put all into the fireless cooker for eight or nine hours. With the  butter,   flour  adn 1/2 cup of the clear soup from which the  fat  has been removed make a  brown sauce.  To this addt eh  meat  and marow removed from the  bone.  Heat and serve. The remainder of the liquid in which the  meat  has been cooked may be used for soup. 
 
    HAMBURG  STEAK    Take the tough ends of two  sirloin steaks  and one tablespoonful of  kidney suet,  run through a food chopper; season with  pepper  and  salt,  form into small cakes, dredge lightly with  flour,  fry quickly, same manner  steak  is fried, turning frequently. The  kidney fat  added prevents the Hamburg  steak  being dry and tasteless,  "A tender, juicy  broiled steak,  flaky baked  potatoes , a good cup of  coffee  and sweet, light, home-made  bread,  a simple salad or  fruit,  served to a hungry husband would often prevent his looking for an affinity," said Aunt Sarah to her niece Mary. 
 
     MEAT  STEW WITH DUMPLINGS.   STEW.   5 pounds of a cheap cut of  beef.   4 cups of  potatoes  cut into small pieces.  2/3 cup each of  turnips  and  carrots  cut into 1/2-inch cubes.  1/2 an opion chopped.  1/4 cup of  flour.   Season with  salt  and  pepper.   Cut the  meat  into small pieces, removing the  fat.  Fry out the  fat  and brown the  meat  in it. When well browned, cover with  boiling water.  Boil for five minutes and then cook in a lower temperature until  meat  is done. If tender, this will require about three hours on the stove, or five hours in the fireless cooker. Add  carrots,   onions,   turnips  and  pepper  and  salt  during the last hour of cooking, and the  potatoes  fifteen minutes before serving. Thicken with the  flour  diluted with  cold water.  Serve with dumplings. If this dish is made in the fireless cooker the mixture must be reheated when the vegetables are put in. Such a stew may also be made of  mutton.  If  veal  or  pork  is used the vegetables may be omitted or simply a little  onion  used. Sometimes for variety the browning of the  meat  is dispensed with. When  white meat,  such as  chicken,   veal  or fresh  pork  is used, the  gravy  is often made rich with  cream  or  milk  thickened with  flour.  DUMPLINGS.     2 cups of  flour.   4 teaspoons (level) of  baking powder.   2/3 cup of  milk  or a little more if needed.  1/2 teaspoonful of  salt.   2 teaspoonfuls of  butter.    Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Work in  butter  with the tips of the fingers. Add  milk  gradually, roll out to thickness of  half inch. Cut with  biscuit  cutter. Place in a buttered steamer over a kettle of  hot water  and cook from 12 to 15 minutes. If the dumplings are cooked with the stew enough liquid should be removed to allow of their being placed directly upon the  meat  and vegetables. Sometimes the dough is baked and served as  biscuits,  over which the stew is poured. If the stew is made wiht  chicken  or  veal  it is termed a fricassee.  This recipe tells of such an economical way of extending the  meat  flavor that I think every young housewife should know it. Mary copied it from 
 The Farmers' Bulletin,  an article on the "Economical Use of  Meat  in the Home." The dumplings, as she prepared them from this recipe, were regular fluff balls, they were so light and flaky. I would add, the cook-pot should be closely covered while cooking or steaming these dumplings, and the cover should not be raised for the first ten minutes.  A lesser quantity of  baking powder  might be used with equally good results, but these dumplings are certain to be light and flaky. A larger quantity of  baking powder  should be used when dough is steamed or boiled than if dough is baked, if one expects good results. 
 
    EXTENDING THE  MEAT  FLAVOR   Mary learned, through reading 
 The Farmers' Bulletin,  different methods of extending the  meat  flavor through a considerable quantity of material, which would otherwise be lacking in distinctive taste, one way to serve the  meat  with dumplings, generally in the dish with it; to combine the  meat  with crusts, as in  meat  pies or  meat  rolls, or to serve the  meat  on  toast  or  biscuits.  Borders of  rice,   hominy  or mashed  potatoes  are examples of the same principles, applied in different ways.  By serving some preparation of  flour,   rice,   hominy  or other food, rich in  starch,  with the  meat,  we get a dish which in itself approaches nearer to the balanced ration than  meat  along, and one in which the  meat  flavor is extended thorugh a large amount of the material.  The measurements given in the above recipes call for a level spoonful or a level cup, as the case may be.  In many American families  meat  is eaten two or three times a day. In such cases, the simplest way of reducing the  meat  bill  woudl be to cut down the amount used, either by serving it less often or by using less at a time. Deficiency of protein need not be feared, when one good  meat  dish a day is served, especially if such nitrogenous materials as  eggs,   milk,   cheese  and  beans  are used instead. In localities where  fish  can be obtained fresh and cheap, it might well be more frequently substituted for  meat  for the sake of variety as well as economy. Ingenious cooks have many ways of "extending the flavor" of  meat;  that is, of combining a small quantity with other materials to make a large dish as in  meat  pies, stews and similar dishes.  The foregoing information may be useful to other young, prospective housekeepers who may never have read "the very instructive articles on 'The Economical Use of  Meat  in the Home,' in the 
 Farmers' Bulletin."  
 
    PREPARING A POT ROAST   When buying a pot roast, "Aunt Sarah" selected a thick, chunky piece of  meat,  weighing several pounds, and a small piece of  beef suet  which she cut into small bits, placed pan containing them on hot range, added a small, sliced  onion,  and when  fat  was quite hot she added the quickly-rinsed piece of  meat,  and quickly seared it to retain the  juice;  added 1 cup of  hot water,  a sprig of  parsley,   seasoning of salt  and  pepper;  cooked short time, then allowed it to stan don the range closely covered, where it would simmer gently several hours; turnign the  meat  frequently, adding a small amount of  water  occasionally, as the  broth  was absorbed by the  meat.  An inexperienced cook will be surprised to find how tender, palatable, and equally nutritious, and inexpensive cut of  meat  may become by slow simmering. When the pot roast has become tender, remove from the  broth  and place on a 
 hot platter;  this latter is a small item, but dishes may be quickly heated in a hot oven and  meat  and vegetables are more appetizing if served hot on warmed plates. "Forgive this digression; I fear the pot roast will cool even on a warmed platter." After removing the  meat  from the pan add a large tablespoonful of  flour,  moistened with a small quantity of  cold water,  to the  broth  in the pan for  gravy;  cook until thickened, strain sliced  onion  and  parsley  from the  broth,  add   seasoning of salt  and  pepper,  serve on the platter with the  meat;  the  onion  added, gives the  gravy  a fine flavor and causes it to be a dark, rich brown in color. 
 
    STUFFED  BREAST of VEAL    Rub the piece of  meat  with  salt,   pepper,   ginger  and minced  onion.  Prepare a  stuffing  as for  chicken  of crumbled,  stale bread,  etc., or soak pieces of  stale bread  in  cold water.  Squeeze dry and season with a little minced  onion,   parsley,  a little melted  butter,   salt  and  pepper,  and moisten all with one  egg.  Fill the  breast of veal  with this  stuffing,  sew together, place in roasting pan with a small quantity of  water,  to which a tablespoonful of  butter  has been added. Roast in a moderately hot oven until well done, basting frequently. 
 
    "GEDAMPFTES RINDERBRUST"   Take  breast of beef  or  veal,  without  fat  or  bones,  quickly rinse off  meat  and wipe with a cloth. Place in a stew-pot with one chopped  onion,  one sliced  tomato,  a  bay leaf,  season with  pepper  and  salt,  add a small quantity of  hot water,  cook, closely covered, several hours. To be tender this  meat  requires long, slow cooking, when it cooks and browns at the same time. Strain the  broth  and thicken for  gravy  and pour around the  meat  on platter when serving. 
 
    "PAPRIKASH"   Two pounds of  veal,  from  leg,  cut into small pieces for stewing ; 4 good-sized  onions,  cut rather fine; measure about 1/2 cup of  sweet lard  place  onions  in pan with some of this  lard  and fry a light brown. Add  meat  and cook  meat  and  onions  together about one-half hour, adding  lard  gradually until all is used and the  meat  is golden brown. Then cover with  water  and stew, closely covered, about two hours or longer, until  meat  is ready to serve; then add more  water  until  meat  is covered. Season with  salt  and  paprika.  Add about three tablespoonfuls of  vinegar  (not  too sour; cook must judge this by tasting) ; then add 1/2 pint of sweet  cream.  Thicken  gravy  with  flour  mixed smooth with a little  water.  Place on platter surrounded with  gravy.  With this was always served baked or steamed  sweet potatoes.  
 
     BEEF  STEW   Three pounds of the cheaper cut of  beef,  cut in pieces a couple inches square; brown in a stew-pan, with a sliced  onion,  a sprig of  parsley  and a coupe tablespoonfuls of sweet  drippings  or  suet;  cook a few minutes, add a little  water,  and simmer a couple of hours; add sliced  turnips  and a few medium-sized  potatoes . Should there be a larger quantity of  broth  than required to serve with the  meat  and vegetables, a cup or more of the  broth  may form the basis of a palatable soup for lunch the following day. 
 
     SAVORY BEEF  ROLL   Three and one-half pounds raw  beef,  or a mixture of  beef  and  veal  may be used, run through a food chopper. A cheap cut of  meat  may be used if, before chopping, all pieces of gristle are trimmed off. Place the chopped  meat  in a bowl, add 8 table-spoonfuls of fine,  dried bread crumbs,  1 tablespoonful of  pepper,  1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  salt.  Taste the  meat  before adding all the  seasoning  specified, as tastes differ. Add 3  raw eggs,  4 table-spoonfuls of  sweet milk  or  cream,  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  a little  sweet marjoram  or minced  parsley.  Mix all together and mold into two long, narrow rolls, similar to loaves of  bread.  Place 1 tablespoonful each of  drippings  and  butter  in a large fry-pan on the range. When heated, place  beef  rolls in and when seared on both sides add a small quantity of  hot water.  Place the pan containing  meat  in a hot oven and bake one hour. Basting the  meat  frequently improves it. When catering to a small family serve one of the rolls hot for dinner; serve  gravy  made by thick-emng  broth  in pan with a small quantity of  flour.  Serve the remaining roll cold, thinly sliced for lunch the day following. 
  
     VEAL  CUTLETS  Use either  veal  chops or  veal  cutlets, cut in small pieces the size of chops; pound with a small mallet, sprinkle a little finely-minced  onion  on each  cutlet,  dip in beaten  egg  and  bread crumbs,  well seasoned with  salt  and  pepper.  Place a couple tablespoonfuls of a mixture of  butter  and sweet  drippings  in a fry-pan; when hot, lay in the breaded cutlets and fry slowly, turning frequently and watching carefully that they do not scorch. These take a longer time to fry than does  beefsteak.  When a rich brown and well cooked take up the cutlets on a heated platter and serve, garnished with  parsley.  
 
     MEAT  "SN1TZEL"   Cut 1 1/2 pounds of thick  veal steak  into small pieces, dredge with  flour,  season with  salt  and  pepper,  and fry brown in a pan containing  bacon fat  ( fat  obtained by frying several slices of  fat,   smoked bacon ). Remove the  meat  from the pan, add a couple tablespoonfuls of  flour  to the remaining  fat,  stir until browned, then pour in the strained liquor from a pint can of  tomatoes.  Add one slice of  onion  and one  carrot,  then return the  meat  to the  sauce;  cover closely adn simmer three-quarters of an hour. When the  meat  is tender, place on a hot platter, add a pinch of  red pepper  to the  sauce  and a little more  salt  if required, and strain over the  meat  on the platter. This was a favorite dish of Mary's Uncle, and he said she knew how to prepare it to perfection. 
 
     SIRLOIN STEAKS    Procure 2  sirloin steaks,  1 1/2 inches thick, and a small piece of  suet.  Cut the  tenderloin  from each  steak,  and as much more of the  steak  as required for one meal. Place the finely-cut  suet  in a hot fry-pan; this should measure 1 tablespoonful when tried out, add one teaspoonful of  butter,  when the  fat  is very hot and a blue smoke arises, place pieces of  steak,  lightly dredged with  flour,  in the pan of hot  fat,  place only one piece at a time in the  fat;  sear the  meat  on one side, then turn and sear on the other side; then place the other pieces of  meat  in the pan and continue  in the same manner, turning the  steak  frequently. The hot  butter  and  suet  sear the  steak,  thus the  juice  of the  meat  is retained, making the  meat  more palatable; season with  salt  and  pepper,  place on a hot platter and serve at once. 
 
     MEAT  BALLS   Chop  meat  fine;  beef,   chicken,   lamb  or  veal;  mince a small  onion  and fry in a tablespoonful of  butter;  add a tablespoonful of  flour,  the  yolk of one egg,  the chopped  meat  and a little  broth,   gravy,  or  milk  to moisten,  salt  and  pepper.  Stir all together and turn the whole mixture into dish to cool. When cool, shape with well- flour ed hands into balls the size of a shelled  walnut.  Dip in beaten  white of egg,  then into  bread crumbs,  and fry in deep  fat  until crisp and brown. Place only three or four  meat  balls in a frying basket at one time. Too many at a time chills the  fat;  but if plunged in boiling hot  fat,  then a crust is formed at once over the outside, which prevents the  grease  from penetrating. When the  meat  balls are browned nicely, lay them on brown  paper  to absorb any  grease  that may adhere to them. To try whether the  fat  is the right temperature, drop a small piece of  bread  in it, and if it browns while you count twenty, the  fat  is hot enough for any form of croquettes. Garnish with  parsley  or watercress. 
 
     VEAL  LOAF   Three pounds raw  veal,  chopped fine; 1 teaspoonful  salt,  1 teaspoonful  pepper,  2 tablespoonfuls  butter,  2  raw eggs,  2 table-spoonfuls  water.  Mix all together with 6 tablespoonfuls fine, rolled,  dried bread crumbs  and mold into a long, narrow loaf. Roll the loaf in two extra tablespoonfuls of  bread crumbs.  Place in a hot pan, pour 3 tablespoonfuls melted  butter  over the top. and bake in hot oven two hours or less, basting frequently. Slice thinly when cold. Should the  veal  loaf be served hot, thicken the  broth  with  flour  and serve this  gravy  with it. 
  
     SWEETBREADS  (BREADED)   Place  sweetbreads  in  cold water,  to which 1/2 teaspoonful  salt  has been added, for a short time, then drain and put over the fire with  hot water.  Cook ten minutes. Drain and stand aside in a cool place until wanted. Remove stringy parts, separate into small pieces about the size of an  oyster,  dip in beaten  white of egg  and then in  bread crumbs.  Put in a pan containing a little hot  butter  and  drippings  and fry light brown. Serve hot. Garnish platter with  parsley.  
 
    FRIED  LIVER  AND  BACON    Have 
  beef    liver  cut in slices about one inch thick; quickly rinse and wipe dry. Remove the thin  skin  on the edge and cut out all the small, tough fibres. If  liver  from a young  beef  it can scarcely be told from  calves '  liver  when cooked, and is considerably cheaper. Fry a dozen slices of  fat bacon  in a pan until crisp and brown. Take from teh pan on a warm platter and place in oven. Put the pieces of  liver,  well dredged with  flour,  into the pan containing the hot  bacon fat,  also a little  butter,  and fry slowly until well done, but not  hard  and dry. Turn frequently and season with  salt  and  pepper.  Take the  liver  from the pan, add one tablespoonful of  flour  to the  fat  remaining in the pan, stir until smooth and brown, then add about one cup of  sweet milk  or  water,  stir a few minutes until it thickens and season with  salt  and  pepper.  Should the  liver  be a little overdone, put it in the pan with the  gravy,  cover and let stand where it will just simmer a few minutes, then turn all on a hot platter and serve the  bacon  on a separate dish. 
 
     BEEFSTEAK  SERVED WITH  PEAS    Fry quickly a large  sirloin steak.  Place in the oven, on a warm platter. Add a large tablespoonful of  butter  to the fry pan, also a can of sifted  peas,  which have been heated and drained, season with  pepper  and  salt,  shake pan to prevent burning and when hot turn on to platter containing  steak  and serve at once. This makes an appetizing luncheon dish. 
  
    CREAMED " DRIED BEEF "   Put a tablspoonful of  butter  in a frying pan, add 1/2 cup of chipped  beef  cut fine and brown it in the  butter,  then add 1/4 cup of  water.  Let stand and simmer for a short time, then add a cup of  sweet milk,  thicken to the consistency of thick  cream  by adding 1 tablespoonful of  flour  mixed smooth with a small quantity of  cold milk,  season with  salt  and  pepper.  This is an economical way of using small pieces of  dried beef  not sightly enough to be served on the table. Serve with baked  potatoes  for lunch, or pour over slices of  toasted bread,  or over poached  eggs  for an appetizing breakfast dish. 
 
    CREAMED  SWEETBREADS    Parboil  sweetbreads  in  water  10 minutes. Remove stringy parts and dry on a napkin. Separate the  sweetbreads  into small pieces with a 
 silver knife,  never use 
 steel,  put in a stewpan with enough  cream  to cover, add  butter,   pepper  and  salt  to taste.  Flour  enough to thicken a little, let all come to a boil. Fill small pattie shells with the mixture and serve hot. 
 
     MEAT  CROQUETTES    2 cups finely chopped  meat  ( beef  or  veal ).  1 tablespoonful  butter.   2 tablespoonfuls  flour  (or a little more  flour ).  2 tablespoonfuls chopped  parsley.   1 scant cup of  milk.    Put  milk  on to boil. Mix  flour  smooth with a little  cold milk  before adding to boiling  milk,  add the  butter  and cook all together until a creamy consistency, then add the chopped  meat  well seasoned with  salt  and  pepper  and the chopped  parsley.  Mix well and let cool. Shape into croquettes, dip in  white of egg  and  bread crumbs.  Let stand until perfectly cold, then fry brown, in deep hot  fat.    Chicken,   beef,   veal  and  mutton  may be prepared in the same manner. When dipping croquettes, 1 tablespoonful of  water  may be added to the  white of egg  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  water  if the  whole of the  egg  is used. Use the  whites of eggs  for dipping croquettes if possible. Croquettes may be made the day before wanted, and placed in a refrigerator or cool place. Croquettes should be cold before frying. 
 
    STEWED  RABBIT    After the  rabbit  has been skinned, and carefully cleaned, wash quickly and let stand over night in  cold water  to which  salt  has been added; also a pinch of  red pepper.  Place on the range in the morning (in a stew-pan with fresh  warm water ). When it comes to a boil, drain off, add one pint of  hot water  containing two sliced  onions  and a little  ginger.  This prevents the flavor of  wild game,  objectionable to some. When the  meat  has cooked tender, drain, dust pieces with  flour,  and brown quickly in a pan containing a couple tablespoonfuls of hot  lard,   butter,  or  drippings.   If you wish the  meat  of the  rabbit white,  add a thin slice of  lemon  to the  water  when cooking  meat.  
 
     ROAST LAMB    Select  leg  or  loin,  or if a larger roast is wanted,  leg  and  loin  together. Carefully rinse the piece of  meat.  Place in pan, dust lightly with  pepper.  Have the oven hot and place pan in without putting  water  in pan. Brown on one side, then turn and brown on the other. Then put about 1/2 cup of  water  in roasting pan, and if oven is too hot, leave door open for a few minutes. Allow 25 minutes for each pound of  lamb.  
 
    "GEFULLTE RINDERBRUST," OR STUFFED  BREAST of BEEF    Take a  fillet of beef,  rub both sides well with a mixture of finely chopped  onion,  minced  parsley,   salt  and  pepper.  Then spread over the fillet a small quantity of raw, chopped, well-seasoned  meat,  roll together and tie. Place in a stew pan with a small quantity of  water,  cook closely covered until tender. Serve with  gravy.  
  
    FRIED  PEPPERS  WITH  PORK  CHOPS  Dust four or five  pork  chops with  flour  and fry in a pan, not too quickly. When nicely browned, remove to a warm chop plate and stand in warming oven while preparing the following: Slice or cut in small pieces four good-sized, sweet,  red peppers  and a half teaspoon of finely chopped hot  pepper,  add to the  fat  remaining in the pan in which the chops were fried, and cook about ten minutes, until  peppers  are tender (stirring them frequently. When sufficiently cooked, add one tablespoon of  vinegar,   pepper  and  salt  to taste, cook one minute longer and serve on the same dish with the chops. 
 
    BOILED  HAM    When preparing to took a  ham,  scrape, wash and trim it carefully. Place  ham  in a large cook pot or boiler, partly cover with  cold water,  let come to a boil, then move back on range where the  water  will merely simmer, just bubble gently around the edge of boiler. A medium sized  ham  should be tender in five or six hours. When a fork stuck into the  ham  comes out readily, the is cooked. Take from the boiler and  skin  carefully, removing all the discolored portions of the smoked end, stick 2 dozen whole  cloves  into the thick  fat,  and sprinkle a couple tablespoonfuls of  brown sugar  and fine  bread crumbs  over top. Place in a very hot oven a short time, until the  fat  turns a golden brown, watch carefully to see that it does not scorch. When cold, slice thin and serve. Aunt Sarah frequently added a pint of  cider  to  water  in which the  ham  was boiled. She said this improved the flavor of the  ham.  
 
    SLICED  HAM    When about to fry a slice of uncooked  ham,  do young housewives know how very much it improves the flavor of the  ham  if it is allowed to stand for ten or fifteen minutes in a platter containing a large teaspoonful of  sugar  and a little  cold water ? Turn several times, then wipe quite dry with a clean cloth and fry in a pan containing a little hot  drippings  and a very little  butter  (one-  half teaspoonful) just enough to prevent its stickign to the pan. Do not fry as quickly as  beefsteak.  After a slice of  ham  has been cut from a whole  ham,  if  lard  be spread over the end of  ham  from which the slice has been cut, it will prevent the cut place form becoming mouldy. 
 
     ROAST PORK    Place  pork  roast in a covered roasting pan containing a small cup of  hot water,  season with  pepper  and  salt  and  sweet marjoram  and sprinkle a little powdered  sage  over it, and stand in a very hot oven. After the  meat  has been roasting for a half hour, have less heat in your oven, allow about 25 minutes to every pound of  pork,  or longer if necessary, but be sure it is 
 well done.  When served, 
 underdone   pork  is very unwholesome and unappetizing. When  meat  is sufficiently roasted, pour off all the  fat  in the pan excep a small quantity, to which add 1/2 cup of  boiling water,   pepper  and  salt  and serve. Serve baked  apples  or  apple sauce  with  pork.  
 
     PORK  CHOPS   Dip  pork  chops in  egg,  then into  bread crumbs  to which has been added  salt,   pepper,  and a very little  sage  and  sweet marjoram.  Some prefer chops simply dredged with  flour.  Fry about 25 minutes or until cooked thorugh and nicely browned, but not scorched. 'Tis said, "The frying of chops in a perfect manner is the test of a good cook." 
 
    HOME-MADE  SAUSAGE    Nine pounds of fresh  pork  (lean and  fat  intermixed as it comes). Cut  meat  in small pieces, run through a  meat  cutter. Sprinkle over the finely chopped  meat  3 tablespoonfuls  salt,  2 tablespoonfuls of  black pepper,  4 tablespoonfuls of powdered  sage  if bought at a chemist's. Aunt Sarah used but three tablespoonfuls of her own home-grown  sage,  as the flavor was much stronger  than  dried sage.  Some folks add 2 tablespoonfuls of  summer savory,  but Aunt Sarah did not care for the flavor.  Cloves,   mace  and  nutmeg  may also be added if one likes highly-spiced food. This is a matter of taste. A good plan is to season the small pieces of  meat  before chopping, as this distributes the  seasoning  through the  sausage.  Fill well cleaned casings, with the finely chopped  meat.  Or form  sausage  into small pats, fry brown on both sides and serve with home-made  buckwheat  cakes. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S METHOD OF KEEPING  SAUSAGE   To keep  sausage  one year, take  sausage  which has been put in casings ( skins  in long links) and cook until heated through in a fry pan half filled with  hot water.  Take  sausage  from the  water,  cut in 4 inch length pieces (stick  sausage  with prongs of a fork, to prevent  skins  bursting) and fry brown on both sides, as if preparing it for the table. Place, while hot, in quart jars, fill jars as compactly as possible, then pour the hot  fat  remaining in pan over top. Seal air-tight and it will keep well one year if jars are perfectly air-tight. 
 
   SOUSE  Two  pig's feet,  weighing together about 1 1/2 pounds. After thoroughly cleansing with a vegetable brush, place in a stewpan and cover with  cold water.  Allow  water  to come to a boil, then move stew-pan to place on range where contents will cook slowly for a number of hours, or until the  meat  is loosened from the  bones,  then strain liquid, which should measure a scant three cups. (If a lesser quantity of liquid, add  hot water  until you have the required amount.) Add also 3 tablespoonfuls of sharp  cider vinegar,  about 3/4 teaspoonful of  salt  and a dust of  black pepper.   Pour this mixture over the  meat,  which should have been seperated from  bones,  allowing a few smaller  bones  to remain with the  meat,  which should have been placed in a bowl with several thin slices of  lemon,  if liked. Stand bowl in a cool place over night or until the "Souse" is of a jelly-like consistency. When  cold, removing any surplus from the top of "Souse." Turn it from the bowl on to a platter. Serve cold. Garnish with thin slices of  lemon  and sprigs of  parsley.  This will furnish about 2 1/4 pounds of souse. 
 
   UTILIZING  COLD MEAT  "LEFT-OVERS"  Small pieces of cold  roast beef,  or  steak  may all be utilized by being put through the food chopper. To 1 cup of finely-chopped  cold meat  add 1/4 cup of  stale bread,  which has soaked for a few minutes in  cold water.  The  water  having been squeezed from the  bread,  it was added the  meat,  as was also a small quantity of finely-minced  onion  or  parsley,  and either the  yolk  or  white of 1 egg  and a  seasoning of salt  and  pepper.  Add left-over  gravy,  to cause the mixture to be soft enough to form into small rolls or cakes, and fry in a pan containing a couple tablespoonfuls of sweet  drippings.  Mashed  potatoes  may be substituted for the  bread  with equally good results. The  meat  mixture may be formed into small cone shapes, dipped in  egg,  then rolled in fine  bread crumbs  and fried in deep  fat.   Very appetizing sandwiches may be made from cold pieces of fried  ham,  run through food chopper. Spread this on thinly-sliced, buttered  bread,  with a dish of prepared  mustard,  spread over the prepared  ham.  Small bits of boiled  ham,  which cannot be slices, may also be used in this manner.  The  fat  was cut from left-over pieces of  roast beef  (place a couple of tablespoonfuls of  fat  in a pan on the range until the  fat  has fried out), then add a little finely-minced  onion  and the  beef  cut in pieces the size of a small marble, brown in the  fat  a few minutes, then add a small quantity of  vinegar  and  water,  and thicken to the consistency of  cream  (with a little  flour  moistened with  cold water,  before being added). This Aunt Sarah made frequently, being a frugal housewife, and called "Salmagundi." 
 
    FOWL-ROAST CHICKEN  OR  TURKEY   Singe the  fowl,  after it has been picked; then with a small vegetable brush quickly scrub it well, with luke- warm water.  Do not let it lie in the  water.  When perfectly clean rinse in cold   water,  wipe dry, cut out the  oil  sack, remove craw from the  neck,  draw the  fowl,  being careful not to break the  gall  in process, as that would cause the  meat,  as well as  giblets,  to have a bitter taste. Take out the  lungs,  the spongy red pieces lying in crevices near the  bones  of the back, and pour  cold water  through the  fowl  until you have thoroughly rinsed and chilled it, and no blood remains inside. I think  fowls  sould be rinsed thoroughly inside and outside with  cold water  (many good cooks to the contrary). Wipe the inside of the  fowl  perfectly dry with a clean cloth, and it is ready for the "filling." Separate the  liver  and  heart  from entrails and cut open the piece containing the  gizzard;  wash the outer part, and put the  giblets  on to cook with a little  hot water;  if wanted to use with the filling. If the  fowl  is wanted to cook or steam the day following, do not cut in pieces and let stand in  water  over night, as I have known some quite good cooks to do, as that draws the flavor from the  meat  and makes it tasteless. If the  giblets  are not to be cooked and added to dressing, place them inside the  fowl,  tie  feet  together, and hang up in a cool place until wanted. When serving a  turkey  dinner with its accompaniments one finds so many things to be attended to in the morning, especially if the  fowl  is cooked on a Sunday. It will be found a great help to the cook to have the  turkey  or  chicken  stuffed with  bread  filling the day before it is to be roasted, ready to pop in the oven in the morning. 
 
    BREAD  FILLING AS AUNT SARAH PREPARED IT  Chop the cold, cooked  liver,   heart  and  gizzard  into tiny dices; add this to a bowl containing one quart of crumbed  stale bread,  seasoned with 1 teaspoonful of  salt,  1/4 teaspoonful of  pepper,  1/2 of a small, finley-minced  onion,  1/4 teaspoonful sweet majoram and a teaspoonful of chopped  parsley.  Stir into the crumbs 3 tablespoonfuls of melted  butter,  moisten all with one  egg  beaten with 2 tablespoonfuls of  milk.  Stir all together lightly with a fork. Fill the body of the  chicken,  put a couple of spoonfuls of this dressing into the space from which the craw was taken, tie the  neck  with a cord, sew up the  fowl  with a darning needle and cord, after filling it. (Always keep a pair of scissors hanging from a nail conveniently near the sink in your kitchen, as it saves many steps.)  The secret of 
 good filling  is not to have it 
 too moist , and to put the filling into the  fowl  
 very lightly ; on no account press it down when placing it in the  fowl,  as that will cause the best of filling to be heavy and sodden. Rather put less in, and fill a small  cheese  cloth bag with what remains, and a short time before the  fowl  has finished roasting, lay the bag containing the dressing on top of  fowl  until heated through, then turn out on one side of platter and serve with the  fowl.  Instead of chopped  giblets,  add 2 dozen  oysters  to the dressing, or a few  chestnuts  boiled tender, mashed and seasoned with  butter,   pepper  and  salt  and added to the crumbled  bread.  This makes a pleasant change. Do not use quite as many crumbs if  chestnuts  or  oysters  are added. Place  fowl  in covered roasting pan, put two cups of  hot water  in the pan and set in a very hot oven for the first half hour, then reduce the heat and baste frequently. An ordinary eight-pound  turkey  takes from two to three hours to roast; a  chicken  takes about twenty minutes to the pound. 
 
   FRIED  CHICKEN  WITH  CREAM GRAVY   Cut one small spring  chicken  in pieces, dip each piece in a batter composed of 1 beaten  egg,  1 cup of  milk,  a pinch of  salt,  1/2 teaspoonful of  baking powder,  sifted with  flour  enough to form a batter. Dip the pieces of  chicken  in this batter, one at a time, and fry slowly in a pan containing a couple tablespoonfuls of hot  butter  and  lard,  until a golden brown. Place the fried  chicken  on a platter.  Make a  gravy  by adding to the  fat  remaining in the pan- 1 cup of  milk,  1 tablespoonful of  cornstarch.  Allow this to brown and thicken. Then pour the  gravy  over the  chicken  and serve garnished with  parsley  or  water -cress. 
  
   STEWED OR STEAMED  CHICKEN  Cut a nicely cleaned  chicken  into nine pieces. (Do not separate the  meat  from the  breast-bone  until it has been cooked.) Put in a cook pot and partly cover with  boiling water.  Add one small  onion  and a sprig of  parsley,  and let simmer about 1 1/2 hours, or until tender. If an  old fowl  it will take about one hour longer. Add  salt  and  pepper.  Strain the  broth,  if very  fat,  remove a part from  broth.  After separating the  white meat  from the  breast-bone,  put all the  meat  on a platter. Add 1/4 cup of  sweet milk  to the strained  broth,  thicken with a couple tablespoonfuls of  flour,  mixed smooth with a little  cold water.  Let come to a boil, and add one teaspoonful of chopped  parsley.  Pour the  chicken gravy  over the platter containing the  meat,  or serve it in a separate bowl. Or you may quickly brown the pieces of stewed  chicken  which have been sprinkled with  flour  in a pan containing a little sweet  drippings  or  butter.  Should the  chicken  not be a very  fat  one, add  yolk of one egg  to the  gravy.   Or, instead of stewing the  chicken,  place in the upper compartment of a steamer, and steam until tender and serve. The day following that on which stewed or steamed  chicken  was served, small undesirable left-over pieces of the  chicken  were added (after being picked from the  bones ) to the  gravy  remaining from the day before, heated thoroughly and poured hot over a platter containing small  baking powder biscuits  broken in half or slices of  toasted bread,  which is economical, extending the  meat  flavor. 
 
   VEGETABLES-WHITE POTATOES Potatoes are one of the most valuable of vegetables. White potatoes, after being pared, should be put in a stew-pan over the fire with a little  boiling water,  but not enough to cover them. The  water  should be kept boiling continuously. About thirty minutes from the time they commence boiling will be the time required For cooking  potatoes  of ordinary size. It spoils  potatoes  to have the  water  stop boiling even for a short time. Add half a tea-spoonful of  salt  to the  potatoes  when partly boiled and when cooked sufficiently drain the  water  from them at 
 once  and sprinkle a little  salt  over the dry  potatoes . Close the lid of the stew-pan  tightly, give it a quick shake, when the  potatoes  will be found dry and flaky. Mash fine with a potato masher, adding a teaspoonful of  butter  and a couple tablespoonfuls of  milk.  Let stand a minute on the hot range to heat the  milk,  then beat all together with a fork until creamy. Add more  salt  if necessary. That is quite important, as  potatoes  require considerable  salt.  Cover the  potatoes  with a cloth. Never allow to stand with the lid of the stew-pan over them, as it will draw moisture. Serve white potatoes as soon as possible after being cooked, as they are not appetizing when allowed to stand any length of time. 
 
   BAKED POTATOES  All young housewives may not know "that there is more real food value in  potatoes  baked 'in their jackets' than is found in preparing this well-known tuber in any other way." The secret of a good baked  potato  lies in having a hot oven, but not too hot. Scrub good sized  potatoes , or, for a change, they may be pared before baking, place in a hot oven, and bake about 45 minutes, when they should be a snowy, flaky mass inside the  skins,  palatable and wholesome. When fully baked they should feel soft to the touch when pressed. Take from the oven, pinch one end of  potato  to break the  skin  to allow the gas to escape. Always break open a baked  potato.  Never cut with a knife.  Medium-sized  potatoes , pared, cut in half lengthwise, and baked in a hot oven 25 to 40 minutes, until the outside of the  potato  is a light brown, make a pleasant change from boiled potaotes. When baked the proper length of time and served at once, the inside of  potato  should be light and flaky. The housewife should occasionally serve  rice  or  macaroni  and omit  potatoes  from the bill of fare, especially in the spring of the year.  Potatoes should always be served as soon as baked, if possible. Potatoes may be baked in less than a half hour in a gas oven. 
 
   VARIOUS WAYS OF USING SMALL POTATOES  Early in the season when small, early  potatoes  are more plentiful and cheaper than large ones, the young housewife will  be able to give her family a change, while practicing economy, as there are various ways of using small  potatoes  to advantage.  First, new  potatoes , if about the size of marbles, may be scraped, boiled in  salted water,  and served with a thin  cream  dressing, sprinkled liberally with chopped  parsley,  or the boiled  potatoes , while still hot, may be quickly browned in a pan containing a couple tablespoonfuls of hot  drippings  or  butter.  They are much better prepared in this manner if the  potatoes  are put in the hot  fat  while still warm. Or the small boiled  potatoes  may be cut in thin slices, browned in a couple tablespoonfuls of  butter  or  drippings  and two  eggs  beaten together stirred over the  potatoes  a few minutes before they are ready to serve. The small  potatoes  may also be scraped and dropped in hot, deep  fat  and fried like fritters.  When possible, the small  potatoes  should be well cleansed with a vegetable brush and boiled without paring. They may then be easily skinned after they are cooked. Some of the more important ingredients are lost when  potatoes  are pared, and it is also more economical to boil them before paring. The cold boiled  potatoes  may be cut up and used for  potato  salad, or thinly sliced after being skinned and placed in a baking dish alternately with a  cream sauce  consisting of  milk,   butter  and  flour,  and seasoned with  salt  and  pepper,  having the first and last layer  cream sauce.  Sprinkle  bread crumbs  liberally over the top, dot with bits of  butter  and bake in a moderate oven about 20 minutes until the top is nicely browned. Serve in the dish in which they were baked.  Or peel one-half dozen medium-sized raw  potatoes , cut into small, narrow strips about 1/3 inch wide, dry on a napkin and fry in very hot, deep  fat  about six minutes, then lift from  fat,  drain, sprinkle  salt  over and serve hot. These are a nice accompaniment to  broiled steak.   Peel and slice, or cut in dice, 6 or 8 cold boiled  potatoes , put in a slew-pan with 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,   salt  and  pepper  to season, heat all together, shaking pan occasionally. Add 1/2 cup of  cream,  sprinkle a small teaspoonful of  parsley  over and serve hot. Instead of slicing or dicing cold boiled  potatoes  (in the usual manner) to be fried, if they be cut in lengthwise sections like an  orange  (one  potato  should make about 8 pieces) and fried quickly in enough hot  fat  to prevent burning, they can scarcely be dis-  tinguished from raw  potatoes  in the same manner and fried in deep  fat,  and are much easier to prepare. They should be served at once.  Another manner of preparing  potatoes  is to slice raw  potatoes  as thinly as possible on a "slaw-culler," place in a fry-pan with a couple of tablespoonfuls of a mixture of  butter  and sweet  drippings.  Watch carefully, as they should be fried quickly over a hot fire, turning frequently. When brown, serve at once.  Raw 
 sweet   potatoes  cut about as thick as half a section of an  orange,  fried in a couple tablespoonfuls of a mixture of sweet  drippings  and  butter,  prove a change, occasionally. 
 
   SCALLOPED POTATOES  In a baking dish place layers of pared, thinly sliced,  raw white potatoes . Season with a very little  salt  and  pepper  and or  parsley  may be added if liked. To 1 quart of the sliced  potatoes  use a scant half pint of  milk,  which should almost cover the  potatoes . Either sift over the top 1 tablespoon of  flour  or 2 tablespoons of fine,  dried bread crumbs  and bits of  butter;  place in hot oven and bake about 3/4 of an hour, until top is browned nicely and  potatoes  are cooked through. Old  potatoes  are particularly good prepared in this manner. 
 
   CANDIED  SWEET POTATOES   Place in an agate pudding dish 6 pared and halved (lengthwise) raw  sweet potatoes.  Scatter over them three tablespoons of  sugar,  2 large tablespoons of hutter cut in small bits, and about 1/2 a cup (good measure} of  water.  Stand in a hot oven and bake about 3/4 of an hour. Baste frequently with the  syrup  formed in the bottom of the dish. The  potatoes  when baked should look clear and the  syrup  should be as thick as  molasses.  Serve in the dish in which they were baked. Should the oven of the range not be very hot, the dish containing the  potatoes  may be placed on top the range and cooked about 25 minutes before placing in oven to finish baking.   To 1 pint of hot mashed  potatoes , or cold boiled ones may be used, squeezed through a  fruit  press; add 1 tablespoon of  butter,  pinch of  salt,  2  eggs, whites  beaten separately. When cool, form into small cone-shaped, dip in  bread crumbs,  then in  egg,  then into crumbs again, and fry in deep  fat.  Drain on  paper  and serve on platter garnished with  parsley.  
 
   POTATO CHIPS  Aunt Sarah's way of making particularly  fine potato  chips: She pared six large white potatoes, one at a time. As she wished to slice them to fry, she rinsed the  potatoes , rolled them on a clean cloth to dry them. She sliced the  potatoes  thinly on a "slaw" cutter. She patted the sliced  potatoes  between old linen napkins, until all moisture was absorbed, then dropped them into hot  fat,  consisting of two-thirds  lard  and one-third  suet.  Place only one layer of  potatoes  at a time in the  fat.  The chips quickly turn light brown; then remove iwth a perforated skimmer to a colander lined with coarse brown  paper,  to absorb any remaining  fat.  Should the  fat  be the right temperature, the chips will be entirely free from  grease.  Dust  salt  over the chips while hot. She 
 never  allowed chips to stand in  salt water,  as many cooks do. She usually made  potato  chips when frying doughnuts, and always fried  potato  chips first; after frying doughnuts in the  fat  fry Several large slices of  potato  in it, as the  potato  clarifies it. Six large, thinly sliced  potatoes  will make about five quarts of  potato  chips when fried and may be kept several weeks in a dry place. The  potato  chips may be re-heated by placing in a hot oven a few minutes before serving. 
 
   FRIED  EGGPLANT   Pare the  egg -plant, cut in slices one-half inch thick, sprinkle  salt  on slices; let stand under heavy weight several hours. Wipe slices dry with a napkin and dip in a mixture of  white of one egg,  and one tablespoon of  water,  then dip them in fine rolled  bread crumbs  and fry a rich brown in deep  fat.  Drain and serve.  Catsup  should always be served with  eggplant.  
  
   BAKED "STUFFED  PEPPERS "  Place a fry-pan on stove containing about two tablespoonfuls of  butter,  add a couple of finely chopped sweet  peppers  and a finely minced small  onion.  Let all simmer on stove. Measure the chopped  pepper  and add an equal amount of finely crumbled  bread.  Season with  salt  and  pepper  and fill (well-washed)  peppers  from which the stem and  seeds  have been removed. Stand the  peppers  in a bake dish containing a small amount of  water.  Place in a hot oven about twenty-five minutes, or until  peppers  are tender. Serve hot. 
 
    CHILI  (AS PREPARED IN NEW MEXICO)  Place hot  peppers  (well-washed) from which  seeds  have been removed into a bake dish containing a very little  hot water.  Stand in a hot oven until tender and  skins  turn a yellow brown, turning them over occasionally. Remove the outside  skin,  chop fine, add a small quantity of finely minced  onion,   pepper  and  salt  and enough  vinegar  to moisten. If sweet  peppers  are used add a pinch of  cayenne pepper.  Serve as a relish in place of  pickles  or chow-chow. This recipe was given Mary by a friend who had lived in Mexico. The outside  skin  of the  peppers  may be more readily removed if upon being removed from the oven the  peppers  are sprinkled with  water,  then covered with a cloth and allowed to steam a short time. 
 
   BAKED  CABBAGE   A half  head of cabbage  was cut into small pieces and cooked in hot  salted water  until  cabbage  was tender. The  water  was drained from the boiled  cabbage,  which was placed in an agate pudding dish alternately with  cream sauce  composed of one cup of  milk;  one small tablespoonful of  flour,  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  seasoned with  salt  and  pepper.  Sprinkle a few crumbs and place bits of the  butter  over top. Bake in oven about 25 minutes and serve hot. This dish is almost equal to  cauliflower  in flavor, especially if after the  cabbage  has cooked ten or fifteen minutes the  water  is dreained from it and fresh substituted. And it is said, " Cauliflower  is only  cabbage  with a college education." 
  
   CRIMSON CREAMED  BEETS   Cut all except two inches from the tops of  beets.  Scrub thoroughly with a vegetable brush, then pour scalding  water  over  beets.  When perfectly cleansed, place in a cook-pot, partly cover with  boiling water,  stand on range and when  beets  have cooked tender remove outside  skin.  Strain and stand aside one cup of  water  in which  beets  were boiled, which should be dark  wine  color. When  beets  are to be served to the one cup of  strained beet juice vinegar,  add one tablespoonful of  sugar,  one-fourth cup of not 
 very sharp   vinegar.  Add one teaspoon of  butter.  Thicken this liquid with one and one-fourth tablespoonfuls of a mixture of  corn starch  and  flour.  When cooked to the consistency of  cream  add the quartered  beets,  season with  pepper  and  salt,  stand on back part of range a few minutes, serve hot. To three cups of the quartered  beets  use one and one-half cups of  cream  dressing. 
 
   BUTTERED  BEETS   Wash young  beets,  cut off tops. Boil one hour or until tender, one tablespoonful of  sugar  having been added to the  water  in which  beets  were boiled. Rub off  skins,  cut in quarters, strew over them one tablespoon of  butter  cut in small pieces, stand in oven just long enough for the  butter  to melt. Or cut the  beets  in slices one-fourth of an inch thick and while still warm place in a bowl and pour over them half a cup of hot  vinegar  and  water  to which had been added one tablespoonful of  sugar,  a pinch of  salt  and  pepper;  serve cold. 
 
   PICKLED MANGELWURZEL  A vegetable in taste, similar to very sweet, red  beets  in shape, greatly resembling  carrots.  Wash the mangelwurzel and place in a stew-pan with  boiling water  and cook until tender (allow about an inch of top to remain when preparing to cook).  Skin  the mangelwurzel, slice and pour over the following, which has been heated in a stew-pan over the fire: One cup of  vinegar  and  water  combined, one tablespoonful of  sugar,  one teaspoonful of  salt,  a dust of  pepper.  Stand aside until cold, then serve. Or  serve hot like buttered  beets.  Some "Bucks County" farmers raise mangelwurzel simply to feed to their cattle, but Aunt Sarah preferred them when young and tender to  beets,  and always raised them for her table. 
 
   GERMAN STEAMED  CABBAGE   Cut one-half  head of cabbage  fine on a slaw cutter. Place in a stew-pan over fire, with about four tablespoonfuls of  water,  one tablespoonful of  butter,  a couple tablespoonfuls of  flour,  one teaspoonful of  sugar  and a pinch of  salt.  Cover and steam twenty minutes. Then add three tablespoons of  vinegar.  Stir in one beaten  egg.  Cover and let stand where it will keep hot until ready to serve. 
 
   BEAN "SNITZEL"  Place in a pan on the range one tablespoon of diced,  smoked bacon,  fry a few minutes, watch closely it does not scorch. Add one tablespoonful of  sweet lard,  when hot, add four thinly sliced, medium-sized  onions  and four chopped  tomatoes  and 1 1/2 quarts of string  beans , cut in inch lengths. Season with  salt  and a pinch of  red pepper.  Simmer all together three hours. After cooking one hour add about one cup of  hot water,  stirring occasionally to prevent scorching, add a little more  water  if necessary; when  beans  are tender and ready to serve there should be a small quantity of liquid, resembling  tomato sauce,  with the  beans . 
 
   BOILED  SPINACH   Wash one-half peck of  spinach  thoroughly through a half dozen waters, until free from sand. Place in a stew-pan containing a small quantity of 
 boiling   water  and one teaspoon of  butter.  Cook until tender, drain, chop fine. Place a large tablespoonful of  butter  in stew-pan and when hot add chopped  spinach,  season with  salt  and  pepper  serve in a warmed dish, garnished with either chopped or sliced  hard boiled eggs.  A German cook, noted for the fine flavor of her cooked  spinach  and  green peas,  said her secret consisted in adding a teaspoon of  butter  to the vegetables while cooking. 
  
   FRIED  ONIONS  AND POTATOES  Another way of utilizing left-over cold boiled  potatoes  particularily relished by "Pennsylvania Germans," whose liking for the humble  onion  is proverbial, is to fry  onions  with  potatoes  in a fry-pan containing a couple tablespoonfuls of sweet  drippings  and  butter;  when heated place a half dozen thinly sliced cold boiled  potatoes , half the quantity of thinly sliced raw  onions,  well seasoned with  pepper  and  salt,  cover an steam for ten or fifteen minutes, when uncover and fry until light brown; serve at once. Or the thinly-slices  onions,  after  skins  have been removed, may be sliced thinly across the  onion,  place in a fry-pan and partly covered with  boiling water;  stand on hot range and steam, closely covered, about fifteen minutes, or until  onions  are tender, then drain off the  water,  should any remain, add a small tablespoonful of  butter,   salt  and  pepper  to season, fry quickly a light brown; pan should be uncovered. Serve at once with  liver  or  bacon.   Onions  are considered more wholesome prepared in this manner than if fried. 
 
   STEAMED  ASPARAGUS  (FINE)  Wash  asparagus  and cut off about an inch of the tough ends, srape off thin  skin.  Place pieces of  asparagus  tips (all in one direction) in the top part of perforated section of a double boiler. Fill lower part of steamer with  hot water  and steam about three-quarters of an hour or less time, until tender. The fine flavor of the vegetable is retained when steamed. When cooked tender turn out on a hot platter and pour  cream sauce  over the tips, or the  cream sauce  may be served seperately, or the  asparagus  may be served on freshly toasted slices of  bread,  over which the  cream sauce  should be poured. 
 
   "PASTURE"  MUSHROOMS   All the members of the Landis family unanimously agreed in declaring the dish "Frau Schmidt" taught Sarah Landis to prepare from the delicious edible Fungi, known as "Pasture"  mushrooms  (gathered by Professor Schmidt from rich, wind-swept pastures, early in the fall of the year until the coming of frost) were good enough to tickle the palate of an epicure.   Sarah Landis was very particular to use none unless pronounced 
 edible  mushrooms  , and not poisonous toad-stools, by Professor Schmidt, who was a recognized authority. Said the Professor, "The edible variety may be easily recognized by one having a knowledge of the vegetable. The cap may be readily peeled, and the flesh of the "Pasture"  mushroom,  when cut or broken, changes in color to a pale rose pink, and they possess many other distinctive features, easily recognized, when one has made a study of them."  The following is the manner in which the  mushrooms  were prepared by Frau Schmidt: 
 
   STEAMED  MUSHROOMS   One-half pound or about twenty-four small  mushrooms  were peeled, washed carefully in  cold water,  placed in a small stew-pan containing two generous tablespoonfuls of  butter,  covered closely and allowed to simmer or steam for twenty minutes in  butter  and liquid in  sauce -pan and  mushrooms  to cook about ten minutes longer, then sprinkle two teaspoonfuls of  flour  over the  mushrooms,  brown a minute, stir into this 1/2 cup of  milk,  or enough to make a  sauce  the consistency of  cream,  season well with  salt  and  pepper  to taste. Have ready prepared six crisply toasted and buttered slices of  stale bread.  Place four  mushrooms  and a couple of tablespoonfuls of the  mushroom sauce  on each slice of  bread  and serve hot. The combination of  toast  and  mushrooms  results in a particularly fine flavor. 
 
   STEWED TOMATOES  Scald ripe  tomatoes  by pouring  boiling water  over them and allowing them to stand a few minutes.  Skin  them and cut in small pieces. Place in a stew-pan with 1 tablespoonful of  butter,  season 
 well  with  pepper  and  salt,  cook about 25 minutes, add 1/2 teaspoonful of  sugar  and thicken with 1 teaspoonful of  flour  mixed smooth with a little  water.  Let cook a few minutes, then serve. If  tomatoes  are very  tart  a small pinch of  baking soda,  added when cooked, will counteract acidity. 
  
    SWEET CORN    Sweet corn  on the  cob  should be cooked as soon as possible after taking it from the stalk, as after being removed it soon loses its sweetness. Do not remove the  husk  until it is to be boiled. Place  corn  in a kettle of rapidly  boiling water,  not salted; rather add a pinch of  sugar  if  corn  is not as sweet as liked. Cover the kettle to prevent steam escaping. Do not use a 
 large quantity of  water  .  Corn  is sweeter if steamed. Boil from ten to fifteen minutes. If  corn  is not cooked in that time, it should be used uncooked for  corn  fritters, as  corn  if 
 not  young and tender may be grated and from it excellent  corn  fritters may be made. 
 
   FRIED  TOMATOES WITH CREAM SAUCE   Cut large, solid, ripe  tomatoes  in half-inch slices; one ordinary  tomato  makes 3 slices. Dredge thickly with  flour.  Fry several slices of  bacon  in an iron pan, take  bacon  from pan when fried and put in warming oven. Lay the well- flour ed slices of  tomatoes  in hot  bacon fat  and one tablespoon of  butter  and fry brown on both sides. Serve on hot platter with  bacon.  Or fry slices of well  flour ed  tomatoes  in pan containing just enough  butter  and  drippings  to keep them from sticking to the bottom of pan, over a hot fire. Fry quickly, browning each side. Season with  salt  and  pepper.  It the  tomatoes  are very sour, sprinkle a very little  sugar  over them before frying. When brown, lift the  tomatoes  carefully from pan and place on in a circle around the inside edge of a warm chop plate, add a lump of  butter  to the pan and a small half cup of  sweet milk.  Let come to a boil, thicken with a little  flour  mixed smoothly with a little  cold milk,  and cook until the consistency of thick  cream.  Season with  salt  and pour in centre of chop plate, surrounded with fried slices of  tomatoes.  Dust  pepper  over top and serve hot.  This is a delicious way of serving  tomatoes.  Or slices of the fried  tomatoes  may be served on slices of crisply  toasted bread  over which place a couple tablespoons of the  cream  dressing. 
 
   BAKED "STUFFED TOMATOES"  Wash a half dozen ripe  red tomatoes.  Cut the top from each  and remove about the half of the inside of  tomato.  Sprinkle a very tiny pinch of  sugar  in each. This small quantity of  sugar  is not noticed, but counteracts the acidity of the  tomato.  To one and one-half cups of soft  bread crumbs  add one small finely minced  onion  and season highly with  salt  and  pepper,  also add one teaspoon of chopped  parsley.  Mix all together and fill the  tomatoes  with the mixture. Place a small bit of  butter  on each  tomato.  Place in a bake dish containing a half cup of  water,  a piece of  butter,  one teaspoonful of  sugar,  a sprig of  parsley  and  pepper  and  salt  to season. Stand in a hot oven and bake from 25 to 30 minutes. The centres which were removed from  tomatoes  may be utilized in various ways. 
 
   CANNED TOMATOES-FRIED  Place in a bowl a half pint of canned  tomatoes,  one-fourth teaspoon of  sugar  with  salt  and  pepper.  Add about four tablespoonfuls of  flour  sifted with one-half teaspoon of  baking powder  and one tablespoon of  butter.  Use only  flour  enough to hold the mixture together when fried. Drop spoonfuls some distance apart in a fry-pan containing several tablespoonfuls of hot  lard,   butter,   suet  or  drippings.  Fry on both sides and serve hot. In Winter, when the housewife is unable to obtain fresh  tomatoes,  she will find this dish a good substitute to serve occasionally. 
 
   "BUCKS COUNTY" BAKED BEANS  Put one quart of small soup  beans  to soak over night in  cold water  to cover. In the morning drain the  beans , cover with  boiling water,  add one tablespoonful of  molasses  and cook until tender, but not too soft. Drain. Do not use this  water.  Put the  beans  in an earthen bake dish. In the centre of the bake dish place one pound of clean, scored  smoked bacon,  and pour over the  beans  the water in which the  bacon  had been simmering for an hour. Add  water,  if not enough, to almost cover the  beans ,  salt  and  pepper  to taste. Place in oven and bake about three hours, or until  beans  are tender and a rich brown on top. Add more  hot water  if  beans  bake dry, until the last half hour, then allow the  water  to cook away.   Serve stewed  tomatoes,  baked  apples  or  apple sauce  as an accompaniment to baked  beans . This is not a recipe for "Boston Baked Beans." Just a "plain country recipe," but it will be found very satisfactory.  If part of a dish of  beans  remain after a meal, re-heat the day following in " tomato sauce. " Aunt Sarah always baked a pan of  corn bread  or Johnny cake, to serve hot with baked  beans .  When the housewife serves a dish of baked  beans  at a meal, serve also a quart of stewed  tomatoes.  The day following a " tomato sauce " may be quickly prepared by adding a well-cooked  carrot  and an  onion  to the "left-over"  tomatoes.  Press al through a coarse sieve, adding a little  water  if too thick; re-heat  beans  in this; serve hot. A delicious "cream of  tomato  soup" may be prepared by substituting  milk  or  cream  to which a small pinch of  baking soda  has been added, omitting the  beans . 
 
   COOKED  HOMINY   Wash one cup of  hominy  through several waters. (The grains should resemble kernels of  corn. ) Cover with  cold water  and stand in a cool place over night. In the morning, drain. Place the  hominy  in an agate pudding dish holding 2 quarts, cover with  boiling water,  add more  water  as the grains swell and  water  boils away, and 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  The  hominy  should be placed on the range to cook early in the morning on the day it is to be served and continue cooking slowly until late afternoon, when all the  water  should have been absorbed and each grain should be large,  white  and flaky. The dish should be about three-quarters full.  A half hour before serving the  hominy,  at a six o'clock dinner, add a generous tablespoonful of  butter  and about 3/4 of a cup of hot  milk  and stand on back of range until served. This is a remarkably cheap, wholesome and appetizing dish if served properly and is easily prepared. 
 
   GRATED " PARSNIP  CAKES"  Scrape, then grate enough raw  parsnip,  to fill two cups, put  in a bowl and add the  yolk of one egg,  pinch of  salt,  1 tablespoonful of  milk,  1 tablespoonful of  flour,  lastly add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg.   Form into small round cakes, dust with  flour  and fry brown on both sides in a pan containing a tablespoonful of  butter  and one of  drippings.  Or these may be crumbed and fried in deep  fat.  These are much finer flavored than if  parsnips  had been cooked before being fried. 
 
   TO MAKE " SAUCE  KRAUT"  Cut  heads of cabbage  in half, after trimming off outside leaves. Cut out centres or  hearts,  cut  cabbage  fine on a regular old-fashioned  cabbage  cutter, which has a square box on top of cutter to hold the pieces of  cabbage  when being pushed back and forth over the cutter. If not possible to procure this, use small slaw cutter for the purpose.  Partly fill a large pan with the cut  cabbage,  and mix enough  salt,  with the hands, through the cut  cabbage  to be palatable when tasted, no more. This was the rule taught Aunt Sarah by her Grandmother, and always followed by her. Then put the salted  cabbage  into a wooden cask or small tub to the depth of several inches. Pound the  cabbage  down well with a long-handled, heavy, wooden mallet, something like a very large wooden potato masher. Then mix another panful of finely cut  cabbage,  lightly salted, into the tub and pound down well, as before. Continue in this manner until the tub is partly filled with  cabbage,  pounding down well at the last until the liquid formed by the  cabbage  and  salt  rises above the  cabbage.  Cover the kraut with a layer of large clean  cabbage  or  grape leaves,  then cover top with a clean piece of muslin cloth, place a round, clean board on top and put a well-scrubbed, heavy stone on the board to weight it down. Stand the tub in a warm place several days, to ferment. When fermentation begins, the liquor rises over the top of the board. Remove the scrum which rises to top. in about six days, and stand in a cool part of the cellar after washing stone and cloth with  cold water,  return to top of kraut, and in two weeks the sauer kraut will be ready to use. Should the sauer kraut require extra liquid at any time, add one quart of  water  in which has been  dissolved two teaspoonfuls of  salt.  Squeeze the sauer kraut quite dry when taking it from the  brine  to cook. Boil about two quarts of the sauer kraut several hours with a piece of fresh  pork  and a little  water  until the  pork  is thoroughly cooked through, when the sauer kraut should be cooked tender.  Some prefer "frankfurters" cooked with the kraut instead of  pork,  and others do not care for the German dish without the accompaniment of drop dumplings. Serve mashed  potatoes  and simple dessert with sauer kraut.  Aunt Sarah taught Mary to save the  hearts  of the  cabbage  usually thrown aside when making sauer kraut. The  hearts  were trimmed all one size, like small triangles. She cooked them in  salted water  until tender, drained them and served with a  cream  dressing, and they had much the flavor of a dish of  cauliflower.    Frau Schmidt always placed several  tart apples  among her sauer kraut when making it, and thought it improved the flavor of the kraut; gave it a "winey" flavor, obtained in no other manner. A  sour apple,  cored and cooked with sauer kraut is considered by some cooks an improvement. The  apple,  of course, is not catable. Aunt Sarah never placed  apples  with her sauer kraut. 
 
   DUMPLINGS TO SERVE WITH SAUER KRAUT  For these dumplings, 1  egg  was broken into a bowl and well beaten. Then a pinch of  salt  was added and 1/2 cup of  sweet milk.  Enough  flour  was added to make a soft dough, and one table-spoonful of  baking powder  was sifted with a very little  flour  into the batter, then a little more  flour  was added to make the dough the right consistency. Form the dough into small balls, handling as little as possible. Drop on top of the hot cooked "sauer kraut" in cook-pot on range and boil, closely covered, about 20 minutes.  Aunt Sarah taught Mary to cook green vegetables,  peas,   spinach,  etc., in a stew-pan 
 uncovered , if she wished them to retain their natural color. Abo, that old  potatoes  may be freshened by being allowed to stand a short time in  cold water  before being cooked, but they should not stand too long a time in  cold water,  as it draws the  starch  from them and causes them to be tasteless, and to lose part of their nourishing qualities.  Also that one teaspoonful of  salt  will usually season one quart  of vegetables, to be put in when the vegetables begin to cook.  Cauliflower,   cabbage,   lettuce  and watercress should stand in a pan containing  water  and a little  vinegar  for a half hour. This will cause insects to drop to the bottom of the pan.  Changing the  water  on  cabbage  and  onions  when partly cooked will improve their flavor. 
 
    PARSLEY  DRIED TO  PRESERVE  ITS GREEN COLOR  Young housewives possessing a bed of  parsley  in their kitchen gardens, wishing to  preserve  it for use during the Winter, may like to know how Aunt Sarah taught Mary to dry it in a manner to  preserve  its bright green color.  She wanted the  parsley  in  cold water  and while still moist placed in on agate pans and dried it 
 quickly  in a 
 very hot  oven. Watch carefully as it scorches easily. Place the  parsley,  when dried, in tin cans covered to exclude the dust. 
 
   TIME REQUIRED TO COOK VEGETABLES  Bake good-sixed  potatoes  in oven about 45 minutes. Smaller  potatoes  require less time to bake.  Boil ordinary sized  potatoes  25 to 30 minutes.   Steam   asparagus  from 30 to 40 minutes.  Boil young  beets  about 60 minutes or longer.  Old  beets,  two hours, or until tender  Green  corn on cob  about 10 to 15 minutes.   Cauliflower,  30 minutes.   Cabbage,  30 to 40 minutes.   Turnips  and  carrots,  40 minutes.  String  beans , 60 minutes to 2 hours.   Lima bean s, 45 minutes to 1 hour.   Onions  about 1 hour.   Squash  about 30 minutes.   Parsnips,  30 to 40 minutes.   Sweet potatoes,  good size, 40 minutes.   Spinach,  25 minutes.   Tomatoes,  25 minutes.    Salt  should be added to the  water  when boiling  potatoes ,  carrots,   cabbage,   parsnips,   turnips  and  onions,  even if liquid in which they were boiled is drained from them after being cooked, before being seasoned. Add a small pinch of  baking soda  to the  water  in which string  beans  are boiled, and they will cook tender in less time. Especially should this be done if the  beans  are not young and tender. 
 
   COMMON "CREAM  SAUCE "  Young housekeepers will be surprised to learn of the various attractive, appetizing dishes which may be prepared by combining them with a "cream  sauce. " After cooking vegetables until tender In  salted water,  they should be drained and served with a  cream sauce  poured over. The art of making a smooth, creamy  sauce  of the proper consistency is easily acquired. A good rule for "common  cream sauce " is 1 cup of  milk,   water,  or  meat broth,  thickened with 1 tablespoonful to 1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  flour,  or a combination of  flour  and  cornstarch.  Mix  flour,  or  cornstarch,  with a small quantity of  cold milk  or  water,  to a smooth  paste,  before adding it to liquid; add, usually, one table spoonful of  butter.  Place the mixture in a saucepan and cook until the consistency of  cream,  add 1/2 teaspoonful of  salt  just before removing from the fire, and dust  pepper  over when serving. When mixing  gravy  to serve with  roast beef  or  veal,  omit  butter.  For a thick  sauce  use either 2 or 3 tablespoonfuls of  flour  and the same amount of  butter.  This thick  sauce  may be used to mix with  meat  for croquettes in the proportion of 1 cup of  sauce  to 2 cups of chopped cold  roast lamb,   beef,   veal  or  chicken.  Should a richer  sauce  be cleared, add 1 or more  yolks of eggs  to the  cream sauce.  Some of the numerous dishes which might be served by the young housewife to vary the daily bill of fare by the addition of  cream sauce, " are: Small, new  potatoes   cauliflower,   onions,   cabbage,   asparagus  tips, thinly sliced  carrots celery mushrooms,   fish oysters,   chicken,   veal  and  sweetbreads.  All of these, when cooked, may be served on slices of  toasted bread,  or served in pattie-cases, with  cream sauce,  or served simply with  cream sauce.  
  
   PREPARATION OF  SAVORY GRAVIES   The art of preparing  savory gravies  and sauces is more important in connection with the serving of the cheaper  meats  than in connection with the cooking of the more expensive cuts.  There are a few general principles underlying the making of all sauces or  gravies,  whether the liquid used is  water,   milk,   stock,   tomato juice  or some combination of these. For ordinary  gravy,  2 level table spoonfuls of  flour  or 1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  cornstarch,  or arrow root, is sufficient to thicken a cup of liquid. This is true excepting in recipes where the  flour  is browned. In this case, about 1/2 tablespoonful more should be allowed, for  browned flour  does not thicken so well as unbrowned. The  fat  used may be  butter  or the  drippings  from the  meat,  the allowance being 2 tablespoonfuls to a cup of liquid. The easiest way to mix the ingredients is to heat the  fat,  add the  flour  and cook until the mixture ceases to bubble, and then to add the liquid. This is a quick method and by using it there is little danger of getting a lumpy  gravy.  Many persons, however, think it is not a wholesome method, and prefer the old-fashioned one of thickening the  gravy  by means of  flour  mixed with a little  cold water.  (Aunt Sarah was one who thought thus.) The latter method is not "practicable for brown  gravies, " to quote the 
 Farmers' Bulletion .  The 
 Farmers' Bulletin  further adds:  "Considering the large amount of discussion about the digestibility of fried food and of  gravies  made by heating  flour  in  fat,  a few words on the subject at this point may not be out of order. It is difficult to see how heating the  fat  before adding the  flour  can be unwholesome, unless the cook is unskillful enough to heat the  fat  so high that it begins to scorch. Overheated  fat,  as has already been pointed out, contains an acrid, irritating substance called 'Acrolein,' which may readily be considered to be unwholesome. It is without doubt the production of this body by overheating which has given fried food its bad name. There are several ways of varying the flavor of  gravies  and sauces. One should be especially mentioned here. The 
 flavor of  browned flour  -The good flavor of  browned flour  is often overlooked. If  flour  is cooked in  fat,  until it is a dark brown color, a distinctive and very agreeable flavor is obtained.  "This flavor combines very well with that of  currant jelly,  and  a little  jelly  added to a  brown gravy  is a great improvement. The flavor of this should not be combined with that of  onions  or other highly-flavored vegetables." 
 
    BUTTER,   CHEESE  AND  SUET -A SUBSTITUTE FOR  BUTTER   This formula for preparing a good, sweet, wholesome substitute for  butter  to be used for baking and frying was given Aunt Sarah by a thrifty German hausfrau, who prepared and used it in her large family many years. Aunt Sarah always kept a supply on hand. It was made as follows:    10 pounds of fine solid  kidney suet.   10 pounds of c lean pork fat.   10 pounds of  butter.    The  suet  cut in small pieces was put in a large boiler of  water,  boiled until all was melted, and the  fat  extracted from the  suet.  It was then all poured through a fine sieve into 3 vessel containing  hot water  (the larger the quantity of  hot water  the finer the  fat  will be). Stand aside to become cold and solid. The boiling process prevents the peculiar taste which 
 fried   lard  and  suet  usually possess. Treat the  pork fat  in a similar manner. Allow the  suet  and  pork fat  to stand until the following morning, when remove the solid  fat  from the boiler of  water,  wipe off all moisture and add both  pork fat  and  suet fat  to the melted  butter,  which had been prepared in the following manner: The  butter  was melted in a porcelain lined boiler and allowed to cook until all  salt  and other foreign substance had settled and the  butter  had the appearance of clear  oil.  At this point the  butter  should be watched carefully, as when settled it might quickly boil over, when you would be liable to lose your  butter,  besides suffering serious consequences. Now the liquid  butter,   suet  and  pork fat  are all put together into a large boiler and allowed to melt together on the back part of the range. This will probably be done in the morning. After the noon meal is finished move the boiler containing  fat  to front part of range; let come to a boil, skimming it occasionally as it boils up. It needs close watching now, the  fat  being liable to cook over the top of boiler, when the " fat " would surely be "in the fire." Carefully pour into stone crock, and it may be kept for months in a cool place.  The  fat  which has been first poured off the top, if it has been carefully skimmed, will keep longest. The last taken from the boiler should be put in a stone crock to use first. This may be prepared in lesser quantities, or a smaller quantity of  butter  might be used to mix with the  lard  and  suet.  Although the preparation is to be preferred composed of equal quantities of  butter,   lard  and  suet,  adding  milk  to the first  water  in which the  suet  is boiled is quite an improvement. After filling the crocks with the  fat,  take the boiled-out  suet  and  hard  scraps and settlings of  butter  remaining and go through the same process and you will have a small jar of cooking  fat  for immediate use. A little trouble to do this, I admit, but one is well paid by having good, sweet, inexpensive cooking  fat.  I should advise a young housekeeper to experiment with one pound each of clarified  suet  and  pork fat  after it is rendered, and one pound of  butter  before attempting the preparation of a larger quantity. 
 
    BUTTER -AS IT WAS MADE AT THE FARM, BY "AUNT SARAH"  Aunt Sarah strained fresh,  sweet milk  into small, brown earthenware crocks kept for this purpose, scrupulously clean. The crocks were kept in the spring-house or celler in summer (in cold weather the  milk  should be kept in a warmer place to allow  cream  to form on the top of the  milk ). When the  cream  was thick and sour she skimmed the  cream  from off the top of  milk  every day, stirring the  cream  well together every time she added fresh  cream  to that on hand. Aunt Sarah churned twice a week;  sour cream  should not be kept a longer time than one week. The churn was scalded with  boiling water,  then rinsed with  cold water;  this prevented the  butter  adhering to the churn. The  cream  should be at a temperature of 60 degrees when put in the churn, but this would be almost too cold in Winter. In very hot weather the temperature of the  cream  should be 56 degrees. Aunt Sarah tested the  cream  with a small dairy tube thermometer. She churned steadily and usually had  butter  "come" in about 25 minutes, but should the  cream  be too cold or too warm it would be necessary to churn a longer time. If the  cream  is too warm, stand vessel containing  cream  on ice; if too cold, stand in a warm place near the range. When the  sour cream   had been churned a certain length of time and granules of  butter  had formed, she drained off the  buttermilk  and poured  water  over the granules of  butter.   Water  should be two degrees colder than the  buttermilk.  After churning a few minutes the lump of  butter  was removed from the chum, placed in a bowl, washed thoroughly several  limes  in very  cold water,  until no  buttermilk  remained. The  butter  was worked thoroughly, with a wooden paddle, until all  buttermilk  had been extracted. One small tablespoonful of  salt  was added to each pound of  butter.  She worked the  butter  well, to incorporate the  salt,  and molded it into shape. Aunt Sarah did not knead the  butter,  but smoothed it down, then lifted it up from the large, flat, wooden bowl in which it was molded. When the  butter  was to be molded into 
 small shapes , she scalded the small wooden molds, then dipped them into  cold water  before using; this prevented the  butter  adhering to the molds. Before commencing to churn  butter,  Aunt Sarah was particular to have her hands scrupulously clean. All the utensils used were washed in  hot water,  then rinsed in  cold water,  both hands and utensils. She frequently wrapped small pats of freshly-churned  butter  in small squares of clean cheese-cloth and placed in a stone crock with a cover. Placed in the crock was usually, with the  butter,  a bunch of sweet clover blossoms, which imparted to the  butter  a delicious flavor. 
 
   "SMIER-KASE" OR  COTTAGE CHEESE   Stand a pan containing three quarts of  milk  in a warm place until It becomes sour and quite thick. Stand the pan containing the  thick milk  on the back part of the range, where it will heal gradually but not cook. When the " whey " separates from the curd in the centre and forms around the edges it is ready to use. Should the  sour milk  become 
 too hot  on the range, or 
 scald , the curds, or smier-kase, will not become soft and creamy. When the curd has separated from the " whey, " pour the contents of the pan into a cheese-cloth bag and hang in the open air to drip tor several hours, when it should be ready to use.  From three quarts of  sour milk  you should obtain one good pound of smier-kase. To prepare it for the table place one-half the quantity in a howl and add one teaspoonful of softened  butter,   a pinch of  salt  and mix as smoothly as possible. Or the smier-kase may be molded into small rolls, and a small quantity of finely-chopped  Pimento  added. This will keep fresh several days if kept in a cool cellar or refrigerator. 
 
   USES OF "SWEET DRIPPINGS" AND  SUET   For deep frying Mary was taught to use  lard  and  kidney suet  combined. The latter had been tried out by cutting  suet  in small pieces. The  suet,  in an iron pan, was placed in a moderately hot oven until  fat  was tried out. To prevent  suet  when rendered having a taste of  tallow,  place in the upper part of boiler, over one containing  hot water,  and stand on a hot range until all is tried out, or melted, instead of putting it in oven. Strain into a jar and stand aside in a cool place until wanted. Take one-third of this tried-out  suet  to two-thirds  lard  when frying croquettes,  oysters,  cruellers or fritters.  Suet  contains food value equal to that of  lard  and food fried in this  fat,  combined with  lard,  is more wholesome than if fried in  lard  alone-if any food fried in  fat  ever is wholesome. And  suet  is more economical than  lard  if rendered at home. Mary was taught by her Aunt to save all the trimmings from  steaks,   fat  left over from roasts, boiled  ham,   sausage,   bacon fat,  etc. When different fats have been tried out, to clarify them, add to every pound and a half of combined  fat  or  drippings  a half cup of  boiling water  and a pinch of  baking soda.  Boil until wafer evaporates and  fat  is clear. Strain into a bowl and keep in a cool place. Clean, sweet  drippings  are preferred by most cooks to  lard  for many purposes. All young housewives do not know that  ham  or  bacon fat  may be substituted for half the  shortening  called for in many recipes for  molasses  cakes (where  spices  are used) with good results. Also that the  grease  rendered from c lean fat of chickens,  which greatly resembles  butter  when tried out and cold, may be combined with an equal quantity of other  shortening  in making cakes in which  spices  are used. The difference in the taste of cake made from this  fat,  if rendered sweet and clean, will not be noticed. Equal parts of  ham  or  bacon fat,   pork  chops or  sausage fat,  combined with  butter,  are excellent for frying  cornmeal  mush,  eggs,   sweet potatoes,   egg bread  and  calves '  liver.  Also  sliced  tomatoes  have a particularly fine flavor if fried in  bacon fat.  Should  fat  removed from top of  stock  pot have a flavor of vegetables, pour  boiling water  over, strain and stand aside to cool; then remove the clean cake of  fat  on top of the  water  and add to howl of  drippings.  This is one of the small economies which will, I think, appeal to the frugal young housewife. If possible, procure an iron pot for deep frying. After using, strain the  fat  remaining, adding sediment in the bottom of cook-pot to the can of  soap fat;  then return the clean, strained  fat  to the cook pot. Keep in a cool place, closely covered, and if careful not to scorch the  fat.  it may be used over and over again, and croquettes, etc., may be prepared in a few moments by simply heating the kettle of  fat  in which to fry them.  Aunt Sarah frequently filled small glass jars with rendered  mutton suet,  scented with violet essence, to be used for chapped lips and hands. 
 
    EGGS -"EIERKUCHEN" OR OMELETTE  For this excellent omelette or "eierkuchen." as Aunt Sarah called it, she used the following:  3 fresh  eggs.   1 cup  sweet milk.   3 level tablespoonfuls of  flour.     She placed on the range a small fry pan (size of a  tea  plate), containing one tablespoonful of  butter.  She then placed 3 tablespoonfuls of  flour  in a bowl, mixed smoothly with a portion of the cup of  milk,  then added the three  yolks of eggs  which had been lightly beaten and the balance of the  milk  and a pinch of  salt.  Lastly, she stirred in lightly the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.  Poured all into the warmed fry-pan and placed it in a moderately hot oven until lightly browned on top. The omelette when cooked should be light and puffy, and remain so while being served. Double the omelette together on a hot platter and sprinkle finely chopped  parsley  over the top. Serve immediately. 
 
    HARD BOILED EGGS    Eggs  to be  hard  boiled should be carefully placed in boiling   water  and cooked 15 minutes from the time the  water  commences to boil again. If cooked a longer time, the  white of egg  will look dark and the outer part of  yolk  will not be a clear yellow, as it should, to look appetizing when served. 
 
   SOFT BOILED  EGGS   The quicker way to prepare  eggs  is to drop them in a stew-pan containing  boiling water,  and let boil 3 1/2 to 4 minutes, when the  white  part of the  egg  should be "set" and the  yolk  soft, but a soft boiled  egg  is said to be more easily digested if dropped into a stew-pan of rapidly  boiling water;  remove the stew-pan of  boiling water  the minute the  eggs  have been put in from the front part of the range to a place where the  water  will keep hot, but not allow the  eggs  to boil. Let the  eggs  remain in the  hot water  from 8 to 10 minutes. On breaking the  egg  open, the  yolk  will be found soft, and the  white of the egg  a soft, jelly-like consistency. This latter is the way Aunt Sarah taught Mary. 
 
   AN  EGG  AND  TOMATO  OMELETTE  Beat the  yolks of three eggs  until light, then add three tablespoonfuls of  water.  Beat the  whites of the eggs  separately. Turn the stiffly-beaten  whites of the eggs  into the bowl containing the  yolks of eggs  and  water.  Stir lightly together and add a pinch of  salt.  Turn all into a small fry-pan containing a generous tablespoonful of  butter  and cook on top of stove until the  eggs  are set, then place the pan containing omelette in a hot oven and finish cooking. When cooked, turn out on a hot platter and spread over the top the following, which was prepared while the omelette was cooking. In a small fry-pan place a tablespoonful of finely-chopped  bacon.  When fried brown add half a small  tomato,  finely chopped, 1/4 of an  onion,  chopped fine, and a little chopped  green pepper.  Cook all together for a short time and season with  salt  and  pepper.  After spreading the mixture on the omelette, fold over and serve on a hot platter. This recipe had been given Frau Schmidt years before by a friend and she used no other for making omelette. Always make small omelettes. They are more  satisfactory. Use a small pan no larger than a small  tea  plate, and, if wished, make two small, rather than one large one. Always serve immediately. 
 
    MUSHROOM  OMELETTE  Place the  yolks of three eggs  in a bowl and beat until light. Add a teaspoonful of  cream  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  flour  mixed together; 1/2 cup of chopped  mushrooms,   salt  and  pepper  and a dust of  baking powder.  Lastly, the stiffly-beaten  whites of the eggs.  Turn into a pan containing two table spoonfuls of melted  butter,  stand on range a few minutes until  eggs  are set, then finish cooking in ahot oven. Serve at once.  A few cold, steamed  mushrooms  (left-overs), if finely chopped, and added to a plain omelette or roast, will improve the flavor. 
 
   A  CLAM  OMELETTE  Two  eggs  beaten separately, 1 scant cup of  milk,  1 table-spoonful of  flour,  6  clams  run through a food-chopper. Place in a bowl the tablespoon of  flour  and mix smooth with a little of the  milk.  Then add the two  yolks of eggs  and beat well together. Add the  milk,   salt  and  pepper,  the chopped  clams,  and lastly the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs,  and add a trifle more  flour,  if necessary. Drop a couple of tablespoons at a time in a large fry-pan containing a couple of tablespoons of  butter  or  drippings.  They spead out about the size of a small saucer. Fry as many at a time as the pan will conveniently hold without running together. Turn when browned lightly on one side, and when the other side has cooked fold together and serve at once. Garnish with  parsley.  These are very easily made for luncheon and are very nice served with fried  chicken.  
 
   DEVILED  EGGS  Boil half a dozen  eggs  until  hard.  Remove shells, cut in halves, mash the  yolks  to a smooth  paste  with about 1/2 teaspoon   mixed mustard,  1 teaspoon softened  butter,   pepper  and  salt  to taste. Some like a small quantity of cold boiled minced  ham  added. When ingredients are well mixed, press enough of this mixture into the cup-shaped  whites of eggs  to form a rounding top. Serve on a platter of  parsley.  To boil  eggs  uniformly, they should be placed in a wire basket and plunged into  boiling water  and boiled not longer than 15 to 20 minutes from time  water  commences to boil, then pour  cold water  over and shell them. 
 
    EGGS  IN  CREAM SAUCE   Four  eggs,  boiled  hard,  cut in halves lengthwise, then across, each  egg  cut in four pieces. A  cream sauce  was made using 1 1/2 cups  sweet milk,  1 1/2 tablespoons  flour,  1 generous tablespoon of  butter,  seasoned with  salt.  After letting  milk  come to a boil and adding  flour  mixed smoothly with a little  cold milk  or  water,  add  butter  and cook until a thick creamy consistency, then add the quartered  eggs  to  sauce.  Stand a few minutes until heated through. Pour the creamed  eggs  over four or five slices of nicely- toasted bread.  Sprinkle a little finely-chopped  parsley  and a pinch of  pepper  over top and serve at once. This is a delicious and quickly prepared luncheon dish.  A very wholesome and digestible way to prepare an  egg  is to put  yolk  and  white  of a fresh  egg  together in a bowl, beat lightly, pour over the edd a pint of  rich milk,  which has been heated to the boiling point. Add a pinch of  salt.  Stir constantly while slowly adding the  milk.  The hot  milk  should slightly cook the  egg.  Eat slowly with  crackers  or  toasted bread.  
 
   AUNT SARAH'S METHOD OF PRESERVING  EGG  WITH LIQUID  WATER  GLASS Aunt Sarah for many years preserved  eggs  in  water  glass, or soluble glass, also known as "Sodium Silicate," a thick liquid about the consistency of  molasses.  It is not expensive and may easily be procured at any drug store. She used the  water  glass in the proportion of 10 quarts of  water  to one pint of the  water  glass. The  water  glass, although in liquid form, is usually sold  by the pound, and 1 1/2 pounds equals one pint. The  water  should always be boiled and allowed to cool before combining with the  water  glass.  She was particular to use none but perfectly clean, fresh  eggs.  She placed the  eggs,  narrow end down, in an earthenware crock which had been well scalded and cooled. When the  water  glass had been thoroughly mixed through the  water  she poured the mixture over the  eggs  in the crock.  A stronger solution might be used to  preserve  the  eggs,  but Aunt Sarah declared she used  eggs  for baking cake which were good at the expiration of a year, which had been preserved in a mixture of 10 quarts of  water  to a pint of  water  glass, and she considered this proportion perfectly reliable. So I do not see the need of using a large quantity of the  water  glass, although many recipes call for a mixture of one pint of  water  glass to only 8 quarts of  water.   Fresh  eggs  may be added daily until the crock is filled, having the mixture at least one inch above the last layer of  eggs.  It is best not to wash the  eggs  before packing, as this removes the natural mucilaginous coating on the outside of the shell. Place clean, fresh  eggs  carefully into the crock containing the  water  glass and  water,  with a long-handled spoon to avoid cracking the shell. Stand the crock containing  eggs  in a cool place, cover with a cloth tied over top of crock, avoiding frequent change of temperature; they should keep one year. The  water  glass solution may become cloudy, and resemble a soft- soap  mixture, but this is a natural condition and does not affect the  eggs.   April is considered the best month for packing  eggs.  Infertile  eggs  are to be preferred to others. Carefully remove the  eggs  from the  water  glass mixture with a long-handled spoon when wanted to use, as the shells are sometimes not quite as  hard  as when placed in the crock. The  eggs  may he used for cooking, baking, in fact, for any purpose except soft-boiled, but should you wish to boil them, a tiny puncture should be made in the shell of these  eggs  before boiling.  Ten quarts of  water  to one pint of  water  glass will cover about 12 or 13 dozen  eggs.  
 
   TO TEST FRESH  EGGS.   Place an  egg  in a tumbler, fill tumbler with  cold water.  If   eggs  are fresh they will remain in the bottom of tumbler. If not strictly fresh the  egg  will  float  on the top, or near the top of tumbler of  water.  
 
   SALADS-AUNT SARAH'S SALAD DRESSING  For this she used 1 pint of  sour cream,  1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  flour,  1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  mustard  ( pulverized dry mustard ), 3  eggs,  1/4 cup  butter  (or 1/4 cup of  olive oil  may be used instead, if liked), 1/2 cup good sour  vinegar,  1/2 teaspoonful of  black pepper  and a pinch of  red pepper  ( cayenne ),  salt  to taste, 1/2 teaspoonful of  sugar.  Place in a bowl the 1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  flour  with the same quantity of  mustard;  mix smoothly with a little of the  sour cream.  The add the  eggs,  beaten in one at a time, or use, instead, the  yolks of five eggs.  When using the  whites  for angel cake or any  white  cake Aunt Sarah usually made salad dressing from the remaining  yolks of eggs.  Add the  sour cream  and  vinegar,   salt  and  pepper.  Mix all well together and strain through a fine sieve and cook in a double boiler over  hot water  until a creamy consistency. Pour in glass jar. This dressing will keep well on ice or in a cool place for two weeks. If too thick, thin with a little  vinegar,   water  or  milk  when using it. About 3/4 of a cup of of this dressing was used for mixing with 1 cup of the  meat  of cold, cooked  chicken  in making  chicken  salad. The  white meat of chicken  was cut in dice and 3/4 cup of  celery  was also cut in small pieces, a couple of  hard boiled eggs,  cut in dice, were added and the whole was carefully mixed with the salad dressing. Cold boiled  veal  or  pork  may be used instead of  chicken  for salad. Potato salad was sometimes prepared by using a small quantity of this dressing, adding, also, minced  onion,   parsley  and  celery.  Hot slaw was prepared by heating a couple of tablespoonfuls of the sald dressing and mixing with shredded  cabbage.  Or use as a dressing for  lettuce  when not served "Au Natural" with  olive oil  and  vinegar  at the table.  Should very 
 thick ,  sour cream  be used in making "Aunt Sarah's salad dressing," use a mixture of  sour cream  and  sweet milk,  instead of all  sour cream.  
  
   "DUTCH"  CUCUMBER  SALAD  Thinly slice one large  green cucumber  and one medium-sized  onion  (if liked). Sprinkle over about one teaspoonful of  salt.  Allow to stand a short time, then place in a piece of cheesecloth and squeeze out all the moisture possible. Place  cucumbers,  when drained, in the dish in which they are to be served, add a couple tablespoonfuls of sour  vinegar,  mix well. Then pour over enough thick  sour cream  to half cover and a dust of  pepper.   Cucumbers  are considered less unwholesome, prepared in this manner. 
 
    CARROT  SALAD  Aunt Sarah pared and cut 1 1/2 cups of uncooked  carrots  in thin strips, not much larger than common match sticks, and cooked in  salted water  until tender. When drained, pour over them a couple of tablespoonfuls of  vinegar.  Allowed to stand until cold. When ready to prepare the salad she drained off  vinegar  remaining. Lined a salad bowl with  lettuce leaves  or  parsley,  placed inside this a border of halved or sliced cold  hard-boiled eggs,  mixed the  carrots  lightly with salad dressing, placed them in the centre of the bowl and served ice cold. This is a particularly delicious, as well as an appetizing-looking, salad. I have never eaten this elsewhere than at Aunt Sarah's home. 
 
   "AN OLD RECIPE" FOR  CHICKEN  SALAD  Two dressed  chickens  were cooked tender. When cold,  meat  was removed from  bones  and cut in dice (not too fine) Cut half the amount of  celery  you have of  meat  into small pieces.  Dressing for salad was composed of the following: Three well-beaten  yolks of eggs.  Pour over these 1 pint of boiling hot  cider vinegar,  stand on back of range to thicken. Place in a bowl 3 freshly boiled and finely mashed white potatoes, add 1 tablespoonful of  dry mustard,  6 teaspoonfuls of  olive oil,  1 table-spoonful of  salt,  1 tablespoonful of  pepper.  Mix all well together, then add the thickened  vinegar.  Beat together until creamy and stand aside until chilled.   Drop the three  whites of eggs  in  hot water,  remove when cooked, chop fine and when cold add to the  chicken meat  and  celery.   Pour the dressing over all the ingredients, stir lightly with a fork and stand in a cold place until chilled before serving. 
 
   GERMAN POTATO SALAD  Boil one dozen small  potatoes  without paring. Remove the  skin  and cut  potatoes  size of dice, also a small  onion,  finely minced. Put small pieces of  bacon  in a pan and fry brown and crisp. Add a large tablespoonful of  vinegar  and a pinch of  salt.  Pour the hot  bacon fat  and  vinegar  over the diced  potatoes , toss them up lightly with a fork and serve hot. 
 
   GERMAN  TURNIP  SALAD  This is the manner in which Aunt Sarah made  turnip  salad: She pared and sliced thin on a slaw cutter 5 large, solid  turnips,  put them in a stew-pan which she placed on the range, adding about 1/4 cup  hot water,  1 teaspoonful of  butter  and 1/4 teaspoonful of  sugar  (no more). She covered the stew-pan closely and steamed about half an hour until the  turnips  were tender. Then mixed together 1 teaspoonful of  flour  with 1 tablespoonful of  vinegar  and  yolk of one egg.  This was poured over the  stewed turnips,  just allowed to come to a boil, then removed from the fire. Add a little  salt  and serve hot. 
 
   GERMAN SALAD DRESSING  For  dandelion,  watercress, endive or  lettuce,  a dressing was made thus: The leaves of vegetables used for salad, after being carefully rinsed and looked over, were cut fine, and the following dressing poured over hot and served at once:  A small quantity of  bacon  was finely minced and fried crisp. To about 2 tablespoonfuls of  bacon  and  fat  after being fried, 3 tablespoonfuls of  vinegar  and 1 of  sour cream,  were added  pepper  and  salt  and a very little mixed with  cold water,  to make  it the consistency of  cream.  The  yolk of one raw egg  may be added to the dressing if liked. An easier way for the busy housewife to do is to simply add a couple of tablespoonfuls of Aunt Sarah's Salad Dressing, add also a small quantity of  water,   flour  and fried, diced  bacon;  serve hot at once. 
 
   MARY'S POTATO SALAD  A bowl of cold, boiled, diced or thinly-sliced  potatoes , three  hard boiled eggs,  also diced, and about half the quantity of  celery  chopped in half-inch pieces, and a little minced  onion,  just enough to give a suspicion of its presence. She mixed all together lightly with a silver fork and mixed through some of the following salad dressing, which is fine for anything requiring a cold salad dressing. 
 
   MARY'S SALAD DRESSING  One tablespoonful of  flour,  1 tablespoonful of  mustard,  2 cups of sweet or  sour cream,  1 tablespoonful of  sugar,  1/2 cup of good sharp  vinegar,   yolks of four eggs,  small teaspoonful of  salt.  Omit  sugar  when using the dressing for  potato or chicken  salad. This salad dressing may also be used for  lettuce.  
 
   " FRUIT " SALAD DRESSING  Three tablespoonfuls of  olive oil  to 1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  vinegar  Season with  salt  and  pepper.  Use this quantity for 1 pint of salad.  
 
    GRAPE FRUIT  SALAD  Cut the  pulp  from one  grape fruit  into small pieces add an equal amount of chopped  apples,  a few of English  walnuts  chopped coarsely. Serve on  lettuce leaves  with  fruit  salad dressing. This recipe was given Mary by a friend who knew her liking for  olive oil.     Grape fruit  is delicious, served cut in halves with the addition to each half; of a couple tablespoonfuls of  pineapple juice,  a tablespoonful of  orange juice  or tiny pieces of  orange pulp,  topped with a marachino  cherry.  A small quantity of  sugar  should have been added. The sections of  grape fruit  should each have been cut loose from the  white skin  inclosing  pulp  with a small knife or scissors. 
 
   A GOOD, INEXPENSIVE SALAD DRESSING   1 tablespoonful  flour.  1 teaspoonful  salt.   1 tablespoonful  butter.  1  egg.   1 tablespoonful  mustard.  3/4 cup  milk.   1/2 tablespoonful  sugar.  3/4 cup  vinegar.    Use a double boiler, put in it the first five articles, stir together until smooth; add the well-beaten  egg  and the  milk.  Let cook, stirring  hard.  Then add  vinegar,  and beat all with an  egg -beater until the mixture is smooth and creamy. Let cool before using.  Aunt Sarah frequently used this salad dressing over sliced, cold,  hard boiled eggs  when other salad materials were not plentiful. Serve on  lettuce leaves.  
 
   IMITATION  LOBSTER  SALAD  A bowl was lined with crisp  lettuce leaves,  over this was spread a layer of cold boiled  potatoes , cut in dice, a little finely minced  onion,  a layer of chopped  celery,  another layer of diced  potatoes , then a layer of sliced  tomatoes  and one  hard boiled egg,  thinly sliced. Pour a good salad dressing over and serve ice cold. 
 
   "GERMAN"  HORSERADISH SAUCE   A  sauce  to serve with boiled  meat  was prepared by Aunt Sarah in the following manner: She put half a cup of  milk  in a stew-pan let come to a boil, added one large tablespoonful of  cracker crumbs  1 large teaspoonful of  butter,  2 large tablespoonfuls of freshly grated  horseradish,  seasoned with  pepper  and  salt.    Also a pinch of  salt,   sugar  and  pepper  added to grated  horseradish,  then thinned with  vinegar,  is an excellent accompaniment to  cold meat.  
 
   MAYONNAISE DRESSING IN WHICH  OLIVE OIL  IS USED  Before making this dressing for salads, Mary placed a large soup plate or a shallow bowl in the refrigerator, also a bottle of  olive oil  and two  egg yolks.  All should be quite cold. Put the  yolks  on the cold plate, add 1/4 teaspoonful of  salt,  the same of  mustard.  Mix well and then, with a fork, stir or blend the  olive oil  into it drop by drop. After about 1/2 cup of  oil  has been blended in, add  lemon juice,  a drop or two at a time. Then more  oil,  and when it becomes very thick add more  lemon juice.  A pint or even more  oil  may, with care, be blended into two  yolks.  Care must be taken not to mix  oil  in too fast, or the  egg  and  oil  will separate, making a mixture resembling curdled custard. If this should happen, take another plate, another  egg yolk,  and begin over again, blending a drop or two at a time in the curdled mixture. Then add more  oil  and  lemon juice  as before. 
 
    MUSTARD  DRESSING TO SERVE WITH SLICED TOMATOES  Two tablespoonfuls  mustard,  1 tablespoonful of  sugar,  1/2 cup  cream,  1 tablespoon  salt,   yolks of two eggs  and 1/2 cup of  vinegar.  Beat all well together, first mixing the  mustard  until smooth with a small quantity of  cream,  then add the other ingredients. (Mary used only 1 tablespoonful of  mustard,  and substituted 1 tablespoonful of  flour  instead of the second tablespoonful of  mustard  and thought it improved the dressing.) This  mustard  dressing may also be served at table, to be eaten with  lettuce.  
 
    CHICKEN  SALAD  The  meat  of one boiled  chicken  cut in small pieces, three-fourths as much  celery,  also cut in small pieces. Three  hard boiled eggs  cut in dice. Take 2 teaspoonfuls  salt,  2 teaspoonfuls  pepper,  4 teaspoonfuls  mustard,  1 cup of sweet  cream  and 1  raw egg.   Use  vinegar  to thin the  mustard.  Beat the  raw egg,  add to  cream,   egg  and  butter  (mash  yolks of hard boiled eggs  and  butter  together). Mix all the ingredients together and cook until it thickens (all except  chicken meat,   celery  and  hard boiled whites of eggs,  which should be placed in a large bowl after cutting in small pieces). The salad dressing should he put in another bowl and stood on ice until cold, then mix the salad dressing carefully through the  chicken meat,   celery,  etc., one hour before using. Cover with a plate until ready to serve. Or "Aunt Sarah's Salad Dressing" could be used over the  chicken,   celery,  etc. This is a very old but an excellent recipe used by Aunt Sarah's mother for many years.  
 
    PEPPER  HASH  Chop fine with a knife, but do not shred with a slaw cutter, 1 pint of finely chopped  cabbage,  adding 1 teaspoonful of  salt,  2 teaspoonfuls of  sugar,  1 teaspoonful of whole  mustard seed,  1/2 a chopped red, sweet  pepper,  a pinch of red  cayenne pepper  and 1/2 pint of  vinegar.  Mix all well together and serve with fried  oysters,   oyster  stew and deviled  oysters.   This " pepper  hash" is delicious if a couple tablespoonfuls of thick  cream  be added just before serving.  Should very sour  cider vinegar  be used in this recipe, the housewife will, of course, dilute it with  water.  
 
   GERMAN BEAN SALAD  Use small green or yellow string- beans , which snap when broken called by some "snap  beans ." String them carefully. (If quite small and tender this should not be necessary.) Rub well with the hands through several waters. This removes the strong  bean  taste. Have your kettle half filled with  boiling water  on the range over a brisk fire. Put a tablespoon of  butter  in the, add  beans  by handfuls until all are in and cook until tender Turn the  beans  in a colander to drain. When cool add a chopped  onion salt  and pour enough good  vinegar  over to cover, and allow to stand two days, when strain  vinegar  from  beans . Boil  vinegar,   add  water  if  vinegar  is quite sour and pour hot over the  beans . Fill quart glass jars with the  beans  and pour  vinegar  over, within an inch of top of jar; pour pure  olive oil  over top of  beans , screw on jar covers tightly and stand in a cool place until wanted to use. In the winter, when fresh salads were scarce, Aunt Sarah opened a can of these  beans . If they were very sour she poured  cold water  over, allowed to stand an hour, drained and added a little fresh  olive oil.  Every one called her "bean salat," as the Pennsylvania Germans call it, delicious. The instructions regarding the preparing and cooking of string  beans  for salad will There is a great difference in the manner of cooking vegetables. Aunt Sarah always added an  onion  and a sprig of  parsley  when cooking  beans  to serve as a vegetable. 
 
    MEAT  SALADS  To quote from the 
 Farmers Bulletin : "Whether  meat  salads are economical or not depends upon the way in which the materials arc utilized. If in  chicken  salad, for example, only the  white meat of chicken,  especially bought for the purpose, and only the expensive inside stems of expensive  celery  are used, it can hardly be cheaper than plain  chicken.  But, if portions of  meat  left over from a previous serving are mixed with  celery  grown at home, they certainly make an economical dish, and one very acceptable to most persons. Cold  roast pork  or tender  veal,  in fact, any  white meat,  can be utilized in the same way.  Apples  cut into cubes may be substituted for part of the  celery.  Many cooks consider that with the  apple  the salad takes the dressing better than with the  celery  alone. Many also prefer to marinate ( i. e. , mix with a little  oil  and  vinegar ) the  meat  and  celery  or  celery  and  apples  before putting on the final dressing, which may be either mayonnaise or a good boiled dressing."   Celery  should not be allowed to stand in  water  To keep fresh until used, it should be wrapped in a piece of damp cheesecloth and placed in. an ice box or cool cellar.   Lettuce  should be broken apart carefully rinsed, and put loosely in a piece of damp cheese-cloth and placed on ice to crisp before using. 
  
   BEVERAGES-COFFEE  Scald  coffee  pot well before using (never use metal). Place in it five tablespoons ground  coffee.  (A good  coffee  is made from a mixture of two-thirds Java to one-third Mocha.) Beat up with the ground  coffee  one whole  egg.  Should the housewife deem this extravagant, use only the  white of one egg,  or peel off the  white skin  lining inside of  egg  shells and use. Add three table-spoons  cold water  and mix well together. Stand on range to heat; when hot add one quart of 
 freshly-boiled   hot water.  Allow  coffee  to boil to top of  coffee  pot three times (about eight minutes), pour over one tablespoon  cold water  to settle. Stand a few minutes where it will keep hot, not boil. Place a generous tablespoon of sweet thick  cream  in each cup and pour  coffee  through a strainer over it. Always serve hot.  A larger or smaller amount of  coffee  may be used, as different brands of  coffee  vary in strength and individual tastes differ, but five tablespoons of  coffee,  not too coarsely ground and not pulverized, to one quart of  water,  will he the correct proportions for good  coffee.  Use  cream  and you will have a delicious, rich, brown beverage not possible when  milk  is used. Better  coffee  may be made if whole grains of roasted  coffee  be bought, reheated in oven and freshly ground whenever used, rather finely ground but not pulverized.  Coffee,  when ground for any length of time, loses strength. If  coffee  is ground when purchased, always keep it in closely covered cans until used. Or buy green  coffee berries  and roast them in oven; when  coffee  has been roasted, stir one whole  raw egg  through the  coffee berries;  when dry, place in covered cans, then no  egg  will be needed when preparing  coffee.  As a substitute for  cream,  use  yolk of fresh egg  mixed with a couple tablespoonfuls of  milk.  
 
    COCOA   Mix four tablespoonfuls of  cocoa  to a smooth  paste  with one cup of  boiling water  Add one more cup  boiling water  and boil fifteen or twenty minutes. Add four tablespoonfuls of  sugar  then add 4 cups of hot boiled  milk.  A few drops of  essence of vanilla  improves the flavor. Add a couple tablespoonfuls  whipped cream  on top of each cup when serving, or, instead of  cream   place a marshmallow in each cup before pouring in  cocoa.  This quantity is for six cups of  cocoa.  
 
    CHOCOLATE   One square of Baker's unsweetened  chocolate  shaved thinly or grated, mixed to a smooth  paste  with 1 cup of  boiling water.  Boil from fifteen to twenty minutes. Add 1 cup of boiling  milk  and 2 even tablespoonfuls of  sugar.  Flavor with a few drops of  vanilla,  if liked, and add  whipped cream  to each cup when serving. This is for 2 cups of  chocolate.  
 
   BOILED  WATER   It sometimes becomes necessary to boil drinking  water,  which usually has a fiat, insipid taste. Do young housewives know it is said that after  water  has been boiled and when quite cool if a bottle be half filled and shaken well the  water  will become areated, and have the taste of fresh  spring water ? 
 
    TEA   To make  tea  always scald the teapot, which should be agate, earthenware or china, never metal. Always use  water  that has been 
 freshly  boiled, and use it boiling hot. Never, under any circumstances, boil  tea,  as tannin is then extracted from the leaves, and the  tea  will have a bitter taste. Do not allow  tea  to stand any length of time unless strained from  tea leaves.  Use one teaspoon of  tea  for each cup, unless liked stronger, when add one extra teaspoon to each three cups of  tea.  Some contend that  tea  is better, if at first a small quantity of  boiling water  is poured over the leaves, allowing it to steep three minutes-then pour over the remaining quantity of  boiling water  and let stand about four minutes, when it is ready to serve with  cream  and  sugar,  if liked, should any  tea  remain after serving do not throw away, but strain at once from  tea leaves  and when cool place in a glass jar in refrigerator to be used as iced  tea.  
  
   CED  TEA   For two quarts of delicious iced  tea,  place in an agate teapot one generous tablespoon of good  tea  (never buy a cheap inferior grade of  tea ). Pour over the  tea leaves  one quart of freshly boiled, scalding  hot water;  let stand five minutes, keep hot (not boil), strain from the leaves into a pitcher, then pour over the  tea leaves  another quart of  hot water,  allow it to stand a few minutes, then strain as before. Add the juice of one  lemon  and  sugar  to taste. When cooled stand on ice and add chipped ice to tumblers when serving. 
 
   PUDDINGS  To boil a pudding in a bag, dip the bag, which should be made of thick cotton or linen, in  hot water,  dredge the inside well with  flour  before putting batter into the bag. When the pudding has boiled a long enough time, dip the bag quickly in  cold water,  and the pudding will turn out easily. Allow five large  eggs  to 1 quart of  milk  usually to make custard solid enough to keep its shape when turned from the mold. One teaspoonful of  extract  will flavor one quart. Always stand individual cups in a pan partly filled with  hot water.  Place pan containing custard cups in a moderate oven and bake slowly forty minutes. Always sift  flour  over  beef suet  when chopping it to be used in puddings. Pour  boiling water  over  Pecans  ( nuts ), allow to stand several hours. When cracked, the shell may be easily removed, leaving the  nuts  whole.  Blanch  almonds  by pouring  boiling water  over them. Allow them to stand a short time, when the brown  skin  may be easily removed. Dry thoroughly by standing in a rather cool oven, then put in glass jars and they are ready to use. Almonds are used particularly by the Germans in various ways. One hausfrau adds chopped  almonds  to cooked  oatmeal  for her children's breakfast and they are frequently used as an ingredient; also to decorate the tops of raised cakes. When  dried currants  and  raisins  are bought by the frugal housewife they are quickly washed in  cold water,  carefully picked over, then turned on to a sieve to drain.  Raisins  are seeded, then spread over pans, placed in a warm oven about 15 minutes, then spread on a plate and allowed to stand in a dry place for several days. When thoroughly  dried place in glass jars and stand aside until required.  Currants  or  raisins  should always be well  flour ed before adding to cake or pudding. The "German hausfrau" usually serves stewed  prunes  or  raisins  with a dish of noodles or  macaroni.  
 
    RICE  PUDDING  One of the simplest and cheapest of desserts depends partly on the quality of the ingredients used, but chiefly on the manner of making for its excellence. If prepared according to directions, you will have a pudding both rich and creamy. Use 1 quart of good  sweet milk  (do not use either skimmed  milk  or  water ), 3 tablespoonfuls of whole uncoated  rice  (no more), 2 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,  pinch of  salt,   vanilla  or  almond  flavoring.  Wash the  rice  well, mix all together in a pudding dish, bake from 2 1/2 to 3 hours in an oven with a slow, even heat. When a  skin  forms on the top of the pudding, carefully stir through the  rice.  Do this frequently. This gives the pudding a rich, creamy consistency. When grains of  rice  are tender allow pudding to added, if liked, or  raisins  may be stewed separately and served with the  rice,  which many think a great improvement to the pudding. Many think  rice  pudding should always be flavored with grated  nutmeg.  Aunt Sarah, while using  nutmeg  flavoring in various other dishes, never used it for her  rice  pudding.  When mixing a boiled pudding Aunt Sarah frequently substituted a large tablespoon of fine  dried bread crumbs  instead of the same amount of  flour.  She said, " 'Twas a small economy." and, she thought, "the pudding's improved" 'by the use of  bread crumbs.  
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S  APPLE  DUMPLINGS  Prepare a  syrup  of 1 cup  sugar,  2 cups of  hot water  and 1 tablespoon of  butter.  Pour all into an agate pudding dish. Add to this  syrup  2 heaping cups of pared, sliced  sour apples.   Let all come to a boil. For the dumplings, sift together one cup of  flour  and two even teaspoons of  baking powder.  Add a pinch of  salt.  Mix into a soft dough or batter with about 3/4 cup of  sweet milk  or  cream.  Drop six or eight spoonfuls of  this batter into the boiling  syrup  on top of  apples.  Cover closely and cook on top of range twenty minutes without uncovering. Serve hot. These dumplings should be light as puff balls.  Peaches  may be substituted for  apples  and are delicious. 
 
    CARAMEL  CUSTARD (AS MARY PREPARED IT)   1 pint of  milk.   2  eggs.   1/2 cup  granulated sugar.    Melt 1/2 cup of  sugar  in an iron pan on stove and allow it to brown. Add a part of the hot  milk,  stirring constantly until  brown sugar  is dissolved. Add balance of the pint of hot  milk.  Stir all together, then stand aside to cool. When cold, add  eggs  and bake in oven in custard cups. Stand cups in  hot water  while baking. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  BREAD  PUDDING  Pour 1 quart of boiling  milk  over 1 1/2 pints of soft  bread crumbs.  Put the mixture into a buttered pudding dish with 1 tea-spoonful  salt.  Cover closely with a plate and let stand about half an hour. At the end of that time beat into it three  eggs,  1 teaspoonful  lemon extract,  and beat until perfectly smooth. Bake in a moderately hot oven three-quarters of an hour. Serve with the following  sauce : 6 tablespoonfuls pulverized  sugar,  2 tablespoonfuls  butter,  1 tablespoonful  lemon juice.  Beat all together to a  cream;  when it is ready to serve. No  sugar  is needed in this pudding if this  sweet sauce  is used. 
 
   STEAMED  BREAD  PUDDING  Place 1 cup of fine  dried bread crumbs  in a bowl. Pour over the crumbs 2 cups of rnilk and allow to stand a short time. Beat together 2  eggs  and scant 1/2 cup  sugar,  add 1 tablespoon of  butter.  Mix all the ingredients together thoroughly; then add 1/2 cup of chopped  raisins,  which have been seeded and  flour ed. Pour the batter in the well-buttered top part of a double boiler over  hot water.  Steam about 2 1/2 to 3 hours. Serve hot with  sauce  used for cottage pudding, or serve with  sugar  and  cream.  
  
   AN ECONOMICAL  BREAD  AND  APPLE  PUDDING  Into a well-buttered pudding dish put a layer of sliced  sour apples.  On the top of these a layer of stale  bread crumbs  with small bits of  butter  and  sugar  sprinkled over them, more sliced  apples  and  bread crumbs,  having the crumbs for the top layer. To about three  apples  use 1 cup of  bread crumbs,  1/2 cup  sugar,  piece of  butter  size of  walnut  and bake in oven until  apples  are tender. Serve with  cream.  
 
   CUP CUSTARDS   1 quart of  sweet milk.   5 large  eggs.   3 tablespoons  sugar.   Grated  nutmeg  or  vanilla  flavoring.   Scald  milk.  Beat  whites of eggs  separately. Add  milk  when cooled to the beaten  yolks.  Add  sugar  and flavoring. Stir in stiffly beaten  whites of eggs,  pour into custard cups, stand them in a dripping pan half filled with  boiling water.  Stand the pan in a moderate oven about twenty minutes, or until custard is "set." This quantity fills about eight small custard cups. The  water  surrounding the custard cups should not be allowed to boil, but the custard should cook slowly.  Grate  nutmeg  thickly over top of each custard before placing in the oven. Scalding the  milk  before using improves the custard. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S  GRAHAM  PUDDING  Sift into a bowl 1/4 cup of  pastry flour  and 1 teaspoonful of  baking powder.  Add 1 cup  Graham flour,  pinch of  salt  and 1/2 cup  granulated sugar.  Mix all thoroughly, then add 1/2 cup of finely chopped  kidney suet.  Add 1 cup of  seedless raisins  mixed with one extra tablespoonful of  white flour.  Mix into a batter with 1 cup of  sweet milk,  to which add  yolk of one egg.  Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  white of egg.  Flavor with either a little grated  nutmeg  or  essence of vanilla.   Make a strong, unbleached muslin bag 7 by 12 inches. Pour  the batter into the bag, which had been previously dipped in  cold water,  the inside of the bag sifted over with  flour,  and tie bag at top with a string, allowing room for the pudding to swell. Place the bag in the perforated compartment of a steamer over  boiling water,  and boil continuously 1 1/2 hours, or longer, without removing lid of steamer oftener than absolutely necessary.  Serve  Graham  Pudding hot with  sauce  used for "cottage pudding," or serve simply with  sugar  and  cream,  or a  sauce  may be served composed of 1/2 cup of pulverized  sugar,  creamed with 1/4 cup of  butter.  Add 1 tablespoonful of  lemon juice  or flavor with  vanilla.  Stand  sauce  in a cool place a short time and serve cold on hot pudding. 
 
   SPONGE  BREAD  PUDDING  Place 1 3/4 cups of soft stale (either  white  or  graham )  bread crumbs  in a pudding dish. Pour 2 cups of hot  milk  over the crumbs, cover with a plate and allow it to stand about thirty minutes, then add  yolks of 2 eggs,  1/2 teaspoonful of  salt,  1 tablespoonful of  sugar  and grated yellow  rind of orange  or  lemon for flavoring. Beat the mixture until perfectly smooth, add the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs.  Bake in a moderately hot oven. Serve hot with the following  sauce : 
 
    SAUCE.   Three large tablespoonfuls of pulverized  sugar  and 1 tablespoonful of  butter  were beaten together until smooth and creamy, 1 teaspoonful of  lemon juice  was added. The  sauce,  when quite cold, was served with the warm pudding. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S COTTAGE PUDDING   Cream  together 1 cup of  sugar,  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  1  egg, white  beaten separately, and added last, 1 cup of  sweet milk,  pinch of  salt,  2 cups of  flour,  sifted with 2 heaping tea-spoonfuls of Royal  baking powder,  1/2 cup of  dried currants,  well  flour ed. Add stiffly beaten  white of egg.  Bake in a small oblong  bread  pan. 
  
    SAUCE.   One cup of  milk,  1/2 cup of  water,  1 large teaspoonful of  butter,  a scant tablespoonful of  flour  moistened with a small quantity of  water,  before adding. Sweeten to taste, add 1/2 tea-spoonful of grated  nutmeg.  Cook all together a few minutes, allow the mixture to partly cool, then stir in the  yolk of one egg;  stand on stove to heat, but not to cook. Serve hot over freshly baked, warm cottage pudding, cut in squares. 
 
    APPLE  "STRUDEL"  Aunt Sarah pared and quartered six medium-sized  tart apples,  placed in the bottom of an agate pudding dish, poured over them one cup of  hot water  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar.  She allowed this to stand on the range and cook while she mixed the following dough.  Into a bowl she sifted 1 pint of  flour  with 2 teaspoons  baking powder,  one teaspoonful of  sugar,  a little  salt.  Cut 1 tablespoonful of  butter  through the  flour.  Lightly mixed all together into a soft dough with about 3/4 cup  sweet milk.  Should she have a left-over  yolk of egg,  that was added to the  milk.  She rolled dough out lightly on the  bread  board, cut vents in the crust to allow steam to escape and spread it over the top of the dish containing the hot  apples;  placed in a hot oven to bake until light brown on top. Serve with  sugar  and  cream.   Aunt Sarah called this " Apple  Strudel," but the German recipe for " Apple  Strudel," handed down by her Grandmother, was quite different. An ordinary noodle dough was made, placed on a clean cloth on the table and rolled as thin as tissue  paper.  Small bits of  butter  were scattered over this, covered with  tart apples,  thinly sliced, sprinkled with  cinnamon,   sugar  and chopped  raisins,  rolled up and baked in the oven until brown on top, basting frequently with a thin  syrup  composed of  sugar,   butter  and  water.  
 
   "LEMON MERINGUE" PUDDING   1 pint of  milk.     1/2 cup of  sugar.   1 cup  bread crumbs.     Juice  and grated  rind  of one  lemon.   2  eggs.     1/3 cup of  butter.    3 tablespoonfuls of pulverized  sugar  used for top.  Soak the  bread crumbs  in  milk.  Beat the  butter  and  sugar  together. Add  yolks of eggs,  soaked  bread crumbs  and grated  lemon rind  and about 3/4 of the juice of the  lemon.  Bake in a buttered pudding dish until firm, then cover the pudding with a meringue composed of the stiffly beaten whiles of  eggs,  3 table-spoonfuls of pulverized  sugar  and the remaining  lemon juice.  Place in oven to brown. Stand on ice; serve cold. 
 
    SUET  PUDDING   1 cup  suet,  chopped fine.    1 cup  sugar   1 cup  sweet milk.     2  eggs.   1 teaspoonful  cinnamon.     1 cup  raisins.   3 cups  flour  sifted with 2 tcaspoonfuls  baking powder.    Steam 2 1/2 hours, then place in oven two or three minutes. This quantity will partly fill three empty 1-pound  baking powder  cans; allowing room to swell. These puddings are equally as good as when freshly prepared if placed in a steamer a short time before serving until heated through. 
 
    SAUCE  FOR  SUET  PUDDING.  One cup of pulverized  sugar  and 1 large tablespoonful of  butter  creamed together. One teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Add one whole  egg  or the  yolks of two eggs,  or the  whites of two eggs,  whichever you happen to have. 
 
   STEAMED  FRUIT  PUDDING   1 cup  sweet milk.   	 1 cup chopped  suet.   1 cup  molasses.    1 cup  raisins.   1 teaspoonful  soda  dissolved in a little  water.   1 teaspoonful  salt.    
 
    SAUCE  FOR PUDDING.  A small quantity of  cinnamon,   allspice,   nutmeg,  and a 
 very   little   clove.   Flour  to make a batter a little thicker than that of ordinary cake. Steam about 3 hours. This pudding is also inex-pensive and equally as good as the former recipe.  Beat 1  egg  very light, add 1 cup  brown sugar,  1 teaspoonful  vanilla.  Beat all together until creamy. Serve at once. 
 
    CORN-MEAL  PUDDING  Scald 1 quart of  sweet milk.  While hot stir in 3 tablespoon-fuls of  corn-meal,  3 tablespoonfuls of  flour  mixed smooth with a little  cold milk.  Add 1 tablespoonful of  butter.  Let cool. Then add to the mixture 1/2 cup  sugar,  1/4 cup  molasses,  1 well-beaten  egg,  1/2 teaspoonful of  ginger,  1/2 teaspoonful  cinnamon,  1/4 pint  cold milk,  a small pinch of  soda  and 1/2 cup of  flour ed, seeded  raisins.  Bake 2 hours in a moderate oven. Serve with  sugar  and  cream.  
 
   HUCKLEBERRY PUDDING  Two  eggs  and 1 small cup of  granulated sugar  creamed together. Four tablespoonfuls of  cold water.  Add 1 cup of sifted  flour  containing 1 teaspoonful of  baking powder,  and 1 cup of huckleberries, pitted  cherries,  or  raisins  and bake. Serve with  milk  or any  sauce  liked. This recipe was given Mary by a friend, who called it her emergency pudding, as it may be easily and quickly prepared from canned  sour cherries  from which liquid has been drained, or any  tart fruit,  when fresh  fruit  is not in season. 
 
    TAPIOCA  CUSTARD  Four tablespoonfuls of pearl  tapioca  soaked in  cold water  over night. The next morning drain the  tapioca,  boil 1 quart of  sweet milk,  beat the  yolks of 4 eggs  light, stir them into the  tapioca,  adding 4 tablespoonfuls of  sugar.  Beat all together and gradually add the hot  milk.  Return to the fire and stir until it commences to boil. Take from the range and pour in a glass dish. Flavor with 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.   Whip  the  whites   of the  eggs  to a standing froth and stir into the cooling pudding. When cold stand on ice until ready to serve. One-half cup of shredded  cocoanut  may be added if liked. 
 
   DELICIOUS BAKED  PEACH  PUDDING  For the dough place in a bowl 1 pint of  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls of Royal  baking powder  and a pinch of  salt.  Cut through this a scant 1/2 cup of  butter.  Mix this with sufficient  sweet milk  to make a soft dough. Roll out dough half an inch thick, cut in strips and incase whole, ripe, pared  peaches,  leaving top and bottom of the  peach  exposed. Or solid canned  peaches  may be used. Put two halves of  peach  together and place a strip of dough around the  peach.  Pinch dough well together, place in a bake dish. Prepare a  syrup  of 2 cups of  sugar  and 1 cup of  water.  Let come to a boil, pour around the dumplings and bake a half hour in a moderately hot oven. These are delicious. The recipe was given Mary by a friend who was an excellent cook. From this dough may also be baked excellent  biscuits.  
 
    CARAMEL  CUSTARD  Place 1 pint of  milk  on the range in a double boiler. Melt half a cup of  sugar  in an iron pan over the fire until a golden brown. When melted add four tablespoonfuls of  boiling water.  Allow mixture to cook one minute, then add it to the  milk.  Remove from the fire and add 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.  When cool stir in 4 well-beaten  eggs  with 2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar.  Pour the mixture in a small pudding dish. Stand in a pan of  boiling water,  place in oven to bake until a jelly-like consistency. When cooled serve plain or with  whipped cream.  
 
   "AUNT SARAH'S"  RHUBARB  PUDDING  Remove  skin  from stalks of rhubard, wash and cut into half-inch pieces a sufficient quantity to half fill a medium-sized agate or earthenware pudding dish. Place in a stew-pan on range, cook  slowly, with a couple tablespoons of  sugar  and a very small amount of  water.  Sift together in a bowl 1 pint of  flour,  1 1/2 tea-spoons of  baking powder  and a pinch of  salt.  With a knife cut through the  flour  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  moisten with one beaten  egg  and sufficient  milk  added to make a soft dough or batter. Drop tablespoons of this thick batter over top of dish containing hot  stewed rhubarb.  Place at once in a hot oven, bake quickly until crust is a light brown. Serve on individual dishes, placing over each a couple tablespoonfuls of the following  sauce.  The combined flavor of  rhubarb  and  vanilla  is delicious. 
 
    VANILLA SAUCE  FOR  RHUBARB  PUDDING.  Beat 1  egg  very light, add 1 cup of light  brown sugar  and 1 teaspoon of  vanilla  flavoring. Beat all together until foamy. Serve at once, cold, on the hot pudding. 
 
    RICE  CUSTARD  Add 1 cup of cold boiled  rice  to 2 cups of  sweet milk,  mix together slowly. Add 1/4 cup  sugar,  the well-beaten  yolks of 2 eggs,  let all cook together a few minutes. Remove custard from the fire and pour over the stiffly-beaten  whites of two eggs.  Beat well with an  egg -beater. Place in a glass dish and serve cold. 
 
   MARY'S CUP PUDDING (FROM  STALE BREAD )  One quart of finely 
 crumbled  stale bread   (not dried crumbs). Fill buttered cups two-thirds full of crumbs and pour over the following custard, composed of one pint of  milk  and three  eggs.  Allow to stand a few minutes, then place the cups in a pan partly filled with  hot water,  place the pan in a moderately hot oven and bake thirty minutes. No  sugar  is required in this pudding if the following  sweet sauce  be served with it: 
 
    SAUCE  FOR PUDDING.  Mix one tablespoonful of  cornstarch  with a half cup of  sugar.  Pour over one cup of  boiling water,  add one generous teaspoonful of  butter.  Cook all together until clear, take from  the fire and add one well beaten  egg  and one teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Serve hot. 
 
   " BUCKWHEAT  MINUTE" PUDDING  Pour three cups of  milk  in a stew-pan, place on range and let come to a boil. Then stir slowly into the boiling  milk  1 1/4 cups of  buckwheat flour  and 1/4 teaspoonful of  salt.  Keep stirring constantly until a thick mush. Serve at once with  sugar  and cream.I have never eaten this pudding anywhere except in "Bucks County." It is cheap, quickly and easily prepareed and well liked by many country folk in Bucks County. 
 
    PEACH TAPIOCA   One cup of  tapioca  soaked in 1 quart of  cold water  several hours. Place in stew-pan, set on stove and cook until clear. Add  sugar  to taste and 1 pint can of  peaches.  Boil two or three minutes, remove from range and pour into the dish in which it is to be served. Stand aside to cool. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S PLAIN BOILED PUDDING  One cup of  beef suet  chopped fine or run through a food-chopper, 1/2 cup  sour milk,  1  egg,  1 teaspoonful  soda,  pinch of  salt,  1/2 cup  sugar,  1 teaspoonful  cinnamon,  1 cup  raisins,  seeded and  flour ed.  Flour  enough to make as stiff as ordinary cake batter. Boil or steam in a muslin bag three hours. This is a very inexpensive and good pudding. Dust a small quantity of  flour  over  suet  before chopping. Serve with the following  sauce :  
 
   PUDDING  SAUCE.   One large tablespoonful of  butter,  1 teacup  water,  1/2 teacup  milk,  scant tablespoonful of  flour,  grated  nutmeg  to flavor. Sweeten to taste, add a pinch of  salt.  Cook and let cool. Beat up  yolk of egg,  add to  sauce,  stand on back of stove to heat, not cook. Serve hot over the pudding. 
  
    APPLE TAPIOCA   Pour 1 pint of  cold water  over 1/2 cup  tapioca.  Allow to stand until the following morning, when cook until clear. Slice 6  tart apples.  Place in bottom of pudding dish, strew  sugar  over, then pour over the  tapioca;  place over this a layer of thinly sliced  apples  over which dust  sugar.  Place in oven and bake until the  apples  are cooked. Serve with  sugar  and  cream.  Several thin slices of  lemon  added before baking impart a fine flavor. 
 
   STEAMED WALNUT PUDDING  Place in a bowl 1/2 cup  butter  and 1 cup of  granulated sugar.  Beat to a  cream.  Add  yolks of 2 eggs  and 1/2 cup of  syrup molasses  or  maple syrup,  in which had been dissolved 1 teaspoon-ful  baking soda.  Then add 1 cup  sweet milk,  alternately, with about 3 1/2 cups  flour,  1/2 cup of  walnut meats,  run through food-chopper or crushed with rolling pin, 3/4 cup of seeded  raisins,  1/2 teaspoonful ground  cinnamon,  1/2 teaspoonful grated  nutmeg,  1/4 teaspoonful ground  cloves,  a pinch of  salt  and the stiffly beaten  whites  of the two  eggs.   The batter should be placed in two empty one-pound tin  coffee  cans, about two-thirds full, covered tightly with lid and placed in a pot of  boiling water  which should be kept boiling con-stantly for three hours; when steamed the pudding should almost fill the cans. If the cans were well buttered and  flour  sifted over, the pudding when steamed may be easily removed to a platter. Slice and serve hot with the following  sauce :  Beat one cup of pulverized  sugar  to a  cream  with 2 heaping tablespoonfuls of  butter.  Add  white of one egg  (unbeaten). Beat all together until creamy. Add 3/4 of a teaspoonful of  lemon extract  and stand  sauce  in a cold place or on ice one hour before serving on slices of hot pudding. This is a delicious pudding. 
 
   " CORNMEAL  SPONGE" PUDDING  Crumble cold  corn muffins , or  corn cake , a quantity sufficient to fill two cups. Soak in 1 quart of  sweet milk  three or four  hours, then add 3 well-beaten  eggs,  3 tablespoonfuls of  sugar  and pinch of  salt.  Beat all well together. Place in a pan and bake hour in a moderately hot oven. Serve hot with  whipped cream  and  sugar  or with a  sauce  made by beating to a  cream  a heaping tablespoonful of  butter,  1 cup of  granulated sugar,  1  egg  and very little  vanilla  flavoring. 
 
   MARY'S  CORN STARCH  PUDDING   1 1/2 quarts of  milk.    1 scant cup of  sugar.   5  eggs.      1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.   2 heaping tablespoonfuls of  corn starch.    Pour  milk  in a double boiler and place on range to cook. Moisten  cornstarch  with a little  cold milk  and add to remainder of the  milk  when boiling hot. Stir thoroughly, then beat  yolk of eggs  and  sugar  until light, stir in stiffly beaten  whites  and when all are mixed stir into the scalding  milk.  Let come to a boil again and add  vanilla  or  almond  flavoring. Pour into individual molds to cool. Serve cold with a spoonful of  jelly  or  preserved strawberry  with each serving. 
 
    APPLE  JOHNNY CAKE (SERVED AS A PUDDING)  This is a good, cheap, wholesome pudding.  1 cup  corn meal.     1/4 teaspoonful of  salt.   2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar.    2/3 cup  flour.   1 teaspoonful of  soda.    1 cup  sour milk.   1 tablespoonful of melted  butter.     Mix batter together as you would for cake, then add 4 pared, thinly sliced,  tart apples  to the batter. Stir all together. Bake in a quick oven in a  bread  pan and serve hot with cold  cream  and  sugar.   Raisins  may be substituted for  apples  if preferred. 
 
   A GOOD AND CHEAP " TAPIOCA  PUDDING"  Soak over night in  cold water  3 even tablespoonfuls of  pearl  tapioca.  In the morning add  tapioca  to one quart of  milk,  3 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,  a pinch of  salt  Grate  nutmeg  over top. Bake in a moderate oven about three hours, stirring occasionally. 
 
   "GOTTERSPEISE"  Partly fill an earthenware pudding dish with pieces of sponge cake or small cakes called "Lady Fingers ;" cut up with them a few  macaroons.  Place one pint of  wine  over fire to heat, add to the  wine  the following mixture, composed of 1 spoonful of  cornstarch  mixed smooth with a little  water,  3  yolks of eggs  and 3 spoonfuls of  sugar.  Mix all together and stir until thickened. Pour the thickened mixture over the cake. When cooled cover with the stiffly-beaten  whites  of the 3  eggs,  spread sliced  almonds  thickly over top and brown in oven a few minutes. Serve cold. 
 
   SPANISH  CREAM   Half a box of Knox  gelatine,  1 quart of  milk,  4  eggs.  Put  gelatine  in  milk,  let stand 1 hour to dissolve. Set over fire to boil, then add beaten  yolks of eggs  with 1 cup  granulated sugar.  Remove from fire while adding this. Stir well. Return to range and let boil. Stand aside to cool. Beat  whites of eggs  to a froth and beat into custard when cooled. Pour into a glass dish in which it is to be served. Stand in a cold place and serve with  cream.  
 
    GRAHAM  PUDDING  One cup of  molasses,  1  egg,  1 cup  sweet milk,  1/2 teaspoonful  soda,  1 teaspoonful of  salt,  1 tablespoonful  brown sugar,  1 cup  raisins,  2 1/2 cups  Graham flour.  Mix all ingredients together. Steam three hours. 
 
   "PENNSYLVANIA"  PLUM  PUDDING (FOR THANKSGIVING FAY)  One cup  milk,  2  eggs,  1 cup  molasses,  1/2 teaspoonful  nutmeg,   1/2 teaspoonful  salt,  2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder,  1 cup  bread crumbs,  1/2 cup  corn meal,  1 cup chopped  beef suet,  1/4 cup finely minced  citron,  1 cup seeded  raisins,  1/2 cup  currants.   Flour  to make a stiff batter. Steam fully three hours, turn from the mold, strew chopped  almonds  over top. Serve pudding hot with  sauce  for which recipe is given.  Aunt Sarah invariably served this pudding on Thanksgiving Day, and all preferred it to old-fashioned " English Plum  Pudding." 
 
    SAUCE  FOR PUDDING.   Cream  together 1 cup of pulverized  sugar,  scant 1/2 cup of  butter,  beat  whites of 2 eggs  in, one at a time, and one teaspoonful of  lemon flavoring ; stand on ice a short time before serving. Serve  sauce  very cold. 
 
   "SLICE"  BREAD  PUDDING  Line the sides of a pudding dish holding two quarts with seven slices of  stale bread  from which crust had been removed. Beat together 3  eggs,  3 tablespoonfuls of  sugar  and 3 cups of  sweet milk  (and add the  juice  and grated  rind  of one  lemon,  or half a grated  nutmeg ). Pour in the centre of pudding dish. With a spoon dip some of the custard over each slice of  bread.  Bake about 30 minutes and serve hot with the following  sauce :  One cup of  water,  1/2 cup  milk,  1 teaspoonful  butter,  scant tablespoonful of  flour  mixed smooth with a little  water  before adding it. Sweeten to taste, add grated  nutmeg  or  vanilla  to flavor. Cook all together, then add the  yolk of one egg.  Place on stove a minute to heat. Add a pinch of  salt.  Serve hot over the pudding in individual dishes. 
 
   CEREALS- OATMEAL  PORRIDGE   Oatmeal  to be palatable and wholesome should be thoroughly cooked, that is, steamed over a hot fire two hours or longer. Use a double boiler of agateware. Place in the upper half of the boiler about 5 cups of  water  and stand directly over the hottest part of the range. When the  water  boils furiously, and is full of  little bubbles (not before), stir into the  boiling water  about 2 cups of  oatmeal  (if porridge is liked rather thick), and about 1 teaspoonful of  salt.  (Tastes differ regarding the thickness of porridge.) Let stand directly on the front of the range, stirring only enough to prevent scorching, and cook ten minutes, then stand upper part of double boiler over the lower compartment, partly filled with  boiling water;  cover closely and let steam from two to three hours. In order to have the  oatmeal  ready to serve at early breakfast the following morning, put  oatmeal  on to cook about five o'clock in the evening, while preparing supper, and allow it to stand and steam over  boiling water  until the fire in the range is dampened off for the night. Allow the  oatmeal  to stand on range until the following morning, when draw the boiler to front part of range, and when breakfast is ready (after removing top crust formed by standing), turn the  oatmeal  out on a dish and serve with  rich cream  and  sugar,  and you will have a good, wholesome breakfast dish with the flakes distinct, and a nutty flavor. Serve  fruit  with it, if possible. A good rule for cooking  oatmeal  is in the proportion of 2 1/2 cups of  water  to 1 cup of  oatmeal.   The cereals which come ready prepared are taking the place of the old-time standby with which mothers fed their growing boys. If you wish your boys to have muscle and brawn, feed them  oats.  To quote an old physician, "If horses thrive on  oats,  why not boys who resemble young colts?"  For example, look at the hardy young Scot who thrives and grows hearty and strong on his  oatmeal  "porritch." Chopped  almonds,   dates  or  figs  may be added to  oatmeal  to make it more palatable. Use cup measuring 1/2 pint for measuring cereals as well as every other recipe calling for one cup in this book. 
 
   COOKED  RICE   Boil 1 cup of whole, thoroughly cleansed, uncoated  rice  in 3 quarts of rapidly  boiling water  (salted) about 25 minutes, or until tender, which can be tested by pressing a couple of grains of  rice  between the fingers. Do not stir often while boiling. When the  rice  is tender turn on to a sieve and drain; then put in a dish and place in the oven, to dry off, with oven  door open, when the grains should be whole, flaky,  white  and tempting, not the soggy, unappetizing mass one often sees. Serve  rice  with  cream  and  sugar.  Some prefer  brown sugar  and others like  crushed maple sugar  with it. Or  rice  may be eaten as a vegetable with  salt  and  butter.   Rice  is inexpensive, nutritious and one of the most easily digested cereals, and if rightly cooked, an appetizing looking food. It is a wonder the economical housewife does not serve it oftener on her table in some of the numerous ways it may be prepared. As an ingredient of soup, as a vegetable, or a pudding, croquettes, etc., the wise housekeeper will cook double the amount of  rice  needed and stand half aside until the day following, when may be quickly prepared  rice  croquettes,  cheese  balls, etc. On the day following that on which  rice  has been served, any cold boiled  rice  remaining may be placed in a small bake dish with an equal quantity of  milk,  a little  sugar  and flavoring, baked a short time in oven and served with a cup of stewed, seeded  raisins  which have slowly steamed, covered with  cold water,  on the back of the range, until soft and plump. 
 
    CORN MEAL  MUSH  Place on the range a cook-pot containing 9 cups of  boiling water  (good measure). Sift in slowly 2 cups of yellow granulated  corn meal,  stirring constantly while adding the meal, until the mixture is smooth and free from lumps. Add 1 1/4 level tea-spoonfuls of  salt  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  sugar,  and cook a short time, stirring constantly, then stand where the mush will simmer, or cook slowly for four or five hours.  Serve hot, as a porridge, adding 1/2 teaspoonful of  butter  to each individual bowl of hot mush and serve with it  cold milk  or  cream.  Should a portion of the mush remain after the meal, turn it at once, while still hot, in an oblong pan several inches in depth, stand until quite cold. Cut in half-inch slices, sift  flour  over each slice and fry a golden brown in a couple tablespoonfuls of sweet  drippings  and  butter.  Or dip slices of mush in  egg  and  bread crumbs  and fry brown in the same manner. Some there are who like  maple syrup  or  molasses  served with fried mush.  This proportion of  corn meal  and  water  will make porridge  of the proper consistency and it will be just right to be sliced for frying when cold. Long, slow cooking makes  corn meal  much more wholesome and palatable, and prevents the raw taste of  cornmeal  noticeable in mush cooked too quickly. The small quantity of  sugar  added is not noticed, but improves the flavor of the mush. 
 
    MACARONI   In early spring, when the family tire of winter foods and it is still too early for vegetables from the home garden, and the high price of early forced vegetables in the city markets prevent the housewife, of limited means from purchasing, then the resourceful, economical housewife serves  macaroni  and  rice  in various ways and makes appetizing dishes of the  fruits  she canned and preserved for Winter use, combined with  tapioca  and  gelatine.   Milk  and  eggs  tide her over the most difficult time of the year for young, inexperienced cooks. When the prices of early vegetables soar beyond the reach of her purse, then she should buy sparingly of them and of  meat,  and occasionally serve, instead, a dish of  macaroni  and  cheese,  or  rice  and  cheese,  and invest the money thus saved in  fruit;   dried fruits,  if fresh  fruits  are not obtainable.   Macaroni  is such a nutritious food that it should be used frequently by the young housewife as a substitute for  meat  on the bill of fare. Also occasionally serve a dish of baked  beans  or a dish composed of  eggs,  or  milk  combined with  eggs,  instead of the more expensive  meat  dish, all equally useful as muscle-builders, and cheaper than  meat.  The wise housewife will learn which foods furnish heat for the body and those which produce  fat  and energy, and those which are muscle-builders, and endeavor to serve well-balanced meals of the foods belonging to the three classes and thus with  fruit  and vegetables she will make wise provision for her family. 
 
   BAKED  MACARONI  AND  CHEESE   Put 2 cups or 1/2 pound of  macaroni  (either the long sticks broken in pieces or the "elbow"  macaroni,  as preferred) in a kettle  holding several quarts of rapidly boiling,  salted water,  and cook about 25 minutes, or until tender. Drain in a colander and allow  cold water  to run over it for several seconds. This prevents the  macaroni  sticking together. Place the  macaroni  in a buttered baking dish and pour over a hot "cream  sauce " composed of 1 cup of  milk  and 1 cup of  water,  2 tablespoonfuls of  flour,  2 even tablespoonfuls of  butter  and a pinch of  salt.  (Too much  salt  is apt to curdle the  milk. ) Spread over the top of  macaroni  about 3 tablespoonfuls of  grated cheese,  or, if preferred, sprinkle over the top 3 tablespoonfuls of well-seasoned  dried bread crumbs  and small bits of  butter.  Stand the bake-dish containing the  macaroni  in a hot oven ten or fifteen minutes, until lightly browned on top. Serve hot in the dish in which it was baked. Stewed  tomatoes  are a nice accompaniment to this dish. Double the quantity of  macaroni  may be cooked at one time and a part of it kept on ice; the following day serve in  tomato sauce,  thus utilizing any left-over  tomatoes.   The  macaroni  may be cooked while the housewife is using the range, and early in the morning. Drain the  macaroni  in a colander and stand aside in a cool place. It may be quickly prepared for six o'clock dinner by pouring over a hot  cream sauce  and  grated cheese  and quickly browning in the oven.  Or the  macaroni,  when cooked tender in  salt water,  may be quickly served by pouring over it a hot  cream sauce,  before the  macaroni  has become cold. Serve at once.  Housewives should be particular when buying  macaroni  to get a brand made from good  flour.  
 
   CAKES-CAKE-MAKING  Sift  flour  and  baking powder  together several times before adding to cake batter. Aunt Sarah usually sifted  flour  and  baking powder  together four times for cakes.  Flour  should always be sifted before using.  Baking powder  should be sifted through the  flour  dry. Salaratus (or  baking soda ) should, usually, be dissolved before using in a teaspoonful of  hot water,  unless stated otherwise.  Cream of tartar  should be sifted with the  flour.   Flour  should be added gradually and batter stirred as little as possible afterwards, unless directions are given to  the contrary. Much beating after  flour  has been added is apt to make cake tough. Cake will be lighter if baked slowly at first. After it has raised increase heat slowly so it will brown nicely on top. The batter, if heated slowly, will rise evenly. This does not mean a cool oven. To prevent cakes sticking to pans,  grease  pans well with  lard,  and sift a little  flour  lightly over pan. Use  baking powder  with  sweet milk.   Saleratus  is always used with  sour milk.  Use 1 teaspoonful of  saleratus  to 1 pint of  sour milk.   Cream of tartar  and  saleratus  combined may be used with  sweet milk  instead of  baking powder.  One heaping teaspoonful of Royal  baking powder  is equivalent to 1 teaspoonful of  cream of tartar  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  saleratus  combined. Either  baking powder  or a combination of  saleratus  and  cream of tartar  may be used in a cake in which  sweet milk  is used. Usually take 1 1/2 to 2 scant teaspoonfuls of  baking powder  to two cups of  flour.   Saleratus  should be used alone with  sour milk.  Put baking  molasses  in a stew-pan over fire and allow it to just come to boil; cool before using it. It will not sour as quickly in warm weather, and the cake baked from it will have a better flavor. The cup used in measuring ingredients for cakes holds exactly one-half pint. All cakes are improved by the addition of a pinch of  salt.  When  lard  is used instead of  butter,  beat to a  cream  and  salt  well. In mixing cakes, beat  butter  and  sugar  together until light and creamy, then add the beaten  yolks of eggs,  unless stated otherwise as for angel cake, etc., then the flavoring, then mix in the  flour  and liquid alternately. The  baking powder,   flour  and  salt  should have been sifted together three or four times before being added. Lastly, fold in lightly the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.   Fruit  well dredged with  flour  should be added last, if used. Cool the oven if too hot for baking cakes by placing a pan containing  cold water  in the top rack of oven. Sponge cake particularly is improved by doing this, as it makes the cake moist. Stir sponge cake as little as possible after adding  flour,  as too much stirring then will make cake tough. Sift  flour  several times before using for sponge cake, as this causes the  flour  to become lighter. Layer cake, and most small cakes, require a quick oven. The oven door should not be opened for 12 minutes after cake has been placed in oven. Rich cakes, loaf cakes must bake long and slowly. The richer the cake, the slower the heat required in baking.  To test the oven, if the hand can  bear  the heat of the oven 20 or 25 seconds, the oven then is the right temperature. After placing a loaf cake in oven do not open the oven door for 20 minutes. If oven be not hot enough, the cake will rise, then fall and be heavy. Angel cake, sunshine cake and sponge cake require a moderate oven.   Raisins  and  dried currants  should be washed and dried before using in cake. All  fruit  should be dredged with  flour  before being added to cake.  Citron  may be quickly and easily prepared by cutting on a slaw cutter or it may be grated before being added to cake. When a recipe calls for  butter  the size of an  egg  it means two tablespoonfuls. A tablespoonful of  butter,  melted, means the  butter  should be measured first, then melted. Aunt Sarah frequently used a mixture of  butter  and  lard  in her cakes for economy's sake, and a lesser quantity may be used, as the  shortening  quality of  lard  is greater than that of  butter.  When substituting  lard  for  butter,  she always beat the  lard  to a  cream  before using it and  salt  it well. If  raisins  and  currants  are placed in oven of range a few minutes to become warmed before being added to cake, then rolled in  flour,  they will not sink to bottom of cake when baked. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S LEMON CAKE   1 1/2 cups  sugar.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard.   3 small  eggs  or 2 large ones.  1/2 cup  sweet milk.   2 cups  flour.   1/2 teaspoonful  saleratus   1 teaspoonful  cream of tartar.   Grated yellow  rind  and  juice  of half a  lemon.    Beat  sugar  and  butter  to a  cream  and add the  yolks of eggs.  Add the  milk,  then the  flour  and  cream of tartar  and  saleratus;  and the flavoring. Lastly, the stiffly-beaten  whites of eggs.   This makes one loaf cake. The original of this recipe was a very old one which Frau Schmidt had used many years. Every ingredient in the old recipe was doubled, except the  eggs,  when  five were used. Mary thought this cake fine and from the recipe, when she used half the quantity of everything, she baked a fine loaf cake, and from the original recipe was made one good sized loaf and one layer cake. Thinly sliced  citron  added to this cake is a great improvement. 
 
   FINE "KRUM KUCHEN"  One cup  sugar,  1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed; 2 cups  flour  and 2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder,  2  eggs,  1/2 cup  sweet milk.   Crumb together with the hands the  sugar,   butter,   flour  and  baking powder  sifted together. Take out 1/2 cup of these crumbs to be scattered over top of cake. To the remainder add the  yolks of the eggs,  well beaten, and the  sweet milk,  and lastly the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  Put the mixture in a well-greased pan (a deep custard pie tin will answer), scatter the half cup of crumbs reserved over top of cake and bake about 3/4 of an hour in a rather quick oven. When cake is baked, sprinkle over 1 teaspoonful of melted  butter  and dust top with  cinnamon.  
 
   AUNT SARAH'S "QUICK DUTCH CAKES"  She creamed together 1 cup of  sugar,  1 tablespoonful of  lard,  1 tablespoonful of  butter  and added 1 1/2 cups of luke-warm  milk.  Add 3 cups  flour  (good measure), sifted with three scant teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Add a half cup of  raisins,  seeded and cut in several pieces, if liked, but the cakes are very good without. Spread in two pans and sprinkle  sugar  and  cinnamon  on top and press about five small  dabs of butter  on top of each cake. Put in oven and bake at once. These are a very good substitute for "raised Dutch cakes" and are much more quickly and easily made and, as no  eggs  are used, are quite cheap and very good. 
 
   A RELIABLE LAYER CAKE   1 1/4 cups  granulated sugar.   3  eggs.    1/2 cup  butter  and  lard  mixed. (Use all  butter  if preferred.)  1/2 cup  sweet milk.   2 cups  flour  silted with 2 teaspoonfuls Royal  baking powder.     Cream  together  sugar  and  shortening.  Add  yolks of eggs,  beating well, as each ingredient is added. Then add  milk  and  flour  alternately, and lastly the stiffly beaten  white of eggs.  Stir all together. Bake in two square layer pans, and put together with  chocolate  or  white  icing. Or ice the cakes when cold and cut in squares. 
 
   BOILED ICING  Boil together 1 cup of  granulated sugar  and 5 tablespoonfuls  boiling water  ten or twelve minutes, or until a small quantity dropped from spoon spins a thread. Stir this into the stiffly-beaten  white of one egg  until thick and creamy. Flavor with  lemon,   almond or vanilla  flavoring and spread on cake. Dip knife in  hot water  occasionally when spreading icing on cake.  A delicious icing is composed of  almonds  blanched and pounded to a  paste.  Add a few drops of essence of  bitter almonds.  Dust the top of the cake lightly with  flour,  spread on the  almond paste  and when nearly dry cover with ordinary icing. Dry  almonds  before pounding them in mortar, and use a small quantity of  rose water.  A few drops only should be used of essence of  bitter almonds  to flavor icing or cake. A pinch of  baking powder  added to  sugar  when making boiled icing causes the icing to become more creamy, or add a pinch of  cream of tartar  when making boiled icing. Or, when a cake iced with "boiled icing" has become cold, spread on top of icing unsweetened, melted  chocolate.  This is a delicious "cream  chocolate  icing." 
 
   A DELICIOUS " SPICE  LAYER CAKE"   2 cups light  brown sugar.      1 cup chopped  raisins.   2  eggs.     1 cup  sour milk.   1/2 cup  butter.     2 cups  flour.   1 teaspoonful each of  soda,   cloves,   cinnamon,   allspice  and a little grated  nutmeg.      Cream sugar  and  butter  together, add  yolks of eggs,  then the  sour milk  in which the  soda  has been dissolved,  flour  and  spices,  and lastly stir in the stiffly beaten  white of eggs.  Bake in two-layer pans.  Two cups  sugar,  3/4 cup of  milk  or  cream,  2 tablespoonfuls of  butter.  Boil until it forms a soft ball when a small quantity is dropped in  water,  and flavor with  vanilla.  Beat until cold and spread between layers of cake. Also on top and sides. 
 
   AN INEXPENSIVE  COCOA  CAKE  This is a decidedly good cake and no  eggs  are required.  Cream  together 1 cup  brown sugar,  1/4 cup  butter.  Add 1 cup of  sour milk,  1 3/4 cups  flour,  then sift over 1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  cocoa.  Add 1 level teaspoonful  saleratus,  dissolved in a little of the  sour milk,  and 1 teaspoonful  vanilla.  Bake in a small loaf. Use the following icing:  1/4 cup of grated  chocolate,  1/4 cup  milk,  1/2 cup  sugar,  boiled together until thick, and spread on cake. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S WALNUT GINGERBREAD   1/2 cup of New Orleans  molasses.   1 cup of light  brown sugar.   1/2 cup of  shortening  (composed of  butter,   lard  and sweet drippings).  1/2 teaspoonful of  ginger,   cinnamon  and  cloves  each.  2 teaspoonfuls of  baking soda  ( saleratus ), sifted with 3 1/2 cups  flour.   1 cup  boiling water.   2  eggs.    Beat to a  cream  the  sugar  and  shortening  in a bowl; add  molasses,  then pour over all one cup of  boiling water.  Beat well. Add  flour,   soda  and  spices,  all sifted together. Beat into this the two unbeaten  eggs  (one at a time), then add about 3/4  of a cup of coarsely chopped 
 black walnut  meats, or the same quantity of well-floured  raisins  may be substituted for the  walnut meats.   The cakes may be baked in muffin pans. In that case, fill pans about two-thirds full. The above quantity makes eighteen. They can also be baked in a pan as a loaf cake. This cake is excellent, and will keep fresh several days. These cakes taste similar to those sold in an Atlantic City bake-shop which have gained a reputation for their excellence. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S "GERMAN CRUMB CAKES" BAKED IN CRUSTS   3 cups  flour.   2 1/2 heaping teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   2 cups  sugar  (soft A or light brown).  1/2 cup  lard  and  butter  mixed.  2  eggs.   1 cup  sweet milk.   Pinch of  salt.   Flavoring- vanilla  or grated  orange rind.    Line three small pie tins with pie crust. Sift together into a bowl the  flour  and  baking powder  and add light brown or A  sugar,  and the  butter,   lard  and  salt.  Rub this all together with the hands until well mixed and crumbly. Take out 1 cupful of these crumbs and stand aside. Add to the rest of the mixture the  yolks of eggs, whites  being beaten separately and added last. Add slowly 1 cup of  sweet milk.  Mix it in gradually until the mixture is creamed, then add a small quantity of grated  orange peel,   lemon or vanilla  flavoring. Lastly, stir in the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  Pour the mixture into each one of the three unbaked crusts, then sprinkle the cup of crumbs thickly over the tops. Bake in a moderate oven. These are very good, cheap cakes for breakfast or lunch. 
 
   " SOUR CREAM "  MOLASSES  CAKE   1/2 cup  molasses.   1 cup  sugar.    1/2 cup thick  sour cream.   1/2 cup  sour milk.   1/2 cup finely chopped  peanuts.   1  egg.   1 teaspoonful  soda  dissolved in little  hot water.   2 3/4 cups  flour.   1 cup seeded  raisins.    Mix together like ordinary cake. Bake in a  fruit  cake pan in a slow oven about forty minutes. This excellent cake requires no  shortening,  as  cream  is used. 
 
   ECONOMY CAKE   1  egg.      1 cup  sweet milk.   1 cup  granulated sugar.     2 cups  flour.   1/4 cup  butter.    2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.     Cream  together  sugar  and  yolk of egg,  then beat into this mixture the  butter  and add the  milk.  Then stir the  flour,  a small quantity at a time, into the mixture, keeping it smooth and free from lumps. Add the stiffly beaten  white of egg.  Use any flavoring or  spice  preferred. Bake in a quick oven.  This is not simply a very cheap cake, but a decidedly good one, and made from inexpensive materials. Follow the recipe exactly or the cake may be too light and too crumbly if too much  baking powder  is used, or heavy if too much  butter  is used. By varying the flavor and baking in different forms it is as good as a number of more expensive recipes. It makes three layers of any kind of layer cake, or bake in Gem pans. 
 
    GINGER  CAKE   1/2 cup  brown sugar.     1  egg.  1/2 cup  lard.    2 large cups  flour.   1/2 cup New Orleans  molasses.    1  tablespoonful of  ginger.   1 teaspoonful  soda  dissolved in half cup luke- warm water.   Beat  sugar  and  lard  to a  cream,  then beat in the  yolk of egg,   molasses  and  flour  and  soda  dissolved in  water.  Lastly, add the stiffly-beaten  white of egg.  Bake 45 minutes in hot oven. 
  
   A VERY ECONOMICAL GERMAN  CLOVE  CAKE   Place in a stew-pan the following ingredients:  1 cup  brown sugar.   1 cup  cold water.   2 cups seeded  raisins.   1/3 cup  sweet lard,  or a mixture of  lard  and  butter.   1/4 grated  nutmeg.   2 teaspoonfuls  cinnamon.   1/2 teaspoonful ground  cloves.   Pinch of  salt.    Boil all together three minutes. When cold add 1 teaspoonful of  soda  dissolved in a little  hot water.  Add about 1 3/4 cups  flour  sifted with 1/2 teaspoonful of  baking powder.  Bake in a loaf in a moderately hot oven about thirty minutes. This cake is both good and economical, as no  butter,   eggs  or  milk  are used in its composition. This recipe for making this excellent, cheap cake was bought by Aunt Sarah at a "Cake and Pie" sale. She was given permission to pass it on. 
 
   ICING.   1 small cup pulverized  sugar.   2 tablesponfuls of  cocoa.   Mix smooth with a very little  boiling water.  Spread over cake. 
 
   CAKE ICING FOR VARIOUS CAKES  Cook together 2 cups of  granulated sugar,  1 1/4 cups of  water,  a little less than 12 minutes. Just before it reaches the soft ball stage, beat in quickly 25 marshmallows; when dissolved and a thick, creamy mass, spread between layers and on top of cake.  This is a delicious creamy icing when made according to directions. If  sugar  and  water  be cooked one minute too long, the icing becomes sugary instead of creamy. One-half the above quantity will ice the top of a cake nicely. 
  
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR "HOT  MILK " SPONGE CAKE   For this cake was used:  2 cups  granulated sugar.   4  eggs.   2 1/8 cups  flour.   1 1/2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.   1 cup boiling hot  milk.   Separate the  eggs,  place  yolks  in a bowl, add the  sugar  and beat until creamy.  Add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  alternately with the sifted  flour  and  baking powder;  lastly add the cup of boiling hot  milk;  should the  milk  not be rich, add one teaspoon of  butter  to the hot  milk.  The cake batter should be thin as griddle cake batter, pour into a tube pan and place at once in a 
 very moderate  oven; in about 15 minutes increase the heat and in about 25 minutes more the cake, risen to the top of pan, should have commenced to brown on top.  Bake from 15 to 20 minutes more in a moderately hot oven with steady heat; when baked the top of the cake should be a light fawn color and texture of cake light and fine grained.  Mary was told by her Aunt that any sponge cake was improved by the addition of a teaspoon of  butter,  causing the sponge cake to resemble  pound cake  in texture. 
 
   CHEAP " MOLASSES GINGER BREAD "   1 cup New Orleans  molasses.   1/2 cup  shortening  ( lard  and  butter  mixed).  1 cup  hot water.   1 large teaspoonful  soda  dissolved in the one cup of  hot water.   1 teaspoonful of  ginger.   1/2 teaspoonful of  cinnamon.   1 quart of  flour.    Stir  sugar  and  shortening  together. Add  molasses,  heat all thoroughly, then add  hot water  and  flour.  Stir  hard.  Bake in two layer pans in quick oven about 30 minutes. Use cake while fresh. 
  
   AUNT SARAH'S EXTRA FINE LARGE SPONGE CAKE   2 cups  granulated sugar.    3/4 cup of  boiling water.   2 1/4 cups of  flour.    4 large  eggs.   2 even teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   1 teaspoonful  lemon juice.    Put  whites of eggs  in a large mixing bowl and beat very stiff. Add  sugar  (sifted 3 times), then add the well-beaten  yolks,   flour  (sifted 3 times with  baking powder ), add  lemon juice.  Lastly, add the  hot water.  Bake about 50 minutes in a tube pan in a moderately hot oven with a steady heat. Stand a pan of  hot water  in the upper rack of oven if the oven is quite hot. It improves the cake and causes it to be more moist. This is an excellent sponge cake and easily made, although the ingredients are put together the opposite way cakes are usually mixed, with the exception of angel cake. When this cake was taken from oven,  powdered sugar  was sifted thickly over the top. Use cup holding 1/2 pint, as in all other cake recipes. 
 
   ANGEL CAKE-AUNT SARAH'S RECIPE  >Mary was taught by her Aunt, when preparing a dish calling for  yolks of eggs  only, to place the  white of eggs  not used in a glass jar which she stood in a cold place or on ice. When she had saved one even cupful she baked an angel cake over the following recipe:  One heaping cup of pulverized  sugar  (all the cup will hold), was sifted 8 times. One cup of a mixture of  pastry flour  and  corn starch  (equal parts) was also sifted 8 times. The whole was then sifted together 4 times. The one cupful of  white of eggs  was beaten very stiff. When about half beaten, sprinkle over the partly-beaten  eggs  one scant teaspoonful of  cream of tartar,  then finish beating the  whites of eggs.  Flavor with  almond or vanilla.  Then carefully sift into the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs sugar,   flour  and  corn starch.  Fold into the  whites of eggs  rather than stir. Aunt Sarah always baked this cake in a small, oblong  bread  pan. This cake should be baked in a 
 very  moderate oven, one in which the hand might be held without inconvenience while counting one hundred; the oven should be just hot enough  for one to know there was fire in the range. Do not open the oven door for 15 minutes, then increase the heat a little; if not too hot, open the oven door a moment to cool and bake slowly for about 55 minutes. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S GOOD AND CHEAP "COUNTRY  FRUIT  CAKE"   1 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.    1 pound  dried currants.   4  eggs.     1/4 pound thinly sliced  citron.   1 cup New Orleans  molasses.     2 teaspoonfuls  baking soda.   1 cup  sour milk.      4 cups  flour.    2 pounds  raisins,  seeded.  A little grated  nutmeg,   ginger,   cinnamon  and a very small quantity of  cloves.   Bake in one large  fruit  cake pan or in two good sized pans about 1 3/4 hours. This cake should not be kept as long a time as a more expensive  fruit  cake, but may be kept several weeks. This was Aunt Sarah's best recipe for an excellent, inexpensive  fruit  cake. 
 
   A "SPONGE CUSTARD" CAKE   4  eggs.      1 teaspoonful  baking soda.   2 cups  granulated sugar.     1 cup  cold water.   3 cups  flour.    Juice of 1  lemon.   2 teaspoonfuls of  cream of tartar  and pinch of  salt.    Beat  eggs  well, then sift in  sugar  and half of  flour  in which  cream of tartar  has been mixed. Dissolve the  soda  in a little  water  and add also the  lemon juice  and lastly add the balance of  flour.  Bake in layer cake pans two inches deep. 
 
   CUSTARD  Boil 1 pint of  sweet milk  and add to it, stirring constantly, the following mixture: Two tablespoonfuls  corn starch,  mixed with a little  water  before boiling, 1 cup of  sugar  and 1 well-beaten  egg.  Allow all to cook a few minutes in a double boiler  about 15 minutes. Split the sponge cakes when baked and put custard between when cooled. 
 
   GRANDMOTHER'S EXCELLENT "OLD RECIPE" FOR MARBLE CAKE   LIGHT PART.  1 3/4 cups  granulated sugar.   1 scant cup  butter  or a mixture of  butter  and  lard.    Whites of 6 eggs.   1 cup  milk.   3 scant cups  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoons of  baking powder.   Flavor with  essence of lemon.     DARK PART.   Yolks of 4 eggs.   1/2 cup of a mixture of  butter  and  lard.   3/4 cup  milk  (scant measure).  1/2 cup  brown sugar.   1 tablespoon of  molasses.   2 tablespoons of  cinnamon.   1 tablespoon of  cloves.     One cup or a little more  flour  sifted with one teaspoon of  baking powder.  Place spoonfuls of the dark and light batter alternately in a cake pan until all has been used.  Bake in a moderately hot oven from 45 to SO minutes.  From this recipe may be made two good sized cakes.  I should advise using one-half the quantity for both dark and light part of cake called for in recipe, which would make one good sized cake. Should this whole recipe be used, the cake baked from it would be of the size of a very large  fruit  cake. 
 
   MARY'S  MOLASSES  CAKES  She creamed together 1 cup of light  brown sugar  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter.  Then added 1 cup of New Orleans  molasses.  The  molasses  had been allowed to come to a boil, then cooled. She sifted into the mixture 4 cups of  flour  alternately with 1 cup  of  sweet milk  in which 2 even teaspoonfuls of  soda  had been dissolved. She beat all well together, then added  yolk  of one large  egg,  and lastly the stiffly beaten  white of the egg.  Beat the mixture again and bake in 2 square layer cake pans in a hot oven about 25 minutes. This is an excellent cake if directions are closely followed. 
 
    CHOCOLATE  ICING FOR  MOLASSES  CAKE.  Boil 1 scant half cup  water  with 1 cup  sugar  until it spins a thread, or forms a soft, firm ball in  cold water.  Pour slowly over the stiffly beaten  white of egg,  beating while it is being poured. Melt 2 squares or 2 ounces of unsweetened  chocolate  by standing the bowl containing it in  hot water.  Add 1 teaspoonful  hot water  to  chocolate.  Stir the  egg  and  sugar  mixture slowly into the melted  chocolate.  Beat until stiff enough to spread on cake. 
 
    HICKORY NUT  CAKE   l 1/2 cups  sugar.   l/2 cup  butter.   3/4 cup  milk.    Whites of 4 eggs.   2 cup  hickory nut meats,  chopped.  2 cups  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   Mix together as ordinary cake. Bake in a loaf. 
 
   "LIGHT BROWN"  SUGAR  CAKE  Three cupfuls of light  brown sugar,  1/2 cup of  sweet lard  and  yolk of one egg  creamed together until light. Then add 1 1/2 cups  sour milk  alternately with 4 cups of  flour  and 1 1/2 teaspoonfuls of  cinnamon;  1 1/2 teaspoonfuls of  ginger,  1/2 teaspoonful of  cloves  and half of a grated  nutmeg,  1 tablespoonful of thinly shaved or grated  citron  is an improvement to cake, but may be omitted. Beat all together, then add 1 teaspoonful of  soda  dissolved in a small quantity of the  sour milk.  Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  white of one egg  and one cup seeded  raisins  dredged with a little  flour.  Put the cake batter in a large, well-greased   fruit  cake pan, lined with  paper  which had been greased and a trifle of  flour  sifted over, and bake in an oven with a steady heat about one hour and fifteen minutes. This is a very good, 
 inexpensive  cake and will keep moist some time if kept in a tin cake box. The  fruit  might be omitted, but it improves the cake. 
 
   "ANGEL FOOD" LAYER CAKE   1 cup and 2 table spoonfuls  granulated sugar.   1 1/2 cups  flour.   1 cup and 2 tablespoonfuls scalded  milk.   3 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   Pinch of  salt.    Whites of 2 eggs.    Place  milk  in lop part of double boiler and heat to boiling point. Sift dry ingredients together four times and then pour in the hot  milk  and stir well together. Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  Fold them in lightly, but do not beat. The batter will be quite thin. Do not  grease  the tins. No flavoring is used. Bake in two square layer tins, put together with any icing preferred. Bake in a moderate oven. This is a good, economical cake to bake when  yolks of eggs  have been used for other purposes. 
 
   MARY'S  CHOCOLATE  CAKE  One-half cup of  brown sugar,  l/2 cup of  sweet milk  and 1/2 cup of grated, unsweetened  chocolate.  Boil all together until thick as  cream;  allow it to cool.  Mix 1/2 cup of  butter  with 1/2 cup of  brown sugar.  Add two beaten  eggs,  2/3 of a cup of  sweet milk  and  vanilla  flavoring to taste. Beat this into the boiled mixture and add 2 cups of  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Bake in three layers and put together with  chocolate  icing, or  cocoa  filling. 
 
    COCOA  FILLING.   1 1/2 cups pulverized  sugar.   1 tablespoonful  butter,  melted.  2 1/2 tablespoonfuls  cocoa.     Place all the ingredients in a bowl and mix to a smooth  paste  with cold  coffee.  Flavor with  vanilla  and spread on cake. This  cocoa  filling should not be boiled. 
 
   A CHEAP  ORANGE  CAKE   2  eggs.   1 1/2 cupfuls  sugar.   1 large tablespoonful  butter.   1 cup  milk.   2 cups  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   Juice  and grated yellow  rind  of half an  orange.  Bake in moderate oven in loaf or layers. If a loaf cake, ice top and sides with the following icing:  1 1/2 cupfuls pulverized  sugar,  1 tablespoonful  warm water  and grated  rind  and  juice  of half an  orange.  Mix all together to a  cream  and spread over cake. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S  MOLASSES  CAKE   1 pint of New Orleans  molasses.   3/4 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.  4  eggs.   1 cup  sour milk.   2 good teaspoonfuls  soda.   4 cups  flour.   Grated  rind  of 1  orange.    Bake in a long dripping pan, cut out in square pieces, or it may be baked in a large pan used for  fruit  cake. It will fill two medium sized cake pans. 
 
    APPLE SAUCE  CAKE   1/4 cup  butter  (generous measure).  1 cup light  brown sugar.   1 cup  apple sauce  (not sweetened).   1 level teaspoonful  soda   2 cups  flour.   1 teaspoonful  cinnamon.   1/2 teaspoonful  cloves.   1 small  nutmeg,  grated.  Pinch of  salt.   1 cup  raisins.     Cream  together  butter,   sugar  and  spices.  Add  apple sauce  and  flour.  (Dissolve the  soda  in  apple sauce. ) Add a cup of seeded  raisins  or  raisins  and  currants,  if preferred. This recipe may be doubled when it makes a very good, cheap  fruit  cake, as no  eggs  are required, and it both looks and tastes like a dark  fruit  cake. 
 
   ICING  One cup pulverized  sugar,  piece of  butter  size of a  walnut.  Moisten with a little  water  and spread on cake. 
 
   "SCHWARZ" CAKE  This delicious black  chocolate  or "Schwarz" cake, as Aunt Sarah called it, was made from the following recipe:  1 1/2 cups of  sugar.   1/2 cup  butter.   1/2 cup  sweet milk.   1 even teaspoon of  soda  ( saleratus ).  3  eggs.   1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.   2 cups  flour.   1 1/2 teaspoon of Royal  baking powder.    Before mixing all the above ingredients place in a stew-pan on the range 1/2 cup of grated  chocolate  and 1/2 cup  sweet milk;  allow them to come to a boil, then stand this mixture aside to cool and add to the cake mixture later.   Cream  together  sugar  and  butter,  add  yolk of eggs;   soda  dissolved in the  milk,  then add  flour  and  baking powder  sifted together alternately with the stiffly beaten  white of eggs.  Then  beat in last the  chocolate  and  milk  mixture which has cooled. Bake in layer cake pans.  Use the following  chocolate  filling:  1/2 cup  sugar.   1/2 cup  milk.    Yolk of one egg.   1/2 teaspoon of  corn starch  (good measure).  1/4 cake of Baker's unsweetened  chocolate.    Boil all together until quite thick and spread between layers of cake. 
 
    APPLE CREAM  CAKE   2 cups  sugar.     1 cup  sweet milk.   2 tablespoonfuls  butter.     3 cups  flour.   3  eggs.   2 teaspoonfuls Royal  baking powder.    Add the stiffly beaten whiles of  eggs  last and bake in two layers. Flavor with  lemon or vanilla.  
 
    APPLE CREAM  FILLING FOR CAKE.  Beat  white of 1 egg  very stiff. Add 1 cup of  granulated sugar  and beat well. Quickly grate one raw  apple  into the  egg  and  sugar,  add the  juice  of 1/4  lemon  and beat 20 minutes, when it will be light and foamy. This icing is soft and creamy. Coarsely chopped  nut meats  may be added if liked. Cake must be eaten with a fork, but is delicious. 
 
   A "HALF POUND" CAKE   Cream  together 1/2 pound of  sugar  and 1/2 pound of  butter.  Beat into this the  eggs  separately, until five  eggs  have been used. Add  flour  and I small teaspoonful of  baking powder.  Bake in a moderate oven about 55 minutes; 1/2 pound of  flour  is used in this cake. This cake is extra fine. 
 
   A DELICIOUS ICING (NOT CHEAP).  Stir to a  cream  a half cup  butter,  1 1/2 cups pulverized  sugar,   1 tablespoonful  milk  and 1 teaspoonful  vanilla  It is then ready to use for icing a cake. 
 
    COCOANUT  LAYER CAKE   2 cups  sugar.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.  3  eggs  ( yolks  only).  1 cup  milk.   3 cups  flour,  sifted several times with the  2 teaspoonfuls  cream of tartar  and 1 teaspoonful  soda  ( saleratus ).   Mix like an ordinary cake. 
 
   THE FILLING.  To the stiffly beaten  whites of 3 eggs  add 1 cup of pulverized  sugar.  Spread this on each one of the layers of the cake and on top. Strew a half of a grated  cocoanut  over. To the other half of grated  cocoanut  add 4 tablespoonfuls of pulverized  sugar  and strew over top of the cake. 
 
   GOLD LAYER CAKE    Yolks of 6 eggs.   1/2 cup  butter.   1 large cup  granulated sugar.   1/2 cup  sweet milk.   2 1/2 cups  flour.   2 heaping teaspoonfuls  baking powder.    Cream sugar  and  butter,  add  yolks.  Beat well, then add  milk  and  flour.  Stir all together and bake in square pans in a hot oven. 
 
   SUNSHINE SPONGE CAKE   1 cup  granulated sugar.    Whites  of 7 small fresh  eggs  and 5  yolks.   2/3 cup of  flour,  or scant cup of  flour.   1/3 teaspoonful  cream of tartar  and a pinch of  salt.     Beat the  yolks of eggs  thoroughly, then beat the  whites  about half; add  cream of tartar  and beat until very stiff. Stir in  sugar  sifted lightly through your  flour  sifter. Then add beaten  yolks,  stir thoroughly, sift the  flour  five times. The last time sift into the batter, stirring only enough to incorporate the  flour.  Bake in a tube pan from 40 to 50 minutes in a very moderate oven. This is a particularly fine cake, but a little difficult to get just right. Place cake in a cool oven; when cake has risen turn on heat. This cake should be baked same as an angel cake. 
 
   AN INEXPENSIVE DARK " CHOCOLATE  LAYER CAKE"   1 cup  sugar.   	 2 cups  flour  sifted with 1/2 cup  butter.    2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   2  eggs.    1/2 cup  chocolate.   1/2 cup  sweet milk.   Grate the  chocolate,  mix with 1/4 cup of  milk  and  yolk of 1 egg.  sweeten to taste; cook the  chocolate;  when cooled add to the above mixture. Bake in three layer tins. Put  white  boiled icing between the layers. The boiled icing recipe will be found on another page. 
 
   ANGEL CAKE   11  eggs  ( whites  only).  1 1/2 cups  granulated sugar  (sifted 3 times).  1 cup  flour  (sifted 5 times).  1 teaspoonful  cream of tartar.   1 teaspoonful  vanilla.   Place  white of eggs  in a large bowl and heat about half as stiff as you wish them to be when finished beating. Add  cream of tartar,  sprinkle it over the beaten  whites of eggs  lightly, and then beat until very stiff. Sift in  sugar,  then  flour  very lightly. Fold into the batter, rather than stir with quick even strokes with spoon. Put quickly in tube pan, bake in moderate oven from 35 to 50 minutes. Do not open oven door for first 15 minutes after cake has been placed in oven.   If cake browns before it rises to top of pan open over door two minutes; when cake has risen to top of pan finish baking quickly. The moment cake shrinks back to level of nan from oven. This is an old, reliable recipe given Mary by her Aunt, who had baked cake from it for years. 
 
   MARY'S  CHOCOLATE  LOAF (MADE WITH  SOUR MILK )   2 cups  brown sugar.     1/2 cup  warm water.   3/4 cup  lard  and  butter,  mixed.   1 teaspoonful  vanilla.   2  eggs.     Pinch of  salt.   1/2 cup Baker's  chocolate,  melted.   1 teaspoonful  saleratus.   1/2 cup  sour milk.     3 cups  flour.    Dissolve the  saleratus  in a little  vinegar  or  warm water.  Mix as an ordinary loaf cake. 
 
   INEXPENSIVE SUNSHINE CAKE   5  eggs.   1 cup  granulated sugar.   1 cup sifted  flour.    Beat  whites of eggs  very stiff and stir in thoroughly, then fold the  flour,  stirring only just enough to mix it in. If stirred loo much, the cake will be lough. Bake in a tube pan. This is a delicious cake if carefully made according to directions. No  butter  or  baking powder  is used. Bake in a very moderate oven at first, gradually adding more heat until cake is baked. 
 
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR  ORANGE  CAKE  Grate outside  rind  of 1  orange  into a bowl; 1 1/2 cups  sugar  and 1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.  Cream  all together. Add  yolks of three eggs  1 cup of  sweet milk,  2 1/2 cups  flour,  sifted with 2 1/4 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  whites of the eggs.  Bake in two layers.  
  
   FILLING FOR  ORANGE  CAKE.  Grated  rind  and  juice  of half an  orange,  half the  white of one egg  beaten stiff. Add pulverized  sugar  until stiff enough to spread between cakes and on top- (About two cups of  sugar  were used.) 
 
   ROLL  JELLY  CAKE   1 cup  granulated sugar.    1 1/4 cups  flour.   4  egg yolks.    Pinch of  salt.   1/2 cup  boiling water.   1 large teaspoonful  baking powder.    The  yolks of eggs  left from making "Pennsylvania Dutch Kisses" may be used for this cake by the addition of an extra  yolk of egg.  Beat the  yolks  quite light, then add the  sugar  and beat until light and frothy. Add the  flour  sifted with the  baking powder  and  salt.  Lastly, add the half cup of  boiling water.  Bake in a rather quick oven from 25 to 30 minutes in two square layer cake pans. Cover cakes first ten minutes until they have risen. When baked turn cakes out of pans on to a cloth. Take one at a time from the oven, spread as quickly as possible with a  tart jelly,  either  currant  or  grape,  and roll as quickly as possible, as when the cakes become cool they cannot be rolled without breaking. Roll up in a cloth and when cool and ready to serve slice from end of roll. These cakes are very nice when one is successful, but a little difficult to get just right. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  CINNAMON  CAKE   1 cup  sugar.     2 cups  flour.   1  egg.     1 1/2 teaspoons  baking powder.   Piece of  butter  the size of  egg.  Pinch of  salt.   1 cup  milk.      A little grated  nutmeg.   Beat the  butter  to a  cream  and gradually add the  sugar.  Then add the unbeaten  egg  and beat all together thoroughly. Add  milk  and  flour  and beat  hard  for five minutes. Add  baking powder,   salt  and  nutmeg.  Pour into two small greased pie-tins  and before putting in oven sprinkle  sugar  and  cinnamon  over top. This is an excellent breakfast cake, easily and quickly made. 
 
   "GELB KUCHEN"  Mary's Aunt taught her to make this exceptionally fine cake yellow as gold, in texture resembling an "angel cake," from the following ingredients: The  whites of 6 eggs, yolks  of 3  eggs,  3/4 cup of fine,  granulated sugar,  1/2 cup of high-grade  flour,  1/2 teaspoonful of  cream of tartar  (good measure), a few-drops of  almond extract  or 1/2 teaspoonful of  vanilla.   Mix ingredients together in the following manner: Sift  sugar  and  flour  separately 3 times. Beat  yolks of eggs  until light, add  sugar  to  yolks of eggs  and beat to a  cream.  The  whites of eggs  were placed in a separate bowl and when partly beaten the  cream of tartar  was sifted over and the  whites of eggs  were then beaten until dry and frothy. The stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  were then added alternately with the  flour  to the  yolks  and  sugar.  Carefully fold in, do not beat. Add flavoring, pour batter in a small, narrow  bread  tin, previously brushed with  lard,  over which  flour  had been dusted. The cake when baked may be readily removed from the tin after it has cooled.   Bake cake in a very moderate oven about 60 minutes. After cake has been in oven 15 or 20 minutes increase heat of oven. An extra fine, large cake may be baked from this recipe if double the quantity of ingredients are used. 
 
   DEVIL'S FOOD CAKE   2 cups  brown sugar.     2 ounces Baker's  chocolate.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.   2 cups  flour.   2  eggs.     1 teaspoonful  soda.   1/2 cup  boiling water.    1/2 cup  sour cream  or  milk.     Cream butter  and  sugar  and add  yolks of eggs;  then  sour milk  into which the  soda  has been dissolved. Add  hot water,  then the  eggs  Bake in layers or loaf. Ice with boiled  chocolate  icing. If a little of the  sour milk  is saved until last, the  soda   dissolved in that, and then added to the cake batter, it will give a brick red appearance. This is an excellent cake. 
 
   A CHEAP  COCOANUT  LAYER CAKE   Cream  together 1 cup  sugar,  1/4 cup  butter,  1  egg  ( white of egg  beaten separately), add 3/4 cup  milk,  2 cups  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.  The stiffly beaten  white of egg  added last. Bake in two layers. For the filling, to put between layers, beat the  white of one egg  to a stiff, dry froth ; add one tablespoonful of  sugar,  mix together, spread between layers of cake and on top and over this strew freshly grated  cocoanut.  Grate  cocoanut  intended for cake the day before using. After it has been grated toss up lightly with a fork and stand in a cool place to dry out before using. 
 
   LADY BALTIMORE CAKE   1 cup  butter.     Whites of 6 eggs.   2 cups  sugar.    2 level teaspoonfuls  baking powder  sifted with the  flour.   1 cup  sweet milk.  	 1 teaspoonful  rosewater.   3 1/2 cups  flour.   Mix in the usual way and bake in three layers. 
 
   ICING FOR CAKE.  Dissolve 3 cups of  sugar  in a cup of  boiling water.  Cook until It spins a thread, about ten or twelve minutes. Take from fire and pour over three stiffly beaten  whites of eggs,  then add a cup of  nut meats  (blanched and chopped  almonds ). One cup of chopped  raisins  may also be added if liked. Stir until thick and creamy. Allow cake to get cold before icing.  One-half this recipe for icing will be sufficient for an ordinary cake. 
 
   AN INEXPENSIVE " WHITE FRUIT  CAKE"   3 cups  sugar.    1 lb. seeded  raisins   3  eggs.    1 cup  milk.    1 cup  butter.     4 cups  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoon-fuls of Royal  baking powder   1 lb.  currants.     1 lb. chopped  almonds.     1/2 lb.  figs.   Flavor with  almond extract.  1/4 lb.  citron.    Beat to a  cream sugar,   butter  and  yolks of eggs.  Then add  milk  and  flour  alternately and  fruit  and  almonds.  Lastly add stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.   Flour fruit  before adding. Chop  figs.  Cut  citron  fine or shave it thin. This is a cheaper recipe than the one for a "Christmas  fruit  cake." but this is a very good cake. 
 
   A GOOD AND CHEAP " WHITE  CAKE"   2 cups  sugar     3 cups  flour.   1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.    2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   1 cup  milk.      Whites of five eggs.   Add a few drops of  almond flavoring .   Cream  together the  butter  and  sugar,  add  flour  sifted with  baking powder  alternately with the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  The five  yolks of eggs  left from baking  white  cake may be used when making salad dressing. Use five  yolks  instead of three whole  eggs,  as called for in recipe for salad dressing. 
 
    CHOCOLATE  ICING (VERY GOOD)  One-quarter cup grated, unsweetened  chocolate,  1/4 cup  milk.  half a cup  sugar.  Boil all together until thick and creamy. This quantity will be sufficient to ice the top of one ordinary cake. Spread icing on cake before icing cools. When this icing is used for layer cake, double the recipe. 
 
   TIP-TOP CAKE   1 lb.  granulated sugar.   	 1/2 lb. chopped  figs.   1 cup  butter.      1/2 a  nutmeg,  grated.  1 cup  milk.      5 scant cups of  flour.   4  eggs.     5 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   1 lb. chopped  raisins.       Citron  may be used instead of  raisins.     Mix together same as ordinary cake and bake in a loaf. This Aunt Sarah considered one of her finest cake recipes. She had used it for years in her family. The friend who gave this recipe to Aunt Sarah said: "A couple of tablespoonfuls of  brandy  will improve the cake." 
 
    ORANGE  CAKE  Grate the yellow outside  rind  of 1  orange  into a howl. Add 1 1/2 cups  sugar  and 3/4 cups  butter  and beat to a  cream.  Then add  yolks of 3 eggs.  Then stir in 1 cup  milk,  2l/2 cups four with 2 heaping teaspoonfuls  baking powder.  Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  whites of 3 eggs.  Bake in three layers. 
 
   FILLING.  Use the  white of one egg,  the grated  rind  and  juice  of large  orange  and enough pulverized  sugar  to stiffen. Spread between layers. 
 
   CHEAP SPONGE CAKE   1 1/4 cups  granulated sugar.    4 tablespoonfuls  boiling water.   4  eggs.     1 3/4 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   1 1/2 cups  flour.    Pinch of  salt;  flavor to suit taste.    Cream yolks  and  sugar  thoroughly, then add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs,  then  flour,  then  boiling water.  Bake in a tube pan about 40 minutes. This is a very easily made cake, which seldom fails and was bought with a set of "Van Dusen cake pans," which Aunt Sarah said: "She'd used for many years and found invaluable." 
 
    CARAMEL  CAKE AND ICING  1 1/2 cups pulverized  sugar,  1 cup of  butter,  2 cups  flour,  1/2 cup of  corn starch,  2 teaspoons of  baking powder  sifted through  flour  and  corn starch,  1 cup of  milk,  the  whites of 4 eggs.  Mix like ordinary cake. Bake as a loaf cake. Ice top with the following: 1 cup of light  brown sugar,  1/4 cup  milk,   1/2 tablespoonful of  butter,  1/4 teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Cook all together until a soft ball is formed when dropped in Beat until creamy and spread on top of cake. 
 
   A  WHITE  CAKE  Sift together, three times, the following:  1 cup of  flour.   1 cup of  sugar  (granulated).  3 even teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.     Scald one cup of  milk  and pour hot over the above mixture. Beat well.  Fold into the mixture, carefully, the stiffly beaten  whites of 2 eggs.  Flavor with a few drops of  almond extract.  Bake in a 
 moderate  oven, exactly as you would bake an angel cake.  This is a delicious, light, flaky cake, if directions are closely followed, but a little difficult to get just right. 
 
   "DUTCH"  CURRANT  CAKE (NO  YEAST  USED)   4  eggs.    1 teaspoonful  cream of tartar,   2 cups  sugar.     1 teaspoonful  cinnamon.   1 cup  butter.    1/4 teaspoonful grated  nutmeg.   1 cup  milk.     1 cup  dried currants.   1/2 teaspoonful  baking soda.    4 to 4 1/2 cups  flour.    Make about as stiff as ordinary cake mixture. The  butter,   sugar  and  yolks of eggs  were creamed together.  Cinnamon  and  nutmeg  were added.  Milk  and  flour  added alternately, stirring  flour  in lightly; sift  cream of tartar  in with the  flour.  Add the  baking soda  dissolved in a very little  water,  then add the well-loured  currants  and lastly add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  Bake in a large cake pan. generally used for  fruit  cake or bake two medium-sized cakes. Bake slowly in a moderately hot oven. These cakes keep well, as do most German cakes. 
  
   AN "OLD RECIPE" FOR  COFFEE  CAKE   5 cups  flour.   	 1 cup  lard.   1 cup  sugar.  	 1 cup  molasses.   1 cup of liquid  coffee.     Spices  to taste.   Mix like any ordinary cake. This is a very old recipe of Aunt Sarah's mother. The cup used may have been a little larger than the one holding a half pint, used for measuring ingredients in all other cake recipes. 
 
   A CHEAP  BROWN SUGAR  CAKE   1 cup  brown sugar.    2 cups  raisins.   1 tablespoonful  lard.    1/2 teaspoonful  cloves.   1 cup  cold water.   	 1 teaspoonfil  cinnamon.   Pinch of  salt.    Boil all together three minutes, cool, then add 1 teaspoonful of  soda  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  baking powder  sifted with 2 cups of  flour.  
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S "GERMAN CHRISTMAS CAKE"   Cream  together in a bowl half a pound of pulverized  sugar  and half a pound of  butter  ; then add  yolks of five eggs,  1 grated  lemon rind,  1 pint of  milk,  1 1/2 pounds of  flour  sifted with 4 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder,  2 teaspoonfuls of  vanilla extract.  Bake at once in a moderately hot oven. Mary baked an ordinary-sized cake by using one-half of this recipe. The cake was fine grained, similar to a  pound cake,  although not quite as rich, and she added a couple tablespoonfuls of thinly shaved  citron  to the batter before baking. This is a particularly fine cake. 
 
   "AUNT SARAH'S" SHELLBARK LAYER CAKE   1 1/2 cups  sugar.    3  eggs.   1/2 cup  butter.    1 1/2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   3/4 cup  water.   	  Flour  to stiffen.    Save out while of one  egg  for icing. Bake cake in three layers. Chop 1 cup of  hickory nut meats  and add to the last layer of cake before putting in pan to bake. Use the cake containing  nut meats  for the middle layer of cake. Put layers together with  white  boiled icing. 
 
   IMPERIAL CAKE (BAKED FOR MARY'S WEDDING)   1 pound  sugar.    1/2 pound thinly shaved  citron.   1 pound  butter.    1  lemon.   3/4 pound  flour.     1  nutmeg.   1 pound  raisins,  seeded. 12  eggs.   1 pound  almonds .  Mix ingredients as for  pound cake.  A fine cake, but expensive. 
 
   A LIGHT  FRUIT  CAKE (FOR CHRISTMAS)   1 pound  butter,  scant measure. 	 1 pound  raisin.   1 pound pulverized  sugar.     3/4 lb.  citron,   candied orange  and  lemon peel.   1 pound  flour  (full pound).    1 cup  brandy.   10  eggs.     1 teaspoonful  baking powder.   1 pound English  walnut  kernels.   Bake 2 1/2 to 3 hours. This is an excellent cake. 
 
   ENGLISH CAKE (SIMILAR TO A  WHITE FRUIT  CAKE)   5  eggs.     The weight of 3  eggs  in  butter.   The weight of 5  eggs  in  sugar.     1/2 teaspoonful  baking powder.   The weight of 4  eggs  in  flour.    2 tablespoonfuls of  brandy.   1 cup  raisins.     1/2 cup finely shaved  citron.   1 cup  currants.     1/2 cup English  walnut or shellbark meats.   Small quantity of  candied orange  and  lemon peel.    This recipe was given Mary by an English friend, an excellent cook and cake-baker, who vouches for its excellence. 
  
   GRANDMOTHER'S  FRUIT  CAKE (BAKED FOR MARY'S WEDDING)   1 pound  butter.     1/4 pound thinly sliced  citron.   1 pound  sugar.     8  eggs.   1 pound  flour.     1 tablespoonful  molasses.   2 pounds  raisins.     1 cup  sour milk.   2 pounds  currants.    1 teaspoonful  soda.    Spices  of all kinds.   Mix together in ordinary manner.  Cream butter  and  sugar,  add  yolks of eggs,   sour milk  and  soda;  add  flour  alternatively with stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  Lastly, the well- flour ed  fruit.  Bake two hours in a moderate oven. This quantity makes one very large cake, or two medium sized ones, and will keep one year. Line inside of pan with well-greased heavy  paper  to prevent bottom of cake baking too  hard.   Aunt Sarah never cut this cake until one month from time it was baked, as it improves with age and may be kept one year. 
 
   AN OLD RECIPE FOR  POUND CAKE    Cream  together 3/4 pound  butter  and 1 pound  sugar  and  yolks of 10 eggs.  Then add 10  whites of eggs  well beaten alternately with 1 pound of sifted  flour.   Bake in a moderate oven with a steady heat. The bottom of pan should be lined with well-greased  paper.  
 
   "BUCKS COUNTY"  MOLASSES  CAKES (BAKED IN PASTRY)  Place in a bowl 1 cup of New Orleans  molasses  and 3/4 of a cup of  sweet milk.  Add 1 teaspoonful of baking 
  soda  . (For this cake Aunt Sarah was always particular to use the 
  Cow  -brand  soda ), dissolved in a very little  hot water.  Aunt Sarah always used B. T. Babbitt's  saleratus  for other purposes.  Stir all ingredients together well, then add gradually three even cups of  flour,  no more, and beat  hard.  The cake mixture should not he very thick. Pour into three medium-sized pie-tins lined with pastry and bake in a moderately hot oven These are good, cheap breakfast cakes, neither  eggs  nor  shortening  being used. 
  
   BROD TORTE ( BREAD TART )  Six  yolks of eggs  and 1 cup  sugar,  creamed together. Beat about 15 minutes. Add 1 teaspoonful  allspice,  1 teaspoonful  cloves,  1 cup Baker's  chocolate,  which had been grated, melted and cooled; 1 cup stale  rye bread crumbs,  crushed fine with rolling-pin. Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  whites of 6 eggs,  a pinch of  salt  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  baking powder  sifted over the batter. Put into a small cake pan and bake half an hour in a moderate oven. When  eggs  are cheap and plentiful this is an economical cake, as no  flour  is used. It is a delicious cake and resembles an ordinary  chocolate  cake. 
 
   A DELICIOUS  CHOCOLATE  CAKE   1/2 cake of Baker's unsweetened  chocolate  (grated).  1 cup  granulated sugar.   1/2 cup  milk.   1 teaspoonful  vanilla.   1/2 cup  butter.   1 1/2 to 2 cups  flour.   2  eggs.   2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.    Boil together  chocolate,   sugar  and  milk.  Add  butter  and when cool add  yolk of eggs;  then the  flour,  flavoring and stiffly beaten  whites of 2 eggs.  Beat all thoroughly and bake in a loaf or layers. 
 
    CHOCOLATE  ICING.  Boil together 5 tablespoonfuls grated  chocolate,  3/4 cup  granulated sugar,  2 tablespoonfuls  milk,  1  egg.   When the mixture begins to thicken and look creamy, spread on cake. If baked in layers, ice on top and between the two layers. 
 
   A  WHITE COCOANUT  CAKE   Cream  together 3/4 cup  butter  and 2 cups  sugar.  Add  whites of 5 eggs,  1 cup  milk,  1 teaspoonful  cream of tartar.  1/2 teaspoonful  soda  sifted with 3 cups  flour  and 1 grated  cocoanut.  loaf. This is an excellent old recipe of Aunt Sarah's. 
  
   A POTATO CAKE (NO  YEAST  REQUIRED)   Cream  together: 
  1 cup of  sugar.     A little ground  cinnamon  and grated  nutmeg.   1/2 cup  lard  and  butter,  mixed.   A few drops of  essence of vanilla.    Yolks of 2 eggs.     1/4 cup of  sweet milk.   1/2 cup pulverized  cocoa.    1/2 cup finely chopped  nut meats.   1/2 cup of creamed mashed  potatoes , cold.    One teaspoonful of  baking powder  sifted with one cup of  flour  added to the batter alternately with the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  Bake in two layers, in a moderately hot oven. Ice top and put layers together with  white  icing. This is a delicious, if rather unusual cake. 
 
   A  CITRON  CAKE   1/2 cup  butter.    1/4 pound of thinly shaved  citron.   1 cup  sugar.   	 1 1/2 cups  flour.   4  eggs.     1 1/4 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   2 tablespoonfuls  water.    Several drops of  almond flavoring.    Bake in a loaf in a moderate oven about 45 minutes after mixing ingredients together as for any ordinary cake. This is a very good cake. 
 
   AUNT AMANDA'S  SPICE  "KUCHEN"   1 cup  butter.    1 teaspoonful  cinnamon.   2 cups  granulated sugar.     1/2 teaspoonful  nutmeg.   1 cup of a mixture, of sour,  milk  and  cream.     1 teaspoonful  vanilla extract.   4  eggs.    1/2 teaspoonful  lemon extract.   1 teaspoonful  soda.     2 tablespoonfuls  cocoa   1/2 teaspoonful  cloves.    3 cups  flour.   Mix all like any ordinary cake. From one-half this recipe was baked an ordinary sized loaf cake. 
  
   A GOOD, CHEAP  CHOCOLATE  CAKE  One cup of  flour,  1 teaspoonful of  baking powder  and 1 cup of  granulated sugar  were sifted together. Two  eggs  were broken into a cup, also 1 large tablespoonful of melted  butter.  Fill up the cup with  sweet milk,  beat all ingredients well together. Flavor with  vanilla  and add 2 extra tablespoonfuls of  flour  to the mixture. Bake in two layer cake pans.  Place the following mixture between the two layers: 1/2 cup of grated  chocolate,  1/2 cup  sugar  and 1/4 cup of liquid  coffee.  Cook together a short time until the consistency of thick  cream,  then spread between layers. 
 
   AN ICE  CREAM  CAKE  Two cups of pulverized  sugar,  1 cup of  butter,  I cup  sweet milk,   whites of 8 eggs,  1 teaspoonful  soda,  2 teaspoonfuls of  cream of tartar,  3 cups of  flour.  From same proportions of everything, only using the 8  yolks  instead of  whites of eggs,  may be made a yellow cake, thus having two good sized layer cakes with alternate layers of  white  and yellow. Put cakes together with  white  icing. This was an old recipe of Aunt Sarah's mother, used when  cream of tartar  and  soda  took the place of  baking powder.  
 
   SMALL SPONGE CAKES  For these small cakes take 6  eggs,  1 cup of  sugar  and 3/4 cup of  flour  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  baking powder,  a pinch of  salt,  flavor with  lemon.  Beat  yolks of eggs  separately, then add  sugar  and beat to a  cream  then add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  alternately with the sifted  flour  and  baking powder;  add a pinch of  salt  and flavoring. Bake in small muffin tins in a very moderate oven. 
 
   SMALL CAKES AND COOKI ES-"AUNT SARAH'S" LITTLE LEMON CAKES   2 cups  granulated sugar.    3  eggs  (not separated, but added one at a time to the  sugar  and  shortening  which had been creamed together).  1 scant cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed.  2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.   Pinch of  salt.   1 tablespoonful  sweet milk.   Grated  rind  of 2  lemons  and  juice  of one.   Stiffen the dough with about 3 1/2 cups  flour  and use about 1 extra cup of  flour  to dredge the bakeboard when rolling out dough and for sifting over the greased baking sheets so the cakes will come off readily. Roll dough very thin and cut in any desired shape. From this recipe may be made 100 small cakes. The baking sheet (for which I gave measurements in  bread  recipe) holds 20 of these small round cakes. Do all young housewives know that if dough for small cakes be mixed the day before baking and stood in a cool place, the cakes can be cut out more easily and the dough may be rolled thinner, and as less  flour  may then be used, the cakes will be richer?  Aunt Sarah always cut these cakes with a small round or  heart -shaped cutter and when all were on the baking sheet she either placed a half of an English  walnut meat  in the centre of each cake or cut out the centre of each small cake with the top Of a  pepper  box lid before baking them. 
 
    OATMEAL  CRISPS   2 1/2 cups rolled  oats  ( oatmeal ).  1 tablespoonful melted  butter.   3/4 cup  sugar.   1 teaspoonful  baking powder.   2 large  eggs.   Pinch of  salt.    Beat  eggs,  add  salt  and  sugar,  mix  baking powder  with  oats  and stir all together. Drop from a teaspoon on to flat pan or sheet iron, not too close together, as they spread. Flatten very thin with a knife dipped in  cold water  and bake in a moderate oven a light brown. These cakes are fine and easily made. Did you not know differently, you would imagine these  cakes to be  macaroons  made from  nuts,  which they greatly resemble. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  GINGER  SNAPS  1 cup  molasses,  1 cup  sugar,  1 cup of a mixture of  lard  and  butter,  1  egg,  1 teaspoonful of  ginger,  1 teaspoonful of  cinnamon,  1/2 a grated  nutmeg,  1 teaspoonful of  soda  dissolved in 1 teaspoonful of  vinegar.  About 3 cups of  flour  should be added.  Dough should be stiff enough to roll out very thin, and the cakes may be rolled thinner than would be possible otherwise, should the cake-dough stand aside over night, or on ice for several hours, until thoroughly chilled. Cut cakes small with an ordinary cake cutter and bake in a quick oven. These are excellent and will remain crisp some time if kept in a warm, dry place. 
 
   GERMAN "LEBKUCHEN"  This is a recipe for good, old-fashioned "German Christmas cakes," from which Aunt Sarah's mother always baked. She used:    1 pound dark  brown sugar.   3 whole  eggs  and  yolks  of 3 more.  1/4 pound  citron  finely shaved on a "slaw-cutter."  1/2 pound English  walnut meats  (chopped fine).  1 quart  flour  sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.    Mix well together. Do not roll thin like  ginger  snaps, but about a half inch thick. Cut out about size of a large  coffee  cup. Bake in a moderate oven and when cold ice the cakes with the following icing: 
 
   ICING FOR GERMAN LEBKUCHEN.  Boil 2 cups of  sugar  and 1/2 cup of  water  seven minutes Pour over the stiffly beaten  whites of three eggs;  ice the cakes. Place cakes in a tin box when icing has become cold and these will keep quite a long time. I have eaten high-priced, imported Lebkuchen no better than those made from this recipe.   One quart of New Orleans  molasses,  3  eggs,   butter  size of an  egg.  Place all together in a stew-pan on range, allow it to come to boil, stirring constantly, and when cool stir in one table-spoonful of  saleratus  dissolved in a very little  vinegar,  and about 3 pounds of  flour.  Do not have cake dough too stiff. Dough should stand until the following day. Roll out at least 1/2 inch thick. CUt cakes as large around as an ordinary  coffee  cup or cut with a knife into small, oblong pieces, a little larger than half a common  soda cracker.  Bake in a moderate oven. Should too much  flour  be used, cakes will be  hard  and dry instead of soft and spongy. This very old and excellent recipe had belonged to the grandmother of Sarah Landis. Cakes similar to the ones baked from this recipe, also those baked from recipe for "honey cakes," were sold in large sheets marked off in oblong sections, seventy years ago, and at that time no "vendue," or public sale, in certain localities throughout Bucks County, was thought complete unless in sound of the auctioneer's voice, on a temporary stand, these cakes were displayed on the day of "the sale," and were eagerly bought by the crowd which attended such gatherings. 
 
   ANGEL CAKES (BAKED IN GEM PANS)  The  whites of four eggs  should be beaten very stiff and when partly beaten sprinkle over 1/2 teaspoonful of  cream of tartar.  Finish beating  egg whites  and sift in slowly 1/2 cup of fine  granulated sugar,  then sift in 1/2 cup of  flour  (good measure). Flavor with a few drops of  almond flavoring . Bake in small Gem pans, placing a tablespoonful of batter in each. Sift pulverized  sugar  over tops of cakes. Bake 20 minutes in a very moderate oven. The recipe for these dainty little cakes was given Mary by a friend who, knowing her liking for angel cake, said these were similar in taste. 
 
   "ALMOND BROD"  Three-fourths cup  sugar,  3  eggs,  2 1/2 tablespoonfuls  olive oil,  2 cups  flour,  1 1/2 teaspoonfuls  baking powder,  1/2 cup sweet   almonds,  pinch of  salt.  A couple of drops of  almond extract.   In a bowl place 3/4 cup of  granulated sugar.  Add 3 well-beaten  eggs,  2 cups of  flour  sifted with 1 1/2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder  and a pinch of  salt.  Mix all well together. Add 1 cup whole (blanched)  almonds  and 2 1/2 tablespoonfuls of good  olive oil.   Knead the dough thoroughly. Do not have dough too stiff. Divide the dough into four equal parts, roll each portion of dough on a 
 well- flour ed  bake board into long, narrow rolls Place the four rolls on a baking sheet over which  flour  had been previously sifted. Place the rolls a short distance apart and bake in a quick oven about twenty minutes or until light brown on top. On removing tile baking sheet from the oven cut rolls at once, while the  almonds  are still warm, into two-inch pieces. From this recipe was made thirty pieces of  almond bread.  The  olive oil,  used as  shortening,  is not tasted when baked. These are a very good little cake, and not  bread,  as their name would  lead  one to suppose. 
 
   "GROSSMUTTER'S"  HONEY  CAKES  One quart of boiled  honey  (if possible procure the  honey  used by bakers, as it is much cheaper and superior for this purpose than the clear, strained  honey  sold for table use). Add to the warm  honey  two generous tablespoonfuls of  butter,   yolks of four eggs,  two ounces of salaratus ( baking soda ), dissolved in a very small quantity of  vinegar,  just enough to moisten the salaratus. Add just enough  flour  to enable one to stir well with a spoon. Work the dough a half hour and allow it to stand until the following day, when cut cakes from the dough which had been rolled out on the bake-board one-half inch thick. The dough should be only just stiff enough to roll out, as should the dough be 
 too soft  the cakes will become  hard  and crisp, instead of light and spongy, and if too great a quantity of  flour  is added the cakes will not be good. As the thickening qualities of  flour  differ, the exact amount required cannot be given. When about to cut out cakes, the bake-board should be well- flour ed Cut he cakes the size of the top of a large coffee-cup, or roll out the dough one-half inch thick on a well- flour ed baking sheet and mark  in small, oblong sections with a knife, they may then be easily broken apart when baked. These cakes should be baked in a moderately hot oven and not a 
 hot oven .  These are the real, old-time  honey  cakes as made by Aunt Sarah's grandmother on a "Bucks County" farm, and Mary's Aunt informed her she still remembered in her earlier days having bought these cakes at "Bucks County" sales or "vendues," as they were then designated. 
 
   LEMON WAFERS OR DROP CAKES   2  eggs.     1/2 pound  butter.   1/2 pound  sugar.    1/2 pound  flour.   Pinch of  salt.    Flavor with lemon essence.   Mix the same as other small cakes. Drop spoonfuls quite a distance apart on the cold pan or tin on which they are to be baked as the dough spreads. These are very thin, delicious wafers when baked. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S  SUGAR  COOKIES   1 cup  lard  and  butter,  mixed.  2 cups  granulated sugar,  and  2  eggs,  all creamed together; then add  1 teaspoon  soda  (mix with a little  sour milk ).  Flavor with  vanilla.    Beat all well together. Add  flour  enough that they may be rolled out, no more.  Flour  bake-board well; cut dough with cake cutter into small round cakes and bake in a rather quick oven. This recipe will make a large number of cakes if dough be rolled thin as a wafer. Frau Schmidt was able to keep these cakes some time-under lock and key. If cake dough be mixed one day and allowed to stand over night, cakes may be rolled out much more easily and cut thinner. 
 
    ALMOND MACAROONS  (AS PREPARED BY MARY)  Three  eggs  ( whites  only), 3/4 pound of pulverized  sugar,   1/2 pound of  almond paste  (winch may be bought ready prepared) Beat  eggs  very stiff, add other ingredients. Drop teaspoonfuls on a baking sheet and bake in a moderate oven 15 or 20 minutes  Macaroons  prepared from this recipe are delicious and resemble those sold by confectioners. 
 
   "HONIG KUCHEN" (HONEY CAKES)  Two pounds of  flour,  1/2 pound of  butter,  2/3 pound of  almonds,  2 pounds of  honey  in liquid form, the grated yellow  rind  of one  lemon,  l/2 teaspoonful of  cloves,  1/2 teaspoonful of  cinnamon,  1 ounce of  hartshorn,  dissolved in a small quantity of  water.  Boil together  honey  and  butter,  remove from fire, and when mixture has cooled add the  hartshorn,  coarsely chopped  almonds  and flour. Allow this mixture to stand several days, roll out 1/3 inch thick. Cut in small round cakes, place a whole  almond  in centre of each cake. Bake a light brown in a moderate oven. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S  MOLASSES  SNAPS  Two cups of New Orleans  molasses,  1 cup of  lard,  1 table-spoonful of  ginger,  1 teaspoonful of  cinnamon,  1/4 teaspoonful of  cloves,  1/2 a grated  nutmeg,  1 tablespoonful of  saleratus  dissolved in a small quantity of  hot water.  Add enough  flour  to form a very stiff dough. Stand dough aside until the following day, when roll out very thin on a well- flour ed bake-board. Cut with a small round cake cutter and bake in a hot oven. These are good, cheap small cakes. 
 
    HICKORY NUT  CAKES  One cup of  hickory nut meats,  1 cup of pulverized  sugar,  1  egg,  a pinch of  salt,  2 teaspoonfuls of  flour.  Mix all ingredients together. Drop small pieces on a sheet-iron and bake. 
  
   "LEBKUCHEN" (AS THE PROFESSOR'S WIFE MADE THEM)  Two pounds of  sugar,  8 large  eggs,  3/4 pound of  almonds  (shelled), 1/4 pound of  citron,  1/4 of a pound each of  candied orange  and  lemon peel,  the grated yellow  rind  of one  lemon,  4 teaspoonfuls of  cinnamon,  1 teaspoonful  allspice,  about 2 pounds  flour.  Separate the  eggs.   Cream  the  yolks of eggs  and  sugar  well together. Then add the  almonds  (which have been blanched by pouring  boiling water  over them, when the  skins  may be readily removed), the  citron  and  lemon peel  chopped fine. Then add 1 level teaspoonful of different  spices.  Then add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs,  alternately, with the sifted  flour.  The recipe called for two pounds of  flour,  but "Frau" Schmidt said: "She was never able to use the whole amount, so she added just enough  flour  to prevent the mixture spreading when dropped on the baking sheet by tablespoonfuls. 
 
    FRUIT  JUMBLES  Two cups  sugar,  3  eggs  (beaten separately), 1 cup  butter,  1 cup  milk,  3 1/2 cups  flour,  3 teaspoonfuls  baking powder,  1/4 of  nutmeg,  grated, 1 cup  currants.  Mix all together and bake in a broad, shallow pan. This is similar to Spanish  Bun.  When cake is cooled, but not cold, cut in two-inch squares or diamonds before removing from the pan in which the cake was baked. 
 
   BROWN "PFEFFERNUSSEN"  For these German cakes Frau Schmidt used the following: 3 pounds of  flour,  2 pounds of  sugar syrup,  1/8 teaspoonful of  black pepper,  1/4 pound of  lard,  1/2 teaspoon of  cardamom powder,  1/4 pound of  butter,  1/2 teaspoonful of  cloves,  1/2 pound of  brown sugar  and 2  eggs.   Use as much "Hirschhorn Salz" as can be placed on the point of a knife ("Hirschhorn Salz" translated is carbonate of  ammonia  and is used for baking purposes). Allow the  syrup  to heat on the range. Skim off the top. When  syrup  has cooled mix all ingredients together and stand aside for one week or  longer, when form the dough into small balls size of a  hickory nut.  Place on greased pans and bake half hour in a slow oven. 
 
   SMALL  OATMEAL  CAKES   Cream  together 1 l/2 cups of light  brown sugar,  1/2 cup of  lard  and  butter,  mixed, and the  yolk of one egg.  Add 1/2 cup of  hot water  and 3/4 teaspoonful of  saleratus  ( baking soda ), dissolved in a little  boiling water;  add 2 1/2 cups of  oatmeal,  the stiffly beaten  white of egg  and 2 1/2 cups of  white flour.  Mix all together. Dredge the bake board with  flour,  roll thin. Cut out with a small round cake cutter. Sift a little  flour  over the well-greased baking sheets, on which place cakes and bake in a moderately hot oven. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S RECIPE FOR "GERMAN" ALMOND SLICES   1/2 pound  sugar,  1/2 pound  butter.   1/2 pound of seeded  raisins  (chopped).  1/2 pound blanched and chopped  almonds.   1 teaspoonful  cinnamon,  1 teaspoonful of  allspice.   Grated  rind  and juice of 1  lemon.   2 cakes German sweet  chocolate,  grated.  3 whole  eggs  and 2 extra  whites of eggs.   2 teaspoons  baking powder.  3 cups  flour.   1 tablespoon  vanilla,  2 tablespoons of  brandy.     Cream butter  and  sugar,  add  eggs,  one at a time. Then add all the ingredients. Mix with  flour.   Flour  bake board and take a handful of dough and roll with the hands in shape of a  sausage  roll. This quantity of dough makes eight rolls. Place on greased baking sheets a short distance apart, so they will not touch when being baked. Bake them in a 
 warm , not hot oven. Take from the oven when baked and cut while still warm into small slices across the roll. Slices should be about three-quarters of an inch wide. Cover the three sides with the following icing:   Beat together until smooth and creamy 1 cupful of sweet  cream,  adding enough confectioners'  sugar  to make it spread.   You may expedite the work by preparing  raisins  and  almonds  the day before.  The Professor's wife always served these almond cakes with  coffee  when she gave a "kaffee klatch" to her country friends 
 
   "JULY ANN'S"  GINGER  SNAPS  Two cups of  molasses  (New Orleans), 1 cup of light  brown sugar,  1  egg,  1 tablespoonful of  soda,  2 tablespoonfuls of  vinegar,  1 tablespoonful of  ginger  and about 5 1/2 cups of  flour.   Place  molasses  and  sugar  in a  sauce -pan on the range, cook together until  sugar  is dissolved, no longer.  Mix the  soda  and  vinegar  and when foamy add to the  sugar  and  molasses  with a portion of the required amount of  flour;  then add the  egg  and the  flour  remaining. Turn dough out on a well- flour ed bake-board, roll out into a thin sheet and cut out small cakes with a tin cutter. Bake in a moderately hot oven.  No  shortening  of any kind was used in these cakes. One hundred cakes were baked from the above ingredients.  
 
    COCOANUT  COOKIES  Three cups of  sugar,  1 cup of  butter,  2  eggs,  1 cup of  sweet milk,  1 cup of grated  cocoanut,  2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Mix all together, sift  flour  with  baking powder,  add  flour  to form a dough just stiff enough to roll out, no more. Cut with a small tin cake cutter into round cakes and bake. 
 
    CHOCOLATE  COOKIES  Two cups of  white sugar,  1 cup of grated, unsweetened  chocolate,  2  eggs,  1/2 cup of  butter,  2 teaspoonfuls of  baking powder.  Flavor with  vanilla.  Mix together  sugar butter  and  eggs,  add melted  chocolate  and  flour  to stiffen, just enough  flour  being used to allow of their being cut with a cake cutter The  baking powder  should have been sifted with a small amount of  flour  before adding. 
  
   SMALL "BELSNICKEL" CHRISTMAS  CAKES  2 cups "A"  sugar.    Pinch of  salt.   1 cup melted  butter.     1 teaspoonful  baking soda.   4  eggs.     About 3 cups of  flour.    Mix in just enough  flour  so the cake dough may be rolled out quite thin on a  flour ed board, using as little  flour  as possible. Cut out small cakes and bake lightly in a moderately hot oven.  The  butter,  when melted, should fill one cup; pour it over the two cups of  sugar  in a bowl and beat until smooth and creamy; add the  eggs,  beating one at a time into the mixture. Sift the teaspoonful of  baking soda  several times through the  flour  before adding to the cake mixture. Stand this dough in a cold place one hour at least before cutting out cakes. No flavoring is used. Sift  granulated sugar  thickly over cakes before placing them in oven to bake.  From these ingredients were made over one hundred cakes. One-half this recipe might be used for a small family. The cakes keep well in a dry, cool place.  This old recipe of Aunt Sarah's mother derived its name "Belsnickel" from the fact that the Belsnickels, who invariably visited the houses of "Bucks County" farmers on Christmas Eve, were always treated to some of these delicious little Christmas cakes. 
 
   "PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH" KISSES  One cup of pulverized  sugar,   whites of 3 eggs,  1 heaping cup of  nut meats  (Mary used  hickory nut meats ), a pinch of  salt.  To the very stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  add  sugar,   salt  and lastly the  nut meats.  Drop teaspoonfuls of this batter on a greased,  flour ed baking tin. Bake in a moderate oven. 
 
   LITTLE CRUMB CAKES  For these small cakes Aunt Sarah creamed together 1/2 cup of  granulated sugar,  1/4 cup  butter.  One quite large  egg  was used. The  egg yolk  was added to the creamed  sugar  and  butter   and thoroughly beaten, then scant 1/2 cup of  milk  was added, and one heaping cup of fine  dried bread crumbs  sifted with 3/4 teaspoonful of  baking powder  and 1/4 cup of finely chopped or rolled 
 black   walnut meats.  Lastly, add the stiffly beaten  white of egg.  Flavor with grated  nutmeg.  Bake in small muffin pans in a moderate oven. This makes nine small cakes. No  flour  is used in these cakes, but, instead of  flour,   bread crumbs  are used. 
 
   DELICIOUS  VANILLA  WAFERS (AS MARY MADE THEM)   1/4 pound of  butter.  	 1/4 pound of  sugar.   1/4 pound of  flour.   	 2  eggs.    Cream  together  butter  and  sugar,  add  yolks of eggs,  beat well, then add stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  and  flour  alternately.  Flavor with  essence of vanilla,  drop from spoon on to 
 cold  iron pan, not too close together, as the cakes will spread. Bake quickly in a hot oven until outer edge of cakes have browned. 
 
    MACAROONS  (AS AUNT SARAH MADE THEM)  One-half pound of  almonds,  blanched and chopped fine, 1/2 pound of pulverized  sugar,   whites of 4 eggs.  Place  sugar  and  almonds  in a pan on the range, until colored a light yellow-brown. Beat  whites of eggs  very stiff, mix all ingredients together, then drop with a spoon on tins waxed with bees' wax. and bake in a quick oven. 
 
   "SPRINGERLES" (GERMAN CHRISTMAS CAKES)   4  eggs.   1 pound sifted pulverized  sugar.   2 quarts  flour,  sifted twice.  2 small teaspoonfuls  baking powder.    Beat  whites  and  yolks of eggs  separately, mix with  sugar  and beat well. Add  flour  until you have a smooth dough. Roll  out pieces of dough, which should be half an inch thick. Press the dough on a  flour ed form or mold, lift the mold, cut out the cakes thus designed and let lie until next day on a  flour ed  bread  board. The next day  grease  pans well, sprinkle  anise seed  over the pans in which the cakes are to be baked; lay in cakes an inch apart and bake in a moderate oven to a straw color. The form used usually makes six impressions or cakes 1 1/2 inches square, leaving the impression of a small figure or flower on surface when dough is pressed on form. 
 
    OATMEAL  COOKIES   1 cup  sugar.   1 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed (scant measure).  1 cup chopped  nut meats.   1 cup chopped  raisins.   2  eggs,  beaten separately,  whites  added last.  1 teaspoonful  baking soda  dissolved in 4 tablespoonfuls sour milt.  1 teaspoonful  vanilla.  Little grated  nutmeg.   2 cups  oatmeal  (uncooked).  2 cups  white flour.    Drop with tablespoon on well-greased baking sheet over which has been sifted a little  flour.  Bake in rather quick oven. This recipe makes 65 small cakes. 
 
    PEANUT BISCUITS   Sift together 2 cups  flour  and 3 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.  Add 1  egg,  1/2 cup  sugar,  1/2 cup  peanuts  and  pecan nut meats,  mixed (run through food-chopper), 1/2 cup  sweet milk,  1/2 tea-spoonful  salt.  Beat  sugar  and  yolk of egg  together, add  milk,  stiffly beaten  white of egg,  chopped  nut meats  and  flour,  alter-nately. Add  salt.  Place a large spoonful in each of 12 well-greased Gem pans. Allow to stand in pans about 25 minutes. Bake half an hour. Bake half an hour. 
  
   PLAIN COOKIES   1/2 cup  butter.    4 tablespoonfuls  milk.   1 cup  sugar.     1/2 teaspoonful grated  nutmeg.   2  eggs.     1/2 cup chopped  walnut meats.   3 cups  flour.     3 teaspoonfuls  baking powder.     Cream butter  and  sugar,  add  milk  slowly, add well-beaten  eggs.  Beat well, add  flour  and  baking powder,  sifted together. Roll thin. Cut with a small cake cutter any desired shapes. 
 
   WALNUT ROCKS  Cream together 1 1/2 cups of  sugar,  1/2 cup of butler, a small teaspoonful of  salt.  Dissolve 1 teaspoonful of  soda  in 4 tablespoonfuls of  warm water,  two  eggs.  Sift 3 cups of  flour,  add 1 teaspoonful of  ginger,  1 teaspoonful of  cloves,  1/2 teaspoonful of grated  nutmeg,  1 pound of English  walnuts,  1 pound of seeded  raisins.  Drop by teaspoon on a cold sheet iron and bake in a moderate oven. These are excellent. 
 
    CINNAMON  WAFERS (AS MADE BY AUNT SARAH)   10  eggs.     3/4 pound  sugar.   3/4 pound  butter.    1 pound  flour.    Mix like ordinary cake. Divide this into three parts. Flavor one part with  vanilla,  1 with  chocolate  and the other with  cinnamon.  These latter will be darker than the first. Place a piece of dough as large as a small marble in a small hot, well-greased waffle or wafer iron. Press two sides of iron together, which flattens out cake, and hold by a long handle over fire, turning it over occasionally until cakes are baked. The cake, when baked, is delicious, thin, rich wafer, about the size of half a common  soda cracker.  I have never eaten these Christmas cakes at any place excepting at Aunt Sarah's. The wafer iron she possessed was brought by her Grandmother from Germany. The waffle or wafer irons might be obtained in this country. 
  
   ZIMMET WAFFLES (AS MADE BY FRAU SCHMIDT)   1/2 pound  butter.    1/2 ounce  cinnamon   1/2 pound  sugar.    3  eggs.    Flour.    Work together and form into small balls. Place in hot buttered wafer irons, hold over fire and bake. This is an old German recipe which Frau Schmidt's grandmother used. 
 
   "BRAUNE LEBKUCHEN"   2 pounds  sugar syrup.   1/4 pound  granulated sugar.   1/4 pound  butter.   1/4 pound coarsely chopped  almonds.   Grate yellow part of one  lemon rind.   1/4 ounce  cinnamon,   1/4 ounce  cloves.   1 ounce of  hartshorn,  dissolved in a little  milk.    Place  syrup  in stew-pan on range to heat, add  butter,   almonds,   spices,  etc.  Remove from range, stir in  flour  gradually. Use about 10 cups of  flour.  When cool add the dissolved  hartshorn.  Allow, the cake dough to stand in a warm place eight to ten days before baking.  Then place a portion of the cake dough on a greased baking sheet which has been sprinkled lightly with  flour,  roll cake dough out on the sheet about 1/3 inch in thickness; place in a 
 very moderate  oven When well dried out and nicely browned on top cut the sheets into small squares, the size of ordinary  soda crackers.   This is a very old recipe given Mary by Frau Schmidt. 
 
    PEANUT  COOKIES  One pint, of roasted  peanuts,  measured, after being shelled.  Rub off the brown  skin,  run through a food-chopper.  Cream  together 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  1 cup of  sugar.  Add 3  eggs,  2 tablespoonfuls of  milk,  1/4 teaspoonful of  salt  and the chopped  peanuts.  Add  flour  to make a soft dough. Roll out on a  flour ed board, cut with a small cake cutter and bake in a moderate oven. This recipe was given Mary by a friend living in Allentown. 
 
   PIES-FLAKY PIE CRUST  Have all the materials cold when making pastry. Handle as little as possible. Place in a bowl 31/2 cups  flour,  3/4 teaspoonful  salt  and 1 cup good,  sweet lard.  Cut through with a knife into quite small pieces and mix into a dough with a little less than a half cup of  cold water.  Use only enough  water  to make dough hold together. This should be done with a knife or tips of the fingers. The  water  should be poured on the  flour  and  lard  carefully, a small quantity at a time, and never twice at the same place. Be careful that the dough is not too moist. Press the dough with the hands into a lump, but do not knead. Take enough of the dough for one pie on the bake board, roll lightly, always in one direction, line greased pie tins and fill crust. If  fruit  pies, moisten the edge of the lower crust, cover with top crust, which has been rolled quite thin. A knife scraped across the top crust several times before placing over pie causes the crust to have a rough, flaky, rich-looking surface when baked. Cut small vents in top crust to allow steam to escape. Pinch the edges of  fruit  pies well together to prevent  syrup  oozing out. If you wish light, flaky pie crust, bake in a hot oven. If a sheet of  paper  placed in oven turns a delicate brown, then the oven is right for pies. The best of pastry will be a failure if dried slowly in a cool oven.  When baking a crust for a  tart  to be filled after crust has been baked, always prick the crust with a fork before putting in oven to bake. This prevents the crust forming little blisters.  Aunt Sarah always used for her pies four even cups of  flour.  1/4 teaspoonful  baking powder  and one even cup of sweet, 
 rich , 
 home-made  lard   , a pinch of  salt  with just enough  cold water  to form a dough, and said her pies were rich enough for any one. They certainly were rich and flaky, without being greasy, and   she said, less  shortening  was necessary when  baking powder  was used. To cause her pies to have a golden brown color she brushed tops of pies with a mixture of  egg  and  milk  or  milk  and placed immediately in a hot oven.  Mary noticed her Aunt frequently put small  dabs of lard  or  butter  on the dough used for top crust of pies before rolling crust the desired size when she wished them particularly rich.  Aunt Sarah always used  pastry flour  for cake and pie. A smooth  flour  which showed the impression of the fingers when held tightly in the hand (the more expensive " bread flour ") feels like fine sand or  granulated sugar,  and is a stronger  flour  and considered better for  bread  or raised cakes in which  yeast  is used, better results being obtained by its use alone or combined with a cheaper  flour  when baking  bread.  
 
   AUNT SARAH'S LEMON PIE  This is a good, old-fashioned recipe for lemon pie, baked with two crusts, and not expensive. Grate the yellow outside  rind  from one  lemon,  use  juice  and  pulp,  but not the  white  part of  rind;  mix with 2 small cups of  sugar,  then add 1 cup of  water  and 1 cup of  milk,  and 1 large tablespoonful of  corn starch,  moistened with a little of the one cup of  water.  The  yolks of 2 eggs  were added. Mix all ingredients and add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs.  This quantity will fill three small pastry crusts. The mixture will measure nearly one quart. Pour into the three crusts, moisten edges of pies, place top crusts on each pie. Pinch edges of crust together and bake in hot oven. 
 
   THE PROFESSOR'S WIFE'S SUPERIOR PASTRY  For superior pastry use 1 1/2 cups  flour,  1/2 cup  lard,  1/2 tea-spoonful  salt  and about 1/4 cup of  cold water,  or three scant tablespoonfuls. Put 1 cup of  flour  on the bake board, sprinkle  salt  over, chop 1/4 cup of  sweet lard  through the  flour  with a knife, until the pieces are about the size of a  cherry.  Moisten with about 1/4 cup of ice  cold water.  Cut through the  flour  and  lard  with a knife, moistening a little of the mixture at a time, until  you have a soft dough, easily handled. Roll out lightly the size of a  tea  plate. Take 1/3 of the  lard  remaining, put small  dabs  at different places on the dough (do not spread the  lard  over), then sprinkle over 1/3 of the remaining half cup of  flour  and roll the dough into a long, narrow roll, folding the opposite ends in the centre of the roll. Roll out lightly (one way), then add  lard  and flou; roll and repeat the process until  flour  and  lard  have all been used. The pastry may be set aside in a cold place a short time before using. If particularly fine pastry is required, the dough might be rolled out once more, using small  dabs of butter  instead of  lard,  same quantity as was used of  lard  for one layer, then dredged thickly with  flour  and rolled over and over, and then ends folded together, when it should be ready to use. When wanted to line pie-tins, cut pieces off one end of the roll of dough and roll out lightly. The layers should show plainly when cut, and the pastry should puff nicely in baking, and be very rich, crisp and flaky. When preparing crusts for custards, lemon meringues and pies having only one crust, cut narrow strips of pastry about half an inch wide, place around the upper edge or rim of crust and press the lower edge of the strip against the crust; make small cuts with a knife about 1/3 inch apart, all around the edge of this extra crust, to cause it to look flaky when baked. This makes a rich pie crust.  A very good crust may be made by taking the same proportions as used for superior pastry, placing 1 1/2 to 2 cups  flour  on the bake board, add  salt,  cut 1/2 cup  lard  through the  flour,  moistening with  water.  Roll out crust and line pie-tins or small patty pans for tarts. This pastry is not quite as fine and smooth as the other, but requires less time and trouble to make.  The Professor's wife taught Mary to make this pastry, but Mary never could learn from her the knack of making a dainty, crimped, rolled-over edge to her pies, which she made easily with a deft twist of her thumb and fore-finger. 
 
   MARY'S LEMON MERINGUE (MADE WITH  MILK )  Line two large pie-tins with pie crust, prick with a fork before placing crusts in oven to bake. When baked stand aside to cool while you prepare the following filling: The  juice  and  grated  rind  of 1  lemon,  1 pint  sweet milk,  1 cup  sugar yolks of three eggs,  3 tablespoonfuls  flour,   butter  size of a  walnut.   Cream  together  sugar,   flour,   yolks of eggs,  then add  lemon,  mix well then add to the scalded  milk  on the range and cook until thick-Let cool, but do not allow to become quite cold, spread on the two crusts, which have been baked. When quite cold add 3 tablespoonfuls of  sugar  to the stiffly beaten  whites  of the three  eggs,  spread on top of pies, sift 1 tablespoonful pulverized  sugar  on top of meringue and set in a quick oven until fawn color Serve cold.  When mixing pie dough, should you have mixed more than needed at one time, line 
 agate  pie-tins with crust (never stand away in tin). They may be kept several days in a cool place and used later for crumb cakes or custards. Or a crust might be baked and used later for lemon meringues, etc. 
 
    APPLE TART   Line pie-tins with rich pie crust, sift over each 1 tablespoonful  flour  and 2 tablespoonfuls  sugar.  Place on the crust enough good,  tart  baking  apples,  which have been pared, cored, halved and placed (flat surface down) on the crust. Put bits of  butter  over the top and between the  apples,  about 1 large tablespoonful altogether, and sprinkle about 2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar  over, add about 1 tablespoonful of  cold water  when pies are ready to place in oven. These pies should be baked in a very hot oven. When  apples  are soft take pies from oven and serve one pie, hot ; stand the other one aside until quite cold.  To the stiffly beaten  white of one egg  add one tablespoonful  sugar.  Stir together and place a spoonful on the top of each half of  apple  and place in oven until meringue has browned and serve pie cold.  Peach  tarts may be made in a similar manner, omitting the meringue and substituting  peaches  for  apples.  
 
    RAISIN  OR "ROSINA" PIE  "Rosina" pie, as Aunt Sarah called it, was composed of 1  lemon,  1  egg,  1 cup  sugar,  1 tablespoonful  flour,  1 cup large, blue,  seeded  raisin.  Cover the  raisins  with one cup of  cold water;  let soak two hours.  Cream egg  and  sugar  together, add  juice  and grated  rind  of one quite small  lemon,  or half a large one. Mix the tablespoonful of  flour  smooth with a little  cold water,  add to the mixture, then add  raisins  and to the  water  in which they were soaked add enough  water  to fill the cup and cook until the mixture thickens. When cool fill pie-tins with the mixture, bake with upper and under crust about 20 minutes in hot oven. Aunt Sarah used a 
 generous  tablespoonful of  flour  for this pie. 
 
   "SNITZ" PIE  Cover a bowlful of well-washed  dried apples  with  cold water  and allow to soak over night. The following morning cook until tender and mash through a colander. If quite thick a small quantity of  water  should be added. Season with  sugar  to taste. Some  apples  require more  sugar  than others. Add  cinnamon,  if liked. Aunt Sarah never used any  spices  in these pies. Bake with two crusts or place strips cross-wise over the pie of thinly rolled dough, like lattice work. These are typical "Bucks County" pies. 
 
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR PLAIN PUNMPKIN PIE  Line a pie-tin, one holding 3 cups of liquid, with rich pastry. For the filling for pie mix together the following: 1 cup of steamed  pumpkin,  which had been mashed through a colander, 1  egg,  beaten separately, 1 tablespoonful of  flour,  2 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,  1/8 teaspoonful of  salt,  1/2 teaspoonful of grated  nutmeg,  same of  ginger,  1 1/2 cups of  milk  (scant measure). The mixture should measure exactly 3 cups, after adding  milk.  Pour this mixture into the pastry-lined pie-tin and bake in a moderate oven until top of pie is a rich brown. 
 
    CHOCOLATE  PIE  Melt one square of Baker's unsweetened  chocolate,  or 1/4 cup  of powdered  cocoa,  mix with this 1/2 cup of  granulated sugar  and 1/4 cup of  corn starch,  When well mixed add  yolks of 3 eggs  a pinch of  salt,  2 cups of  milk;  cook all together in a double boiler until thickened. When cool flavor with  vanilla.  Fill pastry-lined pie crust with the mixture. Beat the 3  whites of eggs  to a froth, mix with a couple tablespoonfuls of pulverized  sugar,  spread on top of pie, stand in oven until light brown. 
 
   "PEBBLE DASH" OR SHOO-FLY PIE  Aunt Sarah made these to perfection and called them "Pebble Dash" pie. They are not really pies, they resemble cakes, but having a crust we will class them with pics. She lined three small sized pie-tins with rich pie crust. For the crumbs she placed in a bowl 3 cups of  flour,  1 cup  brown sugar  and 3/4 cup of  butter  and  lard,  mixed and rubbed all together with the hands, not smooth, but in small rivels. For the liquid part she used 1 cup baking  molasses,  1 cup  hot water,  1 teaspoonful  baking soda  dissolved in a few drops of  vinegar  and stirred this into the  molasses  and  water.  She divided the liquid among the three pans, putting one-third in each crust, over which she sprinkled the crumbs. Bake one-half hour in a moderate oven. These have the appearance of  molasses  cakes when baked. 
 
    VANILLA  CRUMB "CRUSTS"  Cook together a short time 1/2 cup  molasses,  1  egg,  1 table-spoonful  flour,  1 cup  sugar,  2 cups  cold water.  Moisten the  flour  with a little  cold water  before adding to the other ingredients. When cooled add 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Pour this mixture in the bottom of each of four common sized pie-tins, lined with Pastry, and sprinkle over the following crumbs: 
 
   THE CRUMBS (FOR  VANILLA  CRUMB CRUSTS).  Two cups  flour,  1/2 cup  butter  and  lard,  mixed, 1/2 teaspoonful  soda  and 1 cup  sugar,  rubbed together with the hands to form crumbs. Scatter these crumbs over the four pies.  These are not thick pies, but simply what the recipe calls them- vanilla  "crusts." 
  
   "KASHA KUCHEN" OR  CHERRY  CAKE  Aunt Sarah sometimes filled the bottom crusts of two small pies (either  cheese  pie or plain custard) with a layer of fresh  cherries  and poured the custard over the top of the  cherries  and baked same as a plain custard pie.  Aunt Sarah might be called extravagant by some, but she always made  egg  desserts when  eggs  were cheap and plentiful, in the Spring. In Winter she baked pies and puddings in which a fewer number of  eggs  were used and substituted canned and  dried fruits  for fresh ones. In summer she used fresh  fruit  when in season, ice  cream  and sherbets. She never indulged in high-priced, unseasonable  fruits -thought it an extravagance for one to do so, and taught Mary "a wise expenditure in time means wealth."  For  banana  custard pie she substituted sliced  banana  for  cherries  on top of pie.  
 
   "RIVEL KUCHEN"  Place in a bowl 1 cup  flour,  1/2 cup  sugar  (good measure), 1/4 cup  butter  and  lard,  or all  butter  is better (scant measure). Some like a little grating of  nutmeg,  especially if part  lard  is used. Mix or crumb the ingredients well together with the hands to form small lumps, or rivals thickly. Line pie-tins with a rich pastry crust and strew the rivels thickly over and bake in a quick oven. A couple tablespoons of  molasses  spread over the crumbs is liked by some. This is a favorite pie or cake of many Pennsylvania 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S LEMON MERINGUE  Two cups of  water,  1 1/2 cups of  sugar,  2 rounding tablespoon-fuls of  corn starch,  4  eggs,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,  2 small  lemons.  Mix the  water,   sugar  and  corn starch  dissolved in a little  cold water,  pour in  sauce -pan, place on range and stir mixture until thickened. Beat separately the  yolks of 4 eggs  and the  whites  of 2, then add both to the above mixture. Remove from the fire, add the  juice  of two small  lemons  and grated  rind  of one; add  butter.  Fill two previously baked pastry shells with  the cooled mixture. Beat the remaining  whites of egg  (another  white of an egg  added improves the appearance of the pie) Add one tablespoonful of pulverized  sugar  to each  egg  used; place the stiffly beaten  whites of egg  rockily over tops of pies, stand in oven until a delicate shade of brown. This is a delicious pie. 
 
   A COUNTRY BATTER PIE  Line two medium-sized pie-tins with pastry crust in which pour the following mixture, composed of 1/2 cup of  granulated sugar  and one  egg,  creamed together; then add 1/2 cup of  cold water  and the grated yellow  rind  and juice of one  lemon.   For the top of pies:  Cream  together 1 cup of  sugar,  1/4 cup of  lard  and 1  egg,  then add 1/2 cup of  sour milk  alternately with 1 1/2 cups of  flour,  sifted with 1/2 teaspoonful of  baking soda  and 1/2 teaspoonful of  cream of tartar.  Place 1/2 of this mixture on top of each pie. Bake in oven. 
 
    PUMPKIN  PIE (AUNT SARAH'S RECIPE)  The best  pumpkin  for pie is of a deep  orange  yellow with a rough, warty surface. Remove the soft, spongy  pulp  and  seeds  of the  pumpkin,  pare and cut into small pieces. Steam until tender. Put in a colander to drain, then mash through colander with wooden potato masher. For one deep pie allow one pint of the stewed  pumpkin,  beat in 2  eggs,  one at a time, 1/2 teaspoonful  salt,  1 teaspoonful  ginger,  1/2 teaspoonful grated  nutmeg,  1/2 tea-spoonful  cinnamon,  2/3 cup  sugar,  1 scant pint  milk.  Beat all together. This mixture should barely fill a quart measure, Pour in a deep pie-tin lined with rich crust, grate  nutmeg  over the top of pie and bake from 45 to 50 minutes in a moderate oven, Have the oven rather hot when the pie is first put in to bake and then reduce the heat, else the filling in the pie will boil and become watery. If liked, two table spoonfuls of  brandy  may be added to the mixture before filling the crust. In that case, use two tablespoonfuls less of  milk.  
  
   WHITE POTATO CUSTARD (AUNT SARAH'S RECIPE)  Boil one medium-sized  potato,  mash fine, add 1 large table-spoonful of  butter  and a generous 1/2 cup  sugar.  Beat to a  cream.  When the mixture has cooled add  yolks of 2 eggs,  1/2 cup  sweet milk  and grated  rind  and  juice  of half a  lemon.  Lastly, stir in the stiffly beaten  whites  of the two  eggs.  Bake in a medium-sized pie-tin with one crust in a moderately hot oven about 25 minutes, until a rich brown on top. This is a delicious pie and would puzzle a "Bucks County lawyer" to tell of what it is would puzzle a "Bucks County lawyer" to tell of what it is composed. 
 
   " RHUBARB  CUSTARD" PIE  Two cups of  rhubarb,  uncooked, do not  skin  it, cut in half-inch pieces.  Cream  together 1 cup of  sugar,  1 tablespoonful of  cornstarch,  2  eggs  (reserve  white of one egg ). Add the 2 cups of  rhubarb  to this mixture and place all in a pie-tin lined with pastry. Place in oven and bake until  rhubarb  is tender. Remove from oven and when pie has cooled spread over it the stiffly beaten  white of the egg,  to which had been added one tablespoonful of  sugar.  Place pie in oven and brown a light fawn color. 
 
   " LEMON APPLE " PIE  Grate the yellow  rind  from a  lemon  (discard the  white  part of  rind ), grate the remainder of the  lemon,  also pare and grate 1  apple.  Add 1 1/2, cups of  sugar,  then add 2 well-beaten  eggs.  Pour this mixture into 1 large pie-tin lined with rich pastry; place on a top crust, pinch edges, moistened with  water,  together; bake in an oven with a steady heat. When pie has baked sift pulverized  sugar  thickly over top and serve cold. From these materials was baked a fair sized pie. 
 
    GREEN CURRANT  PIE  Line a pie-tin with rich pastry; place on this crust 2 tablespoonfuls of  flour  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar;  then add 2 cups  of well-washed and stemmed  green currants,  previously mixed with 1 tablespoonful of  cornstarch,  moistened with a small quantity of  cold water.  Add 1 cup of  sugar  (from which had been taken the 2 tablespoonfuls placed on crust; add 2 tablespoonfuls of  water;  cover with a top crust, cut small vents in crust bake in a moderate oven. When crust loosens from side of pan the pie should be sufficiently baked. 
 
   A COUNTRY " MOLASSES " PIE  Place in a mixing bowl 3/4 cup  flour  (generous measure), 1/2 cup  granulated sugar,  1 generous tablespoonful of  butter.   Crumble all together with the hands until quite fine. Then to 1/4 cup of New Orleans (baking)  molasses  add 1/4 cup of  boiling water  and 1/4 teaspoonful of  soda  ( saleratus ). Beat together the  molasses,   water  and  soda  until the mixture is foamy and rises to top of cup. Then pour into a medium-sized pie-tin, lined with pie crust (the pie-tin should not be small or the mixture, when baking, will rise over top of pan). Sprinkle the prepared crumbs thickly over the  molasses  mixture and with a spoon distribute the crumbs well through the mixture. Bake in a moderate oven from 25 to 30 minutes and you will have the old-fashioned pie your Grandmother used to bake.  When her baking finished, she had dough remaining for an extra crust. Children always called this " molasses  candy pie," as 'twas quite different from the " molasses  cake batter" usually baked in crusts. 
 
   A MOCK  CHERRY  PIE  This pie was composed of 3/4 cup of chopped  cranberries,  3/4 cup of seeded and chopped  raisins,  3/4 cup of  sugar,  3/4 cup of  cold water,  1 tablespoonful of  flour,  1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Mix all together and bake with two crusts. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S CUSTARD PIE  Line an agate pie-pan (one used especially for custard two  inches in depth, holding exactly one quart) with a rich pastry. Break five large  eggs  in a bowl, beat lightly with an  egg -beater and add 1/2 cup of  sugar.  Boil 3 cups of  sweet milk,  pour over the  eggs  and  sugar,  add 1 teaspoonful of  butter  and a pinch of  salt,  1/2 teaspoonful of  vanilla.  The mixture should fill a one-quart measure. When the custard has cooled, pour either into the deep pie-pan, lined with pastry, holding one quart, or into two ordinary pie-tins holding one pint each. Place the custard pie in a quick oven, that the crust may bake before the custard soaks into the crust; then allow oven to cool and when the custard is "set" (which should be in about 35 minutes) remove from the oven and serve cold. The custard should be the consistency of thick  jelly.  Scalding the  milk  produces a richer custard. 
 
   PLAIN  RHUBARB  PIE  Line a pie-tin with rich crust,  skin rhubarb  and cut into half-inch pieces a sufficient quantity to fill 3 cups. Mix together 1 cup of  sugar  and 1/4 cup of  flour.  Place a couple table spoonfuls of this on the bottom crust of pie. Mix  sugar  and  flour  remaining with 3 cups of  rhubarb  and fill the crust. Moisten the edge of crust with  water,  place on top crust, press two edges of crust together (having cut small vents in top crust to allow steam to escape). Bake in a moderate oven about 30 minutes, when top crust has browned pie should be baked. 
 
   MARY'S  CREAM  PIE  Bake crusts in each of two pie-tins. For filling, 1 pint of  milk,  1 generous tablespoonful of  corn starch,  2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,  2  yolks of eggs  (well beaten), 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Cook all together until mixture thickens and when cooled put in the two baked crusts.  Mix the stiffly beaten  whites of two eggs  with two table-spoonfuls of pulverized  sugar  and spread over  cream  filling in pies and brown lightly in oven.  Always prick the lower crust of a pie carefully with a fork to allow the air to escape; this will prevent blisters forming in the crusts baked before filling crusts with custards. 
  
    APPLE  CUSTARD PIE  To 1 cup of hot  apple sauce  (unsweetened) add a tiny pinch of  baking soda,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,  1 cup of  sugar,  grated  rind  and  juice  of half a  lemon or orange,  2  egg yolks,  1/2 cup of sweet  cream  and 1 large teaspoonful of  corn starch.  Line a pie-tin with pastry, pour in this mixture and bake. When the pie has cooled spread over top a meringue composed of the two stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  and two tablespoonfuls of pulverized  sugar  flavored with a little grated  orange  or  lemon peel.  Brown top of pie in oven. 
 
   LEMON PIE WITH CRUMBS  Place in a bowl 1 cup (good measure) of soft, crumbled  stale bread.  Pour over this one cup of  boiling water,  add 1 teaspoonful (good measure) of  butter  and beat until smooth, then add 1 cup of  sugar,  the grated  rind  and juice of 1  lemon  and the beaten  yolks of 2 eggs.  This mixture should measure about 1 pint. Pour into a pie-tin lined with rich pastry and bake. When cold spread over a meringue made of the stiffly beaten  whites  of the 2  eggs  and 3 tablespoonfuls of  granulated sugar.  Place in the oven until the merange is a light fawn color and serve cold. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  BUTTER SCOTCH  PIE  Boil together 1 cup  brown sugar  and 2 tablespoons  butter  until a soft, wax-like consistency. Mix together 2 heaping teaspoons  flour,   yolk of 1 egg  and 1 cup of  milk.  Beat until smooth; stir this into the  sugar  and  butter  mixture and cook until thick. Flavor with  lemon or vanilla,  pour into baked crust and spread over top the beaten  white of 1 egg  to which has been added 1 tablespoon  sugar  and brown in oven. 
 
    GREEN TOMATO  MINCE  MEAT   One peck of  green tomatoes,  chopped fine; 3  lemons,  2 pounds of seeded  raisins,  5 pounds of  granulated sugar,  1 cup or  vinegar,  1 teaspoonful of  cloves,  1 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  nutmeg,  1  tablespoonful of  cinnamon.  Cook  tomatoes  3 3/4 hours, then add the other ingredients and cook all together 30 minutes. A small quantity of grated  orange peel,  finely minced citron,  cider,   brandy  or canned  fruit juice  may be added to improve the flavor of the mince  meat.  Fill air-tight jars with the hot mixture and screw on jar-tops. This mince  meat  may be prepared in season when  tomatoes  are plentiful; is both good and cheap and is a splendid substitute for old-fashioned mince  meat.  
 
    ORANGE  MERINGUE (A PIE)  Into a bowl grate the yellow outside  rind  of a large, juicy  orange;  add the  juice  and  pulp,  but not any of the tough part enclosing sections. Add 1 table spoonful of  lemon juice,  1 cup of  granulated sugar,  which had been beaten to a  cream  with 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter,  the  yolks of 3 eggs,  2 large tablespoonfuls of  corn starch,  mixed smoothly with a little  cold water,  and 1 cup of  boiling water.  Cook all together until thickened and when cool spread on a rather large pie-tin, lined with a baked crust of superior pastry. Add to the stiffly beaten  whites of 3 eggs  3 tablespoonfuls of pulverized  sugar.  Place meringue over top of pie and place in oven until a light fawn color. 
 
   GRANDMOTHER'S RECIPE FOR "MINCE  MEAT "  The day preceding that on which mince  meat  is to be prepared, boil 5 pounds of  beef.  To the well-cooked, finely-chopped  meat  add 10 pounds of  tart apples,  chopped into coarse bits; 2 pounds of finely-chopped  suet,  2 pounds of large blue  raisins,  seeded; 2 pounds of dried, cleaned  currants,  1/2 pound of finely shaved  citron,  2 tablespoonfuls of  cinnamon,  1 tablespoonful of  cloves,  1 tablespoonful of grated  nutmeg,  1 small tablespoonful of  salt,  1 pint of baking  molasses,  1 pint of  brandy  or  cider  which had been boiled down. Mix all well together, add more  spices,  if liked, also  juice  of 1  orange  or  lemon.  Place all ingredients in a large preserving kettle, allow the mixture to heat through. Fill glass jars, seal and stand away until used. Add more  cider,  should it be required, when baking pies. 
  
   "TWENTIETH CENTURY" MINCE  MEAT   Two pounds  lean beef  (uncooked), chopped fine, 1/2 pound  beef suet,  shredded.  Put the  beef  and  suet  in a large stone jar, pour over it 2/3 of a quart of  whiskey.  Let stand covered with a lid for a week, then add 2 pounds large, seeded  raisins,  2 pounds  Sultana raisins,  2 pounds  currants,  1/2 pound citron,  juice  and grated  rind  of 2  oranges  and of 2  lemons,  1 teaspoonful  salt,  1 tablespoon ground  cinnamon,  2 grated  nutmegs,  1/2 teaspoon ground  allspice,  1 pound  sugar.  Let stand two weeks, then it is ready to use. When you wish to bake pies take out as much of the mince  meat  as you wish to use and add chopped  apples,  two parts of mince  meat  to one part chopped  apples,  and add more  sugar  if not as sweet as liked. If too thick, add a little  sherry wine  and  water,  mixed. Fill bottom crust with some of the mixture, cover with top crust and bake. There must be just enough liquor in the jar to cover the  meat,  as that  preserves  it. This seems like a large quantity of liquor to use, but much of the strength evaporates in baking, so that only an agreeable flavor remains; that is, to those who like liquor in mince  meat;  some people do not. Others there are who think mince  meat  not good unless made with something stronger than  cider.  Mince pies made by this recipe are excellent. This recipe was given Mary by a friend, a noted housekeeper and cook. 
 
   A "DUTCH" RECIPE FOR  PUMPKIN  PIE  Line a medium-sized pie-tin with pastry. Cover the crust thickly with thinly-sliced, uncooked  pumpkin,  cut in inch lengths. Place on the  pumpkin  1 tablespoonful of  syrup molasses,  1 tablespoonful of  vinegar,  1 tablespoonful  flour  and sweeten with  sugar  to taste, dust over the top a little ground  cinnamon,   cloves  and  nutmeg;  cover pie with a top crust and bake in a moderately hot oven. When baked the  pumpkin  filling in the pie should resemble sliced  citron  and the pie have somewhat the flavor of  green tomato  pie. (The  vinegar  may be omitted and the result will be a very good pie.) 
  
   MARY'S  COCOANUT  CUSTARD PIE  Line two medium-sized pie-tins with rich pastry and bake. For the custard filling: 3  egg yolks,  2 cups  granulated sugar,  1 quart of  milk.   Cook all together, then add 1 tablespoonful of  corn starch  and one of  flour  (moistened with a little  cold water  before adding). Cook all together until the mixture thickens. Flavor with one teaspoonful of  vanilla.  Allow the mixture to cool.  Grate one good-sized  cocoanut,  mix half of it with the custard and fill into the two crusts. Spread over the tops of the two pies the stiffly beaten  whites  of the three  eggs  to which you have added a small quantity of  sugar.  Over this sprinkle the remaining half of the grated  cocoanut,  stand in the oven a few minutes, until the top of pie is lightly browned. 
 
    GRAPE  PIE   Pulp  the  grapes.  Place  pulp  in a stew-pan and cook a short time. When tender mash  pulp  through a sieve to remove  seeds.  Add  skins  to  pulp.  Add one scant cup of  sugar  and rounded teaspoonful of  butter.  Line a pie plate with rich pastry, sprinkle over one tablespoonful of  flour.  Pour in the  grape  mixture and sift another tablespoonful of  flour  over the top of mixture and cover with a top crust in which vents have been cut, to allow the steam to escape, and bake in a hot oven. Allow two small cups of  grapes  to one pie. 
 
    SOUR CHERRY  PIE  One quart of  cherries,  1/2 cup of  flour  for juicy  sour cherries,  (scant measure of  flour ), 1 1/2 cups  sugar.   Pit the  cherries,  saving  cherry juice.  Mix together  sugar  and  flour  and place about 1/3 of this on a pie-tin lined with pastry. Fill the  cherries  and  juice  and sprinkle remaining  sugar  and  flour  over. Bake with an upper crust, having vents cut in to allow steam to escape. 
  
   AUNT SARAH'S  STRAWBERRY  PIE  Make a rich crust, line a pie-tin and fill with clean hulled  strawberries.  Allow one quart to each pie. Sweeten to taste; sprinkle a generous handful of  flour  over the  berries,  having plenty of  flour  around the inside edge of pie. Use 1/2 cup of  flour  all together. Cut a teaspoonful of  butter  into small bits over top of  berries,  cover with top crust with vents cut in to allow steam to escape, pinch edges of crust together to prevent  juice  escaping from pie, and bake. 
 
   FLORENDINE PIE  To 2  apples,  cooked soft and mashed fine (after having been pared and cored) add the  yolk of one egg  (well beaten) one minute before removing the cooked  apple  from the range. Then add 1 small cup of  sugar,  a piece of  butter  the size of a  hickory nut,  1 teaspoonful of  flour;  flavor with either  lemon or vanilla.  Line a pie-tin with rich pastry crust. Pour in the mixture and bake in a quick oven. This makes a delicious old-fashioned dessert. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  CHEESE  CAKE  Prepare the following for one  cheese  cake, to be baked in a pie-tin lined with pastry crust:  One heaping cup of rich, creamy "smier kase," or  cottage cheese,  was placed in a bowl, finely mashed with a spoon until free from lumps. Then mixed smooth with 2 tablespoonfuls of  sweet milk,  1 tablespoonful of softened  butter  was added, a pinch of  salt,  about 3/4 cup of  sugar,  1 1/4 tablespoonfuls of  flour  (measure with an ordinary silver tablespoon). One large  egg  was beaten into the mixture when it was smooth and creamy, 1 cup of  milk  was added. After adding all the different ingredients the mixture should measure about 3 3/4 cups and should be very thin. Pour the mixture into a pastry-lined pie-tin. Ihis is one of the most delicious pies imaginable, if directions given are closely followed. Bake in a moderately hot oven until  cheese  custard is "set" and nicely browned on top, then allow the oven door  to remain open about five minutes before removing the "pie," as I should call it, but Bucks County farmers' wives, when speaking of them, invariably say "cheese cakes." Should the housewife possess "smier kase," 
 not  rich and creamy, use instead of the one tablespoonful of  sweet milk,  one tablespoonful of sweet  cream.  
 
   "FRAU SCHMIDT'S" LEMON PIE  Grated yellow  rind  and juice of one  lemon,  1 cup of  sugar,  1 cup of  molasses,  1  egg,   butter,  size of a  walnut;  1 tablespoonful of  corn starch,  3/4 cup of  water.   Cream  together the  butter,   sugar  and  egg,  add the  corn starch  moistened with a little  cold water,  add grated  rind  and juice of one  lemon,   molasses,  and lastly add  water.  Cook all ingredients together. When cool fill 2 or 3 small pie-tins lined with rich pastry; cover with top crust and bake. 
 
    PICKLES -SPICED  CUCUMBERS    24 medium-sized  cucumbers.   6 medium-sized  onions.   3  red peppers.   3  green peppers.    Pare  cucumbers,  then cut in inch lengths. Slice  onions  and  peppers  quite thin. Place all in a large earthenware bowl and sprinkle over about 1/2 cup of  table salt;  mix all well together, let stand four or five hours, when place in a colander; cover with a plate and drain off all the  salt water  possible or squeeze through a cheese-cloth bag.  Boil together for 10 minutes the following: 1 quart of  vinegar,  1 tablespoonful of  cloves,  1 teaspoonful of  turmeric powder  (dissolved in a little of the  vinegar ) and 1 scant cup of  sugar.  Add the  cucumbers,   peppers  and  onions  to the hot  vinegar.  Let come to a boil and allow all to boil two minutes, then place in sterilized jars and seal. 
  
   MIXED  SAUCE  TO SERVE WITH  MEATS     Yolks of 4 eggs.   1/2 cup  sugar.   1 tablespoonful mixed  yellow mustard.   1 tablespoonful  olive oil.   1 teaspoonful  salt.   1 tablespoonful  vinegar  with flavor of  peppers.    Thin with  vinegar  and boil until thick. Add 1 teaspoonful of grated  horseradish.   To flavor  vinegar  cover finely-cut green and  red peppers  with  vinegar  and allow all to stand about 24 hours, then strain and use the  vinegar.  
 
    PEPPER  RELISH  Chop fine 12 sweet  red peppers,  12 sweet  green peppers  and 8 small  onions.  Put all in a bowl and cover with  boiling water  and let stand five minutes. Drain off, cover again with  boiling water  and let stand ten minutes. Then place in an agate colander or muslin bag and let drain over night. The following morning add 1 quart of good sour  vinegar,  1 1/2 cups  sugar,  2 even teaspoonfuls  salt  and boil 20 minutes. While hot fill air-tight jars. This is excellent. 
 
   PICKLED RED  CABBAGE   Shred red  cabbage,  not too fine, and sprinkle liberally with  salt.  Stand in a cool place 24 hours. Then press all moisture from the  cabbage,  having it as dry as possible; stand the earthen bowl containing the  cabbage  in the sun for a couple of hours. Take a sufficient quantity of  vinegar  to cover the  cabbage.  A little  water  may be added to the  vinegar  if too sour. Add 1 cup of  sugar  to a gallon of  vinegar  and a small quantity of  celery seed,   pepper,   mace,   allspice  and  cinnamon.  Boil all about five minutes and pour at once over the  cabbage.  The hot  vinegar  will restore the bright red color to the  cabbage.  Keep in stone jars. 
  
    MUSTARD PICKLES   24  cucumbers,  1 quart of small  onions,  6  peppers,  2  heads of cauliflower,  4 cups of  sugar,  or less;  celery  or  celery seed,  3 quarts of good  vinegar,  1/2 pound of  ground yellow mustard,  1 tablespoonful  turmeric powder,  3/4 cup of  flour.   The  seeds  were removed from the  cucumbers  and  cucumbers  were cut in inch-length pieces, or use a few medium-sized  cucumbers  cut inseveral pieces and some quite small  cucumbers.  (The quantity of  cucumbers  when measured should be the same as if the larger ones had been used.) On quart of small whole  onions,  6  peppers,  red, green and yellow, two of each, cut in small pieces. Place all together in an agate preserving kettle and let stand in  salt water  over night. In the morning put on the range, the vegetables in agate kettle, let boil a few minutes, then drain well. Take three quarts of good  vinegar,  4 cups of  sugar,  if liked quite sweet; 2 teaspoons of either  celery seed  or  celery  cut in small pieces. Put the  vinegar,   sugar  and  celery  in a preserving kettle, stand on stove and let come to a boil; then add the other ingredients. When boiling have ready a half pound of ground  mustard,  3/4 cup of  flour,  1 tablespoon  turmeric powder,  all mixed to a smooth  paste  with a little  water.  Cook until the mixture thickens. Add all the other ingredients and boil until tender. Stir frequently to prevent scorching. Can while hot in glass air-tight jars. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  CUCUMBER PICKLES   Always use the  cucumbers  which come late in the season for  pickles.  Cut small  green cucumbers  from vine, leaving a half-inch of stem. Scrub with vegetable brush, place in a bowl and pour over a  brine  almost strong enough to  float  an  egg;  3/4 cup of  salt  to seven cups of  cold water  is about the right proportion. Allow them to stand over night in this  brine.  Drain off  salt water  in the morning. Heat a small quantity of the  salt water  and pour over the small  onions  which have been "skinned." Use half the quantity of  onions  you have of  cucumbers,  or less. Allow the  onions  to stand in hot slat  water  on back of range a short time. Heat 1 cup of good sharp  cider vinegar,  if too sour, add 1/2 cup of  water,  also add 1 teaspoonful of  sugar,  a couple  of whole  cloves;  add  cucumbers  and  onions  (drained from  salt water,  after piercing each  cucumber  several times with a silver fork). Place a layer at a time in an agate stew-pan containing hot  vinegar.  Allow them to remain a few minutes until heated through, when fill heated glass jars with  cucumbers  and  onions;  pour hot  vinegar  over until jars are quite full. Place rubbers on jars and screw on tops. These  pickles  will be found, when jars are opened in six months' time, almost as crisp and fine as when  pickles  are prepared, when taken fresh from the vines in summer. Allow jars to stand 12 hours, when screw down tops again. Press a knife around the edge of jar tops before standing away to be sure the jars are perfectly air-tight. 
 
   "ROT PFEFFERS" FILLED WITH  CABBAGE   Cut the tops from the stem end of twelve sweet (not hot)  red peppers  or "rot pfeffers," as Aunt Sarah called them. Carefully remove  seeds,  do not break outside shell of  peppers.  Cut one  head of cabbage  quite fine on a slaw-cutter; add to the  cabbage  1 even tablespoonful of  fine salt,  2 tablespoonfuls of whole  yellow mustard seed  (a very small amount of finely shredded, hot,  red pepper  may be added if liked quite peppery). Mix all together thoroughly, fill  peppers  with this mixture, pressing it rather tightly into the shells; place tops on  pepper  cases, tie down with cord. Place upright in stone jar, in layers; cover with  cold vinegar.  If  vinegar  is very strong add a small quantity of  water.  Tie heavy  paper  over top of jar and stand away in a cool place until used. These may he kept several months and will still be good at the end of that time. 
 
   AN OLD RECIPE FOR SPICED  PICKLES    500 small  cucumbers.     2 oz. of  allspice.   3 gallons  vinegar.     1/4 pound of  black pepper.   3 quarts  salt.     1 oz.  cloves.   6 ounces of  alum.      Horseradish  to flavor.   Add  sugar  according to strength of  vinegar.  Place cucum-  bers and pieces of  horseradish  in alternate layers in a stone jar, then put  salt  over them and cover with  boiling water.  Allow  pickles  to stand 24 hours in this  brine,  then pour off  brine  and wash  pickles  in  cold water.  Boil  spices  and  vinegar  together and pour over the  pickles.  In two weeks they will be ready to use.  Pickles  made over this recipe are excellent. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S RECIPE FOR  CHILI SAUCE    18 large  red tomatoes.   10 medium-sized  onions.   10 sweet  peppers  (green or red).  1 cup  sugar.   3 scant tablespoonfuls  salt.   1 1/2 cups  vinegar  ( cider vinegar ).   Tie in a small  cheese  cloth bag the following:  1 large teaspoonful whole  allspice.   1 large teaspoonful whole  cloves.   About the same quantity of stick  cinnamon.     Chop  tomatoes,   onions  and  peppers  rather finely; add  vinegar,   sugar  and  salt  and the bag of  spices  and cook slowly about 2 1/2 hours. Fill air-tight glass jars with the mixture while hot. This is a particularly fine recipe of Aunt Sarah's.  This quantity will fill five pint jars. Canned  tomatoes  may be used when fresh ones are not available. 
 
    TOMATO CATSUP   1 1/2 peck ripe  tomatoes,  washed and cut in small pieces; also four large  onions,  sliced. Stew together until tender enough to mash through a fine sieve, reject  seeds.  This quantity of  tomato juice  should, when measured, be about four good quarts. Put  tomato juice  into a kettle on range, add one pint of  vinegar,  1/4 teaspoon  cayenne pepper,  1 1/2 tablespoons  sugar,  1 1/2 table-spoons  salt;  place in a  cheese  cloth bag 1 ounce of whole  black pepper,  1 ounce whole  cloves,  1 ounce  allspice,  1 ounce yellow   mustard seed  and add to  catsup.  Boil down one-half. Bottle and seal while boiling hot. Boil bottles and corks before bottling  catsup.  Pour melted sealing-wax over corks to make them air-tight, unless self-sealing bottles are used. 
 
    PICKLED BEETS   One cup of sharp  vinegar,  1 cup of  water,  2 tablespoonfuls of  sugar,  8 whole  cloves  and a pinch of black, and one of  red pepper.  Heat all together and pour over  beets  which have been sliced after being boiled tender and  skins  removed, and pack in glass jars which have been sterilized and if jars are air-tight these keep indefinitely. 
 
   MARMALADES,  PRESERVES  AND CANNED  FRUITS   Young housewives, if they would be successful in "doing up  fruit, " should be very particular about sterilizing  fruit  jars, both tops and rubbers, before using. Heat the  fruit  to destroy all germs, then seal in air-tight jars while  fruit  is scalding hot. Allow jars of canned  fruit  or vegetables to stand until perfectly cold. Then, even should you think the tops perfectly tight, you will probably be able to give them another turn. Carefully run the dull edge of a knife blade around the lower edge of jar cap to cause it to fit tightly. This flattens it close to the rubber, making it air-tight.  To sterilize jars and tops, place in a pan of  cold water,  allow  water  to come to a boil and stand in  hot water  one hour.  For making  jelly,  use  fruit,  under-ripe. It will jell more easily, and, not being as sweet as otherwise, will possess a finer flavor. For  jelly  use an equal amount of  sugar  to a pint of  juice.  The old rule holds good-a pound of  sugar  to a pint of  juice.  Cook fifteen to twenty minutes.  Fruit juice  will jell more quickly if the  sugar  is heated in the oven before being added.  For preserving  fruit,  use about 3/4 of a pound of  sugar  to 1 pound of  fruit  and seal in air-light glass jars.  For canning  fruit,  use from 1/3 to 1/2 the quantity of  sugar  that you have of  fruit.    When making  jelly,  too long cooking turns the mixture into a  syrup  that will not jell. Cooking  fruit  with  sugar  too long a time causes  fruit  to have a strong, disagreeable flavor.   Apples,   pears  and  peaches  were pared, cut in quarters and dried at the farm for Winter use.  Sour cherries  were pitted, dried and placed in glass jars, alternately with a sprinkling of  granulated sugar.  Pieces of  sassafras root  were always placed with  dried apples,   peaches,  etc. 
 
   "FRAU" SCHMIDT'S RECIPE FOR  APPLE BUTTER   For this excellent  apple butter  take 5 gallons of  cider,  1 bucket of "Schnitz" (sweet  apples  were always used for the "Schnitz"), 2 1/2 pounds of  brown sugar  and 1 ounce of  allspice.  The  cider  should be boiled down to one-half the original quantity before adding the  apples,  which had been pared and cored.  Cider  for  apple butter  was made from sweet  apples  usually, but if made from  sour apples  4 pounds of  sugar  should be used. The  apple butter  should be stirred constantly. When cooked sufficiently, the  apple butter  should look clear and be thick as  marmalade  and the  cider  should not separate from the  apple butter.  Frau Schmidt always used "Paradise"  apples  in preference to any other variety of  apple  for  apple butter.  
 
    CRANBERRY SAUCE   A delicious  cranberry sauce,  or  jelly,  was prepared by "Aunt Sarah" in the following manner: Carefully pick over and wash 1 quart of  cranberries,  place in a stew-pan with 2 cups of  water;  cook quickly a few moments over a hot fire until  berries  burst open, then crush with a potato-masher. Press through a fine sieve or a  fruit  press, rejecting  skin  and  seeds.  Add 1 pound of  sugar  to the strained  pulp  in the stew-pan. Return to the fire and cook two or three minutes only. Long, slow cooking destroys the fine flavor of the  berry,  as does  brown sugar.  Pour into a bowl, or mold, and place on ice, or stand in a cool place to become cold before serving, as an accompaniment to  roast turkey,   chicken  or deviled  oysters.  
  
   PRESERVED "YELLOW GROUND  CHERRIES "  Remove the gossamer-like covering from small yellow "ground  cherries " and place on range in a stew-pan with  sugar.  (Three-fourths of a pound of  sugar  to one pound of  fruit. ) Cook slowly about 20 minutes, until the  fruit  looks clear and  syrup  is thick as  honey.  Seal in pint jars.  These  cherries,  which grow abundantly in many town and country gardens without being cultivated, make a delicious  preserve  and a very appetizing pie may be made from them also.  Aunt Saarh said she preferred these  preserved cherries  to  strawberries.   Frau Schmidt preferred the larger "purple" ground  cherries,  which, when preserved, greatly resembled "Guava"  jelly  in flavor. 
 
   "WUNDERSELDA"  MARMALADE   This was composed of 2 quarts of the  pulp  and  juice  combined of ripe Kieffer  pears,  which had been pared and cored. (Measured after being run through a food chopper.) The grated yellow  rind  and  juice  of five medium-sized  tart oranges,  and 6 1/2 cups  granulated sugar.  Cook all together about forty minutes, until a clear  amber  colored  marmalade.  Watch closely and stir frequently, as the mixture scorches easily. This quantity will fill about twenty small  jelly  tumblers. If the  marmalade  is to be kept some time, it should be put into air-tight glass jars.  The recipe for this delicious jam was original with the Professor's wife and Fritz Schmidt, being particularly fond of the confection, gave it the name "Wunderselda," as he said "'twas not 'served often.'" 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  SPICED PEARS    Bartlett pears  may be used, pared and cut in halves and core and  seeds  removed, or small sweet  Seckel pears  may be pared, left whole, allow stems to remain, weigh, and to 7 pounds of either variety of  pear  take one pint of good  cider vinegar,  3 pounds   granulated sugar,  a small  cheese  cloth bag containing several tablespoonfuls of whole  cloves  and the same amount of stick  cinnamon,  broken in pieces; all were placed in a preserving kettle and allowed to come to a boil. Then the  pears  were added and cooked until tender. The  fruit  will look clear when cooked sufficiently. Remove from the hot  syrup  with a perforated spoon. Fill pint glass jars with the  fruit.  Stand jars in a warm oven while boiling  syrup  until thick as  honey.  Pour over  fruit,  in jars, and seal while hot. 
 
    PEACH MARMALADE   Thinly pare ripe  peaches.  Cut in quarters and remove pits. Place  peaches  in a preserving kettle with 1/2 cup of  water;  heat slowly, stirring occasionally. When  fruit  has become tender mash not too fine and to every three pounds of  peaches  (weighed before being cooked) allow 1 1/2 pounds of  granulated sugar.  Cook  sugar  and  fruit  together about three-quarters of an hour, stirring frequently, until  marmalade  looks clear. Place in pint glass, air-tight jars. Aunt Sarah always preferred the "Morris  White, " a small, fine flavored,  white peach,  which ripened quite late in the fall, to any other variety from which to make  preserves  and  marmalade.  
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  GINGER PEARS    4 pounds of  fruit.     4 pounds of  sugar.   2  lemons.     1 cup  water.   1/4 pound of  ginger root.    Use a  hard,  solid  pear,  not over ripe. Pare and core the  fruit  and cut into thin slivers. Use  juice of lemons  and cut the  lemon rind  into long, thin strips. Place all together in preserving kettle and cook slowly one hour, or until the  fruit  looks clear. Should the  juice of fruit  not be thick as  honey,  remove  fruit  and cook  syrup  a short time, then add  fruit  to the  syrup.  When heated through, place in pint jars and seal. This quantity will fill four pint jars and is a delicious  preserve.  
  
    PEAR  AND  PINEAPPLE MARMALADE    2 ripe  pineapples.   4 quarts Kieffer  pears.   4 pounds  granulated sugar.    Both  pears  and  pineapples  should be pared and eyes removed from the latter. All the  fruit  should be run through food-chopper, using all the  juice  from  fruit.  Mix  sugar  with  fruit  and  juice  and cook, stirring constantly until thick and clear. (Watch closely, as this scorches easily if allowed to stand a minute without stirring.) Pour into glass pint jars and seal while hot. Any variety of  pear  may be used, but a rather  hard,  solid  pear  is to be preferred. A recipe given Mary which she found delicious. 
 
    GRAPE BUTTER   Separate  pulp  and  skins of grapes.  Allow  pulp  to simmer until tender, then mash through a sieve and reject  seeds.  Add  pulp  to  skins.  Take 1/2 pound of  sugar  to one pound of  fruit.  Cook until thick, seal in air-tight jars. 
 
   CANNED  SOUR CHERRIES  FOR PIES  Pit  cherries  and cover with  cold water  and let stand over night. Drain in the morning. To 6 heaping cups of pitted  cherries  take 2 level cups of  sugar,  1/2 cup  water.  Put all together into stew-pan on range, cook a short time, then add 1 teaspoonful of  corn starch  mixed with a little  cold water  and stir well through the  cherries;  let come to a boil, put in jars and seal. This quantity fills five pint jars. This is the way one country housekeeper taught Mary to can common 
 sour   cherries  or pies and she thought them fine. 
 
    CANDIED ORANGE PEEL   Cut  orange peel  in long, narrow strips, cover with  cold water  and boil 20 minutes. Pour off  water,  cover with  cold water  and boil another 20 minutes, then drain and take equal weight of peel and  sugar.  Let simmer 1 hour, then dip slices in  granulated sugar.  Stand aside to cool. 
  
   AUNT SARAH'S " CHERRY MARMALADE "  Pitted,  red sour cherries  were weighed, put through food-chopper, and to each pound of  cherries  and  juice  add 3/4 pound of  granulated sugar.  Cook about 25 minutes until  syrup  is thick and  fruit  looks clear. Fill  marmalade  pots, cover with parafine when cool, or use pint glass jars and seal. One is sure of  fruit  keeping if placed in air-tight jars. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S  QUINCE HONEY   Pour 1 quart of  water,  good measure, in an agate stewpan on the range with three pounds of  granulated sugar.  When boiling add 3 large, grated  quinces,  after paring. Grate all but the core of  quinces.  Boil from 20 to 25 minutes, until it looks clear. Pour into tumblers. When cold, cover and stand away until used. 
 
   PICKLED  PEACHES   Twelve pounds of  peaches,  1 quart of  vinegar,  3 pounds  brown sugar.  Rub the fuzz from the  peaches.  Do not pare them. Stick half a dozen whole  cloves  in each  peach.  Add  spices  to taste, stick- cinnamon,  whole  cloves  and  mace.  Put  spices  in a small  cheese  cloth bag and do not remove the bag, containing  spices,  when putting away the  peaches.  Scald  sugar,   vinegar  and  spices  together and pour over the  peaches.  Cover closely and stand away. Do this twice, one day between. The third time place all together in a preserving kettle. Cook a few minutes, then place  fruit  in jars, about three-quarters filled. Boil down the  syrup  until about one-quarter has boiled away, pour over the  peaches,  hot, and seal in air-tight jars. This is an old and very good recipe used by "Aunt Sarah" many years. 
 
    CURRANT JELLY   Always pick  currants  for  jelly  before they are "dead ripe,"  and never directly after a shower of rain. Wash and pick over and stem  currants.  Place in a preserving kettle five pounds of  currants  and 1/2 cup of  water;  stir until heated through, then mash with a potato masher. Turn into a  jelly  bag, allow to drip, and to every pint of  currant juice  add one poundof  granulated sugar;  return to preserving kettle. Boil twenty minutes, skim carefully, pour into  jelly  glasses. When cold cover tops of glasses with melted parafine. 
 
    PINEAPPLE HONEY    Pineapple honey  was made in a similar manner to  quince honey,  using one large grated  pineapple  to one quart of  cold water  and three pounds of  sugar.  Boil 20 minutes. 
 
    PRESERVED PINEAPPLE  Pare the  pineapples,  run through a food chopper, weigh  fruit,  and to every pound of  fruit  add three-quarters of a pound of  sugar.  Mix  sugar  and  fruit  together and stand in a cool place over night. In the morning cook until  fruit  is tender and  syrup  clear; skim top of  fruit  carefully; fill jars and seal. 
 
    GRAPE  CONSERVE  Wash and drain ten pounds of ripe  grapes,  separate the  skins  from the  pulp,  stew  pulp  until soft, mash through a sieve, reject  seeds.   Place  pulp  and  skins  in a preserving kettle, add a half pound of seeded  raisins  and  juice  and  pulp  of 4  oranges.  Measure and add to every quart of this 3/4 of a quart of  sugar.  Cook slowly, until the consistency of jam. A cup of coarsely-chopped  walnut meats  may be added, if liked, a few minutes before removing jam from the range. Fill pint jars and seal. 
  
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR  RHUBARB  JAM   Skin  and cut enough  rhubarb  in half-inch pieces to weigh three pounds. Add 1/2 cup  cold water  and 2 pounds of  granulated sugar,  and the grated yellow  rind  and  juice  of 2 large  oranges.  Cook all together, stirring occasionally to prevent scorching, a half hour, or until clear. This is a delicious jam. 
 
    APPLE SAUCE   When making  apple sauce,  cut good,  tart apples  in halves after paring them, cut out the cores, then cook, quickly as possible, in half enough  boiling water  to cover them. Cover the stewpan closely. This causes them to cook more quickly, and not change color. Watch carefully that they do not scorch. When  apples  are tender, turn into sieve. Should the  apples  be quite juicy and the  water  drained from the  apples  measure a half pint, add a half pound of  sugar,  cook 15 or 20 minutes, until it jells, and you have a glass of clear,  amber -colored  jelly.  Add 1 teaspoonful of  butter  and  sugar  to taste to the  apple sauce,  which has been mashed through a sieve.  Apple sauce  made thus should be almost the color of the  apples  before cooking. If the  apple sauce  is not liked thick, add some of the strained  apple juice  instead of making  jelly;  as some  apples  contain more  juice  than others. 
 
    RHUBARB MARMALADE  (AS FRAU SCHMIST MADE IT)  Cut  rhubarb  into small pieces, put in stew-pan with just enough  water  to prevent sticking fast. When cooked tender, mash fine with potato masher, and to three cups of  rhubarb,  measured before stewing, add 1 cup of  granulated sugar,  also 1 dozen  almonds  which had been blanched and cut as fine as possible, and stewed until tender, then added to hot  rhubarb  and  sugar.  Cook all together a short time. Serve either hot or cold. A large quantity may be canned for Winter use.  The addition of  almonds  gave the  marmalade  a delicious flavor. A good  marmalade  may be made by adding the  juice  and  thinly shaved outside  peel of several lemons  to  rhubarb.  Put all together in kettle on range with  sugar.  Cook over a slow fire until proper consistency. Turn into jar, and leave uncovered until day following, when cover and seal air-tight. 
 
    GRAPE FRUIT MARMALADE   For this  marmalade  take 1 large  grape fruit,  2 large  oranges  and 1  lemon.  After thoroughly washing the outside of  fruit,  slice all as thinly as possible, rejecting the  seeds.  Measure and add three times as much  water  as you have  fruit.  Let all stand over night. The next morning boil 15 minutes, stand over night again, in a large bowl or agate preserving kettle. The next morning add 1 pound (scant measure) of  sugar  to each pint of the mixture and boil until it jells. This is delicious if you do not object to the slightly bitter taste of the  grape fruit.  Put in tumblers, cover closely with paraffin. This quantity should fill 22 tumblers, if a large  grape fruit  is used. 
 
    ORANGE MARMALADE   Slice whole  oranges  very thin and cut in short pieces after washing them. Save the  seeds.  To each pound of sliced  oranges  add 3 pints of  cold water  and let stand 24 hours. Then boil all together until the chipped  rinds  are tender. All the  seeds  should be put in a muslin bag and boiled with the  oranges.  Allow all to stand together until next day, then remove the bag of  seeds,  and to every pound of boiled  fruit  add a half pound of  sugar.  Boil continuously, stirring all the time, until the chips are quite clear and the  syrup  thick as  honey  on being dropped on a cold dish. The grated  rind  and juice of 2  lemons  will improve the taste of  marmalade  if added at last boiling. When cooked sufficiently the  marmalade  should be clear. Pour at once into glass jars and cover closely. 
 
    CHERRY  RELISH  After  sour cherries  have been pitted, weigh them and cover  with  vinegar  and let stand 24 hours. Take from the  vinegar  and drain well, then put into stone crocks in layers, with  sugar,  allowing 1 pound of  sugar  to 1 pound of  cherries.  Stir twice each day for ten days, then fill air-tight jars and put away for Winter use. These are an excellent accompaniment to a roast of  meat.  
 
   CANNED  PEACHES   When canning  peaches  make a  syrup  composed of 1 cup of  sugar  to 2 cups of  water.   Place in preserving kettle and when  sugar  has dissolved cook thinly pared  peaches,  either sliced or cut in halves, in the hot  syrup  until clear, watching closely that they do not cook too soft. Place carefully in glass jars, pour hot  syrup  over and seal in jars.  Aunt Sarah also, occasionally, used a wash-boiler in which to can  fruit.  She placed in it a rack made of small wooden strips to prevent the jars resting on the bottom of the boiler; filled the jars with uncooked  fruit  or vegetables, poured over the jars of  fruit  hot  syrup  and over the vegetables poured  water,  placed the jars, uncovered, in the boiler;  water  should cover about half the height of jars. Boil until contents of jars are cooked, add boiling  syrup  to fill  fruit  jars and screw the tops on tightly. 
 
    PEAR  CONSERVE  Use 5 pounds of  pears,  not too soft or over-ripe, cut like dice. Cover with  water  and boil until tender, then add 5 pounds of  sugar.  Peel 2  oranges,  cut in dice the night before using; let diced  orange peel  stand, covered with  cold water  until morning. Then cook until  orange peel  is tender. Add this to the  juice  and  pulp  of the two  oranges.  Add one pound of seeded  raisins  and cook all together until thick  honey.  Put in glass jars and seal. 
 
    LEMON HONEY  The juice of 3  lemons,  mixed with 3 cups of  sugar.  Add 3   eggs,  beating 1 in at a time. Add 2 cups of  water  and 2 tablespoonfuls of  butter.  Cook all together 20 minutes until thick as  honey.  
 
   CANNED STRING BEANS  Aunt Sarah used no preservative when canning  beans . She gathered the  beans  when quite small and tender, no thicker than an ordinary lead-pencil, washed them thoroughly, cut off ends and packed them into quart glass jars, filled to overflowing with  cold water.  Placed jar tops on lightly, and stood them in wash boiler in the bottom of which several boards had been placed. Filled wash boiler with luke  warm water  about two-thirds as high as tops of jars, cooked continuously three to four hours after  water  commenced to boil. Then carefully lifted jars from wash boiler, added  boiling water  to fill jars to overflowing, screwed on cover and let stand until perfectly cold, when give jar tops another turn with the hand when they should be air-tight. A good plan is to run the dull edge of a knife around the outer edge of the jar to be sure it fits close to the rubber, and will not admit air. Beans canned in this manner should keep indefinitely. 
 
   PRESERVED "GERMAN  PRUNES " OR  PLUMS   After washing  fruit,  piece each several times with a silver fork, if  plums  be preserved whole. This is not necessary if pits are removed. Weigh  fruit  and to each pound of  plums  take about 3/4 pound of  granulated sugar.  Place alternate layers of  Plums  and  sugar  in a preserving kettle, stand on the back of range three or four hours, until  sugar  has dissolved, then draw kettle containing  sugar  and  plums  to front of range and boil 20 minutes. Remove scum which arises on top of boiling  syrup.  Place  plums  in glass jars, pour boiling  syrup  over and seal.  A good rule is about four pounds of  sugar  to five pounds of  plums.   Should  plums  cook soft in less than 20 minutes, take from  syrup  with a perforated skimmer, place in jars, and cook  syrup  until as thick as  honey;  then pour over  fruit  and seal up jars. 
  
   BUCKS COUNTY  APPLE BUTTER   A genuine old-fashioned recipe for  apple butter,  as "Aunt Sarah" made it at the farm. A large kettle holding about five gallons was filled with sweet  cider.  This eider was boiled down to half the quantity. The  apple butter  was cooked over a wood fire, out of doors. The  cider  was usually boiled down the day before making the  apple butter,  as the whole process was quite a lengthy one. Fill the kettle holding the  cider  with  apples,  which should have been pared and cored the night before at what country folks call an " apple  bee," the neighbors assisting to expedite the work. The  apples  should be put on to cook as early in the morning as possible and cooked slowly over not too hot a fire, being stirred constantly with a long-handled "stirrer" with small perforated piece of wood on one end. There is great danger of the  apple butter  burning if not carefully watched and constantly stirred. An extra pot of boiling  cider  was kept near, to add to the  apple butter  as the  cider  boiled away. If cooked slowly, a whole day or longer will be consumed in cooking. When the  apple butter  had almost finished cooking, about the last hour, sweeten to taste with  sugar  ( brown sugar  was frequently used).  Spices  destroy the true  apple  flavor, although Aunt Sarah used  sassafras root,  dug from the near-by woods, for flavoring her  apple butter,  and it was unexcelled. The  apple butter,  when cooked sufficiently, should be a dark rich color, and thick like  marmalade,  and the  cider  should not separate from it when a small quantity is tested on a saucer. An old recipe at the farm called for 32 gallons of  cider  to 8 buckets of  cider apples,  and to 40 gallons of  apple butter  50 pounds of  sugar  were used. Pour the  apple butter  in small crocks used forthis purpose. Cover the top of crocks with  paper,  place in dry, cool store-room, and the  apple butter  will keep several years. In olden times sweet  apples  were used for  apple butter,  boiled in sweet  cider,  then no  sugar  was necessary. Small brown, earthen pots were used to keep this  apple butter  in, it being only necessary to tie  paper  over the top. Dozens of these pots, filled with  apple butter,  might have been seen in Aunt Sarah's store-room at the farm at one time. 
 
   CANNED TOMATOES  When canning  red tomatoes  select those which ripen early  in the season, as those which ripen later are usually not as sweet. Wash the tomateos, pour scalding  water  over, allow them to stand a short time, when  skins  may be easily removed. Cut  tomatoes  in several pieces, place over fire in porcelain-lined preserving kettle, and cook about 25 minutes, or until an  orange -colored scum risees to the top. Fill perfectly clean sterilized jars with the hot  tomatoes,  fill quickly before they cool. Place rubber and top on jar, and when jars have become perfectly cold (although they may, apparently, have been perfectly air-tight), the tops should be given another turn before standing away for the Winter; failing to do this has frequently been the cause of inexperienced housewives' ill success when canning  tomatoes.  Also run the edge of a knife blade carefully around the top of the jar, pressing down the outer edge and causing it to fit more closely. Aunt Sarah seldom lost a jar of canned  tomatoes,  and they were as fine flavored as if freshly picked from the vines. She was very particular about using only new tops and rubbers for her jars when canning  tomatoes.  If the wise housewife takes these precautions, her canned  tomatoes  should keep indefinitely. Aunt Sarch allowed her jars of  tomatoes  to stand until the day following that on which the  tomatoes  were canned, to be positively sure they were cold, before giving the tops a final turn. Stand away in a dark closet. 
 
   EUCHERED  PEACHES   Twelve pounds of pared  peaches  (do not remove pits), 6 pounds of  sugar  and 1 gill of  vinegar  boiled together a few minutes, drop  peaches  into this  syrup  and cook until heated through, when place  peaches  in air-tight jars, pour hot  syrup  over and seal. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S METHOD OF CANNING CORN  Three quarts of  sweet corn  cut from the  cob,  1 cup of  sugar,  3/4 cup of  salt  and 1 pint of  cold water.  Place these ingredients together in a large bowl; do this early in the morning and allow to stand until noon of the same day; then place all together in a preserving kettle on the range and cook twenty minutes. Fill  glass jars which have been sterilized. The work of filling should be done as expeditiously as possible; be particular to have jar-tops screwed on tightly. When jars have become cool give tops another turn, to be positive they are air-tight before putting away for the Winter. When preparing this canned  corn  for the table, drain all liquid from the  corn  when taken from the can, pour  cold water,  over and allow to stand a short time on the range until luke-warm. Drain and if not 
 too   salt,  add a small quantity of fresh  water,  cook a few minutes, season with  butter,  add a couple tablespoonfuls of  sweet milk;  serve when hot. This canned  corn  possesses the flavor of  corn  freshly cut from the  cob.  Sarah Landis had used this recipe for years and 'twas seldom she lost a can. 
 
    DRIED SWEET CORN   In season when  ears of sweet corn  are at their best for cooking purposes, boil double the quantity necessary for one meal, cut off kernels and carefully scrape remaining  pulp  from  cob.  Spread on agate pans, place in a hot oven a short time (watch closely) and allow it to remain in a cooled oven over night to dry. When perfectly dry place in bags for use later in the season.  When the housewife wishes to prepare dried  corn  for the table, one cup of the dried  corn  should be covered with  cold water  and allowed to stand until the following day, when place in a stew-pan on the range and simmer slowly several hours; add 1/2 teaspoonful of  sugar,  1 tablespoonful of  butter,   salt,  and  pepper.  This  corn  Aunt Sarah considered sweeter and more wholesome than canned  corn  and she said "No preservatives were used in keeping it."  When  chestnuts  were gathered in the fall of the year, at the farm, they were shelled as soon as gathered, then dried and stored away for use in the Winter. Aunt Sarah frequently cooked together an equal amount of  chestnuts  and dried  corn;  the combination was excellent. The  chestnuts  were soaked in  cold water  over night.  The brown  skin  of the  chestnuts  may be readily removed after being covered with  boiling water  a short time. 
  
    PRESERVED CHERRIES   Aunt Sarah's  preserved cherries  were fine, and this was her way of preparing them: She used 1 pound of  granulated sugar  to 1 quart of pitted  cherries.  She placed the pitted  cherries  on a large platter and sprinkled the  sugar  over them. She allowed them to stand several hours until the  cherries  and  sugar  formed a  syrup  on platter. She then put  cherries,   sugar  and  juice  all together in a preserving kettle, set on range, and cooked 10 minutes. She then skimmed out the  cherries  and boiled the  syrup  10 minutes longer, then returned the  cherries  to  syrup.  Let come to a boil. She then removed the kettle from the fire, spread all on a platter and let it stand in the hot sun two successive days, then put in glass air-tight jars or in tumblers and covered with paraffin. A combination of  cherries  and  strawberries  preserved together is fine, and, strange to say, the flavor of  strawberries  predominates.  A fine flavored perserve is also made from a combinaion of  cherries  and  pineapple.  
 
   FROZEN DESSERTS-AUNT SARAH'S FROZEN " FRUIT  CUSTARD"  One tablespoonful of granulated  gelatine  soaked in enough  milk  to cover. Place 2 cups of  sugar  and 3/4 cup of  milk  in a stew-pan on the range and boil until it spins a thread; that is, when a little of the  syrup  is a thread-like consistency when dripped from a spoon. Allow it to cool. Add dissolved  gelatine  and 1 quart of sweet  cream.  One box of  strawberries,  or the same amount of any  fruit  liked, may be added to the mixture; freeze as ordinary ice  cream.   This dessert as prepared by Aunt Sarah was delicious as any ice  cream  and was used by her more frequently than any other recipe for a frozen dessert. 
 
   SHERBET  Frau Schmidt gave Mary this simple recipe for making any variety of sherbet:   2 cups of  sugar.   1 tablespoonful of  flour,  mixed with the  sugar  and boiled with  1 quart of  water;  when cold, add  1 quart of any variety of  fruit.   Freeze in same manner as when making ice  cream.  
 
   ICE  CREAM  -- A SIMPLE RECIPE GIVEN MARY  When preparing this ice  cream  Mary used the following: Three cups of  cream  and 1 cup of  milk,  1  egg  and 1 cup of pulverized  sugar  (were beaten together until light and creamy). This, with 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla  flavoring, was added to the  milk  and  cream.  The  cream  should be scalded in warm weather. The  egg  and  sugar  should then be added to the scalded  milk  and  cream,  stirring them well together. When the mixture has cooled, strain it into the can of the freezer. Three measures of cracked ice to one of  salt  should be used. The ice and  salt,  well-mixed, were packed around the freezer. Three measures of cracked ice to one of  salt  should be used. The ice and  salt,  well-mixed, were packed around the freezer. Three measures of cracked ice to one of  salt  should be used. The ice and  salt,  well-mixed, were packed around the freezer. The crank was turned very slowly the first ten minutes, until the mixture had thickened, when it was turned more rapidly until the mixture was frozen. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S ICE  CREAM   This recipe for ice  cream  is simple and the ice  cream  is good. A  boiled custard  was prepared, consisting of 1 quart of  milk,  4  eggs,  between 3 and 4 cups of  granulated sugar.  When the custard coated the spoon she considered it cooked sufficiently. Removed from the fire. When cold she beat into the custard 1 quart of  rich cream  and 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla,  turned the mixture into the freezer, packed outside tub with ice and  salt.  It was frozen in the ordinary manner. 
 
   MAPLE PARFAIT  For this rich, frozen dessert Mary beat 4  eggs  lightly, poured slowly over them 1 cup of hot  maple syrup,  cooked in a double boiler, stirring until very thick. She strained it, and when cold  added 1 pint of  cream.  She beat all together, poured into a mold, packed the mold on ice and  salt  and allowed it to stand 3 hours. This is a very rich frozen dessert, too rich to be served alone. It should be served with lemon sherbert or frozen custard with a lemon flavoring, as it is better served with a dessert less rich and sweet. 
 
   ICE  CREAM  MADE BY BEATING WITH PADDLE  This recipe for a delicious and easily prepared ice  cream  was given Mary by a friend living in Philadelphia and is not original. She found the ice  cream  excellent and after having tried the recipe used no other. A custard was made of 1 quart of scalded  milk,  6  eggs,  3 cups of  sugar.  The  eggs  were beaten light, then  sugar  was added, then the hot  milk  was poured over and all beaten together. She put all in a double boiler and stirred about ten minutes, until thick and creamy. A small pinch of  soda  was added to prevent curdling. When the custard was perfectly cold she stirred in three cups of sweet, cold  cream,  flavored with either  vanilla  or  almond flavoring , and beat all together five minutes, then turned the mixture into the freezer, packed well with pounded ice and  coarse salt.  She covered the freezer with the ice and  salt  and threw a heavy piece of old carpet or burlap over the freezer to exclude the air. She let it stand one hour, then carefully opened the can containing the  cream,  not allowing any  salt  to get in the can. With a long, thin-bladed knife she scraped down the frozen custard from the sides of the freezer, and with a thin wooden paddle beat it  hard  and fast for about five minutes. This made the  cream  fine and smooth. Any  fruit  may now be added, and should be mixed in before the  cream  is covered. The  cream  should be beaten quickly as possible and covered as soon as the  fruit  has been added. Aunt Sarah usually made  peach  ice  cream  when  peaches  were in season. Fine, ripe  peaches  were pared and pitted, then finely mashed, 2 small cups of  sugar  being added to a pint of mashed  potatoes . She allowed this  peach  mixture to stand one hour before adding to the  cream,  she fastened the lid and drained off part of the  water  in outer vessel, packed more ice and  salt  about the can in the freezer,  placed a weight on top to hold it down, covered closely with a piece of old carpel to exclude the air, left it stand three or four hours. The beating was all the labor required. The dasher or crank was not turned at all when making the ice  cream,  and when frozen it was delicious.  Mary was told by her Aunt of a friend in a small town, with a reputation for serving delicious ice  cream,  who always made ice  cream  by beating with a paddle, instead of making it by turning a crank in a freezer. 
 
   AUNT SARAH'S RECIPE FOR FROZEN CUSTARD  One quart of rich,  sweet milk,  2 tablespoonfuls of  corn starch,  4  eggs,  1 cup of  sugar,  small tablespoon of  vanilla.  Cook the  milk  in a double boiler, moisten  corn starch  with a little  milk.  Stir it into the hot  milk  until it begins to thicken. Beat  sugar  and  eggs  together until creamy, add to the hot  milk,  cook a minute, remove from the fire, add the  vanilla,  and when cool freeze. Crush the ice into small pieces, for the finer the ice the quicker the custard will freeze, then mix the ice with a fourth of the of the quantity of coare  rock salt,  about 10 pounds ice and 2 pounds  salt  will be required to pack sides and cover top of a four-quart freezer. Place can in tub, mix and fill in ice and  salt  around the can, turn the crank very slowly until the mixture is thoroughly chilled. Keep hole in top of tub open. When mixture is cold, turn steadily until it turns rather  hard.  When custard is frozen, take out inside paddle, close the freezer, run off the  salt water,  repack and allow to stand several hours. At the end of that time it is ready to serve. 
 
    PINEAPPLE CREAM   This is a delicious dessert, taught Mary by Aunt Sarah. She used 1 quart sweet  cream,  1 1/2 cups  sugar,  beaten together. It was frozen in an ice  cream  freezer. She then pared and cut the eyes from one ripe  pineapple  and flaked the  pineapple  into small pieces with a silver fork, sprinkled  sugar  over and let it stand until  sugar  dissolved. She then stirred this into the frozen   cream  and added also the beaten  white of one egg.  Packed ice and  salt  around freezer and allowed it to stand several hours before using. Mary's Aunt always cooked  pineapple  or used canned  pineapple  with a rich  syrup  when adding  fruit  before the  cream  was frozen. 
 
    MARY'S RECIPE FOR  PEACH CREAM   Mary made ice  cream  when  peaches  were plentiful; she used 1 quart of sweet  cream,  sweetened to taste (about 2 cups  sugar ) and 2 quarts of ripe  peaches  mashed and sweetened before adding the  cream.  Freeze in ordinary manner. If  peaches  were not fine flavored, she added a little  almond flavoring . 
 
   LEMON SHERBET  This is the way Frau Schmidt taught Mary to make this dessert. She used for the purpose 1 quart of  water,  5  lemons,  2 tablespoonfuls  gelatine,  2 large cups  sugar.  She soaked the  gelatine  in about 1 cup of  water.  She squeezed out the  juice of lemons,  rejecting  seeds  and  pulp.  She allowed a cup of  water  out of the quart to soak the  gelatine.  This mixture was put in an ice  cream  freezer and frozen. 
 
   FRAU SCHMIDT'S FROZEN CUSTARD   1 1/2 quarts  milk.     2 cups  sugar.   5  eggs.     2 1/2 tablespoonfuls of  flour.    Scald the  milk  in a double boiler. Moisten  flour  (she preferred 
  flour   to  corn starch  for this purpose) with a small quantity of  cold milk,  and stir into the scalded  milk.  Beat together  egg yolks  and  sugar  until light and creamy, then add the stiffly beaten  whites of eggs  and stir all into the boiling  milk.  Cool thoroughly, flavor with  vanilla  and freeze as you would ice  cream.  When partly frozen crushed  strawberries  or  peaches  may be added in season. A little more  sugar  should then be added to the  fruit,  making a dessert almost equal to ice  cream.  In Winter one cup of  dried currants  may be added, also one tablespoonful of  sherry wine,  it liked.   Scald one pint of  sweet milk  in a double boiler. Stir into it one cup of  sugar  and one rounded tablespoonful of  flour,  which had been mixed smoothly with a small quantity of the  milk  before scalding. Add two  eggs  which had been beaten together until light and creamy. At the same time the  milk  was being scalded, a fry-pan containing one cup of  granulated sugar  was placed on the range; this should be watched carefully, on account of its liability to scorch. When  sugar  has melted it will be brown in color and liquid, like  molasses,  and should then he thoroughly mixed with the foundation custard. Cook the whole mixture ten minutes and stand aside to cool; when perfectly cold add a pinch of  salt,  one quart of sweet  cream,  and freeze in the ordinary manner. 
 
    CHERRY  SHERBET  Aunt Sarah taught Mary to prepare this cheap and easily made dessert of the various  berries  and  fruits  as they ripened.  Currants,   strawberries,   raspberries  and  cherries  were used. They were all delicious and quickly prepared. The ice for freezing was obtained from a near-by creamery. The  cherries  used for this were not the common, sour pie  cherries,  so plentiful usually on many "Bucks County Farms," but a fine, large,  red cherry,  not very sour. When about to prepare  cherry  sherbet, Mary placed over the fire a stew-pan containing 1 quart of  boiling water  and 1 pound of  granulated sugar.  Boiled this together 12 minutes. She added 1 tablespoonful of granulated  gelatine  which had been dissolved in a very little  cold water.  When the  syrup  had cooled, she added the  juice  of half a  lemon  and 1 quart of pitted  cherries,  mixed all together. Poured it in the ice  cream  freezer, packed around well with  coarse salt  and pounded ice. She used 1 part  salt  to 3 parts ice. She turned the crank slowly at first, allowed it to stand a few minutes then increased the speed. When the mixture was firm she removed the dasher. She allowed the  water  to remain with the ice and  salt,  as the ice- cold water  helped to freeze it. She filled in ice and  salt  around the can in the freeze and on top of the can;  covered the top of the freezer with a piece of old carpet and allowed it to stand a couple of hours, when it was ready to serve. Almost any  fruit  or  fruit juice,  either fresh or canned, may be made into a delicious dessert by this rule. 
 
    GRAPE  SHERBET   Grape  sherbet was made in this manner: The  grapes  were washed, picked from the stems and placed in a stew-pan over the fire. When hot remove from the fire and mash with a potato-masher and strain through a  jelly  bag, as if preparing to make  jelly.  Boil together 1 pound of  granulated sugar  and 1 quart of  water,  about 12 minutes. While hot add 1 pint of  grape juice  and 1 teaspoonful of granulated  gelatine,  which had been dissolved in a very little  cold water,  to the hot  syrup.  When the mixture was partly frozen add the stiffly beaten  white of 1 egg  and 1 tablespoonful of pulverized  sugar,  beaten together. All were stirred together, covered and stood away until cold. Then place in a freezer, iced as for ice  cream,  and frozen in the same manner as for  cherry  sherbet. The  juice  of all  berries  or  fruits  may be extracted in the same manner as that of  grapes.  
 
   WINES AND  SYRUPS -UNFERMENTED  GRAPE JUICE   To 6 pounds of stemmed  Concord grapes  add 1 quart of  water,  allow them to simmer on range until  grapes  have become soft. Strain through a piece of cheese-cloth, being careful to press only the  juice  through, not the  pulp  of the  grapes.  Return the  grape juice  to the preserving kettle and add 3/4 of a pound of  sugar.  Allow the  juice  to just commence to boil, as cooking too long a time spoils the flavor of the  juice.  Bottle at once, while  juice  is hot. Bottles must be sterilized and air-tight if you expect  grape juice  to keep. Cover corks with sealing wax. 
  
    VINEGAR  MADE FROM  STRAWBERRIES   "Aunt Sarah" Landis possessed the very finest flavored  vinegar  for cooking purposes, and this is the way it was made. She having a very plentiful crop of fine  strawberries  one season, put 6 quarts of very ripe, mashed  strawberries  in a five-gallon crock, filled the crock with  water,  covered the top with cheese-cloth and allowed it to stand in a warm place about one week, when it was strained, poured into jugs and placed in the cellar, where it remained six months, perhaps longer, when it became very sharp and sour, and had very much the appearance of  white wine  with a particularly fine flavor. This was not used as a beverage, but as a substitute for  cider  in cooking. 
 
   BOILED  CIDER  FOR MINCE PIES  In Autumn, when  cider  was cheap and plentiful on the farm, 3 quarts of  cider  was boiled down to one, or, in this proportion, for use in mince  meat  during the Winter. A quantity prepared in this manner, poured while hot in air-tight jars, will keep indefinitely. 
 
    LEMON SYRUP   Boil two cups of  granulated sugar  and one cup of  water  together for a few minutes until the  sugar  is dissolved, then add the  juice  of six well-scrubbed, medium-sized  lemons;  let come to a boil and add the grated yellow  rind  of three of the  lemons.  Be careful not to use any of the  white skin  of the  lemons,  which is bitter. Put in air-tight glass jars. This quantity fills one pint jar. A couple tablespoonfuls added to a tumbler partly filled with  water  and chipped ice makes a delicious and quickly prepared drink on a hot day. 
 
    EGG  NOGG  Add to the stiffly beaten  white of one egg  the slightly beaten   yolk of egg.  Poor into glass tumbler, fill with cold,  sweet milk,  sweeten with  sugar  to taste and a little grated  nutmeg  on top, or a tablespoonful of good  brandy.  This is excellent for a person needing nourishment, and may be easily taken by those not able to take a  raw egg  in any other form. The  egg  nogg will be more easily digested if sipped slowly while eating a  cracker  or slice of crisply  toasted bread.  
 
    ROSE WINE   Gather one quart of rose leaves, place in a bowl, pour over one quart of  boiling water,  let stand nine days, then strain, and to each quart of strained liquid add one pound of  granulated sugar.  Allow to stand until next day, when  sugar  will be dissolved. Pour into bottles, cork tightly, stand away for six months before using. Aunt Sarah had some which had been keeping two years and it was fine. 
 
    DANDELION WINE   Four good quarts of  dandelion  blossoms, four pounds of  sugar,  six  oranges,  five  lemons.  Wash  dandelion  blossoms and place them in an earthenware crock. Pour five quarts of  boiling water  over them and let stand 36 hours. Then strain through a muslin bag, squeezing out all moisture from  dandelions.  Put the strained  juice  in a deep stone crock or jug and add to the grated  rind  and  juice  of the six  oranges  and five  lemons.  Tie a piece of cheese-cloth over the top of jug and stand it in a warm kitchen about one week, until it begins to ferment. Then stand away from stove in an outer kitchen or cooler place, not in the cellar, for three months. At the end of three months put in bottles. This is a clear,  amber,  almost colorless liquid. A pleasant drink of medicinal value. Aunt Sarah always used this recipe for making  dandelion wine,  but Mary preferred a recipe in which  yeast  was used, as the  wine  could be used in a short time after making. 
  
    DANDELION WINE  (MADE WITH  YEAST )  Four quarts of  dandelion  blossoms. Pour over them four quarts of  boiling water;  let stand 24 hours, strain and add grated rine and  juice  of two  oranges  and two  lemons,  four pounds of  granulated sugar  and two tablespoonfuls of home-made  yeast.  Let stand one week, then strain and fill bottles. 
 
    GRAPE FRUIT  PUNCH  Two cups of  grape juice,  4 cups of  water,  1 1/2 cups of  sugar,  juice of 3  lemons  and 3  oranges,  sliced  oranges,   bananas  and  pineapples.  Serve the punch in sherbet glasses, garnished with Marachino  cherries.  
 
   A SUBSTITUTE FOR  MAPLE SYRUP   A very excellent substitute for  maple syrup  to serve on hot griddle cakes is prepared from 2 pounds of either brown or  white sugar  and 1 3/4 cups of  water,  in the following manner: Place the stew-pan containing  sugar  and  water  on the back part of range, until  sugar  dissolves, then boil from 10 to 15 minutes, until the mixture thickens to the consistency of  honey.  Remove from the range and add a few drops of  vanilla  or "mapleine" flavoring. A tiny pinch of  cream of tartar,  added when  syrup  commences to boil, prevents  syrup  granulating; too large a quantity of  cream of tartar  added to the  syrup  would cause it to have a sour taste. 
 
    SALTED ALMONDS  OR  PEANUTS   Blanch 2 pounds of shelled  almonds or peanuts  (the  peanuts,  of course, have been well roasted) by pouring 1 quart of  boiling water  over them. Allow them to stand a short time. Drain and pour  cold water  over them, when the  skin  may be easily removed. Place in a cool oven until dry and crisp. Put a small quantity of  butter  into a pan. When hot, throw in the  nuts  and stir for a few minutes, sprinkle a little  salt  over. Many  young cooks do not know that salted  peanuts  are almost equally as good as  salted almonds  and cheaper.  Peanuts  should always be freshly roasted and crisp. 
 
    PEANUT BUTTER   When  peanuts  have been blanched, are cold, dry and crisp, run them through a food chopper. Do not use the 
 very finest  cutter, as that makes a soft mass. Or they may be crushed with a rolling pin. Season with  salt,  spread on thinly-sliced, buttered  bread.  They make excellent sandwiches. Or run  peanuts  through food chopper which has an extra fine cutter especially for this purpose. The  peanuts  are then a thick, creamy mass. Thin this with a small quantity of  olive oil,  or melted  butter,  if preferred. Season with  salt  and you have " peanut butter, " which, spread on slices of buttered  bread,  makes a delicious sandwich, and may frequently take the place of  meat  sandwiches.  Nuts,  when added to salads,  bread  or cake, add to their food value. 
 
   A CLUB SANDWICH  On a thinly-cut slice of  toasted bread  lay a crisp  lettuce leaf  and a thin slice of  broiled bacon.  On that a slice of cold, boiled  chicken  and a slice of ripe  tomato.  Place a spoonful of mayonnaise on the  tomato,  on this a slice of  toasted bread.  Always use  stale bread  for  toast  and if placed in a hot oven a minute before toasting it may be more quickly prepared. 
 
   CANDIES- WALNUT MOLASSES  TAFFY  Place 2 cups of New Orleans  molasses  and 3/4 cup of  brown sugar  in a stew-pan on the range and cook; when partly finished cooking (this may be determined by a teaspoonful of the mixture forming a soft ball when dropped in  water ), add 1 tablespoonful of  flour,  moistened with a small quantity of  water,  and cook until a teaspoonful of the mixture becomes brittle when dropped in  cold water;  at this stage add 1 scant teaspoonful of baking   soda  (salaratus). Stir, then add 1 cup of coarsely chopped black  walnut meats;  stir all together thoroughly, and pour into buttered pans to become cool. 
 
    COCOANUT  CREAMS  Grate 1 medium sized  cocoanut,  place in a bowl, add 2 pounds of confectioners'  sugar,  mix with the  cocoanut;  then add the stiffly beaten  white of 1 egg  and 1 teaspoonful of  vanilla;  knead this as you would  bread  for 10 or 15 minutes. If the  cocoanut  is a large or a dry one, about 1/2 pound more  sugar  will be required. Shape the mixture into small balls, press halves of English  walnut meats  into each ball, or have them plain, if preferred. Stand aside in a cool place a half hour. Melt a half cake of Baker's unsweetened  chocolate,  add a half teaspoonful of paraffin, roll the small balls in this  chocolate  mixture until throroughly coated. Place on waxed  paper  to dry. From the ingredients in this recipe was made 3 pounds of candy. 
 
   FUDGE (AS MADE BY MARY)  Two cups of  granulated sugar,  1 cup of  sweet milk,  1/4 cup of  butter,  1/4 cake or 2 squares of Baker's unsweetened  chocolate.  Cook all together until when tried in  water  it forms a soft ball. Remove from fire, flavor with  vanilla,  beat until creamy, pour in buttered pan and when cooled cut in squares. 
 
   A DELICIOUS " CHOCOLATE  CREAM" CANDY  Place in an agate stew-pan 2 cups of  granulated sugar,  1 cup of  sweet milk,   butter  size of an  egg.  Cook all together until it forms a soft ball when a small quantity is dropped into  cold water.  Then beat until creamy. Add a half a cup of any kind of chopped  nut meats.  Spread on an agate pie-tin and stand aside to cool.  For the top layer cake 1 cup of  sugar,  1/2 cup  milk  and  butter  size of an  egg,  2 small squares of a cake of Baker's unsweetened   chocolate.  Cook together until it forms a soft ball in  water.  Beat until creamy. Add half a teaspoonful of  vanilla,  spread over top of first layer of candy and stand away until it hardens and is quite cold. 
 
   MARY'S RECIPE FOR  MOLASSES  TAFFY  Four tablespoonfuls New Orleans  molasses,  9 tablespoonfuls  sugar,  3 tablespoonfuls  water,  2 teaspoonfuls  butter,  1 teaspoonful  vanilla.  Boil all together until it becomes brittle when a small quantity is dropped in  water.  Pour the mixture into buttered pans and when cool enough to handle, pull with the hands until a light creamy yellow shade. Pull into long, thin strips, cut into small pieces with scissors. This taffy is fine if boiled a long enough time to become crisp and brittle, and you will be surprised at the quantity this small amount of  sugar  and  molasses  will make. 
 
   RECIPE FOR MAKING  HARD SOAP  WITHOUT BOILING  To make  hard soap  without boiling, empty a can of "Lewis Perfumed Lye" (or any other good, reliable brand of lye) into a stone jar with 1 tablespoonful powdered borax. Add 2 1/2 pints of  cold water  to the lye. Stir until dissolved. Be very careful not to allow any of the lye to touch hands or face. Wear old gloves when emptying can and stirring lye. Stand the dissolved lye in a cool place. The tin cans containing the  fat  to be used for  soap  (which have accumulated, been tried out, strained, and put in empty tin cans at different times) should be placed in the oven of range for a few minutes. When warm they may be turned out readily into a large stew-pan. Put over fire, and when all has dissolved and melted, strain through cheese-cloth bag into an agate dish pan. When weighed you should have 5 1/2 pounds of clear  fat.  A recipe telling exact quantity of  fat  and lye usually comes with can of lye. When temperature of  fat  is 120 degrees by your thermometer (luke-warm), the lye should have been allowed to stand about 1 hour from the time it was dissolved. It should then be the right temperature to mix with strained, luke-warm  fat  or  grease  not over 80 degrees by thermometer.  Now slowly pour the dissolved lye over the  fat  (a half cup of  ammonia  added improves  soap ), stir together until lye and  grease  are thoroughly incorporated, and the mixture drops from the stirrer like  honey.  The  soap  may be scented by adding a few drops of  oil of cloves,  if liked. Stir the mixture with a small wooden paddle or stick. Stir slowly from 5 to 10 minutes, not longer, or the lye and  fat  may separate. Pour all into a large agate dish pan lined with a piece of clean muslin. Throw an old piece of carpet over the top and stand near the range until evening, when, if made early in the morning, a sold cake of  soap,  weighing 8 1/2 pounds, may be turned out on a bake-board (previously covered with brown  paper ) and cut into 20 pieces of good  hard soap.  Lay the pieces of  soap  in a basket, cover to protect from dust, and stand in a warm room to dry throughly before using.  Soap  made according to these directions should be solid and almost as  white  as ivory if the  fat  used has not been scorched.  This  soap  is excellent for scrubbing and laundry purposes. The greater length of time the  soap  is kept, the better it will become. The  grease  used may be clarified by adding  water  and cooking a short time. Stand away and wheen cool remove  fat  from top, wiping off any moisture that may appear.  Soap -making is a 
 small economy . Of course, the young housewife will not use for  soap  
 any  fat   which could be utilized for frying, etc., but she will be surprised to find, when she once gets the saving habit, how quickly she will have the quantity of  fat  needed for a dollar's worth of  soap  by the small outlay of the price of a can of lye, not counting her work. The young, inexperienced housewife should be careful not to use too small a stew-pan in which to heat the  fat,  and should not, under any circumstance, leave the kitchen while the  fat  is on the range, as grave results might follow carelesness in this respect. 
 
   TO IMITATE  CHESTNUT  WOOD  Before painting the floor it was scrubbed thoroughly with the following: One-half cup of "househ old ammonia " added to four quarts of  water.  The floor, after being well scrubbed with this, was wiped up with pure, c lean water  and allowed to  get perfectly dry before painting. For the ground, color or first coat of paint on the floor, after the cracks in floor had been filled with putty or filler, mix together five pounds of  white lead,  one pint of turpentine and about a fourth of a pound of yellow ochre, add 1 tablespoon of Japan dryer. This should make one quart of paint a light tan or straw color, with which paint the floor and allow it to dry twenty-four hours, when another coat of the same paint was given the floor and allowed to dry another twenty-four hours, then a graining color, light  oak,  was used. This was composed of one pint of turpentine, one teaspoon of graining color and two tablespoons of  linseed oil,  and 1 tablespoon of Japan dryer, all mixed together. This was about the color of  coffee  or  chocolate.  When the wood had been painted with this graining color, before drying, a fine graining comb was passed lightly over to imitate the grain of wood. This was allowed to dry twenty-four hours, when a coat of floor varnish was given. The room was allowed to dry thoroughly before using. The imitation of natural  chestnut  was excellent. 
 
 
 
 
   MEASURES AND WEIGHTS  When a recipe calls for one cup of anything, it means one even cup, holding one-half pint, or two gills.  One cup is equal to four wine glasses.  One wine glass is equal to four tablespoons of liquid, or one-quarter cup.  Two dessertspoonfuls equal one tablespoonful.  Six tablespoonfuls of liquid equal one gill.  Two tablespoonfuls dry measure equal one gill.  Two gills equal one cup.  Two cups, or four gills, equal one pint.  Four cups of flour weigh one pound and four cups of flour equal one quart.  One even cup of flour is four ounces.  Two cups (good measure) of granulated sugar weigh one pound and measure one pint.  Two cups butter equal one pound.  A pint of liquid equals one pound.  A cup of milk or water is 8 ounces.  Two tablespoonfuls liquid equal one ounce.  One salt spoonful is 1/4 teaspoonful.  Four tablespoonfuls equal one wine glass.  Piece of butter size of an egg equals two ounces, or two tablespoons.  A tablespoonful of butter melted means the butter should be first measured then melted.  One even tablespoonful of unmelted butter equals one ounce.  One tablespoonful sugar, good measure, equals one ounce.  Ordinary silver tablespoon was used for measuring, not a large mixing spoon.  
   COOKING SCHEDULE TO USE WITH THE OVEN THERMOMETER OF A GAS STOVE 
   To Cook-   
 Cook for-    Bread, white..............280°  
 40 minutes    Biscuit, small............300°  
 30 minutes    Biscuit, large............300°  
 30 minutes    Beef, roast rare..........300°  
 15 minutes per pound    Beef, roast well done.....320°  
 15 minutes per pound   
  Cake, Fruit..............260°  
 2 hours.   
  Cake, Sponge.............300°  
 30 minutes.    Cake, Loaf...............300°  
 40 minutes   
  Cake, Layer..............300°  
 15 minutes.    
 Cake, Cookies............300°  
 5 minutes.    Chickens..................340°  
 2 hours    Custards..................260° to 300°  
 20 minutes.    Duck......................340°  
 3 hours    Fish......................260° to 300°  
 1 hour    Ginger Bread..............260° to 300°  
 20 minutes.    Halibut...................260° to 300°  
 45 minutes.    Lamb......................300°  
 3 hours    Mutton, rare..............260° to 300°  
 10 minutes per pound    Mutton, well done.........300°  
 15 minutes per pound    Pie crust.................300°  
 30 minutes    Pork......................260° to 300°  
 2 1/2 hours    Potatoes..................300°  
 1 hour   
  
 Puddings, Bread..........260° to 300°  
 1 hour   
  
 Puddings, Plum...........260° to 300°  
 1 hour    Puddings, Rice...........260° to 300°  
 30 minutes   
  
 Puddings, Tapioca........260° to 300°  
 30 minutes    Rolls.....................260° to 300°  
 20 minutes    Turkeys...................280°  
 3 hours  
   Veal......................280  
 2 1/2 hours  
  When a teacher of "Domestic Science," the Professor's wife was accustomed to using a pyrometer, or oven thermometer, to determine the proper temperature for baking. She explained its advantages over the old-fashioned way of testing the oven to Mary and gave her a copy of the "Cooking Schedule," to put in her recipe book, which Mary found of great assistance, and said  she would certainly have a range with an oven thermometer should she have a home of her own, and persuaded Aunt Sarah to have one placed in the oven door of her range.  THE END.  
    INDEX TO RECIPES   PAGE  Small Economies, "Left-Overs" or "Iverich Bleibst" ...... 
 162    The Many Uses of Stale Bread  ... 
 164   "Brod Grummella" ........................................ 
 155   "Croutons" and Crumbs ................................... 
 165   "Zweibach" .............................................. 
 166   German Egg Bread ........................................ 
 166   Creamed Toast ........................................... 
 167    Bread and Rolls  ................. 
 167   "Bucks County" Hearth-Baked Rye Bread ................... 
 171   Frau Schmidt's Good White Bread (Sponge Method) ......... 
 173   Excellent Graham Bread .................................. 
 173   Graham Bread (An Old Recipe) ............................  174   "Mary's" Recipe for Wheat Bread ......................... 
 174   Frau Schmidt's Easily-Made Graham Bread ................. 
 175   Whole Wheat Bread ....................................... 
 176   Nut Bread ............................................... 
 176   "Frau" Schmidt's "Quick Bread" .......................... 
 177   An "Oatmeal Loaf" ....................................... 
 178   "Aunt Sarah's" White Bread (Sponge Method) .............. 
 179   Recipe for Pulled Bread ................................. 
 180   Aunt Sarah's "Hutzel Brod" .............................. 
 180   Aunt Sarah's White Bread and Rolls ...................... 
 182   Aunt Sarah's Raised Rolls ............................... 
 183   Clover-Leaf Rolls ....................................... 
 183   "Polish" Rye Bread (As Baked in Bucks County) ........... 
 183   Perfect Breakfast Rolls ................................. 
 184   An Old Recipe for Good Bread ............................ 
 185   Steamed Brown Bread ..................................... 
 185   A Wholesome Bread (Made From Bran) ...................... 
 186   "Frau" Schmidt's "Hutzel Brod" .......................... 
 186   Aunt Sarah's "Quickly Made Brown Bread .................. 
 187   "Stirred" Oatmeal Bread ................................. 
 187   Nut and Raisin Bread .................................... 
 188    "Saffron" Raisin Bread .................................. 
 188    PAGE   Bread and Rolls-(Continued)    Raised Rolls ............................................ 
 189   "Grandmother's" Fine Raised Biscuits .................... 
 190   "Stirred" Bread ......................................... 
 191   Potato Biscuits ......................................... 
 192   Aunt Sarah's Potato Yeast ............................... 
 192    Raised Cakes  ................... 
 193   "Perfection" Potato Cakes ............................... 
 193   Mary's Recipe for Cinnamon Buns ......................... 
 194   "Kleina Kaffe Kuchen" ................................... 
 194   "Grossmutter's" Potato Cakes ............................ 
 195   Aunt Sarah's "Bread Dough" Cake ......................... 
 196   "Good, Cheap" Dutch Cakes ............................... 
 196   Recipe for "Light Cakes" (Given to Mary by a Farmer's Wife) .......................................... 
 197   Butter "Schimmel" ....................................... 
 197   "Bucks County" Doughnuts ................................ 
 198   Extra Fine "Quaker Bonnet" Biscuits ..................... 
 198   Bucks County Cinnamon "Kuchen" .......................... 
 199   Moravian Sugar Cakes .................................... 
 200   "Mary's" Potato Cakes ................................... 
 200   "German" Raisin Cake ....................................  201   "Kaffee Krantz" (Coffee Wreath) ......................... 
 202   "Mondel Krantz" ........................................ 
 203   The Professor's Wife's Recipe for Dutch Cakes ........... 
 204   Farmer's Pound Cake ..................................... 
 204   German "Coffee Bread" ................................... 
 205   "Fast Nacht Kuchen" (Doughnuts) ........................ 
 206   "Kaffee Kuchen" (Coffee Cake) ........................... 
 207   "Streusel Kuchen" .......................................  207    Muffins, Biscuits, Griddle Cakes and Waffles  .... 
 208   Sally Lunn (As Aunt Sarah Made It) ...................... 
 208   Aunt Sarah's Recipe for "Johnny Cake" ................... 
 209   "Mary's" Breakfast Muffins .............................. 
 209   Rice Muffins ............................................ 
 209   Indian Pone ............................................. 
 210   "Pfannkuchen" (Pancakes) ................................ 
 210   "Extra Fine" Baking Powder Biscuits ..................... 
 210   "Flannel" Cakes Made From Sour Milk ..................... 
 211   "Flannel" Cakes With Baking Powder ...................... 
 211     PAGE   Muffins, Biscuits, Griddle Cakes, Etc.-(Continued)    Frau Schmidit's Recipe for Waffles ...................... 
 211   "Crumb" Corn Cakes ...................................... 
 212   Grandmother's Recipe for Buttermilk Waffles .............  212   "Bread" Griddle Cakes ................................... 
 212   Never Fail "Flannel" Cakes .............................. 
 213   Waffles Made From Sweet Milk and Baking Powder .......... 
 213   "Bucks County" Buckwheat Cakes .......................... 
 213   Delicious Corn Cakes .................................... 
 214   Rice Waffles (As Aunt Sarah Made Them) .................. 
 214   "German" Egg-Pancakes (Not Cheap) ....................... 
 215   "Frau Schmidt's" Griddle Cake Recipe .................... 
 215   Mary's Recipe for Corn Cakes ............................  215   Aunt Sarah's Delicious Cream Biscuits ................... 
 216   Mary's Muffins .......................................... 
 216   "Corn Muffins" (As Made by Frau Schmidt) ................ 
 217   Strawberry Short Cake (As Frau Schmidt Made It) ......... 
 217   Perfection Waffles ...................................... 
 218   Recipe for Making "Baking Powder" ....................... 
 218    Fritters, Croquettes, Dumplings and Crullers  
 219   "Kartoffle Balla" (Potato Balls) ........................ 
 220   "Boova Shenkel" ......................................... 
 220   Rice Balls With Cheese .................................. 
 221   "Kartoffle Klose" ....................................... 
 221   Rice Croquets (and Lemon Sauce) ......................... 
 222   Corn Oysters ............................................ 
 222   Banana Fritters ......................................... 
 223   Parsnip Fritters ........................................ 
 223   Aunt Sarah's "Schnitz and Knopf" ........................ 
 224   A Very Old Recipe for "Knopf" (or Dumplings) ............ 
 224   "Kartoffle Kuklein" (Potato Fritter or Boofers) ......... 
 224   Rosettes, Wafers and Rosenkuchen ........................ 
 225   "Bairische Dampfnudehn" ................................. 
 226   "Heller Bluther Kuklein" ................................ 
 226   "Apyl Kuklein" (Apple Fritters) ......................... 
 227   Dumplings Made From "Bread Sponge" ...................... 
 227   "Leber Klose" (Liver Dumplings) ......................... 
 228   Frau Schmidt's "Old Recipe for Schnitz and Knopf" ....... 
 229   "Brod Knodel" or Bread Dumpling .........................  230   "German" Pot Pie ........................................ 
 230    PAGE   Fritters, Croquettes, Dumplings, Etc.-(Continued)     "Zwetchen Dampfnudehn" .................................. 
 231   Green Corn Fritters ..................................... 
 231   "Mouldasha" (Parsley Pies) .............................. 
 232   Inexpensive Drop Crullers ............................... 
 232   Batter Baked With Gravy ................................. 
 232   "German" Sour Cream Crullers ............................ 
 233   Grand mother's Doughnuts ................................ 
 233   Fine "Drop Crullers" .................................... 
 234    Soups and Chowders  ............. 
 234   Vegetable Soup .......................................... 
 235   "Marklose" Balls for Soup ............................... 
 236   Egg Balls for Soup ...................................... 
 236   "Suppee Schwangen" ...................................... 
 236   Cream of Oyster Bouillon ................................ 
 237   "German" Noodle Soup .................................... 
 237   Cream of Celery ......................................... 
 238   Oyster Stew ............................................. 
 238   Clam Broth .............................................. 
 238   Turkey Soup ............................................. 
 239   Cream of Pea Soup ....................................... 
 239   Tomato Soup ............................................. 
 239   "Frau" Schmidt's Clam Soup .............................. 
 239   Clam Chowder ............................................ 
 240   Brown Potato Chowder .................................... 
 240   Bean Chowder ............................................  241   Bouillon ................................................ 
 241   "Farmer's" Rice ......................................... 
 241   Philadelphia "Pepperpot" ................................ 
 242   "German" Vegetable Soup ................................. 
 243   A Cheap Rice and Tomato Soup ............................ 
 243    Fish, Clams and Oysters  ........ 
 243   Boned Shad .............................................. 
 243   Croquettes of Cold Cooked Fish .......................... 
 244   Shad Roe ................................................ 
 244  Scalloped Oysters ...................................... 
 245  Deviled Oysters ......................................... 
 245   Planked Shad ............................................ 
 246   Broiled Mackerel ........................................ 
 246   Codfish Balls ........................................... 
 246    PAGE   Fish, Clams and Oysters-(Continued)    Fried Oysters ........................................... 
 247   Panned Oysters .......................................... 
 247   Oysters Steamed in the Shell ............................ 
 248   A Recipe Given Mary for "Oyster Cocktail" ............... 
 248   Oyster Croquettes ...................................... 
 248   Frau Schmidt's Way of Serving "Oyster Cocktails" ........ 
 249   Salmon Loaf ............................................. 
 249   Creamed Salmon .......................................... 
 249   Oyster Canapes .......................................... 
 250    Meat  ........................... 
 250   "Sauergebratens" (German Pot Roast) ..................... 
 251   "Hungarian Goulash" ..................................... 
 252   Broiled Steak .......................................... 
 252   Stewed Shin of Beef ..................................... 
 253   Hamburg Steak ........................................... 
 253   Meat Stew With Dumplings ................................ 
 254   Extending the Meat Flavor ............................... 
 255   Preparing a Pot Roast ................................... 
 256   Stuffed Breast of Veal .................................. 
 257   "Gedampftes Rinderbrust" ................................ 
 257   "Paprikash" ............................................. 
 257   Beef Stew ............................................... 
 258   Savory Beef Roll ........................................ 
 258   Veal Cutlets ............................................. 259   Meat "Snitzel" ......................................... 
     Sirloin Steaks ......................................... 
 259   Meat Balls .............................................. 
 260   Veal Loaf ............................................... 
 260   Sweet Breads (Breaded) .................................. 
 261   Fried "Liver and Bacon" ................................. 
 261   Beef Steak Served With Peas ............................. 
 261   Creamed "Dried Beef" .................................... 
 262   Creamed Sweetbreads ..................................... 
 262   Meat Croquetres ......................................... 
 263   Stewed Rabbit ........................................... 
 263   Roast Lamb .............................................. 
 263   "Gefullte Rinderbrust" (Stuffed Breast of Beef) German Style ............................................ 
 263   Fried Peppers With Pork Chops ........................... 
 264    PAGE   Meat-(Continued)     Boiled Ham ............................................ 
 264   Sliced Ham ............................................. 
 264   Roast Pork ............................................. 
 265   Pork Chops ............................................. 
 265   "Home-Made" Sausage .................................... 
 265   Aunt Sarah's Method of Keeping Sausage ................. 
 266   Souse .................................................. 
 266   Utilizing Cold Meat "Left-Overs" ....................... 
 267    Fowl  .......................... 267  Roast Chicken or Turkey ................................ 
 267   Bread Filling (As Aunt Sarah Prepared It)............... 
 268   Fried Chicken With Cream Gravy ......................... 
 269   Stewed or Steamed Chicken .............................. 
 270    Vegetables  .................... 
 270   White Potatoes ......................................... 
 270   Baked Potatoes ......................................... 
 271   Various Ways of Using Small Potatoes ................... 
 271   Scalloped Potatoes .................................... 
 273   Candied Sweet Potatoes ................................. 
 273   Sweet Potato Croquettes................................. 
 274   Potato Chips ........................................... 
 274   Fried Eggplant ......................................... 
 274   Baked Stuffed Peppers .................................. 
 275   Chili (As Prepared in New Mexico) ...................... 
 275   Baked Cabbage .......................................... 
 275   Crimson Creamed Beets .................................. 
 276   Buttered Beets ......................................... 
 276   Pickled "Mangelwurzel" ................................. 
 276   German Steamed Cabbage ................................. 
 277   Bean "Snitzel" ......................................... 
 277   Boiled Spinach ......................................... 
 277   Fried Onions and Potatoes ..............................  278   Steamed Asparagus (Fine) ............................... 
 278   Pasture Mushrooms ...................................... 
 278   Steamed Mushrooms (Delicious) .......................... 
 279   Stewed Tomatoes ........................................ 
 279   Sweet Corn ............................................. 
 280   Fried Tomatoes With "Cream Sauce" ...................... 
 280   Baked "Stuffed Tomatoes" ............................... 
 280    Page   Vegetables-(Continued)    "Canned Tomatoes," Fried or (Tomato Fritters)........... 
 281   "Bucks County" Baked Beans ............................. 
 281   Cooked Hominy .......................................... 
 282   Grated Parsnip Cakes ................................... 
 282   To make "Sauer Kraut" ................................. 
 283   Dumpling's to Serve With "Sauer Kraut" .................  284   Parsley Dried to Preserve Its 
 Green Color  ... 
 285   Time Required to Cook Vegetables   ... 
 285    Common Cream Sauce  ............ 
 286    Preparation of Savory Gravies  . 
 287    The Good Flavor of "Browned Flour"  .. 
 287    Butter, Cheese and Suet  ....... 
 283   A Substitute for Butter (As Aunt Sarah Prepared It) .... 
 288   "Butter"-As It Was Made at the Farm, "By Aunt Sarah" ................................................. 
 289   "Smier Kase," or Cottage Cheese ........................ 
 290   Uses of Sweet Drippings and Suet ....................... 
 291    Eggs  .......................... 292  "Eierkuchen," or Omelette .............................. 
 292   Hard Boiled Eggs ....................................... 
 292   Soft Boiled Eggs ....................................... 
 293   An Egg and Tomato Omelette ............................. 
 293   Mushroom Omelette ...................................... 
 294   A Clam Omelette ........................................ 
 294   Deviled Eggs ........................................... 
 294   Eggs in Cream Sauce .................................... 
 295   Aunt Sarah's Method of Preserving Eggs in "Water Glass" ................................................. 
 295   To Test Fresh Eggs ..................................... 
 296    Salads ......................... 297  Aunt Sarah's Salad Dressing ............................ 
 297   Dutch cucumber Salad ................................... 
 298   Carrot Salad ............................................ 298   "An Old Recipe" for Chicken Salad ....................... 298   German Potato Salad .................................... 
 299   German Turnip Salad .................................... 
 299   "German" Salad Dressing ............................... 
 299   Mary's Potato Salad .................................... 
 300   Mary's Recipe for Salad Dressing ....................... 
 300   PAGE    Salads-(Continued)     "Fruit" Salad Dressing ................................. 
 300   Grape Fruit Salad ...................................... 
 300   "A Good, Inexpensive" Salad Dressing ................... 
 301   Imitation "Lobster Salad" .............................. 
 301   "German" Horseradish Sauce ............................. 
 301   Mayonnaise Dressing (In Which Olive Oil is Used) ....... 
 302   Mustard Dressing to Serve With Sliced Tomatoes ......... 302  Chicken Salad .......................................... 
 302   Pepper Hash ............................................ 
 303   German Bean Salad ...................................... 
 303   Meat Salads ............................................ 
 304    Beverages  ..................... 
 305   Coffee ................................................. 
 305   Cocoa .................................................. 
 305   Chocolate ..............................................  306   Boiled Water .......................................... 
 306   Tea .................................................... 
 306   Iced Tea ............................................... 
 307    Puddings  ...................... 307  Rice Pudding ........................................... 
 308   Frau Schmidt's Apple Dumplings ......................... 
 308   "Caramel Custard" as Mary Prepared It .................. 
 309   Aunt Sarah's Bread Pudding ............................. 
 309   "Steamed" Bread Pudding ................................ 
 309   An Economical "Bread and Apple Pudding" ................ 
 310   Cup Custards ........................................... 
 310   Frau Schmidt's Graham Pudding .......................... 
 310   "Sponge" Bread Pudding (Sauce) ......................... 
 311   Aunt Sarah's Cottage Pudding (Sauce) ................... 
 311   Apple "Strudel" ........................................ 
 312   "Lemon Meringue" Pudding ............................... 
 312   Suet Pudding (Sauce) ................................... 
 313   Steamed Fruit Pudding (Sauce) .......................... 
 313   Corn-Meal Pudding ...................................... 
 314   Huckleberry Pudding .................................... 
 314   Tapioca Custard ........................................ 
 314   Delicious Baked Peach Pudding .......................... 
 315   Caramel Custard ........................................ 
 315   "Aunt Sarah's" Rhubarb Pudding ......................... 
 315     PAGE   Puddings-(Continued)     "Vanilla Sauce" for Rhubarb Pudding .................... 
 316   Rice Custard ........................................... 
 316   "Mary's" Cup Pudding (From Stale Bread) (Sauce) ........ 
 316   "Buckwheat Minute" Pudding ............................. 
 317   Peach Tapioca .......................................... 
 317   Aunt Sarah's Plain Boiled Pudding ...................... 
 317   Pudding Sauce .......................................... 
 317   Apple Tapioca .......................................... 
 318   Steamed Walnut Pudding ................................  318   "Cornmeal Sponge" Pudding ............................. 
 318   Mary's Corn Starch Pudding ............................. 
 319   Apple Johnny Cake (Served as a Pudding) ................ 
 319   A Good and Cheap Tapioca Pudding ....................... 
 319   "Gotterspeise" ......................................... 
 320   Spanish Cream .......................................... 
 320   Graham Pudding ......................................... 
 320   "Pennsylvania" Plum Pudding (For Thanksgiving Day) (Sauce) ........................................... 
 320   "Slice" Bread Pudding .................................. 
 321    Cereals  ....................... 
 321   Oatmeal Porridge ....................................... 
 321   Cooked Rice ............................................ 
 322   Cornmeal Mush .......................................... 
 323    Macaroni  ...................... 
 324   Baked Macaroni and Cheese ..............................  324    Cakes  ......................... 
 325   Cake Making ............................................ 
 325   Frau Schmidt's Lemon Cake .............................. 
 327   Fine "Krum Kuchen" ..................................... 
 328   Aunt Sarah's "Quick Dutch Cakes" ....................... 
 328   A Reliable Layer Cake .................................. 
 328   Boiled Icing ........................................... 
 329   A Delicious "Spice Layer Cake" (Icing) ................. 
 329   An Inexpensive Cocoa Cake .............................. 
 330   Aunt Sarah's Walnut Gingerbread ........................ 
 330   Aunt Sarah's "German Crumb Cakes" Baked in Crusts ...... 
 331   "Sour Cream" Molasses Cake ............................. 
 331   Economy Cake ........................................... 
 332   Ginger Cake ............................................ 
 332   PAGE  Cakes-(Continued)    A Very Economical German Clove Cake (Icing:) ........... 
 333   Cake Icing for Various Cakes ........................... 
 333   Mary's Recipe for "Hot Milk Sponge" Cake ............... 
 334   Cheap "Molasses Gingerbread" ........................... 
 334   Aunt Sarah's Extra Fine Large Sponge Cake .............. 
 335   Angel Cake (Aunt Sarah's Recipe) ....................... 
 335   Aunt Sarah's Good and Cheap "Country Fruit Cake" ....... 
 336   A "Sponge Custard" Cake ................................ 
 336   Custard ................................................ 
 336   Grandmother's Excellent "Old" Recipe for Marble Cake ................................................... 
 337   Mary's Molasses Cakes .................................. 
 337   Chocolate Icing for Molasses Cake ...................... 
 338   Hickory Nut Cake ....................................... 
 338   "Light Brown" Sugar Cake ...............................  338   "Angel Food" Layer Cake ............................... 
 339   Mary's Chocolate Cake .................................. 
 339   Cocoa Filling .......................................... 
 339   A Cheap Orange Cake ................................... 
 340   Frau Schmidt's Molasses Cake ........................... 
 340   Apple Sauce Cake ....................................... 
 340   Icing .................................................. 
 341   "Schwarz" Cake (and Chocolate Filling) ................. 
 341   Apple Cream Cake ....................................... 
 342   Apple Cream Filling for Cake ........................... 
 342   A "Half Pound" Cake .................................... 
 342   A Delicious Icing (Not Cheap) .......................... 
 342   Cocoanut Layer Cake .................................... 
 343   The Filling ............................................ 
 343   Gold Layer Cake ........................................ 
 343   Sunshine Sponge Cake .................................. 
 343   An Inexpensive Dark "Chocolate Layer Cake" ............. 
 344   Angel Cake ............................................. 
 344   Mary's Chocolate Loaf (Made With Sour Milk) ............ 
 345   Inexpensive Sunshine Cake .............................. 
 345   Mary's Recipe for Orange Cake and Filling for Cake ..... 
 345   Roll Jelly Cake ........................................ 
 346   Aunt Sarah's Cinnamon Cake ............................. 
 346   Gelb Kuchen (Yellow Cake) .............................. 
 347   PAGE  Cakes-(Continued)     Devil's Food Cake ...................................... 
 347   A Cheap Cocoanut Layer Cake ............................ 
 348   Lady Baltimore Cake and Icing .......................... 
 348   An Inexpensive "White Fruit Cake" ...................... 
 348   A Good and Cheap "White Cake" .......................... 
 349   Chocolate Icing (Very Good) ............................ 349  Tip-Top Cake ........................................... 
 349   Orange Cake and Filling ................................ 
 350   Cheap Sponge Cake ...................................... 
 350   Caramel Cake and Icing ................................. 
 350   A White Cake ........................................... 
 351   "Dutch" Currant Cake (No Yeast Used) ................... 
 351   An "Old Recipe" for Coffee Cake ........................ 
 352   A "Cheap" Brown Sugar Cake ............................. 
 352   Frau Schmidt's "German Christmas Cake" ................. 
 352   Aunt Sarah's "Shellbark Layer Cake" .................... 
 352   Imperial Cake (Baked for Mary's Wedding) ............... 
 353   A Light Fruit Cake (for Christmas) ..................... 
 353   English Cake (Similar to a White Fruit Cake) ........... 
 353   Grandmother's Fruit Cake (Baked for Mary's Wedding) ............................................... 
 354   An Old Recipe for Pound Cake ........................... 
 354   "Bucks County" Molasses Cakes (Baked in Pastry) ........ 
 354   "Brod Torte" ........................................... 
 355   A Delicious Chocolate Cake ............................. 
 355   Chocolate Icing ........................................ 
 355   A White Cocoanut Cake .................................. 
 355   A Potato Cake (No Yeast Required) ...................... 
 356   A Citron Cake .......................................... 
 356   Aunt Amanda's Spice "Kuchen" ........................... 
 357   A Good, Cheap Chocolate Cake ........................... 
 357   An Ice Cream Cake ...................................... 
 357   Small Sponge Cakes ..................................... 
 357    Small Cakes and Cookies  ....... 
 357   "Aunt Sarah's" Little Lemon Cakes ...................... 
 357   Oatmeal Crisps ......................................... 
 358   Aunt Sarah's Ginger Snaps .............................. 
 359   German "Lebkuchen" (Icing).............................. 
 359   Grandmother's Molasses Cakes ........................... 
 360   PAGE Small Cakes and Cookies-(Continued)    Angel Cakes (Baked in Gem Pans) ........................ 
 360   "Almond Brod" .......................................... 
 360   "Grossmutter's" Honey Cakes ............................ 
 361   Lemon Wafers or Drop Cakes ............................. 
 362   Frau Schmidt's Sugar Cookies ........................... 
 362   Almond Macaroons ....................................... 
 362   "Honig Kuchen" (Honey Cakes) ........................... 
 363   Frau Schmidt's Molasses Snaps .......................... 
 363   Hickory Nut Cakes ...................................... 
 363   "Lebkuchen" ............................................ 
 364   Fruit Jumbles .......................................... 
 364   Brown Pfeffernussen .................................... 
 364  > Small Oatmeal Cakes .................................... 
 365   Frau Schmidt's Recipe for "German" Almond Slices ....... 
 365   "July Ann's" Ginger Snaps .............................. 
 366   Cocoanut Cookies ....................................... 
 366   Chocolate Cookies ...................................... 
 366   Small "Belsnickel" Christmas Cakes ..................... 
 367   "Pennsylvania Dutch" Kisses ............................ 
 367   Little Crumb Cakes ..................................... 
 367   Delicious Vanilla Wafers (As Mary Made Them)............ 
 368   Macaroons (As Aunt Sarah Made Them) .................... 
 368   "Springerles" (German Christmas Cakes) ................. 
 368   Oatmeal Cookies ........................................ 
 369   Peanut Biscuits ........................................ 
 369   Plain Cookies .......................................... 
 370   Walnut Rocks ........................................... 
 370   Cinnamon Wafers (As Aunt Sarah Made Them}............... 
 370   Zimmet Waffles (As Made by Frau Schmidt) ............... 
 371   "Braune Lebkuchen" ..................................... 
 371   Peanut Cookies ......................................... 
 371    Pies  .......................... 
 372   Flaky Pie Crust ........................................ 
 372   Aunt Sarah's Lemon Pie ................................. 
 373   The Professor's Wife's Superior Pastry ................. 
 373   Mary's Lemon Meringue (Made With Milk) ................. 
 374   Apple Tart ............................................. 
 375   Raisin or "Rosina" Pie ................................. 375   Snitz Pie .............................................. 
 376    PAGE   Pies-(Continued)     Mary's Recipe for "Plain Pumpkin" Pies ................. 
 376   Chocolate Pie .......................................... 
 376   "Pebble Dash," or Shoo Fly Pie (As Aunt Sarah Made It) ............................................... 
 377   Vanilla Crumb "Crusts" (the Crumbs for Crusts).......... 
 377   "Kasha Kuchen" or Cherry Cake .......................... 
 378   "Rivel Kuchen" ......................................... 
 378   Aunt Sarah's Lemon Meringue ............................ 
 378   A Country Batter Pie ................................... 
 379   Pumpkin Pie (Aunt Sarah's Recipe) ...................... 
 379   White Potato Custard (Aunt Sarah's Recipe) ............. 
 380   "Rhubarb Custard" Pie .................................. 380   "Lemon Apple" Pie ...................................... 
 380   Green Currant Pie ...................................... 
 380   A Country "Molasses" Pie ............................... 
 381   A Mock Cherry Pie ...................................... 
 380   Aunt Sarah's Custard Pie ............................... 
 380   Plain Rhubarb Pie ...................................... 
 382   Mary's Cream Pie ....................................... 
 382   Apple Custard Pie ...................................... 
 383   Lemon Pie With Crumbs .................................. 
 383   Aunt Sarah's Butter Scotch Pie ......................... 
 383   Green Tomato Mince Meat ................................ 
 383   Orange Meringue (a Pie) ................................ 
 384   Grandmothers Recipe for "Mince Meat" ................... 
 384   "Twentieth Century" Mince Meat ......................... 
 385   A "Dutch" Recipe for Pumpkin Pie ....................... 
 385   Mary's Cocoanut Custard Pie ............................ 
 386   Grape Pie .............................................. 
 386   Sour Cherry Pie ........................................ 
 386   Aunt Sarah's "Strawberry" Pie .......................... 
 387   "Florendine" Pie ....................................... 
 387   Aunt Sarah's "Cheese Cake," or Pie ..................... 
 387   "Frau" Schmidt's Lemon Pie ............................. 
 388    Pickles  ....................... 388  Spiced Cucumbers ....................................... 
 388   Mixed Sauce to Serve With Meats ....................... 
 389   Pepper Relish ......................................... 
 389   Pickled Red Cabbage .................................... 
 389    PAGE   Pickles-(Continued)     Mustard Pickles ........................................ 
 390   Aunt Sarah's Cucumber Pickles .......................... 
 390   "Rot Pfeffers" Filled With Cabbage ..................... 
 391   An Old Recipe for Spiced Pickles ....................... 
 391   Aunt Sarah's Recipe for "Chili Sauce" .................. 
 392   Tomato Catsup .......................................... 
 392   Pickled Beets .......................................... 
 393    Marmalades, Preserves and Canned Fruits  . 
 393   "Frau" Schmidt's Recipe for Apple Butter ............... 
 394   Cranberry Sauce ........................................ 
 394   Preserved "Yellow Ground Cherries" ..................... 
 395   "Wunderselda" Marmalade ................................ 
 395   Aunt Sarah's Spiced Pears .............................. 
 395   Peach Marmalade ........................................ 
 396   Aunt Sarah's Ginger Pears .............................. 
 396   Pear and Pieapple Marmalade ............................ 
 397   Grape Butter ........................................... 
 397   Canned Sour Cherries ................................... 397   Candied Orange Peel .................................... 
 397   Aunt Sarah's "Cherry Marmalade" ........................ 
 398   Aunt Sarah's "Quince Honey" ............................ 
 398   Pickled Peaches ........................................ 
 398   Currant Jelly .......................................... 
 398   Pineapple Honey ........................................ 
 399   Preserved Pineapple .................................... 
 399   Grape Conserve ......................................... 
 399   Mary's Recipe for Rhubarb Jam .......................... 
 400   Apple Sauce ............................................ 
 400   Rhubarb Marmalade as "Frau Schmidt" Made It ............ 
 400   Grape Fruit Marmalade .................................. 
 401   Orange Marmalade ....................................... 
 401   Cherry "Relish" ........................................ 
 401   Canned Peaches .........................................  402   Pear Conserve .......................................... 
  402   Lemon Honey ............................................ 
  402   Canned String Beans .................................... 
 403   Preserved "German Prunes" or Plums ..................... 
 403   "Bucks County" Apple Butter ............................ 
 404   Canned Tomatoes ........................................ 
 404    PAGE   Marmalades, Preserves & Canned Fruits-(Continued)     Euchered Peaches ....................................... 
 405   Aunt Sarah's Method of Canning Corn .................... 
 405   Dried Sweet Corn ....................................... 
 406   Preserved Cherries ..................................... 
 407    Frozen Desserts  ............... 407  Aunt Sarah's Frozen "Fruit Custard" .................... 
 407   Sherbet ................................................ 
 407   Ice Cream (A Simple Recipe Given Mary) ................. 
 408   Frau Schmidt's Ice Cream ............................... 
 408   Maple Parfait .......................................... 
 408   Ice Cream Made by Beating With Paddle .................. 
 409   Aunt Sarah's Recipe for Frozen Custard ................. 
 410   Pineapple Cream ........................................ 
 410   Mary's Recipe for Peach Cream .......................... 
 411   Lemon Sherbet .......................................... 
 411   Frau Schmidt's Frozen Custard .......................... 
 411   Caramel Ice Cream ...................................... 
 412   Cherry Sherbet ......................................... 
 412   Grape Sherbet .......................................... 
 413    Wines and Syrups  .............. 
 413   Unfermented Grape Juice ................................ 
 413   Vinegar Made From Strawberries ......................... 
 414   Boiled Cider for Mince Pies ............................ 
 414   Lemon Syrup ............................................ 
 414   Egg Nogg .............................................. 
 414   Rose Wine .............................................. 
 415   Dandelion Wine ........................................ 
 415   Dandelion Wine (Made With Yeast) ....................... 
 416   Grape Fruit Punch ...................................... 
 416   A Substitute for Maple Syrup ........................... 
 416    Salted Almonds or Peanuts  ..... 
 416   Peanut Butter ......................................... 
 417   A Club Sandwich ........................................ 
 417    Candies  ....................... 
 417   Walnut Molasses Taffy .................................. 
 417   Cocoanut Creams ........................................ 
 418   Fudge (As Made by Mary) ................................ 
 418   A Delicious Chocolate Cream Candy ...................... 
 418   Mary's Recipe for Molasses Taffy ....................... 
 419      PAGE  Recipe for Making Hard Soap Without Boiling ............ 
 419   To Imitate Chestnut Wood ............................... 
 420   Measures and Weights ................................... 
 422   Cooking Schedule ....................................... 
 423