Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 23, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 December 1893 — Page 8

HOME KNICKKNACKS.

ARTICLES THAT MAY BE PRODUCED :*TL WITHIN THE FAMILY CIRCLE

^Directions For Making a Decorated Portfolio—Convenient Case* For Knives and Forks—Scrap book a and Simple Picture

Poxzles For the Little Children.

To make an inexpensive portfolio purchase an ordinary pad or block of paper, =8 by 16- inches, and place two or three "thicknesses of blotting paper on the face of the block. Cover the other side •which has the pasteboard back with gray linen, which should be cut one inch larger on each side than the size of the block.' This extra inch is to be brought over to the face of the block and sewed at the corners to form an outride frame for it

Over this place a cover in book fashion made of canvas cut double and bound around with, worsted braid.

AN INEXPENSIVE PORTFOLIO.

Make pockets on the in/ride of the covers to accommodate paper, envelopes and stamps, with straps for lead pencils and penholder. Decorate the outside of the cover with flowers, either painted or embroidered, and tie the covers together with silk ribbons.

A convenient case for a set of knives and forks that are used only occasionally la appreciated by every provident housewife. A pretty model suggested is made of felt in two shades—olive green, with a lining of robin's egg bluo felt. Cut both of the strips 80 inches long and 12 inches wide, and pink them on all sides, rounding the corner of one end.

On tho inner one of blue stitch two pinked strips of tho felt 80 inches long and 2 inches wide, placing each of them about three inches toward the center from the pinked sides, and sew tho strips in alternate large and fiinull loops to hold the knives and forks as illustrated.

Stitch two Hups along both sides of the case inside of tho scallops to fold over the ends of tho knives and forks to secure them. These flaps should be 4 inches wide. Ribbons for tying the case must be fastened to the flaps.

Very little children are made happy and kept quiet for hours with a scrapbook made of varicolored leaves of window curtaining Holland. Tho edges are out fagged and tied together with ribbons at tho back. Pretty advertising pictures, cut out in relief, aro pasted into the book. Tho book, like the dolls, does not tear.

A simple picture puzzle may please Budge or Toodle. Cut up a brightly colored picture (such as will interest a child) into irregular pieces, some larger and

CASE ron

KNIVES AND

FORKS.

Others smaller. Paste tho pieces on cardboard and trim edges neatly. Put all together in a pretty box, and his little lordship may find much pleasure in putting tho pieces together again and making the picture. Theso helpful suggestions were originally made for the benefit of The Household.

Recipe For Pumpkin Pie.

For each pie mix two tablespoonfuls of rifted pumpkin, tho yolk of an egg, half a teacopful of sugar, a teacupful of milk, a little cream and half a teaspoonful of ginger lastly add the beaten white of the egg. Dust cinnamon or grate a little nutmeg over each pie just before placing it iu tho oven.

Cleaning Carpet* on Floor*.

During the winter season the carpet the sitting room or other place much need often requires cleaning in the middle of the season when it is not practicable to lift it from the floor and send to the cleaners. To clean it on the floor, first sweep it very thoroughly then ecour with warm water to which one pint of oxgall has been added for three gallons of water. Rinse with plenty of water and wipe dry as possible with Clash towels. This will dean a large carpet 20 feet square and not only extract grease but brighten the colors.

Old Time Wafers

Mix four spoonfuls of flour, the same quantity of sugar and the same of cream with a spoonful of butter, and season with orange peel (grated), mace and nutmeg. Cream the butter first, add sugar, flour, cream and seasoning, and beat well. Bake in wafer irons, rolling while hot, and afterward filling with raspberry or strawberry jam. This old fashioned dainty is one of my childhood's cherished memories—first, watching them made, and then the taste of them afterward as they melted in my mouth.

Plain Fritters

Beat the whites and yolks of 2 eggs separately. Add 2 cups of milk to the yolks and beat gradually into 2 cups of sifted flour. Add the whites of the eggs and heat well. Fry by the spoonful in deep, hot fat

HOW TO SERVE DINNERS

Two Course Dinners—Serving and Removing a Four Course Dinner. In removing the meat course

removing the meat course from a dinner table, if no salad is to follow but the dessert comes at once, the mode of procedure is as follows: Remove the plates first, next the sauce dishes if ary have been used—that is, clear the table before each person before taking the main dishes from the table. It is usual to serve as much as possible from *lte sideboard. Where this is not done the next in order is tho meat then vegetables, bread, and whatever small dishes may be on the table. Take the salt and pepper dishes on a separate tray, and place tray and all upon the sideboard. When this is done, remove the crumbs from the table before serving the next course.

It may l)e of assistance to some reader to give the most universal mode of serving and removing a four course dinner— ie„a dinner to consist of the following courses: Soup roast, potatoes, vegetables salads dessert, coffee.

The table is set with the silver needed for all the courses, including the dessert and coffee, the bread and butter plates, napkins and soup plates—i. e., a plate at each place. The soup is served by the hostess. As each soup plate is removed the dinner plate is put in its place then the soup removed to the kitchen. The roast is put before the host, the vegetables and bread being kept upon and served from the sideboard. Remove the dishes for this course as described above, leaving the bread and butter plates, also salt and pepper, upon the table until the salad is removed.

The salad is usually prepared upon the plates. If not, it should be placed before the hostess to be served, ana in this case after clearing the table a salad plate should be placed before each person before bringing the salad to the table. Remove the salad plates, the bread and butter plates, the salad, then the pepper and salt dishes, etc. Xs soon as the crumbs are cleared from the table a plate should be placed before each person, then the dessert served.

It is a matter of preference in regard to the coffee whether it should be served with or after the dessert. When there is time, especially when there are guests in the house, perhaps there is no nicer way than that of serving the coffee in the library or sitting room after all have left the table. In this case, of course, no provision is made for it on the dining table, according to Table Talk, from which the foregoing is gleaned.

One Way to Cook Steak.

It is not always convenient to broil a beefsteak, but there is away of cooking It that gives almost if not quite as satisfactory results. Heat the frying pan quite hot. In this put the steak. No butter nor grease, remember, nor salt. Allow the steak merely to glaze over. Then turn it quickly, turning it often until it is done. When it is done, lay it on a hot platter, butter and salt it, and you will find it delicious and juicy. Allowing the steak to heat but a moment on each side sears it over and retains all Its sweet juices, and salting it at the last moment while on the platter draws out these juices.

An Apple Shortcake.

One-half cup each of sugar, butter and milk, two cups of flour, a teaspoonful of cream tartar, half that amount of soda. Bake in four j^lly cake pans. Four large apples-grated, an egg, a cup of sugar, the grated rind and juice of a lemon. Let it come to a boil and spread between the cake like jelly. Some prefer to eat this cold, in which case do not spread the apple filling until cake and filling are both cold.

For the llaby's Picture.

A baby'8 picture may be effectively framed at a very small expense by following these directions from Country Gentlemen:

Out of apiece of heavy pasteboard or (better) millboard, such as is used for book covers, cut a circular piece 7 inches in diameter. In the center of this round out a circular opening 4 inches in diameter. The sizes given are for what are known as cabinet photographs. Cover this round of pasteboard with a layer of cotton batting, put on loosely and held in place with a few long stitches.

From a delicate shade of rose or blue silk cut a strip 8| inches wido and 1 yard long. It will puff more gracefully if cut on a true bias. Sew together and

&RCGUUI FRAME OF IKDIA SILK,

press all seams. Gather each edge with a strong thread. Sew one edge of this puff around the inside opening of the teboard circle about half an inch the edge on the side not covered with the batting, making the gathers as even as possible. Draw the silk through the opening and over the outer edge of the circle, fasten in place with slip stitches—that is, stitches taken into but not through tne pasteboard. Do not draw the silk tightly, but let it puff softly over the cotton.

Cut a circle of heavy rose or blue paper to match the silk about six inches in diameter, and after putting the photograph in place, paste it over the back,, using stiff flour paste, not forgetting to pat a loop of ribbon exactly at the top to suspend the frame by. A pretty variety can be had by using brocades of •mall flowers on light grounds and making the frames oval in shape instead of round.

ilSlill^

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY2*EVENING MAIL. DECEMBER 2,1893

ON PAPER HANGING.

fttrtng the Walls—How to Cat, Paste and Hans the Paper. it?'

Often a room is entirely transformed by anew paper of pleasing pattern and harmonious colorings. Fortunately fcr the great majority of housewives, very pretty designs and attractive colorings are to be found in the wall papers of medium cost hence, when one becomes his own paper hanger the expense of newly papered rooms is comparatively small.

Paper hanging is not such a difficult process when the apartment is low, though a high room is trying, as it requires s^ much reaching tall steps. If the walls have never been papered before, they should be washed with vinegar and water. all cracks in the plaster filled a a it putty, and the whole sized before the papering process commences. New plastered walls must-palso be sizedl&fiThe size is made by sbak-

FLOWER-DE-LUCE PAT- ing a pint of linTEKN. seed in a pail of cold water over flight, the seed in a cheesecloth bag, from which all the mucilage must be squeezed* Give bag and all a good boil for 15 minutes and apply the size with a whitewash brush, advises The Housewife.

The paper should be first cut in lengths two inches longer than the wall, care being taken to match the pattern from the marks given on the margin. Cat off the left baud edge of each piece, and lay the lengths one over the other on along, firm table. There should be two workers, one to paste and one to hang the paper. Begin at the window of the room, working from left to right.

The pasted length should first be held about afoot from tlie top and laid, evenly against the wall. See that it hangs cenp from the steps, take the lower end, lift it a little from the wall and let it fall gently into place without a crease. Then with a clean, large, soft cloth press the paper to the wall down the middle from top to bottom.

Avoid large patterns for small rooms and select colors with a view to the pet, draperies, etc., of the apartme: North rooms ought to" have light hangings. A pretty pattern for the drawing room is the flower-de-luce so popular |n other lines of decoration. It is quite the fashion nowadays to have the border repeat the principal design in the paper. In some of the papers the pattern merges into the frieze in an artistic banner, giving the idea of a spiral decoration for the apartment. *,#*'

Crocheted Lace Edge.

A pretty lace edging may be easily crocheted by readers understanding the art, if they will only follow these instructions from The Housewife:

Make a chain the length required. 1st row: S. c. in 2d stitch chain 6, miss 4 stitches, s. c. in next. Repeat from to

PATTERN FOR LACE TDGINO.

the end of the row turn. 2d row: S. c. 11 times under the first two loops of chain, s. c. 6 times under next, turn chain 6, s. c. in top of next loop chain 6, s. c. in top of next loop, turn, s. c. 11 times in loop of 6 chain, s. c. 6 times under the next loop, turn chain 6, s. c. in top of next loop, turn, s. c. 11 times under top loop s. c. 6 times under each of the half loops down the side s. c. 11 times under next loop, s. c. 6 times under next loop, turn, chain 6. Repeat from the second six chain you make this time join to loop on bust point you

made-

A Fruit Cake Recipe.

The season is at hand when fruit cake is in greatest demand. The following recipe from Good Housekeeping is therefore presented: .........,n

If fruit cake yon essay to make, One pound of sugar you must take Three pounds of raisins Hoar, one pound Two pounds of currants cloves, well ground Three-quarters pound of better one Gill of molasses. This being done,

1

One and one-quarter pounds you'll take Of citron, and eight eggs you'll break: One nutmeg and one-half, and one Half gill of brandy add. This done. And all well mixed, with care you'll bake Twill make eight pounds of fine fruitcake.

Homely Hints.

Very hot soda in a solution, applied with a soft flannel, will remove paint splashes.

Turn the garments inside out and let the air and sunshine disinfect and deodorize them. All night airing is good, but a day of sunshine and wind is better. "Roman toilet paste" is merely white of egg, barley, flour and honey.

Your dress skirts will wrinkle lees if folded right side out. Violet and orris make the best combination for bureau and chiffonier sachets. The orris imparts a delicious odor of cleanliness and the violet gives just the suspicion of actual fragrance that is

THE SOCIAL JAPANESE.

Their Theaters, Dramatic Performances Vr and Stage and Scenic Effects,

The Japanese are an essentially social aitd active minded race, much resembling the Peloponnesian Greeks of old times. When not employed in study, commerce or agriculture, they seldom appear content to lounge away their leisure, but want to enjoy themselves definitely and in society. Everywhere the traveler comes across picnic parties, water parties, dinner and tea parties gardefas, tea houses, temples, all offer facilities for merrymaking, and tha company cannot be accused cfei such occasions of taking itspleasure sadly,

for

every

member thereof is chattering, laughing, singing and doing his or her best to make matters go off cheerily.

Among the favorite entertainments of the

populace,

dramatic performances have

always held a high place, and a great ac-» tor is ffilly as much appreciated among the Japanese as among ourselves. We had an opportunity of seeing Danjolo, commonly called the "Irving of Japan," in one of his principal characters. The building in which the performance took place, though built of wood and slightly decorated, is, in many respects, nof unlike a good sized London theater. The floor of the house is divided into little jsquare boxes, in which kneel the audiencej men, women and children. From the main entrance to the stage runs a gangway, somewhat elevated above the floor. This is called the flowery path and serves not only as a means of access to the boxes oh either side but also 'as an approach by which some of the principal actors make a sensational entrance on the scene.

A large gallery, divided like the parterre, runs around three sides of the house and is reached from an outside balcony. European spectators taking seats'in the gallery are accommodated with chairs. The main difference between an English and a Japanese stage lies in the fact that the whole of the center part of the latter, which'is of Considerable size, is round and turns on a pivot.

The scenery rims across the diameter of the reversible part so while one scene is before the audience another is being set behind, and when wanted is simply wheeled around to the front. This certainly saves a great deal of time and scene shifting, but might be difficult to manage with the very elaborate adornments demanded by a modern European public. Japanese scenery is sufficient and historically correct, and for indoor scenes, at least, far less furniture is required than with'.us to truthfully represent a native interior.

To remove the impedimenta at the, sides, or anything which has to be taken away during the progress of a scene, little, black figures, with black veils over their faces, like familiars of the Inquisition, come in and are supposed to be invisible. Japanese politeness is never inconveniently clearsighted.—Nineteenth Century.

'1 Ellen Terry's Characters,

Miss Terry thinks—and rightly, too— that a dress should do much to indicate tho character Of the woman who is wearing it, as witness the dress she wears as Lady Macbeth, which looks like a coiling snake. "I could' have gone mad," She said, "as Ophelia, much more comfortably in black than in white. But, ohl the little ins and outs of which the public know nothing. Hamlet and Othello #iust be black, then Ophelia and Desdemona must be white."

Then on the question of studying a part. Any schoolgirl can learn the words of a part, but that is a very different thing to knowing and growing up, as it were, with the character you are called upon to conceive and create. To study means to know, to know means to be. I saw one of her books. Its leaves were iifterspersed with almost as many notes as there was type—notes on the character of the woman, period, costume, surroundings,, influences. One little note reads: "Character— Undemonstrative—Singing voice— About 25. She ought to bo nice looking, for the king of France took her without any dower. Every servant in the court loves her—indeed, the court fool pines away when she goes to France."

Some half dozen books, all for the same character, are full of notes of this kind. She loves Beatrice and Ophelia the best, and the shortest and smallest part she ever played was only a year or two ago, when she went on at. an amateur performance and the applause which greeted her would scarcely allow her to give her one and only line, "Please, ma'am, are you hin or are you hout?"—-Strand Magazine.

1

v?

f.

A Recipe For Mincemeat.

Here is The Housewife's recipe for making mincemeat: Three pounds of tender, lean beef, pounds of suet, 2 pounds of chopped apples, 2 of raisins, 2 of currants, 1 of citron, 2 of sugar, 1 gill of rosewater, the juice of 4 lemons and the peel preserved and chopped fine, 1 pint of brandy. Have salt, mace, cloves, allspice, pepper, cinnamon and ginger pulverized in the proportions you like, and add sugar to your taste. Never use much mace or cloves. Mix it thoroughly. Cider or wine added when the pies are baked greatly improves them.

You Never Heard a Dentist

say that SOZODONT was not a good article to preserve the teeth and gums This fact is not to be controverted. What gives it such prominence as a curative wash? It is compounded, after years of scientific plodding, of materials calculated to.harden the gums, remove the septic acid, and avoid putrefaction.

So all ladies say of SPAUIJDING'S GLUE. They use it to make Lovers stick.

A Watermelon Eater's Plight.

A1 Winn, a 60-year-old colored man living at 8500 South Broadway, submitted to a peculiar operation at the City hospital for a peculiar ailment. It was the cutting out of 2,000 watermelon seeds from his internal mechanism.

The old man had been in a watermelon patch over in East St. Louis. He was enjoying himself finely, when he was disturbed by the approach of some one. Seizing a large, fine green melon, he "lit out." He soon realized, though, it would be impossible to carry that melon very much longer. If it was only on the inside, however, it would be all right. With this thought In his mfnd he began to throw huge chunks of melon down his throat, still running lik§ a deer. didn'fc^tjjp to chew. He dldn^t evSa stop to spit out the seeds. Winn has a mouth like the opening of a coal mine, and "everything went" into its black depths. When the old man concluded he was out of danger he stopped running andXound that the entire big melon was gone. He did not experience any particular inconvenience from his gigantic meal for a couple of days." Then he had the "worstest" stomach ache he ever had. He was doubled up with horrible cramps for* a day and then cam& to the hospital. Dr. Marks cut Winn open and got a quart of seeds.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

Col. Clark,

U. 8. Army, writes: For the last two years, my health has been excellent this, I think, is due to my using Sulphur Bitters, as formerly my health wss miserable, owing to the frequent changes of climate, etc., so incident to a soldier's life.

Care Toamlt

Don't pay large doctor's bille. The best medical book published, one hundred pages, elegant colored plates, will be sent you on receipt of three 2-cent

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LOUIS D. VANDERVERE, One of the best known lJuslnoss men in Chicago) representative of ths great Bradstreet Oo, HEADACHE, SLEEPLESSNESS, NERVOUS /V PROSTRATION. 7*"

Dr. Miles Medical Co., JEtkhart, Xnd. jGentlemen: I take pleasure in informing you of the very beneficial results which have followed: the use of Djt. MILES' RCCTOMATIVK NCKVINC in the case of myself and wife, tor a year I was subject to a distressing pain at the base of the brain and upper portion of the spinal cord. I __ lost flesh and was greatly fT I ID |1 troubled with sleeplessness.

V/wrltift/ your Nervine was highly recommended to ma My case had been so obstinate that I had no confidence in the efficacy or any medicine. Yet as a last resort I consented to give it atrial. Much to my surprise, I experienced marked benefit my sleeplessness disappeared my headache was removed my spirits and general health greally improv­THOUSANDS ed. I SOON OAINCD TWKNTY POUNDS. ALL THIS OCCURRED

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DR.MiLES' PI LLS, 50 DOSES 25 CTS.

1894.'

Harper's Magazine.

ILLUSTRATED.

HARPEB'S MAGAZINE for 1894 will maintain the character that has made it the favorite lllustiated periodical for the home. Among the results of enterprises undertaken by the publishers, there will appear during the year superbly illustrated papers on India by EDWIN LORD WEEKS, on the Japanese Seasons by ALFBED PARSONS, on Germany by POULTNEY BIGELOW. on Paris by RICIIAKD HARDING DAVIS, and on Mexico by FHKDEKIO REMINGTON.

Among the other notable features of the year will be novels by George DU MAURIEK and CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER, the personal reminiscences of W. D. HOWELLS, and eight short stories of Western frontier life oy OWEN WISTER. Short stories will also be contributed by BRANDER MATTHEWS, RICHARD HARDING Davis, MARY K. WILKINS, RUTH MCENERY STUART, Miss LAURENCE ALMA TADKMA, GEORGE A. Hum KD, QUESNAY DE BEAURKPAIRE, THOMAS' NELSON PAGE, and others. Articles on topics of current Interest will be contributed by distinguished specialists.

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BI-CHLORIDE OF GOLD CURE

For LIQUOR, OPIUM and TOBACCO Habits at 106 south Tenth-and-a-half streets. A. H. Brown, solicitor, and Dr. J. T. LAUGHEAD,

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Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life Away is the truthful, startling title of a little book that tells all about No-to-bac, the wonderful, harmless Guaranteed tobacco habitcure. The cost Is trilling and the man who wants to quit and can't runs no physical or financial risk In using "No-to- bac." Sold by A. F. Miller.

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894.^

IS Harper's Weekly. &

ILLUSTRATED.

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W* '-r &

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Address: HARPER A BROTHERS, New Yom.

1894.

Harper's Bazar.

ILLUSTRATED.

Harper's Bazar is a Journal for the homo. It gives the fullest and latest information about Fashions audits numerous illustrations, Paris designs, and pattern-sheet sup-

Sress-maker

lements are indispensable alike to the homo and the professional modiste. No expense is spared to make its artistic attractiveness of the highest order. Its bright stories, amusing comedies, and thoughtful essays satisfy all tastes, and its last page is famous as a budget of witand humor. In its weekly Issues everything Is inoludod which is of Interest to women. Tho Serials for 1894 will bo written by William Black and Walter Besant. Short stories will be written by Mary E. Wilkins, Maria Louise Poot, Ruth McEnery Stuart, Marion Harland, and others. Out-door Sports, and lu-door Games, Social Entertainment Kmbroldery, and other Interesting topics will receive constant attention. A new series is promised of "Cofl'ee and Repartee."

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The Volumes of the Bazar begin with tho first Number for January of each year. When no time Is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with tho Number current at tho time of receipt of order.

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IS

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-THE-

St. Louis Globe-Democrat,

To GLOBE PRINTING CO., St. Louis, Mo.

Remit by Bank Draft, Post-office or Express Money Order, or Registered Letter. Sample copies will be pent free on application.

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blank clipped from the published at

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.......V.,.. .Please, send the Tuesday and Friday

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LOUISVILLE xr.

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