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			Mothers and Daughters.
				IN A PICKLE
		Almost everything green, and some things
		not green, make good picles. In making,
		however, avoid recipes which recommend
		using a brass kettle in which to boil the vine-
		gar. A brass kettle is never clean, no matter
		how clean it looks and the acid in the vinegar
		takes off layers of the brass with which to del-
		icately poison your system. If you must have
		brilliantly green pickles, don't make them
		green with brass. Using brass to make your
		pickles green is like coloring butter; it doesn't
		improve the butter and it doesn't improve you
		when you eat it.
		There are a few points worth remembering
		in pickle making. Cider vinegar will not eat
		up your pickles. It is not a very handsome
		vinegar, however, and white wine vinegar
		must be used for all really delicate pickles,
		like white onions and cauliflowers. Grape
		leaves packed with pickles assist in keeping
		them firm, as does alum boiled in the vinegar.
		Never put pickles in a greasy tub or jar. Pick-
		les gather scum when left standing; a gener-
		ous slice of horse-radish root wil clarify the
		vinegar. Put it in at the top of the jar and it
		will sink with the scum. If not too thick a
		raw potato has the same effect on the scum.
		The nicest way to get rid of this stagnant vin-
		egar parasite is to scald the vinegar over, after
		skimming it. Pickles should be kept closely
		covered, as air has a murderous effect on vin-
		egar flavor. Salt for making pickle brine
		should be the coarse rock salt.
		Now, having mastered the a, b, c of pickle
		making, let us go on and study a few short
		"pieces" about various kinds of pickles.
		Cucumber pickles: In weak brine soak 100
		small cucumbers for 24 hours. Scald five pints
		of vinegar, one cup of sugar, one ounce of
		cloves, one ouncec of cinnamon bark, one ounce
		of black pepper corns and horse-radish root.
		Pour the hot mixture over the cucumbers,
		rinsed from the brine. If you like, you may
		tie the spices up in a bag, which will prevent
		the vinegar from cloudiness.
		Plain cucumber pickles: Soak cucumbers in
		brine until wanted for use, then freshen by
		soaking a day or two in water, cover with scald-
		ing vinegar. Pickles can be kept in brine all
		winter and when freshened in the spring will
		be firmer than those put away in vinegar in
		the fall, but they of course have no spicy
		taste.
		Cucumber pickles: Salt small cucumbers 24
		hours. Pour boiling water over them and
		let them stand one day. Re-scald the vine-
		gar and let them stand another day. Repeat
		this four times. The fifth day drop the cu-
		cumbers into cold vinegar which has been
		spiced with cinnamon bark, whole cloves, pep-
		per corns, bay leaves, and a small quantity of
		brown sugar.
		Ripe cucumber pickle: Cut ripe cucum-
		bers in squares, removing the seeds. Cook a
		few minutes in salted water, take out while
		hard and drain. Pour over them one quart of
		vinegar, one pound of sugar, six sliced onions
		and a liberal seasoning of cayenne pepper,
		scalded together. These do not keep very
		well unsealed.
		Pickled onions: Remove the brown skin,
		scald, a few at a time, and wipe dry. Let
		them become perfectly cold, pack in bottles
		pour over hot vinegar which has not boiled.
		A beautiful effect is produced by packing sev-
		eral long red peppers with the onions. White
		vinegar should be used and all spices omitted.
		Pickled onions: Boil small onions in equal
		quantities of milk and water. When the
		onions are so as to be pierced by a fork, take
		out, rinse in cold water, and pour boiling vin-
		egar over them in jars. The milk removes
		the over-strong onion flavor.
		Tomato pickle: After cucumbers or gher-
		kins--which are only very small cucumbers--
		there is nothing which admits of being made
		into such a variety of pickles as tomatoes.
		One recipe calls for a pec of chopped green
		tomatoes, salted over night in a colander
		where they can drain. Add four green pep-
		pers, chopped, three pints of vinegar spiced
		with horse-radish and a cup of sugar. Boil
		the sugar and vinegar and pour over the to-
		matoes hot.
		Pear tomato pickle: The red and yellow
		sweet tomatoes are appetixing pickled whole.
		They are salted over night, and then drowned
		in boiling vinegar, spiced with ground cloves,
		cinnamon, allspice, pepper and half a cup of
		sugar to each pint of vinegar.
		Chow-chow: This is made as follows: Chop
		fine half a peck of green tomatoes, one head
		of cabbage, one dozen green peppers, one
		dozen onions, as much sorrel--"horse"sorrel--
		as you can find so late in the season, and after
		letting the mixture stand in salt over night,
		squeeze dry with the hands, and over with
		cold vinegar. In the afternoon squeeze the
		chopped stuff out of the vinegar, and season
		with half a cup of mustard seed, half a cup of
		celery seed, mace, allspice, horse-radish and a
		cup of sugar. Boil the vinegar and pour over
		the whole.
		Chow-chow: Another recipe calls for string
		beans, green tomatoes, green peppers, onions,
		sweet corn cut off the cob, gherkins, cauli-
		flowers, celery cut fine, squares of melon rind,
		and anything else green you have on hand,
		such as shell beans, artichokes, or radishes, all
		sliced conveniently for eating, salted six hours,
		then boiled three-quarters of an hour in vine-
		gar with half a pound of mustard seed, the
		same quantity of pepper corns, and a few bay
		leaves in a bag. After this is put in the jar
		where it will remain, add two teaspoons of
		turmeric powder and one teaspoon of the best
		salad oil.
		Artichokes: These are pickled much like
		cucumbers. It is a good thing to remember
		that if one wishes pickled artichokes to be
		hard, pickle them as soon as dug; in order to
		have them soft allow them to freeze before
		pickling. Add red peppers to artichoke
		pickle.
		Pickled peppers: Take the large, gree,
		"sweet" kind, cut a slit in the side of each
		and remove the seeds. Soak for a week in
		brine, changing the brine daily. Then stuff
		the peppers with a chopped hash of onions,
		cabbage, green tomatoes, cucumbers, green
		grapes, beans, okra, carrots, mustard seeds
		and celery, sew up the peppers and cover with
		cold spiced vinegar.
		Cauliflower pickle: Cut cauliflower into
		branches, boil an instant in salt water, then
		cover with spiced vinegar, and shut out the
		air with a layer of sweet oil on top of the
		vinegar.
		Piccalilli: Anyone fond of mustard likes
		this dish, and it is pretty to serve in place of
		the bare condiment with cold beef. Chop one
		dozen of cucumbers, a quart of onions, two
		quarts of green tomatoes, half a dozen green
		peppers, one small head of cabbage, and salt
		over night. In the morning boil half a gallon
		of vinegar, half a pound of brown sugar, half
		an ounce of cinnamon and half a pound of
		ground mustard, added last thing before
		taking from the fire. Squeeeze the green stuff
		from the salt and boil in the vinegar. After
		adding the musterd, put in 100 small cucum-
		bers and seal in bottles. This does not keep
		very well unsealed.
		Red cabbage: The recipe for this came from
		England, where the bright red pickle is a great
		favorite. Slice red cabbage, throwing away
		the core. Salt it two days then pack it in a
		jar and pour over it boiling spiced vinegar.
		Anything added to this pickle--like beans or
		onions--takes on the red hue of the cabbage.
		Beet root is sometimes added to this pickle.
		Butternut or walnut pickle: Pick the nuts
		early in July, and salt three days in brine that
		will bear an egg. Drain and pack in a jar,
		pour over cold vinegar spiced with pepper,
		cloves and ginger. Anchovies are nice in wal-
		nut pickles, and after the pickles are eaten
		the vinegar is excellent to use in making meat
		sauces and salads.
		French beans: These are pickled by stand-
		ing in salt until yellow, and then being scalded
		with vinegar every twenty-four hours until
		they turn green and can be packed away with
		the vinegar and a bag of peppercorns in a jar.
		Pickled Lemons: This does sound awfully
		sour, but lemon acid is perhaps healthier than
		any other for the human system. Pare lemons
		throw away the white skin, saving the yellow,
		slice the pulp, throwing away the seeds, salt a
		week in weak brine, then cover with boiling
		vinegar spiced with cloves, mace, mustard
		seed and shallops (small onions). After two
		weeks the vinegar can be used for other pickles,
		as the lemons will keep without it.
		English pickle: In the old country, where
		time doesn't seem to be worth as much money
		as it is here, they make a pickle out of ginger
		root, onions, long peppers, sliced cabbage and
		cauliflower, radishes, beans, celery, quartered
		apples and elder shoots, all salted a week and
		then dried in the sun, to which gherkins are
		then added, and the whole submerged in vine-
		gar in which bruised gooseberries have stood,
		and a small quantity of mustard and curry
		powder added.
		I have not given exact quantities in many of
		these recipes, because family tastes differ, and
		in mixed pickles one should assort things to
		suit the eaters. If one remembers to put in
		plenty of spice--there can hardly be too much,
		as some of the goodness goes off in the air--
		and to keep their pickles under vinegar, they
		cannot fail to succeed with any of these rec-
		ipes.
		I have not spoken of sweet pickles, reserv-
		ing this family of pickles for future consider-
		ation. You can make sweet pickles out of any
		kind of fruit by boiling it in a portion of one
		pound of sugar to half a pint of vinegar, and
		adding such spices as cinnamon, cloves and all-
		spice. Sweet pickles do not keep very well out
		of air tight cans unless the sugar is used pound
		for pound with the fruit, and then one might
		as well make preserves and done with it. Any-
		way, be sure and make some pickles, or next
		spring your family will be whining as the
		Israelites did in the wilderness, when they
		wished for the leeks and cucumbers of Egypt.
		This is probably the first known reference to
		the demand every human system makes some
		time or other in its existence for pickles. Now
		is the season to fill the pickle jars, and then
		when "his" folks drop in unexpectedly, and
		the pantry is bare of all but cold beef and po-
		tatoes, do you be like the dime novel lover,
		who "rescued his lady-love from drowning with
		one arm and with the other called loudly for
		help," do you pass the hash with one hand,
		and with the other say, "Have a pickle?"
		[Edith Miniter.
		---
			PREEMPTORY SUMMONS TO PORT
				TOWNSEND IL-LI-HAL
		Kla-how-ye Six: Tahl-kee mika wa-wa
		nika: Spose mika mamook eeht o'na pot-
		latch kah-kwa Siwash mamook ahubutte;
		nika pee hyu tillicums charco copo mika
		illahia; nika wawa mika wake, nika o-le-
		man atia. Mika wawa spose hul-o-i-ma
		mamook kahkwa, mesika charco; nika
		wawa huloima mika tumtum Klaska
		wawa mesika ticky mamook kahkwa
		mika pee mika Siwash tillicum mamook
		ahnk utte Naah spose mika pee mika
		tilicum wake charco. Nika pee huloma
		mamook me-sah-chie copo mesika, pee
		mamook plah kopa mika moos-moos
		house.
		---
			FAST STEAMING
		Kron Prinz Wilhelm Breaks All Records
		Between Cherbourg and Sandy
		Hook
		(Associated Press.)
		New York, Sept. 16--The North Ger-
		man Lloyd steamer Kron Prinz Wilhelm,
		which arrived in port this morning from
		Bremen, Southhamption and Cherbourg,
		beat all previous westward records. She
		left Cherbourg at 9:10 p.m. on Wednes-
		day Setember 10th, and arrived at the
		Sandy Hook lighthouse at 4:07 this
		morning, making the run of 3,047 miles
		in five days 11 hours 25 minutes, at an
		average speed of 23.09 knots an hour.
		The time is twenty-six minutes better
		than the time of the Deutschland.
RIGHT PAGE
			FAST TRIP.
		Steamer Korea Makes Record Time to
			Honolulu.
		Honolulu, Jan. 26--The steamer Korea
		has arrived, breaking the record between
		here and San Francisco by four hours
		and 57 minutes. Her time from San
		Francisco was four days, 22 hours and
		53 minutes. Her longest day's run, the
		last day, was 451 miles. The Korea will
		sail for Yokohama Tuesday, and try
		for another record. Lorring Andrews
		has been appointed attorney-general of
		Hawaii by Governor Dole, to succeed
		E. P. Dole, resigned.
		---
		Y, May 16, 1906.
			MISS FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE
		The Famous Crimean Nurse Celebrates
			Her Eighty-Sixth Birthday.
		London, May 15.--Miss Florenc [Florence]
		Nitingale, the famous Crimean w [war]
		nurse, who shares with the philan-
		thropic Baronness Bourdett-Coutts the
		honor of being one of England's "Grand
		Old Women" has just celebrated her
		eighty-sixth birthday. Miss Night-
		ingale lives in quiet retirement in a
		house in the outskirts of London,
		which she has occupied for many years.
		Here she received a number of personal
		friends, who called to congradulate her
		on her birthday. Others who remem-
		bered the anniversary among them
		King Edward and Queen Aleandra,
		sent her personal messages of felicita-
		tion. Though she has been an invalid
		for many years, Miss Nightingale con-
		tinues to take an active interest in all
		that concerns the profession which she
		made famous.
		Miss Nightingale was born at Flor-
		ence and named after the City of
		Flowers. Originally her patronymic
		was Shore, and it was only on her fath-
		er inheriting the state of his uncle,
		Peter Nightingale, that he assumed the
		name of the testator.
		After being presented at court, Flor-
		ence figured for severay years in Lon-
		don society and then withdrew to de-
		vote herself to sick nursing. It was
		only natural that with her experience
		in nursing and her talent for organiza-
		tion she should be placed at the head
		of the band of volunteer nurses, com-
		posed wholly of women of good family
		who started out for the Crimea in re-
		sponse to the public appeal for nurses
		made by Sir Robert Peel and Sir Wil-
		liam Russell, the correspondent of the
		London Times at the seat of war, and
		who, like Miss Nightingale, still sur-
		vives.
		Modesty has always been Miss Night-
		ingale's principal characteristic. She
		refused all public ovations on her re-
		turn from the Crimea, and when the
		nation and the army presented her
		with a testimonial of $250,000 in recog-
		nition of her services she declined to
		receive it.
		[colourful eight-pointed star, text partly obscured by clippings]
		[obscured] of [illegible] M
		[obscured] Travel
		equired [required] Who-
		---
				Verse
		nist. [Colonist.]
		2, 1894.
		on a visit to
		---
		[Childrens] A-
			Page
		---
		First Atlantic Steamships --H. E. F.--
		The first ship to cross the Atlantic Ocean
		wholly propelled by steam was the Royal
		William, built by a joint stock company
		at the yard of Campbell & [and] Black in
		Quebec in 1830-31. The designer of the
		ship and superintendent of its construc-
		tion was Mr. James Goudie, who was
		born in Quebec in 1809 and dies in 1892.
		The ship was launched in the spring of
		1831 with more than orninary ceremony,
		was towed up the St. Lawrence River to
		Montreal to receive her machinery, and
		on being fitted for sea her first voyage
		was made to Halifax, N.S. Before setting
		out for England she traded between Que-
		bec, Halifax and Boston. The dimensions
		of the Royal William were: Length, 176
		feet; hold, 17 feet 9 inches; breadth out-
		side 44 feet; breadth between paddle-
		boxes 28 feet. She had three masts
		schooner rigged, and the builders' measure-
		ment was 1,370 tons with accommodation
		for 60 passengers. She left Quebec for
		London on August 5, 1833 and called at
		Pictou, N.S., to receive coal and overhaul
		machinery. She started again from Pictou
		on August 18 with 7 passengers and a light
		cargo. She encountered a terrific gale on
		the Banks of Newfoundlan, which dis-
		abled one of her engines. The passage
		from Pictou to London occupied 25 days.
		Ten days after her arrival in London she
		was chartered by the Portuguese Govern-
		ment and the following year was sold
		to Spain. She was then converted into a
		war ship and named the Isabel Sigunda.
		Among the original owners were the three
		brothers, Joseph, Henry and Samuel Cu-
		nard, of Halifax, N.S, the founders of the
		famous Cunard Line. During the meeting
		of the Inter-Colonial Conference in Ot-
		tawa, June 28, 1894, occasion was taken of
		the presence of so many representative
		men from the various parts of the Empire
		to place a tablet in the Parliament Build-
		ings in commemoration of the important
		event. This tablet bears this inscription:
		"In honour of the men by whose enter-
		prise, courage and skill the Royal Wil-
		liam, the first vessel to cross the Atlantic
		by steam power, was wholly constructed in
		Canada and navigated to England in 1833.
		The pioneer of those mighty fleets of
		ocean steamers by which passengers and
		merchandise of all nations are now convey-
		ed on every sea throughout the world."
		---
		SEPTEMBER 27, 1906
		Fine Dog Killed -- W. B. Sylvester's
		fine Gordon setter "Mac" widely
		known for his hunting skill was run
		over and killed yesterday afternoon on
		Yates above Douglas by a motorist.
		The dog was valued at $150.
		---
		AN EXCELLENT COUGH CANDY
		An excellent cough candy is made
		of slippery elm, flaxseed and su-
		gar. Soak a gill of whole flax-
		seed in a cup of boiling water.
		In another cup but broken bits of slip-
		pery elm bark until it is full. Cover
		this also with half a pint of boiling wa-
		ter and let it stand for two hours. Strain
		the flaxseed and slippery elm through a
		thin muslin cloth and save the liquid.
		Add a pound and a half of granulated
		sugar to it. Boil this syrup for ten
		minutes. Add juice of lemons and boil
		until it forms canday. Test from time
		to time by dropping a little in cold wa-
		ter. The moment it is done, pour it on
		white paper, spread on biscuit tins and
		let it harden. As soon as it begins to
		cool, before it hardens, crease it with a
		knife so that it may easily be broken
		into lozenge-shaped candies.
		---
		Clam Chowder [handwritten]
		---
			Clam Chowder.
		Clam chowder is a great dish across
		the line, but Canadian have not taken
		it up to the same extent. But when it
		is well made clam chowder is a most
		wholesome and tempting dish. The
		following recipe comes from Boston:
		Have ready a quart of clams, prefer-
		ably of small size. Wash them thor-
		oughly in a quart of cold water to re-
		move particles of sand. Pinch off the
		black portion of the body, removing
		with it the firm, gelatinous tube. The
		black end may also be cut off if desir-
		ed. Cut the tough portion into two or
		three pieces and leave the soft part
		whole. Cut a thin slice of salt port, less
		than four ounces, in small bits and
		fry out the fat. To this add an onion
		cut in slices and cook until yellowed.
		Strain the water in which the clams
		were rinsed through two folds of
		cheesecloth over the pork and onions
		and let it simmer while a quart of slic-
		ed potatoes are brought to the boiling
		point and then drained. Then strain
		the clam water a second time over the
		potatoes. Cook until the potatoes are
		tender, then add the clams, with suf-
		ficient salt and pepper. Heat to the
		boiling point, skim, if needed, add one
		quart of hot milk (part cream is pre-
		ferable), and turn into a tureen over
		half a dozen crackers. If preferred the
		milk may be thickened with three or
		four level tablespoonfuls of flour cook-
		ed in the same quantity of butter.
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