M V S i- A A GWPXf&WUrfiND PCPCOJPH SXWO 'EARS quality 17 v.-, ! affects the food condition is undeniably an important factor in the world's progress. . T' - Harry E. Barnard is well fitted to speak on sanitary food production. As state food and drug commissioner, his experience has been wide, long and deep. He knows the dangers, the facts and the aventi.es of, escape. Let him tell you of. the evils that threaten you, and of easy means that can be adopted by which better general conditions will obtain. - "- By Harry E. Barnard, B. S. Stat Food and Dm Commissioner of Indian. WITH tii passage of the federal food law In 1908, the prac tice of food adulteration was made so difficult that now, ' lx years later, the gr.oss forms of fraud that had ehrlched .manufactur ers and dealers are never found. The law la doing Its work of suppressing fond fraud, and every consumer's table Is the safer for It It Is com. nelllns proper labeling, and the products of the honest manufacturer MENUS AND RECIPES FOR A WEEK FROM AN EXPERT IN COOKERY - This department will be in charge of a different instructor, every tnonth. The plan will give the housewife the benefit of wide and varied Experience, and will present topics of interest to all Conducted by Helen Louise Johnson , v . MONDAY .. .. - BREAKFAST - . Stewed Prune Cereal Cream Broiled Liver and Bacon Bolls Coffee - LUNCHEON .. h- Omelet ' ' ... v Cauliflower Salad - Wafers Cesses DINNER Vegetable Soup Boudin of Chicken i . Baked Potatoes . " Peat Floating Island .. .... .. . Coffee Boudins of Chicken -For every ' cupful of t cold cooked chopped chicken meat take 1 tablespoon ful of melted butter, 1 taMespoonlul of breadcrumbs, 1 egg, of a cupful of milk, a little chopped parsley and salt and pepper to taste. Add the bread crumbs to the melted butter and when veil mixed add the milk. As soon as the milk is heated take it from the fire, add the chicken meat, seasoning end the beaten egg. Stir , together well. Pill small " greased custard cupis "or eoufflo tins about two-thirds full of the mixture and stand these in a shallow baking pan half filled with hot water. Bake in a Jnoderately hot oven for. 20 minutes.: The boudins whould bake as do custards -and be turned out of the cups or tins when served. They may be served with or without sauce. TUESDAY , BREAKFAST Fruit - Hominy Crjaia Codfish Cakes Coffee .. . LUNCHEON Cream of I'ea Soup Prune bouflio DINNER Chicken Soup ' Roaat Lamb'- . , Boiled potatoes. Butter Eauc ' ." '. ., String lieam .., . Mint Hherbet . ' ' - Coffee- Mint Sherbet Take a rmaH bunch of mint and mac erate the leaves, adding to them the Juice ': of 2 lemons. Let them stand, covered, for some fifteen or twenty min utes whlia tho syrup is being made. Dis solve 2 cupfuls of sugar in 2 cupful of water and cook without stirring until the syrup spins a delicate thread. Take from the .- fire and, f while the cyrup is hot, add the mint and lemon J'llce and a half cupful of orange Juice. Cool, strain and f reese. .,- The Bherbest should be frozen with a mixture of salt and ice, half ice and half 'salt, to make it coarse grained and rather snowy. This horbet may be served witti a meat course when desired at a leng course dinner. . - . : -; WEDNESDAY, Sl!"4 Oritifea and Bananas FouDaxea nrtH.it fair Coffee LUNCHEON Fnkeit Homlnr Caramel CusturV "1 1 1 f J v . JI M ; v. fK7ECXa GLASS ago shoulders were shrugged eompTa- eently wkeri protests against dirt were tmade. "Every one must eat his peck of dirt" was the answer that a reformer would receive. Times have changed. With intelligent directors at the controlling wheel of affairs, with principles that gov ern the preservation of health, and with tke individuats interest in affairs xnat vnmeasuraoiy influence nia nap piness, the peck of dirt has dwindled in quantity and :,-:. . ... it ts astont8ning now many open tneir mouins while eating, and synchronously -close their eyes. Candy, bread, meats, fish, vegetables and fruit in a condition that would appal the eater if he but knew are taken into the system and are quick to get in their deadly work in undermining health. No cheap argu ments can combat science. " "Oh, well," some will say, "our grandfathers k7iew nothing of this and they lived." Our grandfathers read by candlelight, lived in com parative discomfort and died from diphtheria; but that is no logical reason for our doing likewise. - As the days go on we should pass toward the light of intelliaent and -safe livind. That movement which now go to market free from the com petition of cheap Imitations.' It Is eliminating fake weights and substi tutes; it Is driving out artificial col ors and bleaches. It is faithfully serving the people by protecting them against the dlfahonest dealer. . Thus far It has done Its work well. But now, looking back over the long lists of successful prosecutions, we are astonished to find that so. few food cases have really concerned the public health. With the exception of the cases that have Involved the sale of goods made of decomposed raw ma terial, such as tomato products put up ' DINNER . Noodle Soup . " Cold Roast Lamb ., . . , Mint and also Brown Sauce Potato Croaiiettfi Aspartgtii with Mayonnaise Cottace Pudding Foamy Sauce Coffee - -Potato Croquettes - Beat the yolks of 2 eggs light and add to 8 cupfuls of mashed potato. Mix welL Add ' 1 tablespoonful ' of chopped parsley, 4 tablespoonfuls of cream, a very little onion juice, salt and pepper to taste, fctlr together in a saucepan over the fire until . the potato is heated through and, sticking . together, comes away from the side of the pan when stirred. Cool, make into cork-shaped cro quettes, cover with gg and bread crumbs and fry In deep hot fat When croquettes are to be fried, certain points are to be noted. In the first place, the egg called for al ways means whites and not yolks. Yolks have sufficient albumen to make a grease-proof covering, but they have also so much fat In them selves that they will not make so , dry and perfect a . covering as the whites alone. The egg Is put over the croquette mixture because the albumen coagulates as quickly as it is submerged into the hot fat, thus protecting the mixture Inside from soaking up the grease and breaking' to pieces. It is economy to use the white of the egg, which should be beaten slightly and mixed with suffi cient cold water to make a thin cov ering only, This not alone makes a better and more delicate croquette, but the egig goes further. J Breadcrumbs are specified because they make a better covering than cracker crumbs. To fry means to immerse in hot fat To saute, means to brown first on one side, then on the other: and in the majority of cases it is better to fry than to saute things. The fat should be tried for its temperature, and the best test is to use a small piece of bread. If It browns quickly, the fat '8 ready for frying already cooked articles such as croquettes, eto. If It browns more slowly, then It Is ready ,for frying raw articles, such as doughnuts, etc. With some fats, to be smoking hot mfans that they are too -hot for frying," and the person cooking should learn to test the fat properly. When the fat is too hot, the article burns; when - too cool, It becomes grease soaked before frying and often breaks to pieces. . ' THTJBSDAY BREAKFAST Cerjal cooked with Dates - Egjs a la P-nedictlnt .-' Coffee . . ' , . "', ' LUNCHEON Vll of Lamb o. m Tomato Sauce Stewed Fruit , Cookies DINNER , x . rram of Corn fioup Canneloa of B - Brown Sauce ! Potato Snuffle - - Bt Greene Efyptlan Pudding ...- 'loOP I . , wlta benioate of soda, of milk con taining barnyard filth and millions of bacteria, of gelatin, eggs and oysters contaminated with Intestinal bacteria, ..the manufacturers who have faced the federal courts have pleaded guilty, to practices that have robbed the pocket book of the consumer, but fortunately . worked no Injury to his health. After these years of federal super- . vision and1 vigorous state control we -are "beginning to realise that food ; adulteration is taking on a new phase and that It is of far more moment to the consumer to know his food is made in clean factories, by healthy workmen, from sound materials, than that it is properly labelei as to the place of production or the percentage of glucose or butter fat - ' In other words, it Is now apparent that-many foods, though chemically" satisfactory are sanitarily unfit to , eat All this means tnit the work of the pure food official goes beyond the laboratory-and the analysis of sam ples suspected of fraudulent adultera tion and centers about th place of manufacture , and the distributing . agencies. ' . - The food officials of the so-called pure food states early saw the need of active work for clean food, but be- -cause of the pressing need of driving out food frauds were unable to give much attention to the Work until the federal food law came to their rescue with its far-reaching control ver the character of goods entering Interstate shipment And then 'hey found an opportunity, to act, and through a committee of their own members framed a bill known as the sanitary food bill. The winter after the bill was prepared it became the law of eight states, and in its original form, or but slightly modified, it Is now- be lng enforced in most of the states. . This measure does for clean food what earlier laws have done for pure food. It places in the bands of the -officials who enforce it a vigorous, , . effective weapon with which to fight dirt at the factory, unclean methods of. handling. Insanitary conditions wherever food is manufactured, stored, transported or distributed. It'makes it the duty of the dealer to protect his stock, for the manufac turer to look to the health of his employes, for the transportation com pany to refuse to. carry poorly packed foodstuffs. . i . The enforcement of sanitary food production is a subject that Is full of interest for tflft health officer: it should be of even greater Interest to the house- wife. For the first time since purs food laws were placed on the statute books the consumer can for herself ' give active assistance to the crusade for clean food. Unlike th ' enforcement of earlier food laws, sanitary work must be done where the food is made or handled, and does not stop after a single inspec tion. It was possible with one analysis to secure changes in formulas and labels; It la almost fruitless to secure sanitation with one inspection. Th new field of labor must be entered by the consumer if the law is to yield real results. The health Officer, In whom is usually vested the local en forcement of the law, cannot be ex- -pected to give sufficient time to the work to keep every manufacturer ev-. ery dairyman, every baker and butcher and grocer in his community under supervision. I say he cannot be ex pected to do this because it is a most unfortfmate fact that in this country the health officer is less appreciated than the tax collector and more poorly ?aid than the policeman. He Is uaual y a publio spirited, well educated, -progressive young physiolan, who sees the need of medical control of health affairs in his town and who is willing Eggs a la Benedictine Cut English muffins in half and toast For each half delicately broil a round piece of ham, cut to fit the muffin, or a slice of bacon, using whichever is pre ferred. Lay the slice of meat on the toasted muffin and keep very hot while the eggs are poached, one for each half muffin.- Put the eggs on the meat -on top of the muffin and serve very hot with or without a sauce. When served for breakfast the eggs are served with out a sauce,, but when used as a lunch . eon dish it is usual to serve them with a bechamel, sauce supreme or even aauce hollandalse. - - . . -. r - t , . Cecils of LamD ; ; : To every cupful of cold chopped lamb allow 1 egg, 1 tablespoonful of butter, 1 tablespoonful of - bread crumbs and seasoning to suit the taste. Mix all the ingredients togeth er In a saucepan over the fire, adding brown sauce to moisten if necessary. Cool, form into small round balls, cover with egg and breadcrumbs and fry in deep fat ; Egyptian ' Pudding , Cover Vt box of gelatin with H cupful of cold water and let it stand for half an hour. Boil cupful of rice In plenting of boiling salted water until thoroughly done. Carefully drain. Wash 2 dried figs , ftnd 4 dates very carefully and cut them In small pieces. Add cupful of preserved ginger, cur In thin slices, and cover with the fol- ' S&&lsti Juice, I dessertspoonful of the juice ,. from the preserved ginger and litable- spoonful of sherry or rum. Let stand at least one hour. Dissolve the gelatin "X nvcr hot water, whin 1 nlnt of cream to a stiff dry froth. Add the dissolved gelatin to the : whipped cream with two-thirds of a cupful cf pulverized sugar, ths rice and the fruit. Stand where the pudding will grow cool and stir gently, turning the mixture from the bottom toward the top, without a stirring motion, merely folding, until the pudding begins to form. The ob ject is to keep the rice and fruit stirred throughout the mixture. In place, of letting It settle tc the bot tom of the pan. "When the pudding is ; sufficiently formed, turn into Indi vidual molds, previously wet. with cold water,' and put away in a cold place , to become solid. Turn out to serve. FRIDAY BREAKFAST -: Grapefruit ' ' Scrambled EmTg German Fried Potatoe- ' . Popovers .. Coffc LUNCHEON Clwe Fondu - Strawberry Shortcake - DINNER :- Tomato Blnmie v Halibut a la Delmontoo steamed Potato Balls Hot Slaw " . Wateroren French Dressing Pineapple Puddln - . . Coffee . . Popovers : "Many seem to feel that there ts some - secret in making popovers, but this is not the case. All that Is needed Is to realize that the recipe calls for less . .ttouc-than seems' pracuial to, the peg per. Do not adef any more flour than the recipe asks for and follow direc tions carefully. This rule should bring " out good popovers every time. ' Take 2 I cupfuls ot good bread flour and put in a KwL Get the popover pans heated and to sacrifice much of his time and run the risk of losing patients and making enemies for the sake of the opportunity to do something toward a lower death, rate.' '.' : But however energetic he Is,- how--ever willing he may be, he cannot give . of his time to visiting dirty basements and unclean warehouses, Ill-kept res taurants and filthy bakeries. This work must either be done by sanitary -policemen, as is the case in several of the western states, where the women use their influence and vote as well in all movements for the general good, or by the unpaid I am tempted to say, un-; welcome volunteer, who, seeing an opportunity to improve sanitary con ditions, goes ahead and does it Here is where the progressive women's movement nnds Its opportunity for real service. This Is the way for women t enter publio- affairs through an avenue closed to men, and for reasons but lit tle understood by them. The housewife Is a trained sanitary officer. . She has been practicing the principles of sanitation in her kitchen from the day she made there her first loaf of bread or washed her first loit of dishes. What we officials, who axe re sponsible for the enforcement of plendid laws, but wfho have far too small forces with which to do the nee- , essary work, now desire is to have every women's club, every nefghborhood cir cle, yes. every - housewife, know the provisions of the sanitary food lews and then, as self-appolntad deputies, go about the business of enforcing them. it- r - t v ' - .- ..jK.,..y " ! wptaciN a rrn'-i n "mr vm .un m himk mnw-T---tf -irvrtii i r rfifriri-fisssi .ShowHQ pood exfoscojo oustwyo ojst orjrHc smctrr Sanitary food is food free from- bac teria that might do harm to the con sumer. Sanitary food production Is the employment of methods of work that so protect the food that these bacteria do not find an opportunity to reach it. San itary food distribution is the handling of food between the factory and the kitchen door under conditions that make it impossible for dirt from hands, street, floor or carrier to come in - contact with it It is not necessary to do this kind of sanitary work with the microscope or a culture tube, for It has been demomrtra ted that bacteria and dirt are always found together, and that if . dirt is greased ready for the popover mixture before you mix it. See that the oven is in good baking condition, Beat 3 eggs very light, but without separating. You cannot make popovers If you separate the yolks and the whites. Add 2 cupfula of milk to the eggs and beat again. Pour this liquid upon the flour gradually, beating steadily, and beat out all the lumps In the batter before all the liquid is added. It wHl make a thin batter. from which It will be Impossible to re- 't move the lumps If the batter Is not ; beaten smooth before ail the liquid Is . added. When all Is added, beat with a Dover eggbeater until foamy, turn Into the popover pans at once and bake 25 minutes In a quick oven. To be good, popovers should be served at once. Cheese Tondu Melt 2 tablespoon fula of butter, add 4 tablespoonfuls of flour, mix until smooth and well cooked. Add 1 cupful of milk and stir as If making cream sauce until : the mixture becomes thick. Take from the fire, add the beaten yolks of S eggs, 4 tablespoonfuls of grated cheeBe, 1 tea spoonful of salt and 14 teaspoonful of paprika. Mix thoroughly. Add care fully, folding them in, the beaten Whites of- the eggs, and turn the mixture quickly" into greased eouffle dishes, In dividual, or one baking dish If pre- ferted. If In small dishes, bake In a quick oven for 1,0 minutes; but II In a farg9 aiSh, 20 will be necessary. Halibut a la Delmonico TV 3 cupfuls of mashed potato add 1 cupful of hot milk and the beaten yolks of 2 eggs. Thoroughly mix and season: with salt and paprika. Grease a baking . dlah and line with the notato mixture. Cover witn a layer 01 Douea naiiDui, over Which should be put a layer of bechamel sauce. Repeat putting be ' tween each layer of shredded fish a layer of sauce. Cover the top with a layer of the mashed potatoes, sprinkling over the top with greased breadcrumbs mixed with parnaesan cheese. ' Brown for 15 minutes in a hot oven and serve at once. SATURDAY BREAKFAST Beef Hah on Toast Buttered Toaet ,L: Coffee . LCNCHBON . Deviled Oyster ! Cbbae alad DINNER Clear Soup ' Corned Beef : Boiled Potatoes Boiled Cabbage ' Fried Paranli ' , Saked Indian Pudding .' , Coffee '. SUNDAY " ' BREAKFAST , '... Btrawbenie Shad Roe : Creamed Potatoes Muffin ''.-.: . ' Coffee The following recipes are given . merely because they : are everyday affairs. - It Is actually easier to find ' good recipes for dishes one uses three or four times yearly than tp find the' best recipes for the 'most common foods. Coffee is the most variable ar ticle put upon the table, and almost. st difficult to procure. wa made. The old-fashioned coffee, the kind of coffee our ' grandmothers used to brown for themselves or buy after a ripening in bond houses, which developed the flavor and pro vided a rich and delicious beverage, chased away the bacteria go away also. So you, mesdamee housewives, look to the condition of the, grocery store you patronUe; get acquainted with your baker; know the Interior of your butcher's meat box as you do your own. . If you can possibly do so, visit the dairy that supplies you with milk for your children. If , you cannot do this be cause you live too far from its source, at least know where It Is bottled and the condition of the plant In visiting the grocery as my deputy sanitary officer, I expect you to note carefully everything to which you would raise objection If you saw it In your own home. If ycu see un covered dried fruits, exposed to all the dust of the store, to attack by flies and insects. It Is your duty to point out to your grocer that such a practice is repugnant to your ideas of cleanliness and, as well, in violation of ' law; if you find bis cracker bins open, Shut-the covers down slam them, if you will; the noise will call the grocer's attention to your work quite as effectively as another discussion of dust and dirt;, if you find candles, sugar, cereals, anything that you eat without first washing and cooking, . unprotected, stay by it until It Is cov ered up with some form of dustproof case. If the grocer asks you If you : are crusading In the interests of some showcase manufacturer, tell him "No; -in the interest of the health of your patrons." If you And your suggestions unap preciated, go with your trade to a grocer where your right to know 1 3 ' how the food you buy is cared for is recognized.' When you visit your butcher, ask . him where his supply of meat comes from. Then ask if the abattoir la under government In spection. Look for the oval purple stamp and the words "U S. Inspected and Passed" on every quarter of beef or pork, If you don't find it, ask "why? Don't buy meat for your . table that Is not prepared at an in spected slaughterhouse. Remember that uninspected meat Is very apt to be from an animal that would not pass Inspection. . Recall the fact that there are thousands of local shops in the country that kill and sell every has entirely . disappeared. "We no longer , can buy exceptionally good coffee. The best coffee at the most reasonable price is to be found, gen erally speaking, ' at . the best gro ceries. And it Wl pay ' he house keeper to do some experimenting for herself in the - matter of blending coffee, . Buy a pound of cheap coffee at 25 or 2T cents, then a pound of as good straight Java as can be found. Do not ask for- Java and 'Mocha; get a cheap but fair grade of coffee and a good Java and mix them. Then make the coffee by boiling'. It may be given as a fairly good rule that the cheaper the coffee, the ranker it Is, the longer it must be boiled. Once upon a time, when delicious coffee could be purchased in the bean, delicious cups of coffee could be obtained by per colation without the boiling process, but that time is way back in the Golden Age. Now coffee must be boiled whether percolated or not. Try making It by the following process: Take a rounded tablespoonful of coffee for each cup (half pint) of wa ter and an extra tablespoonful "for the pot," as the old phrase goes. Mix with 1 eggshell, fresh, or a small amount of egg for each 4 tablespoonfuls of coffee, and then mix with the entire amount of water to be used. Do not boll a por tion and then add hot water, fot that , process Is one calculated to spollhe best cud of coffee ever made. . Por fo people take 6 tablespoonfuls of coffee , and 4 cupfula of cold water and 1' eggshell and mix. Put in a granite saucepan or perfectly smooth coffee pot with a nozzle which can be cleaned. The usual kind of coffee pot, having corners which have to be boiled out, is also fatal to good coffee,' Bring the coffee slowly to a boll the slower the bettor. Let it .boll from five to ten minutes, according to the grade of coffee used. ; The ma jority of coffees now on the market need, boiling at least five minutes. Add 'a cupful of eqld water to check the boiling quickly, and stand on the back of the stove where the beverage will keep hot, but cannot boll. JLet stand at least ten minutes. The eaucepan is suggested because, If it has a tightly fitting cover, It loses Jess 8rtrttuj than the ordinary coffee pot and it is extremely asy to keep it lean. No old odotsOf coffee clings 'to a smooth saucepan; but care should be taken not .. to cook onions and coffee In the same pan. , . .. . ' DINNER Cream cf Tomato Fonp Chicken a la CaMerole ' Cauliflower Sauce Hollandaise . Biscuit Glace v.t ,..:.- . -Coffee . , Cream ot Tomato Soup .. f Turn out the contents of one pint can of tomatoes into a saucepan, add 1 slice of onion, H bay leaf and sprig of parsley. Simmer 15 minutes, pre3s through a fine sieve and return the liquid to the stove. Scald 1 quart of milk. Stub together 2 tablespoonfuls of butter end t of flour until smooth and add to the milk in the following manner: Add first a little of the hot milk to the butter and flour mixture, stirring and adding more liquid until the roux Is smooth and will pour from the dish. Thea add this to the scalded milk and stir steadily over the fire, keeping the -Mure, ., 4a-the-dowMe-toiler until It ha thickened. The object of thlnnina this butter and flour mixture in ; this way first Is to prevent the soup from becoming lumpy. , When the milk Is" of the dsired cpnMstenay add 1 teaspoon ful of sugar and V4 teaspoonful of soda ....rftfxWJ:-';'- v...v.;:: : y . . -v i . .,; ;! J 1 A QUESTION FOR YOU WE ARE going to place you on the witness stand for a few minutes. The cross-examination need not be feared and we feel sure that your replies will drive home some important truths, and materially benefit our readers and writers. Is not the leading article on this page of value to you? Do, you not feel that you know more about the science and art of the home than before you read It? ' The fact la indisputable that homekeeping, with everything that ths word entails, has been boiled down to a science and can be governed by truths and laws that will decimate labor and multiply efficiency and suc cess. Is this worth while? If an opportunity were given" you to hear a great writer or lecturer, noted for reform, for successful work in the betterment of general con ditions,, or for a big heart-and brain devoted to helping others, would you refuse? That is what we are giving each week. . No longer does the housewife acquiesce in things and work as her mother's mother, did. ; The successful woman Is moving with events. Progress is a great force that takes Intelligent beings With it This page stands for progress. , Thank you. We know your answers. Next week Grace M. Vlall will speak on the "Value of Home Eco nomics." . t. ,. animal that enters them, never find ing one unfit for food, although the work of the federal Inspectors shows that thousands and thousands of both cattle and hogs are every year con demned by them as diseased. Ask the proprietor to turn on the light in his meat box and refrigera tor. Go inside and see If it is as clean as your own. Note the absence of mold, rancid grease, t8llmy meats. Is the odor sweet and suggestive of din ner? Is the box used for cooling of other. foods besides meat? And if so, are they kept in a separate compart ment? Look at the sausage grinder ' and the meat saws, the blocks. Are they' clean, free from grease and sour meat? . Does your butcher have marble-topped counters? Does Jje expose meat on top of them where it can be handled by every inquisitive custo mer and utilized as abreedlng place for files? If he does, suggest again : that the sanitary law is being vio lated and the hungry feeling of his customer entirely assuaged. Go next to the bakeshop. I am sure you will And your appetite return when the delicious odors of fresh bread and spicy cakes come floating out to meet you as you enter. But, as my inspector, you will not be satisfied to stay in the salesroom, the Queen Anne front of the bakery ; business. You will ask to be conducted to the Mary Ann back. And you may find that; much to your sur prise, the back Is down in the basement, in en unventilated, badly lighted, foul- -smelling cellar. You may see there dough troughs that have been uncleaned so long that the material from which they are made to entirely obscured; you may And no sinks, no lavatories, a tap and a week old towel serving the ablu- . tlonary needs of the workmen. You may. find the floors patched or broken, cov ered with dirt and dough; you may won der what the cricket-like buns are that so playfullv run up and down the side walls and In and out of the proofing chamber: you may, indeed, ask if it Is quite necessary to let cats and rat ter riers live In the storeroom. And after you come up the worn and dough tracked stairways, you will step to the , alley entrance and look around, to And the stable. Perhaps you wlir not need youryes to tell you its location. Some times the sense of smell is quite as -serviceable. , If you do find all these conditions Which you never dreamed of before, yo'i ; will not only lose your taste for that particular baker's bread, but you will point out to him how in some dosen ways he Is running Ws shofln viola tion of the laws of decency and ths sanitary food statute. s ; But i do not think you will be so tin fortunate as to find this kind of a bake shop. There sren't any more of that class. You will probaoly find the bake- shop where the oven Is fairly clean: you will find the bakers dressed in white linen suits; you .will note that all the dissolved in a little hot water , to the tomatoes and take them frbm the stove. Do not get careless at this point and think the soda will dissolve sufficient ly in the tomatoes without the previous dissolving in the warm water. Thesuo cess of this soup depends upon careful- . ness in details... Strain the milk into the tomatoes, season with salt , and pepper and serve at once. . Do not add the tomatoes to the milk; add the milk to the tomatoes and serve at once. This soup- cannot be reheated. If the direc tions are faithfully followed, there is no reason why the soup should separate. , . Chicken a la Casserole - Either a younr chicken must w se lected for the chicken casserole or part of the cooking be done in anothervulsh. Many prefer the latter method, hs it does away with an objection which, oc casionally arises in he amount ofAfat that cooking in the-dish prevents re moving before serving. The method of first cooking outside and then An the d'sh will be described. Clean and?dlsjoint the fowl, and saute In hot fart. Cover with a small amount of boiling hot water and cook for . threequarters of an hour or more, depending upon the condition of the fowl, In. a saucepan set where the water will simmer and not boll. This may bedone on Satur- uajr. nianu me cnicKen in me COM' in stock, and when cool remove the . fat TTfom4hBsurface The next day put me pans ot tnecnicKen desired for the caserole In the casserole dish, and add sufficient stock weakened if de sired by the addition o a little water , 1 cupful of very small button onions , and H cupful of small carrot balls. Let , cook until the vegetables are nearly tender, then add peas, cauliflower, bruw ; eels sprouts, etrlngbeans any or all of these vegetables as you may happen to have a small quantity on hand or wish them in the casserole. A half cup ful of button mushrooms may be used In place of all or any of these.. What ever 1 added should bare time enough ; to cook tender. Potatoes may be used, often are; but it is better to cook the potatoes separately 4n some way and serve with the casserole than to cook them in with the other things. A half hour before serving make a thick brown sauce by browning a j talfespoonful of butter, adding 2 tablespoonfuls offldur 1 and thoroughly browning while rubbing smooth. Add some liquid from tl" casserole until smooth enough to ed to the liquid in the dish. Season with salt and nepper and 1-S of a cupful or aberry. Serve in the casserole dish. : v Sauce Hollandaise Beat 4 tablespoonfuls of butter to "a cream. Add the yolks of f eggs, one at . a time, beating eaew time thoroughly or nntll very well mixed. Add teaspoon ful of white pepper, teaspoonful of salt and cupful of hot water. Cook over hot water, "stirring steadily until the mixture thickens; then add the Juice of .half a lemon, . remove from the fire and serve at once . , . BisciiltGlace ; Put t cupfuls of granulated sugaf and a pint of water In a saucepan over the fire. Stir until the sugar is dissolved and cook until the syrup spins a thread. . Watch carefully, but do not stir or the sugar will grain. Beat the yolks of 6 , -very ..light etraifl- lha .- ayrup.. on. them. lea tin k steadily until the mixture ' is thick and smooth. When cool add 1 toaspoonful of . vanilla. H cupful of sherry and a tablespoofful of rum. Some prefer maraschino to the sherry, in which case less Bbould be used. Turn machinery is of metal, and that ths walls are tiled Or painted white. Yoa will be pleased with your peep Into the great oven and long for a taste of the loaves you see browning there. And then, after you have about concluded . that your baker is able to satisfy the critical taste and caprices of a sanitary officer, ask him how he handled the officer, ask him how hs handles , the loaves be takes from the oven and senda on the long road to the consumer. If he is the kind of baker I think yon patronise, he will show you a room off the - bakeroom where hundreda mf even-shaped, uniformly colored loaves are cooling on iron racks and where hundreda of others are being done up in clean paper wrappers by nimble fingered girls. Possibly you will find your baker Is using automattcWTap' ping machines, just as he Is uselng automatic machines for almost every other process in the bakery. If he Is, you may be sure that your bread Is clean clean not only at the bakery, but clean when it gets to your home. And now after you have made the rounds of the places on which you depend for daily food, do you feel pleased with your choice of mer chants, or somehow not verf hungry? You have done a great deal Snore than satisfy an Idle curiosity. You have . put In motion the tremendous power of the purchasing housewife to secure for yourself and her family a clean food supply. . , , And now, as your final act as deputy food Inspector, you are to make your report If you find condi tions grossly Insanitary, yoj will make it to your own health officer. If you do not think it necessary to 'go that far, if you know the men with, whom you trade so well -that such action is not necessary, take the story of your first day's labors in behalf of pure and clean food to your club and with it as your text make converts of every listener to the cause ot sanitation. How else can we expect to make our efforts for law enforcement br' t results? If there is any other way, have yet to hear, of it We can In spect and arrest, and repeat the treat ment as often as we have time to get around, but such methods will not teach sanitation and they will turn from tradesmen's pockets -into the funds of the police court the money that could far more properly be spent for. soap, water and good, effective labor on bended knee. So, On behalf of the grocer and butcher and every purveyor to the dining table, as well as on behalf of an uneducated publio and a careless consumer, I urge you to keep up the good work and never to rest till you can make a tour through the markets and come home gratified with what you have seen, sure that In your town at least sani tary food is a reality and not a vision. the mixture into a freeser and stir carefully until it bag begun to thicken. Add 1 pint of cream whipped to a stiff dry froth and mix well. Remove from the freeser and fill the biscuit glace-7 - eases. Pack and allow to stand until thoroughly frozen. To pack, first see that the freezer or case is properly " packed with salt and ice. Put a layer of - cases on a piece of thick pasteboard on : ' the bottom ot the freezer. Lay a siml- lar piece of pasteboard over this layer of cases, and put another layer of cases on top of this. Repeat this until the cases are all packed, using paraffine pa- ' per between each layer as a protection, to the cream mixture. The freezer ... - should be packed with salt and Ice suf- . : ficlently long before the cases are put In It to become thoroughly chilled, and then the biscuit must stand at least two hours to freeze properly, Grate stale macaroons over the top of each case just before serving. All sorts of mix tures may bs used with the above syrup ' and cream. Chopped glace fruits man be added, different flavors used, eto. SUPPER . . . Salad Marenire ' j U .. ; Savory Sandwiches mMu., Salad Marengo ' " Carefully clean and parboil a' flair of calf sweetbreads. Remove the mem brane, cut In pieces with a silver knife and chill. Boil 3 eggs hard. Take 1 head of curly lettuce. Remove the outer . leaves of the lettuce to use for serving and shred the remainder, the more ten der part. Cut 2 good-slued truffles Into shreds or strips. Rub the yolks of the eggs through a sieve and cut the white Into small dice. Carefully mix the ; sweetbreads, whites of eggs and truf- fles and marinate wMh a small quan- tity of French dressing. After standing an hour, drain, mix with the shredded "lettuce and mayonnaise dressing. Serve on the outer lettuce leaves garnished with the yolks of the eggs. Bills of Tare With. Noonday Dinners BREAKFAST .,.,., Baked Banaaai '" '' 1 DriM Beef and Greats 1 ; , Orlddl. Cah. dinner ' Tomato Bono Breaded Veal Cutltts ' Baked Macaroni . Lettuce Salad, 'French Dressing Sponge Padding . Coffee SUPPEB . Baked Huh , TVs Blacult and Booty ' . : Sliced Oranges . -Cak ,. :'',.'.' II BREAKFAST Boflad Bns i DINNER ' Cereal afuSnl CofftS Cream of Rica Bone""' Pot Rout , - . afaaurd Potatoes Baked Cabbage Battered Beets Fruit Blane Kangs , ' SUPPEB Veal Brmdlna . Tomato Satr Canned Fruit Oats III BREAKFAST . Stewed Prunes ibreamed Fried Smelt Potafaea ua Coflaa - Brorfed Steak Bpinaca Baited Fotatott Clear Soup i French Fried Potatoes flTJPI.KRFrU.TaPi0C Beef Stew Jellied .1 ' :