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pound of salt pork, chopped with it.

      ½ cup of bread crumbs, soaked in milk.

      1 egg.

      1 teaspoonful of chopped onion.

      ½ teaspoonful each of pepper and paprika.

      1 level teaspoonful of salt.

      Have the meats chopped together at the market; put the crumbs in a bowl and cover them with milk, and let them stand for fifteen minutes; then squeeze them dry and add to the meat. Beat the egg without separating it, and mix that in next, and then the seasoning. Stir all together, and put in a bread tin and bake one hour. Have on the stove a cup half full of hot water mixed with two tablespoonfuls of butter, and every fifteen minutes open the oven door and pour a quarter of this over the meat. When done, put in a cold place over night. Slice thin, and put parsley around it.

      "You see, this is very easy to make, and it is always good for luncheon for ourselves, and for Sunday night supper as well. You can make it Friday afternoon, and then, by the time for the picnic, it will be ready to slice."

      "And what are they to eat with it?"

      "I think it would be nice to have some sandwiches – hot ones."

      "Hot sandwiches, Mother Blair! I never heard of them. How do you make them?"

      "I invented them myself," laughed her mother. "I really did, this very morning, when I was thinking about the picnic. Here is the rule."

TOASTED SARDINE SANDWICHES

      1 tin sardines.

      8 slices of toast.

      ½ a lemon.

      Large pinch of salt, and as much dry mustard.

      Open a can of sardines, drain off the oil, and spread them on brown paper. Scrape off the skin carefully, and open each one on the side and take out the back bone. Sprinkle over them all the salt and mustard, and squeeze the lemon on. Then make the toast, large brown slices, and butter them a little; lay two together, trim off the crust, and cut them in strips. Open the strips, and between each two put one sardine and press together. Put them in the oven between two hot plates till needed.

      "Oh, those do sound so good! Can't I make some for lunch to-day, Mother?" Mildred begged.

      "But they belong to the surprise! Let's wait till after the picnic, and then you may make lots of them."

      "Well!" sighed Mildred, "then let me have another receipt right away, so I'll forget them. I do want to make them so much."

      "Here is another receipt you will like just as well; part of it is for the picnic, and part of it is for a little bit of a party for you and Miss Betty and me, while the picnic is going on upstairs."

      "A party for us? What kind of a party?"

      "Lovely grown-up afternoon tea!" laughed her mother. "You can invite Miss Betty yourself won't that be nice?"

      "Perfectly lovely! Do tell faster!"

      "Well, first you make for the picnic some sweet sandwiches like those we planned for the school lunches; these are simply, to begin with:"

ORANGE MARMALADE SANDWICHES

      Spread thin white bread and butter with orange marmalade; trim off the crusts and cut into even shapes; a round cooky cutter makes pretty sandwiches.

      "I've made those for Jack, lots of times," said Mildred, as she wrote this down, "only I didn't cut them in round shapes, because boys don't care about that."

      "No," said her mother, smiling, "boys don't, but girls do! So make part of these in rounds, and put them away, and send the square ones upstairs. And when it's time for our party, just toast ours quickly, and you will find them the most delicious things you ever ate, especially with tea; that's what we three will have."

      "Those will be Miss Betty's surprise!" laughed Mildred, as she wrote down the word toasted after the title of the sandwiches. "Now what next?"

      "Suppose you try some very easy cookies; those are just the thing for a picnic; you can make them Saturday morning, and then they will be fresh. Here is the rule:"

SPICY COOKIES

      Sprinkle the baking board with flour and rub it smoothly over; do the same to the rolling-pin, and scatter a little flour evenly also over the bottom of some shallow tins. Have a panful of sifted flour ready on the table, as you may need to do this several times.

      ¾ cup of sugar.

      3 tablespoonfuls of butter.

      6 tablespoonfuls of milk.

      1 egg.

      1½ cups of flour.

      ¼ teaspoonful of soda.

      ¼ teaspoonful of salt.

      1 tablespoonful of hot water.

      ¼ teaspoonful of cloves.

      ¼ teaspoonful of cinnamon.

      Melt the butter, add the sugar, and rub together. Beat the egg without separating, and put in next. Mix the soda and hot water, put the milk with this; put the salt in the flour; add part of the flour to the sugar and other things, and then part of the milk, and so on; then put in the spices and stir all together. Put the dough on the board, roll it out thin, and with a cutter mark it all over; then lift out the pieces with a cake turner, very carefully, and arrange them in your pans, but do not let them touch. Bake fifteen minutes; take them out of the pans while warm, and spread out on a platter to cool.

      "Dear me, that sounds pretty hard!" said Mildred, as she finished.

      "Cookies are not quite as easy to make as some other things, but they are so good, so nice for luncheon and suppers and other times, that I think you will be glad to know how to make them. And Father is so fond of cookies!"

      "So he is. Well, Mother, I'll try them. And now what comes next?"

      "Some cunning, easy little cakes, so easy that next time Brownie can make them herself. They are called:"

MARGUERITES

      20 round, thin crackers.

      20 marshmallows.

      2 tablespoonfuls of chopped nuts.

      2 teaspoonfuls of butter.

      Butter the crackers on one side, just a little; put a marshmallow on each, a tiny bit of butter on it, and a sprinkle of chopped nuts of any kind. Put them in a shallow pan, and bake till they are soft and brown; eat while fresh and warm.

      "Oh, lovely! Mother, I must have some of the girls in and have those for myself!"

      "So you shall, any day you want to. Now don't you think that is almost enough for the picnic?"

      "I think we ought to have something to finish off with – to eat with the cookies and marguerites; don't you think so?"

      "Yes, I do; something in the way of fruit. Suppose we give them this – it is much nicer than plain oranges or bananas; write it down, dear."

ORANGE BASKETS

      6 large oranges.

      2 bananas.

      2 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar.

      Cut the oranges in halves; take out the pulp with a spoon, and put it in a bowl. Scrape out the inside, leaving nice, clean shells, and then scallop or point the edges with the scissors. Peel the bananas, cut them in long, narrow strips, and these into small bits, and mix lightly with the orange, and add the sugar; heap in the baskets and set away to grow cold.

      "If we happened to have any pineapple or white grapes in the house, I should put some of those in too; but these will be delicious just as they are. Now anything more?"

      "Something to drink with the lunch. I think pink lemonade would be nice."

      "Perfectly lovely!" laughed Mother Blair. "We will get a can of raspberries out of the fruit closet, and make something for them that will be ever so good. This is the rule:"

PICNIC LEMONADE

      8 lemons.

      12 glasses of water.

      3

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