. India rubber world. ted sugaris poured and left to cool. Often, however, in pressing thesemetal shapes into the cornstarch or flour one mold will dis- USING CANDY MOLDS OF RUBBER. By Our Cincinnati \OWN at the Woodward High School, in Cincinnati (ex--^ President Tafts alma mater, by the way), an inventiveteacher in domestic science has contrived an interesting de-vice for candy-making, which, being non-patented. lends itselfto imitation elsewhere. While the course of domestic science is, of course, intendedto help the young women of the Queen City to becomebetter able to wash
. India rubber world. ted sugaris poured and left to cool. Often, however, in pressing thesemetal shapes into the cornstarch or flour one mold will dis- USING CANDY MOLDS OF RUBBER. By Our Cincinnati \OWN at the Woodward High School, in Cincinnati (ex--^ President Tafts alma mater, by the way), an inventiveteacher in domestic science has contrived an interesting de-vice for candy-making, which, being non-patented. lends itselfto imitation elsewhere. While the course of domestic science is, of course, intendedto help the young women of the Queen City to becomebetter able to wash and iron and cook and bake, still it isrecalled that husbands and children relish a tid-bit now andthen. As a result candy-making has become a feature of thiscourse and the young women make caramels and marshmal-lows and taffy and what not. Candy is candy the world over, of course, but appearancescount a great deal. To pile up a lot of lumps of sweets wouldnot always serve to tempt the palate of the fastidious. Where-. Scjiuui. M.\Ki. C,\Ni)v in Molds. turb another, so that the whole work has to be done overagain. But this would not be the case with a rubber moldthat would always keep its shape and not be so liable toaccidents as the unstable starch or the shifting flour. So the teacher got busy. She designed some eighty differentforms in which candies would look well. These, then, shearranged in series, eight rows across by ten rows down. Shetook her pattern to a great rubber factory and had a mat ofrubber embodying this series of forms made for her use. .•d now candy-making is indeed simple. You pour yoursyrup into the neat rubber molds, let it cool and by and by drawit out; and a slight washing, with luke warm water, makes themold ready for another batch of the sweets. THE RUBBER TRADE IN RHODE ISLAND. By Our Regular of the rubber factories in tliis vicinity are booming,*~^ altho others report a slight falling off in the volume of busi-nes
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