42 THE SUNDAY OHEGONIAN, POKTLASD, AUGUST 13, 1905. " - DURING TfSB c3CHOQb H&Xy . . mjji?OTWfijM , WITH the opening of school less than a month away, mothers study juvenile Vanlrobes with anxious eyes. What possibilities for first warm school days do thoso gar ments hold? Not much, if the young sters have spent the Summer in the country: yet it does not pay to buy Fall things so early, besldos'whfch the mother must thlak of the child's feel ings during those first hot days under schoolroom discipline. There will be many Bummers-like days before linens, ducks and crashes can be laid aside for the more sober woolen frocks. The woman who Is Summering In town can face the problems of school clothes more easily than her sisters who still loiter by the soa or mountain stream, for the bargain days in shops catering to children are -t hai.d. Sum mer toggery of all sorts Is cut ruth lessly rather than carried over for an other season. Boys of the kindergarten and pri mary school age will woar wash suits until October, and evon later, with woolen refers for chill mornings, so the wise mother looks flrst for bargains In these materials. Sailor and- Russian blouse suits which sold In June for $10 have dropped to $7, ?C or even ?5, while $5 6Ults are cut to ?2.9S and $2.50. Nat urally the market Is still flooded with the regulation "bargain suits" for boys, made from cheap material, stiff with dressing and sewed with stitches which pop open at the first suggestion of wearing. These are not cheap at any price. Materials from which deft-fingered mothers still fashion the best-wearing garments of all arc also groatly re duced. Plquos, ducks, linons, crashes and galatea cloth which sold for 50 cents or more during the Spring are now down to half the price. One prox'Ident mother of two boys of kindergarten age has bought-a length of dark (not navj-) blue linen of extremely good quality for 26 cents a yard, and is making it up for blouses, trimmed with white linen braid and pearl buttons. This being the dull season in town, sho induced a tailor to make up two pairs of weo trousers for each of the boys at CO cents each. The wash trousers will be worn on very warm Jays, and on chilly mornings the boys will don woolen trousers. The sailor suit is gaining rather than losing in popularity, and the small boy who has been togged out all Summer In one-plocc or two-piece 1 inert suits built on the Russian blouse order with white socks and patent leather "trimmings," welcomes with effusion a school suit on simple sailor lines. A pretty Fall model shows a galatea cloth In black and white shepherd's plaid, with shield and sleeve insignia done In scarlet. With this Is worn a brilliant scarlet tie. Dark red. dark blue and brown linen sailor cults are trimmed with white braid and white ornaments, while pretty suits are shown in all-Tvhlto linen or a white ground, striped with dark blue, dark red or dark green, and made up with cuffs, sailor collar and belt of the lark colored linen, stitched with white or trimmed with narrow, flat white braid. With most of the sailor suits straight knee-lcngth pants are worn, but with the Russian blouse the trousers are full, Zouavo fashion, and 'held to the knee with rubber. For early Fall wear mothers who make blouses at heme are using a non shrlnkable flannel, rather light in weight, that will wash. This comes in gray,-tan and dnrk blue, and the trou sers can be ordered from a tailor, ma terial provided, of course, for 50 cents. Two blouses should be made for each pair of wee pants. s Mothers who have the Umo to make Fall and Summer garments for their small boys insist that one home-made suit will outwear two ready-made suits, and the making is largely a matter of mechanical accuracy. Onco the pattern fits the child, tho success of the gar ment depends upon Its neat finish. One wise mother who has not the gift of fashioning raiment for small boys never allows her youngsters to don a new suit, bought ready made, until she has run up every seam which she can reach with her machine, and sewed on all buttons, and recast all button holes. In this way she prolongs the life of tho garment and forestalls frequent repairs. As soon as a boy passes the kinder garten stage ho longs for trousers and coats "like papa's," and these sturdy Iwo-pioce suits In tweeds and cheviots are, after all, a much better investment than moro fanciful toggery. When tho coat Is worn only to and from school, during early Fall days, and cast aside on particularly warm ones, a blouso with a collarless shield is worn. Later on a soft negligee shirt Is substituted. This has a narrow turnover collar of tho same material. The Windsor tie promises to be the thing for boys this year. Instead of the more boyish striped tie In which the average youngster fairly revels. Wash Windsor tie3 are offered as low as 15 cents, or two for a quarter. In plain and striped zephyr ginghams, and In myriad colors. They are infinitely more tidy than the silk ones, which soil so quick ly. And, lastly, the boy is right in his demand for a cap for school wear. No hat has yet been built which will meet the demands of a boy or withstand his hard usage. First school raiment for little girls should be extremely simple, and a one piece rock or a waist and skirt Joined by beading or piping, or belt, is far mora comfortable than the daintiest two-piece costume ever concocted. One mother who feels that Hhe must economizo in laundry bills has picked up a genuine bargain In real linen crash, which she la making Into one piece school frocks for her little daugh- ter. One frock has a guimpo with sleeves, made from coarse allover Ham burg embroidery, which combines well with the natural-colored linen crash, and the waist line of the little garment Is suggested by a loose belt of the crash, covered with the Hamburg. Another dress Is laid In pleats from the shoulder, Russian blouse fashion, and flares broadly around the bottom. This has a deep collar and turnback cuffs, as well as a belt, of the crash, worked in scallops of mercerized floss. The crash requires no starching, and launders easily. A pretty design in natural-colorsd linen has tho same Russian blouse ef fect, but is set oft by collars and cuffs of natural colored embroidery with the pattern done In scarlet floss. A touch of scarlet or vivid blue lends pictur esqueness to a school dress, and always pleasos Its little wearer. Pretty school dresses are evolved from a mercerized taffeta In black and white check, which is selling now for 19 and 23 cents per yard, according to the quality. Piped with scarlet, and set off by scarlet ornaments on the shield or on th siocves, this makes a pretty sailor suit for a kindergarten glrllo. Some suitable patterns In challlc are also offered for Juvenile Fall wear, and there Is a marked revival of the apron custom. Pretty Summer frocks which mothers know will be outgrown ere next Sum mer rolls round enn bo worked over Into aprons. The Mother Hubbard or Kato Greenaway pattern, with straps over tho shoulder, make the best of all patterns for school wear, and when tho little girl finds that all her small friends are togged out In the same practical fash Ion she will make no further objection to aprons. KATHERINE ANDERSON. Dainty Home-Made Ices and C reams FROM all over the land arises tho cry for America's Summer dish, ice cream. In reply, the city housewife orders by telephone from the caterer, or sends her one maid around the corner to the nearest candy shop for her frozon des sert. Her country or suburban cousin freezes her own cream, and the family of the latter gains by -the proceeding. High-priced city caterers offer a frozen custard to which cream has been added, the cheaper shops adulterate ingredi ents from milk to flavoring, until the mix ture ferments in anything but an abso lutely healthy stomach. Given one of the new kind sof feezera and an energetic, interested young as sistant to turn the dasher, any house wife can make her own frozen desserts rapidly and inexpensively. Sho should remember that cream swells with freez ing, and that at least half of tho liquid should be "scalded and cooled before the freezing is undertaken. To this half, she adds the rest of the cream beaten or whipped smoothly. Vanilla is not only the most popuYar flavor in ice cream, but it can bo used as the foundation for many fancy des serts. Scald one cup of unskimmed milk and one cup of cream with one cup of sugar. Sot away to cool thor oughly. When quite cold, add two cups of whipped cream and vanilla to taste. Have ready plenty of Ice which has been pounded in a .burlap or canvas sack, for which purpose a wooden mallet with a. short handle la best. Many women use "the flat side of an ax and are exhausted by the task. A wooden mallet can be bought for a quarter. Pour the mixture Into the can, adjust the beater, fasten ten the cap securely and pack with the crushed ice and rock salt in tho propor tion of three pajjts lco to one of salt, and the finer the ice tho quicker tho freez ing. Have a reserve stock of crushed lco to All up tho freezer as fast as the first lot melts. When tho crank moves slowly and heavily, wipe off tho lop of the can. open It and if tho mixture 'is of the consistency of cornmeal mush, re move the beater, taka a long wooden ladle and beat the mixture until your arm aches. This will give it a smooth, velvety finiBh. Put on tho top, drive a cork firmly into the round opening in the top, cover with old carpet or burlap and allow the cream to stand an hour or so before serving, as this mellows the flavor, packing with plenty of fresh Ice. Ice cream sandwiches make a dainty dessert. Bako an oblong loaf of sponge cake. When cold, cut in slices half as- inch thick and make into sandwiches, with a half-inch layer of tho crfram to two of tho cake. Raspberry Jelly with Cream Filling Soak half a box of gelatine in a cup of cold water. Place over the fire a stewpan containing one cup of sugar; a cup of water and tho thinly pared rind of two lemons. Let this mixture sim mer ten minutes, lift out the lemon peel and add two pounds of fresh raspber ries, stewing until the juice is. drawn out qf the fruit. Strain this juice, hot, ovor the gelatine, making sure that the latter is thoroughly dissolved. Whon cool, add a dash of maraschino or sherry, if you use liquor in cooking, pour into a mould with a hollow In tho center and set away to form. Turn out on a platter and fill the hollow in -the center with vanilla lco cream. . Hot Chocolate Sauce for Serving With Vanilla Cream Boll half a cup of su gar and the same quantity of water for five minutes and set aside to cool. In a double boiler melt one-fourth of a pound of unsweetened or baker's chocolate, add to this the sugar syrup and one tcaspoonful of vanilla, and leave it standing over the hot water until time to serve tho cream, then pour a little of tho sauce over each por tion. Tho hot chocolate sauce made famous by Huyler is mado as follows: Grate two ounces of chocolate, add one fourth of a tcaspoonful of cinnamon, two cups of sugar, one-half cup of water and four tablespoonfuls of sweet -cream. Boll without stirring until it forms- a soft ball when dropped Into Ice cold water. Servo at onco over vanilla ice cream." Cherry Sauce Stem and stone two cups of cherrieB, and add tho bruised kernels of half a dozen. Sweeten - to taste and let thiB mixture stand for half an hour.- Then bring to a boll, strain through a Jelly bag and to every cup cf juice allow one tcaspoonful of arrow root wet In cold water. Cook this mix ture flvo minutes, being careful not to burn, and set away to chilL Serve cold over vanilla lco cream. Peaches may be substituted for cherries, preserving tho samo proportions of Juice and arrow root. Cherries are plentiful in almost all markets, and they make delicious frozen mixtures. For cherry Ice allow one quart of the fruit, stemmed, stoned and washed, and mash this thoroughly with two cups of sugar, add the juice of one lemon, strained, and one quart of cold water. If the cherry skins are not desired strain this mixture, but quite generally the pulp and skin arc permitted to remain. Freeze as dlrecteX tor vanilla Ice cream. Another recipe for- cherry ice requires cooking as follows: Scald one quart of ripe oxheart cherries, and squeeze out the Juice as for Jelly. Allow for each cup of this juice one of wator and one of sugar. Boll the water and sugar to gether forfive minutes, skim, cool and add tho cherry juice and one-fourth of a cup of lemon Juice. Freeze hard, and when serving, top oft each portion with a bunch of cherries with a leaf of tho same. Chocolate Frappe Place two squares or ounces of baker's chocolate into a double boiler. When it has melted, add ono quart of milk which has been warmed slightly; two tablespoons of sugar. Cover and boll five minutes. Then whip with an egg beater until very smooth and set away to cool. Freeze as you would Ice cream until thfe mixture Is soft and mushy, not firm and smooth, and serve at once with whipped cream which has been sweetened with pulverized sugar and flavored delicately with vanilla. When a hostess desires to carry out a color scheme In her midsummer lunch con or dinner, the sherbert or dessert may be colored accordingly. A delicious green lco is mint. Bruise and steep six mint leaves In one-half cup of lemon juice for fifteen minutes; strain into a quart of boiling water In which two cups of sugar have been dissolved. When cold, strain again and frcczo as for vanilla lco cream. Bisque lco Cream Uso as the founda tion the recipe for vanilla ice cream, and when you heat tho mixture of milk and cream, add to each pint a cup of maca roons, dried and crumpled or rolled fine. Flavor delicately with a mixture of al mond -and vanilla. A Little Episode in Bohemia By Elfrld Bingham, author of "Art Thou tho Man?" SHE was an actress not a star or a ' leading woman, but a demure looking, unimportant member of tho Luckett Summer stock company at Hartford. In the house whero sho lived all tho men loved her, and sho liked all tho men in a desultory sort of way. It, was not hor custom to like people in any other way especially men. Notwithstanding whlch, she believed flrznly that she was a bohemlan. "To bo a bohemlan," sho explained. "Is merely to bo a 'good fellow.' It isn't necessary to woar soiled linen or oven to borrow money." Her other ideas were as radical. She believed that good fellowship knew so sex, and to prove her theory sho founded a sort of .clique in (whlch there was the ut most spirit of camaraderie, and It made no difference whether one woro trousers or skirts. Equality, "frater nity and pretzels wero tho pillars of this set, which was dominated largely by a young chap who affected a soft hat in hot weather and smokod a pipe. He also believed in the elimination of the question of sex. - The clique prospered and the rooms of the unimportant member were ever lastingly full of bright people, who were anxious to adopt the Idea until they met the woman and saw bovr well she carried it out. Her whole heart was in the demonstration, and nothing pleased her more than its success. As times grew brighter and" the stay of tho .stock company was assured she would occasionally spend money on in formal dinners and suppers, and her chums returned In kind so generously that tho days becamo long rounds of Jollity. The girls woro compelled to pay as freely as tho boys, for woro they not all equal? "Surclyl" ex claimed the youth who smoked the pipe. One of theic girls dropped in early of a morning in July and found hor hostess in tears. All sympathy, sho seated herself beside the unimportant member and began quizzing. Littlo by Httlo tho tale came out. The unimpor tant member was weeping over the corpse of her theories. "It's tho fault of the men,'! sho whimpered. "They never can forget tho fact that they are men and that wo are women, and there's no use try ing to make them. Just as soon as you got ono to a point whero only mental ity is in evidence, ho forgets every thing he has been taught and goes back to tho beginning." "All of fhem?" inquired tho visitor. "Yes, alL" "But the youth who smokes his pipe every evenragr "The first to forget tho principles of comradeship. An hour ago in this room he proposed to me and and oh. that isn't tho worst! I accepted him!" Serving Beverages in Midsummer Fruit "breaks. London Chronicle. In a garden at Wlthlngton, England, are to be seen a gooseberry bush growing from the trunk of a damson tree, and a current bush emorging from tho trunk of an apple tree. SUMMER service of beverages, wheth er hot or cold, has developed into an art. To Its charm, manufacturers of ta bleware have added many fascinations in china, glass and metal. They offer every possible Inducement, also, to outdoor service. In many homes, both city and country, tho after-dinner coffee 13 enjoyed eltSer on. the porch or In the side or back-yard. For this service, tho equipment easiest to handle includes a small, stout table, with a tray on which rests tho German drip coffee pot in copper or nickel, with its dome of clear glass In which the cof fee bubbles In richest brown tones. These triple drip pots require no additional hot water facilities, as tho lower compart ment holds an alcohol lamp which boils the water right in tho pot and drives it upward to percolato through the pulver ed coffee and be drawn off from a faucet, after tho fashion of an old style coffee urn. Trays come to match these pots, and the entire equipment in a large family size can bo secured for $10 or less. Larger trays, big enough to hold. In addi- Uon to tho pot, a sugar bowl, cream piicner ana naix a aozcu truu. tuuia . triflo higher. When Iced tea Is served, the up-to-date hostess makes It before the eyes of her guest. Tho servant brings In tho usual tea equipment, a brightly burnished cop per or nickel tea kettle - swung over an alcohol lamp, one of the new squat tea pots in Japanese ware (and the uglier these are the better, tho more sugges tive of demons or monsters "or idols, the 'more popular) and a tea caddy to match. The mistress brings the water to boll and by this time the servant or a daugh- ter of the household has returned with a tray covered with tall, slender glasses filled with coarsely chopped ice. The tea is brewed quickly and poured ovor tho chopped ice to, chill, a dash of pulverized sugar and a slice of lemon peel being added last. Amplo supplies of Ice must be at hand for the service. Where the tea Is brewed In tho kitchen, it may be poured ovor chopped ice in a pitcher, and when Ice-cold, a sprig of fresh mint leaves, frosted lightly with powdered sugar, or a spray of nasturtium blooms and leaves Is thrust into the neck of the pitcher, or laid at its side on the tray. Tea brewed In the morning and allowed to stand all day in tho refrigera tor may save trouble for the housewife at the last moment, but it Is less palata ble than the freshly brewed article. Many housewives follow the French custom and pass- with tho Iced tea the tiniest of wafers v or macaroons, smaller than a sil ver quarter. With these go also a bowl of pulverized sugar and very thin slices of lemon. Every woman who has dined at, a res taurant on a warm Summer niht has admired tho cool, refreshing appearanco of the various wine "cups" served to Summer diners. This can he imitated cleverly In fruit punches. Take as your foundation a rich lemonade. Slice the lemons and lay them in alternate layers with sugar and grated pineapple. Allow this mixture to stand for an hour or more, then add water In the proportion of a pint to every lemon. Strain over plenty of Ice, add an orange, washed and sliced very thin, and a few maraschino cherries, top oft with frosted mint leaves and serve Ih claret glasses. Grape juice may be added to lemon ade for a rich and toothsome drink, but with this as with all Summer bevorages. the tinkle of Ice must sound clearly, cool ly. Iced coffee served In slender parfalt goblets, which are about six inches In depth and set on a standard, is qulto popular this Summer. It" Is best when made from fresh coffee as for aftor dinner service, then poured off Into a bottle and packed in salt and ice until almost frozen. It Is then brought out upon the porch or Into the garden in the tall, gracoful glasses, topped oft by whipped cream. Thin wafers and pul verized sugar may be passed with It. though If the cream is sweetened with a liberal hand whon whipped, tho addi tional sugar may not be needed. The new pitchers are either very tall, tapering steadily toward the top or they are very low and squat. In the first Instance, the top quite frequently shows a rim of silver, plain or beaten In somo appropriate design. A beautiful model has a rim of silver grapes, with a grace ful, depressed leaf for the Hp. Grap vines, hung with fruit and leaves, run down' the entire handle. Some of the punch bowls which may bo used for lemonade or any sort of fruit punch, also show these rims of silver, with a silver tray and low, squat glasses to match The low glass is by all odds tho safest for serving Summer drinks out doors. The high-priced cut glass sets are imitated cleverly In American waro with a good quality of plate rim. A pret ty punch service for Summer use Is a remarkably good imitation of Bohomlan glass, showing golden grapes on a deli cate green glass ground. This includes a good-sized round tray with up-turned rim. a three-quart bowl and six glasses, all for Ave dollars. Served with a spray of pink or white roses or sweet peas hiW across the tray, this would be delight fully Summery and appetizing. A Real Daughter df the Revolution THE 100th birthday of Mrs. Drusllla Hall Johnson was celebrated with unique ceremonies In the Edwards Con gregational Church, Northampton, Mass.. a fewdays ago. The service was con ducted by Mre. Johnson's son, the Rev. Dr. 31. A. Johnson, of Cincinnati, and her grandson, the Rev. Walter Do For est Johnson, of Wllkesbarre, Pa. Both axe Episcopal clergymen. The experiences of a century have not dimmed Mrs. Johnson's enjoyment of life. Thoush her sight and hearing are Im paired, her vigor, both mental and phy sical. Is noteworthy. She rises In good season, generally between 7 and S o'clock. She performs light domestic tasks, takes a nap or two, and converses much. Sho retires not later than 8 o'clock in the evening. Mrs; Johnson's father. Aaron Hall, left Harvard to join the Continental Army, in which he served six years. He wit nessed the execution of Major Andre, and was afterward captured and sent to Eng land. Her grandfather was one of the minute men of Lexington and Concord, and one of the committee that drafted the constitution of Massachusetts. Seventy-flvo years ago, when Mrs. Johnson was a teacher In Westhampton. she lived In Edward Everett Hate's grandfather's family. The Unitarian creed was at that time generally consid ered unthinkable heresy, and Mrs. John son was often cautioned by Dr. Haie 9 grandfather against the "false doctrine." little dreaming that the young grandson of her counselor would one day become the foremost exponent of Unitarianism in the United States. A few years ago Mrs. Johnson and Dr. Hale enjoyed a hearty laugh over the circumstance. When Mrs. Johnson was a girl of 19 or 30 she met General Lafayette. She re calls distinctly that the General seemty surprised as well as delighted with tho spontaneity of the continuous ovation which marked his progress through tho country. Mrs. Johnson was 92 years old befero she saw the ocean. On her 97th birthday she gave a -trolley ride-to neighbors who were more than 70 years old.