THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAN", PORTLAND, MAT 21, 1911.
3'
nettes look well in gray, sage green,
azure, and black, and .white, which, by
the way. Is the favorite echeme t
present for all dres. Muddy complex
ions and colorless hair, must avoid yellow-browna.
slate -tinted grays, dead
white, all black, and the paler blues.
For these persons & darkish gown and
a black hat with a bit of color where
It Is most becoming: are the get-up ad
Tlnahlc. But. then, who can tell of the greater
subtleties of dress in cold words. The
Lady Fashion has chameleon moods,
and what will look well on one woman
would kill another of the same type.
Everything must be tried, tested and
proved Acceptable to mirror and
friends. As I have said before, one
must go about it with fasting and
prayer or else find the great soul that
understands the needs of beauty in the
lines and colorings of dress.
HAREM COSTUME ALL THE RAGE NOW
AT FASHIONABLE BATHING RESORTS
BATHING SUITS NOT MEANT FOR
SALTY SEA ARE NOW IN VOGUE
Narragansett, Atlantic City and Other Fashionable Watering Places Show Elaborate Costumes Hats Are Worn
by "Sand" Bathers White Is Color Popular on Private Beaches.
Women of Smart Set rind Nothing Immodest in This New Skirt for Ocean "Dips" Knitted
Worn Allow Wearers Ferfect Freedom and Yet Cling Closely to Figure.
Jersey Suits
1 j
The Beverages for the
Home Table
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KW TOKK. May 10. I Special.
Ilk the harem klrts. upon
ch ronwrr, live American
wonifa looked with a disapproving eye.
the Jolly llttl harem bathing suit la
taking Ilka wildfire. There ta noth
ing Immodest about th! nf w bathing
klrU which, aa vrjr woman tnuat ad
mit, la g!orlouly well adapted for fun
In tha water and on the bearh. The
new aklrt, moreover, max be worn
without tha bother of knlrkera or
trunka underneath, maklna- but two
garment. Jeraey and skirt, to bt car
ried back and forth In the bathing bag.
Women who ewlrn will delight In the
new knitted bathing ault jeraeya. which
cling trimly to tha figure. yet allow
perfect freedom of the arma and
ehoulilera. Tha Jersey la so knitted
that It maintain Ita good linea and la
easy to draw on and off. It Is accom
panied by knitted trunks ami a wel
rut little aklrt of mohair, a sailor col
lar .of mohair and silk turning back
over the knitted jersey to glre a femi
nine touch of attractlveneas. This
suit la In dark blua and white, tha cap
being of blue silk dotted with wlitte.
French and Kngllsh women do not
make a practice of lying about on the
aand in the sun. Vhen ttwe bath la
over they repair Immediately to the
bathhouse, the bathing suit discreet
ly covered with an all-enveloping wrap
which Is held by a maid during the
bath. These- wraps are being taken
up by American women for wear at
public beaches and the drape hns another
advantage It may be spread on the
aand during the sunhath to keep the
dainty silk bathing suit free from tha
disfiguring wet sand.
NO WOMAN IS TOO BEAUTIFUL
TO NEGLECT TASTE IN DRESS
Frequently Good Looks Are Concealed by Mistakes in Costumes High Stocks Have Done Much to Ruin Wom
an's Charm Short, Tight Skirts Are a Danger to Faulty Figures.
APMART dressmaker was turning
a prospective customer round and
rnund. the audience wondering;
what she would do with so plain
woman. Jler - complexion and soi
era both a sort of bruised pink: danc
ing feathera In several shades of tha
ame unwholesome color sprouted fool
ishly from hrr silly, too youthful hat
though she was quite 29 Inches at tha
waist and big In the hips to boot, her
costume was skintight. She had reached
the age fnr grahalr and reaaon. yet
here she was poured like a sausage Into
a costume whose style wss for It and
whose color waa for nobody but
Kebe.
"let me see." ruminated the priestess
of style. "You hsve fresh eye, splen
did teeth; you are fairly tall; yoa
must wear all black, black and white,
and coats that veil tha line of your
figure. Tou cannot wear flowers In
vour rhapeau unleea they ara white
and are maed rloaely to the hat.
Graying hair" ue looked apologetic
Iiere mut never be worn frlned with
heavy features. Korty-two. you aayT
Well. 1 aha!l make you look 3. If you
leave It to me. 8he actually did It.
Ah. If only other fairly good-looking
women who make objects of themselves
with bad taste In dress had omebody
to examine their points and show them
how to make the best of them Take
the matter of middle age. and see tha
things we must combat. Half or mora
tf the figures once so slim have become
atorky. too fat. or plteously lean. Com
pletions have changed with them.
changed to brick dust, copper tint
lmon and clayey pallors; for tha bird
of time always hath tta way with the
rosea and lilies of youth. We. these
ntddte-sged ones, of all women on
earth, must compromise with fsshlon.
M'a must consider our points abota all
things, and every defective figure and
Indtfrerent complexion must do the
asms thing. '
In point of llne.ln drese. a Hgure
that la the least bit too heavy or that ta
not properly proportioned must have Ita
faults concealed and not revealed. The
looee. transparent coats now worn over
thin, handsome gowns, with tbetr
graceful kimono sleeves snd rounded,
fronts, give all figures, whether fat or
lean, a certain Jaunty youthfulneaa. Tha
gowna underneath muat fit In to the
f sure yet never be too tight. For
f "ion-legged women. who waist
length la too exaggerated for propor
tion, the hlgh-waisted Empire atyles
ara a boon: If the legs are too long and
tha waist short a long coat only slight
ly fitted 1 advUable.
High tocka have done much to ruin
woman s charm, and unless tha throat
la of tha long, swan sort they should
never be worn. Tha full columnar
throat requires a straight, soft, trans
parent stock, or els a flat collar or col
larleea neck. To squeese tha big;
healthy throat Into on of tha high
bands with wing points going up Into
tha ears Is to destroy all Its charm.
Elderly women, for tha most part, need
to wear these high stocks for the con
cealment or the acragglnesa that cornea
at the front of the throat; but If tha
band I of a thick white material it
add la more years to their sgea. On
very young persona the high stock
with side points Is a'o out of place,
especial If tha girl la not old enough
to pot up her hair. Then collarless ,
necks are once more to reign and they
are epeciaily tha privilege of youthful
person.
Tha very short, tight skirts are an
other danger to faulty figure. Unless
tha woman Is well corseted, there Is a
hideous bulge at the rear of the tight
skirt where tha corset ends. If her
feet ara large, they appear enormous
under the edge of the skirt too short
and too narrow to conceal them. 5-uch
figures. If they will affect the scan
jupes. should have over tunics, cut
square bark and front, divided at the
sides and allowed to hang loose. These
straight panels straighten the figure
bark and front, and help to lessen tne
prominence of the feet, for evening.
a faulty form Is best gowned In
trained costume, for though trains are
made In tha most absurd points, and
the dress material at the front and
sides hugs the ankles with awkward
tightness, thla bit of a tall behind con
tributes to grace.
With hats and colore, the woman ot
bad taste Is bound to sin most pro
founlly. for the buying of headgear re-
qutrea Inspiration or the best advice.
and the color sense Is a gift from
heaven. Just now two -awful thing
are threatening hats In brilliant col
ors and absurd shapes. Scarlet feath
ers adorn wide black shapes: turb
crowns are made up of flowers In
party hues that stand on end: blues,
greens, purple, red, yellows and every
other crude color mark mammoth tur
bans In coarse straws whose textures
are unkindly to complexions and tha
usual lines of features. A hat. reinem
ber. muat follow the lines of the face
and head; tha woman must not look as
If she Is wearing a hat. bnt as If hrr
headpiece were a part of her. Only the
coloring and Unea of dainty youtii can
stand the rough straw hats In vivid
colors, the scarlet feathers, tha posies
sprouting from the crown ol-.tke head
and waving with every movement. Only
the Juvenile and pretty head which go
tth slim, buoyant figures, or course.
ran caa triumphantly under tha shal
low. mide-biimmed millinery which
must be cocked slightly sidewtee.
Kor the difficult head and figure.
prayer and fasting are needed before
the selection of a hat. and the gwn
with which It Is to be worn must be
considered, the complexion ar.d the ar
rangement of the hair.
An all black hat 1 aging to any but
tha most youthful wearer, but If the
complexion I very faulty the bit of
color In It mut not be put too close to
the fare. At the left back, turban In
irregular line ehow lifts In dead
white- -arlet. apple green or other col
ors, these rorka!e made of ait Iff rib
bon In many ways. A woman of .42
might wear a hat of this sort, but she
had better choose tl.e white cock an e.
as the black and white scheme Is suited
to her yeara and It la smart, besides.
nd goes with gowns In any color.
Many complexions, especially those
with pale brunette colorings, need a hat
with a white brim facing, but this
should never be In a hard whit satin
or ailk. as theae facings are very try
ing. A soft panama hat. with black
velvet trimming put on In plain tail
ored way requires good coloring, a
smooth dressing of the hair and a
look of health or youth.
The big turbans with perfectly round
ltnrs suggest the woman past 30. as
the newest lines of such hats are un
dulated. Tha helmet with narrow
brima, tha Napoleon shapes, the Dutch
bonnets with scoop fronts, and the
cut-out rear for the accommodation of
the chignon are for the young and
pretty. The woman of average looks.
neither young nor old. will nnd In a
Neapolitan turban with undulated brim
, change In the line aomem-here
tha likelihood of a kindly headpiece. A
high black algret. or one In bl k and
wulte. placed ax tfce left back will give
the hat a touch of becoming elegance.
A single half-blown rosebud of the
American beauty species, placed on the
side front brim of a hat trlmned else
where with black, will relieve a sallow
complexion, iieautlfy It. In fact. If there
are no splotches, for even the color of
Ike bud will emphasize them. Flowers
In a deep orange, or pure white, tone
down a florid complexion, and for this
face any black and white scheme Is
very good unless the hair Is of the
pepper and salt gray, when black and
white Increases the look of age some
time, though this Is not always so.
The startling shades of red used for
both gowns and hats require a clear,
rather pale complexion or else one In
whirh something of the same red 1
shown. Violet and dull blues are beau
tiful against gray hair, and coppery
shadra of red go superbly with red
hair and the thin white skins that
generally accompany It. With dun-colored
h!r, blue or gray eyes and a so-so
complexion, the softer shades of blue
are sometimes very accommodating
the blue called Alice, the Nattier shade,
crow-blue. etc. Where the eyes are of
the changeable sort their bluea deepen
the color, and with thla deepening of
the tint of the eyes the complexion
commonly Is Improved. Where there Is
too much color a blue hat or dress
scheme Is excellent: where there Is too
little It Is bad. unless the cheeks are
llglitry touched with rouge.
Freshly colored blondea or pale bru-
HOW many housekeepers understand
the gentle art of making coffee
and tea to perfection? The majority
Ignore the temperature and freshness
of the water used, and not one out of
ten realizes that the vessel used for
drinks must be kept as clean as a new
born rosebud. Cooking- a greasy mess
In a saucepan one day and boiling tea
or coffee water in It the next li
crime. The cooking vessel used for any
beverage must be kept for the purpose
and none other. It must be scrubbed
every day with a cleaning powder,
scalded, aired, sunned. t
The pot must aiso be made hot with
scalding water and then wiped perfect
ly dry with a fresh towel before tea
or coffee is put In. Stopping the spout
of both vessels with a small clean
cork, or with the metal cap supplied,
keep In the aroma while the drink Is
brewing. The teapot should be covered
with a wadded "coxy" while Ita delect
able drink Is steeping, and. time must
be kept for this by the clock. Good
tea makers steep their tea about three
minutes. Good coffee makers never let
their nectar boll.
The morning coffee doea not need to
be as strong aa that served In small
cups after dinner. But a little good.
strong coffee, liberally diluted with hot
milk, la more delicious and kindly on
ttie stomach than the usual wishy-
washy stuff some housekeepers pro
fan with this sacred name. The taste
exquisite, the odor divine, the exalta
tion coffee drinkers love Ilea In the drip
variety. Machines with glass bowls.
in which the coffee can be aeen as it
bubbles up and down, make this cof
fee without too much thought on the
part or the maker. They cost about
dollar and a half, with the little alco
hoi lamp that goes underneath. But
such drip coffee is only second best.
The most sophisticated and sure ves
sel is a French earthenware coffee not.
and this Is always placed in a pan of
not water wnne the drink Is being
made. The cofee bean Is Improved If It
is slightly parched over after It come
from the grocer with a nut of butter
in the pan. Then It must be nowdered.
for a coarse grinding does not bring
out an tne extract. The water must be
freshly drawn and used as soon as it
doiis ror both coffee and tea.
yulte excellent coffee can be made
or cold water, and as soon as this
DUDDies onoe the drink is ready. The
usual grinding is correct for this, as
the powder makes a muddy drink. Mix
the dry coffee with a raw beaten esre-.
snowing one taoiespoonrul heaping
ir eacn person and one for the pot.
"e cup oi water for each per-
vuu uue iur tne urn.
Refreshing; Drinks for the Rest
Hour.
Knmls Milk prepared In this way is
boon to tired stomachs, serving the
purpose of both refreshment and food.
Ingredients are one ouart of fresh
milk, one and a half tablespoonfuls of
sugar, dne-fourth of a yeast cake, one
tablespoonful of lukewarm water.
Heat the milk to 75 degrees, using a
cooking thermometer for the testing.
Add sugar and yeast cake dissolved
tne lukewarm water. Fill sterilized
beer bottles to within one and a half
Inches of the top. Cork these and shake
them. Then place the bottles upside
aown wnere tney can remain at a tcm
perature of 70 degrees for 10 hours;
men put mem In the Ice box. or In
cold spring, and let them stand 48 hours
more, shaking occasionally to prevent
the cream from clogging at the top of
Dotties.
Kumiss Is also one of the best Invalid
foods that can he given, being always
advised In gastric troubles and with
high fever.
It Is sold In pint and half-pint bottles
at an good drug stores.
Iced Tea With Freak Mint Heat
coffee cup In thickcrockery and put In
one slack teaspoonful of good tea. Pour
over boiling water and let the cup stand
In a w a ran place for three or five mln
tites. Remove, strain the tea and chill.
Then sweeten slightly and pour It into
a glass of crushed ice holding three
bruised mint leaves.
This is very reviving after a day's
sewing or housekeeping, and a nibble of
sponge or pound cake will go well
with It.
11 1 j? ? s s 4! I II -Mi
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' Bassse-aBXaBaM
. zrji'ry SCrST" -VE
NEW YORK, May 20. (Special.)
The bathing suit shown In the il
lustration is often aeen at Trou-
vtlle and other French watering places,
though American women, who swim,
do not favor such dressy water cos
tumes. Elaborate bathing suits ac
companied by hats are, however, much
the fad at Narragansett, Atlantic City
and other large fashionable resorts and
it is safe to say that the bathing suit
like the one pictured never goes Into
the salty sea. This suit is made of
pink satin trimmed with Venise lace;
I the stockings are pink silk and the
I wrap is of thin cashmere embroidered
. oncollar and cuffs.
Tiiough white bathing suits are not
! permitted on the large public beaches,
they are often seen on private beaches
! at fashionable Summer colonies, and
j the white bathing suit, if made qf suf
i flciently substantial material, is quite
as modest as the darker one and much
prettier. One of these charming lit
tle suits is built of heavy yet soft
white satin, beneath it are satin
knickers. The manner of lacing the
skirt w ith white braid run through em-
cA-V lrjJ5Vr
Jroldered eyelets is particularly grace
All. An arrangement of blue and white
striped taffeta silk on a white silk
suit Is exceedingly effective and gives
the simple suit much smartness. The
skirt is slashed up in four places and
V-shaped sections of the stripings in
serted. Sleeve and under-arm sections
are of the striped silk, a shaped panel
reaching up over this stripins at front
and back and a pointed yoke of the
striping being: stitched to the panel.
The stockings in this case are white,
with blue canvas bathing shoes.
ENGLISH ETIQUETTE FOR WEEK"
END PARTIES IS MOST PRECISE
Guest Is Expected to Remember Time Limit of Visit and Not to Overstay Train Upon Which Visitors Are to
Arrive Is Also Specified hy Hostess.
DAINTY SILKEN BATHING
CAP PROVING POPULAR
Quaint Dutch Bonnet of Checked Rubberized Silk With Rosettes Over
Ears and Kerchief of Colored Silk With Persian Border, Alluring.
i?
NEW iORK, May 10. (Special.)
The woman who really dives in
the wavea acorns a fancy bath
ing cap and tugs a practical rub
ber swimming rp down over fore
head and ears, tying around the edge
stout silk ribbon band. But bath
ers who do not exercise energetically
enough in the water to wet the front
of the hair, wear the dainty silken
cap.
Two new models are herewith pic-
- . '
A; : .TV
-
s ,
tured: one a quaint Dutch bonnet , cap
of checked rubberized silk with ro
settes over the ears; the other a ker
chief of colored silk with a Persian
border, the kerchief being in three
cornered shape so that it may be easily
adjusted. l'nder both of these caps
goes -an ordinary rubber bathing cap
wlitch protects the hair at the nape of
the neck where the salt water always
reaches even when the front of the
coiffure is kept dry.
strrE OWE our present interest in
week-end .visiting to the Eng-
" lish, who set the fashion for
these short visits at country homes.
Not uncommonly a smart hostess fol
lows the English method to the letter,
stating In the word to the- prospective
guest that the invitation is for a long
week end or a short one. The long
week end Is from Friday until Tues
day and the short one from Saturday
until Monday, and It behooves the
guest not to forget the time limit, as
the welcome of fashionable folk end
with the specified day. To stay over
the Monday or Tuesday designated,
then, would show a lack of under
standing in matters polite on the part
of the guest.
Following . the English way, the
American hostess also designates the
very train on which the guest must
come, and If she takes any other it is
considered bad manners. The fact that
in England a vehicle and two servants
are always sent to meet a guest has
established this last point, for if the
hostess has to send people to meet
another train this may be a serious
Inconvenience. Where there is no ex
pec tat ion of a conveyance, and the
guest must go on foot or by trolley to
the house. If she happens to know the
way, there seems no great imperti
nence In taking a different train from
the one specified. In this country this
is frequently done, though a proper
excuse is expected at the end of the
line for the disobedience.
Persons who entertain a great deal.
and always finish up a week at this
season with some sort of a house
party, are not expected to enlighten
the guest as to the costumes that will
be required during her stay. She
supposed to travel In a suitable tailor
suit and bring a change of bodices
and an evening dress and driving coat;
but all of these must be stored away
in a handbag, as a week-end Invite
does ' not allow enough time for the
change of raiment a trunk involves.
If the long week end Is to be celebrat
ed very formally, however, -it would
be polite of the hostess to suggest the
fact in a few words, and state, too,
that perhaps a small trunk would be
handler than a bag.
The bungalows of this country per
mitting the simple life, it Is quite com
mon for a hostess owning such a place
to tell her guest that she will not need
clothes. In the dressy sense of the
word.
We'll just rough It, you know go
to the woods, gather apple blossoms
and maybe take the trolley into North
port." Such a phrase In a letter of In
vitatlon for a week-end visit would be
very helpful to a woman who could
nut afford to bother with the clothes
needed for social functions.
The moment the invitation is re
ceived the -guest answers, accepting or
refusing with equal grace in the c:
knowledgment of the honor done her!
If she accepts, and there are to be
other guests, the hostess who affects
the English caper will not meet her
at the train; neither does she show
herself at the guest s room on her ar
rival at the house. She sends word
that there will be tea in the grounds
at 4 o clock or dinner at 7, and at
either of these functions greets the
guest for the first time, introducing
her at the same moment to such per
sons as are strange to her. With the
bungalow, or little country house in
vitation, where this guest is to bo the
sole outsider, the hostess could not
possibly put on such frills. In fact, In
all likelihood, she would go to the
train and nsher the stranger herself
Into her home, where, after giving ber
some slight refreshment, she would at. native heath, it is incumbent upon her,
once proceed to show off her pretty 1 in fact, to shut her eyes to small remiss-
home.
It is a difficult matter to be a good
hostess, but It is far more to be a per
fect guest. One hostess, who has oniy
one servant or none at all maybe, may
expect some little assistance with
household matters; another situated in
exactly the same manner, would resent
even an offer of assistance in the least
duty. So It is best for the guest to take
the bearings of the place and act ac
cordingly. With a person she knows
fairly well she might say: "I'm rather
useful about the house; call on me if
you wish," or something to that effect.
With the appearance of another visit
or, somebody who drops in to meet the
house guest, ft is not fitting for the lat
ter to propose tea or any entertainment.
She shows herself as very pleased to
meet her friend's friends, but beyond
doing the most gracious sort of talk,
and getting up to meet her, and again
rising wlieri she goes, she in no wise
presumes on her own footing in the
house.
On the other hand, where the hostess
gets up some little entertainment es
pecially for the guest, and has only one
servant or none, it is proper for the
stranger to ask for a share in the man
agement of things and to be ready to
do any form of entertaining the hostess
requires. If asked to do It. she must
sing, read aloud, recite or tell stories or
play cards. Only one thing would ex
cuse her for not responding to any re
quest made by the hostess, and that
would be some indisposition or other;
for the. hostess would not ask for a dis
play of talents the guest did not pos
sess. In a house where there are many
servants, the hostess" sets aside several
maids for the convenience of the ladies,
they coming In to button dinner gowns
and keep all the costumes of the guests
in good shape. a The maids who take
care of the chambers bring pitchers of
drinking water at night and attend to
any room service, but it is not correct
for the guest to fee any of ,these do
mestics without first asking the hostess
if she approves. If permission Is grant
ed, and there are two maids who look
to the guest's comfort, a. dollar may be
divided between them. A man servant
who waits on the table, and does va
rious small services for the stranger.
would require a separate fee and doubt
less a bigger one than that given to a
maid. In the event of a large staff of
servants, the guest would not even put
her gowns away after wearing them,
but where there are none she might be
called upon even to keep her chamber
In order.
In the British Isles they omit one very
pretty feature of all American visiting.
Here the guest invariably takes the
hostess some little gift or other, a box
of candy, some trifle for her toilet, or
hot-house fruit. In a home that Is run
on medium means any fruit is accept
able, while In a house far from markets
a bunch of new asparagus, a pound of
fine tomatoes or a basket of mushrooms
might prove a godsend.
But the prettlnesses of conduct are
not confined to the guest.
The hostess does any number of lit
tle things to show her pleasure in the
presence of her friend; she turns her
into one or her daintiest Dearooms,
made charming with a vase of flowers,
and perhaps holding some specially
cherished view from a window. She
states the hours for meals and is her
self punctual at them, and if she has
any notion of her own comfort as well
as her guest's she provides some enter
taining reading matter ror the rest
hour in the Bedroom or on the porch.
She also gives the stranger to under
stand that she may come and go about
the grounds or woodlands as she
pleases, outside of meal hours, and does
not show by word or sign any of the
tyrannies of the vulgar minded and sel
fish householder. Since she is upon her
nesses in the outsider, for, all things
said and done, the greatest obligations
at such times lie with the hostess.
As a nation we are all beginning to
crave country homes of some sort, so
those provided with these luxuries
should be generous to poorer friends
and make it a point to share their
blessings sometimes with persons tied
by necessity to city lives. An invita
tion to come out and see the apple
blossoms, take a motor ride or walks
in beautiful woodlands is something
any city dweller will value at this sea
son; and along with everything else
there is the social importance guests
give a country home.
A girl of my acquaintance who bought
a tiny farm on 920 a week has built
up a gathering of very delightful
friends in this way. Everybody who
goes out to see her carries a useful
gift of fine food in some shape, and
everybody helps with the housekeeping
and gardening.
The house is an old stable turned
into a species of bungalow, and the
dining table and chairs have rustic
legs. The invitation to share in this
blessed taste of simple life is always
unconventional and full of poetry.
One sent me a month since read:
"The hermit thrush is beginning his
divine pipe, and seven fat robins are
building in my apple trees. Come out
Friday, four-fifty train. Meet you."
Could a letter 10 pages long offer
more than this? The song of the
hermit thrush, apple trees, nests with
blue eggs the sky, the blue air, the
quiet of dawns and dusks! These
things belong to the girl who has
earned them with the sweat of her
brow, and all , her social gifts shine
more sweetly for the offer to share
them with poorer persons.
PRUDENCE STAXDISH.
' Cabbage Salad.
Shred fine a new cabbage, the red
cabbage is generally most crisp, and set
where It is cool while you prepare a
dressing as follows: Beat two eggs and
place them in a double boiler, or in a
kettle set in boiling water, with salt
to taste, a saltspoon of dry mustard and
a pinch of cayenne pepper; when these
are well mixed add three tablesroon
fuls of butter and half a cupful of vin
egar, stirring constantly until cooked;
take off, add a half cupful of cream
and pour oer the cabbage.
Lemon Dumplings.
Half a pound of bread crumbs. Half
a pound of finely chopped suet, a quar
ter of a pound of dried flour, the rind
and Juice of one lemon and two eggs.
Mix all together well, form Into dump
llnps. tie in cloths and boil two hours.
Freckle-Face
New Remedy That Removes Freckle or
Coat Nothing;.
Here's a chance. Miss Freckle-Face, to
try a new remedy for freckles with the
guarantee cf a reliable dealer that it will
not cost you a penny unless it removes the
freckles, while if it does ive you a clear
complexion, the expense is trifling.
Simply get an ounce of otnine doub:e
strength from Woodard-CIarke & Co., and
one night's treatment will show you how
easy it Is to rid yourself forever of the
homely freckles and get a beautiful com
plexion. Rarely is more than one ounce
needed for the worst case.
Be sure to ask Wood a rd -Clarke A Co.
or double strength otfaine as this is the
only prescription sold under guarantee of
money back if it fails to remove freckles.