THE SUNDAY OREGONIAW. POKTjLAlfP. JULY 19, 1914. 8 panniers or wide sashes or flaring tunics. She considers the panorama of fash ions as a parade from which one can choose the thing best suited to one self. Consequently, she always commands your admiration, as well as your envy, and you fretfully ask yourself how she does It. When you find that she does not spend more money than you do, per haps not as much, and yet achieves this result, you do one of two things: You petulantly or vaingloriousiy say that life is too full of more important things for you to give such time and attention to the vulgar "necessity of dress. Or you sensibly recognize that the question of clothes must be met. and it behooves every well-balanced woman today to do each of the necessary things of life with Intelligence and or ganization, and that it is neither a credit to her judgment, her taste, or her perception of money value, to dress FREEDOM OF MOUNTAIN OR SEA STILL HAS ITS STRINGENT RULES Friends Easily Made, but Same Hotel or Camp Does Not Constitute Introduction Rigid Convention of Socirty in City During Winter Months Abandoned in Nearly All Resorts. WOMEN CRITICISED FOR BEING BADLY DRESSED THOUGH BUYING LAVISHLY Excuse of Lack of Vanity Scored as Being Covering for Laziness or Carelessness and Bargains Are Declared Valueless Frequently, but Study in Buying Clothes Is Urged as Sensible Business Policy. badly, extravagantly, or careiessij Aatwew to CorrepondenU On the left is a white taffeta fro Caught together at the bottom. In t pleasing substitute for fur. which has at the lower edge and the long-waiste a little laced white net gulmpe. Vel IT behooves every woman to take a little time out of the stir of things and take an inventory of her rela tion to clothes. The inactivity of the Summer season offers the best chance at leisure. Of morals, of mentality, of character, I do not speak. That is not the prov ince of a stranger, but an inventory of clothes and of oneself in them, of the money needed to dress well, of the pit falls one should avoid and the effort to overcome the temptation of going long the line of least resistance of these things we can all talk together. Kach woman has her own experi ences. No one is so blessed with money and taste and Judgment that she has no mistakes to her credit In the matter f clothing herself. Some women are born with the Clothes sense Just as they are with the card or the music sense, but they err. Some women have an easier path through the maze of fashions than those who struggle wildly and fret fully with each recurring fashion. There are other women many of them who feel so hopelessly out of the running when it comes to fashion able dressing that they give up any of competing with their neighbors and either negligently or dogmatically wear whatever comes their way. Stock-Taking .Necessity. Possibly the most discomforting knowledge that can come to one who is irchlni for liaht on how the well- dressed woman manages to look so continuously well-dressed. Is that she leaves nothing to chance, does nothing In a hurry. The other woman always argues that she has not the time in life to attend to her costumery. and Its ar rangeemnt on herself, regarding it as a serious matter; to which the other woman retorts that she can never hope for good results under that theory. The crux of the situation lies there; no woman is well-dressed who does not take clothes seriously, not as the end and aim of life, which Is a doll's busi ness, but as a commodity which must be worth the money spent. One admires sucji judgment. It shows a sense of good management that can never be put down to the woman who. saying she has not the time to give to a matter of so little Importance as clothes, spends her husband's hard, earned dollars on a frock that is neither becoming nor worth its price. When one argues with this type of woman and it abounds she usually takes the attitude that she hasn't suf ficient vanity to pay attention to these things. And it Is almost impossible to persuade her that good business sense, not vanity, is at the root of wise pur chases of clothes. This Is a lesson she should learn. It may not be her own money that she is spending, and to spend another's money willfully and wastefully is wrong from healthy moral point of view. Merlon Thought Required. After she takes this idea to heart and looks at the valueless wardrobe she may have assumed during the Win ter, and wonders why she never has the right frocks for the right occa sions, possibly she may find it wise to sit down and take stock of her cos tumery and its relation to her charac ter as well as to her physical appear ance. There is a reason for a tangle in everything. Few conditions are brought about solely through happenings. And when one is badly dressed at all times. IS also fretted about clothes, and is found wanting whenever a special oc casion srises. there is often a remedy to be found If one will thoroughly ana lyze her failings. Few women like to acknowledge this, for it is easier to lay the blame on the styles or the pocketbook. or to make that flrst and last excuse: a lack of vanity. The real truth is that it Is easier to assume the personal responsi bility, for then the remedy is at hand. ck trimmed with scalloped bands. The he center Is a delightful Summer afternoon coat, edged with marabou a a stronger place in fashion this summer man n nao iasi. xnv utuU d lines of the coat are new. On the right is a pHik corded velvet dress with vet is as fashionable as fur for a warm summer day. We can't change other Influences, but we can change ourselves; or rather we can apply the remedy. So, probably, the time may not be m- snent in takinir stock of ourselves and finding out what was the matter last Winter and Spring and applying to our wardrobe and its consequent expense the same business method that a man applies to his financial affairs. It will help even when a woman has had a successful season. She knows just where she stands and what counted against failure. Cause of Failure Shown. One of the greatest failures of most wardrobea is tne gown purchased for a social affair without due thought. A wedding, a luncheon, a dance comes up, and orfe rushes from shop to shop to find a ready-to-wear gown; finally, in the despair that accompanies fatigue, physical and mental, one buys a gown which is not only wrong, but which one despises from that moment. It looks well in the shop, and the slight alterations seem easy to do un til one begins them, and then they as sume the proportions of a problem in Euclid. Altering a ready-to-wear gown is one of the most annoying and tedious pieces of dressmaking work, one which even the experienced dressmakers often refuse to attempt. The amateur, however, embarks upon it without firm knowledge of Its shoals, and is often wrecked. The gown never appears well, one always has the feel ing that It cost twice as much as it is worth, and one vows never to do it ..rain Ah' thnRe vows. We all have made them. The truth we should take I to heart Is that it is far better policy to refuse an invitation that is a hurry call for a new gown than to accept it unless one is sure of one's judgment and pocketbook. It is quite too often a costly pleasure. It is on this rock that so many ward robes wreck. And this is a difficult truth to digest evidently, from the number of disasters that occur. An excellent motto to put in each closet Is one which warns us to think well over the purchase of every frock. "Bargains" Often I'seless. Far better go without the wonderful bargain that Just suits the purse than to spend a useless dollar. Enough of these in one year will count up to the price of one good gown. The doctors and race experts say we eat too much, and it might be wisely added that nearly every woman buys too many clothes. Each woman will deny this assertion with emphasis, be cause she remembers the frequent oc casions for which she had nothing to wear. She has bought too much, how ever, when she has two useless suits or frocks hanging in the closet. There are women to whom the bar gain counter is as alluring as a pack of cards to a gambler. They find a dozen things there at moderate prices of which they are not In immediate need. They think they will "come in handy" some day. and they absorb the dollars that should have been guarded for one especially nice thing. A bargain counter is an admirable institution when it caters to your need, but it is disastrous when it serves only your desire to buy cheap that which may never be used. A woman usually buys too many odd pieces of neckwear, of stockings that do not go with one's frocks, of hats that soon fade or lose their shape, of blouses that do not fit, do not last, and do not harmoniee with one's suits. Every woman has on hand a stock of these inutile things: she bought them under the Impression that they were cheap; or probably she bought them under the knowledge that they were pretty. Random Buying Criticised. Half the secret of ill-buying is the random method adopted. One sees a thing in a shop and buys it independ ent of its immediate usefulness in the wardrobe. Fashion In materials changes almost as quickly as fashion long tunic is open at the side and in silhouette, and the thing bought merely because it might serve at some time rarely finds its place in the scheme of good dressing. Clothes are not like real stocks. One does not buy them for a rise in values. The only legitimate demand one has for them is for quick and speedy use before their value is entirely passed. If one will look at them in this light and buy accordingly, one will not suf fer from the consequences. There was a day and generation when women had "best" clothes, which originated the phrase "Sunday-go-to-meeting gowns"; provincialism of small communities that found their weekly social meeting place in the church and dressed accordingly. Such costumes were laid In lavender, fig uratively speaking, during the work days, and no properly brought up wom an was allowed the extravagance of wearing a "best" gown except on a "best" occasion. Social Demands Gone. Today this has been changed. The church holds its proper place. Women go there to worship, or not at all. and the promptings of modern good taste call for a simple tailor suit with an in conspicuous hat. Little by little is the church decreasing as a social factor, and more and more is real religion making itself felt; the creed of service to mankind sustained and directed by faith. And also the "best" gown has gone. We wear whatever we wish at all times. The closet holds no frock dedi cated to a weekly airing. Women who know the art of dressing as well as the art of sp'ending money judiciously buy only the fewest clothes to suit the op portunities their lives offer, and strive to get their value through constant service while their fashion lasts. In this creed lies the success of the well-dressed woman. You, who dress at loose ends and are constantly impoverished through dress expenditures, often envy the perfection of the woman who wears the right clothes at the right moment, and you put the condition down to the theory that she has a larger bank account than you have. Over-Stocking Bad Fault. On the surface it may appear that She spends more money, but intimacy with such women often reveals the fact that each article of clothes is chosen with distinct references to its exact usage, and care and discrimination have gone toward its purchase. Each dollar has counted. No nickel has gone to waste. She realizes that clothes fluctuate in their value more rapidly now than be fore, and she has no intention of being such a poor business woman as to be left on the sands with a heap of use less and half-worn things from which the high tide of fashion has ebbed. If high muslin collars are in style she does not buy every one she sees that is pretty or reasonably prices; be cause hats are in fashion she does not fill her wardrobe with them, for they may soon be out. She does not buy more than one kind of gown for each kind of occasion, for she realizes that there are many months left in the year and her first gowns may be out of style before half the year has turned. She looks well at a fashion before she makes up her mind that it Is suited to her face, her figure, her opportuni ties. She looks at all the evidence and sifts from it what she needs. For instance, if she has a wide neck under the ears she does not wear the high collar that rolls all the way around, for she knows that it makes her look at her worst. Characteristics Need Study. If she has a large ankle, she does not slash her skirt at the hem in order to give freedom in walking. If she has a large face she does not wear one of those absurdly small hats that the style calls into being, and if her hips are unusually broad, she does not add BY LILIAN TINGLE. PORTLAND. July 5. Will you kindly give rec!pe for elderberry wine Also can you make Jelly out of elderberries? Thank ing you in advance. MKi. K. 15. ELDERBERRY wine (1) Four five gallons of water on five quarts of elderberries picked from the stems. Heat and boil one-half hour. , Strain and add 14 pounds brown sugar, and boll again one-half hour. Put three pounds raisins Into a large crock and pour boiling liquor over them. When lukewarm add two cakes compressed yeast mixed with one cup lukewarm water. Mix and let stand three days, then strain into a cask, keep four weeks or until fermentation is com plete, then strain into bottles. It should be ready to use In three months. Eldebrerry wine (2) Nine quarts elderberry juice, nine quarts water, 12 pounds sugar, two ounces cream of tar tar, yeast to ferment a above. While fermentation is in progress add one ounce ginger root, one ounce allspice, one-fourth ounce cloves. Tie in muslin and suspend the spices in the cask. When fermentation is complete seal up and leave two months to clear, then draw off and bottle. The elder Juice alone gives a Jelly of Deculiar flavor not always well liked. The apple Juice in-Uhe following recipe helps both "jelling and riavor Apple and elderberry jelly Pull the elderberries from the stems. Heat in a double boiler with a little yellow lemon peal until the juice runs, then strain. Cut all imperfections from the apples, c.ut in quarters, barely cover with water, simmer until soft, then drain. To three cups apple Juice add one cup elderberry juice. Boil 20 min utets, add three and three-fourths cups sugar, made hot in the oven, and boil until the jelly drops from a cold spoon. Store in the usual way in glasses. For some tastes the flavor is improved by the addition of a little yellow orange peel to the cooking juice. Remove this before the sugar is put in. If the ap ple juice is not acid enough add a little tartaric acid. A little ginger or other spice may also be used to vary the flavor. One maker I know uses a small quantity of vanilla bean and orange peel in elder Jelly with good success. The following may interest you. It is taken from a very old cook book: "Pick green elderberries and leave in brine until well salted, then wash in fresh water and heat with vine leaves to green them. Put' in bottles (glass cans would be safer) and cover with strong vinegar, spiced to euit your taste. Use these in place of French capers with boiled (it is 'boyled' in the book) mutton. In connection with capers I may re mind readers who like pickles, salads and piquant sauces and have nastur tiums in their gardens that nasturtium seeds, gathered daily before they be come too hard, make an Inexpensive substitute for capers in piquant dishes. An easy way is to have a quart can half full of strong, slightly salted vin egar, with or without spices, and to drop in each day's harvest of nastur tium seeds, gathered when you gather the flowers. Nothing could be simpler; and a good jar of pickled nasturtium seeds Is a useful thing to have on hand for the Winter. Put up in small bot tles, too, they make nice little useful and "unusual" gifts for the "light housekeeper" who has no garden. PORTLAND. July G. Kindly give a recipe for peach cocktail, also for old-faahloned peach butter. Would like you to repeal a recipe for peach chutney given a year or two ugo which I have lost. I find your column very helpful. MRS. C. L. Peach cocktail Pare and slice a medium-sized peach for each service. Sprin kle with lemon juice and powdered sugar to keep from discoloring. Serve plain or combined with a little orange or pineapple juice or pulp, or seasoned with a little sherry or maraschino, if preferred. In any case have it thor oughly chilled and very daintily ar ranged in cocktail or punch glasses. Old-fashioned peach butter Pare, stone and crush very ripe peaches and simmer in cider boiled down as thick a.4 molasses. For each gallon of thick cider add two cups sugar and to three quarts peach pulp allow one pint of the cider and sugar mixture. Boil down slowly until thick, adding spices or not as preferred. The following is a quick "modern" method: Peach butter, quick method Scald, wipe and stone one-half bushel of peaches and pass through the food chopper, setting a bowl ,to catch the juice. Measure and add one cup sugar for every pint of pulp. Mix and boil about two hours, stirring occa sionally. At the last constant stir ring will be necessary to prevent burn ing. Or heat the pulp and sugar and place In the fireless cooker, giving the last part only of the boiling directly over the stove. Add spices or not as preferred. I hope the following is the recipe you mean: Peach chutney To four pounds of peaches, weighed without parings and pits, allow one and one-fourth pints vinegar and stew together until soft. Mix one-half pound each white mus tard seed, chopped onions, chopped raisins and sugar, one-fourth pound of scraped green ginger root (may be omitted), one tablespoon "Spanish pep per" and two cloves garlic crushed line, i Mix well and add to the peaches witli three-fourths pint more vinegar, if necessary. Cook about 15 minutes, add cayenne, if liked very hot, and store in small Jars. PORTLAND. Or.. July 2. Would like an easy recipe for tomato catsup, also a good recipe for stuffed green peppers. Thanking you in advance. MRS. H. M. W. I hope the following will suit you. "Stuffed peppers" may mean so many different things, but the recipes given below' are typical and may suggest others to you: Tomato catsup (1) Boll fresh ripe tomatoes and run through a sieve. To each quart Juice add one tablespoon each cinnamon and white pepper, one fourth teaspoon cayenne, one table spoon ground mustard, three table spoons salt and two onions finely chopped. Boil three hours, then for each quart pulp add one pint cider vinegar and boil one-half hour longer. Bottle while hot. Tomato catsup (2) Scald and re move the skins from the tomatoes. For one-half bushel ripe tomatoes add one half cup salt, two cups sugar, three tablespoons each ground mace and cel ery seed, two tablespoons ground cin namon and two quarts vinegar. Boil until reduced one-half, then pass through a sieve. Reheat and store while hot. The amount and kind of spices may oe vaneo io sun. Stuffed green peppers .i opm lour I Flat heels, broad toes, waistcoats, shirts, shirt-bosom fronts in blouses cravas of various i sorts Norfolk Jackets, and masculine hats and caps these are some of the details that women he bor- J odfroIS rdrob for their sports clothes. Of course, a white satin waistcoat can be worn " the mot feminine of silk suits, but when it is a part of a tennis frock or yachting dre.s t look. nuTits o to in the accompanying sketch two effective waistcoats are shown, one, of white pique. in the linen Norfolk suit; the other of white linen, -er the striped . , '"'"'- . ? ,Tet- n t sleeves and a shoulder yoke, to and to the eommodlousnes, and comfort of the blouse, and a rolling col lar and short sleeves further Increase its comfort. TO see the gay and care-free life at the American Summer resorts, which Is Just now getting Into full swing, one might think that the persons who take part in it were an entirely different race of people from those we see in the society of the Win ter. There seems to be a different code of etiquette for the Summer, and people slip from their Winter man ners to their Summer manners with as great ease as they close up their houses and decamp for the woods or the seashore. For most peopule there is little at traction in the Summer resort that af fords no relaxation from the more ex acting manners of Winter. Of late years even the most formal society puts aside the rigid convention of clty life to enjoy the freedom of the Sum mer time. When the late King Edward was at his Summer home at San dringham he set the style of other Englishman by quite laying off the formality of his position and behav ing himself like the most unpreten tious English gentleman. Even our own President nowadays follows this fashion of making the Summer holi days a time of relaxation as stories of picnics, cross-country tramps and informal fun of all sorts testify. Most Summer resorts have a set of social requirements of their own. and the woman with tact will as soon as possible accustom herself to those rules and will not be unwilling to comply with them. There is a decided ly exclusive colony in one of our moun tain districts in the East to which ev ery year a company of families with draw for the freedom and simplicity they cannot enjoy at any other place. There men and women of influence and wealth, of high rank in Washing ton and New York society, find a ha ven and put aside whatever show of wealth and distinction they may in dulge in the nine or 10 months they are in town. They Don't Dress for Dinner. There no one ever thinks of dress ing for dinner. In fact, the charm ing young matron who enjoys the dis tinction of being the leader of this mountain society comes to dinner In a gray flannel shirtwaist. a brovyn corduroy skirt and a red Indian blank et for a cloak. As no one from the outside world is ever allowed to ln- large sweet bell peppers lengthwise, taking out seeds and ribs. Mix two cups sifted bread cfumbs with one small, finely chopped onion, one tablespoon parsley, one-fourth teaspoon mace salt and pepper to taste, and enough fresh or canned tomato pulp to mo,s"n thoroughly. Fill the ha ved PePPf 3. heaping lightly and putting a bit of butter on top of each. Bake 4a min utes with a little water in the pan. Peppers prepared as above are in tended to be served as an accompani ment to meat or fish. The fi l ing ; may be varied by using one cup cold bo ed rice or hominy or cut-up cold boiled macaroni or mashed potato for part of the crumbs in this recipe. One or two tablespoons dry grated cheese may also be added. . Stuffed peppers with chicken or veal Prepare the peppers as above. Mix one cup each boiled riced potatoes and minced or diced chicken or other white meat with two tablespoons chopped celery, one tablespoon fine chopped onion or onion juice, two tablespoons melted butter, one-half cup tomato juice and pulp, salt and PJle Fill the peppers and cover with fine sifted crumbs, mixed with an equal amount of very dry grated cheese. Baked as above. Peppers with a sub stantial filling of meat, fish or cheese are used as an entree or main dish, not as a "meat accompaniment like stuffed peppers No. 1. Any good left over" meat or flaked cooked fish might be used in place of the chicken. Stuffed green peppers No 3 Cook quickly one cup hamburger steak with two or three tablespoons chopped onion and one tablespoon fat until the meat has lost Its red color and developed "savor " Stir all the time. Add water to make a sort of stiff meat porridge. Add an equal quantity cold boiled rice or a mixture of rice and peas or cut-up macaroni and string beans. Season with saU and pepper, with or without a little tomato catsup. Pack while hot into split, seeded and scalded green neDpers. Cover with sifted bread cVuTbs to which one or two spoonful, irrated cheese have been added and set fn a Aaking pan. Bake until the pep in aaKing pan. . . , pers are tenoer, -stock or a little butter melted in hot water. Use as a "main dish. RASMUSSENJTO TRY AGAIN Danish Millionaire to FHianoe Xew Xorth Pole Expedition. COPENHAGEN, July 16. Ole Olsen. a Danish millionaire, has undertaken to finance a new north pole expedition under the command of Knud Rasmus sen the Danish Arctic explorer. The expedition probably will start for the North next Summer and will be provisioned for two years. All possible modern appliances are to be provided, and Rasmussen is to have a staff of scientists with him. He will establish his base at Cape York, Greenland. A Polish scientist is the inventor of a motion picture camera which can be carried in the hand and which is op erated by compressed air as long as a button is pressed. trude in this exclusive little paradise, the ways of fashion are for the time well nigh forgotten. Last year a family of supposedly desirable people was introduced and at first received with a warm wel come into this little community. The women came with a half dozen trunks apiece, scores of hats and. no end of new frocks the sort of thing they had been in the habit of displaying at Palm Beach and on the Rlverla. The first day of their sojourn a mountain tramp was proposed and the newcomers ap peared in the latest Alpine mountain costumes, with hats, glovos and boots to match. The result was that before many days had passed, during which they had displayed more of their elab orate wardrobe, there was a decided chill in the atmosphere, and before long these people were glad to seek new pastures for their Summer's hol iday. Fit Manners to Stnndanl Planned. The newcomers had broken none of the rules of etiquette, but they had failed to use that tact und Judgment which are always the part of the wise woman to use as her social compass It would have been Just as great a mistake if these people had gone to a resort where elaborate dressing was the rule and had appeared clad in tho rustic simplicity affected In the simple mountain resort. No matter where you are in the Summer, if you decide to have a share in the social life you must fit your manners to the standard already es tablished. In a great many of the best resorts elaborate dressing for dinner Is the custom and here your most ornate evening frocks are not out of place. If at your Summer home you have been entertained at a seven course dinner, don't return the cour tesy with a simple country supper, and on the other hand don't offend your Summer neighbors in outdoing them In the costliness and formality of vour entertainments. At the Summer hotel one of the first questions that presents Itself is that of making friends or acquaintances. The very fact that a person happens to be the guest of the same hotel does not necessarily constitute an Intro duction. Yet there Is much more leni ency in this matter at any Summer place than there is in home society. If there are men in your family, it Is, Tortoise, Called Chrysagere, Bernhardt' Pet. Favorite Had Gold Shell on Bark, Studded With Small Topasea of lllur, IMnk and Yellow. jk LIST of the pets of famous men XTt and women doubtless will prove interesting. And its range would be indeed startling. Monkeys and parrots canaries, dogs, horses and cats would be among the more usual pets. Gold fish, too, and sometimes turtles would be included, and there would be many unusual animals. Sarah Bernhardt shared the liking of many other women of the etaie for live pets, and her la vorite was a tortoise which she called ChrvsaRrere. It wore a gold shell on Its back. set with small topazes, of blue and pink and yellow, so it was no ordinary tor toise, but quite a feast for the eye. There was another tortoise, smaller and covered only with his own shell, and the smaller tortoise used to follow the other around like a shadow. They both amused the great actress very greatly and her grief when they were killed in a fire was real. WIFE LIKES PITTSBURG Womun Refuses to Leave City. Charge Made in Divorce Suit. WASHINGTON, Pa., July 13. Be cause his wife flatly refuses to leave Pittsburg to live with him, Conrad Blumenstlne, of McDonald, seeks di vorce from Mrs. Nettle Blumenstlne. The Blumenstines were married about 14 years ago. All seems to have gone well until 1913, when Blumenstlne made a business trip to Oklahoma. He alleges in his testimony that in his absence his wife received at her home the visits and attentions of three men of McDonald. Blumenstlne says that after he came home from the West his wife went on a trip to Atlantic City. She never came back home. She went to i-msDurg ana tarried there. All efforts of Blumen stlne, according to his evidence, were In vain to persuade her to return to McDonald. She liked Pittsburg and proposed to stay there. In the testimony is a statement of a 12-year-old son. who said that on one occasion his mother took him to Pitts burg and that there they met one of the men mentioned by Blumenstlne. The three of them attended a theatrical performance, and after the show was over found that they had missed the late train to McDonald. He says the man took them to a hotel and secured two rooms, one for himself and one for Mrs, Blumenstlne and her son. The boy testifies his mother asked him how he would like to have this man for a father. On any important street you can see a lot of insane people. I perhaps, the most satisfactory thing to leave the matter of Introduction to them. It is always easy for men to get acquainted, and a man can easily tell whether other men are desirable socially. Then, If you find that the men of the family are mutually congenial, the most natural thing In the world l to propose a game of cards In the hotel drawing-room, a promenade together, an evening In the bowling alley, a mountain tramp or h trip on the water. After this the friendship Is well on its way. Wa-h the Children. Is Plea. Remember that others are as anxious for companionship us you are. and If you will go half way In the matter of making new friends you will surely find responsiveness on the part of others. Children, too. are likely to make friends very readily with other efcll dren at a Summer hotel or boarding house perhaps too readily. But chil dren are not always gooil Judges of the value of a chance acquaintance as a permanent friend. The fact that your 6-year-old darling happens to be attracted by the numerous toys or frolicsome manners of the children In the room next yours is not a sura sign that you will want to associate with the mother of these little neighbors. A word of warning Is not out of place Just hare. It is difficult to break a childish acquaintance; so do not let your children make friends with un desirable children staying at the same hotel., with the Idea that the two weeks or a month of their stay will not make any difference. These very weeks may be the moat Impressionable In your child's life, and undesirable ac quaintances will do more harm than months of after training will correct. However, do not overburden your self or your family with rules of any kind in the Summer. Remember that what most of ui go away for In the Summer Is to get strength and Inspir ation for the rest of the stay-at-home year. If the more formal gayetjr of the big seaside and mountain resorts helps stimulate your mind and relax your body, choose that sort of a vaca tion If possible. But If the freedom and fun of the Informul mountain ramp or seaside cottage appeals to you, by all means choose the cottage or camp. PROTECT YOUR COMPLEXION Every woman who spends the Summer at the ashore. In the mountains or at some fashionable watering place should take with her a few bottles of GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL . CREAM ? to Improve and beautify her complexion and protect her skin from the burning sun. bleaching winds, and damp night air. The surest guarantee of Its perfection Is the fact of it having been In ac tual use for nearly three - quart ers of a cen tury. It cannot be surpassed for the relief of tan. riimn- lrs, freckles and other blemishes of the complex ion. At Druggists and Depart ment Stores. FERD. T. HOPKINS & SGN, Props. 37 Great Jests Stmt NCW YORK To Properly Treat Obstinate Wrinkles Particularly where wrinkles are long and deep, the massage devotee is apt In rub too hard and too frequently. Thin loosens the skin, causes muscles to sag. aggravates the wrinkled condition just the opposite result from that sought. , Better than massaging, or Hrsrthlng else, for the most obstinate wrinkles, as well as the finest lines. Is a formula well known In England, which you may readily avail youraelvea of. as you will have no difficulty procuring the inexpensive constituents from drug gists In this country. It Is this: One ounce powdered saxollte. dissolved In one-half pint witch hatel. Rathe fans, neck or hands In this. The if feet Is really marvelous, not unly as to wrinkles, but also In cs of baggy cheeks and chin. Marked Im provement Is noticed after the erjr First application. The lotion Is cooling and aoo bin,, tending to relieve fatlgua and teu.dve "that tired look." Adv. A