TITE SUNDAY OKEGONIAX, PORTXAND, DECEMBER 3, 191G. ERMINE IS CORRECT WITH ALL "GASLIGHT" COSTUMES BEFORE OR AFTER DINNER jiOUR Small Pelisse, Cut Cape Fashion, la Quite a Sufficient Wrap Even on the Coldest Nights While on Way to Play by Limousine or Taxi Furs and Velvet Combined in Dressy Sets.' . 'jJ! yJr :::::r:' "a "r'l"f""'1f ; '"willift nitMimtimtf" . y J X- ' f : ' - b- yv A v V'Viv- - BY "evening," one means after the lights appear. Ermine is correct with all "gaslight" costumes, whether worn before or after the din ner hour, and many formal affairs take place in the late afternoon, these Win ter days when artificial light is neces sary after 4 o'clock. The stole and muff pictured accompany a theater frock of white soiree silk with pearls at the throat and in the hair. With this lovely white costume, the snow-white furs, relieved with touches of black in the trimming of ermine tails, is won derfully effective. A quite sufficient wrap, even on the coldest night if one journeys to the play by limousine or taxi is the smal ermine pelisse, cut cape fashion. The deep points falling over the arms make the little cape extra warm and the big collar may be wrapped closely about the throat. This is a very handsome theater wrap, for not only is the fur ermine, the costly, but the lines are particularly smart and modern. The dainty wrap is worn over a theater gown of orchid pink faille matinee, one of the loveliest of new evening silks. Distinctively of this season are fur sets for dressy wear combining two furs and velvet In what may be con sidered by the real fur lover as a somewhat "fussy" effect, though it has Fashion's full and unqualified ap proval. The collarette pictured here is of brown velvet, skunk and ermine, jabot ends of skunk with velvet puff ings between the fur bands, rippling below revers of pleated ermine. The round muff of ermine has a wide center band of skunk and velvet puff ings. To Keep Lemons. Lemons may be kept a long time Iwithout becoming dry if put into a jar of water with a lid. Change the water once a week if the lemons are to be kept long. When used they will be found quite as firm and juicy as when fresh. Answers to Correspondents PORTLAND, Or., Xov. 18. Kindly give at your earliest convenience a recipe for a white fruit cake. Also can you give a recipe for plum pudding that is not so ex pensive as the real English kind? Thanking ou, MRS. M. B. T. Following is the recipe for a white fruit cake that I have found very pop ular: A pudding can be made as plain or rich as desired by varying the amount of fruit and shortening. When very little shortening Is. used, some baking powder or soda and molasses will be needed, the amount Increasing i,n proportion as the shortening is re duced. Below are some typical plainer Bteamed puddings: White Fruit Cake One pound sugar '(2 cups), 1 pound flour (4 cups, measured after once sifting), pound butter (1V4 cups, or 1 cup butter and Ji cup crisco), 12 egg whites, 1 pound blanched and shredded almonds, 1 pound candied pineapple, 1 pound white Sultana raisins (or red candied cher ries), white meat of 1 large cocoanut, 2 teaspoons (level) soda, 44 teaspoons (level) salt. Flavoring may be added if liked, but is not really necessary. Sift the soda and cream of tartar with the flour. Cream the butter until white. Add the sugar and beat light. Have egg whites beaten stiff, add grad ually with a little of the flour to pre serve the consistency. . When half the eggs are in, add the fruit cut up and mixed with the flour. Add remainder of egg and flour. Bake in ftans lined with double-greased paper. Cover with paper at first. Follow general rules for cake baking. Frost with any pre ferred white frosting or (better) leave unfrosted. If preferred, homemade can died orange peel may be substituted for the citron, and homemade light colored crystallized cherries, or crystallized pear chips may replace all or part of the red cherries or bleached Sultanas. Candied ginger is liked by some makers. These quantities will give two large cakes (about 4 pounds each). They may be made into one by baking in shapes suitable for putting together with almond icing. Two pounds of al monds and 2 pounds mixed light fruitj may suit some tastes better than the proportion of almonds and fruit given above. Carrot Plum Pudding One pound grated carrots (red part only; put the core into the stock kettle), pound very 'finely chopped suet, 1 cupful sugar, 1 cupfuls flour, 1 teaspoonful salt. 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder, 1 teaspoonful cinnamon. 1 teaspoonful nutmeg, 14 teaspoonfuls cloves, 4 pound currants, 1 pounds stoned raisins. For a richer pudding add mixed shredded preserved orange, lemon or citron rind and nuts or al monds, the total quantity not to ex ceed 6 ounces. Mix all the ingredients, using no liquid (the carrots' supply that), place in greased cups, or in a pudding mold, and steam the cups 45 minutes to one hour; the large pudding two to three hours. Serve hot, with any of the usual plum pudding sauces or witn whipped cream. .Graham Plum Pudding One-fourth cupful melted shortening, cupful mo lasses. k cupful milk. 1 cupful gra Wg: & ' If ' ' J j T X ; ' 11'' f I T.-vr'"r'9 ham flour, 1 cupful white flour, tea spoonful soda, teaspoonful baking powder, 1 teaspoonful salt, 1 cupful seeded raisins, 1 cupful currants, 1 cup ful chopped mixed peels and nuts (optional), 1 teaspoonful cinnamon, 1 teaspoonful allspice, teaspoonful ginger, teaspoonful cloves, grated rind of 1 orange or 1 lemon. Mix and steam as above. Pancake Flour Pudding One and one-fourth cupfuls pancake flour, 2 ta blespoonfuls molasses, 2 teaspoonfuls mixed spices, H cuphil sugar, 2 table poonfuls melted shortening. Milk or water to make a stiff drop batter. Steam as above. ASHLAND. Or., Nov. 27. Please give a recipe for tomato jelly salad. I make it with gelatine, but it is not firm. Should I heat the tomatoes? Thanking you, R. L. R. The tomatoes 'are to be cooked soft and strained if raw; merely pealed and strained if canned, and then stiffened with soaked gelatine in the usual way, using 1 tablespoon dry gelatine to 1 pint tomato pulp. The tomato jelly may be simply seasoned with salt and pepper if the tomatoes are full fla vored. Sometimes, especially if canned tomatoes are used, it is wise to sim mer them before straining, with a little additional flavoring, such as onion, green pepper, celery, tiny bit of bay leaf, a few pepper corns, and to add a small quantity of lemon juice or vin egar with a mere trace of sugar be fore straining. No exact rule can really be given, because personal tastes vary, and so do tomatoes. For a small family mould the jelly in small cups. When stiff unmould in a nest of crisp lettuce leaves and serve either alone or. combined with addi tional materials, such as peas, chopped green pepper, asparagus tips, chopped olives, choped nuts or chopped celery. Any of-these might be moulded in the jelly if liked. The mayonnaise or cooked dressing, as preferred. For a large number make the Jelly a trifle stiffer by adding more gela tine or reducing the amount of liquid and mould in a square pan. For service unmould and cut into neat squares or diamonds, or serve in slices on lettuce, as above. Excellent tomato Jelly may also be made from canned tomato soup, as fol lows: To one can of condensed tomato soup add H can of boiling water, 1 teaspoon of sharp vinegar, or sherry if preferred. of a grated onion, 4 of a green pepper, not too finely chopped, and bring all to the boiling point. Season to taste with paprika and salt. Dis solve V4 box of-gelatine in cold water, then pour the boiling soup over the gelatine and stir well. Pour into small cups and place in refrigerator until chilled. Serve very cold. PORTLAND, Or., Nov. 22. Will you kindly tell me. through next Sunday's Ore gonlan, how te prepare dressing and roast domestic duck? I have roasted them, but they are not as tender as I think they should be. Thanking you in advance; MRS. L. G. F. Tour reply would have been in last Sunday's Oregonian, but was delayed by the same accident that caused dis appointment to the many correspond ents who had requested the "Brother Killer" recipe. I hope it is not too late to be of use. (1) Your difficulty with toughness is probably due to lack of care in roasting. Begin with a very hot oven (to keep in the juices) and then cool it off so as to give slow cooking, to make the meat tender. A very tough goose or duck may be steamed a little before roasting. (2) The dressing is almost entirely a matter of personal taste. Stiff apple sauce (with or without bread crumbs and onion) is liked by many; others prefer equal parts of crumbs or cooked rice or potatoes and cooked chopped onions, seasoned with sage pepper and salt; or a mixture' of equal parts of crumbs," chopped cnions and apples may be used, with or without a" seasoning of sage. Use salt and pepper to suit individual taste. Apple sauce should be served if apples are not used in the dressing. Celery and orange salad (with French dressing) is a "classic" duck accompaniment when apple sauce is not used. A bread and (cooked) celery dressing might be liked by those who object to onions. PORTLAND. Oij. Nov. 18. Will you tell me what to do -iWth the drippings, suet or whatever It is called, left from a beef roast? I do not care to use it for frying. Could I use It In place of the suet I use in my etfam puddings? Can I substitute a dark Karo syrup for molasses in a recipe calling for It and still use the soda? Isn't baking powder usually used with syrup? I thank you. MRS. W. C. M. The soft, drippings may be clarified and used for shortening in plain things such as eggless cakes and cookies in which molasses and spice are used. The harder fat is suet, and can, of course, be used for puddings. If both are clarified together they may be used in puddings calling for only a small amount of shortening. Karo syrup should not be used with soda, but with baking powder. Mo lasses contains an acid which unites with the soda to give off the gas which "raises" the mixture. Following is a gluten bread recipe omitted in a recent reply to a corre spondent: Gum Gluten Bread One-half yeast cake, 2 cups lukewarm water or milk, 3V4 cups gum gluten (ground), tea spoon salt. Soften the yeast in V4 cup of the water and mix thoroughly to a rather stiff dough, using more gluten if necessary to keep it from sticking to the board. Shape into a loaf, or two loaves, as preferred, place at once in a buttered pan for it to rise to about double its bulk. This should take about 2hi hours. Then bake 4S minutes to 1 hour, according to size of loaf. Do not have the water too warm or the "rising temperature" too high, or the bread will be sticky. Gluten bread, made as it should be. without any starch, or at least with as little starch as possible, is never- very attractive and cannot have the tex ture of ordinary bread. Many of the so-called "gluten flours" on the mar ket are unsuited for strict diet pur poses, though they . make more at tractive bread. It is best to use the brand of gluten flour selected by your physician if a strict diet is ordered. Success with gluten bread, besides de pending upon the flour used, is largely a matter of "knack" and skill, as much as of proportions as given in any recipe. The addition of an egg, well beaten, to the yeast- bread mixture sometimes makes the bread more attractive to the patient. PORTLAND, Or., Nov. 25 Kindly give recipe for "nougat frosting." Thanking you. , MRS. F. S. O. I hope the following is what you mean: Nougat Frosting Boil S cups sugar. 1 clip thin (or cup medium thick, or cup thick) glucose, to the "soft ball" (238 to 240 degrees Fahrenheit). Pour half of this upon the stiff-beaten whites of 2 large eggs, beating as for ordinary frosting. Let the rest of the syrup cook to the "very hard ball" (255 to 2 60 degrees Fahrenheit). Combine the two, beating well; add, when it be gins to thicken, 1H teaspoons vanilla and 1 cup mixed walnuts arrtl crys tallized fruits, all chopped. Put on the cake while the nougat is still soft enough to run level and show a fine gloss. Decorate when nearly firm with a wreath of holly and mistletoe, done in cherries, citron and blanched al monds. Success with the frosting de pends upon exact recognition of the "signs" (not to be described in print)' of exactly the right temperature of the mixture and the texture of the com bined whip. Four cups of sugar and 3 egg whites would be needed if you like a very thick frosting. Again, the quantity is a matter of to.ste, cost and digestion. This soft nougat frosting may 'also be made by cooking all the syrup to 255 degrees Fahrenheit and then combining it with the eggs. This way is quicker, but the other way is generally easier for an unpracticed hand. Another variety is cooked in a double boiler after beating in the eggs. Another kind has gelatine or dissolved marshmallows as one of the ingre dients. Ordinary well-made "White Mountain Cream" is really a "nougat," and will suit some tastes better than the above. Success with soft frostings is more a matter of deftness of. hand and exactness of observation than of "recipes." I find six people may fol low the same frosting recipe and get six different textures and degrees of success. T" Bronze Boots Very Much in Favor This Season. Modern DrrM Boot Is Far Cry From Sturdy Footwear of Ten .Years Ago. MOLE and mink are the furs that travel together Just now in fash ion's estimation. Who would have thought, two years ago, of putting mole and mink together; but the combina tion today is particularly smart. Twi-light-and-dark wraps for- wear over dinner and evening frocks are of matched moleskins, with broad border bands and collars of mink, the more mink the better. One does not, however, see mink wraps trimmed with mole, though that may come with Midwinter. The fa vored lining color seems to be a very pale corn color, and the popular or perhaps one should say. the select lin ing material, is satin, or- the shimmer ing, satin-textured soiree silk, which comes in such delicate colorings. "Very good-looking reticules for the ater or calling use" are of dark-gray velvet, drawn up on black cord draw strings and forming a pouch shape, a big black silk tassel swinging from the bottom. A narrow band of black fur is set around the bag. three inches below the shirring that holds the cord drawstrings. Be careful to match the gray velvet exactly with sewing-silk, and sew on the fur with tiny stitches, by hand. Cotton thread, or carelessly matched thread or silk, give such a belonging a cheap, second-class appearance sugges tive of the bargain counter. FROCK MAY BE "DRESSED UP" FOR ALMOST ANY OCCASION Belongings Picked Up With Discriminating Eye' Add Incalculable Style to Dress and Do Not Represent Any Great Expense. J - 'I C , f- t "ft - "VW - . :-y-- :::- : ::-:'-:-y.-y-. : :.--' i-yy :y-': ::x:x:;-:-:::-;x-:::":::.:'x.".':::: . : ::- -y.-:,y. :.y;:'y -iyy'yy . yy - ' .7., ''4 ' ":.::"::':... " 7 - ,:;:;7 :;7:7 ;7-. 7 :7;:- ;7;;7;.:.";;7: .7-:-:; . -. :- ' Ay .: '':.':7;7:'-::::fe :7-i;-: . P$ : T X M -f - jy 'i 'CI - i 7 -7 r f f " " .:-"v:":. NA" .::. ::t ;.'.. SMART SMALL BELO.VGIXGS THAT "DRESS IP" THE COSTUME. NEITHER the collar and cuff set pictured, nor the fur-trimmed hat and bag of taffeta, represent a great deal of money in themselves, but their style value is quite incalculable. By aid of such small belongings, picked up with a discriminating eye in the shops, a simple frock may be "dressed" up and made ready to meet almost any afternoon occasion except a formal re ception or wedding. The collar and cuffs are of oyster white broadcloth and the illustration shows that the materials have been generously used, while the big cuffs extend considerably beyond the sleeves. Velvet buttons add an effective trim EXPEDITION OF CAPTAIN BONNEVILLE INTO THE OREGON COUNTRY AND HIS TRIALS RECOUNTED Visit of Indians in Same Year to St. Louis to See Red-Head Chief. Who Quarter of Century Before Had Visited Their Forefathers, Also Pictured by Eva Emery Dye. S" '"" oc HteS Z . y STORIES OF OI.I OREGON BV EVA KM Hit V DYE The stirring tales of old Ore gon, with all their wonderful color, life, romance and historic i accuracy, as related by Eva Emery Dye in her famed book, "Stories of Old Oregon," are be ing presented In installments In The Sunday Oregonian, with il lustrations provided by the au thor. Mrs. Dye, who is a resident of Oregon City, has writteni a num ber of remarkable, books, includ ing "McLoughlin and Old Ore gon" and "The Conquest." These books brought into life and be ing the treasured characters of Lewis and Clark, Dr. John Mc- Loughlin, Sacajawea and others. ' The stories of old Oregon are made simple for the special ben efit of children. Other chapters will be published in succeeding issues of The Sunday Oregonian. Bonneville. w1 HEN Bonneville came." What a legend that has come to be! B. L. E. Bonneville was United States Army officer who ming and gray and white silk tassels, weighting the corners of the collar and the edges of the cuffs, are still further effective. The collar and cuffs are per fectly plain in other respects, but ail seams are stitched with silk and silk was used to sew on the ornaments. Cotton thread has a provoking way of garnering dust to itself and should never be tolerated in a dainty belong ing of good material. Very smart is the little hat of dark green silk, with a narrow fur band and a saucy ostricb tip for trimming. The bag to match Is of green silk and velvet with bead and silk embroid ery, and from the velvet pouch depends a fur brush to match the fur on the hat. :"7Ml.; :; . v wished to emulate the deeds of Lewis and Clark. Obtaining leave of absence, he was fitted out By merchants of New York, in 1832. for a trapping and trad ing expedition. That same year "Nathaniel J. Wyeth, of Cambridge, fitted up his wonderful amphibious wagon, a boat on wheels, that was to . cross all the lands and waters to Oregon. The Harvard stu dents called it "The Natwyetheum." Bonneville and Wyeth met beyond the Rocky Mountains. The "Natwye theum" had been abandoned far b&ea as impracticable. But Bonneville took 20 wagons, loaded with Indian goods. over the Rockies and cached them on the Green River the first wagons that ever crossed the range. Captain Bonne ville was ' utterly bald. Whenever he pulled off his cap the Indians rose up to gaze with exclamations of awe and wonder at the shining white pate that could not be scalped. After many adventures among the Blue Mountains and much kindness from the Nez Perces, Captain Bonne ville reached Fort Walla Walla, on the Columbia River. .Here he was cordial ly received by Pierce C. Pambrun, of the Hudson's Bay Company. "And now," said Bonnveille to his worthy host, "If I can purchase of you a few supplies " The hospitable host of a moment be fore became suddenly cold and formal. "However I may feel inclined to assist you personally. Captain Bonneville, I feel in duty bound to the Hudson's Bay Company to do nothing to encour age other traders in this part of tho country." And so Bonneville left, empty-handed. Indians Flee at Approach. "I will get supplies. I will trade with these Indians!" indignantly vowed the Captain. He did come back with supplies from Green River, but the Indians, once so friendly, fled at his approach. Not a horse, iot a dog, not a skin, not a fish would they exchange for all his beau tiful gifts. They had been warned not to trade with these Americans. Bonneville was obliged to kill some of his horses for food. Absolutely boycotted out of the country, he turned again toward the Rockies. "But I will return." said Bonneville. Captain Wyeth had already gone down the Columbia, but somehow his salmon fisheries did not prosper. The Indians brought him rotten fish. The Hudson's Bay Company hired his men away. He built Fort Hall, on the Snake River; the Hudson's Bay people built Fort Boise near it and paid the Indians more for their furs; so in a short time Wyeth was obliged to sell his establishment to the Hudson's Bay people and leave the country. It was always that way; American traders found It hard to compete with the Hud son's Bay Company. In the same year that Bonneville crossed the Rocky Mountains four Ness Perce-Flathead Indians entered the City of St. Louis and asked to. see the Red Head Chief who, a-quarter of a century before, had visited their fath ers in the far Northwest. AmnaKsadora Are Received. General Clark, now Indian agent for all the Western country, shook his sil ver locks with roars of laughter at this reminder of his youth. Very well he remembered his Nez Perce friends, and with fatherly kindness that ever had won all red men he received thes9 ambassadors of a tribe farther than the farthest that had ever visited St. Louis. "We have been sent by our people," said the Indians, "to obtain the white man's Book of Heaven." Realizing the import of their visit. General Clark sent them to a young Methodist missionary, who, as best he could, told them the story of the Bible. Then they were feasted and shown the city. They visited theaters and churches, . saw steamboats and tall houses, but in this unaccustomed life the two old men died. Early in the Spring, 1832, on the first steamboat that ever ascended the Missouri, the two young men started on the long journey homeward. The story got into the papers. "The Indians of the far, far West are calling for the Bible!" The churches were startled. Methodists. "Let us go!" said Marcus Whitman and Henry Spalding, the Presbyterians. "We will go!" said the Catholic fath ers, De Smet and Blanchet. In 1834 Jason Lee. Daniel Lee. Cyrus Shepherd and P. L. Edwards came with Wyeth to Fort Vancouver. "Bless me. bless me!" said Dr. McLoughlin to Ja son Lee. "Are yon going to settle among those Nez Perce Indians? No, no; that is too far away. We need you right here in the Willamette Valley. We have ' Indians of our own." So Jason Lee went up the Willamette and built his log mission 10 miles below the present City of Salem. The Nez Perces of Idaho to this day tell of the chiefs who went to St. Louis for the Book: Two old men. Black Eagle and Man-of-the-Morning. who had known Lewis and Clark on their Western journey, and two young men, Rabbit-Skin-Leggings and No-Horns-On-His-Head. George Catlin, the fa mous artist, met them on the boat and painted their portraits. in 1S36 Dr. Whitman, and Mr. Spald- ing came over the Rocky Mountains with their brides, the first white wom en that ever crossed the continent. Indiana Greet "White Women. "They are white squaws, white as snow," was the word that flew into the Indian country. Nez Perces. Flatheads. Snakes, Bannacks came out in hun dreds to meet them. When the two brides alighted at Green River scores of Indian women pressed to grasp their hands and kiss their cheeks. "Thar," said Joe Meek," an American trapper in the mountains, "thar are Immigrants the Hudson's Bay Company, cannot drive out!" "These teachers have come to bring us the Book of Heaven," said the In dians. They looked -at the women, and they looked at the wagon that rolled creaking along. Wonderful sight! They poked it with sticks, and examined the wheels, and named it the "horse canoe." "The way is so rough, you cannot get the wagon through," said the trap pers. But the Indians said, "Go on!" and put their shoulders to the wheels. And that was the first wagon ever brought into the Oregon country. At last they reached the Columbia, and visited Dr. McLoughlin at Fort Van couver. That story you will find in "McLoughlin and Old Oregon." Dr. Whitman settled among the Walla Walla Indians, where now stands the beautiful City of Walla Walla and Whitman College, in the State of Wash ington. It was all a flower-decked prairie then, with herds of spotted cayuse ponies. Mr. Spalding located among the Nez Perces, on the Clear water River, near the present site of Lewiston, Idaho. Schools were opened, and orchards planted and gardens. The Indians learned to cultivate their fields . and went to school to read along with their little children. Ship Brings More Teachers. Soon after the arrival of the Whit mans, a ship came in from sea. bring ing more teachers for Jason Lee's mis sion on the Willamette. Among them was a beautiful young lady who be came the bride of Jason Lee. This was the first Anglo-Saxon marriage on the Pacific Coast. Some time when you are in Salem, go to the cemetery and read the inscription upon her tombstone: : Ber.eath This Pod : : The First Ever Broken in Oregon : : For the : : Reception of a White Mother and Child, ; : Lie the Remains of : : Anna Maria Pitman. ' : . "Wife of Rev. Jason Lee, ! : and Her Infant Son. : Jason Lee was sent back to the States in 1838, in the interests of his mission, and while he was gone she died. In 1840 Jason Lee came back by ship around Cape Horn with a mission colony of 57 men. women and children, the first large accession of American immigrants .to Oregon. The mission was removed to a healthier location, and out of it grew the present capital city of Oregon, and Willamette Uni versity. Builders of cities and carvers of states were those old heroes of 80 years ago. In 1838-33. Blanchet came from Canada and DeSmet from St. Louis and set up the first Catholic missions. DeSmet located among the Flatheads. in what is now a part of Montana, so at last the anxious Flatheads had their prayer granted for a teacher of the Book of Heaven. In 1842, one hundred and nine people on horseback arrived at Whitman's mission. dusty, sunburned. ragged, weary. "Where are your wagons?" was Dr. Whitman's first inquiry. "We broke them up at Green River to make pack-saddles," answered the immigrants. "They told us a wagon could never cross the blue mountains." "All a mistake! All a mistake!" cried the vehement doctor. "Yonder is my wagon, brought over the Blue Moun tains. Look at your women, tired to death on those hard-riding horses. Oregon never will, be settled until we can bring wagons." Then and there while doing every thing he could for the weary people. Dr. Whitman resolved to go back and lead a wagon train to Oregon. It Is a long story. He went back for many things on that wonderful Winter ride that has been told in song and story. A brave young lawyer, Asa Lovejoy, went back with him as far as Bent's Fort, on the Arkansas River. Then Whitman pressed on alone to Washington and to Boston. Meantime he people were gathering on the border. Already the long train of wagons was far out on the River Platte when Whitman joined them on that memorable May in 1843. "Worthy Suggestions Given. To Remove Mildew Rub the spot with soap; scrape chalk over it and rub it in well; then lay on grass in sun. As it dries wet it a little and it will r n m a nn with twn snnllrntinna Dried Celery for Winter Use Save all leaves of celery and toss up and down on tin plate over small gas flames or on top of kitchen range until crisp enough to roll in hands. Sift through fine wire sieve and you will have celery flavor for soups and to sprinkle through potato salad all Win ter. Safe Home Treatment ; for Objectionable Hairs (Boudoir Secrets.) The electric needle is not required for the removal of hair or fuzz, for with the use of plain delatone the most stubbon growth can be quickly banished. A paste is made with water and a little of the powder, then spread over the hairy surface. In about two minutes it Is rubbed otf and the skin washed. This simple treatment not only removes the hair, but leaves the skin free from blemish. Be sure you get genuine delatone. Adv.