10 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTL AND, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL i 21. 1918. Get Deady a PAIN TED TlW FOB ICE TEA TIME Ql IB o a D , ,;: T: ', v''. -t . v J' V ,1 f Mill. I ' J' ' . , ' ' ' ? -. rVK ; f V 4 -, ''. ? . I v - r V rrf lira 4 r Z1- - xt v- j 151 fow foe Conventional 3ax$uef B B Desfa las Us Lcxorj xs iJOV ' Wf .oio Vv Bl E B B WOMEN PROVE THEY CAN KEEP SECRETS WOOD AND TRAYS WICKER EASILY MADE By Adelaide Bjrd NO, IT won't be o very long until warm days make the appearance of a tray of iced drinks a very welcome sight indeed. And if you wish to be - artistic and practical at the same time ' tn your entertaining: you will want one of these lovely wood and wicker trays, which, nothing: can hurt and which fit In so well wth the character 6f sum mer furnishings. They are lovely for porch and cottage use, but for that mat ter they will fit In with an informal -' scheme of furnishings all the year around. They are not to be made in an after noon, , however, though a great amount of time Is not required in their manu facture ; sufficient coats of paint and a . drying and rubbing down process be tween each is what will make them works of art instead of mere botches. ' , Ton must begin with a round board about half an inch in thickness and 14 Inches in diameter. It could be oblong , or square or oval, but as both the pat terns given are round, the round tray Is suggested for this article. The next process is the weaving of the willow border. It would take too much space to the full directions for this but any student of basketry could easily fashion it, while even the amateur could follow the directions from a book on basketry to be found in any library. If you can't find the directions write to us. Inclosing a stamped self-addressed envelope,, and we will send them to you. With the tray made, it is time to give It the first coat of paint. For most pur poses the tray with a neutral back ground, a gray or a gray-green is more serviceable. One of the trays photo graphed has a bright yellow background and you can imagine how effective it is if the' motif is artistically managed, design has been carefully traced to the exact center of the tray you will fill in the outline wltb oil colors from tubes like artists work with. Try not to have your colors so thin that they run over the outline nor so thick that they cake and do not line smooth. It may be necessary to thin out theube paint with a bit of turpentine. For the ama teur it is better to buy a tube of each color needed, rather than to try to mix the shades from a few rudimentary colors. Supposing you have selected the bou quet design, you will want a color scheme. Is your furniture covered with cretonne? tion from that. One beautiful was painted a flat erav. Little Known Vegetables Some of Best By Edwin Fagn The Well Known British Novelirt, In th London Mail SINCE the beginning of the war women have proved pretty conclusively that there are comparatively few men's Jobs they cannot master. On the land, on- the railways, in the workshops, amid the vehicular traffic of the crowded streets, in a hundred new. unaccustomed occupations, alike exacting and dangerous, they are doing work now that only a little while ago seemed to require air a man's strength and skill and nerve. But - perhaps what most amases busi ness and professional mqn is that they should have "made good" a clerks. It may be urged at first sight that there is nothing . particularly difficult or arduous about a clerk's work that it ought to be as easy to wield a pen as a needle, to manipulate a typewriter as a sewing machine. And that is true enough, I dare say. Only that is not the point. Before the war there was consider able prejudice among business and pro fessional men against the idea of women acting as 'clerks. They were never employed in banks, in solicitors' offices, or, I think, in the offices of insurance companies. And doubtless there were many other offices from which they were as rigorously excluded. They were cheaper than men clerks, and it had never been demonstrably proved that they were Jess efficient. No; the obiectlon to . them was that they were not so trustworthy as men, that most of them could not be relied on to keep a secret, and that therefore it was un wise to allow them the least Insight into the details of private and confi dential transactions. Speaking at first hand, from my own eight years' experience of a solicitor's office. I can say without any paltering that It was thought most of them would be sure to gossip about our clients' affairs. We irnagined them as discuss ing with their friends and neighbors of their own family, all manner of family scandals and other delicate Issues that we men were in honor bound to say nothing about. For it is a mistake to suppose, when you have breathed your Innermost soul Into a solicitor's ear. that what you have told him goes no further. It goes no further than the outer walls of his office. But no solicitor could ever carry on his business properly who tried to withhold his clients' secrets from the knowledge of his clerks, even if It were possible for him to do so. And what Is true of a solicitor's office is more or less true of every other office. If solicitors' and other clerks told only a tithe of all they, know about what Is hidden not only from the public but also from Intimate connections of the MILLION WORKERS . ARE ILL ALL parties concerned the whole fabric of society would totter to its fall. And I have never heard or known of any clerk betraying this trust in his integ rity. It is a tradition among clerks as sacred as the "kiss and, never tell" tra dltlon of every true man. But when women are kissed or see others kissing they often do telL Would they be any more reticent about business affairs than they are about love affairs? It was generally assumed that they would not. And so they were never permitted to enter the office of any business or professional man to whom the most Intimate self revelations and inviolable confidences were the mere commonplaces of his everyday routine until the war broke out and it was found Impossible to do without them even as clerks. And now they are everywhere. There are very few offices, large or small. In which you will not find at least one woman clerk taking the place of a former man clerk. They are the re pository of all kinds of momentous secrets Just as their male predecessors were. They know Just as much and that Is, as a rule, all there Is to know about what happens behind the scenes as I and my fellow clerks knew in the old days. And they have proved them selves Just as trustworthy. During this war there have been be trayals of faith, breaches of confidence. There have been some ugly scandals and exposures. There have been cases of blackmail and bribery. But In none of these cases has the name of any woman clerk appeared. Instances of venality among women clerks have -been, and are still, as hard to seek as ever they were among men clerks, i Thus it exploded the old base gibe: "If you want to tell a secret, don't telephone or telegraph, tell a woman." May Day Next Fete Day to Be Celebrated By Pame Csrttejr AWKEK from Wednesday is another special day to be celebrated, and a very pretty pustom Is the keeping of May day. As usual, we are indebted to our English cousms for the Ideas hero suggested. If the day be fair and an afternoon party for children is to be given, have a May pole erected on the . lawn and equip it with streamers of delicately colored cambric with which to wind the pole. For a table centerpiece have a small pole with an embroidery ring fastened on the top. and from this hang the rib bons, which may extend to each place, the ends being tied to small basket filled with spring flowers and the place card tied to the handle. This makes a most effective decoration, and one only suited to this day. Lines from Tennyson's "For I Am to Be Queen of the May, Mother." may be written on the card, or the poem may be read aloud. Send the Invitations by special messenger In tiny baskets, which may be left on the door knob. The gtvisg of gifts on May day Is an old custom. The gifts are usually In a box of fragrant blossoms. What a pretty way for a lover to send a token to his sweetheart hidden in a mass of violets! Mayday brings another op portunity for sending gifts of fruit or flowers to our friends who are 111 or shut In. . TIME flowers Of the bounuet wrre a rather Select then your paint and give it the ; bright blue with yellow centers, both the first coat, wood and willow both. Let (large open flower and the buds. All it dry and then rub it down with a! the leaves and stem nH r.anrr.r THERE are a few early vegetables, not well known to. the average per son, which are of decided food value and can be cultivated profitably by the amateur gardener in thrs season's at tempt. These are mostly vegetables of a green and succulent variety. One of these is okra, grown for its Then you may get lnspira- j green pods, which are used in soups and iray I mews. it. is cuiuvaiea mucn UKe corn. The 1 The seed is sown in late spring after the rtaste of srround numlca stone, and water. Give it the second coat and repeat the rubbing down process. The tray is ready then to be decorated.' Tou have a choice of two patterns, the conventional bouquet and the bas ket of flowers. The latter is a stencil and may be treated that way if pre ferred. The first is not quite a stencil and will have to be transferred to the wood with a dull carbon paper. Tou may find this as easy a way to work, with the basket design, too. When the CASCARETT were a rich dark green. The bowknot at the bottom gave some life to the de sign by being painted a bluish purple. The basket of flowers can be treated even gayer. Make the basket a rich brown, with lines of yellow, the flowers in Boft pinks, purples and reds. Experi ment first on paper until you get the combinations you like. Put- the design on a green background. ground has become thoroughly warm, in drills three inches apart and one inch deep. Later the plants are thinned to 10 Inches apart. The okra requires a rich soil. The leek is another vegetable used for stews and soups that is not so well known among Americans. It is sown in drills early in the season, and trans planted when the plants are six inches high, into rows one foot apart, allow ing six inches to each plant. Plant as deep as possible and, as the vegetable crows, draw thA earth nn armmi ft an When the design is painted, a coat of j that it will not blanch. The advantage a..crvruoi vurmsn is tne last step of ; of the leek is that it may be left out all the process. There are some people who i winter. lflrA tKalv t m .m An .i.j 1 -i treated" with flat paint Then thl . Artichokes are used for food on the aUse it Included' rural weU IN HIS report on the conservation of rate of sickness with age. as well as national vitality Fisher states that an increased amount of illness among there are always 3,000,000 sick persons females. The average number of days In the United States, of whom 1,000.000 of disability per annum per capita' of are in the working period of life, and population was found to be 7.8 days for that about three quarters are actually white males and 10.2 fpr white females, workers earning an average of $700 a i .. .. . year, the loss tnrougn stcKness oeing over $500,000,000. To this is added an- t other $500,000,000 as the expense of med- :. icines. medical attendance, special foods. etc., bringing the total cost of illness, as estimated by Fisher, up to about i $1,000,000,000 a year. One half of this loss is preventable. The preventable loss from death is esti- mated at $1,000,000,000, which, added to ' the estimated preventable loss from ill ness, $500,000,000, gives Vt billions as the preventable loss from disease and ; ' deatn in tnis country, l nese ngures are i estimates conjectures and yet they j probably are not far from the actual facta. 7.4 for colored males and ll.J for col ored females. These results agree with the best data available as to the num ber of days of disability per person of working age. The German figures for 1913 give 8 8 days for males and 9.8 days for females insured In the sickness so cieties of that country. If from 2.5 to 3 per cent of the work ing population are constantly sick, this Is equivalent- to a loas of about nine working days per person per year of 100 working days for the entire population. This rate applied to the whole coun try gives figures that are staggering. No monetary estimates of disability are needed to emphasise this enormous loss of working time in the productive years of life. American sailors last year deposited close to a million dollars In the branch bank maintained at the Brooklyn navy T. H.C A. building. A recent survey of the sickness in North Carolina Indicates that they are not exaggerated. North Carolina was They Gently Clean the Liver and Bowels, and Stop Head ache, Colds, Sour Stomach; Bad Breath Enjoy life! Take Cascarets and Wake Up Feeling Fit and FineBest Laxative for Men, Women, Children Harmless Never Gripe ' XJ 0 tK PRICE 10 CENTS 1 ;ascarets work whilyou sleer Then let th .t . ..... i,.. Bny.nj mot . . . , - , vuuuiiciii, uui in wio Liuira oiaies l ills eans. TXil t tLJname V f" custom does not widely prevail.. They seatf of nllnL whh i r,a "ta,n ,n" ucceed best when the plants are bought of taste PalnU'nlch ,s matter from the seed man and then set out. in- stead of starting from the seed itself. But don t despair if you have not the For all the kohlrabi is an old1 plant. It v,. lu mane me wnoie tray. The de- i is generally a curiosity to most persons, signs are still valuable. You can buy It makes a delicious dish when fried, a tin tray at a cheap novelty store, Its culture is comparatively simple. Sow enamel it black or white or any color ; In drills. : and when the plants are six and use either design upon it in oil ! inches high, transplant to rows. The colors or enamels. You can also make( salsify or oyster plant is well known use of the designs for the new painted! to vegetarians. It resembles carrots furniture, but f you are in no hun;J and parsnips in culture, doing best In wait a few weeks and some designs , a light, highly fertilized soil. It is hardy mf especially for painting furniture J and may be left out all winter for use in will be given to you. The new artistic the early spring. If wanted for winter iwu are so lovei-v ami an a, oil-.. without any shading, but Just filling in a transferred outline, that the merest amateur can have all the pretty things she wants from a few designs like those given here. . Birds Cross Ocean H. F. Witherby, who is the editor of British Birds, has since 1910 had 75,000 birds marked in the hope, of learning, something about their travels. A swal low ringed in Lancashire was found seven months later : at Grahamstown, South Africa, 600 miles away. A "lesser black backed gull." ringed at the Fame islands, off Northumberland, was found eight months later ar St. Louis, Senegal, and a blackbird, ringed in London, was found in -Moscow a few weeks afterward. use, it ought to.be taken up and stored. Salsify, when boiled and fried m cakes, very closely "resembles oysters. ' Kale and collards are both a kind of cabbage: both are best when touched by frost. :- Cardoon Is scarcely known in the Uni ted States, but . in Europe it Is used wide ly. It resembles celery somewhat, as it is an edible stalk. Its culture Is some thing; like that of celery, and the stalks of the plant must be bleached like cel ery. The leaves also are wrapped . up in straw when mature and allowed to blanch. Swiss chard, a sort of spinach beet, is rapidly-gaining in popularity. It is prepared for the table like spinach,: only sometimes the mid rib of the leaves is torn out and cooked like asparagus. Either way it makes a delicious- dish. as urban communities, and gave an op portunity to compare sickness In the white race with that in the negro. Four teen thousand one hundred and twelve families were canvassed, containing 66.007 persons. 43,468 white and 22.539 colored, comprising about 2.5 per cent of the total population of the state.' There were 1881 cases of illness found. or 28.5. per thousand, indicating that about 2 per cent of the population are constantly sick, and that . in 80.4 per cent of those sick the Illness is serious enough to render them unable to work. This Is slightly higher than the mor bidity rate found in Rochester, N. Y. It is also -higher than that reported by killings in the 11 census reports for a group of 12 Northwestern and Southern states ; but in considering the different geographic areas covered and the changes that have occurred since 1890, the two estimates correspond closely. - , Of nearly 2000 sick . persons. 80. per cent were unable to work; 28.5 per cent of these were confined to bed and 61.8 per cent were up and about. These fig ures confirm . the Rochester report, which showed 27.8 per cent confined to bed and 55.2 per cent up and about. J Only 2.4 per cent were In hospitals. This contrasts strikingly with 10.7 per ctnt in Rochester and 14.4 per cent in Tren ton, and indicates limited hospital facili ties in a state for the most part rural in character.- , "' v - . . - There ia a' regular increase - in too When the Baby Needs a Laxative No one knows bettor than the ever watchful mother the natural doctor of the family in all the small ills that when the baby is out of sorts it is usually due to indigestion or constipation. It is always well, in any of its illnesses, to look for this cause. The diet may have to be changed, but before good can result from it. the bowels must be moved. The mother has the choice of many medi cines cathartics, purgatives, bitter-waters, pills, physics, etc But the little body doesn't need such harsh remedies for they wrench the system and do only temporary good, so often followed by an unpleasant reaction. A better plan Is to employ a mild.' gentle laxative of which only a little is required. There is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepein sold by druggists under the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin that thousands of mothers have used successfully for baby's constipation and its accompany ing ills, such as belching, wind colic, rest- The nursing mother will also nod it Ideal for herself, and it is especially important that she be free from constipation. Syrup Pepsin is guaranteed to do as prom ised or the druggist will refund the money. Thousands of cautious families have it in the bouse, secure against the little ill. ' .O. Dr. Caldwell's 5YRUP PEPSIN The Perfect il Laxative . NO INCREASE laboratory eaota 4 Dr. CoUwoll a 4mm to tbo War tko taaoaractirMra a Pmomm mrm nifii ilia nioir prohta aad abaorbiM us So ck m-m ao tfcat th tmzmirr iaasOva mar i at tha pro-war prieo of SOe and 81 a largo bettla. sole by oVoasaata (or 26 yoara, FREE SAMPLES Dr. CaloWI'a Syroo Papon ia tka laraaot toOiaS Kerns laaarrvo im Aanrira. If yoe kavo arm oaoa it mmd wowid ttao to aarapia it Mora boyiaa. oaadyoar eddr for a fraa trial bottio to Dr. W. B. CaldooO. 4MWaokiaSc,Motiealloja. If ra.ka-MbaaM.ia tkm faauiy rood lor a copy mi "Tka Can of tba Bab?-"