1 15 leasehold Topics nrir r JL 'msumble CLASSIC DANCING BENEFITS How This Art of Poetic Motion Brings Grace of Carriage and Health to the User. au v a . Cl ICC , V 7 s& .' . OMDeacJUanariQ Mjorus Hi (f e ..-'ip EXTRA HATS IN 1 1 . u r I n g on e often want to take along a different sort of hat for vnr w hrn not in the tar, A bag that will holtl two or three hats may be made by taking tvo long, straight pieces Of heavy line n. matching the lining of the ear if possible binding Ultra together with tape hi the fdges, leaving tin Lop open lengthwise and dividing i hem in to three pm khs '1 ben sew on a'rap at intervals. Fasten these straps to buttons either in the top of the hood or on the framework between the front and ba k Keats, and the hata will be protected and out of the w a lucallnped i '.tin One quart of long clams, half pound of milk crackers. Hun through the meat chopper. Now put a layer of crackers, thru one of clams, with hits of buMei and salt and pepper t you hat e - d t hem all Pour one tjuart of milk over all and bake in a hot oven till brow n. Apricot Souffle. Heat the yolks of five eggs until thick, and continue heating while five tablespoons of sugar air added. Then boat, in half cup of apricots that htive hecn put l h rough a cgci a hie ricer ; then fold In the whiles of the five eggs that have been heairu oiiff Srnr half a canned appricot and a spoon of the sirup with etch portion I iieoa I lldge. PlseC 12 teaspoons of cot oa in a saucepan and rub into smooth paste l adding lialf cup of milk. Add four cups of no gar. piece of butter size of an rgg ami one cup of milk. Place on fire and boll, thru add half OUp of Batik and conk until it forms a soft ball when dropped Into cold water. Take from fire, add vanilla and beat until it is just thick enough to pour inlo but tered tins By adding half of milk last you will find fudge to he free from grain and I I be nice and smooth W hen COOl mark into one-inch blocks and break. I.emon Pie. Mix three tablespoons of cornstarch and three uuaricrs eup Of sugar, add tin rf-quartri cup of boiling water, stirring -onsianl Cook two min utes, add one teaspoon of butter, two egg yolks (not bealenl. grated rind of onr lemon ami three lablespoons of lemon; Jo too, Um plate with paste and build In a fluted run Turn in mix ture which has been cooled and hake till pHKlry ih well browned t'ool slightly and cover M Ith meringue, then return 10 oven and bake me ringue In a slow ov en about 1 B min utes. I react Frail salad. Two oranges, three hananas half a pound V.alaga grapes 13 Kngllsh wal nut meal a. I head lei luce I'rench die; ping I'eel oranges, and remove pulp separalelv from cch secimn Peel batltnae, and cut in quarter-inch slices. RemOVe skins and seeds from grapes. Liraah wainui meats in placed Mix prepared Ingredients and arrange on lellnce leaves Serve with I'Tcucli Pressing. You may sc a mayonnaise dressing instead of the French if preferred, in making the mayonnaise dressing for a fruit salad a spoonful of fine sugar can be sub st it tiled for the mustard You can use lees oil than in the usual mayon naise aud the last minute when ready to serve add thick, fresh cream e hipped. Pnrrant Jelly. I'uk over currants, but do not re move stems, w ash and drain. Wash a few in the bottom of a pressing ket tle, using a wooden potato masher: an continue until berries are used Cook until currants iook while, strain through a coarse strainer, (hen allow juice to drop through a double thick ness of cheesecloth or a Jelly hag Meature. bring to i be boiling point and boil five minutes, skim and pour into glasses. IMace in a sunny win dow and let stand ti hours. Cover and keep in a eool( dry place. Orange sToaate, Mix two cups of fruit pulp with powdered sugar to sweeten with the whip from one pint of cream. A small amount of lemon juice brings on. the flavor of the oranges. Mold, pack and let stand in ice and salt four hours. shrimp Higgle. One-half teaspoon of salt, four ta blespoons butter, two i tbleepoom at floor i pine fa of cayenne pepper. melted together st tiring constant ly . then pour in graduallv one and a half cups of milk as soon as it thickens. Add onr cup of shrimps broken In placet gnd one otlp of peas after drain i ng from I he liquor ook af let add ing shrimps on ly enough to hea t through well. Steamed Klce and Salmon. A w a v tO use salmon a lit t le dif ferent from the usual recipe i;. as fol lows: Lint a bread pan. sllghlly hol lered, with w arm steamed rice. Kill the neater with c id tmiied aalreon, flaked and seasoned with s ll. pepper and I slight crating of n 'Imrg. Cover w Ith rice and slea in one hour It tin on a hoi platter for serving and pour ; rot ad egg aattt e made of one third rUp Of butter, three nhlespoons Hoar, na aad a hair nope hot water. half tcsspnon salt, one -eighth lea Spoon pepper, beaten yolks of three eggs and one teasKon lemon juice Molt half hatter, add flour with sea sonings and pear oa gradnatl) hat wa ter. Roll five minutes and add re maining butter iu mall pieces. JImos-3 y Cursy fe V s BBBBBB1 SPENDING THE INCOME HV MRS. ItcCUNE. MAKING I he most of a moderate income Is the problem which h (real many women are try ing to solve. Many answers are found to this many-sided question, but Tew women have found satisfac tory solutions to all the parte of the problem. There are a great many families in this country who are in want, and there are also many families of great wealth Hui Ihe majority rests with the ones who are neither very rich aor very poor, bin in moderate circum tancea. The bnaaen href whose hus bands make moderate salaries have just as man) and just as engrossing problems as tb w omen w hose mates dig ditchee Of carrj a hod to earn t hen dai l w age. One of the limes When every woman feels the desire for wealth is when her children arc growing up without the son of education that she would like to give them A I most every mother feels strong ambition for her children, and if one g specially talented It al most breaks the mother-heart to be unable to develop that talent. You ni; y have found that you could get along very well on your moderate income W ben t here was only a Ques tion of your own and your husband's needs. And when the children were very little the added drain on the purse was not so much greater. Hut now that same income seems all to small now that you would like 10 give your child music or drawing. Preach and German lesaons. all of which coal money Ynu will And that there ig ver lit tle in the line of education which can not be acquired either enltrely free or a I most free of charge The public high schools i each German. French and Italian and ha v e besid es free elaaaea In g rawing;. There roar child can lay a splendid foundation for fu ture stud.v in an.v one of these lan guages or in art Music is the only thing which re quires n expenditure of monej to gain a siart. Hut after your child has made a slarl In music. If she in renttj laleniei' she will soon he able to con tinue her 1cons for nothing. n there g re lant Hat teen a here free achat at" hips are offered each year. BY EDNA BO AM THE esthetic dance, unlike the folk dance or the morr con ventlonsl ballroom dance, in a personal and physical ex pregston of the beautiful exempt from rule. It ia opposed to the hard and fast regulations of calisthenics. Is even more effective In producing symmetry if form, absolute muscular control, r-otso and grace. This kind of danc ing, dependent as It Is on responsive muscles and a happy frame of mind. Is a most pleasurable torm of exercise And now for the practical side of Its execution. loae clothing is imprrs tlve. and a happy frame of mind Is no unimportant consideration. However, the purely physical side of the 'exer cise can react on the mental and pro duce a care-free attitude where a grouch formerly held coin! I sa loose clothing, because the free mne. nient of the body cannot be hampered Coqaefe WALKING HY LUCILLE DAUDBT. fan A1K IXC is the only exercise Baial POaaibte for every one, Wmm The busy man says he can not go to a gymnasium or take up regular gymnastic drill. To main I a in health, y on requi re no apparatus or equipment. Ftereisc is a matter of will and desire. You can secure Improved health by using your muscles in a natural way. The purpose of exercise is not mere ly to develop muscles, but to use and drvelop energy. M strengthens ihe heart by making it work, and nourishes Ihe organs of the body and the muscles by promot ing their activity. Use of ihe body increases its ta pasity for work. You can always walk. You will find it wholesome exercise. tiei out into the fresh air. Walk more ride less. Don't be afraid of the weather Property clad you can enjoy almost any kind of Bather Walk moderate distances at ft rat. Lengthen the distance as your ability to withstand fatigue increases. I on't lire y ourself. Fatigue is the result of over-doing Throe your shoulders back, ai low your arms free swinging action Make the whole body walk. Daet merely bend your knees. Keep an upright posture. Feel your si rcngth. Dont slouch, crawl or dawdle. Walk up and walk out with snap, vig or, interest . ent husiasm Iton't walk a certain numhet of miles each day because ) onr doc lor adv ises it. Have a purpose in every walk Qa soniew here See sontet lung. Visit somebody. (let out of the busy plaees into the Open spaces I Be your eyes, your ears. Com mune with Nature, and be occupied with thoughls unrelated 10 business, shop or store. Breathe bj new iifj with over deep hnalh of fre:.h air. Fa and at the ame time appear graceful. Just what sort of attire you will se lect for the dan' ' is a matter that Is best decided by your own taste, ir "gym" bloomers, a middy blouse and soft shoes do not, in your estimation, detract from ihe beauty of appear and that usually accompanies beau'y of pose, why, well and good. On the other hand, if clothes affect your moods and what woman doesn't "feel better" in becoming clothes" and you would feel more like a sprite In ihe eu rial led eoetume aeea lit 'lassie mtiral decorations, then wear a drepp like ihe one pictured. Its simplicity of design i-nd material plaOea it readll within the capabilities of dWt fingers Now that the all-Important rlothes question has been settled, let us eon sider the when, where and how of the "poetry of motion" for amateurs When? Joel whenever you are so in clined The inclination is best taken advantage of In the early morning PhyeJcai or mental fatigue Is not con ducive to any form of exercise, you snow. Where? Tref-rably on a smooth broad surface. Carpet is no objection. And how? Begin by let ling Ihe whole body from head to loes relax utterly. Let the head droop slowly until it falls quite limp on the chest. Let the arms hang limply at your sides. Then re lax the whole body, waist, hips. legs, feet and all. until you fall all in a heap. Repeat this preliminary exer cise for several days, or until you are quite supple. Then you might begin limbering up your arms and wrists. Swing the arms backward and for ward and from side to side, letting the w rists take care of themselves. If they show any signs of stubbornness, then they require individual attention. This attention is best administered by w ringing ihe hands. Rigid wrists can not remain thus after such vigoroua treatment. Now you are ready for the actual dance poses. In "BacchanaJe" the waist is slightly bent, the weight of the body resta on the forward foot, the head is thrown back and ihe arms complete a circle above the head. You will no tice that the wrists are quite limp. Practice ihe pose as often as you care to; of course, not to the point of ex haustion. "Almost a curtsy." excepting the po sition of the arms, is really nothing more than a curtsy. The bend cornea directly from the waist, and the bal ance is on the backward foot, "Coquette" demands a slightly curv ed torso, a coquettishly poised head and the uplifted leg at right angles to the body. "Breath of Spring is best interpret ed by a stretching of the whole body from head to toe. The weight is car ried by either the right or the left foot. The other leg is raised from the hip. bending at the knee, with the calf sw inging quite limp. You will note that "Butterfly" is composed of curves. From tlie uplift ed arm to the correspondingly uplifted leg is described a half circle. From the sltghtry bent head to the support ing foot there is just the suggestion of a curve, sufficient to establish balance and harmony. Practice the poses in the order in which I have described them. Your mirror is perhaps the best critic. At the beginning you will doubtless have difficulty in rounding out the "angles." Despite the wholly ungraceful aspect that you present, the muscular activ ity w ill do ynu an untold amount of good. Practice each pose several times, relax and go to the next. But a last word of caution: If you would benefit mentally as well as physically by the esthetic dance, make play of it. So many of us are in need of diversion from our every-day activ ities. Yet when we play, we do it w ith so vigorous a will and way that it really isn't playing at all. Remember, if you would acquire grate, that grace of mind accompanies grace of body. A squared ,ia and an I'm-bound-l'll-get-it-right expression cannot be condu cive to limber joints, responsive mus cles and true grace. Play more HARMONY IN DRESS BY LOUISE UANNOM. EtVKN "all the money in the world" th spend, a woman who is naturally dowdr, too stubborn to listen to people of good taste, too unimaginative to picture herBclf in the clothes she sees. 44 ml quite unblessed with an eye for harmony of color and line, would look a thousand times more frumpy t ban if ghe had less to spend Not long ago woman was seen Strolling into a fahionable restau rant With about fStdOtl worth Of clothes on and looking infinitely less smaii than her blue serge soiled companion w ho could not hav e in sured her entire costume at more than one hundred dollars The epensie ladv had clad herself In coat of Ko Itneky, whose belt, collar, tuft's and flaring band born horizontal Sir I BOO SO arranged that her th e feet four of height looked like I he same distance in circumference The flashing buckles on her bronze Slippers had prohabiv cost a sum to be noted in three figures tfrr hat bore a towering made ff black paradise w Inch would hav e been better suited to Ihe stage than the street, and more becoming tO a drum major than to any "mere vv omn To complete Hie effect of utter dow diness, she wore a dress of gt ay score- P a tableapoonful of peroxide ia placed in two lablespooafuls of water and used as a gargle it w ill prove an excellent rem edy for tonsilltis. About ten drops of peroxide in a half-glass of water used to clean the teeth will remove tartar and harden the gums. A few drops of peroxide put on an open wound imme diately will take out the polaon. The wound should be bathed every day in water to which a few drops of the per oxide have been added and it will heal very quickly. SIBI RL'DK oil ia one of the very rSj best remedies for falling hair SBi and dandruff. Apply it to the scalp every other day, but massagt the scalp daily and then brush the hair afterwards. Another good remedy for dandruff is to rub castor oil inlo the scalp every day. This will not make the hair very oily if one is careful to use only a little at a time. ic-as"! VERY fashion returns sooner I Ml or later- ana nnw walnut fur SSB niture is coming in again. Nof the ornate and carved walnut horrors of early Victorian days, how ever, but simple, beautiful pieces of this really fine wood in yuecn Anne design A diniug room set of burl walnut in ljueen Anne pattern retails for four hundred dollars--which proves how fashionable aud exclusive walnut has become. LL forms of pendant dress orna ments are to be seen at the trimming counters. There is a large selection of bead tas sels, silver beads, crystals, gold and bronze heads and those in colors as well. Similar tassels come in glass drops, and pearl-drop ornaments are numerous. Cord and ball trimmings in cotton and linen and wool are ef fective hen used in tho right place. THERE is a strange fascination about Chinese things; the country and race remain to a great extent a twentieth cen tury world mystery. Our modes for ette which was not in harmony with any other part of her costume. The Keynote of smartness is fitness, and after fitness comes harmony, which makes the garments you wear look congenial and happ Then there is a certain dash and originality about putting them on. No woman ever wns smart whose sense of fitness, phu harmony plus dash cre not bulwarked and but treated by neatness I.e.:::- w hsi ou as an Individual can wear Keep tho details of your cos tume harmonious I'm OS each gar ment as if xour entire effect depended on it alone. And as ou value vour reputation hX good dressing, reuieni her thai a trip to the gasoline howl or laundry tub in trass ll as Isapor tant as the fat famed stitch which saves the infamous mae. El the year are. it is said, to be largely a la ChinoU, and the Paris creators have gone to the Chinese Empire for inspiration alike In color and in line. Mandarin hats and coolie cnapeaux are already in our midst, and very charming they arc, being, it must b understood, highly developed from the original inspiration. Dresses and coats are also to be of Chinese char acter. So far. it is not proposed to la' troduce pigtails! i 1 CRU curtains, after many wash ings, lose their color, but they, may be made to look like new if they are washed In thia manner: Soak the curtains In coldU salt water for an hour or to. Than.! wring them out, put them In a tub 0C1 clear warm water and wash them," carefully until perfectly clean. Put S cents' worth of dry saffron into avj Quart of water, boil for a moment and strain. Put this into the rinsing'' water, saving a little for the atardvl water. Rinse them quickly through, the yellow water. Then make a very" thin, clear starch, color it with thn saffron, put the curtains through this, spread them on a sheet, roll tightly for a moment and they are ready to Iron. rx- ERE is a timely tip for glrlar I I She. had had a young man IUUI calling on her regularly and devotedly for some time. One day she met him on the street. Sh had on a new hat and looked her pret tiest, so he observed, and she saw ho did. "Do you like it?" she queried. "Oh. yes." he responded. "Forty dol lars.' she said with evident pride. Soon after he went upon his way and she hers. Days passed, and then weeks. His calls had ceased sudden ly. Then one day she met him on the street again. "Why don'i you come t see me any more" she queried. "Hat: " he responded with laconic fer vor. HE well-groomed woman whom you meet at the breakfast ta ble, office or shops is the i n w ho never ignores her bedtime toilet, uo matter what tho hour of re tirement She believes it Just as es sential to retire wholesomely clean, giving certain toilet details their attnu tlon. as to emerge refreshed In the morning savs Hortcuse. No woman in the world is more appreciative of this simple truth than the French woman, no matter her social caste, and to this is due their immaculate ap pearance which makes an instant sp peal. especially to foreigners. Where the rising hour is an early one. the business woman cannot afford la make a leisurely morning toilet Where i ri tain details have been attended to 'h night before h. r toilet is made In halt the time, and the nervous flurrj. easev cially a hers trains are made. Is hap pily eliminated No woman need make an elaborate toilet unless she Is so disposed. Attention to the few essen tials is all that is necessary This daily care not only iscoii rages health aud beauty, but preset tes tntui as ae.ll.