nOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION In the Home-Household Hints-Fashion Notes-Recipes 12 The Editor will bp pleased receive and publish hints f In terest to onr readers. Dishwashing. IP there Is one tiling more than another that shou'.d be thoroughly and conscientiously done, it is the dishwashing. Dishwashing is often looked upon as menial work or drudgery. But any work poorly and improperly done whether it be teach ing school,, painting a picture or washing the breakfast dishes Is drudgery. Success in each case means proper equipment, thorough knowledge of the work and right at titude toward the work. Collect, sort and scrape all dishes to be washed. Fill sticky dishes which have been used for milk, eggs and starchy foods with cold water. ( Use hot water for sugary substances. Wipe the greasy dishes with paper and burn the paper or use a rubber food scraper made for that purpose. Fill one dishpan one-third full of hot, soapy water and another with clear hot water.- Wash the dishes thoroughly in soapy water and rinse in clear water. Have an ample sup ply of clean, dry dish towels. Wash the glassware first, then the silverware, cups and saucers, plates, platters and vegetable dishes. Fol low with the cooking utensils if they were not washed as soon as used. Dishes that feel rough and sticky are unfit for use. Clean dishes can only come from a clean dishpan, clean water, a clean dishcloth and clean, dry dish towels. For the Housewife. Many housekeepers do not know that there is a simple way to pre vent potatoes from burning and sticking to the bottom of the pot. An inverted pie pan placed in the bottom of the pot avoids scorching potatoes. The water and empty space beneath the pan save the potatoes. This also makes the work of cleaning pots easier, as no adhering parts of pota toes are left to be scoured out. If you have a door in your house that will swing shut when It Is de sired to stay open or ajar, make a small bag as ornamental as you please, though the color of the floor or wall paper is recommended. Fill this with sand. Attach it to a rib bon or cord long enough to slip over the doorknob and let the weight drag on the floor. This makes a door stop that Is always at hand and can be lifted out of the way without stooping. . Household Hints. Try cooking the sausage in the oven'instead of frying it. A tiny bit of butter is often an Im provement to cake frostings, espe cially chocolate or caramel. The milk added to potatoes while mashing them should be hot to keep them from becoming soggy. Mice object to camphor, which if put in places frequented by them, will drive the'm away completely. Kerosene will soften boots and that liavp heen hardened bv water and makes them as pliable as new. Most people Bprinkle fried apples with sugar just before serving. Try using salt instead and see what an entirely different flavor is given the disll. A tablespoonful of olive oil and another of molasses added to the griddle cake batter is worth while trying. This keeps the cakes from sticking and also aids in browning. If vinegar is added instead of water to moisten stove polish, two good results will be obtained. First the work of polishing will not be as hard, and secondly, the polish will last much longer. Before turning oyster soup into the tureen t it Into the dish a heap ing tablespoonful of finely minced celery and half as much chopped parsley. The flavor of the soup will be much enhanced. If there is not electricity in .the house and it becomes necessary to have a little light all night in a sick room, use a candle heaped with salt to the black part of the wick. The light will be mild and steady and it will not contaminate the air like kerosene or gas. May Manton Weekly Fashion Talk A NEW BLOUSE WITH OPEN COLLAR jsS Blouse with Vest, 36 to 46 Making Use of BY MRS. W. C. I'ALMEK. (Concluded From Last Week.) WHEKE there are bits of boiled or roast meats left over, cut the meat into ' cubes. Stew gently, flavor with a tiny bit of onion and thicken. Instead of making the usual crust tnat is used for the meat pie, make small biscuits and ulace on top of the meat and gravy aud oahe a goiueu brown. Do not make too many, but just enough to make everyone wish there were more. An other time, cold mashed potatoes can be used instead of the biscuits, The potatoes should be mashed again with a little warm milk and if egus are plentiful, whip in one. Spread over the meat pie and bake a golden brown or until hot clear through. One must remember to add salt and a little pepper also to the cold pota toes so they will not taste flat and warmed over. Cold meals of all kinds can be sliced, dipped iu egg and bread crumbs and fried a goldeu brown. Any left-over vegetables as a few beets or carrots or peas can be made into a salad and then with potatoes and an extra vegetable one can get up a good meal in a hurry. Cold boiled or baked potatoes can be scal loped to good advantage. They re quire only about half an hour to bake, while if the raw ones are used it often requires over an hour. Do not always mix left-over vege tables that are to be used in making a salad together. If potatoes or cel ery are used as the foundation, ar range the small bits around the foundation to make the dish attract ive. Often a left-over cold boiled egg or two can be used to good ad vantage in a salad of this kind. Cut the whites into half circles and rub the yolks fine. Arrange the whites around the yolks, which should be piled in the center of the salad. If a few slices of pickled beets are left over, cut into tiny cubes and place on the salad. This will not ouly add a pleasant flavor, but the red, white and yellow look very pretty together, and who would guess it was made of left-overs? Often there are bits of gravy left over from a ntew or roast. The3c make mott excellent soups and can ALL the newest blouses show high collars of some sort. This one, which is open at the front, is thoroughly comfortable as well as exceedingly smart. It includes also a little vest that is pretty aud has the advantage of allowing the use of con trasting materials. Here the blouse Itself is made of Bilk crepe while the collar, vest and cuffs are of bengaline silk, and that combination Is a new one which is much liked. The fronts of the basque show au unusual shaping at the lower edge which is effective and the ends of the shaped belt disappear under the extensions. The sleeves may be long er or shorter as desired, but the long, plain sleeves with roll-over cuffs are new and fash ionable. Blouses of this kind are liked for wear with coat suits and also are utilized for entire gowns of simple mate rial. For the trimming any pretty contrasting material may he used, but the heavy silk in contrast with the crepe is effective. For -the medium size will be needed 3Vi' yds. of material 27, 'M yds. 36, 'VA Jds. wlth yd. 27 for vest, col lar and cuffs. The May Manton pat tern S528 is cut in sizes from 36 to 46 bust meas ure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fash ion Department of this paper, on receipt of 10 cents. bust. the Left-Overs he.made very nourishing. If there Is a hit of rice left over, It can be added or a little barley can be boiled and then added to the soup. If a few lima beans are left over, rub them through a sieve and add to the gravy. If a dish or two of tomatoes are left over, they can be made iuto. a cream of tomato soup, while a few beans or peas can be rubbed through a sieve and made into a good puree. Meat salad from left-overs Two cups cold chicken or veal, cut into cubes; ono cup of cold peas or car rots left over; three slices of pickled beets left over. Add to this some chopped celery and a few walnuts. Add the dressing and seasoning and serve on a cabbage leaf. Croquettes from left-overs Re heat the rice in a little milk. To each cupful of the rice add a little white sauce or the yolk of one egg. Sea son with salt and mix thoroughly. Form into balls or cones or any shape desired. Roll lu fine bread crumbs, then in beaten egg that, has been diluted with one tablespoon of milk, clip in the crumbs again nnd fry in deep smoking hot fat until a golden brown. Half-ground meat and rice can be used. Potato cro quettes are made In the same way. Very often broken slices of bread will cut small squares or triangles the size of an Inch. IX these arc placed in the oven and toasted a golden brown they are delicious with soup. These are" often called crou tons. Chinese Pudding. Cover half box of gelatine with a half cup of cold water, soak 10 mln utea, whip one pint of cream, set it In a pan of cracked Ice, add half a cup of chopped ginger, half a cup of powdered sugar, half a cup of cold boiled dry rice, dissolve the gela tine, add the cream and stir until a little thick. Turn into mold, stand away to harden, serve cold with gin ger sauce. Sauce: Chop fine a quarter "cap of ginger, odd one enp of water, quarter cup of sugar, boil five minutes, pour over the well beaten white of two eggs, add two lablespoonfuls of sherry and turn out to cool. Turn pudding out and serve with sauce poured over. The Kdltor will be pleased rwrlH sail publish favorite rctlpcs. Cooos Cake. ONE-HALF cupful of butter, one cupful of sugar, three eggs, three-fourths of a cupful of milk (sweet), one teaspoonhil of vanilla, six level tablespoonfuls of cocoa, two level tacspoonfuls of baking powder and ouo cupful aud one-half of flour. linked Eggs. Butter as many muffin rings as will be needed, break into each an egg, salt Bllgtuly, pour over each a spoonful of cream and bake until the whites are set. Iteet JMI.hIi. Cook beets the same as for the table, ono quart of beets chopped fine, one quart of raw cabbage, chopped fine, one cup grated horse radish us prepared for the table, one cup granulated sugar, one tablespoon of salt, one teaspoonful black pep per. Vinegar enough to mix well. .Wcllesley Sulud. Cut apples into discs, chop celery rather fine, cut white grapes iuto halves, take out seeds, break Eng lish walnuts or pecans in small pieces, marinate with French dress lug and put on ice till chilled. Serve on hearts of lettuce leaves. Whip heavy cream and add lemon juice to taste; put a large spoonful ou salad. Pumpkin I'ie. Mix two-thirds cupful of brown sugar, one teaspoonful cinnamon, one-half teaspoonful ginger and one- half teaspoouful of salt, and add one and one-half cupfuls of steamed and strained pumpkin, two eggs, slightly beaten, one and one-half cupfuls of milk and one-half cupful of cream. Hake In one crust, cool andsevve. Apple Fritters. One cup flour, one-fourth teaspoon salt, two-thirds cup milk, yolks of two eggs, whites of two eggs, one tablespoon melted butter, two me dium-steed apples. Mix salt and flour, add mult gradually, yolks of eggs beaten until thick aud butler. Stir In two medium-sized apples thin and lastly fold in the stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Coffee Custard. Two cups milk, two tablespoons ground coffee, threo eggs, one fourth cup siar, one-eighth salt, one-fourth teaspoon vanilla. Scald milk with coffee and strain. Beat eggs slightly, add sugar, salt, vanilla and milk. Stialu iuto buttered indi vidual moulds, set in pan of hot water and bake until firm. Serve with cream. Orange Cuke. Oue-fo:irth cup butter, one cup sugar, two eggs, one-half cup milk, one and two-thirds cups flour, two and one-half teaspoons baking pow der. Cream the butter, add sugar gradually, yolks of eggs well beaten, and milk. Then add flour mixed aud sifted with baking powder. (Do not pack flour in cup or the mixture will bo too stiff.) Lastly fold in stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Put together with orange filling and ice with orange frosting. Irish Stew. Cut two pounds of lean mutton Inlo inch cubes, put thein in a cas serolo, cover with oue quart of boil ing water and cook one-half hour. Add one dozen button onions aud one-half cup of diced carrots and cook one hour; then add one dozen small potato bnlls, season with pep per and salt and cook until tender. Brown two tablespoons of butter, stir In two and one-half tablespoons of browned flour, add slowly one cup of brown stock, stir until smooth and thick, pour the sauce into the cas serole and cook ten minutes longer. Poison Oak? Ivy? An application of Santlseptlc Lotion affords instant relief, Is soothing and cooling In Its action on the affected part. It relieve the Itching and irritation at once, rapidly reduces tho Inflammation and fever, and speedily effects a cure Druggists refund if it falls. Hantlseptlc Is also an efficient preventive of Oak and Ivy poi soning. Keep a supply conven iently nt hand. It is equally ef fective for all other skin troubles. At all drugstores or by mall, f0c. Ksbenrott Chemical Laboratories,