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Show (), 127, Doddu's Euemncr Fair Tale Western Newspaper Union.) When we look Into the avenue of the future and eee long the there la for each of us to do,good we realize after all what a beautiful thing It is to work and to live and he happy. Stevenson. ' - Ar MARy GRAHAM-BONNER VCUttff Ntwtftl UNION -- DAINTY Oranges come In EDITHS DOG FOODS Nick and Nancy had met the smallest dog they had ever seen that after- In any form are always welour food. The folfowing makes recipe dessert: ' a Orange Souffle. To the whites of three eggs .add a small pinch of salt and beat until stiff, then add gradually . Beat the yolks of the eggs sugar. until light,, add six tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and stir In enough orange Juice to thin to the consistency of coffee cream. Into this fold careof the beaten whites, fully one-haturn Into a baking dish and cook In a dish of water until it puffs. Spread over the top the pulp of three oranges, cover with the remainder of the whites and set Into the oven to brown lightly. The, reason for adding the oranges after the first cooking is that they become bitter if cooked for a longer time. Roquefort Salad Dressing. Cream two ounces of Roquefort cheese, using a wooden spoon. ( Gradually beat in four to six tablespoonfuls, of olive oil, two to three tablespoonfuls of vinegar and a scant half teaspoonful of salt and paprika. This is especially good on head lettuce. Wild fowl is most appetizing with : Ripe Olive Sauce. Melt four tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, add one sliced onion and cook until slightly brown. Remove the onion and stir to a smooth paste with the butter and five tablespoonfuls of flour, a teaspoonful of salt, ful of pepper and cook with two cupfuls of brown stock, adding gradually until well cooked. Cut the meat from a dozen ripe 'olives, cover with water and cook seven minutes, then add tc the sauce Potatoes. Arrange Savory nine medium-sL.e- d potatoes in a shallow h baking dish add cupful ol water, six tabljspoonfuls of olive oil. two onions finely minced, one l of powdered sage, one teaspoonful of salt and pepper to season. Bake 'one hour or until the potatoes they told him about It. He was so cunning, Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 4 coat" Was he a little Chinese dog?" asked Daddy. Yes, replied Nancy, we couldnt help but stop and talk to his mistress, and she told us he was a little Chinese dog. She also told us that he had his full growth, and that certainly was three tablespoonfuls of powdered little." That reminds me," said Daddy, of the story I have meant to tell you for some time of the little Pekingese dog who was given a tea party in honor of his first birthday by his mistress. Chung Wang was his name, and It was his first birthday. His mistress name was Edith, and ihe was more devoted to little Chung IVang than to almost anything else, ind he was Just as fond of her. He would follow her around wher-ive- r she went But to continue about his birthday He was one whole year old, party. tnd, of course, he must have a birth-Ja- y party. , Edith thought a tea party would the very nicest kind. So 9e Besides, Chung Wang had always leemed to like tea better than any Hher meal. So, for that reason, Edith thought to give Chung Wang a party all for Colds , Headache Neuritis Pain Neuralgia Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART .Accept only Bayer package! which contains proven directions. Safe very lf 1 SAY said Nancy. Yes, said Nick, and he was all fixed up in a little brown coat, which exactly matched his own little brown tasty and INSIST BAYER ASPIRIN noon. Of course when Daddy came home Handy Bayer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Laolrin Is the trade mark of Barer Manufacture of Monoaectlcacideater of Saltcyllcecid Bigger Babies Cat Adopts Skunks In a Tetter to the Journal of th American Medical Association a New York clothing manufacturer asserts that his company has been forced 'to increase the size of the dresses for d children. next day his small son Informed him one, two and that the kittens were safe and sound. Persistent complaints that thq becks Recalling the traditional nine lives, of the dresses were too small have Tones investigated and found that come to him during the past year for the cat had acquired four other kit- the first time in thirty years experitens without doubt, but Instead of, ence. Most of the complaints came their being some other felines off- from California. This seems to show spring they were of the genus mep- that the size of American babies Is Californians may now,, increasing. hitis, or common American skunk. point to another benefit of their gloriIndianapolis News. . , ous climate. 4 We all believe In the Ten ComIt isnt a real victory unless everymandments, but mere belief gets us nowhere. body concedes it - mother cat with four kittens came to the farm of F. A. Jones at Brookfield, Mo., but Jones, having other ideas on the subject, consigned The the four kittens to the creek. A three-year-ol- ! one-fourt- h 6ports Hat Made Up in Hunters Green Felt, Banded With a Strap of ' Tan Kid. Small Hat In Satin and Grosgrain Sections With Ornament of Jet or Brilliants. Large Hat In Black Milan With Soft Black Taffeta Crown and Large Gardenia on Under Brim. one-fourt- table-spoonfu- are soft. Crowns, Brims Increase in Size lovely with the new frocks of crept and other summer goods. An Innovation in the styles Is th combination of two materials straw with a fabric, usually satin or taffeta. n The hat is now, as ever, dignified and serviceable, but the newet mode Is that in which the brinr is mads of straw, ordinarily milan, and the crown of satin, moire, taffeta or fancy goods, slightly drapes In soft lines, This model has the effect of elabora tion, accomplished with slight, clevei arrangement on the crown and ths simple line about the face. A pin, an ornament of some description or one of the rosettes made of ribbon In a different weave but the same color is jised on most of the hats. The very simplicity requires the most skillful handling, evident In the latest and loveliest among the larger hats that come from French' qpd American designers. For more formal summer costumes tulle Is much used, and In some light, dainty hats, made all in one color or all black, the straw is sewn by hand In very narrow strands on a foundation of tulle used in two or more layers to give it body without the more clumsy appearance of wining. An indestructible tulle which Is reais being put sonably moisture-proo- f Into these dressier hats, which will answer charmingly for the sheer frocks of chiffon, georgette and organdie that will be much worn. Some Small Hats Freakish. Large hats are more or less conventional this season, with little that is extreme in any detail. ,It is in the small bats that eccentric modes have been created, some of these being rather freakish. A new idea in trimming places the flower at the top ,of the crown, a little to one side. Two or three flowers are twisted or pinched together, to stand sharply erect and to add height to a crown already very high. One novelty Is a shape made of green taffeta and straw in alternate rows, with narrow brim and an extremely high crown that tapers upward anti backward, and has a cluster of small flowers in a stiff nosegay' at the peak. This model has the droll effect of a ponys head dressed in hay trappings. In another small Imported hat the brim is of straw In a warm shade of mauve, and the crown, also of the straw,' is half covered with felt in a slightly deeper shade, stitched leaf pattern. This flat, in a cut-otailored manner of making a hat ol straw overlaid with cloth is considered very smart and is particularly gotxl with the latest street and better sports suits in which stitching,; appllqued bands and tucking are now so fashionable. Opportunity is given In thlsf nlodel for striking combinations and contrasts in color. Even then one color is employed the effect of a difference In shade is given . between ' straw and fabric. Needlework on hats Is liked by some milliners, and some intriguing styles are shown ,In which a pattern is embroidered on the straw shape, with different straw, floss, crewels or metal thread. This is done also on small hats of felt, grosgrain or satin, making a model .which may be snitabiy worn with the sports ensemble of lighter weight goods and with more formal dress. all-sati- Slices of lemon dusted with paprika br. finely hilnced ' parsley1' mak very pretty garnishment for fish. Are You Economical? Here, are a few questions which it Is wise to ask ones self quite frequently: Are you careful of the large expenditures but careless of the little things? We have been often called the most wasteful nation in the world. Anyone, if he has plenty, may be wasteful, but true thrift is found as often among those of wealth as those who have little. If the one who is wealthy has earned it himself, that very fact shows that he has been thrifty and saving. . Do the members of the family take more food upon the plate than they can eat? It used to be considered good form to leave food on the plate; that has passed Into disuse; now it Is a compliment to ones hpstess to leave a clean plate. Look Into the cup after a meal and see who leaves sugar undlssolved and wasted. Such waste is both useless and wrong. Stirring the sugar to dissolve It, takes but a minute and If less ls needed less should be served. Are' the vegetables prepared In a wasteful manner; Is food carelessly prepared, burned and unpalatable, so that It Is uneaten and then thrown out? Are you speeding more than a third of your Income for food for your family? Are you buying foods out of season, thus spoiling the appetite for them when they are In the seasonable market? If so, this Is waste of labor, fuel, transportation, as well as money. Are you buying perishable foods In such quantities that they must spoil before they are used? Are you using the fish of your own community rather than those which must be shipped in at greater expense? Do you throw away the vegetable waters or combine them in sauces or gravies to serve with the foods? Do you us the cheaper cuts of meat which arq more nourishing, or the choicer cuts which cost twice as much? Do you, plan your meals several days ahead, so that leftovers may be utilized? Do you realize that the, mother in the home Is the most Important member; that her strength slioukl be conserved and her comfort looked after? conHas she time and strength-savinveniences so that her family may have the maximum comfort with the minimum labor, go that she may have rest and leisure to keep her health, ' happiness and good looks? little at the look leaks, the Let us irritating little things which wear away nerves and cause friction and discord. These are the things .which cause many bankrupt homes. , g Larger Hats Now Prominent Among Fashions for Miladys Wear. theories that a woman must be properly and becomingly bonneted and shod whatever the rest of her toilet Is quite as true In the fashions of today. Greater emphasis was never given to millinery and footwear and this seasons styles in both are of compelling Interest. In hats, observes a fashion writer, in the New York Times, the campaign for a more feminine mode which has held the attention of stylists and designers for the last year is evident in the latest models, some of which are so radically different from the prevailing fashions of several recent seasons that the lines of costumes, of coiffure and details of dress have have been altered In a general scheme of harmony. At the same moment that news is received of a diminishing enthusiasm for closely bobbed hair of transformations and puffs and ringlets appear hats of more generous size in crown and brim, and a welcome sign in the windows of some prominent hat shops announces These are offered large head sizes. partly because of the new arrangement of hair, also because of the manner of wearing a hat low on the head, but showing at the same time soft lines of wavy hair about the face and neck. These and other variations in the mode have established a great variety In shape, size and style of trimming, presenting many beautiful creations for early summer and for all types of dress. Jn Wearing Large Hat tTheArtnearest approach to the quaint old idea of a picture, hat is shown in hats of fine quality and graceful lines for formal and semiformai occasions. In this sort of hat well defined restrait Is expressed, and the latest designs are decidedly smart and elegant. The success of a hat that has width of brim and little trimming Is due largely to the manner of wearing a tilt ever so slight, giving it sometimes Just the necessary chic. This is especially Important in the shapes that have a straight edge. These are worn far down at the back as well as the' front, and slightly higher on one side. The drooping brim, less extreme than that brought forward two seasons ago, is still very fashionable. It Is, to be correct, wide at the sides, narrower in front and quite short at the' back. Crowns are dome shaped, as a rule, but "somewhat fuller and higher than they, were last season. A novelty in large hats that seems certain to have an immediate vogue Is of black straw, light as down, and faced with a more finely woven straw In contrasting color. These hats in Paris models have facings of rose and blue, each trimmed with a wreath of tulips in soft shades, laid singly, with the natural shaped leaves on the brim, close about the crown. It Is one of the most stylish and flattering hats shown in many seasons and will to Old-tim- e , , MOTHER- :himself and to have It a tea party would be quite the nicest thing she could do In honor of his first birthday. Edith invited a few of her friends who owned little dogs to come to the party. When the dogs all came In they carried in their mouths presents for Chung Wang. One brought a beautiful Cower, and this was fastened to his collar. Another little dog brought a new red sweater, stfll another brought a cushion for Chung Wang to sleep on. Chung Wang barked his Thank you ! each time Edith opened the parcels for him, and then the other dogs their tails, which meant, wagged Youre very welcome. And then the tea table was brought In with a big cake In the center upon which was burning brightly a tall red candle. All the, little dogs barked some more. They wanted to say: Many, happy returns of the day! How they all did enjoy the tea party ! First they had little saucers with cream, a little sugar and a drop of tea all mixed up together. 'Then they had little chunks of buttered toast with sugar on top. Then they all had several little cakes, and each got a piece of birthday cake, so they considered it a very rich, fine Fletchers (Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by assimilation of regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Corporation Runs Farms One Boston corporation is running 20 farms In Iowa bought at sacrifice prices, says Cappers Weekly. Babson, the statistician, believes that during the next few years a number of such corporations will buy up at bargain prices the best of the farms now for sale. Several concerns have been organized for this purpose. The farming of the future, Babsofl believes, may be done by big business corporations the same as in other branches of Industry. Phone Silencer Invented Holding ones hand over the telephone mouthpiece while conversing aside" with other, persons In the-rooIs not necessary If a device recently perfected by a British Inventor is used. iBy pushing a lever on thtf silencer, which fits behind the transmitter, sounds in the room are entirely cut off from the wire. Following a nervous shock, a Parisian is said to have turned blue all over, a condition which resisted the treatments of physicians. Big corporations are just what we Hope for the best; and some go out want; somewhat restrained by a few and pursue it. good rules of law. party. The Game of Adjectives One Btory; player commences to read a but for each adjective he says "cross. For. instance, he might say, Ones there was a cross old man, with three cross sons and three cross daughters, fin-when actually the story reads old man, handsome sons, and beautiful daughters." As the player reads, the rest write .down his words, leaving a. gap every itlme he says cross. Tie dictatss one or two paragraphs reads the rest of the story. Afterwards the Vest of the players are allowed five minutes in which to fill, in what they consider would be tfie correct adjecne tives in the dictated' paragraphs. most nearly qr she whose adjectives correspond with those in the book Is the winner. i then-quickl- y Crying for a Tooth -Baby T&ddy Betty had been fretful, and had heard his mother tell several how cross baby was, but that she w mid be all right when she cut that fl, t tooth. Hows Baby Betty this morning? -- ac neighbor asked of Teddy one ( t morn-1- Quarantined! Millions Beware! THERES PANIC in Bugville! Cockroaches are dying by the thousands I Use Petermans Roach Food in your house. Exterminate every roach. Dont fight roaches with a spray. You must have a powder. Petermans is the right powder. It entices roaches from their hiding places. They carry it back on their legs and bodies to their nests behind under floors where no spray could possibly reach. Every adult roach, the young, every egg in the entire colony is exterminated. No, odor. Nothing is left but a Rule dry dusL Use base-board- Tiers all right this morning. fl h She the toof her has been crying for." What Its For Teacher Johnny, what is the func-- t n of the nose? Johnny To blow and to hold speo t cles. Exchange. of cockroaches already exterminated! JWnaat km the right insacticidm far each in secs. On safe wherever drugs arr roitL s, Petermans Roach Food now. Keep themouLDontletthemgctastarL Here is the right insecticide for each insect : I PETERMANS ROACH FOOD exterml nates that cockroach army. PETERMANS ANT FOOD exterminates ants. FLYOSAN kills flies and mosquitoes. PETERMANS DISCOVERY exterminates bedbugs. PETERMANS MOTH FOOD protects against moths. You must have a specific insecticide for each insect. No single insecticide w ill exterminate them all. We have had nearly 50 years experience. We know that is true. UM& SOO Fifth AraX.T.C. |