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XA Fresh, Pure and so Delicious —— Universally Sold —_ Put up lots of it now whlle strawberries are plentiful. And be sure to make it delicious and good with Domino Granulated Sugar. SAVE THE FRUIT CROP ‘“‘Sweeten it with Domino’’ Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown; Golden Syrup. Cinnamon and Sugar; Sugar-Honey; Molasses Use it for Cooking don’t particularly ask for Dairy- men’s League Brand when you buy, you may get some other kind that will not be “cmmy 1f you want to use this as or- dinary milk in cooking, you just add an equal part of water, for this is rich, “creamy milk.” ‘Where the real “cream” effect is wanted, use it undiluted. ‘ Please do not think of this as milk.” 0z. cans. - You may keep/thé fiew bright suede Bat for the country wiub, the beach on a holi or wear At with the new tafloréd suit in the street. What- ever you do with it\is proper, even to letting it go out for tea. These hats are draped If. they com from some milliners, straight if they come from others. You take your choice according to what the shape of your head needs. Of course, it is more fashionable to be draped than not. Fabric must be manipulated in ibfas folds. Thus it carries out the fashion. Frocks are full of the folds that drop and rise. Hats have swung into line through the recrudescence of the Russian and Persian ideas. The two are not widely separated. For one was brought to the other by conquerors,- & way in which most tashions are born. The fact that new hats are suede, however, is the thing Just now. They can as the rainbow or a cubist In his wildest mome did some of the color comb: of the dressmakers this seaso one ever hoped for a tion black, one had not an idea that its cessation would resujt in a kaleldo- scope. Green suede hats are smart be- cause they carry out a color that is very well liked. "It may the green of water, of jade or apple, The sketch shows one worn with a simple blue tailored suit and white blouse, the Immense collar of which, take notice, s placed outside the jacket. This is an innovation de- voutly to be pralsed. The crown of the hat is soft after the Russlan manner of another century, but it is not rolled over at the top like an ap- ple tart, which would be true to history. The crown band is slight and ends in a loose bow on ome side. There 1s a handkerchief of green linen that attracts attention to its existence by nearly falling from the pocket. Handkerchlefs are doing all sorts of queer things this season be- side being highly colored. Big ones, The Summer Bedroom. “T want a happy looking bedroom. I am apt to get tired and depressed at times and I know it is due to my surroundings, the present decoration: in my room are so somber and cold, writes a corresporlent. Her letter further adds that her room faces 4 ltwmsinllb.‘lnd 6-0z. cans. Dairymen's League - smwmhm SPORT HAT OF SOFT SUEDE IN BRIGHT GREEN TO 'GO WITH DARK BLUE TAILORED BUIT. fll- BOUX OF PARIS FEATURES THIS B AMERICA WILL BEE IT. THB W!flTD LIN- GERIE COLLAR IS PULLED OU’ SIDE THE JACKET. like those men use for polo and riding, are drawn !Iu'nulh the b.l'. of a sport frock to hang lo brilliant in coloring and are elpecld- iy effctive with white gown Paris has been playing h big handkerchiefs as ornaments for sev- eral months, but the world has just caught their agreeable possibilities. (Copyright, 1922.) MAKING THE HOME ATI'RA BY DOROTHY ETHEL WALSH. that the bedspread and hang- ings are blue and white chints and the furniture cream-colored. ‘The floor has a mixed red, blue and tan rug. Who wouldn't feel depressed and tired in such a room. A north light, blue predominant in the decoration: It would be hard to be cheerful und such circumstances. 1 have written my correspondent to redecorate her room in the follow- ing way: “Take the mixed rug off the floor,” I Aune-led. “and substi- tute sorhe green and white rag rugs. The: are not expensive and will bring a needed touch of color. Make glass curtains of white Swise with = green dot and overdraperies of deep rose voile. Make a bedspread of elther the swiss or voile, preferably the swiss, and cover the chalr cus! Inon H agres that this although representing but little monetary outlay, will raise her flagging spirits. i HOME ECONOMICS. BY MRS. ELISABETH KENT. Everybody likes to be pralsed.” Yet {1t has been a long-established Puri- tan tradition that there is something very dangerous about praise, that it puffs up unduly and softens and weakens ‘the moral fiber of the re- cipient. “Praise to the face is open disgrace,” 1s an old proverb on which many of us have been unfortunate enough to be reared, with consequent loss of self-assurance. It is really flattery, not pralse, that is so dangerous, and it seems a pity s0 to have confused t| two that honest praise comes with stiff awk- wardness from Anglo-Saxon lips if at tall. For honest pral recognition of sincere effort and real lothllllInt is the best oil there is to lubricate the joints of human intercourse, ‘{ - sening friction instantaneously. Re: praise, given with intelligence and sincerity, does no harm. It does more good than we oan measure. It is really the nym-m. of a debt of ap- preciation, a debt that we owe to others exactly in proportion as we crave it for our own effor If women would think more of thelr duty and privilege in giving praise where justly due, to their own mothers and fathers, to their hus- bands, children, rvants, friends and enemln, to teachers, doctors, minis- ters, butchers, bakers and candi stick makers, it would make much smoother. We certainly find fault very readily with all these folk, and the point about finding pralse in. stead of fault is {ts subjective effect upon ourselves thbse whom re's mercy, Dbless. b fiillnl him lllt lhl.l lnd him that es. To learn to praise justly is not in 1f ‘2 difficult task, and o: learned it has ma: | —— Stnwbm-y Jayer Cake. Bake a plain cake in' two layers. Put one cupful of ripe strawberri crushed in a bowl. Add one cup of sugar, Heat the whites of two stiff and dry, then add the ber: sugar gradually, continuing the b«t- ing until 1t will hold l!l foou s b St ng and on ti and garnish with whole berri elly Squarei. In & little enld Bring to Tomato Rarebit on Iu'dnl- Bcalloped Rhubarb. | Crisp Rolls. DINNER. Cream of Spinach Soup. Lamb Souffle. Tomato. Sauce,: Buttered String Beans. Radish and Water Crtu Salad. eese Relish, Rhubarb Puddm? With Tapioca. lgonl 18 one of those ever-present and helpful desserts that every house- keeper may keep at her finger tips. for it di ot ufl‘ll! deteriorat it 81V Ilr.d in a numhlr ol tl-rnch{ry 'ro begin with, remember that a tablespoonful of tapioca bolled in with soup stock adds, not much taste, but a delicious texture, to the soup. es it thickness and creamine l.nd smoothness that are quite desir- able. H [ nnd taploca 4 rt, ple taploca: Fl ak one cup of nelrl tapliocs In nty of water over night, and in lho morn-. ing add two c\lgl The taploca n the have almost absorbed the water, but not qui Add a saltspoon of salt and one vanilla, and cook three or four hours in a uble boiler, until clear. B8erve hot or cold with cream. Apple Taploca Pudding.—Soak one- half pint of tapioca In water for se hours. Peel and core half a dozen spples. In the oranlnl of each one place a teaspoonful of sugar and 11 plece of lemon or o Pour the tapioca over th bake thoroughly. ioca Cream Puddin'—!'or taplo- ca cream pudding mix a pint of mlt a quarter of a cup of sugar, a table- spoon of butter, two ounces of taplo- ca—about four tablespoons—the grat- ed rind of a lemon, and a pinch of salt. Cook in a uble boiler for twenty-five minutes. Remove from the fire and add two beaten egg yolks and then two beaten whites. Pour into a buttered dish and steam for an hour. BServe with ¢old custard sauce. Here is another good pudd! a sort of Indian pudding: Mix ane-quarter cup of granulated two table- spoonfuls corn m 3 Coftee. e s m of maple sirup spoonful of salt, and sealdea milk.” Cook carefully ring to keep from burning, Until 1t begins to thlckom Add one cupful of brown sugar, pour into a buttered pudding dish and bake for three- quarters of an hour. Serve hot or cold with cream. morning should { " Chalk Talk on Urio Acid, ‘What can be done, ask many ooh the ‘| respondents, to remove or prevent chalk acoumulations around the joints? “The jolnt of the .fingers are growing larger—I can now get my wedding ring only on my little finger?” VDon't say it is old age. When young folks get sick som thing' is done for them, but when old folks suffer people say it is old age and can't be helped.” “I am seventy-two, but very active, and I hl e to think I m be disabled by insidious rheumatism or rheuma- B nnhrlt} called 1§ nciplent mans. n is just lumps on my fi Joints that get sore now and th That which these co ondents dln:rlb.-h not chalk deposit or uric id accumulation, but ly an s?u;ahl ljmlckt"tlrl" of t|l!' structures of the joint from grad mild chrl;nl;:hlnflunm:flnow g ® o e correspondents opines that the drimkin "D ter in hl:’pl.rt f the country ‘i mwl‘ rouble, for nu Water 18 very hard. Another Thinke It etrange that should have these heberden's nod: on her finger joints and maybe an hritis future before her, when has for years drank only pure & tesian water. Stil] ‘whether distilled 'll.r 'l hel!er for one so afficted. The hardness of the water or the Softness of the water or the pota- bility or purity of the water has no tion to the various joint diseases, ough it may be true that one who abitually drinks pl is less likely to s r with such diseases than Is one who drinks very little water. About the silliest ex- travagance I have encountered in studying the household sports of the country is the purchasing of r a8 one horrid doctor a tis defor- ty of water drink- ing water in bottles when tap water of unquestioned potability is right at hand at no expense at ail. 'he prevention of actual chalky concretions (monosodium urate, a di rivative of uric acid) about the join! and the prevention of the other typ of joint disease described by the carrespondents quoted is a compara- tively simple matter as compared with the cure. As 1 out of the uric acld p joints is not the caus: just incident or an effect of the disease. The increase in the proportion of uric acid in the blood and tissues of a person who has chronic lead ing, Leukemia, Bright's diseas or other disease is not the c: have pointed ot about +|just a secondary feature of the dis- The Housewife’s Idea Box Get the Maximum Wear Out of Sheets and Cases. In order to get the maximum wear out of your plllowcases and sheets, | turn the cases every day—that Is, turn the plllow. This gives equal wear to both sides of the case. Every |- third day turn the bottom of the sheet to the head of the bed. This Bives eTul wear to both ends of the sheet. If this simple method is used you will get almo;ldl;';k:e as much wear out of your bed linens. THE HOUSEWIFE. (Copyright, 1922.) ° —_— Planked Shad. The best way to cook a shad. or any large, firm-fleshed fish, {s to plank It The plank must of hardwood, either seasoned hickory, oak, cherry or ash, two feet long by elghteen inches wide and about three inches thick. Heat the plank in the oven or before the fire. Have the fish split down the back, removing the back- bone. wash and wips dry. then season with salt and pepper and fasten it with tack on the plank. 1f you use a gas stove for planking your fish, turn on both burners under the oven and lay the plank in the bottom of ‘the broiling over for about twenty minutes, then 1ift it onto the bottom of the oven to brown delicately, basting frequently with butter and lemon juice. When done_ gerve from the plank, or slide the fish off onto a hot dish or plat- ter. Serve baked potatoes with it. Jellied Tes, Whipped Cream. Soak two-thirds of & two-ounce package of gelatin in enough cold water to dissolve it, and pour one pint of strong hot tea over the gela- tin. Add one cup of sugar and the juice of two lemons. Strain_and place on ice for several hours. Serve with whipped cream. is possible by the use of Beauty Bleach and Black and White Soap. Beauty Bleach is a delightful "¢old cream’d skin beautifier. Black and White Beauty Bleach oase. If there 1s one preventive of {lon, of 'which more in_ subsequent issues. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Kindly exp! your opinion as ‘to L sl \DEFINIT] et n;p,,,,,m llsFlz The healthiest of flies and mosquitoes cannot live long in Dethol-sprayed air; they die—quickly! mosquitoes will not enter where Dethol has been sprayed. y, =y in preceding talks, the deposit| rod r th her baby. having bunions 6] hy pleted hr er rrespon Kinaat sually fnal As of his asks flu use of spirits of horated sweet (Mrs. M. E. camphor or g )lbr reducing No external applisstion, medicinal, food or appliance or gar- m-nz or u:yp-rnu whl reduce or breasts. camphor rstition is just ancient fan bnmch’nh::sflmum?‘ ‘would be fo: o practice of feeding . mother timothy luy %o ensble her nurs Answer—! at e h° all the “-.” = on when monts have falled. W, nouu.bly chlnM rlcrmod. lnn m ‘was discour- S . I ol e (l’. l‘) ‘Well, wh; ot mnnn 30 milliner and an op naily ru.te n your mlnd ‘bnut ul ing else than opera- a rul tion will onro bunion. Your gait is great deal better when likel 3 cured than it is now. the gnnlon Visegar Habit. Pln-. tell me whether the drink-| nf one-fourth cup of vinegar daily will have any effect on the red blood corpuscles. (D. 8.) Anmh-ll shrivels and destroys red The great trouble with the modern woman {s that she cannot relax. ‘When I think over my list of ac- quaintances I feel as If some of them had never relaxed at all, not from the time they were bables and jounced about Iin baby carriages to distract them so they wouldn’t cry. ‘We do live & restless, hectic life, all of us In strange cities noises con- stantly assall the ears, even in the country thers are few places free from the shriek of an engine or the honk of a motor. We even learn to sleep with a constant hum of noise going on in the alr around us. If it dosen’t affect us consciously I am sure that the ears of our subconscious mind must be_tired of the constant Wa are, I nfloufly belleve, in dan- ger of losing our power of relaxa- tion. It is one reason why we grow old soon and worry over gray hairs and wrinkl, If a woman wants to stay young she should force Herself iy i il ELY GU'ARANTE Any little girl will just love to be the happy owner of & black cat bag. Cut out two cat heads of blick oflcloth, leatherette or of any other black material. (Be sure to have the right side of the material of both heads facing out.) Sew the two heads together on the wrong Turn the bag to the r line it & you wish, Make an in each ear. Run a slik cord through them for the handle. Cut two larger white circles and two smaller black ones for the eyes. Applique them on one or both sides of the bag. Stitch the mouth, nose and whiskers in white wool. A black cat bag will be lovely for gathering flowers or for knitting. | FLORA. (Copyright, 1922.) yelet BY EDNA KENT FORBES. to relax. She will probably have to teach herself how. If you have time for a nap in the afternoon, even for fifteen minutes, compel yourself to do so0. Lie down in a darkened room and lie still even though it is an ef- fort. It may take you weeks and weeks before you can relax sufficlent- ly to sleep, you may be =0 nervous that you never will learn to dose off in the afternoon, but even 80 the rest will do you good. If you are very mervous you may find it necessary to read while you are lying there. After a time, £ ever, you should have tten your- self Into the habit of quiet. Then it will be possible to lie quietly relaxed with the eyes shut. June—Since you are the Irish type with black hzir, brows, and deep blue eyes you have no limit in your choice of colors. If there is any preference it should be given the blues and after that all the gutumn shades. Dickey—A girl of seventeen, hel, five feet, two inches, should welgh 110 pounds. Flies and PR\ Dethol not only kills flies and mosquitoes, but roaches, ants, bedbugs, etc., as well as the impurities that are carried on their bodies. Spray Dethol! It cleans—it disinfects—it destroys foul odors—it prevents moths—it purifies the alr—nnd kills the msects that make life miserable for you. Spray Dethol in the sick room; in the nursery; in the linen closets; in stuffy rooms; on carpets and draperies; in damp cellars—every place! a sprayer full and ready all the time. Dethol cleans, too. Tile, marble, bathroom and kitchen fixtures—all become glisteningly clean when Dethol has been sprayed and then wiped off. Try it on the windows! Get Dethol! Dethol does not stain. Have Simultaneously, it does many things and does them quickly and surely. Spraying Dethol is the most economical, convenient and positive way of keeping your house sweet, clean and pure. Never be without it. Buy Dethol at drug, grocery, hardware and ,department stores. Full directions on every can. Small size, 50c; quart, $1.00; gallon, $3.00. Dethol sprayer, 50c. DETHOL MFG. CO., Inc., Richmond, Va: H. cmxl & SONS, Imc., Sales Agen: t, ‘W. Lombard Street, Baltimo ASK m FREE DEMONSTRATION, -‘.