Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BHSELHLHLLLLBHPSLH LS LB LELEHHHLLSHSLLOSHL DL S $855 S MY HUSBAND’S LOVE Adele Garrison's New Phase of The popular separate blouse and AILY FASHION SERVICE. POPULAR FOR SUMMER water and fit top crist over | dish. Press edges lightly together and trim ciose to the dish with a knife. Run the rolling pin gently around the edge to insure even pres- sure. Roll the edges together with the thumb and first finger of the haid, using the - first finger of the cold MEDICAL TREATMENT HIGH Great sums of money necessary (0 equip modern school, says Dr. Bur- ton, REVELATIONS OF A WIFE PEPETEE How Madge and Dicky At Away Irom Mrs, Dur Over her sister’s head Edi to me a silent appeal incongruity of onr associatic friendly terms ¢ Leils in & more primitive time have been at_cach other gailed me forcibly, me from re 1 mute messag “lLella, liste emptorily there of A about this little to know Mrs, realize 1 Last Got eause particular tions. And was present thing. rely no one is going to T Dicky “I ought falteredf brows draw toge her folly “Tell him wat my tone cor to feign the ousness irritat pression of ¥ actly what your mothe when she was talking @ good deal of money That's the only thing you could honestly, and let me tell you now, dear, that you'll find enough to tell your husband in the years to come, without mulling over facial expres- sions and voice tones.” “I suppose 1 am terribl Leita said shamefacedly, but was an inflection of hope in her voice, and I patted her shoulder reassur- ingly. es, you are,” I laughed, “but we'll forgive you®on condition that you atop worrying now, for there isn't a single, solitary thing to worry about. 'l wager Katherine has your moth- er-in-law in a properly ‘penitent and placid mood by now.” “For the love of Lulu, Madge are you trying to do, beat that by battery besieged Belgrade at his own game Dicky strolled lazily across room, with his hands in his p and surveyed us quizzically. I glad indeed of the interruption Lella needed now was to have her at tention diverted from her own affairs for a little, and I knew that my hus- band could be depended on to rattle along indefinitely, He did not wait tor an answer, but continued his strictures against my alliterative phra “You're the goat this time, he said, grinning teasingly “Usually when she feels an allitera- five it like that coming on, she ties me down in my. chair, puts a gag in my mouth so 1 can’t summon the po lice, and then proceeds to get it all out of her system. You have my sympa- thy, old dear, but I can't wait until she gets over the attack.” “You're a horrid boy, Dicky pouted, “and if 1 were Madgo “Now, how do you expect me to an- swer that 2 Dicky démanded, looking around him with a highly injured air “If 1 sigh sntimentally and breathe softly, ‘Would t you were!" Madge is just unreasonable enough to swat me one wherever the sw ng is best, And, on the other hand, if 1 remain glumly silent, you have just cause to indict me for ungallant boorishness, 1 tell you 3 Katherine's entrance cut short ravings, and with one accord we moved forward 1o meet her emiled with tender mischief at Lella Joshe: r-in about sp or new dresses. suy my silly,” there what oldly cllow the ckets, was All Lefla," at me " Wella his all She Potter from Sally Atherton to Mrs Joseph Graves Hamilton, Dear Mrs. Hamiite I wish I could expr Mr. Hamilton my appreciat lovely gifts. 7T this morning, much pleascd, brocade evening go You mee I you, of Eamand I w ed for 1 would fee 1t 1 made a T don't howey t %o grieve at a ean live wit g9 thro that T did tendernoss severed as must & and a fecling of s to you and .t and 1 %0 co nany r PEITEVIVITOIIIT separate skirt for summer are here shown making the perfect ensemble. The overblouse is of white crepe de chine heavily over.dotted with tiny black dots with a white collar and a pleated frill. The skirt 1s of red white striped silk, with a band of the stripes used horizontally for the hem, The blouse would be | cqually smart and very practical with | thesuit skirt or one of flannel. | 1 : TETTIIPTIVIIGD and “Weal Have to Plan, w tamed mother-in-law sald, “but 1 have prom- 10 one is going 1o men- aguin, So don't you" - - — nitory forefinger head that for being like that. I have foolish it is to be fitted is like- r her oper- adm loosen it of the | It sufficlently to spoiling the shape will melt without mold into your or unything r how Ty ns now, stouter when she To Try Euge Add A little flour to the grease in| which you are frying eggs and they | will not pop when the grease becomes | very hot. Likewise the flavor will| be greatly improved. afte My get tnine in plan- up and up and in. So she is d Jow fix she can ants to come plan.”i flave to p Il never get there, and when we ail had trooped up Mrs. Durk:e's room again, ¢ volubly, he waited vou an how to get Restoring Furniture Dicky TLemon, linseed or any prepared oil on cloth will help restore an old spot on furniture if you vub vigorously | cnough. we & to i onl ing Blankets wool blankets dry stretchers if you their original 1 va Was| After washing them on curtain want them to retain length an dwidth. athhg decision immediately for the uctantly Mrs. Durkee let us go, went down the stairs, heard orine vrivs 2nd lomestic 1S We Edith and Leila we = ing happily to essmaking my ened 1d blown over, escortea by K r chatts of various knew th tempest Care of Meat There is always an eclement of danger in using meats that have been | cooked for several days unless they are reheated, even if they have been | | Kopt in a cold place. i - 9 i Scenting Handkerchiefs | Gosstp S COmer | An.casy way to give your hand- kerchiefs a delicate scent is to put & little arrow root, in a muslin bag and | which the | | | (Unless otherwise specified, these recipes are planned for four persons) To Bake a Pie While some pie bakers scoff at the i*dea of measuring fNour, ter for the crust, the cook finds it quite as measure her ingredients for pie as for ake. So, for the benefit of the * rule and method for a o is carefully worked out. First and foremost, past should be used. Le: to make a flaky crust and consequently no danger of a “lardy” taste to the pie. Half butter and half Jard can be used if preferred but the amount of shortening must be doubled. x The lard should be cold and firm but nee dnot be chilled. The water should be cold but need not be ice water. Quick work and a light touch are two necessary ingredients for a good pie, new cook rhubarb flour Rhubarb Pie One pound rhubarb, 1 to 1 1-2 cups sugar, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1 cup pastry flour, 4 tablespoons lard, 1 scant teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons cold water. Remove skin from rhubarb and cut in inch pieces. Mix sugar, corn- | starch and salt add rhubarb and stir | with have it in the water in Bell Sleeves handkerchiefs are holled. ong tight sleeve for day I-shaped model lined ting color. || e FABLES 'ON Black Tulle dress of black tulle with many unt ruffles is combined with wide | ribbon polished to the luster, Beside the wear is tl with a cont A bo shoepolish greatest possible Frin black | Mr. Mann would observe as he tip- toed into the room. “Yes—thank goodness,” Mrs, Mann | would echo. “We don't have much trouble in that direction.” But Ostrich vinge in and white mottied eftect is used on black or gowns with equally good effect. Ostricl white | there are many who do. | The active, playful child needs a great deal of slcep and rest—the more the better, The minimum that statisticians allow for children | from two to four years is 12 hours, And from four to six years 11 hours. | Sleep and rest insure a greater resistance when illness comes, Also | Flaring Ruflles ring ruffles of lace are of finishing the this season a popular way lace gown of amount of sleep Chintz in Evening Chintz Is no longer used merely for garden costumes and possibly for sport but is used for evening | frocks, linings and blouses and | weaer coat suits, Embroldery English eyelet embroidery in eolors on white is a very novel decoration a white or colored frock. Hems Tmportant Hems this season are of great im- portance, Frequently they are of a different material and color from the dress proper, for White Crepe youthful and charming coat Is of white erepe romain with | bands of white rabbit. | —_— | Sport Dress | A plaid sport dress in white has a wide sash orawmgs colored silk. A mad: huge black and | girdle of | Removing Tee Croam | When jce ercam will not come cull of the mold, having been frozen so | hard, et a little cold water run over i 3 the outside of the container. '”""_',:‘n’,",'. A{:\'h’l"xllmv.lovtn the lttle hill in | “Of eourse it is, Raggedy Andy Raggedy Ann laughed. “Cavse why? Cause, we have never seen anything | like it b | Y1 am ve "Phis is the nicest pop corn moun- tain I have ever scen, Rerty Dear!” Raggedy Andy sand as he caught six different flavored pop corn balls as | glad that Y found the | pop corn hill and that you eame along when you did!” Deryt Bear sald as he helped himself to another eream puff | from Raggedy Ann's basket, “l1 supposs someone mad Raggedy Andy sa Berty Bear agreed nice things do not just grow deep woods like pine and paw paws | do they, Raggedy t with magic!” “Oh, ‘Buch in hout any port In sigl ever, I do not mind t ves ing my d Mre. Hamilton, that the deep, o of philesophies of life & that hini stely dead to me T can, It ow; and comes ed. “Mag iike raspber- have to be ' Raggedy Ann laug do not grow Bear! T} by Magie. T wonder who made geedy And il g8 wof Wi Nerty ica “ hate yester- | ma 1 said oud gruff 1" Ra I will tell you Y| 10w i T > k 1 eat my nagic there looking ish stood a I Raggedy Ann & 4 up. “We supposed that the pop eorn mouniain Was free o he enjoyed by everyone You did, 414 you?” t Well you 1tell v Ann! How many of my mag- corn balls di4 sou eat? Just & man just me this | bed The Adventures iy [ ea. a fork until rhubarb is well | covereds e HEALTR: | REGULAR SLEEP | “That child certainly does sleep,” it helps to retain weight oand increase two together, it. Children who get insufficfent sleep are soon likely to show it through losses in weight. Fatigue is' also likely to follow, with loss of ap- petite, irritability and nervousness. | The child sliould have its own - in the open, if possible—or In well ventilated room. A daytime nap should be insisted upon, and, there should be great regularity in the time of this nap as well as in the | child's bedtime, > | Be sure to make your child keep | a ‘rrxumr sleeping hours—and get the | an eight-inch pie dish. habit yourself, | i | | § Raggedyhun | coop and Yocked the door. Now! Wa shall sce whether you | pay, or not!” he said as he went into | his house. | “Isn't he silly?" Berty Bear laugh- | “How can we pay when we| Mix flour and salt and rub in lard with tips of fingers, The mixture should be made like course corn meal, Add one tablespoon of water at one side of the flour mixture and work into about half of it. Add the other tablespoonful at the other side of ‘the mixing bowl and work up the rest of the flour mixture. Work the always rather tossing and lifting the dough than pounding or kneading it. Divide, reserving a the upper crust than Work the dough cake with the fingers, the molding board, evenly floured, and roll. Turn the dough half way around after each rolling to kecp it round, Roll the dough to about three- eighths of an inch thickness, Fold one-half over the other and place on little more for the undef then put on it 8moothly with the tips of fin- gers. Be mure the dough covers the edge of the dish. Roll the remain- ing pieces of dough just as you did the first and ent a gash in the cen- ter, Fold over ready to put over under crust, Fill the lined pie dish with pre. pared rhubarb. Any sugar and juice | that have settled in the bow) of rhu- barb should, of eourse, be poured over the rhubarb in the pie shell. Moisten the edge of the dough with The man said, “You owe me for thirty pop corn balls!™” aven't any money?” We can't!” Raggedy Ann said s what makes me think that he p us here a long, long time!™ “List Raggedy Andy eaid. len’t that someone eoming?” And the three friends listened and eould hear footsteps. “Pitypat! pitypat!” and in a few moments the little Rags Pupp 10§ walked up, wagging his rag tail. s 5 will kee 'you have no pastry jagger. | with ard is necessary ' there is | | of Joliet and Marquette, it may fol- into a round flat | | move the cause, The Crawford unites coal and gas for your comfort : other to make a sort of “flute” it Chicago, May 23.-—Any Increase in | the cost of modern medicine and sur- gery evidently has but kept pace with a proportionately higher cost in train- ing, as a modern school eannot be | adequately endowed for anything less than $10,000,000, according to Dr. E. D. Burton, president of the University of Chicago. “And if the school is te include in its scope all the specialities of medi- cine and surgery, two or three times that sum is not too much,” sald Dr. Burton, “The days have gone in which a group of physicians can supplement their income by conducting a medical school for pecuniary profit. Now WeKnow Why People Have urning Feet All in the Joints Says Maine Doctor Put into a hot over and bake about 20 minutes. The rhubarb will cook as quickly as the crust. Cornstarch is used in place of | flour to thicken the juice because there is less danger of its boiling up out of the pie. One cup of sugar wil make a tart pie and one and one-half cups wlil make a very sweet pie. Ore pound of rhubarb three cups of rhubarb eut lengths, he oven should be hot enough to hrown the pie as it bakes. Any pie 1 top crust should be a healthy Nobody like an anemic looking measures in inch tan, pie. Total calories, 1853. fat, 440; carbohydrate, L0016 gram, (Copyright, 1 Protein, 1355, 58; Iron, 24, NEA Service, Ine.) YOYAGE IN PAGEANT Landing of Joliet to Be Celcbrated By Over 1,000 Actors on Anniversary of Founding of Site of His City. Jolict, May 23.—Tloating down the Chicago draipage canal and the IIli- nois river, & modern Louis Joliet, ac- companied by Father Marquette and Nhis voyageurs, will be greeted when he lands June 18 at the city bearing his name, by a pageant of more than 1,000 actors, given in commemoration of the landing of the original Jollet here 250 years ago. The week of June 16 to 22 is to be devoted to a celebration of Joliet's ex- ploration and discovery of the site of this city. Although the trip down the Chica- go canal and river will not foilow ac- curately the original exploration trip “What fools we mortals be.” All these years we have been trylng to help thousands of footsore people by bathing and powdering tHe akin when all the time the real trouble is in the bones, ligaments and cartilage —it is to be short in the joints, There are 26 bones in the foot cov- ered with cartilage and econnected with ligaments and they have a tre- mendous amount of work to do. The slightest strain on one little ligament from being “on the feet” too much inflames the whole fotho, caus- ing soreness and burning, aching and general misery. “All this can be quickly proved,” says a prominent Maine doctor whose name is known the world over. Just try a remedy that is com- pounded for joint troubles only—such as Joint-Ease, which every druggist carries, and see how quickly your sore, tired, inflamed and tortured feet will get well and strong and sturdy again, FForget your powdering and soaking and other makeshifts for just & few days and get rid of ail foot Misery by using Jolnt-Ease, It's an active emoliment that rub on with your fingers for about & minute and it soaks in through ski and flesh away down to the joints the real seat of all troubles, And remember when Joint-k gots in all foot agony gets out—quic! A tube for 60 cents—Jivery dru: sto All druggista sell lota of Jont- Eas low the route taken by the famous explorer a year later in returning to the Tllinois country, Have You Piles’ Then Yo Have Somcthing to Learn, Thousands who have piles have not learned that quick and permanent re- ief can only be accomplished with internal medicine, Neither cutting nor any amount of treatment with ointment and suppositories will re- Bad circulation eauses piles. There is a complote stagnation of blood in the lower bowel and a weakening of the parts. Dr. J. & Leonhardt whs first to find the remedy. Idis preserip- tion, HEM-ROID, is now sold by all drugglsts, Dr. Leonhardt tried it in 1000 casas with the marvelous record of success in 98 per cent and then de cided it should ba sold under a rigid money-back guarantes. Don't waste any more.dme with outside applications. G ackage of HEM-HOID from ##*wflmhp erd Co. today, Tt hae giyen(safe and lasting relief to thousands and should o the same for you—it ss¥dom fails. you ‘The Fortrees will do the cooking foralarge famils. It has separate coaland ash hodsinside the base be connected with the 1 by an ash chute, if desired. at No ONE WILL DENY that gas is the ideal fuel for summer cooking. Nor will anyone deny that New England winters demand “twenty-four hours a day” warmth in the kitchen. A Crawford combination range gives you both. And it gives you better cooking for years to come! O —————— et RUB RHEUNATISH PAIN FROM SORE, ACHING JOINTS nnbhurden closing THERTON , NEA Service, Inc oiatica @che, sprains ar me that! gt to ecount; they Raggedy Ann replied at means ten!” #4 1o Raggedy Andy, “How many 1 you eat?” 1i1 not eount them:"” were 80 en, th Then he Ragge 7 the man Berty at makes twent aid. “How many did you eat Bear? Quick! Tell me!™ " Berty r repiied that makes thirts “You owe me for thirt the .y s t does not!” Raggedy Ann and iy Andy and Berty Bear said and ten ne kfows that ten is only twenty-five!” t makes thirty!” the man way, you have 16 pay me cause 1 sald so first yway, we can't pay you, .\lumr' haven't anything to pay 1t you were stingy with the pop | 5. you should have had a sign telling everyone not te take | Raggedy Andy sald | 1 shall have to take you lock you up untll you pay!™ e man said, and eatehing | perfect propriety keep his seat irs and little Berty Bear, | very old or a young one wrried them Uhrough the {carrving a baby enters fhe a he came to 1 house, | gentieman rises at once, 1ifts his hat | then he put them in & small chicken |and say Please take my seal”™ 1f a gentleman is sitling in & crowded street car and ladies enter, |should they be young, he may with Ifa hame and Rage womnan We have the latest Crawford models on our sales floor. We can show you in a few moments the exclusive Crawford features which have kept these ranges in a position of leadership for sixty- nine years. We'll show you why the Crawford oven gives such wonderful baking results, why the Crawford fire box makes it easy to keep your fire over night, Crawford Meat Contrel, o foatere and how easy our payment plan makes the pur- of Crawford Gas Ranges, is & wei- chase of a Crawford. - SRS Goulen U SR Panr Tawford PRansges for any length of time. Just set the A. A. MILLS indicator at the desired tempers« ture. Heat control does the vest! West Main Street