2 3 "i 3 Z = Doubiean: WNU Bervice, (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS —JIntroducing “So Pi in his infancy. And his DeJong, daughter of oon Peake, gambler and gentleman rtune, er life, to young woman- in Chicago in 1888, has been un- genventional, somewhat seamy, but orally enjoyable. At school her = id fails Hempe y DeJog| or, Selina daughter of empel, butcher. Simeon fis ed in a quarrel that is not his own lina, nineteen years old and FrSotisalty destitute, becomes a mchool- or. CHAPTER YI—S8Selina secures a posi- tion as teacher at the High Prairie ool, in the outskirts of Chicago, ng at the home of a truck farmer, 8 Pool. In Roelf, twelve years son of Klaas, Selina perceives a ares spirit, a lover of beauty, like reelf. CHAPTER IIL.—The monotonous life & country school-teacher at that e, is Selina’s, brightened somewhat the companionship of the sensitive, artistic boy Roelf. CHAPTER IV.—Selina hears gossip cerning the affection of the “Widow siehvergs rich and good-looking, or Pervus DeJong, poor truck farmer. who is insensible to the widow's at- tions. For a community “sociable” elina Jrepares & lunch basket, dainty, ut not of ample proportions, which is uctioned,” according to custom. The smallness of the lunch box excites deri- lon, and in & sense of fun the bidding omes spirited, DeJong finally secur- ng it for $10, a ridiculously high price. Over their lunch basket, whic elina DeJong share together, the school- eacher arranges to instruct the good- paiured farmer, whose education has neglected. - CHAPTER V.—Propinquity, in their Joiitiona of “teacher” and “pupil,” and lina’s loneliness in her uncongenial urroundings, lead to mutual affection. Fervus DeJong wins Selina’s consent be his wife. CHAPTER VI.—Selina becomes Mrs. eJong, a “farmer's wife,” with all the rdships unavoidable at that time. irk is born. Selina (of Vermont stock, businesslike and shrewd) has plans for building up the farm, which be ridiculed by her husband. Maartje ol, Klaas’ wife, dies, and after the requisite decent interval Klaas marries he ‘Widow Paarlenberg.” The boy oelf, sixteen years old now, leaves home, to make his way to France and study, his ambition being to be- ome a sculptor. CHAPTER VI1L-—Dirk is eight years old when his father dies. Selina, faced {th the necessity of making a living r her boy and herself, rises to the fon, and, with Dirk, takes a truck- of vegetables to the Chicago mar- et. A woman selling In the market place is an innovation frowned upon. CHAPTER VIIL—As a disposer of the vegetables from her truck Selina is a flat failure, buyers being shy of dealing with her. To a commission dealer she sells part of her stock. On the way home she peddles from door to door, with indifferent success. A Pliceman demands her license. She none, and during the ensuing alter- tion Selina’s irlhood chum, Julie Home now Julie Arnold, recognizes CHAPTER IX.—August Hempel, risen to prommence and wealth in the busi- ess world, arranges to assist Selina making the farm something more of a paving proposition. Selina grate- fully accepts his help, for Dirk’s sake. CHAPTER X.—Belina achieves the success with the farm which she knew was possible, her financial troubles ending. At eighteen Dirk enters Mid- west university. CHAPTER XI—Dirk goes to Cornell university, intending to make architec- ture his life work, and on graduation enters the office of a firm of Chicago architects. Paula Arnold, daughter of Julie, enters his life. He would marry her, but she has a craving for wealth and takes Theodore Storm, millionaire, for her husband. The World war begins. CHAPTER XIl.—Paula, despite her marriage and motherhood, continues interested in Dirk, their friendship be- inning to cause gossip. She urges irk to give up the profession of archi- tecture and enter business for the rreater financial reward possible. IDdirk esitates, feeling his mother would not approve of the change. > CHAPTER XII1.—Dirk enlists in the army, going to the officers’ training camp at Fort Sheridan. He gets to France finally, but sees no actual fight- ing. Selina is Yaguely dissatisfied with Dirk's progress, the tension increasing svhen he tells her he has decided to ive up architecture for business. Se- ina’s success with the farm is now ronounced. Paula's fondness for Dirk oy to approach infatuation. He did not know that Dallas played until he came upon her late one after- noon sitting at the piano in the twl- light with Bert Colson, the black-face comedian. Colson sang those terrible songs about April showers bringing violets, and about mah Ma-ha-ha-ha- ha-ha-ba-my but they didn’t seem ter- rible when he sang them. There was about this lean, hollow-chested, som- ber-eyed comedian a poignant pathos, a gorgeous sense of rhythm—a some- thing unnameable that bound you te him, made you love him. In the the- ater he came out to the edge of the runway and took the audience in his arms. He talked like a bootblack and sang like an angel. Dallas at the piano, he leaning over it, were doing “blues.” The two were rapt, ecstatic. I got the blues—I said the blues—I got the this or that—the somethingor- other—blue—hoo-hoos. They scarcely noticed Dirk. Dallas had nodded when he came in, and had gone on playing. Colson sang the cheaply sen- timental ballad as though it were the folksong of a tragic race. His arms were extended, his face rapt. As Dal- las played the tears stocd in her eyes. When they had finished, “Isn't it a terrible song?’ she said. “I'm crazy about it. Bert's going to try it out tonight.” WZ (C= rie \ } “Who—uh—wrote it?” politely. Dallas began to play again. “H’'m? Oh, I did.” They were off once more. It was practically impossible to get a minute with her alone. That irri- tated him. People were always drift- ing in and out of the studio—queer, important, startling people; little, de- jected, shabby people. An impecunious girl art student, red-haired and wist- ful, that Dallas was taking in until the girl got some money from home; a pearl-hung grand-opera singer who was condescending to the Chicago opera for a fortnight. They paid no attention to Dirk. Yet there was noth- ing rude about their indifference. They simply were more interested in what they were doing. He left telling him- self that he wouldn't go there again. Hanging around a studio. But next day he was back. ‘Look here, Miss O'Mara,” he had got her alone ior a second. “Look here, will you come out to dinner with me some time? And the theater?” “Love to.” “When?” He was actually trem- bling. “Tonight.” © He had an important engagement. He cast it out of his life, “Tonight! That's grand. Where do you want to dine? The Casino?’ The smartest club in Chicago; a little pink stucco Italian box of a place on the Lake Shore drive. He was rather proud of being in a position to take her there as his guest. “Oh, no, I hate those arty little places. I like dining in a hotel full of all sorts of people. Dining in a club means you're surrounded by peo- ple who're pretty much alike. Their membership in the club means they're there because they are all interested in golf, or because they're university grad- uaies, or belong to the same political party, or write, or paint, or have iu- comes of over fifty thousand a year, or Something: I like ’em mixed up, niggledy-piggledy. A dining-room full of gamblers and insurance agents, and actors, merchants, thieves, bootleggers, 1awyers, kept ladies, wives, flaps, truv- eling men, millionaires—everything. "That’s what I call dining out. Unless one is dining at a friend's kouse, of course.” A rarely long speech for her. “Perhaps,” eagerly, “you'll dine st my little apartment some time. Just four or six of us, or even—" “Perhaps.” "Would you night?” “It looks tco much like a Romaun bath. The pillars scare me. Let's gr to the Blackstone.” They went to the Blackstone. The head waiter knew him. “Good eve- ning, Mr. DeJong.” Dirk was secretly gratified. Then, with a shock, he realized that the head waiter was grinning at Dallas and Dallas was grinning at the head waiter. “Helio Andre,” said Dallas. “Good evening, Miss O'Mara.” The text of his greeting was correct and befitting the head waiter at the Black- stone. But his voice was lyric and his eyes glowed. His manner of seating her at a table was an enthronement. At the look in Dirk's eyes, “I met him in the army,” Dallas explained, hen I was in France. He’s a grand ad.” “Were you in—what did you do in france?” “Oh, odd jobs.” Her dinner gown was very smart, out the pink ribbon strap of an under- garment showed untidily at one side— her silk brassiere, probably. Paula would have—but then, a thing like that was impossible in Paula’s perfection of toilette. He loved the way the gown cut sharply away at the shoul- der to show her firm white arms. It was dull gold, the color of her hair. This was one Dallas. There were a dozen—a hundred. Yet she was al- ways the same. You never knew whether you were going to meet the gamin of the rumpled smock and the smudged face or the beauty of the lit- tle fur jacket. Sometimes Dirk thought she looked like the splendid goddesses you saw In paintings—the kind with high, pointed breasts and gracious, gentle pose—holding out a horn of plenty. There was about her something hb genuine and earthy and elemental. He noticed that. her nails were short and not well cared for—not glittering and pointed and cruelly sharp and horridly vermilion, like Paula’s. That pleased ‘him, too, somehow. “Some oysters?’ he suggested. “They «re perfectly safe here, ‘Or fruit cock- tail? Then breast of guinea hen un- der glass and an artichoke—” She looked a little worried. “If you ~—suppose you take that. Me, I'd like a steak and some potatoes au gratin and a salad with Russian—" “That's fine!” He was delighted. Ae doubled that order and they con-, like the Drake 1e asked Dirk | popular. sumed it with devastating thorough- ness. She ate rolls. She ate butter. She made no remarks about the food ex- cept to say, once, that it was good and that she had forgotten to eat lunch be- cause she had been so busy working. All this Dirk found most restful and refreshing. ‘ Usually, when you dined in a res- «aurant with a woman she said, “Ol, I'd love to eat some of those crisp little rolls!” You said; “Why not?” Invariably the answer to this was “I daren’t! Goodness! A half pound at least. I haven't eaten a roll with butter in a year.” Again you said, “Why not?” “Afreid I'll get fat.” Automatically, “You! fou're just right.” He was bored with these women who talked about their weight, figure, lines. He thought it in bad taste. Paula was always rigidly refraining from this or that.’ It made him uncomfort- able to sit at the table facing her; eat- ing his thorough meal while she nib- bled fragile curls of Melba toast, a lettuce leaf, and half a sugariess grapefruit. It lessened his enjoyment of his own oysters, steak, coffee. He thought that she always eved his food a little avidly, for all her expressed indifference to it. She was looking a little haggard, too. “The theater’s next door,” he said. Just a step. We don’t have to leave here until after eight.” £ “'That’s nice.” She had her cigarette w~ith her coffee in a mellow, sensuous atmosphere of enjoyment. He was talking about himself a good deal. He felt relaxed, at ease, happy. “You know I'm an architect—at least, I was one. Perhaps that’s why I like to hang around your shop so. I get sort of homesick for the pencils and the drawing board—the = whole thing.” “Why did you give it up, then?” “Nothing in it.” *How do you mean—nothing in it?” “No money. After the war nobody was building. Oh, I suppose if I'd hung on—”" “And then you became a banker, h’'m? Well, there ought to be money enough in a bank.” He was a little nettled. “I wasn’t a banker—at first. I was a bond sales- man.” Her brows met in a little frown. “I'd rather,” Dallas said, slowly, “plan one back door of a building that’s going to help make this town beauti- ful and significant than sell all the bonds that ever floated a—whatever it is that bonds are supposed to float.” He defended himself. “I felt that way, too. But you see, my mother had given me my education, really. She worked for it. I couldn’t go dubbing along, earning just enough to keep me. I wanted to give her things. I want- ed—" “Did she want those things? Did she want you to give up architecture and go into bonds?” “Well—she—I don’t know that she exactly—" He was too decent—stiil too much the son of Selina DeJong— to be able to lie about that. “You said you were going to let me meet her.” “Would you let me bring her in? Or perhaps you'd even—would you drive out to the farm with me some day. She’d like that so much.” “So would L” He leaned toward her, Nonsense. suddenty. “Lieten, Dallas. What do you think of me, anyway?’ He wanted to know. He couldn't stand not knowing any longer.” “I think you're a nice young man.® That was terrible. “But I don’t want you to think I'm a nice young man. I want you to like me—a lot. Tell me, what haven't 1 got that you think I ought to have? Why do you put me off so many times? I never feel that I’m really near you. What is it I lack?” He was abject. “Well, if you're asking for it. I do demand of the people I see often that they possess at least a splash of splen- dor in their makeup. Some people are nine-tenths splendor and one-tenth tawdriness, like Gene Meran. And some are nine-tenths tawdriness and one- tenth splendor, like Sam Huebch. But some people are all just a nice even pink without a single patch of roys! purple.” “And that’s me, h’'m?” He was horribly disappointed, hurt, wretched. But a little angry, too. His pride. Why, he was Dirk DeJong, the most successful of Chicago's younger men; the most promising; the most After all, what did she do but paint commercial pictures for fif- teen hundred dollars apiece? “What happens to the men who fall in love with you? What do they do?” Dallas stirred her coffee thought- fully. “They usually tell me about it.” “And then what?” “Then they seem to feel better and we become great friends.” “But don’t you ever fall In love with them?” Pretty d—d sure of herself. “Don’t you ever fall in love with them?” “I almost always do,” said Dallas. He plunged. “I could give you a lot of things you haven't got, purple or no purple.” “I'm' going to France in April Paris.” “What d’you mean! Paris. What for?” “Study. I want to do portrait Oils.” He was terrified. “Can’t you do thew here?” “Oh, no. Not what I need. I have been studying here. I've been taking life-work three nights a week at the Art institute, just to keep my hand in.” “So that’s where you gre, evenings?” He was strangely relieved. “Let me go with you some time, will you?” Anv- thing. Anything. ‘She took him with her one evening, steering him successfully past the stern Irishman who guarded the entrance to the basement classrooms; to her locker, got into her smock, grabbed her brushes, went directly to her place, fell to work at once. Dirk blinked in the strong light. He glanced at the dais toward which they were all gaz- ing from time to time as they worked On it lay a nude woman. To himself Dirk said, in a sort of penic: “Why, say, she hasn't got any clothes on! My gosh! this is fierce. She hasn’t got anything on!” He tried, meanwhile, to look easy, careless, critieal, Strangely enough, he succeed- ed, after the first shock, not only in looking at ease, but feeling so. The class was doing the whole figure ir oils. The model was a moron with a skin like velvet and rose petals. She fell into poses that flowed like cream. Her hair was waved in “wooden undula- tions and her nose was pure vulgar- ity and her earrings were drug-store pearls in triple strands but her back was probably finer than Helen's and her Lreasts twin snowdrifts peaked with coral. In twenty minutes Dirk found himself impersonally interested They Had Sandwiches and Coffee -at an All-Night One-Arm Lunchroom. .n tone, shadows, colors, line. He listened to the low-voiced instructor and squinted carefully to ascertain whether that shadow on the modei’s stomach really should be painted blue or brown, Even Dirk could see that Dallas canvas was almost insultingly superior to that of the men and women about her, Beneath the flesh on her canvas there were muscles, and beneath those muscles blood and bone. You felt she had a surgeon’s knowledge of anatomy. It was after eleven when they emerged from the Art institute door- way and stood a moment together au! the top of the broad steps surveying the world that lay before them. Da:- lug said nothing. Suddenly the beauty of the night rushed up and cover whelmed Dirk. Gorgecusness and tawdriness; color and gloom. At the right the white tower of the Wrigley building rose wraithlike against a background of purple sky. . Just this side of it a swarm of imp- ish electric lights grinned their mes- sage in scarlet and white. In white* TRADR AT then blackness, while you walter? ygainst syour will. In red: THE FAIR Blackness again. Then, in a burst of both colors, in bigger letters, and in a blaze that hurled itself at your eyeballs, momentarily shutting out tower, sky and street: SAVE MONEY Straight ahead the hut of the Adams street L station in midair was Vene- tian bridge, with the black canal of asphalt flowing sluggishly beneath. The reflection of cafeteria and cigar- shop windows on either side were slender shafts of light along the cana’ An enchanting sight. “Nice,” said Dallas. A long breath She was a part of all this. “Yes.” He felt an outsider. e sandwich? Are you hungry?” “I'm starved.” They had sandwiches and coffee at an all-night one-arm lunch room be- cause Dallas said her face was too dirty for a restaurant and she didn't want to bother to wash it. She was more than ordinarily companionable that night; a little tired; less buoy- ant and independent than usual. This gave her a little air of helplessness—of tatigue—that aroused all his tender ness. Her smile gave him a warm rush of pure happiness—until he suw her smile in exactly the same way ut the pimply young man who lorded it over the shining nickel coffee container, as she told him that his coffee war grand. “Wan? Chapter XV The things that had mattered so vitally didn't seem to be important, somehow, now. The people who had seemed so desirable had become sud- denly insignificant. The games he had played appeared silly games. He was seeing things through Dallas O’Mara’s wise, beauty-loving eyes. Strangely enough, he did not realize that this girl saw life from much the same angle as that at which his mother regarded it. In the last few years his mother had often offended him by her attitude toward these rich and powerful friends of his—their ways, their games, their amusements, their manners. And her way of living .in turn offended him. On his rare visits to the farm it seemed to him there was always some drab dejected female in the kitchen or liv- ing room or on the porch—a woman with broken teeth and comic shoes and tragic eyes—drinking great draughts of coffee and telling her woes to Selina— Sairey Gampish ladies smelling un- pleasantly of peppermint and perspira- tion and poverty. ‘“And he ain’t had a lick of work since November—" “You don’t say! That's terrible!” He wished she wouldn't. Sometimes old Aug Hempel drove out there and Dirk would come upon the two snickering wickedly together about something that he knew con- cerned the North Shore crowd. It had been years since Selina had said. sociably, “What did they have for ' dinner, Dirk? Hm?” “Well—soup—" “Nothing before the soup?” “Oh, yeh. Some kind of a—one of those canape things, you know. Caviare.” “My! Caviarel” Sometimes Selina giggled like a agughty girl at things that Dirk had taken quite seriously. The fox hunts, for example. Lake Forest had taken to fox hunting, and the Tippecanoe crowd kept kennels. Dirk had learned to ride—pretty well. An Englishman— # certain Captain Stokes-Beatty—had Initiated the North Shore into the mys- | teries of fox hunting. Huntin’. The North Shore learned to say nec’s’ry and conservat'ry. Captain Stokes- Beatty was a tall, bow-legged, and somewhat horse-faced young man, re- mote in manner. The nice Farnham girl seemed fated to marry him. Paula had had a hunt breakfast at Storm- wood and it had been very successful, though the American men had balked a little at the deviled kidneys. The food had been patterned as far as possible after the pale flabby viands served at English hunt breakfasts and ruined in an atmosphere of lukewarm steam. The women were slim and perfectly tailored but wore their hunting clothes a trifle uneasily and self-consciously like girls in their first low-cut party dresses. Most of the men had turned stubborn on the subject of pink coats, but Captain Stokes-Beatty wore his handsomely. The fox—a worried and somewhat -dejecteddooking animal— had been shipped in a crate from the South and on being released had a way of sitting sociably in an Illinois corn field instead of leaping fleetly to cover. | At the finish you had a feeling of guilt, as though you had killed a cock- roach. . Dirk had told Selina about-i , feeling rather magnificent. A fox hunt. “A fox hunt! What for?” “For! Why, what's any fox hunv for?’ “I can’t imagine. They used to he Jor the purpose of ridding a fox-in- fested country of a nuisance. Have the foxes been bothering ’em out in Lake Forest?” “Now, mother, don’t be funny.” He told her about the breakfast. “Weli. but it’s so silly, Dirk. It's émert to copy from another country ‘te things that that country does bet- ter than we do. England does gar- dens and woodfires and dogs and tweeds and walking shoes and pipes and leisure better than we do. But those luke-warm steamy breakfasts of theirs! It's because they haven't gas, most of them. No Kansas or Ne- braska farmer's wife would stand fer one of their kitchens—not for a minute. And the hired man would balk at such bacon.” She giggled. “Oh, well, if you're going to talk lke that.” But Dallas O’Mara felt much the same about these things. Dallas, it ap- peared, had been something of a fad with the North Shore society crowd after she had painted Mrs. Robinson Gilman's portrait. She had been in- vited to dinners and luncheons and dances, but their doings, she told Dirk, had bored her. “They’re nice,” she said, “but they don’t have much fun. They're all try- ing to be something they're not. And that’s such hard work. The women were always explaining that they lived in Chicago because their husband’s business was here. They all do things pretty well—dance or paint or ride or write or sing—but not well enough. They're professional amateurs, trying to express something they don’t feel; or that they don’t feel strongly enough to make it worth while expressing.” (Continued next week.) Served the Purpose. < The captain, taking inspection, no- ticed Private Brown had no tooth brush. “Where's your tooth brush ?” he de- manded. “Here, sir,” said Private Brown, producing a large scrubbing brush. “You don’t mean to tell me you can get that thing into your mouth?” shouted the captain, angrily. “No, sir,” replied Brown, without changing his expression. “I take my teeth out.”—Good Hardware. Her Face Her Fortune. “My sister is awfully lucky,” said one little boy to another. “Why?” “She went to a party last night where they played a game in which the men either had to kiss a girl or pay a forfeit of a box of chocolates,” “Well, how was your sister lucky ?” “She came home with thirteen box- es of chocolates.”—From Everybody's Magazine. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. The greatest man is he who chooses right with invincible resolution, who resists se- cret temptations from within and without, who bears the heaviest burden cheerfully, ° who is calmest in storms and most fearless under menace and frowns, whose reliance on the truth, on virtue, on God, is most unfaltering.—Channing. Small screw-eyes screwed into the right-hand side of the ice-box with the proper distance apart make a very convenient holder for ice-pick. Tie a cloth around your wrist when washing ceilings or anything over- head. The rag will prevent the water from running down your arm. ° A toothbrush used for dampening seams for pressing saves time. Fhe brush opens the seam as it is drawn along and facilitates the work. Try ironing men’s soft collars on a Turkish towel doubled to four thick- nesses. The collars will iron much easier. They will be smoother and shine like new when finished. To cut bias folds, fold the bias ma- terial the desired depth for as many i folds as needed, then crease with a hot ‘iron. It is easy to cut biases prepar- ed in this way. When threading your sewing ma- chine needle, turn the flash-light on : the opposite side from the thread and the eye will show up plainly. | To save time and bother in hanging out clothes, tie a bag around your waist to hold the clothes-pins. Insert rose cuttings in a small Irish potato and they will never fail to root. | How to Remove Summer Stains.— i The sooner you attempt to remove an { offending spot the more satisfactory j will be your efforts. Second, know | what made the stain before you do (anything about it. Many a stain, properly treated, is easy to remove. If attacked by the wrong methods, however, it stubbornly persists and is often worse than in the beginning. Look it over carefully to see if you can determine its exact cause. Was it made by grass, automobile-oil, ice cream or cream sauce, paint, tar or fruit juices? For example, test its nature with your finger-nail. If it shows white, it is probably sugar or a cream sauce. Then look on the back of the fabric; for sugar stays on the surface while cream goes through to the other side. Then carefully follow the directions for handling that special stain, both for removal and after-treatment, be- fore you proceed with the general cleansing and pressing. Some com- mon summer-time stains yield rapidly to the following directions: Grass—Wash in cold water if the stain is new. If it is old, spread with molasses, then wash it in cold water. If the fabric is colored, sponge the spot with alcohol. Grease—Wash with plenty of yel- low soap and luke warm water. Try to absorb it with powdered magnesia or French chalk. Use a hot iron over blotting paper. Dissolve the stain with a grease solvent. Fly Paper (of the sticky variety)— Wash with yellow soap if the spot is fresh. Sponge or soak in turpentine, which will dissolve the sticky sub- stance. Then cleanse by washing. Cream or Ice Cream—Wash in luke warm water and white soap. On white goods use washing soda, one-half cup to one cup of boiling water, then dis- solve in half a tub of water and let the garments stand in this for fifteen min- utes. Then rinse and wash as usual. On colored material, chocolate or fruit stains complicate the cream removal, so follow up the treatment given above with their special treatment. It is important for you to decide how best to proceed in the cleansing and pressing of each garment to make it appear most like new. This de- pends entirely on the material of the garment, of what fibers it is made, if 1t is white or colored. And if it is col- ored, is the thread dyed, or is the pat- tern merely printed on the outside of one surface? All white and uncolored goods are easier to handle both for the spot removal and for washing #nd ironing. The moment you attack a colored fabric you enter into the realm of the unknown, for it is not always possible to know the reaction of dyes when affected by soap, sun and heat. If the garment or article is colored or printed in colors like print, chintz, linen, gingham and other similar pop- ular materials, the colors should be carefully set with the proper mordant before you attempt to wash them. Place the garment in cold treated water the time required, rinse it in clear cold water, let it dry, and then proceed with the ordinary washing. Various colors are best set by cer- tain substances as follows: To set blues and greens use one- half cup of strong vinegar to every four quarts of cold water. To set pinks, blacks and browns use two cups of kitchen salt to every four quarts of cold water. To set lavenders use one tablespoon of sugar of lead to every four quarts of cold water. To set mixed colors, as in prints, it is safest to use salt as for pinks and ‘blacks. All colors should be washed and rinsed in luke warm water—never in hot. If the article is cotton, linen or any heavy mixed fabric, it can be washed in much hotter water than should be used for a silk. Silk mater- ials, silk and cottons, or artificial silk fabrics with a high gloss or glaze are affected by heat both in the washing and in the ironing. Pure silk is particularly affected by heat, because it is made of a delicate animal fiber which quickly cracks, rots and disintegrates if treated with extreme heat, acids or alkalis. White silks are turned yellow by the sun, and colored silks are liable to fade badly. Therefore, silk dresses, particularly popular this season, should never be hung outdoors or near an intense light, but should be dried inside in the shade. They should be pressed when only about half dry.—The Designer Magazine.