og HALL, PA. Cotton Fabrics for Hot Weather Wear {Prepared by the United States Department of Agrieulture.) Any of the firmly woven printed cot- ton fabrics might be used for this at- tractive dress for a hot day, designed by the bureau of home economics. The material used was a soft English print, but zephyr, percale, lawn, or broad- cloth, all of which are'made ig delight- ful printed patterns, would give good results. The collar line is round and ® Simple, Easily Made Print Dress low enough for warm weather. [It is finished with a binding of the plain material as the tie, and ing of the in the prints The set-in sleeves short for sane match one colors are com fort, but not extreme. The cuffs and belt are also bound like the neck. Front fullness In the wajst Is made by a yoke of little tucks. Below the low waistline four plaits give ample width to the skirt. The long flat tie and large pearl belt buttons give a touch of tailored trimness, Fled From Painted Baboon A blue baboon has stopped the raids of wild animals In Kenya. South Africa, according to latest reports Elephants, hippopotaml, bushpigs and baboons that have done much dam age In villages have been completely routed by the “strange creature,” which consisted of a baboon that was captured, shaved and painted a bright blue before he was released to try to Join his fellows, who fled at his ippearanee, Broiled Liver & POP 0600009000000000000000% 9 of the best wavs of cooking any of liver—beef, calf, lamb, or —gecording to the bureau home of the United De partment of Agriculture—Iis to breil it gus oven, For a pound and i i "nT in Sices a quarter of economies States under the Hame of a family a half of liver, cut of an inch thick. Wipe the slices with a damp then grensed baking sheet and put it under the flame of the broiling oven from elght ten minutes, frequently. When done, sprinkle and pepper, pour butter, and iy iv -nhotit # of six, buy about a cloth. Place on on Cook to turning with over it galt some melted serve nt ot! to Ted with an Baked hoked ‘nn peppers stuf and bread crumb mix h, kale, or enbbage liver are: onions, matoes, ores onion, tomato ture, spinn x pot s—— scinating it if iiss attri By NELLIE MAXWELL “Tis true that death haz choked A great man's voice, the common words he said Turn oracles, the co he yoked horses, draw this And accept when the dust of Like Sometime, when tired of meat dishes, wm will like: Pea Mix of a a good one y¥ f three [: cupful of ith one pea pul passed one tablespoonful of cupful walng finely chopped, one egg slis en, of a teas] salt, pepper to season, one-fourth cup- ful of melted butter three-fou of a cupful Turn Ir small pan waxed Cover and bake minutes. Baked Malibut.—Arrange six of fat salt pork in a dripping Cover with one sliced onion an a sieve), one-fourth of three-fourths and of milk lined wit} slices pan. Fe Borisov manos oie % » = {Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Time to take the dasher out of the ice cream freezer—and be rewarded by a first taste of the product you have helped to churn! Evidently these children, like all others, believe there never was a more blissful mo- ment in the summer time than tif, What extraordinary sharp ears the neighborhood youngsters develop when , there's ice cream being made on any- bsy's back porch! They flock around so hopefully, all eager to help, on the chance of even a small sample of the delectable contents of the freezer, Here's a recipe from the bureau of home economics for that most popu. lar. of all homemade ice creams fresh peach, In some parts of the country you ean make it as early as July and in others as late as Oc a bit of bay leaf. Wipe of fresh halibut and piace f Mix with {Wo pour over table same nd three the butter and spread over the fish and Ir onion. spoonfuls of floor Cov er with buttered crumbs of Jake fifiy Serve with gravy made fro of miik. it and pepper. Fruit Punch.—Pour one cupful tea infusion over one cupful of sugar trip SiTips salt pork nines m the pan, | one cupful Se penn of hot on ns dissolved add three a cupful of orange Juice of a cupful of in into a8 punch bowl of one lemon over fee and hefore pint and a dozen ginger ale with one cherries Chocolate Souffle. Melt mfuls of butter, add and urihs ix 1 . f ff Nore ol HOUEL fuls add three fe ilk. Bring and ff chocolate, add on ful of sugar, hot water and bine mixtures beaten boiling one cup of Com the yolks add two tablespoonfuls tir until smooth, and add eggs, then of HN tober, depending on the state of the peach crop: : Credm, . 14 teaspoon salt 14 to 1 tablespoon lemon juice, de. pending on acid. ity of peaches Peach Ice 2 cups single cream 3 cups soft cut peaches 1 cup sugar Wash and pare the peaches, cut them in small pleces, cover with the sugar and let them stand for a short while, Press the fruit through a colander, go that a pulp Is formed, Add the salt, creawp, and the lemon Juice If needed, Use a freezing mix. ture of one part salt and four to six parts of ice. Turn the crank of the ffeczer slowly. arter freezing remove the dasher, pack the freezer with more Ice and salt and let the cream staud for an hour or more to ripen. of three eggs beaten stiff a buttered baking dish £ { moderate oven thirty minutes, Serving Swiss Cheese using piquancy immer suggestions for ‘variety as ile even increasing the food values: Deviled Cheese Sandwiches — (ut thin slices of whent into butter Ww bh Glee bread with slices on each, two and of Switzer. Add mus papriks, and s : tl ttle butter. walter cress or serve and French Cressing Cheese and Grapefruit Salad.—Peel the pulp from a grape st to break the thin slices fazhion inch rounds, arrange ind F tard, } spread wafer like cheese em Nerve with water and remove taine using fruit tions, arrange them on very of Switzerland petal border with cress or lettuce i cube of currant jelly with a dressing made with fruit juices care n S60 cheese, Cheese which 1s our trated food has been called hard digestion; the reason for this is that it is not well masticated or is eaten after the stomach has been well filled with food. Cheese is a food and should be treated as such. It econ tains no waste, is highly nutritive and will take the place in the diet of all meats, Being compact, it is harder of digestion unless it Is eaten with coarser food like crackers which need to be well chewed. most concen of (3 1928 AAA Western Newspaper Union.) { By JULIA BOTTOMLEY o— “ 4 with knitted Is being developed in un- usunl Note the crepe Is appliqued on the front of the cardigan in the Hlustration, suggest- ing a diagonal fastening with a tie ef- fect, Not fabric trimmings employed, but quite a few knitted cos- embellished with fancy Which fo show expressed the WHYS, how cleverly only are fumes braid the knitted are handings, Zire wide diversity in realm, Among charming knitted themes for fall is that of knitted velours.. Many a handsome two-piece frock will grace the autumn scene, their skirts of plain knitted knitted showing an elaborate velours, topped with velours jumpers, patterning Color effects that will be highlight middy intermediate tones t1so rose gistered include blues, such as blue, (hit powder and English violet, Vivi and § NUT BISCUITS FOR © LUNCHEON, SUPPER ammnnnnnannInI nanan inncheon with both, is nut biscuits, These are ides if for tion pre- ROTVER served over your | active 3 1 4 : i ousenoid Iinciudes Colne are middie afternoon rant fer {to re- look snack store the erg) have ! it yvands, brush place Bake In a quick brown, 8 hot cheese and one s» other, oe been draine 1 he ¥ hes has ’ his good soup, of home » method of making ft: economics unded salt pork, 4 very small ths ed Cook the salt pork In a skillet un- til very crisp and then remove it Add the butter to the pork fal and then the onions, celery tops, and car rots and cook for § minutes, stirring to keep them from, becoming brown. Heat the rice water and milk in a saucepan and stir in Season with vegetables amount of pepper. too the cooked salt and = 3 Allow the small For day dresses, soft tints overs 3 i Nors serviceable; bright « tiresome. S000 ETrow 4 “It seems.” sald the Dream fairies, “that there have been many children lately who have been telling each other unkind things they have heard, “For Instance one little girl said to another: “Oh, Sally, Pheard Mamie say she thought you were awfully mean and selfish, I told her I didn't think so, I stood up for you. 1 was your friend.’ “Well, the Fairy Queen heard this, too, and she said it made her every angry and unhappy. “She said It was far worse of the little girl who came and told such a horrid thing than it was of the little girl who had sald It, “She sald that people who handed on mean speeches, and repeated them were about as mean as people could be, “So we must do something about it, And there have been grown-ups lately who bave been saying unkind things to children. We must get to work at once.” So the Dreamland King helped the Dream fairies and they tied up dreams fo the grownups which let them see how mean they had been and how they had hurt children's feelings, and they tied up dreams for the children who had repeated mean speeches, And oh, what a lot of good these dreams did, By Mary Graham Bonner Every one in Fairyland and Dream. land was delighted about it. For above everything else in this world the Fairy Queen hates unkind speeches and unkind actions, They took dreams to grownups who had been saying how much children apnoyed them und bow restiess chil dren were, And they took them dreams showing The Dreamland King Was Quite Tired. tow they were as children and how much more restless (hey used to be than (hese children of whom {hey com. plained. But mostly they took dream pack- ages to all, young and old, who had been saying mean things about people. They took dreams which showed a irip taken by a mean speech-how It got In this way and that and caused trouble wherever it went. The Dreamland King wae quite tired out after he had. Onished his work and so were the Dream fairies, But they were glad of the they had been doing and they it would do good, They got Habit to Habit had two sides one was Bad Habit Habit, When he turned one way he was Good Habit and when he turned the other side he was Bad Habit Sometimes he turned the Bad Habit glde and people got into the way of thinking about each other-—really got the bad habit of doing this, But now he kept his mind on what he was doing and he kept the side of Good Habit turned right. And the Dreamland King knew he would help so much, too. As the Dreamland King rested upon his Sicepy Cloud Mountain he sald to himself: “1 think avaning.” work knew help them, too. to his nature and the Good we bave bad a successful When zour Children Cry for It Baby has little upsets at ti § re cannot prevent them, sd. Then 1 nurse would « inns would 8( roner done than Pu ust a matter u have eased your child jiarrhea : effective . Twenty-five million bought last year. Quick Results From Vegetable Method in Constipation roper vegetable <i 372 Pearl Bt » % y INDLAN AL 1ghts NILA 1066S STHMA REMEDY Believes Stars Liquid ref. J. H. Jeans, an eminent as- r vances the theory that i {38% : i : i { i - GREAT RESULTS FROM COMPOUND Read How This Medicine Helped This Woman Brainerd, -Minn<*1 read abo Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Ci pound in a new paper and i have got great results from its tonie action at the Change of Life. Before I took it I was nervous and at times I was too weak to do my house. work. I was this way aboyt a year. ut now Ido all my housework and do chores outside also. I must say that Lydia E. Pink. ham’s Vegetable Compound has done wonders for me and no woman should be without it. I sure can speak a d word for it."—Mgss. Jin Saar, R. 7, Brainerd, Minnesota, QUALITY FOOD PRODUCTS set the standerd, If you the Monarch label. Reid, Murdoch & Co, Establyshed 1833 General Offices, Chicago, INL,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers