tvrypm'Ji "W T3 W V" ' ffV T, fT" r JULT 23,.190 The Commoner. 9 throw into rapidly boiling salted wai ter, and keep furiously boiling for half an hour with just enough wa ter to prevent scorching. Then drain through a sieve or fine colander, put Into a dish or pan and Bet into a hot oven for a few minutes, not letting it brown. Fruit Cup Five tablespoonfuls of good Ceylon tea infused in one quart of boiling water; let stand five min utes, steeping, then strain, and pour over two pounds of granulated sugar. Cook this to a thick syrup, cool and add to the juice (strained) of six lemons, six oranges, one pineapple, one quart of berries the fruit to be according to the season. Add one teaspoonful of vanilla extract and one teaspoonful of almond flavoring extract. When ready to serve, add a quart of any filtered, mineral or ice water and serve cold. This quan tity should make one gallon of liquid and may be increased or diminished, keeping the above proportions. Tomato Jelly For eight to ten persons, the following will be suffi cient: Three cupfuls of water, one and one-half pounds of fresh toma toes or the same of canned, one slice of onion, one stalk of celery, one tablespoonful of tomato catsup, one tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar, whites and shells of two eggs, six whole white pepper corns, one bay leaf, one blade of mace, teaspoonful of salt, half teaspoonful of sugar, two whole cloves, red coloring mat ter sufficient. Put three heaping tablespoonfuls of powdered gelatine Into a sauce pan, add the water and all the other ingredients except the coloring, and beat over the fire until i - 1 1 1 1 i i HOME TESTING A Sore and Easy Test on Coffee To decide the all important ques tion of coffee, whether or not it is really the hidden cause of physical ails and approaching fixed disease, one should make a test of 10 days by leaving off coffee entirely and using well-made Postum. If Telief follows you may know to a certainty that coffee has been your vicious enemy.. Of course you can take It back to your heart again, if you like to keep sick. A lady says: "I had suffered with rtomach trouble, nervousness and terrible sick headaches ever since I was a little child, for my people were always great coffee drinkers and let us children have all we wanted. I got so I thought I could not live without coffee but I would not ac knowledge that it caused my suffer ing". "Then I read so many articles about Postum that I decided to give It a fair trial. I had not used It two weeks In place of coffee until I be gan to feel like a different person. The headaches and nervousness dis appeared and whereas I used to be uick two or three days out of a week while drinking coffee I am now well and strong and sturdy seven days a week, thanks to Postum. "I had been using Postum three months and had never been sick a day when I thought I would experi ment and see if it really was coffee that caused the trouble, so I began to drink coffee agajn and inside of a week I had a sick spell. I was so ill I was soon convinced that coffee was the cause of all my misery and I went back to Postum with the re sult that I was soon well and strong again and determined to stick to Postum and leave coffee alone in the future." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." ' Ever read the above letter?, A new one appears from time q, time, They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. boiling; remove tho whisk and allow to boil up, draw to one sido and cover for fio minutes. Pour two quarts of boilinc water through jelly bag, then the jelly and add tho coloring. Pour into a wot mold. It may be poured into a ring mold and when turned out salad may bo served in tho center. Good Cookery. Summer Laundering For navy blues In cotton or linen, rinse in a thin staTch water made a deep indigo blue, always tfslng soft water. They should not bo made stiffer than now cloth. For stiffening thin black goods, use gum arable water, or very thin glue water. The best way is to wash in very thin starch water, using no soap. No extra starching will be needed. Black lawns, percales, dimities and other mourning goods, where tho color is apt to "streak," should, after washing, be rinsed in water to which turpentine in proportion of one table spoonful to each pailful of water has been added. Black sateen skirts should be treated the same. The same proportion of turpentine and water should be used for deli cate pinks, greens and lavenders. These colors must not bo rinsed in blue water, as it gives them a dirty look. "Shepherd's plaid" in fine black and white checked prints, should bo dipped In a hot suds when washed clean, which will give them a fresh look, clearing the white. When a muslin becomes limp with out being soiled, freshen without washing by sprinkling with gum arable water, then Iron. When starching such goods, turn wrong side out, dry In shade as rapidly as possible, sprinkle and roll in a damp towel for a little time, then Iron on the wrong side and press all rough seams. If so unfontunate as to scorch any article, Tiang it In the hot sunshine and, unless too badly scorched, it will clear. White goods ehould be wet and laid on the grass in the hot sunshine, repeating until the scorch disappears. Try to have soft (rain) water for the rinsing, if not for tho whole washing, as the bluing Is even in soft water, while with hard water It is apt to cause It to streak. Some Vegetable Recipes String Beans Remove the strings from one quaTt of beans, cut each pod through lengthwise twice, then cut into two Inch lengths; parboil; put into the stew pan an ounce of butter", a teaspoonful of sugar, pep per and salt to taste; saute (cook in this butter for a few minutes) until the butter is absorbed, then add a very little stock, or water, a half teaspoonful of lemon juice, and let simmer until perfectly tender. String Beans Snap, after string ing, into short pieces and, if the beans are not quite fresh, let lie In cold water for half an hour before cooking, then throw into boiling wa ter and cook rapidly, uncovered, for at least an hour, but they will prob ably require much longer cooking, if they are not the golden wax beans. At the end of the first half hour, change the water and add an ounce or two or fat salt pork to the water; cook until done. The water should be nearly all cooked away, and the remainder should be used to make a drawn butter sauce, which should be poured over them when dished up; or they may be seasoned with butter, salt, pepper and a little thick cream. It is better to cook In soft water, but if the water is hard, a bit of bicarbonate of goda as large as a small pea will soften it suffi ciently. Corn Salad Three stalks of cel ery chopped fine, mixed with half a can of corn or with tender grcon corn, with a nice salad dressing. Corn and Tomatoes Cut a slice from the top of each largo smooth tomato, scoop out tho seeds, leaving tho inside liko a' cup. Fill with grated corn seasoned with buttor, popper and salt, cover with tho tops, pour a little wator in a buttered pud ding dish, sot tho stuffed tomatoes in, cover the dish and bake in a mod erate oven for an hour. Applying Designs for Needle-Work Thore aro two ways to apply a de sign to tho material on which it is to be worked. If your material in sheer, such as handkerchief linen, lawn, batiste, and tho like, tho simp lest method is to lay the material over the design and, with a well pointed pencil, draw over each lino. If the material is heavy, securo a piece of transfer or impression pa- por; lay it, faco down, upon tbo pa per, then draw over each lino of tho paper design with a hard pencil or the point of a steel knitting noodle. Upon lifting tho pattern and trans fer paper you will find a neat and accurato Impression of tho design upon tho material. If you would do tho work successfully, you must soo that your material is lovol cut and folded to a thread, and that your design is placed upon it ovonly at every point. When placed accurate ly, securo tho design to tho material with thumb tacks or pins so they can not slip during tho marking. Trans fer paper comes in while, black, blue, red and yollow. Uso tho llghtor col ors when possible as tho black or blue aro so liablo to crock. Do not rest your hand or fingers upon any part of the design you aro transfer ring, olso tho imprint of hand or fingers will bo as distinct upon tho material as tho drawn lines. Fash ion Magazine. Latest Fashions for Readers of The Commoner 2952 Ladies' Shirt Waist. Any of th6 sheer white materials, such as lawn, batiste, organdie, muslin or any material on that order may bo used to advantage with this waist. Seven Bizes 32 to 44. 294G Ladles' Five-Gored Skirt. A plain and simple model, suitablo for any of the washable , materials or for sergo or Panama, Sovcn sizes 22 to 34. i Hii w 2559 2 2918 Ladles' Shirt Waist Suit, Consisting of a Shirt Waist Having Onc-PIece Plain or Regulation Shirt Sleeves, and an Attached Nine Gored Skirt. This model is a simple one for tho pjaln every-day model made up in gingham or chambray. Seven sizes 32 to 44. 2559 Ladles' Shirt Waist with Seamless Yoke. A good model for almost any material that the wearer wishes. Six sizes 32 to 42. 2945 Girls' Sailor Dress, Closing with Buttons Down the Front and Having a Removable Chemisette. Plain colored linen, Indian-Head cotton, madras, mercerized, poplin or rarquet cloth aro good materials for this model. Five sizes C to 14 years. 2947 Misses' Soml-Princess Dress with Empire or Regulation Waistline at the Back. Dotted foulard with a yoke and insertions of cluny lace makes this a pretty model for best wear. Three sizes 13 to 17 years. 2045 SB I rotoro j 2017 THE COMMONER will supply its readers with perfect fitting, seam allowing patterns from the latest Paris and Now York styles. Tho de signs aro practical and adapted to tho homo dressmaker. Full direc tions how to cut and how to make the garments with each pattern. Tho price of these patterns 10 cents each, postage prepaid. Our large cata logue containing the illustrations and descriptions of 1,000 seasonable styles for ladies, misses and children, as well as lessons In homo dress making, full of helpful and practical suggestions In the making of your wardrobe mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents. In ordering patterns give us your name, address, pattern number and size desired. Address THE COMMONER, Pattern DepL, Lincoln, Neb. ii; Uv i1.-. - l, AJ f jui '-i.