- - t1 Persian Lawn With Lace Negligees In white are always dain ty and charming and have besides the merit of laundering easily and well This one 13 exceptionally grace ful and becoming and is shown in lawn wltlA frills of polnte de Paris lace but can be reproduced in many other fabrics and in color as well a3 while the frills being of lace em broidery or the material as pre- I Mill ferred Also there i3 a choice allowed of the flounce or a plain skirt The garment is a simple one and is made with full fronts and back that are joined to a shallow yoke that is con cealed by the big collar The quan tity of material required for the me dium size is 14 yards 27 12 yards 32 or 8 yards 44 inches wide with Cie flounce and 10 yards 27 9 yards 32 or 6 yards 44 without with 9 yards of lace for frills Latest Demands of Fashion Radical changes in late summer styles for women are few and far be tween although the latest creations in gowns pre modeled after those of the Louis periods Yet some of the changes while not in the extreme are for the better and consist mostly of softening and toning down A smart gown of the lingerie type Is accompanied by one of those three quarter coats of a delicate colored taffeta and must be of a soft lustrous quality There is no lining and in sertions of dainty lace give to them a decidedly pretty effect Some havo no lace trimmings at all but are made witu pufflings and other self trim mings As for gowns in general they aro made with full skirts and the best effects show the fullness at the bot tom which is attained by making the skirt flat about the hips and allowing Jt to fall out below with a kilted ef fect at the feet Smart Frocks and Hats A very smart frock was made of rrse pink muslin trimmed plentifully with lace in Paris shade It was worn with a Leghorn hat this had a high crown There were two twists of soft pink ribbon round it and an im mense pink rose with foliage ap peared in front Another charming hat worn with a pale blue nuslin dress was in a picture shape made of wire and covered with lace string colored The lace was slightly gaged and simulated a short narrow curtain at the back The high crown was trimmed with twisted bands of soft blue satin ribbon a big chou of the ribbon being fastened in front a little to the left side Tusser frocks should be worn with coarse straw ats trimmed say with cabbage roses and a little foliage otherwise with bands of velvet br ribbon Boston Globe oadoir ConJidences Cerise is a good deal seen in white combinations Sweet peas fashion the most fetch ing flower hat Narrow wash braid is much used to trim the linen frock Gay Japanese buttons and Oriental belt lighten the dull pongee Lace sleeve ruffles seem part and parcel of every smart costume A colored bead or two glints in the center of embroidered flowers Undersleeves and chemisettes are now a feature of hot weather fash ions To tie chiffon veils in a bow in the back is a later notion than to tie them in front Finish off the green foliage hat with a great knot of pale blue soft satin ribbon Trimmings of soft lustrous straw of voile net lace are used on gowns or taffeta Lemon Catchup Cut six smooth skinned lemons In slices remove seeds and sprinkle each slice about a table- little salt on spoonful in all Mix an ounce each of cloves mace and if liked hot tea spoon of cayenne a tablespoon each of mustard seed white pepper and fresh horseradish Put the lemons in stone jar with the mixed spices be tween each layer of lemon slices Heat two quarts of white wine vine gar boiling hot and pour over the whole After standing 24 hours squeeze out the pulp through cheese clcth strain and bottle Keep in a cool place Can be made any time of year but is especially nice in hot weather on cold meats and a change from other catchup Chiffon Mohair As the season advances materials of a soft flimsy texture- become still more prevalent One of the newest additions to the popular line of chif fons is chiffon mohair It is suited to the smartest of summer gowns and gives a pretty effect The champagne color white dark and light blue are very much in demand In the shad ed effects blue black and brown are the smartest combinations Plenty to Choose From Dolly Varden silk mulls make a popular material and form a close rival for the printed nets In these mulls the ground is white with tinted floral designs upon it The linen gown is the choice of the ultra fash ionable for both morning and after noon wear The pale colors are more in vogue than the plain white al though the pure white for hot summer days hold their own The Fichu Effect Fichus or collars draped to give a fichu effect make an easily applied completing touch for many Inexpens ive summer dresses These pictur esque accessories are made of the finest mull chiffon or any soft fabric of the kind They may be finished with self ruffles or wee frills of lace Many little French touches in the tiimming are possible to the home dressmaker B2lh Lemon juice and salt wipe out the average stain A little salt in the water sets the average color Remove stains before sending gar ments to the laundry Embroidered dresses must be ironed on the wrong side To keep cut flowers as long as possible add a little salt to the water in which they are placed For gasoline washing soak the gar ment in a vessel for half an hour In jyy spots it may need scrubbing Rinsa In fresh gasoline and hang out to dry High Turn Over Collars High turn over embroidered collars of lace and other materials are still popular They resemble a great deal trose that the old fashioned tailor once affected for women with long necks In fact all the ideas and fan cies of the past few years have been combined in the seasons styles and with the most artistic effect Square Yoke Waist t Square yokes are exceedingly fash ionable and suit some figures and faces better than any other sort This very pretty waist includes one that extends over the shoulder after the prevailing style and can be made slightly low as illustrated or high with a regulation stock The model Is made of sheer white batiste with the yoke and cuffs of represe net Kwwm banded with Lace insertion the lining beneath the yoke being cut away to give a transparent effect but the de sign is suited to all seasonable mate rials thin enough to bo made full and various combinations can be made All over lace of many sorts fine tucking and the many combina tions of bandings with fancy stitches all are admirable for yoke and cuffs while the trimming can be one of many things The wat Is made with full front and backs which are arranged over a lining that is smooth at the upper portion but gathered at the waist line to blouse with the waist The yoke is separate arranged over the waist on indicated lines and the sleeves are full puffs finished with fitted cuffs and can be either arranged over the foun dation or left unlined as liked The quantity of material required for the medium size is 44 yards 21 inches wide 3 yards 27 inches wide or 214 yards 44 inches wide with 1 yard IS or yard 40 inches wide for yoke and cuffs and 4 yards of band ing to trim as illustrated For Idle Hours The making of fancy chemises and other pretty accessories makes de lightful pickup work to engage the idle Lours of the summer girl Sprays oi flowers may be elaborately worked and combined with insertion and fine lace and motives of drawn work are successfully introduced A FASHIONA BLE BLOUSE 1 A- I - - I Cream lace with white silk makes an exceedingly effective as well as fashionable combination both for sep arate blouses and entire gowns The very charming waist illustrated i3 adapted to both purposes and is made of white Korean crepe with yoke and cuffs made of motifs of cream pointe de Venise connected by bands of taf feta embroidered with French knots The yoke is becomingly shaped and can be made over a foundation or transparent as may be liked while the blouse below is laid in fine tucks which are stitched for a short dis tance only and provide the soft ful ness below that point To make the waist for a woman of medium size will be required 44 yards of material 21 3 yards 27 or 2 yards 44 inches wide with 1 yard of all over lace MMMb4Vi A Good Example Many of our milk producers can well afford to take a hint from the great bottling establishments as to the care of their milk We wish that when the opportunity comes readers of this department would make it a point to visit some of these places and see the extraordinary care that is used in cleaning bottles that have held milk and in keeping clean all things that are to contain milk or that are to come into contact with milk What these establishments do on a large scale the farmer can do on a small scale If it pays the big establish ments to keep clean it will pay the small establishments to do likewise Water and heat are used in great abundance It may not be possible to have steam in the farm home but hot water can always be had in large quantities Hot water is destructive of germ life if it is left long enough in contact with the utensils The man that has a good deal of milk to handle will And it to his advantage to arrange for tanks of hot water in places where he can use the water when it is needed Frequently the little kitchen stove and the teakettle are the only means of heating water and when the farmer has a dozen cows this way of heating the water makes it necessary to be very econ omical in using it The gallon of hot water has to be diluted with cold wa ter to make it go around and the tem peraturo that results is not too high for germ life to stand In the big es tablishments the bottles and other utensils receive a soaking in hot wa ter that will remove any kind of germ or put it in a condition where it cannot develop It is often said that it is possible to have too much of a good thing but thi3 is hardly true of hot water and heat in the cleansing of utensils and vessels used in the milk room We believe that the men that are running the big bottling es tablishments are setting an example that should be followed as far as it is possible to do so Continue to Paraffine Cheese The Canadians are continuing the paraffining of cheese in spite of the fact that some of the consumers of cheese both in Canada and England are objecting to it This course is advised by the Department of Agri culture of the Dominion of Canada There are a number of reasons why paraffining is desirable one of which is that the cheese is less easily affect ed by the conditions through which it passes as to molds A cheese that has not been paraffined may be placed where it is exposed td mold and in a short time the mold will affect it so seriously that it will be unfit for con sumption There are numerous con ditions of this kind that have to be faced for the cheese are sent to many parts of the world and into all sorts of neighborhoods The paraffined cheeses will go into such places and be unaffected The molds cannot pierce the paraffiine for they find no food in the medium through which they must go Molds do not go through substances except as they grow through If the protecting coat be of a substance that will not furnish food for the development of molds those minute plants cannot live and thrive In the United States paraffining has been adopted at some of our experi ment stations but we believe has not been generally adopted in tae fac tories where most of our cheese is made Silo Building Professor McKay of Iowa is credit ed with the statement that there are probably not- more than ten silos in Iowa This is surprising in view of the fact that silage is one of the best foods in the world for dairy cows The maximum feed of silage for dairy cows is 40 pounds and an acre of good corn will provide the rough feed for a cow for 750 days Think of it And the cow will eat the entire stalk of the corn up clean when it is served to her in the form of silage It is surprising to learn that in some of the states of the Union this great saving is ignored This is especially the case in Iowa and Illinois There are states in the Union where silos are numer ous notably Wisconsin and New York Professor McKay says that in Iowa milk is produced as expensively as it was 20 years ago in spite of the steady advance in price of the land and the consequent necessity of pro ducing milk more cheaply It is safe to say that if every farm that has dairy cows on it also had a silo thous ands of the cows that now do not pay their board would be kept at a profit because the feeding of high priced feed to poor cows is one of the surest ways to lose money We have advo cated the letting go of the poor cows but if the farmers are determined to hold onto them they should at least stop feeding them a high priced feed out of which the cows find it impos sible to return a profit Salting of butter is a practice that is very old and until recently has been very popular In fact our peo ple have come to believe that butter without salt is of little value Yet in Europe unsalted butter is being used to such aa extent that salted butter is looked upon with suspicion It is said that salt is put in to disguise the bad qualities That of course is not so where the salting of butter is ex tensively practiced Too little attention is paid to the matter of the quality of the dairy bull KsattaSSgnateW 13miSimm AUSTRIAN GIRLS WELL TAUGHT Careful Education in All Branchea Accorded Them Austrian girls are often taught in school until they are 15 years old They are not during this time kept entirely out of society but aro dressed with the greatest simplicity never wearing a silk gown until they have left school and attended their first ball On leaving the schoolroom they iave one or two years training in he dtchen and pantry either by some aiemher of their own family for un Jer a trained cook in anothers house Though they -may never be required o cook for themselves they know ex actly how everything should be done and long before they set up house keeping on their own account are ompetent to take charge of a house bold They make most affectionate wives and mothers says Womans Life An Austrian lady is said to bo as accomplished and learned as an Eng lish governess as good a cook and housekeeper as a German as bright and witty in society as a Parisian and as handsome as an American In Vienna are found some of the most beautiful women in Europe Austrian girls are brought up in habits of industry and are rarely seen without some kind cf work in hand They are famous for their great piles of linen a certain number of yards of which aro every year from a girls birth woven and laid aside for her marriage portion The grandmothers spend much oi their time in knitting for their grand children not only supplying their present need but laying by dozens of stockings of every kind for the young frls trousseau Some of these woven ones stockings are as fine as the finest Wanted His Presents Back Recorder Pickersgill at Perth Am boy N J was arsd to settle a novel case in which Andrew Lichask was arrested on complaint of Miss Julia Piatt who charged him with annoying her on the streets She declared that every time they met Andrew persist ed in stopping her and speaking to her and she wanted the practice stop ped Andrew explained to the recorder that he and Julia were once lovers and that while he was courting he made her a present of half a book ol trading stamps Recently Julia re jected him and their engagement was broken Andrew thought that as he was jilted he should have the stamps back Julia admitted having received them but declared she could not re turn them as she had exchanged them for a beautiful plush chair On An drew promising not to speak to Julia again the recorder let him go The Market Price of Titles A dealer in foreign titles and decor ations in response to an inquisitive inquirer gives the price of the com modities he offers The title of count costs 30000 francs viscount 25000 barcu 15000 These are Spanish Chevalier is naturally much less expensive the highest order being for sale at 8000 francs The red black and white rosette ol the Red Cross given for aid to the wounded on land and sea can actually be purchased for 1500 francs no further qualification being necessary than the payment of this sum One month suffices the intermediary to se cure this decoration to the candidate who desires it The Iiigher title necessitate a delay of five or six months Half the purchase money has to be sent to the dealer in titles on applica tion A Chronological Impression Januarys made for work an February too Comes round to Rive de folks a chance to show what dey kin do Dars Christmas an Thanksgivin day a sentterin through the year An spring lo stain you singin cause de sky is bright an clear Mos every month dat comes along some special work will show Exceptin one Dats Augu Den de world moves kind o slow You feels like loafin frum de dawn until de shadows fall It pears like Angus wasn made foh anything at all It gives the ol thermometer a second chance to climb It jes slips in between de fireworks an de reed bird time De sleepy days is noddin like de branches of de trees Dats ben din whah de clover is invitin of de bees When folks divided up de year I reckon it was found Dfy had mo sunshine dan dey really needed to go round Dpv found some extra time dat somehow didnt fit in pat So dey rolled it up together an made Augus out o dat Washington Star Women as Dress Judges It would almost seem as though a new profession for women were mak ing its way to the front that of dress experts to puzzled county court judges Judge Edge at his wits end at Clerkenwell yesterday to decide a dis pute about the fit of a dress bethought him of a colleague who had created the precedent of calling in a disinter ested lady to decide the point and following it gave judgment in accord ance with the experts advice If I get many of these cases said Judge Edge pathetically I either have to learn dressmaking or have a lady expert -attached to the court London Express Deepest Sounding Ever Made The deepest sounding ever made by any vessel was the United States ship Nero while on the Honolulu Manila cable survey When near Guam the Nero got 52G9 fafrhbms or 31614 feet only 6G feet less than six miles If Mount Everest the highest mountain on earth were set down in this hole it would have above its summit a depth of 2612 feet or nearly half a mile of water 3sM L 1 AND v Jacks Fatal Oversight I like you well enough Mr Ux mal said the perplexed young wom an or at least Im not sure I like you as well as I do Jack Cawdrey He says he thinks of me 365 days iu the year He wants one day off every four years does he exclaimed young Ux raal with indignant scorn That kind of devotion doesnt command itself to you does it Clarice Jacks doom was sealed from that n oment Headlight Edythe How sweet the moon Is Why do you start so Willie when you look at it Willie Er why you see Ive been knocked over by automobiles several times In Early Days Capt Kidd had jiistlowered a chest of treasures into the sea after care fully charting the spot 1 suppose he mused as he watched the bubbles rise and float upon the water I suppose that one of those corporation pirates would call that my sinking fund Those who heard him afterward claimed that the captain was one of the pioneers in the watered capital game Wrong Remedy Is it true asked the caller that your husband ordered Dr Smoother out of the house Yes Poor Jack had been carrying the baby all night and every night for a week and was run down to a thread I called the doctor and he told Jack that he must take exer cise Detroit Free Press Failed to Make Good Miles D you ever read that won derful Dook How to live a Hundred Years Giles Yes the author was an old schoolmate of mine Miles Indeed Where is he now Giles He died at the age of thirty seven Safe for a While Its funny said the sick mans wife but the doctor says he hasnt discovered yet whats the matter with you Thank x heaven exclaimed the sick man then Im safe for a while yet Inthe Blood Adelle Clarence dont you think you could overcome somewhat your fondness for your club Clarence No that would be impos sible I inherit it from my mother She was a club woman Leading Man Thespis When were you a leading man Foyer When the company had to walk back from Chicago and they selected me to show the way Town Topics Keeps It from His Wife Knicker Is he modest Bocker Very He doesnt let his right hand know when he puts hia foot in it New York Sun Irony Spick She rules her husband with a rod of iron Span I guess that accounts for my seeing her chase him with a poker this morning Had Him Guessing Ccme up to the house and if you are fond of music Ill have my daugh ter play and sing for you What effect would that hare on my fondness for music- Houston Post T k i 1 t i r j e t j