en | | J Cabinet | j ^^xw.siirn Xrwyuaoer I'nlon.) I ^ j < f ^ i r: ^ "rt* r?r a purpose and ( vivn;.'! t>'' enjoyed; but all I f,e r:Vb? 1 >' used, that they I jiMFLY DESSERTS (>, rr'< ^I>r:i:C nmntllS. havln/j f ,,; , ilcsM'ris, we turnl enjoyment to" / '- liter and easier I . ^ digested liislifs. 1 -'.W ' ls so wellj ' ilmt It is | /-'.'/ ' ere often served I ;. j any other des I When It Is I n.-d with a till-I ojie.'i j.ie, I mere easy at ^^B:. i.-!ard. and dif- / : tin's! ?>:' i.o'.viiia is a pood I ( " ' Been if if"-" F,c- tl,e -volks I ;,e cupful of sugar [ of butter; when I (.r,. i !;.l?le<[ioonful of n a ... ilie eggs. Crate ( k , . ,i.m and squeeze lie cupful of milk \ . I '.eat the whites W -liir ami fold in J H, . .r .- a lined pastry . I:,?. ?? slowly until r :Blrri co P-a'rtg. Turn a pint < . ... ; , the sirup into a J j. II. a! one pint of milk ? add one-third of a , I,1 ,: -i areli siirred to a ! | 1,1, j,u.,a one-half teaspoonfu' ( Br and one hall eitpful of eiild milk. | , rook iii the hot milk until | cornstarch is thoroughly cooked. , |r , t situo! for a few minutes. | I the \oiks of two eggs, add one| of a rupful of sugar, beat again, to the niixuire. continue beat nril the egg is rooked, tiien pour [the peaches, p.rat the egg whites slit!', add four tahlespoonfuls of r rover the pudding and place it) kr uven at lirs*. then brown quickjt-rve either hoi or cold, une Patties. Take one-half eupf slewed prunes, stone end mash, oi.e heaieri egg yolk, a pinch of a grating of nutmeg, a teaspoon- | f flour ai d sugar to taste, a half il of sweet milk. Mix and pour tv.lined tin11v nans. Itake I"" ' ;t li.-' t brown. Spread the tops I h inoritiiTUt* made from the egg Hp nii'i a !i:'le sugar. Brown light:i moderate en. ^Hpie Jurkit. Warm just lukeH i|'!nrt of milk, add one disHl 'inkt-i tablet, one-third of a Hj| . ? maple sugar and pour into ^H?-' Sc; e when firm with i Hi a:a; ! sugar and cream. If the H*' r 1,1 i'e obtained use I ^b: with a few drops of ma- : lemn Crumbs. Melt chocolate l H ir. a< many dry. finely {.'rated j us the chocolate will cover. ] B un; . ream and sugar. ^H F:od Suggestions. I Hpm'P salad for a partv is pre- ' I a? follows; place a slice of pine- ' apple on a tender ; lettuce leaf; In the ; center of the pine- ; apple place half of | , :l ''"nana and top i H'y!T7^' I w'th " red cherry I'ass salad dressing j ^B>j'., or heap a spoonful on the side of too , salad. of Onion Soup. -Slice four ^H~ boiling water until j H ' - us the water onee during j Ho... When tender, rub the 1 ^B>- ' a sieve and to a cupful I . prepare the following: | i';i . i.fiil of butler: when j uur. Mix and stir I ' a ; . iadd . onq ?*tij?l' v.in", which is j pi -pooiif.il of soda. I ' II well mixed, then I _ * :isi d dripping pan res. Serve hot, cut ! I";- i. enttaue cheese' and | It" j ? dessert is especially I 1 . .-ream. Ils.fy S:i,o s.-rape and clean r'' ' ? salsify cut into dice I"- minutes in cold water. PI- h - l.oilint: water and k I :l quart of tnilk, P" i pepper to season. lii ' '!< l i s.- point, add three 'Ta. r? (rolled) and serve at fcamsh Eggs.?Cool; together one | u! ".'matoes and a clove | P:,r tit.* deed. one chopped 1'- t green peppers - eriily until reduced p' ' * !. thin slices of hutBr ' a poached egg on ash R-ii. p-,., rj(.f, biscuit J" ..no.half inch thick. vv " ne.ist and well-seapV ... j|> ana oase in a ( ?in a h. "'' ""^ Crjar Chests Are Valuable [Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Clothes moths are in greatest abuniance the country over from May to luly. and during September and Ocober, although in steam-heated houses hey may be on the wing in any month. The time to begin taking precautions tgainst damage from mollis is there'ore before they appear in any num>ers. Whatever protective measures are tdopteil. one invariable rule should >e followed in putties woolen, fur and it her susceptible articles away for the teason. Clean each article thoroughy, brush and heat it, to dislodge any tggs or larvae that may be already on t, and sun it if possible. If these Garment* Neatly Stored in a Closet. precautions are not followed, and baifjrown larvae or eggs from which larvae can hatch are securely established in your garments and rugs before you put them away, there is every likelihood that they will do damage and that they may not be afTeoted by repellents. Larvae Destroys Clothing. ..Moths or ' moth-millers" do not eat fabrics. They' lay their eggs where the larvae or worms when hatched will tlnd suitable food, and the larvae eat the woolen or fur or other material. The ideal way to protect articles of every kind subject to moth damage is to put them into cold storage. after the preliminary treatment described, but this is not always possible. Cedar chests are valuable for storing clothing at home. Their value lies in the fact that the aroma of red cedar heart wood kills young moth larvae. Cedar chests cannot be depended upon to kill the moths, their .nnrmo uftOr fheV H TO One* eggs, or i nr half to full grown, or after tlie.v are three or four inonlhs old. If the fabrics put in the chests have first been Peppers Useful in Many Dishes to Give Flavor Sweet mild green peppers are sometimes served by themselves as a vegetable dish, either fried In butter, broiled or baked in the oven. After they have been washed, they are usually prepared for any of these methods of cooking by cutting them in half, ami removing the core and seeds. Tliey should be basted with butter if they are cooked in the oven or broiled under the giis'rtaine. Sometimes the skin is removed when they are served. Tomato sauce or lemon juice may be used for seasoning. Because of their pronounced flavor, peppers are more often combined with other vegetables or foods than served alone, says the United States Department of Agriculture. After parboiling for two or three minutes they are stuffed in many ways, either whole or split down the middle, and baked. Left?iw of many sorts may be utilized in making the stuffing. From a third to a half of this is usually a starchy material, such as bread crumbs, cooked rice, macaroni, mashed potato or corn. One or more of the following will be found to blend well with the flavor of any of these and of the pepper container. Meat, fish, cottage cheese, pennuts, celery, tomatoes, chopped onion, string beans or other vegetables. Such Bllings are mixed with the starchy tuffing to be used, seasoned, moistened HOUSEHOLD HINTS , Olives and cheese chopped together make tasty sandwich filling. " ??1? ^ii frnm Remove sewijijj uiauuuc garments by wetting with turpentine, then washing with cold water and a pure mild soap. There Is no more healthful dessert than baked apples. Remove cores, bake whole with skins on and place . jr-. -JW-; .r\ ^ S FROM MOTH DAMAGE rj? ? ? ; j SmkBI ^\ ?j\ \ 1 I for Storing Clothing at Home. thoroughly denned, brushed and beaten, with special attention to brushing out pockets, scams, and other possible biding places for larvae or eggs already on the garments, and if the chest ts tight so that no moths or larvae can reach the garments later, the clothing will probably be quite safe. Brushing or beating furs will not always get-rid of"the older worms, if liiey have once gotten into the long hairs and established themselves by spinning their webs. If you think your furs are already infested they should be eotnbed out with a very fine comb or should be fumigated. If furs are promptly stored as soon as the season for their use Is over, there Is little likelihood of their containing these older fjtrvae. Box or Chest Satisfactory. Any tight box or chest is satisfactory for storing clothes tiiat have been given tlie necessary preliminary treatment?cleaning, brushing, heating and sunning. Ordinary firm wrapping paper will do, or several thicknesses of newspaper, provided the folds of the paper at tlie ends of the bundles ara bent securely back so that moths cannot crawl in to lay eggs. I'nbroken cardboard boxes may be used if simi I - J 1 iL. lany wrapped or seaieu arouuu me covers with gummed paper. The specially treated paper bags which come for the purpose are of no value in killing moths, but are excellent if so devised that they are perfeely tight, always provided that every precaution has been taken to clean and brush the clothing before putting it away. If there is any hole about the hanger or anywhere else on such a bag, it Is useless. Winter suits and coats dry-cleaned and then immediately put away in any of the foregoing tight containers are almost eertuin to escape moth damage. To "make assurance doubly sure," however, the use of repellents, shut up Iti the containers witli the clothing, is recommended. When naphthalene tlakes. pa rudich torn-benzene crystals, or camphor blocks are shut up "in tight boxes with garments, they give o(T fumes which kill all stages of clothes ninths which may be present in spite of the most careful Attention and cleaning. Scattering these substances about on shelves or bureau drawers does not accomplish the same result because the fumes are not confined. I Camphor is less effective than the other two substances. Carbon di' sulphide and enrbon tetrachloride are excellent for the fumigation of clothes which can lie tightly sealed. The former is inflammable and should be used only by an experienced person, as is the case with liydrocyanic-acid gas, used for fumigating an entire house or storage establishment. Farmers' Rullctin 1353 gives several other suggestions for protecting clothes from moth damage, as well as detailed instructions for using any of the foregoing methods. Send to the United j States Department of Agriculture for J it at Washington, D. C. It Is free J while the supply lasts. with a small amount of stock, gravy. l)Uftor or white sauce, anil the exposed top of the stuffing is usually sprinkled with bread crumbs.. Shredded or minced peppers, both raw and cooked, may he used to give flavor to a great many dishes, inrlud ing soups and stews, scalloped dishes and salads. Suggestions of Lunches Suitable to All Needi While the carrying of lunches la still by far' the most common practice. taking country and town together. there are a few cases in which It is thought desirable for the school to share with the home the responsl bility for the noonday meal. In some frlaees the task for the school may be hardly more than that of providing clean and safe places for lunch baskets, where the food will not be likely to become dirty or to spoil. In others it may be practicable to provide by one means or another a hot dish with which to supplement foods a. *?? T? of ill nf horc Drougni I rum uuiue. iu own vv..v.u, particularly where large attendance and many teachers and other workers make subdivision of labor a comparatively easy matter. It may be possible for the school to establish and maintain lunch rooms. In Farmers' Bulletin 712, School Lunches, suggestions are made for types of lunches suitable to all these needs. a marshmallow on each when you remove from the oven. Farm folks move to the cities to give their children added benefits, instead, the fresh young minds are stifled and surfeited with the veneer and jim-cracks of materialism. Yellow, dingy lace curtains may be restored to snowy whiteness If boiled 30 minutes 'In a strong soapsuds which Is equal parts of milk and water. and rinsed In the usual way. < , NEWS. jpRYON. N. C. COLOR IMPORTAN FOR THE BIG / IT IS good to be living In the present fl day, when one can wear, In the h name ot fashion, colors as bright and 1 I joyous as the: tints of the rainbow^ e Such a season for color as Is this! t; Kven our clotjh topcoats, which once we thought lhust appear in tone as g neutral as shyj pussywillows in spring- ii time, now take on color. s, Indeed color is playing a role so p vastly important that it all but counts g more than the actual styling of the n garment. It is a fact, a garment may d One of (he Lnti he fashioned most simply, free from I any novel detailing, yet if It registers ' an important new shade, its style sig- < nillranoe is pronounced at a glance. ; Green is one of the leading color s themes for cloth this season, espe- s cially soft-toned shades. Even the i j tans have lost all somberness, as they take on a touch of rose. Then there i j are the rose tonps themselves which 1 liave Deen so assertive among i*aim Reach colorings find which hid fair to ; repeat their vogue throughout spring < and summer modes. As to navy and ( gray, the.v are pre-eminently smart col- i orings of coats, hats or frocks. I Xo less fascinating than the coloring i of our spring coats, are the materiuls 1 from which they are made. There is an 1 Impressive air of refinement about the i exquisitely textured woolens featured i , I . X ^ \ I * 1 ytt'imgl ilTl ) Party Dreit foi throughout all fashion's realm. Emphasized anions leading fabrics are ' twills, reps and wool bengalines. Inspired by choice fabrics of perfect i coloring, the stylist is making It a point to carry the thought of superior , workmanship and careful detailing | into the moderate-priced coat as well | as the more costly types. The coat | in the picture may be in almost any coloring of one's choosing. Fine twill is the medium chosen for its develop- , rnent. Its outstanding detnil when , it comes to its styling is that extra , fullness has been acquired by introduc- ( ing a subtle flare at the side seams in conjunction with a pointed waistline , brought from the back to under the arms. Thus has genius adopted the New Type of Hose The hosette is a new type of stock 1 ing developed at the demand cf a 1 well-known film star. It ends below 1 the knee and has a top resembling 1 those of men's golf hose, which Is 1 turned back. The stockings, however, I Instead of being of the heavy golf ' type, are sheerest chiffon. < New Tea Gown i The latest tea gowns are known as trow-trows because the important i parts of them are a type of trousers, i >. . . ' * >T . . ,| . " v ... - ' 1 T IN TOPCOAT; If ^ND LITTLE GIRL are without sacrificing the slim sll ouette which is as popular as ever, "he majority of simple cloth coats are ollared with dainty spring fur, as is rue of the model in the picture. In all clothes for youngsters, heinning with the little tots and gong on to those of the sub deb, one ees repeated, or. reflected, the style olnts that were first presented for i rownups. Evidently spring's new ! lodes became the Inspiration of those eslgners who occupy themselves with 1 ' Pfe- H P? '.J*< tv 11 i est Topcoats. he needs of the younger generatloa rhey have not even omitted the note >f greater elaboration in spring styles tnd so little missy is going to be ^ somewhat less simply dressed than JE f ' "> * ^ k>r'"\^ V "* ; ; ' ; V ' ' ' fP? gjf ??????TWT9?>MW??M? ! ! IWC MM ' I ' i 1 ; -v. ; . ? , 1 Is your car a General Motors Car? IF YOU own a Chevrolet, a Pontiac, an Oldsmobile, an Oakland, a Buick or a Cadillac, you own a General Motors car. "But whatj" you may ask, "does that meafi to me?" It means just this: General Motors is a family of companies building motor cars and trucks and such other famous automotive products as Fisher Bodies, Delco and Remy electrical systems, Harrison radiators and AC sparkplugs. Still other General Motors products are Delcoi i r _ Light electric power plants ana rngiaaire electric refrigerators. There are General Motors plants in 44 cities, employing 120,000 people; and sales and service organizations in 144 countries. General Motors uses the combined resources of this great family for the benefit of each member. It efFects great savings in the purchase of quality materials; it provides the best of engineering talent; it maintains the world's largest research laboratories and proving ground for automobiles; and it assures the permanence of its various divisions and the products which they make. In other words, General Motors has every facility and every incentive to maintain quality and to offer value for the price; and the current models of General Motors cars are offered as the greatest values in the history of the automobile industry. GENERAL MOTORS * CHEVROLET ' PONTIAC ' BUICK OLDSMOBILE ' OAKLAND CADILLAC ' GMC TRUCKS "A par for every purse and purpose" General Motors cars and trucks, 3>rk:o-Light electric plants and Frigidaire electric refrigerators may be purchased on the GMAC Plan, provided by General Motors itself to assure sound terms and low finance rates. =dl Nnt There i FLUSHING HOSPITAL. FLUSHING. LONG * ,c* | Island. Registered School for Nurses. Offer re you anywhere near maturity?" two y^ar1 a"^ six month, urBO - " women having two years of High School edn, DO, WG liVG in Ozone Park.** ucatlon. Uniform* and booka furnished; monthly allowance given." Class entering June ? 1st. Write now to Director of Nurses. ' B ? & Kill Thotf Lice, Mites and Blucbug* FjmUx ? I ifr* WW?^M I^VT" Reliance Lice and Mite Killer in HlknTI InTl drinking water. No unnecessary handling. Affects neither eggs nor meat. Rnll&nra - , a I Poultry Tonic makes them peppy and lay_ j \ ; ^Wli\Dri I.KUC vi Fifty cents and dollar sizes guaranteed. V / y/A\JL_?\ 11 RELIANCE MANUFACTURING CO. a ,noigisvonjj i ?"* 3*2 yjggsjpy/ CENTS Jr "Handy" .Men Wanted to Paint Automobile*. \vlliu Ci D??? _ No experience or capital needed. We teach v DELL-ANS you. Address Valsp&r Painters, Box Sit, Hot water Wlcl""- Kan AWa SureReliof Salesman Wanted: Solicit accounts for col_ j wwiviwiivi lection. Liberal com. Protected territory. Bl ^0^ Every business man a prospect. Internat'l Q ^1 Credit Adj. Co.. 2722 Neb. Ave.. Tampa. Fla. n ECQIA RIG CLEANER Removes ail dirt jD I AJnlrZCCTI^^1 and stains, restores original lustre and color; *rm\ BllUIVJtJl |^|1 sent prepaid 50r. C* So ECONOMY HOUSE. t and 75? PM's.Sold Everywhere " N' T>"'P" Arf' " " CLEAROSKIN?The perfect akin food. Clear* and beautifies the skin.* Send for our apein ought to be most annoyed by ciai offer, cass economy house, i* s. ...L, , , ' I . TEMPLE AVE. INDIANAPOLIS. IND. sufferings which come from their I __ faults.?Cicero. cash paid fob dental gold, falsb Teeth, Discarded Jewelry, Diamonds and Platinum. Cash by return Mail. Florida Gold Rey buy many bottles of other verml- fining Co., 21 W. Adams St.. Jacksonville. Fla. when one bottle of Dr. Peerv*s "Dead I ?? will work without fail? a4v. , plunt* From Guaranteed Inspected, Selected j j red Porto Kican potatoes. 12.25 M. delivered. e condition upon, which Ood hnth ! 0rd wtMa qw Bthe most artistic results. You can do the work yourself if the decorators are not available. Ask your dealer for an Alabastine color card. Or write Miss Ruby Brandon, Home Beautiful Specialist, the Alabastine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. KakomneisnotAkbastme ' -ft- V-. i :t . . .yjWjl