The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, June 27, 1916, Image 5

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Summer Luncheons III" in a jiffy Mlli I Let Libby's splendid chefs relieve voo I | f of hot-weather cooking, Stock the v | pantry ^ shelf with and the other good summer meets ? including Libby's ^ Vienna Seusage?you II had them Bfresh and appetizing. Libby, M9Neffl & Libby, Chicago liliiinii Kill All Flies! P)*r?d ?oywlinr?,D?l?y riy KllUr Bttntrtu and kill* all aaa. Naat. doan, oroiunantal. convenient, ^andcheap. HAROLD SOMLRS, 150 DeKalb Ava., Brooklyn, N. V. j A Rood tnlkor la pleased when he encounters n good listener. For fresh cuts apply Hunford's Balsam. Adv. . Appropriate Illumination. "What kind of lights dl 1 the foot- j hall team have nt their dinner?shaded candles?" "No; they had rushlights." Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh is Itself an antiseptic and the use of any other remedy before applying it is unnecessary. Adv. Art Objects 8old. A rare Flemish tapestry entitled "The Haymakers," dating from late in the seventeenth century, brought $1,400 nt an art wale nt the Anderson galleries, new xorK. It went to M. Kernoclinn. Other Important snles Wore a large win? Jar of the Sung dynasty In China, about 000 A. P., sold for $175: a Chinese pnlntlng from the Ming dynasty, sold to M. Kernorhan for $100; a landscape painting from the Ming dynasty, to the same buyer for $l.r?0, and another landscape sceen from the Ming I dynasty to W. ITotchklss for $130. I Diggers of Anthracite. In an article In World's Work on the situation In the anthracite coal regions Guy W. McConnell explains that dnrlng recent yenrs the old type of coal miner from Great Britain nnd ( Germany has disappeared out of the , mines and that, "driven Info their | places hy the extreme nnd peculiar j hardships of laboring down under the j crust of the earth, have come hordes ; upon hordes of racial types more ; physically fit to flght off the rheumntlam lurking In the 'dog hole* of a wet chnmher nnd less susceptible to rn? prcvnicnt minor's nstlima nnd germs of tuberculosis. Those nre the peasantry of southeastern Europe Russia and Poland^ They nre the rank and file of the anthrnette field where 'general conditions have grown steadily worse,' snld President White of the United Mine Workers of America the other day. 'Owing to the Increase of 17 per cent In the cost of living during the last few years, many of our men nre In deht to the landlord nnd Installment houses, their children, In order to keep alive nnd stay In school, subsisting on oatmeal three times a dny. Fnmllles are freuqen.ly forced to live three and four In one house.* ** A Sensible Thing To Do When the drug, caffeine? the active principle in coffee ? shows in headache, nervousness, insomnia, biliousness, jumpy heart, and so on, the sensible thing to do is to quit the coffee. It's easy, having at hand the delicious pu**e food-drink ?_ ?. instant Postum It is made from wheat roasted with a hit of wholesome molasses and is free from any harmful substance. Thousands who prefer to protect their health, use Postum with comfort and delight. Made in the cup?Instantly ? with hot water. Convenient, nourishing, satisfying. "There's a Reason" for POSTUM * 1 1 * THE LANCASTER N In Womans Realm 1 I "Morning Frock " an Innovation That Well Deserves the Success I It Has Achieved?Many Materials That Are Available?Midsummer Hats All Have Wide Brims ? Three of the Pretty Models Are Illustrated Here. TXfltsv*. * iuu nine came 10 write tne hemp shape with low crown and flat j .nal chapter In the atory of summer brim only moderately wide. It Is cov- ; frocks, up sprung a genius who Intro- ered with crope georgette and trimmed I duced a now and happy ending And with crepe roses all In pale tones of now no one wants to lay the tale aside, shell pink. The filmiest of black mesh for the "morning frock" or "pastime veils is draped over It, and this with suit" or "breakfast drcsB," as It is a narrow band of black velvet draped variously called, has added an unox- at the base of the crown gives an at PASTIME SUIT OF HEAVY COTTON STUFF. pected Interest to Bummer appareling, tractive depth of color. A wreath of It la a garb that sulta and expresses rosea rests on the hair In a prim row the woman of today. It la sensible set close to the undcrbrlm. and attractive and Inexpensive, and it At the left an odd development of radiates snappy Btyle. the "cane-seat" hat lends daintiness The heavier cotton weaves In white to the substantial but cool-looking and colorB are used In making this shape. The brim is edged with lace new order of summer clothing. Cot- hair brnid and outlined on the under ton poplin, gaberdine, basket weaves, sido with lines of French blue. I'icotcrash, and twills or any cotton stuff edged ribbon in the same shade of with body and durability, that will blue is drawn about the crown, and stand wear and tubbing will answer, tiny chiffon roses with long Btems npWhite khaki is an excellent choice for pear to clamber over the crown, tho nithor tho nlrlrta or oao t a I ~ * *' i-j * * I bu;ub luruttut'u inrougn tne open In the illustration n suit is shown ( spaces in tho strnw shape. In which tho plain white skirt is tin- : A familiar and always pretty hat ished at the bottom with a cuff of the of leghorn app( are nt tho right, of the > ' ""Ni V'"W % ' ~W WIDE BRIMS THE MIDSUMMER VOQUE blue stuff. For no particular reason sort that Is never entirely out of Btyle. the cuff falls to extend all the way It has a round crown, covered with around the skirt, but has an unexpect- crepo georgette, and a wide and floppy ed bre>u. near the front. The short brim. Its designer has confined herloose coat is smocked with white floss, self to approved methods In trimming to adjust It to the figure, at the . belt it, with a big pink rose and a wreath lino and shoulders In front and across of forget-mo-nots posed at the front, the waistline at the back. Needlework Black velvet ribbon is tied across and In white floss finishes the edges of the around the crown, ending in loops cuffs and collar. and ends at the right side near the There Is any number of gayly col- back. The model 1b bo convincingly ored cottons to make a variety of pretty for young faces that the milcoats from, like the vivid but pleasing liner need never worry to look 'or bet colors that appear In the striped cot- tor moans of decoration, tons for sports coats and skirts. The yj ^ Dasttme suit is an Inanlratlnn n' tha lis Js?- " sports suit, but It appears, so far, In a combination of white and one color p ?7 in plain materials. All the simple, quickly made decorative stitches are Shaded Ostrich Boas, appropriate in neodlework decorations In order to stimulate the interest on these Jaunty coats. in feathery neck trimmings, the manAbout the only debatable question ufacturers are now putting out shadfn midsummer millinery lies in its ed ostrich boas, very long and fluffy width of brim, and there are three Beginning with a faint color at one widths to choose from. They are wide, end, H gradually deepens until at tho wider, widest. The hats shown in the other It Is of deepest hae. illustration are far from extremes and they are very pleasing developments Cotton imports into China last year f three entirely different styles. showed an increase of $8,760,000 la The pretty model at the center Is a value. EWS, JUNE 27, 1916.. -*5 the mm u flkitcnen pgau ifelcabinetra! The budget Is to the housekeeper what the blue print Is to the builder. The average housekeeper may reduce J expenditure by keeplnK accounts each month of amounts spent for various J food products. HELPFUL HINTS. fli In the first place ovcry home keep- P' <r cshoiitd ? - 1 Kl ?<.? ? nvcjl mxuuiUM. UO you know any success- 01 'Q/ _~ rul business man *1 who keeps no ac- | frvvrT^*/ JuS i'?me an(i outgo? Ci j^y^Vxj He is Just as rare d: U3? iT I "1 keeper who does CI - * record her daily expenditures. Since the cost of living is tt constantly advancing it is vitally nec- cl essary that deep concern be paid to ta reducing certain items of expenditure. L; Food for the family costs more than s< any other item, and those who work L with the thriftless und improvident ? know that their condition is largely a matter of what they spend for the inside rather than the outside of the body. Since meat makes up a large part of the ordinary family diet, any economy in the purchase of it will make a no- ; 'iceable reduction in the food bill. Llv using meat substitutes, which are less expensive, but as nutritious, the amount may be cut down by half. The a( use of cheeso, which is rich in pro- ; tein, a pound of cheese being equal to two pounds of meat in food value with much less waste, will prove most sat- j1| isfactory. It is a great advantago to market ai In person; she sees the food products, is uble to furnish variety and if she has strength of mind enough to re- j fuse to buy that which she knows she er cannot afford, no matter how alluring, UJ she will find her markoting profitable. The butcher will not give short weight with the customer looking on, though the difference may be smnll it amounts to much in the course of a year. Tho cheaper cuts of meat, uuts propared in loaf, eggs in various forms. are all economical dishes when prepared Intelligently. re The utilizing of left-overs in the 8t planning of the meals Is another Im- ai portant item. It goes without saying re that the economical housewife makes ni out her menu days ahead in order to ai save expense and use those left-overs ?' profitably. a' Brown bread, white bread or whole wheat bread is made more wholesome by the addition of a few raisins. 8< Fruit and vegetables lend them- tr selves to j;11 sorts of combinations. As d" soups and salads they are satisfac t> tory. o) Something Is wrong with everything, j We live upon the planet of mistakes. Most of us are misfits. The rest are a excuses. 1 know of no Ideal condition except tlie condition of someone : else. No human being ever had things Just exactly to suit him. The sooner | we awake to this truth and make up our minds that if ever we are to llnd contentment at all. It will be among things as they are and not among P' things as they ought to be, the better rl It will he for us-and also for the unfortunate people who have to live with 1 . ub.?Frank Crane. A DAY WITH PANCAKES. w as If pancakes are to be light, more j-' mixing will not do. The batter nnist n< the thoroughly beaten for sa five or ten minutes. The Cl frying pan should be tf very smooth and fuirly Gj hot so the cakes may fo cook quickly without get- J J1 ting soggy. I Plain Pancakes.?Sift one cupful of flour into a basin; add a quarter of ^ a tea spoonful of salt, one unbeaten egg, and half a cupful of milk. Mix until smooth, then begin to heat with a wooden spoon for a few minutes; then odd another half cupful of milk and continue beating 1 until air bubbles rise to the top. Pry j on a hot griddle and serve with lemon Juice and sugar. ! ^ Cherry Shortcake.?Add to the #{ ! cherry Juice a little cornstarch, cook ^ until smooth, add butter, then the pit- ' c< ted chorries and placo on the cakes. ! ^ Serve with the sauce instead of cream. Rice Pancakes.?Boil a quarter oi a pound of rice until quite soft, then hi ' drain. Mix with it one cupful of croam, : j four well beaten eggs, a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt, nutmeg to taste, j a half cupful of melted butter and suf- j flcient flour to form a smooth batter, p Fry and serve. 1 Serving a thin slice of orange sprin- j kled with sugar on the nice brown S . ooVo u/h la Kill H til a Iovoa* * tho orange in a most attractive and ? delicious cake. Scotch Pancakes.?Beat four eggs with four tahlespoonfula of sugar, if Have six tahlespoonfula of flour and f>' a pint of sweet milk, mix a little of the milk with tho flour until smooth, add this to the beaten eggs, then add bi a little salt and mix all together. Put a tablespoonful of hotter on a smooth o) griddlo and pour a tupful of tho well ? heaten batter on to the pan, cook until ! well browned, then spread with butter ? and orange marmalade, roll tt>, sprin kle with sugar, serve on a hot dish. L Chopped pineapple or other fruits U may he served on those cakes, even 'grated chocolate added just as they I are taken from the griddle, dusted L with sugar, Is a cake liked very much. T W. CALOMEL MAKES II ? CLEAN LIVER AND BOWK., J* ust Once! Try "Dodson's Liver Tone" WhyMBTc pated, Headachy?Don't Lose a Pali Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel back guaranto^^fljj^Mf?', ^ p le and cheerful; make youi work a will olean youi&jHHV'- -" easure; be vigorous and full of am- than a dose of tlou. But take no nasty, danger- It won't make is calomel, because It makes you Dodson'e Livt jto I^JKL^-ai ck and you may lose a day's work, medicine. YoulJW&KJQbdy Calomel Is mercury or quicksilver, lng, because yj^n_ hlch causes necrosis of the bones, lng fine, your alorael crashes Into sour bile like your headach^k^inH^I rnamlte, breaking It up. That's your stomach hen you feel that awful nausea and bowels regular 4 amplng. Dodson'e Lihe W Llston to me! If you want to enjoy vegetable, th?toRrini^ Aoh le nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cannot salivate/* '? S^8on' censing you ever experienced Just.dren. Mllllonfopl? ljR)ro. ike a spoonful M harmless Dodson's! Dodson's LlveilBSteJ w . Iver Tone. Your druggist or dealer i gerous calomel Tov " ' ills you a BO cent bottle of Dodson's will tell you tMkl* glovernIver Tone under my personal money-1 Is almost BtopJtwVr ' ,ie ' ' jif%- ?r the WIHTERSMTHs gt dllTonic rjl-. ^ jlmands, A Bad Example. I A Jo'j,* .* "Miss Jane Addams, during u tea Mother made a' ^ "e demobHull House, said: 'children by snwini<my, which "I disapprove of the new fashions kitchen table mO|V<*ible delay, icnuse they encourage vanity. so that the llttle'ting. "1 know n little girl whose mother Round the tabl*jite replacing is gone In for nil the new fashions painted green, ,'ablnet by a -sheath skirt, slit skirt, short skirt ledge of wood?r* no political id what not. v quite four Inchct ssary guar"That little girl's teacher said to ledge alike were >f the benjr reproachfully one day: white sand Wnsjg g?the allied "But, my dear, don't you want to ly over the tul ration of ow up so that everybody will look hugely enjoyed > to you?' the seaside,'br11_^ ^ polutlon "No, nin'nin," said the youngster, palls nnd maki 11 J\ elec'ddedly, "I wnnt to grow up so that ways on It. (> t j,y nie 'eryhody will look round at me.'" pretended t1, demob? i or n fiir !?.? '? - -- ^|J|W l|Y JIWVIUIUI /ONDERFUL HOW RESINOL j things ? J J , STOPS SKIN TORMENTS T The soothing, healing medication in tutu io, islnol ointment and reslnol soap aaWBHBnAk, >othes and cools tho Irritated skin, id usually stops itching at once. The nn|n|, slnol treatment speedily heals eczo- ; 4Mrr a, ringworm, and similar eruptions, lm id clears away dlstlguring pimples mo Fen when other treatments have been Pr|( Imost useless. j t -i/j., Reslnol Is not an experiment. It Is f?<,1,1 g doctor's prescription which proved J ??%,*& *% * !/ > wonderfully successful for skin A m.' %nal oubles that it has been used by other Woman ^ "WPactors all over the country for twen- \ ^ fh_-ud ' years. Every druggist sells reslnol For_ Intment and reslnol soap.?Adv. Adv. 1 T * Took the Gold Cure. ppw m f' The Spinster?It is said that love is romps jn fll- A V* disease. Do you believe It? * ? \ ^ The llnchelor?Well, I have no rea- ~ k \ \ >n to doubt It. A friend of mine once ok the gold euro for it. StrJ "^T? Tho Spinster?You don't say I m?J0 H wk J^LJrie The Ilachelor?Fact. He married n rl worth linlf n million in her own Jj^K - *W ght' sthmatic Sufferers Read This: (9 ... ... ^tj*L Mrs. Fannie Mayberry. Columbia, Tenn., i |J "J 1** C rites: "I have buffered for years with 'l causo in its early Stun ithma and was told by three doctors in il not allow tho organo ttf alumina that there was no cure for me. 1 chronic state. Aiewt&i would have died this past winter if I had 98 nn Til 1 -i it gotten Lung-Vita when I did. I cannot 1^ IjW |MA| HIrlDb iv too much for Lung Vita for it has 'I U Els IllrtWlJr ired me of asthma and throat trouble." I firm 111% oWe receive hundreds of letters like this kl I lyL D A Nil k W lling what Lung-Vita has done in cases 119 LlVbKl HI' : consumption and asthma. Send $1.75 II * '"C^ r a thirty-day treatment or ask us for I JR, irther particulars. Nashville Medicine Ak A , . o., Dept. K, Nashville, Tenn. Adv. kl _ " all of his Sl 7*? TeS*,?ve ^ ^st positive Reproof. |l to a healthy g that mJght "Does your hoy Josh have any idea It is a get jout running n farm?" kl jy ve?e^*hl "I should say so." replied Farmer M ^^arch far . orntossel. "He says I'm all wrong, fig SJ-uLPV'0 TO m spollin* the makln' o* a fine set of V| home tonic/ GRAfs,De ?if links Jos' fur the sake of a little kk Qel a irti an* lay an' such." gfi in convenient siz?&^"\'> and Keep In Your Stable. For external use on horses nothlna lat wo know of equals liauford's Hal- WIIQ TG Women a* v im. Many trainers use It as a leg TO jfbS ash because it keeps the skin In Qne * bladder troujfr >nditlon and should cure lameness. D L A M E dv. Root the great kidney remedyJwr gists In fifty-cent and dollar IP* The Fitting Sort. XTVo'.T.U "M.v glover told me today that he Address Dr. Kilmer St Co.. (Bn is twins " Jl*. Y- *nd enclose ten oantV*# <> i"?ns. paper- , "Most appropriate. A pair of klda." ; f* Important to Mothera I Examine carefully every bottle of ASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for 1 n if ants cb'ldren. see that ^ m ? * *0 bUWP i Use for Over 30 Years. . v hildren Cry for Fletcher's C / > ^qZh?The world moves, u v / /5 ? I ' j. . . , * ie grit to hnnic on. ^ J L 3 , . it of ninny n hsd^t b1ue\ h M ^ .rrou'r'mTTl s^E eclal, the ya>. / j 1 wages, steady CARRIZAL. For proud fh v i? g, ' :ng conditions am of Myrr* x)? ^ as ? ||r0R ? Stragglers ,r J I ? 5 " ^. lrr detachment . , "a'Y 11 \1 ? ?t Carrlzftl ?rv --~{L_ vVTenlfete' ' # 1 ^I ?hin^a headquar; agf&d on at a "T |lmore.?Abe???'u the fighting be*?B w voru provisions V hlf the Maryla bed attack on the , **' tu ask the so1,. MiB ,n camp at L inclusion of a parJ; _ f ^|11Cr naval kid I take the oath jxlcan commander. [($23 6\ pvllt the meas#, \lKce years re^f; transmitted their ltlrv-V? li I Jltik- .y.A I^al Funston. who 1m Iffis r J rrcd It to the War DoLANCASTER'S LEADING