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ee ee en ; ’ | Gceicad | HOUSEKEEPING IS DONE | IF YOU’VE FAILED | FREEZE THE SALADS. octal an | BY SCHEDULE HERE aa pales | | | By Sister Ma ne lt Doesn’t Mean That You Are | Chicken, fish, vegetable or fruit is | | delicious fiozen.- If a frozen fruit Personal 1 } | / Not Capable | | salad is served at a dinner — i |no other salad or _ dessert is E N i H By ‘Ruth Agnes Abeling | needed. Crisp, curly endive is an at- MPLOYES A D EY le youre abate youre dleappolntes. | ' tractive garnish, and a few slices of "FICIALS ON | ou diun’t quite think your chief | ; the fresh fruit or vegetable may be 1 ry OI | would do such a thing. i ; added when serving. t + | Elizabeth, the girl who has had a Tomato Bisuge Salad THEIR VACATION, ‘desk right ‘beside voure for the past | | One quart can tomatoes, 12 me- nt ale, | year and hasn’t worked as long as you | {dium sized onion, 3 sprigs parsley, A large number of officials and em- | nave, has been promoted. And you} 1-2 teaspoon celery alt 5 cloves, 4 ployes of the state capitol are now en-| ; haven't. | | teaspoons sugar, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-4 joying vacation trins to various points. | h de bi ae | Z 2. | You go home and cry about it: teaspoon pepper, 1 cup whipping Miss Freda Hultberg, of the supreme; {awhile and then you begin to take ; cream. 5 H i izabel it better me- | | twenty minutes. Rub through a fine for Judge Grace, left for Wisconsin on | | chanic than you. She made mistakes ; sieve. Season with salt and pepper her vacation and may not return to; ‘oceasionally and her speed on the j and add to cream which has been . Bismarck. Judge Bronson and family! | typewriter wasn't startling. ‘Her spel-| | | whipped stiff. Turn into a mold, 4 i‘ are in Grand Forks and Judge Chris- ! | ing was 1) better than yours. She | pack in ice and salt and freeze for 4 nausea wet visit sronner jand: Grand | hadn't been any more punctual than jfour hours. Serve on lettuce with ‘orks on his vacation.. J. H. Newton, ‘you have for since the beginning of : j mayonnaise. The salad should be clerk of court, is at Grand Forks at- } | your business life you had made it a} | frozen without turning. . -— tending a bar board meeting. point to be on time. | Heavenly Salad ‘Charles Gutman, of the tax com- , But there, right in the punctual- | | One-half pound marshmallows, 1-2 mulsstons and rae one oe | ity, he juurerenee between you and ! ; cup pineapple cubes, 1-2 cup English mobile trip to the Blac! Ss. iss | | Elizabeth lay. walnuts, 1 cup boiled salad dressing, Violet Thrams, of the tax commission | | Elizabeth bad not only been punc- H maraschino cherries. offices, is visiting Yellowstone Na- | | tual, she had been thoughtful. ‘Cut marshmallows in quarters. ‘ + tional Park. Miss Ruby Amundsen, of | | \S3he had rt only been a good ma- | Add to salad dressing. Add pine- fe the state highway commission, is at | jchine on which her employer could : apple cubes and nuts cut in small ’ Ryder and Miss Helen Gallagher, of | | depend for so many hours of the day | pieces. If the marshmallows are not the auditor’s office, is spending her i —she had been a human being. perfectly fresh let the mixture stand vacation at home. EE. E. Rimbach,! j Elizabeth's Success an hour before packing in ice and | state purchasing agent, and wife are! | ‘She had remembered his appoint- salt. Freeze four hours. Serve on visiting relatives in Vermont. Miss} ; ments. Where, in his hurried dic- curly endive and garnish with mara- Vivian Bobean, of the supply depart- j tation his English had lacked some- schino cherries. Serve with cheese ment, is at Fargo and Miss Edna! | thing of finish, Elizabeth supplied it. cups and black: coffee as the last Sehrt of the secretary's office, went to | ! She had an uncanny gift at discrim- | course of dinner. Williston and from there will.go to| | atlon ie erpaled her 7 omuloyer i i Frozen Prune Sates ‘ Yellowstone park. Mrs. W. J. Tofget, | | enough ‘y» know who to send into his ‘Two cream cheeses or 1-2 cup cot- © s of. tie obice wa eam tetoner of pane jprixate office and ie te keep out, | ' tage cheese, 12 prunes, 6 dates, 1 cup. and Miss Anna Tollefson, of the same} The Home Economics Department of| that it requires 23.5 minutes to get; he did not wantt to be bothered with. | oranges, curly endive. office, has left for a vacation in Mc-| the University of Kentucky has house-| breakfast; the same umount of time| She made taipolnt to ean ole [/-,iaah cheese (and 90d: -arocales, « 5 phone numbers which he called most ‘Beat to a smooth paste. Use large, Kendle See ane a keeping so systematically worked out] for cleani 9 minutes to get lunch-| orren and was exceedingly capable in i | choice prunes, wash and soak oven" iss Nora le, of the land office. that it moves by time table! eon; 26 minutes for cleaning; one] the wa: ‘1 P| { | : : ats a i . . m y of arranging Pullman pass- | night. Stone and fill cavities with is spending her vacation in Lisbon and) Miss Maybelle Cornell, hea of the| hour and thirty-two minutes to pre-! qe or aatting the theater seats which H ‘nuts, Stone dates. Add dates, nuts, ee Not WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1921 Fargo and Mrs, A.C. Drysdale is at Shoreham, Minnesota, with her hus- department, directs a practice house in which the girl students live and pare dinner and’ 37 minutes to clean. One hour and fifteen minutes is re- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | he wanted. { | 20 sseabeth had been promoted | lemon juice and prunes to first mix- band. Miss Minnie Wolfe, of the of-| keep house, facing practical prob-| quired to put the kitchen and veraQ-| ang moved into a nice little private ! oe crue. inte:e moe and) tee 10 LE Sets tee ot Sommlasionet. of erence, ae jlems. In this house they have found] das in order. office. Her thought had added dol- Auten Mamoldcaudi carver sections sede gu Plate. end: Mis re M. “Clark. GRR SEER R eR ng = | lars to her pay envelope. While you, | orange arranged on ! of endive. nad. returne 1 | VISITING HERE j although just as good a mechanic, MRS. C. J. GORF French dressing poured over each of the samé office, has returned from Superior, Wis. Miss Grace Frazier, of the Adjutant-General's office, is spend- ing her vacation in Fargo. On her trip she stopped in Jamestown to visit Mrs. | Helen Clemmons, who formerly was chief clerk in the Adjutant General's! office. Mrs. Edith Herbert, of the state library, is on vacation. i STREET DANCE OFF | TILL NEXT WEEK The street dance which was pro-} posed by the Elks for the benefit of | the swimming pool has been post-! poned until next week, it was an- nounced today. The postporizment was made because the Elm Grove management is giving half of its pro- ceeds to the baseball Tuesday, Wed- furnished home at 222 Second street and will remain at her home until October. Mrs. McLean and son, Les- ; Visit at the lake home of her brother, Dr, Strauss in Minnesota. ON EXTENDED ‘TRIP R. C. Rosen of Rosen’s New Cloth- ter, will leave the last of the month to; ing Store left for the Detroit Lakes where he will spend his Chicago on a buying trip. vacation, ‘From Detroit Mr. Rosen will go to LEAVES FOR JAMESTOWN left Mrs, Sarah West Ankenman Presbyterian at James- |she will attend the ; Synod which convenes town this week. this morning for Jamestown where | Mrs. A. M. Fisher of Ave, B. has as | her guests ;her aunt, Mrs. Woodbry | Libby, of Minneapolis who will spend the summer here and Miss Nell | Dooley of Aberdeen, Washington who | lived in Mandan formerly: RETURNS FROM VACATION Miss Irene Algeo returned yester- {day from Valley City where she has | been on a three weeks vacation. Miss | Algeo will go in training for a nurse { | at the St. Alexius Hospital the first of | | August. TO DRISCOLL Mrs. Olaf Quale of Driscoll who has been visiting here left for her home | j yesterday. Mrs. Quale’s mother Mrs. | {G, Anderson and daughter accompan- j ied her and will visit in Driscoll. | stay at the same old desk. { | NURSERY This fall when you begin heating | your nursery either by stove, steam or hot air, keep a receptacle of pure water in the room. This will put just enough moisture in the atmosphere to keep the sensitive nostrils of small children from being affected by the dryness. YOUR LI) Just because it is French to be short waisted and have a ripple at the hips —don’t forsake your long American lines if they are most unbecoming to you, and usually they are, for only the French can wear to advantage the short waist. 3 BY ALIC New York, July C. J. Gott, at 89, does all the work in her eight room apartment here, But only the early birds find her for before most folks are up, she has her work done and is off on a shop- ping expedition. I found her, after two unsuccessful attempts, at 7:30 A. M. She had been up for two hours. Mrs. Goff is the mother of Fred H. Goff, Cleveland banker, who has just been named by President Harding to untangle the railroad snarl. She lives alone—by choice. “Allmy boys want me to spend tie summers at their country places,” she says, “but 1 can’t stand the noise and confusion.” Yet— Mrs. Goff often packs up her trunks and sets off alone on a world tour. Japan, Africa, Europe—she knows them all. And a custom house full of pushing, shouting porters and exam: iners doesn’t bother her at all. Last fall she took an airplane trip over New York with a pilot from As- bury Park. She got all the thrills of 2,000 feet, dips and dives, And she said, when she landed: “It didn’t last long enough. coming back for more.” Here's the philosophy that, at 89, helps to make her look 65 and act still ten years younger: She doesn’t talk about her troubles —if she has any. She believes mean- ingless conversation, like meaningless acquaintances, dissipate one’s vitality. I'm salad just before serving adds piqu- ‘ancy to the dish. A dinner of fish, potato chips, radishes, iced tea and this salad served with plain brown bread sandwiches would be splendid for a hot mid-summer evening. INEW FANS The new fans are huge affairs—even larger than those of plumage which have been waving for the past year. And on these newer ones you find flowers, fruit and foliage. It is made of velvet and laid flat against the fan. “FOR LINING. The smart lining for tailluers is wear to become softer as the progresses. ‘, | va NEW Ti RETURNS TO WORK Neoset nesday and Thursd | sie Gaarnaneawee Hen Lae ie (Miss Susan Wermerskirschen has : 4 | Mr. $ HI tomobile ac- +LARGER CROWDS EACH DAY jor home of George F. Hoag on 11th.j recovered from thes, auromotile mS The interest in the Domestic: Sci-| yy. 4 : cldent she was in Sunday and has re ‘i _|Mr. and Mrs. Hoag expect to move to| turned to her work ‘in the ready to ence schoo) being held at the Ameri- | gpox Wash., in th fut ° i can Legion: hall is-inereasing every | Pokene, Wash. in the near future. | wear department of Lucas’. ‘ day and if good crowds are a sign of | VISITING HERE. i TO SPOKANE success the school ia certainly suc-| Migs Hazel Morse, who lives on the| George Juell of West Thayer street cessful. This afternoon the lesson in-| state game farm below Mandan is vis-| left this morning for Spokane, Wash- Ff See tie tides eee | iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs.| ington on a vacation trip. ( the making of mock mayonnaise and | eee Langley cap. Ae: SHOPPING HERE 4 ry fruit salad and dressing. Other les- ENTERTAIN FRIENDS ‘Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crouse and party ' sons are being taught besides the| Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Duemeland| of Steele were in the city shopping use of masole but a great many of ine entexiained a small company of | yesterday. recipes display the saving qualities,|friends at dinner and a theater party! TOPPING aa ON SHOPPING TRIP " ., both in time and expense, of Mazola. ilast evening. Mr. and (Mrs. Coleman Riddle of A fi RETURNS FROM REUNION i - ay HOSPITAL, it A Max spent yesterday shopping here. H W. E. Perry returned yesterday | ency Dickinson, little daughter 0! : from Clear Lake, lowa where he visit- | the superintendent of the Indian) FOUR COLORS ARE NEW - ed his parents. His brother Guy Per- school is confined to the Bismarck| ia iy a family’ ot Ailing aud als’ sit | Hospital with tonsillectomy. ‘What is a season without a few | » 1 er,, Mrs. F. McDonald of Innipeg | ) APAR new colors? % ? were also visiting home making it aj MOVE TO APARTMENTS “Thus we have them— forward ‘ family reunion. Clear Lake is the old|, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Pavlak who} ,, fashion authority and an- home of the Perrys and this is the ,ave been making their home at 801 ease in ole midst that sf four first time in eleven years the entire |Fourth street have moved to the Mur- newest and most popular colors of the fully mas pontted, Mare. WE Bee: [Pay apartments. present moment rosewood, chow, az on tole | RETURNS FROM VACATION tec and humming bird. where they w.ll visit her mother. Mrs. Esther ‘Bioclkanusiler has re-| With rosewood we're more or less ROOF GARDEN ATTRACTS turned from Fargo, here she spent: fern eet att in ” pianos, e “The heat wave affects not only Bis- {her vacation visiting her parents. Pgteerapireieets 5 ued P t t t th t t marek people. An increase. of visi oan tag Ee pi at ree Ul It to the Severest tes bore from gurrounding: towns to ihe Jack Langley, three-year-old son of} to the food your doughboy existede on e ae peal roof gar en stifie to | mr. and Mrs. L. H. Langley is recov-| in those mad days of memory. you can think of h of bane 0 ihe lia "bree f| ering from a severe illness. Artec—ah! There's something to i an tect le oe aed een | —- |conjure with! The name brings vis- , s the, mosquito-free roof garden. e TO MINNEAPOLIS. fons of bright shawls, beads and roof garden dances are given every night during the heated period to af- ford people a chance for pleasure and relief. RETURN FROM CONFERENCE Zella Harris, Rachel Mowry, Calvin Christoph, ‘Norma DeVol, Lucile Ne- bergall and Margaret Postlethwaite returned from Jamestown where they and Mrs. H. C. Postlethwaite remain- ed in Jamestown Presbyterian synod. MARRIED IN MINNEAPOLIS Mrs. Catherine Jager and Mr. Stev- to attend the | Mrs. F. H. Register left today for | Minneapolis, where she expects to be j Bone for about a week. | VISITING IN CITY Mrs. M. W. ‘McGahey, of Wilton, is | visiting at the home of her daughter, (Mrs. E. Charlebois. | HBRE ON BUSI) | NESS business. | Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Anderson, of ;Person Court, have returned from a ivisit in Minneapolis. | painted feathers in which we might array ourselves and bedeck the Sun- ! | day landscape. ; As for humming bird—the subtle- {fies of that are left to your imagina- tion. | COMANCHE chocolate, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 tea- spoonful vanilla. Second mixture—Two cups brown! sugar, 2 cups white sugar, 1 cup milk, 2 tablespoons butter, cup of chopped nuts. i Apple Pie—Lemon Pie, THURSDAY Mazola Pie Crust, i | ll Iixperts in Domestic Science will convince you about Mazola O domestic UR expert demonstrators will be at the American Legion Hall over . Re its: a p x The: Was is i . se ignded’ the Youte Peoples. Conlon |. States Attorney HiAc Hangin of ae nrements: Bits pieictre Ose Grand Opera Salad, the Rex Theatre all this week. Step in and let them prove to you ” ence of the Presbyterian church. Rev. | Bowbells was in the city today on|1 cup sirup, 1-2 cup milk, 2 squares | Orange Loaf. the remarkable facts about Mazola. You could not spend an hour more profitably. Women’s clubs, teachers organizations, and high school science classes especially invited. Bring pad and pencil and take notes during the lecture. For. v r For many years you have been hearing about the remarkable economy of Mazola—how it can be used for every cooking and salad purpose. Mote Boil first mixture until quite thick en Fisher left last night. for Minneap- | ——_—_ VISITS IN CITY | and pour on buttered tin. Then boil ‘lis where they will be married at a/ Catholic church. Mrs. Jager’s daugh-; John Buck, who taught schpol at : at Bernice Eee aes lnceabure: yesterday. done. Then pour it over the brown! | Mazola is richer and much more economical than butter in shortening for N. D. but they expect to live in Min- Cae RGR HOME mixture in the pans. H i cake, pie crust and pastry. For Mazola is a 100% pure vegetable fat, and r ‘ or Gee are te “ neapolis next year. LADIES AID The Ladies Aid of the First Luth- eran church will meet tomorrow af- ternoon at the home of. Mrs. Charles Swanson, seven miles south of Bismarck. Members and friends of the society are cordially invited to attend. RETURN FROM CONVENTION. H. A. Arnot and Robert Dutton re- turned yesterday from Minot where they attended the North Dakota Ab- Stractors convention. Mandan was se- lected s the meeting place for the covention next year. ce Aorta llar® each day with a large num- For oil, prefer Mazola, even to the highest priced imported olive oils—it is so Mrs. A. TO en daughter | ber of housewives, and besides Hempty Bread |, sweet und wholesome. Hazel left for St. Paul where they | they make such nice meals for a Prodi will visit Mrs. Lenhart's sister, Mrs. Charles Maitland. They will stop at the Detroit Lakes on their return trip. FROM HAZELTON. Joe Chalfin, daughters, Helen and Sablau, of Hazelton and Mrs. Rebecca Thornberg of Iowa, who is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Chalfin, of Hazelton, were in the city yesterday. MOVES TO NEW HOME. { Mrs. L. W. McLean’ has moved from | Medina last year, visited in Bismarck Mrs. R. H. Batchelder and baby left | today for their home at Zap. | feria iia ite eae: | BECOMING MORE POPULAR It is quite evident that you have ‘been in conversation with your friends and they too have discussed with you and stated |that it is more than a problem to |know what food to serve at each jmeal. We certainly agree with these problems for we notice that Dohn’s Home Made Sau- sages are “becoming more popu- change. | Love Finds a Way in Louise Glaum Picture | aes ae | “Love,” the J, Parker Read, Jr., / screen story, which comes to the Rex | theater today is under the auspices (of the Associated Producers. How it | is worked out is better told in the | picture than in unsympathetic type. her apartment on Main street to her} TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS second mixture adding nuts when TIGHT BODICE, The tight bodice—unornamented and uncorseted, is the mode of the moments} And below this is found, quite often, a circular skirt. JET PENDENTS Tulle, unadorned, except for a sin-| gle jet ornament, is the newest in gos- samer head wear—and vastly becom-; ing to the face with which time has; dealt gently. i ASK Your Grocer | |} BARKER BAKERY KODAK FINISHING Quality Work for the Amateur SLORBY STUDIO Successors to HOLMBOE. STUDIO than seven million American women have proved, over and over again, that contains absolutely no It is better than lard or ordinary cooking fats. —nor because it can be heated to a higher temperature without smoking or burning than other cooking fats that the surfaces of the food are crusted over, and the rich juices are kept in. or od Thi up flavors to another, This is why Mazola can be used over and cver—until the last drop is gone—even after frying fish or onions, Then you can use it for shortening the most delicate cake. Many Italian and French people, who know the taste of good salad CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY water—as do butter and lard. carries flavors or odors All you have to 17 Battery Place, New York Purchace a can of Mazola on trial. Your grocer refunds cost if not entirely satisfactory in every way. Mazola never takes from. one food do is to strain it.