The evening world. Newspaper, April 20, 1917, Page 21

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’ @' from the obesity die’ - Brening World Daily Magazine 4) By Friday, April 20, Maurice Ketten TMs series will be followed by ‘ interested, RONG combinations of food will produce many bodily disorders and | Atveases, and only by making strength, Most taken into the hu pain temporarily invariably exagge overcome It. many suffer is by which their contents a When the digestion is defective it the intestinal canal, and cannot pos -albly make healthy bone, blood or brain. Good, healthy bodies can only be _ made out of good, healthy material, and food that ferments and sours doe - allotted to it by nature, If you wish to bring the body to ergy, vitality and strength certain Jaws must be obeyed and followed out consistently, and if you do not do so pain will be nature's way of warning you that something is wrong with the delicate machinery of the human system. FATTENING FOODS—©. (.: Corn, 1} corn meal and honey must be omicied Puna fish and Tye bread are allowe: A JOT TOWELS WHEN REDDEN- (ANG THE HAIR WITH HENNA MRS. K.: 1t makes little difference { whether the towels are wet or dry. ‘The main thing is to keep the hair and paste hot. I know many persons who use them both ways. Henna does not Tub off on hands and linen, The von- tinued use does not make the hair . ~ . By Pauline Furlong Copyright, 1917, by the Pree Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World), Beginning next Monday, Miss Furlong will pose for The Eve ning World the Setting-Up Exercises of the United States Army. ~| wilt demonstrate approved “First Aid” methods. will present means of “preparedness” in which everybody should be to bring the system to the highest degree of phyiscal and mental | making a stufly of the cause of thelr various Ilinesees | and preventing rv Excessive int wrong combinations of food. @tomech prolapsus, and this naturally lessens the activity of forced onward, | ‘not properly digest within the time the highest degree of efficiency, en-| another, in which Miss Furlong These two sertes | | i} | @ study of proper foods can you hope | persona resort to drugs instead of ather than curing them, Most drugs man body do little more than kill the and, if taken regularly, will almost | rate the vondition and certainly never | estinal fermentation from which 80) generally caused by overeating and Overeating also causes e intestines, | naturally changes food into poisons in | yellow, as the length of time the paste | is left on always determines the shade |The addition of lemon juice to the paste makes the hair redder, and peroxide makes it more golden. MY OWN WEIGHT—Mrs, 8. B. F.: At this present time 1 weigh ex- |uctly one hundred and twenty seven pounds in @ shirt waist and plain tailored skirt. I am five feet four | inches tall without shoes... GRANULATED EYELIDS—N, C.: |Take care of the eyes und do not \strain them by reading, sewing or erwise using them in a dim light. boracic acid in an eye-cup as] often as convenient, | DRY DANORUFF—HARKY gE: | Brush the hair constantly ach day and night at least fifty strokes to| keep the scalp clean, This 1s more {important than shampoos and tonics, Massage, with @ little quid vaseline on the finger tips is also advised. | EATING BETWEEN MEALS— B. D.: Meals should not be eaten |within six or seven hours of each other, especially by those who are not | active during the day, Those who do | |hard physicial labor can eat more | often, of course. [ Women’s Education Once Condemned higher education of women, was founded by Matthew Vassar, a wealthy Poughkeepsie brewer, It was @ woman, however, who sug- gested the plan of the college to the jp aMambrovic brewer. Having ac- ¥ cumulated a fortune, and being with- out children, Matthew Vassar de- elded to devote the greater part of his Wealth to the establishment of gome public institution, It was at the muggesion of his niece, Miss Booth, a successful teacher of girls, that he was induced to found a col- lege for young women, for wilch he Novel Recipes for | Cooking Fish Fish Forcemeat. HREE cupfuls pounded raw haddock or fresh cod, one-half teaspoonful salt, two table two tablespocns cornstarch, one- eighth tablespoon pepper, liked less highly seasoned. To prepare fish, scrape the white, raw flesh from the bones and skin. About a pound and three-quarters ‘will be needed, put the flesh through the food-chopper, then into a bo and rub with a potato masher till it ts thoroughly broken up and very smooth, Add the other ingredients in the order given, transfer into a well- buttered mold or pan and bake for chirty nutes, Serve it sired sauce. When cold, it may be aliced, dipped in flour, and fried as io Is, or it may be cut int eubes, combined with diced lobster, with white sauce; or it may be combined with cubes of roast and heated in brown gravy, or With bits of cooked cauliflower and celeriac. Norse Haddock Pudding. Cook the fish a little underdone In water with # tablespoonful of yine- ar and salt and black poppers, and then drain and pound until the fiber fs broken. Now season with butter, ¢ream and fish stock, until it is of the oonsistency of thin cake butter, Pour into creased ids and for two hours a half, with (rawn butter uce. Norse Cod. Prepare cod as for frying. Dot the ttom of the casserole with bits of utter, then place in it a lay fieh. Dust lightly with flour, sal and pepper. Dot with butter and re peat. When the fish Is all used pour Over It a half cupful of water or fish stock, a third of a cuptul of orange fJuice and the juice of haif a lemon, Add parsiey ‘and onion, Fit the over tightly and bake unul tender, Newfoundland Herring. Wash he’ gf in cold water wipe dry.. Rub all over with off and broil ov a quick Spread with butter and squeeze @ little lemon juice Breakfast Herring. A tasty breakfast dish is to take a dozen herring, filet and wash, and then roll tham, Place a small piece of butter or drippings on each, with per and a touch of vinegar, Bake fiowly for half an hour, Cod Roe Swedoise. Blice the roe and fry a rich brown in butter, On each slice ts laid a ef lemon and a small butten mixed with chopped parsley, with slices of tomato and AR COLLEGE, the pioneer American institution for the! spoonfuls melted butter, one-half cup! rich milk or cream, few grains nut-| or less {f) with do-| | ave $408,000 in 1861, and other sums aggregating as much more before his death and by bequests, When Vas- sar was opened the institution was denounced by many women and | humerous clergymen, who proved to their own satisfaction that a college for women was an insult to God! One prominent woman sald: “Of one thing we may be sure—no_ refined Christian mother will ever send her daughters to Vassar College! ‘The | mere fact that it Is called a ‘college | for women’ is enough to condemn it FIRST EH LOVE AT — MARRIAGE LICENSES SIGHT ? |the up Original Designs for The Home Dressmaker Advice in the Selection of Materials and Styles for All Types Furnished by The Evening Worid’s Expert. By Mildred Lodewick Copyright, 1917, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Drening World), , Description. N terms that are unmistakable does the mode for tall- ored and aports clothes make sports hats the most pop- ular of the season. They have made their appearance In every known color and tn every imaginable ma- terial, but as for shapes, the mush- room takes the lead, Most of them follow the very good recipe, ‘small hats, high crowns,” but when not allowed to attain their full height they branch out on ali sides into exceedingly broad trimmed af- faire. Everything within reach seems to be possible for use in constructing these sport hats, Satin, ribbon, coarse linen, crepe, cretonne, bro- muslin, organ- cade, dy, coarse straw, atlk are in Fow evi- hats 4 with one ma ad the contrast of two or three different fab- rles in the building of one hat achieves a trimming quality which makes further adornment unneces- sary. However, on many hats where plain fab- rics are used, Mowers ¢ or odd conventional shapes can * applied by hand stitching of yarn oF silken floss. The effect ts sometimes amaging, but none the less charming, Leather, velvet, felt, vividly colored beads or soft toned chenille are in- teresting mediums of expression, I am showing to-day ideas which may be copied at home by any wom an Who t# handy with the needle, At or left a buckram shape ts covered with rose Mnen over the crown, to which {# attached purple Georgette crepe by means of blanket braid dence. neom THREE PRETTY HATS THAT ARE EASY TO MAKE, eee This stitch is repeated around the edge of the tiny brim and clusters of varl-colored flowers cut from linen or cretonne are pasted around the crown, A facing of rose linen com- pletes this bat, whose meagre ex- pense Is out of all comparison to ite harm, At the right another mushroom hape of straw is elaborated by the application of different fabrics over jthe upper surface, Black satin would be pretty for the top of @ green straw hat, with dull blue Georgette crepe or batiste attached below the black stitch done with rose-colored Yat satin Aq banding of colored linen. or THE MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY By came of tt, without ever even hearing of the yearn drift on, Nolan belug keyt a prisoner op epemanaapannneneanenenad BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE EVERY TWO WEEKS, THE $ suvdosrd. PRESENT STORY WILL BE iCakiicwe, pelo CAL IOEU E Lh OR bin, poor fellow, he re- pented of his folly, and then, like a man, submitted to the fate he had asked for. He never intentionally added to tho difficulty or delicacy of the charge of those who had him tn hold, Accidents would happen; but they never happened from his fault. Lieut. Truxton told me, that when Texas was annexed, there was @ care- ful discussion among the officers, whesher they should get hold of Nolan's handsome set of maps, and cut Texas out of it—from the map of the world and the map of Mexic The United States had been cut out when the atlas was bought for him SYNOPSIS 01 v Army of | the acheme of Aaron Burr to He |a ted by court-martial after Burr's yours of the last century, to defend binwelf, oF at least | to swear allewane, be cree in a Mt of rage: | Demo the United Staten! 1 weigh T may never | hear of the Uni ‘Mates again!’ Tmmeasurably ocked, bis supertor offices mire fo Fineliy bis Colegel retumea and enuounces: “Prisoner, hea rtbe sentence of 1 Court decides, aubfect to the thet you never hear the ted States again t!* wart a wari at New Orleans and carried on amiise, No mention of PRECEDING INSTALMENTS, he Western volved im Nolan, 4 young officer in le United States, becomes re out an em: pire, failure in the When called vi nome in eter inade in hin prwence, camming out But it was voted, rightly enough, that ence which he virtually probounced > ould be D reve | When ee warty uromoused wan to do this would be virtually to reveal to him Marry what had happened. or, as Cole said, to make him think ain, Nohan ound fs transferred, 4 foreign station | ho war of 1812 the ship on which Nolan Old Burr had succeeded, So it was toner met and fought « British from no fault of Nolan's that a great When the captain of @ gua crww , la killed, Nolan takes command and hele de. bOtch happened at my own table |fout the Britis ort, Fie this be was men. When, for a short time, I was in com- ened in dewatches "botne, but hothing ever mand of the George Washington cor- England to Raise Crops By Artificial Sunshine | t national effort | mans’ U boat England is aid growing artifielal sunshine, It is a that the overhead ctricity may exert the Farm we shall experiment with to defe acres of cereal and other | campalg pting to ns of t th 40 or at-|feld crop The scientific world 1s much Inter- which may crops by ested in this experiment, yield invaluable results. ifle theory dise samo influence upon a planted field |)j ey as the rays of the sun—in otner/{} Chinese Hens words, create life, | Help Feed U. S. | importations from China The expe ents with electrical dis charge as affecting agriculture are “ bein supervised ») *ro! v i aU a by Prot, Vs ou O have kept down the price of Blackman, professor of plant physt-| pe ology and pathology at South | AEE. Tet may ADPARE 10 be: 8 sence rat ped arap | peculiar statement, and some persons ine i Anes sd ant baa nish doubtless Will be surprised to hear egg eareh work, which | 1 ricog spoken of ag “down.” But here bo carried out at Huntington 6 Court Farm, near Hereford |ar He Fadia , i | Chinese egxs by the million dozen Prof. Blackman is quoted as sayin®| are being shipped into the United that the purpose of the experiments | states, and sold at prices close to the “is to carry to @ larger scale the suc-| figure paid for our cold storage eggs. | | | Ken cessful work which has been done} in China they sell at the rate of nine during the last years netr Dum-| for @ cent, frics, where in 1916 an increase of] ‘They come to usin a preserved state, | about 50 per cent. in grain and §5 Per lthe whites and yolks separated, and are | cent, in straw was obtained on oats! chtefly used by bakers. One plant tn a8 @ result of overhead electrical| ghanghal handles 100,000 eggs por day. discharge This was on a smal! scale | ota exportations to the United States one acre only, At Muntington last year amounted to 7,800,000 pounds. He 1 transferred from ship to ship vette, on the South American station, 8. So the We were lying In the La Plat and some of the officers, who had been on shore, and had just joined again, were entertaining us with accounts of their misadventures in riding the half-wild horses of Buenos Ayres, Nolan was at table, and was in an unusally bright and talkative mood, Some story of a tumble reminded him of an adventure of his own, when he was catching wild horses in Texas with his adventurous cousin, at a time when he must have been quite a boy He told the story with a good deal of spirit-so mnch #0, that the silence which often follows @ good story hung over the table for an instant: to be broken by Nolan himself, For he asked perfectly unconsciously: “Pray, what has become of Texas? After the Mexicans got thelr inde- pendence, I thought that province of Texas would come forward ver It is really one of the finest r on earth; it is the Italy of this conti nent. But I have not seen or heard a word of Texas for near twenty years.’ There were two Texan officers at the table. ‘The reason he had never heard of Texas was that Texas and her affairs had been painfully cut out of his newspapers since Austin began his settlements; so that while he read of Honduras and Tamaulipas, and, till quite lately of California—this vir gin province, in which his brother had travelled so far, and I belleve had died, had ceased to be to him. Waters and Williams, the two Texas men, looked grimly at each other and tried not to laugh. Edward Morris had his attention attracted by the third Unk in the chain of the Cap- tain's chandelier, Watrous was seized with a convulsion of sneezing, Nolan himself saw that something was to pay, he did not know what. And I, 4s master of the feast, had to say Texas is out of the map, Mr. Nolan, Have you seen Capt, Back's curtous account of Sir Thomas Roe's Welcome?” After that cruise I never w Nolan again. I wrote to him at least twice @ year for in that voyage wa became even confidentially intimate; but he never wrote me, The otnw men tell me that in those fifteen years he aged very fast, as well he might indeed, but that he was still the same gentle, uncomplaining, silent sufferer that he ever was, bearing as best he could his self-appointed pun- ishment—rather jess social, perhaps, with new men whom he did not know, but more anxious, apparently, than ever to serve and befriend and teach the boys, some of whom fairly seemed to Worship him. And now It seems the dear old fellow ts dead. He has fcund a home at last, apd @ country, S INCE writing this, and while considering whether or no 1 would print It, I have re- celved from Danforth, who ison board the Levant, @ letter which gives an account of plan's last hours, It removes all my doubts about telling this story, To understand the first words of the letter, the non-professional reader should remember that after 1817, the position of every officer who had Nolan tn charge was one of the great- est delicacy Th Government had fayed to renew the order of 1807 re- garding him, What was a man to do? Should he let him go? What, then, if he were called to account by the department for violating the order of 1s07? Should he keop him? What, then, if Nolan should be liberated some day, and should bring an action for false imprisonment or Kidnapping | housewives to go on year after year | most n against every man who had had him in charge? I urged and pressed this upon Southard, and I have reason to think that other officers did the same thing. But the Secretary always said, as they #0 often do at Washington, that there were no ap 1 orders to give, and that we must act on our own judgment, ‘That means: “If you succeed, you will be sustained; if you fall you will be disavowed.” Well, as Danforth say all is over now, | though 1 do not know but 1 expose elf to @ criminal the evidence of the am making. Here is the letter “Levant, 20° 2' 8. @ 130° W. “Dear Fred—I try to find heart and Hife to tell you that it ds all over with dear old Nolan. I have been with him on this voyage more than I ever prosecution on ry revelation I was, and I can understand wholly now the way in which you used to speak of the dear old fellow. 1 could seo that he was not strong, but I had no idea the end was #0 r ‘The | A Big, Vital Story of | eee! The Patrol of the Sun Dance Trail Begins on This Page April 23 Life in the Northwest Edward Everett Hale ribbon elther stamped or ombrpiigyet would make a decorative “amd to | conceal joining of the bly+Zand dull biue, while on the eqn.“ the brin a fancy edged ribbon or an uneven doctor had been watehing him very carefully, and yesterday morning came to me and told me shat Nolan was not so weil, and had not left his stateroom~a thing I never remem- ber before. He had let the doctor come and see him as he lay there~the first time the doctor had been in the stateroom-and he sald he should like to see me. "O, dear! Do you member the mysteries we boys used to invent about his room. in the old Intrepld days? Well, I went in, and there, to be sure, the poor fellow lay in his berth, siniling pleasantly as he gave me his hand, but looking very frail, I could not help a glance round, which showed me what @ Hittle shrine be had made of the box he was lying in, The Stars and Stripes were triced up above and around a picture of Wash- | Use Less Butter | By Andre Dupont. HEMISTS have discovered that almost all fucs, whether antmal embr titeh could hold the blue fabric green straw, The centre figure shows a broad+ brimmed shiny straw hat, made Sportive by means of colored felt ap- plied In points around its upper Orim, Faille ribbon forms a decorative bow and said with a sad smile, ‘Here, you! at the front. ’ see. L have a country!’ And then be| ‘The omnipresent scart of the pres- pointed to the foot of his bed, where/ent season will find its way into tie 1 had not seen before a great map of! suru mode by such means as | the United States, as he had drawn It! have pictured in the centre figure. { hb memory, and which he bad there| A length of elegant plain colored rib tu look upon as he lay. Quaint, queer | pon i Ralsned, A roms the on aya or Row c ington, and be had painted a majestic eagle, with lightnings blazing from his beak and his foot just clasping the whole globe, which bis wings over- shadowed, he dear old boy saw my glance, : A stripes, old names were on it, in large letters! are either contained In one width of Indiana Territory,’ ‘Mississippi Ter-| wide ribbon or are of several narrow ritory,’ and ‘Louisiana Territory,’ as| ribbons sewn onto the foundation 1 suppose our fathers learned such| scarf, The effect Is original, and things; but the old fellow had patched | We" Worn with the plainest of frocks eens eens ‘he had’ carried’ iia] such a scart would achieve distine- Weatern boundary all the way to the| ton for the w re Pacific, but on that shore he had de. bitrate fined nothing i (To Be Concluded.) Answers to Queries — a I have five yards ; and More Fat | of navy blue satin fat can be used for ll sorts of cakes that rations of cott Fanhio and want to make a4 dress of same. Am 4 feet 9 Inches weil. Chicken making nearly 1 for butler rt or pe Iwo bi and have -a good for this purpose and can satisi \ or vegetable in origin, have the) iy take the of lard in making sd bee. My jsame food value, and if this ts|piex and fine pastry, Lam not men- hair is dark and |true, and science seems to have Honing the of olive oil in cooking, eyes brown, I find |proved It, Is It not rather stupid for|Mectuse though it has 4 high foo I look best in plagn, value and Is very easily digested and purishing, it 1s proportionately straight lines, jin the face of si! lily advancing | more expensive than butter oe i MISS M, Z. 8. prices using butter, the most expen-| For table use gravy, which shoul rea sive fat of them all, in the lavish way jalways accompany every meat dish, White Georgette their grandmotherg dt can take the place of butter on ail vest and cuffs. | In any household w there is|foods except bread A few slices of| Red, steel and blue the slightest regard for thrift, butter |salt pork cooked with fish not only embroidery should be confined solely for use on| greatly Improve the taste, but | the table except in the cure of cer. [Iiclous served with each porth | sie tain delicate dishes that are served |render the use of butter unnecessi | : once in a while as a great treat, or [In all European countries. people with oe Mire. G. GN in cooking It should be a east nixed |amall ine en eat beef drippings This design, using |with cheaper fats so eas wil (that beef suet that has been meltod| black satin saab. be used. and clarified) on their bread oecasion- - A mixture of carefully rendered ally or habitually to cut down thelr | Fashion Editor, Evening Work | (that 1s melted and claritic t | food bills | Lhave one and a | suet and lard can be used f ‘ rt Not @ particle of bacon fat, han quarter yards of ening in most recipes almost as sat- | sausage fat or salt pork should chiffon (peacock istactorily as table butter, Or beet) be wasted, For inastan after bacon| blue flowered in | brisket fat, which is softer than suet |has been fried the liquid fat should| rose) like sample Jif rendered, can be used in making |be poured at once into an old cup to| and would 1 to (gingerbread, spice and things | cool and the sane way with salt pork,| develop a dress, jlike that where the hides |fat ham Bausaxe, but these fats) using same, Your tho taste of the fat, Chopped, unren- | should not be mixe kept separate! advice in the mat dered suet can be used fe }so that their individual favors willnot) ter wi be grate suet puddings, while fin be spotled, They can be used for frying | fully ved, 1 pork fat is sometim potatoes, fish, croquettes, or meat cake) have joyed your where there is spice, Instead of us and dishes of this t that im-)| fashion talks and ing butter with vegetables, many |proved by such flavors, but after admire your taste, people cook a small piece of salt pork, | has once becn fried inany fat it can| 1 am twenty-nine acon or fat ham with them, because | nev be used again except to fry! years of age, look they enjoy the flavor this imparts,| more fish. younger; have | If you do not ike this; never add| You can cut down your butter bills} black hair, hazel butter to the vegetables while they|yery largely by substituting other! eyes, fair coloring, are cooking, for much of It ts lost in| fats for its use both on the table and Am 6 feet 4 lnches jthe water in which they are boiled n cooking and by being car of tall, | Drain them, put them in the serving | the quantity that you use. al MISS RQ, H, dish and then stir in @ small eof j low any membe of the fan y to take Match the blue butter, You can use half the amount} more at a time than he or she can, In satin for a skirt, In this way with better results, eanily eat, ao that the left overs will) use your ohiffon Cheese ts cheaper than butter, so] be small. The little that remains on for blouse part, when making such dishes as Brown|the butter plate should never be trimming same Betty, or even bread pudding, it can | wasted, but should be used tn cooking With blue beads, This would make a* |be used ag shortening Instead of but- modish deml-evening or afternoon |ter and give @ delicious favor as or ROMA give a butter taste to cheaper jts. ‘gown, a © eT SS ee

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