The evening world. Newspaper, May 22, 1917, Page 10

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et ER Ee RE ee i ee shooting, arrest May 22.--Stroll- Falls Park last jan Riley, @ iteen-year-old girl, was abot thrvetes breast by a Fourth Regt- ment sentry when she and her escort to gbey the sentry’s order to The bullet passed through the girl’s body and sho died an hour later at the Franklin Square Hospital. Ernest G, Funk, a private, did the RENO, Nev, Covb Johnson, on grounds of desertion, and Bowels ment ONE PILL OR MORE EACH NIGHT halt. Make You fit’All the Time a ee Bhent ithe fainted and was unable t court room for fifteen minutes, She ig known on the Mine. Cobina.. Her husband, to be near children, and children of both by f WEEK Final Cut in Prices! Remaining Stock of Men's, Women’s, Children’s RAINCOAT Now Being Closed Out. After a Quarter Century We Are RETIRING from RETAIL ; WOMEN’S $12, $13.50, $15 values; pon ot ag aad beac dl 10| Plaids, Checks and Novelty Mix- Waterproof... det % 3: tures; all colors. .... seavegerkye ey MEN’S $10, $12.50, $13.50 values; Recta ta an her par ber Ne " | i rized Sil ‘oats, plaids an ee eee. §:25 slat effects, large variety styles.... (WOMEN’S Very High Grade Silk Rubberized Raiticoats, in assortment of up-to-minute styles, fabrics, colors. The best that can be produced. Some very expensive Coats included in this 10-25 lot. Allat..... vecte ese REGEN BOYS’ $3.50 to $5 black Rubber 2 25|_. Coats and Double Tex. Bombazines. . *““|GIRLS’ $3.50 to $5 values; Combina- tion Hat and Coat; all colors; belted Pn, Ue eae enrn wee Gabardines, Rainprooi and Novelty Rubberized Coats........- MEN'S $20, $22.50, $27.50 values: Cravenet imported materials and 8-25 newest style Raincoats. This lot in- cludes many of our finest products WOMEN’S $5, $6, $7.50 values; Poplins, Cantons in various colors and styles. WOMEN’S $9, $10, $12.50 values; in 4.25 Cashmeres, Tweeds and Mixture effects, | a A patrolman was about to k when other members of tho militia unit intervened. Funk was taken in charge by them and placed in @ guardhouse to await court martial, ——e ee «| OWEN JOHNSON DIVORCED. May 22.—Mre, Esther wife of Owen Johnson, novelist, has obtained @ divorce hi ter decree had been granted Mra. Johnson 0 leave the ratic stage as said, left her because he could not stand ji th were THE EVENING WORLD, TUESD AY, MAY 22, 1917, The Evening QUESTION AND pear every Saturday. I want to answer again, as promi- nently as possible, all those who con- tinue to write in, saying that they have read “somewhere” that seed po- tatoes and other seed would be given free to those applying for it. The Evening World has absolutely no seeds of any kind for distribution, and I do not know of any source! B from which they can be procured free, as the supply for the free dis- tribution by the Congressmen has, I believe, been used up long since. A GARDEN IN SAND AND ASHES: —MRS. H. R., Rockaway Beach, Long Island: “I have a piece of ground Practically all sand with which a great deal coal ashes has been mixed. Do you think that this is any good ‘for planting? Please tell me what to jad yith it lo get it ready for garden- oome of the best vegetable growing in the country is done in sections where the soil js almost pure sand. The coal ashew will not hurt, espe- if they have been sifted. Of course, all clinkers and cinders should be raked off after the ground has been spaded up. On soil of this kind use all the manure possible, also @ generous amount of fertilizer, but the latter should be put on always on the surface and preferably just before planting or even between the rows while the plants are growing. The most important factor in suc- ceeding with this sort of soll is hav- ing plenty of water, either naturally, not more than @ foot or so below t surface, or available for the applic: tion with a hose or watering can dur- ing dry weather. GROUND THAT PACKS OVER SPROUTING SEED—wW. K., Her- kimer Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.: up. over the seed. has been the trouble? I have an- Is there anything that 1 can add te help it besides ashes sweepings? and off and I had no fruit. trouble?” year. early planted seeds. soil germination can be made A Little Supper illustrating the many uses of MAZOLA the new and better oil for deep frying.sauteing.short- ening and salad dressings ERE is a suggestion for one of those little home suppers that the New York hostess prepares so exquisitely: and everyone Ainds so enjoyable. The dishes are all especially chosen because they give an ex- cellent idea of the delicate flavor of foods prepared with Mazola. . This question of cooking mediums, shortening and salad oils, is owing more and more troublesome— what with the high prices of ard, butter and olive oil, and a woman’s instinctive feeling that the only fats really suitable to eat are those from edible sources. Mazolais a pure oil pressed from Indian Corn. America leads the world in the production of corn—and Mazola, pressed from the heart of corn, is a cooking medium as pure, sweet and wholesome as the most delicate food cooked in it. And for salad dressings, a trial of Mazolain Mayonnaise, Russian or French dressing will show you that here at last is an oil that takes rank with any salad oil you ever used—and at a ‘fraction of the cost. Another thing, Mazola comes to cooking heat long before it smokes. Test it with a bit of bread as you do other fats, and you need never have the smoke or smell of burning fat in your apartment again. Every woman should try these five recipes. Mazola can be had from any rep- resentative grocer or delicatessen dealer—pint and quart cans and 15-cent bottles. You will find Mazola economical—since it keeps perfectly under all conditions, does not burn, smoke or absorb odors, and may be used over and over again, The Mazola Book of Recipes is remark- ably complete and worth while. The dealer who sells you Mazola will give you a copy —or write us direct. Corn Products Refining Co. New York = 3 ef Litt Gis, fie ’ 4 Veal Cutlet 2 pounds veal cutlet 1 teaspoon salt 4% cup Mazols 14 teaspoon pepper 14 cup flour i tablespoon finely 2 ‘cups milk chopped parsley Dust the cutlet with salt and pepper and rollin flour. Put half the Mazola into hot iron pan; add the cutlet and sear on both si very quickly, Add a little more Mazola if needed; cover pan and simmer on back of stove for 30 minutes, Turn once or twice, adding a little water, When tender add milk ; remove cover and let it simmer 10 minutes. Sweet Potatoes Glacé Select medium large potatoes, uniform in sire. Parboil, allow to cool, and then peel, Cut diagonally into quarter-inch slices, Have the sauté pan ready with just enough Mazola (very hot) to cover the bottom, Cook quickly on bath sides, Sprinkle with raaeoied sugary coverthe pan and put in the oven to glacé. French Dressing 3% teaspoonful salt Dash Paprika Veteaspoon white pepper 3 tablespoons Mazola 1 tablespoon vinegar Mix the seasonings and stir into the oil. Add the vinegar and stir vigorously till the mixture thickens slightly Bran Gems 1 cup bran M4 cup molasses 1% cups flour % teaspoon soda 1 cup sour milk '% teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons Marola Mix dry ingredients; add milk and Mazola; stir well and bake in hot oven in tins well greased with Mazola. If sweet milk is used substitute 2 heaping teaspoons of baking powder for the soda Pineapple Fritters 14 teaspoon salt T tablespoon Mazola 1 tablespoon sugar 8thin slices pineapple 1 cup flour 4X cup milk Deggs 1 rounded tea- spoon baking powder Sift dry ingredients into bowl; add milk, well beaten eggs and Mazola, Wash, pare, and slice pineapple thin and remove the center. Dip in batter; remove with fork and fry in deep hot Mazola, Drain on paper and dust with sugar.—Try this Recipe with canned sliced pincapple > N Oo > the several vegetables that I planted last month only radishes have come My ground is largely clay, and| though I have added sand, ashes and| straw over them, manure, still a hard crust has formed | Do you think that this other plot of clay soil to spade up.| surface street/down and the sprouting vines Last year my tomato| i‘ Ny Si up Planta bloomed, but my flowers fell What was the This correspondent has experienced the same trouble as many others this It has been a bad season for In very heavy more certain by covering the drills or fur- rows in which the seed are planted World’s Conducted by This “Question and Answer Column” hereafter will be pud- lished in The Evening World Saturdays, instead of Tuesdays, in F. F. Rockwell, Consulting Agriculturist. | | conjunction with Mr, Rockwell's articles on gardening which ap- | with sand or soll with which about half again as much humus or sifted ashes han been added, ax this willnot “ouke” ao readily. Baking very light- ly over the surfage, after the seed has been planted, to prevent the forma- | tion of @ crust will also help, PROTECTION AGAINST POTATO UGS—C, C. L., Brooklyn, N. Y.: “What is the best remedy to combat | the ‘potato bug’ beetle that destroys | our crops each year?" | In next Saturday's article the whole questions of insects and insect reme- dies will be takén up in detail, The “cure” for potato bugs most widely used in arsenate of lead, which may be applied either in the dry powder or in @ solution in water, Put it on small patches. Keeping the bugs de- stroyed as they appear will go far toward keeping them under control, PROTECTION AGAINST BIRDS— D. C, C,, City Island, N. ¥.: “I have planted my first garden this following the suggestions you put in The Evening World. My peas are now two inches high and are look. | ing well, except that at one end of the rows the peas have been nipped by the birds, What can I do to stop this trouble?” Ten or fifteen cents’ worth of cheap black cotton twine stretched in a network over the part of the garden which the birds bother will protect the plants without destroying the birds, which are a great help to the gardener in his fight against bugs and Insects, Pieces of shingle or packing box will serve as supports for the twine. This will not be needed after the plants get a little larger, POTATOES UNDER STRAW AGAIN—F. R. G., Highbridge, N. ¥., wants to know how potato vines can be watched and protected if there is @ mulch of twelve inches or so of As explained in a previous article on growing potatoes by this method, the seed pieces are placed on the and the mulch .put over »|them; the mulch gradually settles up through it. The vines are all up above the surface—only the surface is formed by the mulch instead of by the soil as when they are planted in the ordinary way. . « WATERING SEEDS AFTER THEY ARE PLANTED—The above corres-| pondent also asks if seeds should in- variably be watered after being planted; where the plant forcers can be obtained, and why root crops such as radishes, beets and carrots in ‘her garden develop only tops without much root. To take the questions in order, usually it 1s not necessary to water Be at all after Planting, particu- larly at this time of the year, If they are to be watered, the proper way is to water the soll in the bot- tom of the trench, filling the latter full and letting the water soak away before planting the seeds. Watering on the surface will do little good unless one has a regular irrigating |system. As a general thing it is. better and a simpler thing to soak |the seed for a day or two before planting than to water the soil to jget quick germination, The forcers mentioned can be | most seed houses, |are several makes, One |simplest is that described, The un- {satisfactory root growth is probably | due to two causes—cither the soil on | which manure or fertilizer very rich in -nitrogen has been used or grow. ing the plants in too shady a posi. ; tion, mproper thinnin; would s possibly be the troubles “ould also plant bought There of the through GETTING RID OF wor McC. L, N. Y.: “There are Mgany many worms in my garden, T would lke to know how to get rid of them without spoiling the vegetables.’ If the ordinary earth or angle worma are the ones referred to, it is not probable that there are enough of thei to do any Injury. Frequently a great many of them will come up to the surface after rainy weather, but they disappear again and cause no trouble In fact, trey help heavy sol! to some extent by opening it up and making alr passages. A preparation called “Vermine,” which can be bovght at raost seed houses, is effective for mary underground insects, STARTING POTATOFRS PLANTING—H. G. H. Boots “TL have bought old potatoes for‘plani. ing. Is this correct? Is it advisable to let the whole potato stand until tt sprouts, or must the seed be put into the soll right away?” Old potatoes are good for planting If you want them te sprout, place them on the soll, spread out so that they are only one layer deep in the full sunshine, At this state, how ever, It would probably he best to plant at once if you can do #0. Me- | dium sized potatoes you can cut fata | two or three or four pleces—tne very small ones can be put in w! 51-6 DOWN 5-69 WEEKLY Will Dring to Your Home This $50 CORTOFONE Talking Machine and $9.00 Worth of Double Faced Records (24 Belections) $59 tat 84-00 Special at Made in Muhogany and Golden Oak COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS $1.00 Down—$1.00 Weekly Cort Sales Co., Inc. 330 SIXTH AVENUE NEAR 20TH STRERT, NEW YORK, ECZEMA ACTRESS WHO TAKES LEADING ROLE IN BIG ; MOVIE PRODUCTION ®«t Mes. Motter Won't Die Yet,| will soon be time to speak of a beautifull Home Garden League. ~ AAA RAR ARAL ARAL 4" ANSWER COLUMN Ae WROTE A SUICIDE NOTE. Hospital Doctors Say. and charming young woman as a potate, Mrs. Helen Moller, thirty, of No, 312 ,__ ee? Manhattan Avenue, Manhattan, was taken early to-day to Kniekerbocker Hospital, a prisoner, charged with at- tempted suicide. Her husband, Max Moller, a moving picture operator, came home and found Mra, Moller groaning on the bed, Be- side her was @ note reading: “Dear Pop: We are gone, never to bothér you any more. I have suffered enough. Please bury us in the Lutheran Coeme- tery. Lovingly, Mom.” Mra, Moller told hér tusband she had taken bichloride of mercury and had also given some to thelr four-year-ol! “eon Alfred, but Dr; Mills found the boy | [i had not been given any. Mra. Molle: will recover, . @ chauffeur, living with arrested early to-d sey and Ward as bury Inst Saturday. According to the police, surprised in his home. pecting him. ear, No. 66 Melrose Avenue, Brooklyn, was by Detectives Hu: spect in connection with the killing of Albert Starle at Dan- Starle ap- parently was shot by @ burgiar he had Maloney denies having been in Connecticut and the po- lice do not give their reason for sus- HEALED BY CUTICURA Itched So Could Not Sleep, Hand Inflamed. Could Not Do Any Work. “I noticed an eruption on the back of my left hand, and I let it go a few days, I was told it was eczema and was treated, but it became worse, ele but was not helped. could not sleep. applications I were gettin, healed.” 39-11th St., Troy, Make f Cuticura July 3, 1916. Mist skin beautiful by pimples, redness or roughness. For Mail address _post-card: Dept. H, Boston. blisters came on my and | could not work, “'l was advised to use Cuticura Seap and Ointment which I did. Aftera few noticed that my hands better and now they are (Signed) G. E. And hands ap daily for the toilet, a Th skin came off and my hand became inflamed, and a lerson, usin, nd Cuticura Ointment for first signs of Sample Each by Return “Cuticura, | ~ me Sold everywhere. How Dully’s Helps Health When you take the prescribed dose What Duffy's you are taking a medicinal intended to do is to stimulate the normal action of the organs, and this it does. It is the body itself that throws off disease, and al Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey condition for this work, is one of the purest to known to science, Duff; ealthy action and strengthen: on which bodily healt ia invaluable for bu Because it stimulants encourages 3 the iN de- rs it has proved ng up and giving strength, and this is why thousands have testified that they always “Get Dulfy's and Keep Well.” At most family vine stores, I~ ed druggists ‘grocers they can't supply you, write Us Usetul, household booklet free. ‘The Duffy Mait Whiskey Oo,, Rochester, N.Y, DENTISTRY, NO PLATES REQUIRED Waterbury Brid itwelt, by on new Come here in the morn old teeth extracted hone at night with perfectly. axing wark and yours, Fxtraction 'NEW BOTANICAL DISCOVERY + $5.00up $1.00 up eth « Sliver Filling Incorporated 29 W. 34th St., New York 414-16 Fulton St., Brooklyn! Sundeye, 9 to 2 Inju Houre:Bto6 - German, French and Swedish Sp LADIES IN ATTENDANC! Wok ts ib @ olase ‘able and comfort~ 500 up | Wareroury DentaL Company | 4 en > Yo bring a light table beer ‘ lopunquestionec ertel fon I j ombination of { ax perten de; equipmenvand 4 maintain, the qualily and few weeks later it broke out baat teer oe oncmny fate, hands LEAD ° ulatify iof Budweiser.a itching bothered me so I ” Pan, NHEUSER.BLISCH ST. LOUIS, On Sale Everywhere. Families sup- plied by Grocers and Retailers, ANHEUSER-BUSCH AGENCY Dealers New York, N. Y. A. BUSCH BOTTLING CO. Dealers Brooklyn, N. Y. Good Furniture at Reasonable Prices On Our LIBERAL CREDIT ARRANGEMENT Our Terms Apply Also to New York, NewJersey, Long Island and Connecticut, ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES, WE PAY FREIGHT iihutrated: 9120° 10-PIECE WILLIAM and MARY SUITES, In Jacobean gonaleting of per. with _ mirrors A s SERVING TABLE, DINING TABLE, 6: foot extension; 4 CHAIRS, 120” 4 3. We as illus. APARTMENTS FURNISHED FROM $75 UP ON CREDIT WING MACHINES ON CREDIT, Dentistry That Lasts "a ky ca Es aan Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York City Physician and Medical Author, says: “There can be no. strong, vigorous, Iron men nor be | without tron: the tiful, healthy, rosy-cheeked women juxated Iron taken three times per day after meals will increase ind endurance of weak, nervous, run-down folks 100 per cent, in two Nn many Instances, Avold the old forms of metallic Iron which mi the teeth, corrode the stomach, and thereby do more harm than good, joken | Take only organic Iron—Nuxated Iron.” It Is dispensed in this city by all good drugglete.—Advt,

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