The evening world. Newspaper, June 13, 1918, Page 16

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eee re ee is ee a \ \ THURSDAY, How to Cook Ae EO nan By Exhibits, Cooking Demonstrations, Thrift Menus and War Recipes, Conservation Here To-Morrow, Will Teach Housewives How to Help Win the War in Their Own Kitchens. By Marguerite HAT should go into the war kitchen, what should go out forged weapons for winning the war are put at the disposal of all patriotic New York women to-morrow, when the Conservation Food Show, approved b; Not through patrioticnlly. A is now working lems. Mr. Hoove , tm this drive to put a war kitchen First consideration will be given to the contents of the market basket and the pantry shelf, the new supplies with which they should be equipped. A city war garden, a backyard poul- try farm, cheesemaking in the home, the home drying of fruits and vege- tadies, personally demonstrated by Mra. Oliver Harriman, will be among and under the auspices of the National League for Woman's Service, actual touching, tasting, hearing and seeing, the house wife who goes to the Conservation Food Show may leagn how to live better, Mve cheaper and live more by every department of city, State and Nation which JUNE 13, 1918 and Save In Your “War Kitchen” Shown by Food Experts Food Show, Which Opens Mooers Marshall kitchen, what should go on in the war of the war kitchen—these three home- y the Federal Food Board of New York opens in the Grand Central Palace. formally worded pamphlets but by personal appeal will be gnade to her on America’s War time food prov- r himself will be one of the speakers into every home, oe |Agriculture will have one of the |largest exhibits, in charge of its own speakers and workers, and other Gov- jernment departments to be repre- | sented include the Bureau of Chemis- |try, Bureau of Fisheries, Department of Commerce, Bureau of Markets. | There will be an international booth, v ik ee A a 4) mil. Mix well and bake ina greased| Gift together the corn flour, salt! 4 shallow pan in a moderate oven 50] and baking powder. Add the ground/ minutes. Yield: 1 pan, 9x0 rolled oats, Reat exes, add milk and | j arene syrup. Ci < | SONITEREAD: Yee. | Oomhne Hawa and dry in- } | Ooramest, 1 cup; sweet milk, 1 UP: | Te nate ne sien ey fat and ral baking powder, 2 teaspoons; sugar, Ye! Tiaates Wo a snow to Mand twenty tablespoon;'fat, 1 tablespoon; salt, % | », ) & §reased bread pan. | Hapeaek | ake In a moderate oven one hour or * 4 Mix dry ingredients, Add milk, ered Slide longer. Yield: 1 loaf, | well beaten ogg and melted fat, Beat} mS? sAGhOS, | BARLEY AND GROUND OATMEAL WAR-TIME ME. | BREAD. FOR A SUNDAY || Ground oatmeal, 1 cup; parley : flour, 4% cups; mk and boiling mily of Five — Father, || water (%), 1% cups; yea cake; For a Family PS; yeast, 1 cake; { Mother and Three Children, | !vkewarm water, 3 tablespoons; corn ‘Ages 3, 7 and 12. syrup, 2 tablespoons; fat, two teas where the popular wartime dishes of our allies will be cooked and served. Arthur Wilitams is Chairman of the Conservation Food Show; Miss Maude Wetmore is Vice yChairman; Miss Anne Morgan, Treasurer; Mins Grace Parker, Secretary. Other well known women on the Central Committee in- clude Mrs, Charles Cary Ramsey, Mim Virginia Gildersleeve, Mrs. Lewis the lessons taught in the new house- wifery. The new cooking made desirable by wartime conditions also will be dem- onstrated. With cach copy of the programme there will be given to the visitors at the Food Show an official book of recipes suited to carry out the Food Administration's requirements loro) O A the VERY day, at swadown, We, the American People, shall pray! We, the once frivolous and cynical; we, the once gay and light-hearted— We, “the SMILING People’’—whose soldiers go over the top with a laugh on their lips and poppies in their helmets— We, who do not understand the terrible god of hate and vengeance, But know only the God of Love, and Liberty, and Justice! Every day, at sundown, we shall bow our heads in reverence, And PRAY for Victory— Those of us who have always prayed, those of us who have never prayed, Those of us who have forgotten how to pray— Protestant, Roman Catholic, Hebrew, Christian Scientist, Mental Scientist, Agnostic! Do you know the POWER of a prayer like that? Can you conceive the miraculous power of millions of minds and souls concentrated on ONE THING, all at the same moment? Such a power is invincible! It will sweep all before it! German propaganda, social discontent, political partisanshi private hates and grievances and petty personal spites shall be as straws in the path of a mighty hurricane. Then, let us not be self-conscious, nor stiff-necked, nor cynical, Every day at sunset, let us bow our heads and PRAY— Not with our lips, but with our hearts and minds and souls, \ and arranged by Dr. Marty Swarts Rose, one of New York's leading food specialists. Ten of the best recipes in this book are printed in The Evening World to-day. Of course the methods of preparing the various wheat sub- | stitutes—which so many women with the best intentions do not know how $ to use—will be explained most care- Cully, as well as the ways of saving fete and sugars. And for the doubiting,| Thomasine who wonders “if all this waving really does anybody any good, there will be a panorama of exhibits to show just how homé saving rolls ‘ap into a mammoth snowball of na- tlenal saving and helps the American boys and the other boys who are fighting our battles for us. The new serving—the number, com- Bination and proportion of foods | which should go out of the war kitchen fmto the war dining room—also will be taught at the Conservation Food | Show. There will be sample “war ra- tions” for eight days for an average | family. Lest any man who reads this | @ory should fear future starvation | and try to keep his wife away from | the Food Show, an appetizing war- | time menu, suggested for a Sunday, | is printed in the lower corner of this Nixon, Mra, Ernest Thompson Seton, Mrs, F. Gray Griswold, Mrs, Coffin Van Rensselaer. The United States Department of “War Kitchen” Recipes “The Ten Best,” Culled From the Collection of War Rec- ipea, to Be a Feature of Conservation Food Show. OATMEAL BREAD. well, Bake jn a shallow gan for about Barley flour, 1 cup; cornmeal, 1% | fifty minutes, ©@5s; salt, 1 teaspoon; baking pow- der, 5 tedspoons; sugar, 2 table- spoons; rolled oats, 1% cups; 1 ese; fat, 2 tablespoons; milk, 1 cup. @itt together four, cornmeal, salt, baking powder and sugar; add oat- me:l Add beaten egg, melted fat and OAT AND CORN FLOUR BREAD. Corn flour, 11-3 cups; ground rolled oats, 1 cup; salt, 1 teaspoon; baking powder, 6 teaspoons; raisins, % cup; milk, % cup; fat, % cup; corn syrup, % cup; eggs, 1 or 2. Spoon: i salt, 1 teaspoon; ee Pour boiling water over the syrup oatmeal, salt and fat. When cooled to room temperaturé add yeast, softened in lukewarm water, and the BREAKFAST. Jew — Bt ‘oat er for one (butter). paten Add the barley four, ‘too milk for three. milk for |! into pans, let rise y » put until double In DINNER. | bulk. Bake in a moderate oven one ADULTS—Roast mutton, browned || hour and fifteen minutes, tsncel and’ barisy bread, — oat ; i oaitema berry BOSTON BROWN BREAD, Barley flour, 3 cups; cornmeal, 3 cups; molasses, 1 cup; salt, % toa- spoon; #oda, % teaspoon; milk, hot, 2 cups, Mix and sift barley flour, cornmeal, salt and soda, Mix the hot milk and molasses, add to the dry ingredients. Stir well and fill greased moulds Fy! imation Be, fe fer gies muses jo tor twon UPPER. OHILDEEN — Omelette for three. kere, butter three, Not in mechanical, meaningless phrases, not in idle pleadings, nor in Kaiser-like “instructions” to an All-Wise Deity— CHE “VICTORY” PRAYER. By Helen Rowland, Tt has been suggested at Washington that an Angelus be rung every day ct sundown to call American people to prayer for viclory.—News Item. | But in simple faith and serene confidence, Wherever we may be, whatever we may be.doing, At the ringing of the Angelus, Let us stop, and with reverently bowed heads, let jhe great Divine spirit flow through us, Stilling our restless souls, strengthening our hearts, And filling us with hope, courage, power, patience, confidence, serenity and invincibility! In our visions, let us see the word VICTORY, shining in golden letters, Victory! We shall not doubt, fighting in the cause of Humanity. Victory! We shall not falter. For Divinity has put strength | in our arms and quenchless courage in our souls. Victory! We shall not fear. For there can be but one dut- come of a righteous battle for a divine purpose. Victory! We shall not hesitate—but stand ready to GIVE to the last dollar, the last ounce of strength, the last drop of blood! Thy victory, oh God of Love and Humanity, shall be our victory, ead And OUR victory shall be THY victory! No matter how bitter our temporary reverses, how dark the momentary outlook, help us to remember that the ultimate VIC- TORY always has been and always shall be THINE! Keep us clean, and fine, and cheerful, and full of faith—brave, wise, fearless, indomitable, invincible— Always Thy “SMILING PEOPLE”’— Thy children of liberty, and brotherly love, and sun: ; Whose soldiers go over the top with a laugh on their lips and | poppies in their helmets. To CONQUER tyranny—and FREE the WORLD! For we KNOW that we are Amen, | Pollyfoxing | GOOSESNOOPER—A Senator with | AY” THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1918 The Word-Foundry Which Manufactured “‘Pus- syfooting” Hung Up Another New Chin Rivetting Record by Turning Out “‘Pollyfox- ing”’—A Pollyfoxer is a Gent Who Pulls a Houdini Out of a Tight Debate by Switching the Subject From Horse Collars to Folding Doors, From Vegetarian Dinners to Pinochle, By Arthur (“Bugs”) Baer Ooorrieht. 1918, by The Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), FTER Hoovering between life and eix silver handles all winter on A four square meals a day, the conversational season has busted out among the Senators, and the old chatter eap is flowing in the nw tional forest of chins, The maxim ailencers are all salted away in cam- phor, and verbal confetti is ricocheting around like a country school teacher off of a bent pin. The commtitee who investigates the Committes on Investigations is being investigated by the committee whe investigates Investigating Committees. The casualties among the listeneys are very heavy and enormous gobs of Senators have been wounded in fhe vooabulary, Old Noah Webster is thinking of hanging out @ eervice star for hie dic tionary. If the war only lasts long enough, the world will find out what hap | pens when a kitten catches its own tall. The gossiping is of the Japanese | waltzing mouse vancty, going round and round without ever getting ary further than a web-footed hyena on a freshly honed trea@mill. Four setg of acoustics have been worn to a whisper and there is talk of raising the ceiling fifty fect so that the delegates can't hit it so often, When it comes to | hitting the ceiling, every Senator has a medal for sharpshooting. Wren the laryngeal skirmishes are cured and the roll call of epithets te | called, it is general'y discovered that not only are afl the Senators present, but also a regiment of new names has been apprehended. » ‘The word-foundry which manufactured “pussyfooting” hung up another new chin riyetting record by turning out “pollyfoxing.” Which is pretty good work for an eight-hour day, A pollyfoxer is o gent wh» pulls a Houdini out of a tight debate by switching the subject from horse-collars to folding doors, or from vegetarian dinnera to bid pinochie, ‘A pussyfooter explains itself, being a genial bird who wears a milllom doliare worth of rubber heels on a ten cent pair of shoes, Some other terms now cavorting around the Capitol are tinct. Can be found in any D. Q hotel. Feeds its young by stuffing thelr bills with bills. a web-footed walk who thinks !f the cackling of geese saved Rome it will also save Washington. i} SOB-HOWLER—A calamity buzzer TOBEYLIZARD: who wears his chin at halfmast. “Supposed to be ex- furnish New Yield—Five one-pound baking pow- | corn syrup, half cup; cinnamon, quar- der tins, eight one-half pound tins, | ter teaspoon Mix and bake half hour. th spi, far ‘titres, eanied fruit for ped rue. |two-thirds full. Grease the covers and cover tightly, Steam three hours. ' fat half cup; apples, cut nal, 43 ‘nnd The savin of one week wouK Citys draft anny with | Bringing Home to the Housewife Need for War Kitchen Thrift Exhibit Features of Conservation Food Show Open To-Morrow in Grand Central Palace and Women Helping Conduct It. REMEMBER JACK SPRATT Wiy serve the fat to those 10 dorit care for ib the lrimmings saved. from su slices ; : ham will sborten this ginger read, os | sprinkle over the top of the dish. | tomato sauce around cabbage; cook | cabbage le wud Wuusod, aud sie, deur dy este aud pour 1b 1s BUdb Wark Bake Serve hot | crumbs are gold in a moderate even until bid sauce for about ten minutes. Serve EAL 1 brewn, ' i CORNMEAL ROLLS. or cold, Any dried fruit or fresh | penaistas with sauce, Yield; 8 large servings, Cornmeal, % cup; barley flour, 1% | fruit, dates or ground peanuts may | STUFFED CABBAGE. cups; baking powder, 8 teaspoons; |De used in place of the apples let aanhana stemml heath ead aun FUDGE SQUARES. | exe, 1; milk, 1-3 cup; salt, 1 tea- ig eet pound; tomato saucer 2a, | Fat, % cup; aweetening, % cup each epcant teh: § tamipepoone nanny SATHEAL WITH CHEESE) cups; stoc kK, 1 cup; olive oil, 2 ae of sugar and corn syrup; 1 egg; bar- itt, together tho dry ingredienta| Four cups cooked oatmeni, one cup) CUPM: Morte 2 cups, olive tll, 8 tall |! ¥ four, 1% cups; soda, % teaspoon; and cut in the fat, Beat the ogg and | Sted cheese, salt and pepper, quar- | “Scoop out the centre of a small head | baking powder, % teaspoon; salt, 1% add to it the milk, Combine the| (er cup soft bread crumbs, one tea-| of cabbage. Parboil head of cabbage | t@@spoons; chocolate, melted, 2 Nauid with the Gtystagredients, #hape | | until tender. Heat olive oll, add rice, |Satares; vanilla, 2 teaspoons; nut into rolls and bake in a hot ove Put into an oiled baking dish a and w this has partially browned | meats, 1 cup, twelve to fifteen minutes, Yield ayer of loft over oatmeal, then a add mutton cut into small pleces,| Combine ingredients tn the order Twelve rolte, sprinkling of grated che pepper | when well browned, add stock, w given, sifting dry ingredients together. AL PI 1 salt, another layer of oatmeal,| seasonings; cover and steam, until| Pour mixture into a shallow pan. OATMEAL PUDDING, [ancenaaee Gat Beabonibak 4 seasoning ver and steam, until | Po cheese and seasonings, and con- | rice is soft and tender, Drain | Bake @ hot oven ten tojtwelve Oatmeal mush, two cuy raisins, ra Sait rice is nm is tender, n| Ba it in 1 vity with cooked m +|minutes and cut into squares while s ry | PROHIBEERINIST—A Ddird whe thinks the side door of the Senate should be open om Sundays. Op- posed to total prohibition, so bawls out whiskey between sips of bes. | ER | PoRKGABBER — A Senator who | owns @ furniture factory and : | thioks that all submarines should iio | be ejulpped with mahogany deck oie | chase, det 4 PACIBEZZAMRD — Elected to Con- | gress durtmg hulls in good judg- Fs | ment. Has no backbone, but if he | had @ backbone ft would be yel- | enw. Genprally from the agri- | kultur-@l district. | MOOSEBULLER—A loud voice with no echoes. PROPAGOOSER—Wife of the propa. gander, Speaks English with a Swiss movement. DAMPBER-GOOF—Tosses wet biank- ets on everything. Took a long time to get into Congress and a long time to get him out. Talks between snores and snores between talks. The Reason: Scientific Facts Applying “Why”, to Questions You Should Be Able to Answer. | 8 jane 1 : Why Do We Stop Growing? | or some other part of yyur boty you 7 | destroy some tissues. The body re- tha ody lowe thelr ability of| Ceal> for © certain time, | increasing’in size and producing other | cells. It is one of the marvels of the| | grow older, or rather as you use the | construction of the human body that) qirerent parts of your body more and | this {9 #0, and one of the wisest Pro-| ore, it brings nearer always the | visions also, At first the cells of the | body crave lots of food and increase jim size, divide and thea the party Bo lon growing until they become of al | certain size, when they again divide and cach part goes on growing, &c.. |and thus we grow. A growing boy needs more food than 4 mature man, because he needs some of it to grow! with, while the man has only to keep |what growth he has going—that 1s,| alive. We say, this limit of growth ts a wise provision of nature becauso if there were no limit to the size we might become we would not know how large to build houses, barns, &c., accord build up again the tissues you have destroyed. people become very old at forty and others are still comparatively young at seventy. It requires a great deal of care end attention and the elimination of all abuse of the body to keep us young when we aro old. The use of drink, lack of sufficient sleep and othw abuses prevent the body from restoa* ing the tissues which have been @ stroyed. Worry and sorrow age Ky very rapidly because these thingn affect the nerves. If the nerves ace or else we would have to build them) not quiet wo cannot get there t" any |so large to start with that we would regt, and without rest w. be lost In them for a long timo. We) very pantaly it we grow old would constantly be forced to change wiahy these things and there would be no basis to reckon from, Why Do We Feel Thirsty ? Why Do We Grow Aged? ALi a senmtion of Arynems and eat E age directly in accordance | i ects ly is generally with the lives we lea You! Anas Sah ene H . to us through can bend a wire back and| and throat. The gensa- tion of thinst art! forth a number of times at the same| ¥ hinet can be artificially pro~ duced by passing a current of air point without breaking it, but eventu-| Over ihe monte ne win ally it will break. Just so with the| tongue and peranes male cover the human body. You can uso each part} yrcily due to a shortase ne Bur of it for its own purpose a Sumter the body. av times, but eventually the break The huma: e human body req wil} come, Or you can fail to make| geal of water to. aniree & great a part of it perform its regular func-| gition, and when th - ; in co tions and it will dio—the break willl jow a warning ia giv Pie becomes come. The human body is the most| ine ¢ © us by mak- membranes of the tongue and wonderful machine in the world, but| throat dry. even it will eventually wear out, Fran the Every due you wove your arm, leg bc. Rook ct Wonder, by newman welnaesies Lacaiion, Wi When you | bend a joint in your body, the bedy » oils the joint naturally, but as you | time when the body cannot of its own ‘ That is why some | ~ —

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