The evening world. Newspaper, July 2, 1918, Page 12

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RY AA PANN AAY Si A i TUESDA “One Lump or Two, Please?” Sugar Question Housewife Must Now Ask Herself Keeping Strictly to New Conscience Ration Easy Task if Wifie Has Been a School Teacher, but — | Restaurant Keepers and Other ‘Must Men” May Have to Call In Expert Accountants. if ner possible. Sugar n't exactly gone up, but it has gone out. It has been curtailed, cut of, cut short, stopped to a certain extent, deleted by the censor and in a dozen other w creating a condition wherein you are entitled to just three pounds per month and not enough More to sweeten your coffee and your breakfast food. Within @ few days cafe noir will be @ popular beverage and cereals end fruits will have to be consumed sat ar or beeprinkled with tho minimam amount. To the housewife and the home cooking bachelor Mr. Hoover has sent his edict, and said edict went into effect yesterday Without causing any brain fag or causing any reader to do mathemati cal back flips, a few figures showing just what three pounds per person each month means might be interesting. Without making @ eingle Sher- lock Holmes deduction and by measuring accurately with a silver plated texepoon, it will be discovered that one pound of granulated eugar con A GAIN we are Hooverized, but on this occasion in the sweetest man t ’ a Y Three Pounds of Loaf Sugar Contain} tains fifty teaspoonfuls. Therefore your three pounds of sugar per month! } aye * away 228 Pieces This Size. ai i will give you exactly 150 teaspoonfuls, | How will you use the 150 teaspoonfuls? Every time you drink a cup morning ana the tea at night, four teaspoonfuls of the precious crystals will have disappeared Just how will this affect your monthly supply? Four teaspoonfuis « @ay for thirty days means that at the end of the month you will have a surplus of thirty teaspoonfuls. Pro viding you do not care to use sugar seven pounds of sugar a for anything else, you have just that|month, ‘This may sound alarming, but much margin on the next month. If Mr. Hoover estimates that where there cereals enter into the question, here are large families there will be less is a little thought that may be of interest. ‘Two teaspoonfuls on your cereal every morning will use up 11-5 pounds. This Jeaves you 14-5 pounds for coffee and tea. If you insist on two teaspoonfuls in the beverage morning and evening, and at the same the éther or borrow from your neigh- | °° don the horizon, It is estimated ber, De eure and pick outa neighbur (PY the Federal Food Board that te kb Aoees't Grink (a. oF ootten when) reer Testeurants will: need approx. | Pei ashe the soueh. imately 6,000 pounds a month while ces Gk i GiASod siipae Shs‘ ROU HOt | are tee ce nrerees Lane reap tll gclaptora repens ee ara Ned died aibencieytabcbaebdead ashe a S| ea eemnere Is the lump sugar, | (0,86 restaurants will not be appor- P patelage themation ania | Honed until the proprietor has mado Lngelig bee pig ian ete wien, | Known the rumber of meals he serves ineludes the famous domino effect and bey ie pouaae will be allowed the lump that looks like the familiar| ° ry 90 meals, and on these fig- Sabes with the little black numbers |UTe* Plus an eatimate of the amount ieninated, there are seventy-six|%@ bas used during the last month, Tampa In’ three pounds, therefore, | ‘B° restaurant man will be permitted Giare are £460 lumps. At four lumps | DAY® enough sweetening: for his per day for tea and coffee, the con. | Present needs and for the next ninety sumer finds himself with 108 lumps | %*¥# to come, left over at the end of the month, All| At the Federal Board it is estima.ot of this may be used for cercals or | ‘Pat there are more than 2,000 appti- frait, but in the event that they arc, | “4t day presenting certificates {t will be necessary for the consumer to go to the extra expense of a pestle and mortar, so that the sweetne may be applied in a granulated form. Of course, Mr. Hoover has said that | est senso of du He may have nine members of the family around the te board when it is sugar time is moans that he is entitled to twenty son? Well, the kiddies like sugar, but | shoes are @ greater necessity, eo it | will economize along the least line of | resistance, ‘The wail of the restaurant man could be heard from State to State under the new ruling, It will be un» merry whirl at the Board for the aext w days. While the doesn't mean to clamp down the lid the individual can have but three diately there will be but a few pounds of sugar a month. Here is grace--perhaps ten—during where the large family comes in, Sup-| Which the restaurant man and oth- pose Pasquale, who has followed ers will be permitted to apply for an Rooseveltian theory with the keen- , exact interpretation of the new law, days of Keep One Yard Within the Law; Sew It on Your One-Piece Suit RB you playing “Within the/Ftitehing or hen tracks in ratnbow A Law" to crowded beaches down | *hades " Coney this season? | Wear that, Genevieve, with an alr No, Annabelle, “Within t law" | f insouciance and with stockings or ts not @ melodrama; it is a simple| Without to suit individual taste, and batbing euli—very simple at that, It] You'll Ket by the ¢ is the lit sister of the one-piece |" Within the Law hing suit. well known 0 |ONE LITTLE RUFFLE— beach rigging which the majesty of the law has put back the discard along with heatless Mon less pups and that sim fer.| f Vor it 1 AND THERE YOU ARE!) days, munzi ple pastime known as chemin The “Within the Law” fe about the size of a sls wctence, though | contemplate | around its cov | mon elder. You ean ¢ | beach in your vanity ¢ when you you plight! photograph you at the « the face o “Before the Here are Within the them to an and he an turn out the fir Une single piece #u r ing somewhere between the k Far Rockaway: silk and @@t on the Queen A tween the *‘ou of roof over non-shrinka the statute game general tint as the bod structure. Firmiy ris fe waist of e one € #0 ¢ @outh and d like o glass portico over a hote! door wm ruffle to suit with feather { ) Bi irsnctnieliceapiaasibiieisiiniaaiinnenresinese peu wi - - contract w it falls in a line not extend outw ; \ of Mocha and Java in the morning or daily with a cup of “the King’s | Own” tea at twilight it is generously estimated that two teaspoonfuls ofthe ; beet and cane product will be necessary. If you have the coffee tn the i o f sugar used than where just husband | / and wife are to be supplied. The rea-! almost an even wager that Pasquale | | and asking for their portion of sugar | | Government | ; | Dig as @ toothpick, but not quile so tender. A war portion of tomatoes WAY AN ANS A een | TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1918 Little Stories From the Movies Old Good-for-Nuthin' Featuring Jay Dwiggins, Edwina Robbins and Bobbie Connelly. Gauging a Month’s Sugar Allowance TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM FOR YOUR HOUSEHOLD YOU MAY HAVE TO EMPLOY ADDITION, SUB-' TRACTION, DIVISION AND MULTIPLICATION. THESE PICTURES WILL HELP YOU. ae er ee Sn ge TR eR TTL erin papers hree Pounds of Granulated Sugar Contain 150 Teaspoonfuls This THE BOY STAYED WITH HIRAM AND SAMANTHY. By William Addison Lathrop (A motion picture synopsis in enactly the form in which it was sud mitted to the studio, and one of a series by this author being published in The Evening World.) (By Permimion of Britton Publissine Comeany.) O I know Mr, Hiram Peabody? You mean “Old Good-for-Nuthin'!’y D Sure, I know him—everybody knows him. Folks always cally him “Old Good-for-Nuthin’;” an’ I reckon that, jedged by ord nary standards, that’s about his size. He was always a shif'less, triflin i | whittlin’, whistlin’, jackknife-tradin’ old party, that couldn't be relied o1 ; | for nuthin’, at least by grown-up people, ‘less ‘twas an engagement to i| fishin’ or to play the fiddle ‘at @ dance or a corn-huskin’. But on | thing—nobody ever heared him say a cross or an unkind word to a child ; | nor knew him to do a mean trick to anybody—you got to hand that to him Still, he wa'n’t a particle of use to anybody, let alone S’manthy, his siste: } | that he lived with in a run-down place jes’ beyond the fork. | Old Hiram wa'nt no account.) ~———— S'manthy 'd set him choppin’ wood or) least, owed rent for it regular, Dein ~ ; |weedin’ the garden, an’ ten chances}a Widda woman. Seems she up wo Lumps in One Cup of Coffee to one, some of the kids would come dled, leavin’ youngster ‘bout & and Two in One Cup of Tea | along, and Hiram 'd stop whatever he| Years old, an’ they was figurin’ Every Day in One Month {was doin’ an’ go off with ‘em an‘| sendin’ him to the poor farm, him n Would Use Up One and learn ‘em to set a figure-4 trap, or find| havin’ no relative livin’, The To’ Five-Eighths Pounds ‘a bee-tree, for ‘om, and mobbe get all | Commissioner was there, an’ the Po of Loaf Suga and give the boys the honey, | Master, an’ it seemed nobody want : end. S'manthy 'd send him to| the boy bound out to ‘em, bein’ as the store, an’ there wa'nt no tellin’|boy would be more bother ‘n he wi when he'd come back; or like as not, | Worth. | he'd forget what he was sent to buy—| Well, I swan, if Htram.don't ap | mebbe some sugar or coffee or some-|*4¥, “I'll take him!” An’ they thin'—an’ he'd come home with some|"You?” An’ Hiram eays, “Yes, met trif_in’ thing like a string of beads or|An’ they says, “What'll S'manthy 5 somethin’, that he thought she'd like;/#@¥?" An’ Hiram says, bristlin’ w an’ she'd have to go back an’ ex-| Never mind what S'manthy’l ea: change it—an’ Old Perkins, who run| You ain't got to hear it!” ols ‘0 Te ‘spoonfuls on One Dish Cereal Every Morning for One Month Would Consume Ono and One-Fifth Pounds of Li stung u in the h S) An’ I swan! s and Loaf Sugar in Your Home b's a! hand | Seems If ¢ n » Your Problem the store, wa'nt no great hand to ex-/} Seems If the luck @ian’t Will re to So Proportion the Amounts That Their Combined change nuthin’ he'd done sold. change for Hiram and S'manthy i é onsumption. Will Keep Within the Total Quantity Certainly was thy most onpractical|the day they took him! It wa‘nt Your Household Is Allowed, + | cuss! Leave what he was doin’ any/sreat while before a man eome time to go an’ do somethin’ for any|town poeta’ for Mis’ Holloway. | one else—an’ bim and S'manthy was|Seems Roe was her brother, or zomex poor as Job's turkey, too—jest man-|thin’, and he was referred to Hiram’ Reed to get along. How they con-|Seems, too, he was the feller that badl trved to keep the farm away from|Went West on S'manthy and’ hadn'd the mortgagee was a myst'ry, She|Wrote for years, nor nuthin’, An’ '¢| yas gettin’ along to the old-maid|any rate, he got married to S'manchy stage pretty fast; some said she'd had and {s said to be pretty tol’ble com. a feller, but he went West, an’ nobody|f'table well off, He fixed the farm w; nuver heard of him again—not for a/slick, an’ has a Ford, considerable long spell, they didn’t.) But it never made no change “p any rate, right when things was/Old Good-for-Nuthin’. He's jest ¢h worst with Hiram and S'manthy—1| same shittiess, trifin’, whittlin’, whl heared Old Perkins tell him flat that/t Ro account feller—him an’ thi |ne wouldn't trust him for another/boy! Jest nacherly no account! Ami |cent—heared him with my own ears, I) you say that he's proba’ly heir toa bigt {aid—right on his way homo, after @/bunch of coal lands in Pennsylvany ike that, with nutbin’ in] Wa'al I swa: That's him now This May Unravel the Garment Dame (‘Bugs’’) Rumor Is Knitting but Will Not Detract From the Public’s Keen Interest in Her Pungent Gossip Which May Not Be All True but Which Surely Is Timely. BY ARTHUR (“BUGS”) BAER Copyright, 3918 by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World).) looks like a bead off @ coral necklace. Nobody orders milk, because p yEW YORK ts now bomb and bum proof, it 1s considered impolite to drink out of @ thimble, Gonusoas jinoes no etrings on that Amarante munoes flail) Tae’ (See the buttous on without hiding the sult. his basket, and prob'ly wonderin’ |That's Old Go——that's Mr. Peabod: first guy to make it can do it from either a running or standing start. | what he was goin’ to say to S'mAn-|—the fat man with the old straw ba Von Hindy 1s still trying to get me janitor to turn on the steam thy, what does Hiram do but stop at/an’ one gallus an’ a fish poln ‘That’ Paste a Thrift Stamp in your hat to remind you to buy another. | mis’ Holloway’s house, seein’ a crowd|Mr, Peabody, An’ that’s the Holloa im Dis steam rolier. t b Jolloway’s!way boy with bi there, ‘T house, either, wa'nt Mis’ b bim, with « Gab poi bein’ she rented it, or 't I reckon they're goin’ fishin’ Thrift Stamp, not hat. Will You Have the “Broad A” With Your Breakfast? were resplendent, you know. |now had been done on hot rocks, But of ev description and|the delicacies they furntsh tickle the the like of which we had! American palate, and the Moving the clocks up an hour hasn't puzzled the moths any. They still manage to chew forty dollars’ worth of nutrition out of an eleven dollar sult | Big problem in modern girls’ bathing euits !s how to sew | | | in Lynbrook {s working out # set of springs to absorb the thock of the high cost of lving Geniu Stories of American Gold and Jewelry Bringing Oodles of aks } Colored Women Cooks From the West Indies to ‘ele are rap- Uncle Sam doesn’t elatm that nrift Stamp will cure y¥ a ; wuninn. cs lo Gees deadie 0 ac Eat ri eve Be Tay Give Our Kitchens an English Accent. never seen except on occasions when lidly learning to prepare the dishes | ends with their appearance, When|ur employer gave fancy dress par-| which their new employers are mo. ties. accustomed ee y that new colored cook of yours corrects your pronunciation don't] they speak you observe it is not witb resembles a kid Right now the Kalser with eighteen gree th eighteen green | ed fortunes around! ‘The ne: apples in a nine-apple stomach fly into a rage and discharge her| the soft draw! that rolls from the lips| “And they carried fo tana a ung _The new household workers are not 3 on the spot. You wouldn't, anyway,|of Bert Williams (when he is on the) with them. Fawney! We ag ‘oming on any nized plans, but pao wed % . 1! | stage’ rith 7 es | lette: ron jends a tives inlafter | . 4 4 01 West Indian cookery 1s etill| stage) but with the cultured tones| letters from friends and rela E & at the docks of ¢ When in doubt about what kin: et to buy, remen for real = t ei and’ ® ae ka of. th si heitt @tamo 24H at bretate id of bonnet to buy, remember that | o.ough of a novelty to be prized, And, | associated with London drawing| New York were true then, and every- | Quebec t the foot of Chari amp will just match your complexion. vesides, by following her tips you can! rooms. This comes from being reared | body who could ra! the passay ually go to the bom ue id a iequire a genuine English accent, for, in the West Indies, where the ruling | money, pr ally, ¢ led to come," | r relatives in New Yorkil Calling the Clown Prince a mutt should be stopped until we find ier Life up to now has been spent in ss and the one to be copied for| Most of arrivals are being going t Natlonafll out what he has done to deserve the promotion. i tish officers and their ages has been the British eagerly snapped up by New York 1 Urban “= The lure of American gold is what| housewives who have no ob, mn te t No, 2 ine In addilion to a reserved seat in the sun, the Junkers want forty find, tf you investigate,| Prousht them, One of them told/Ii-less days in the kitchen, ‘They he spd in STR five billion dollars indemnity, Now you understand y a bullet hat the new cook is part of the in-] bout tt to-day, find the new cooks know compara- | York hou t te ema doesnt hurt a German soldier when ft hits him in the head, flux from Barbadoes and other We Wo had been hearing marvellous | tively little about the preparation of | ployment Indian ports which just now ia reach- | tales of the waxes bein paid in the| American dishes, but ea at bo. ieern Arrivals yesterday declared ta ibaral assim iia ill RAEAnh RPAGAaT ARIA alcenwe fies en) Vinee proportion of u flood tide.! Upited States for household work-|and they can serve you @ dc ful hetter 8 received from others who had : se aaa Tat {ers she said, “It seemed they were! dread fruit glace or broiled squids’! come } a A : ale from bad eggs se ERED. But ev worst cold e arriving on every boat. Just) ; 7 igus 1 of recely t gist y ‘ terd ne hundred and. tifty)coming it a bit thick when we heard | tentacles on a na ASA aad gee 0 os wice as Koo 1y who buy ¢ SeAne y rday one hundred and } ia . | E " Instead of Thrift ssa | 1 in Now York and they say | of money paid for a week's| Qne difficulty about some of them !sjold work they often did not get mor \nsore aro coming ‘work that it took months for us to|teaching them to sleep in a bed, us) that for month, Also, They look just lke the ordinary\earn, but we were convinced when |they have been used to using ham- of the early voyagers had ¢ War is affecting eve estaurant asparagus is abo ! r affecting everything, Restaurant asparagus is about as |W nug jadies that have been cooking| some of those who had gone before |mocks for this purpose, and one con- ‘turned to the old homos just blasting for generations, but the resemblance returned home on visita My word! fided that most of her cooking up to witb jewelry, ent TET TT ICES AA NIECES TT OTR AT a TT TE RE Be Ss oe

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