The evening world. Newspaper, February 13, 1919, Page 18

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a er i ei Eee \) \ 1919 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, V “| HERES THE RECEIPT wo Sy Vices th a? © pamousy — SA ywAT] 0 ‘Sma land Here’s Also the Story of the First One| Hi ig hs tays and Wa: It, the Girl Who Fried It and How It| ome bined Model Lac Became the ‘Symbol of Endless Service.’’ Sanaa Reha ona | Tue New York Evening W | | By Zoe Beckley. T will be My Lady of the Lead Pen-| cil for 1919. 1018, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Byening World) Only the ead penol! sha ' | ' ‘ t { | SRE'S alot more to a doughnut than a ring of dough and a bole, be tolera say I It is not a mere edible. It is a symbol. It las become a-sort of those human re- international fig At home, when mother made it, glorified it, with @innamon and dusted it with sugar—oh, boy, it waa a delicious tidbit! But when it went abroad, first in the mind of an American Salvation Army girl and finally | as an actuality, mixed and fried by another Americaa, Salvation Army girl, the doughnut became food for tho soul as well as for the body. With the first bite, the lonely doughboy began to feel that somebody loved him, Wita the second, he could see a picture of his own back porch bout the old kitchen, And ¢ bul three bites), Le felt LACED IW FRONT, Gives A GIRLISH FIGURE 0 will moulders of tho fe- male form divine, hee smart woman's fig-| ure will be the fig- | ure 1—no plump 5, glass § will! 137° Bowanee Lm form width—Jjust }'ke that and a glimpse of ma moving t (there never with the J _. things weren't half as bad as he had thought, and tha i eee everything would come right in the end, | | we The demobilization of the doughnut has not yet begun. It is going THe SCHENTIELC, Way TO) Fir A CORSET. into service stronger than ever. Lach week a fresh batch of Salvation | Jassies sails with her doughnut recipe tucked in.her pocket. For the sake | of returned doughboys who may miss their doughnuts unless mother or Aunt Caroline provides the selfsame article made in the selfsame way, J} give herewith this recipe from which millions of doughnuts have been| made in France, England and along the Rhine, by Salvation Army girls | and those to whom they have taught the magic mixture | “Put a large pan on the stove, on third filled with melted lard, and ai-|4Md is now mixing and frying “tho | Jow it to come to a boil. Put twenty- |8¥mbdl of endless service” in batches | four large cups of four into a bow), of hundred thousands. ‘The “tirst | Mix with it twenty heaping tea-|/undroed thousand” were made in a Pula of baking powder, four'tield kitchen near the frout Jine nfuls of salt, eleven cups of |ttenches in Northern France, to t Seeger, Mix well and work in on ment rumbling guns. Gleep of 1rd. \ he a ughnuts $9 doughboys have pty san Moved over to the Rhine since then, x another bow! break ten ° Me and eat ke with two cans of 92d the big guns have been wilenced by But BR. none ) ‘os |i ho a font milk and an equalamunt BUt Raymond VD, Fosdick, chairman SF water, awe nuts of Of the Commission for War Camp % Activiti attached to the War De- rac nd four teaspoon- vakiila extract und four seasb00% | artinent, Keeps on wending for more fig of cinnamon or nutmes. | |saivation girls—and thelr’ doughnut aur into th at DOW!, AOOINe ons d as long he calls, the BS necessary more water and work Pans And as long His, they ; f ; t, workavie e#pond. © The A. has sent more eyes REVO Be BOT, i women workers sin mistice ro, ; maHias was signed than it did before, .50 " out in portions dough on a lurge table, cut @oughnuts and the holes with su coon {Ts AW ART. TO POT A CORSET the a aving sailed in less than three ni as been found -who can put able sized cu the Great American Doughnut into | MRerne doughnuts are now ready A Balvauionio Peon ‘lace in u wire bask ‘ sg trying. Via 1 ing if one girl made three batche lower into boiling lard and let dia eek eh ohDO ene rs tay until very br ea date sy could 200 gités who had taught 800 beration until aly ar more girls who worked 14 hours a day Now, then, that is the authentic po ty7 gaya Bub tha back ot a Ypeescription.” If followed accu- envelope Was used up and his p mately it is guaranteed to cure Vo gown before he got past Meverything from a grouch to stra'slt eet nition day, a hundr why it has been 1 That 4 years, and will continue to ere is litt be popula Really change from 1918 to it has the charm, y youth.” “And what about the per 1919 figu of eternal At the Hotel McAlpin young women from Maine, Texas, Florida and North ect Ru additional 8,500 ly know b to eat Mrs, Thon isthe) "The lead pencil proved | promptly, “No army | this year, Waists will be very la responded | But I DO know how to make ‘ei a up Adjutant Purviance. My mother didn't come from New 4 for nothing. Now if we only ithe sugar we could make a bateh of G60ghnuts—if we had the dough.” ihe cook, who was a very ador wi be worn 5 ) France. jand the corsets will be designed es ninate or conceal the e hips. ‘The effect more! must be as straig arves 4 in any|clally to el und takes |lower part of ¢ and down as | possibie—no he corset walled two 889, sbove, figure ig the young figure, the girlish | American Kxpeditionary Fores, rt Woman’s Figure Now Figure. Ll: ! | Lead Pencil Shape Is 1919 Decree Hiding the Hip Now Corsetiere’s New Job. p Waists in Discard. That Was Made, the Girl Who Inspired) NO More Awkward Lacing rs on Back. in Front. firtufare Ware FRONT LACING 16 easy To ADJUST - CONVENIENT AND SUPPORTING THE “LEAD-PENCILY Corset, WE WILL NEVER GO GACK TO THE OLO Corser, tT MAKES ONE LOOK OLD bad begun required to a splendid type Travelling With Wilson In Europe | |Odd and Amusing Inci dents in the Overseas Journeys of . the President, | rosely fitting waist, is per= > concesrently with the years' course of the unive structure and req When @ student who has taken the} not only harmles ill not be required to pa But for six weeks during the ¢ » chance at Waist corset be worn by with uniforms and all equipment, will be s hours of each day at Car + /a Deautiful and healthful spot in the Connectic “you firsts” finally said with a laug! Well, I'm too hungry to argue about go in first and t figure or their costume. So no Venus de Milo need ap vench diggir 1 Grayson thoughtlessly vis living room aftor in Paris ¥, It will keep the boys t 7 bens?" J erve Yi ; om. The Salvation doughnuts are sup-! Dakota, also points in between, are 7 opmerved. OF .¢ nobody ie ramigate and make your posed to be sold to the boys * earaing how 10 put the hip-hip in [v8 8 fat Wor u may pity popu’ the neigh ; < t lov i v Lee Ik ; rd ne ©." whieh is less than t wit the discard, how to turn lightweig h ol n Salvation claim r , t ¢ nop ; THe, 4 { 4 Hehe fe me, If uw ty heavywoights and middiewelghts int \ tts recipe a one from wh now ‘hae 1 corsetie @idajt, Melen Purvian Aa o t n }i human lead pen oP ; hs . stowing away a& teow without! corsets, The gir orset the 1 a aged sh mude the fl i ‘ “hs eres tr ; 2 i einige bey mentioned {uy 1, 8. Thompson and her ee ada . J 4 Whe two ‘ ¢ a Or suppose he huan’t been a t the sid lea to » W dina b pl <i Rep Rabie ppowe Vth Paid and jwistants, and at the end of the Weck ei. Or mmnme, ey wo " erican on Army, M su mi hued , etecdl =n seh 08"! York need have an abdomen ifthe, Ameri - Y Is the doughnut pan snatched and West to take up aguin their Jobs x a h. pbdomen--ve @Parviance ng from New York) / Peep aed rp alah arcane. Athan ‘ spas ; vw do have it, Thaf eliminat are ear remy “ shly away from his wistful paw? [of Hitting American women with oa aie 6 ‘ > 4 Mi 9 n. | You bet NOT. He ia jus welvome | foundation of correct and fashionable Properiy 1 Bu ¥ ff unit found itself in a locality) 1) RAN t i h i | figure remains the ideal, Mee tar trom any base of supplies that |" ust 4s Uiough le had | dress—the cage, the cuirass, the rock There seemed nothing more to be t ine #0: all id of all the Indies in his| ribbed corset, Knights wore armor in | Li they were put to it to devise some- said for ov to the plump and pon i A 1 be | money belt. And if a soldier boy or] other days; now it is reserved, in ail . for the boys that would be/ i) ve rag be? Pesiget: tor their ladiea, {(°72us: So I asked if the 1919 c¢ fearing to the spirits as weil as to|® ” & jckel but isn’t | its steely inflexibi for their ladies. |W gientc the,tum. There waPno chocglate, no | Wie baPPY With just three dough n from it will } venture to | —_-— SIE RD Mn hae) ee aivining, . nuts, is he told that Jy all he can , Woman's last emancipation re ll N Y , ae ee rg ” 1A POO | si hiel us "itt" Au contraire nay L not be there to see, un- | WA ew ork s Hotels ( rowded? have it!” cried djuta Monsieur, Mada He is told to go afores f.¢ is infinitel ‘ Seog Terre my ery a tl “You Should Try to Get a R ” fe and | ay 4 nm Sally nore d. than \ a4 Jed, with a nee HOUGH Paris has 15,400" hote! as aston led tS curious fact t elegantiarum of the corset scbool, | SEE SORCROR NGUaG, * Hate suburbs, a room is hardly to be e French Gorergn nt has tact obably do not exc nvited everybodY who was com- | forty or fifty in numbe to the Peace Conference merely gramme. Take, f dent in engineering, Can there b« wny better equiped engineer thar PUZZLES. Ithe man who knows, in addition. ¢ © was so cold th. more serious eleme on kept overcoats on, out of curiosity to please come st | i plea ne. Ht} nt removed his when he | ome other time. Orders have been | ih atoehen ahan t many of whom have! ind dark pass prefer to remain In Paris, where ording to the most sefentifle meth scks, t ® accepted the|ing feat in the x contingents of En word spread moker’s world f In route to Italy the difficulties the Italian language became appd families to places rooms in|ent. One member of the PresidentJai principles relating to world diplo- ithe class, The puzzle is solyga by, | party asked for a bottle of water and macy, Who can tell what may be in adding 1 to the least common, mule store for ue? I em inclined to bes tiple of 4, 4 and 6, so acute that a society been organized among the wealthiest cog indeed, dug up the y a Sail ba xsued by the French consular and Adjutant Helen wny thin with, « ther Is there any chance of the old- | “blomatic officers all over the world aleev lad ¢ rpay. In tru fush } hour-glass figure coming |‘? Vise passports for Paris only That was so long ago that nobody | is a slowa. d¥ ‘shorts’ the| back?" I asked. “One hears rumors | Pe"8ons who can demonstrate t at Salvation Army head yuart Q Neaicak +l op the Wictarian xy thoy have” son’ is necesaity £ pexact date, But back into the work “Neyer,” Mrs, Thompson re led | Coming, ° Beginning ey Ay rty-four motor trucks | promy Tight lacing, the wasp| It has not been decided whether t! Parviance found sh¢ could do ° vice running out from| waist, the corset coming high up on | Shortage of hotel accommodation but mix and sculpture doughni Pari the ever ; @ of {the figure, will never again be worn, | Paria 19 due to some unext j@ high officers came and told he N at aalth ll dead. And yt will te 1 the | my or to ect! teahe had done for the morale of | stopped. the eat ibn’ veamon,( Rha aisle was onvatenio nna | @Rule . y troops, The cook paid her the! is sent to ty gel undoubtedly injured women. But t Many of the largest hotels hav ment of stg ding, round-eyed + and wold not. keen (¢ from bale revives [t used as hospitals ever sin gad Oh-mouthed, at her elbow, which y MDA loing Ail the doctore in the world might voginning of the war, a few are use Wyaein action every day from reveillie! hat where Salvation Sa and hat certain corset wa s Min 65 and Under-Ministri¢ ape. h foughiut pan n flourish and if they thought it the Mreneh Government mr muMbat elbow, says ever) vody, ought greates unbers. And there com. tey would wear jt, But the |@Viation and munitic and wiven the Croix de Guerre, the + wii! stay Lill every dear old a boy | old-style corset will not be worn again | P several have been ty MEMAlllo Militaire and tie U. & D.\ ang over ‘ r eee redatige byt) every good old “gob” is ap the|in w million years because it makes American Red Cross, the 8. C.A4t came home for a rt Vaca-}wey home—and then Ma ake} women Jook OLD . Y. W. C. A, Knights of But it has [fone back| his doughnuts from the recipe giv “9 he Columbus and yarious departments be given The straight up and down, hipless | or’ the administrative offices of (the disposal of American leave, wot three blankets. bY se \ \\ HANES AMC (Gt 00,000 ’ ouny officers 8 z | | SSeenssooes Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at Columbia a Step in Government’s Plan to Equip Young Men in American Colleges to Lead Troops in Any National Emergency. By Clyde B. West Copptlgnt, 1919, by The Prese Publi MERICANIZATION is the very keynote of the proe jovernment to train and equip 200,000 young men in our universities and colleges to becomq in the American Army in times of national ing Co. (The New York Leening World So declared Lieut. Col. A. R. Edwards of the United States Coast Artillery, one of the highest branches of the service to-day, in telling of the encouraging opening of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at Coie “umbria Untversity this week. Col, Edwards, who {s in charge of this work at Columbia, said the army classes th an enrolment of 150 stud fifty more than the number ure this line of instruction at the university, “Americanism, not militarism, is our motto,” continued Col, Edwards, West Phinter, who, although hardiy thirty, k as a result of bis dynamic zeal and his of the you en ele na more or twenty years “s may ra of have to aiq/ Maintain law tor of ¢ 2 Ww tin abicn we ould become engaged would be wht with subm bomb, a airplanes, with liquid tire and po.soa nks and workshops, | 4s? By the Jon leaders of our armed|to take up arms again we 5 ty of go will be as far advanced from thes the ne | modes of war . s of as We now are a ployed whe 6 system of inatr ve Officers’ Tra standardized aining which student of our colleges to pers intelligently the duties of offi« in the military forces of oug untry with tho least practicable terference with their elvil varooray eighbor ds spoke of the actiyit awakened in the me underateed ai ’ “Lhaye been asked what 4 commis oltiined) the aoris, for cwhton | monnin R. 0. T. C.’ means? It edules have been arranged so that |™eans that the President of the ore will be no conflict with other | UMited States, reposing special trust idies, The time required for the | Md confidence in the fidelity, ability and honor of the individual citizen, nissions him an officer im the duties,| Army of the United States, leaves him free In times of peace to perforny normal civil oceupation and oblie ates him in tin of emergency t@ eturn as an officer to the colors, “In a national crisis you will b@ alled, ‘ou are of the prescribed is three hours a week not | COM the student room * course and runs| four itary feature graduates he be 4 entitled to a commission in ‘ Tinitaa MtAtaA Asia aaa BAGOHA > serve your country anyhow During the. soholuatio| the proper place for a colles@ ¢ will be none of the usuai| "2" '8 4s an officer and leader, ce Umanahas and ithe catudent If we had bad this officers’ reserve joipate’ in | °°: of 200,000 men in the early Bev of the world-war just closed I doubt very much if Germany would lave committed the outrages against erica which forced our peaceful coun to luke up arms against her, s isoaniaty f reserve officers ldiers for 24|™e4ns we shail be able to mobilize p Columbia, /#4 train an army of severai millions, should an emergency arise, in perhaps Prat one-third the time, and probably at one-third the expense to the people ‘a Here drilis, marches, field work. |tayos that would be required others gs, map making and | wise ary f hola nations which might in- | his | | vacations the R, O, T. C, men, > are to be provided by Uncle Sam “Such a body o other practical out-door ‘branches of | pais ndid training Uncto Sam the military science will be taught, | piy contident thatshe will be Mdwa xpluined richly rewarded, even should a blow Piaannat too great emphasis," |never be struck the improved e Colonel continued, “on what 1 re- |physical and me attainments of ard the advantages the yo nese young men and thei hrough our rT officer d love and respect for Amerie course will haye ov wi only takes the regular colle pro Gin. .aieenn instance, the stu EVENING WORLD © usuul lines, how to construct By Sam Loyd. SOO Ee now to oui’ | Miser \Wilkins's Pussle. moinical way and within the t ISER WILKINS is too mean ta ible time, how to lay out army give you the time of days camps and other important works ac When I asked him for It this morning he glanced cautious ly at his big ver timepiece and replied: “Just add “phe genit irmy engineer 3 responsible for the at ( most wonderful en, Ay) 1-4 the time from Hie skill contributed midnight unt!t sonstruction of New Yo now to half ° time from now until midnight and you will have the ‘In the case of the boy studying ach him the fundame that govern our army and admiralty |correct time | courts d instruct him tp the Answer to Sorting the Pupils. -\cepts of international law and the| There must have been 61 scholars in

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