The evening world. Newspaper, March 4, 1922, Page 11

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ce 4 Simplicity in Dress Subject of the Radto Phone Tatk By Margery Welle To-Night—Read It Mts. Christine Frederick Household Efficiency Pzpert | Author “Household Engineering” / J York Evenii World), " Ret 208, Nr Ae Socapey. ne Ot eneh of these groupe OF thos RE you aware, Mre. Average That i, at cach meal woe should Houwekeeper, that most editors C8008 @ food which has proteins, and-leaders say that you won't another that is starch, another that d can't be interested in learning has sugar and fat, and another that how to feed your 9 mineral and bulk, Plaaning a family as’ intetii- Al 18 Just Ike a gaxie. ‘We can think of each food as a block or part farmer aah 3 of @ puzzle and meed only to put the ermine go right oes together to form a per- . fect whole. a es For the Aged. = — = | ee age makes a great deal of won't do so—but aimerence in the kind of food we Taueh as T Bate te should eat. If we have a grand- I must admit thet pther or old person in the home, the farmer 40€8 sng should not use fats or starches, feed his cattle aut should confine her meals largely more intelligently ¢4 fruit, lean meat and dry forms of than the average s,044 which will be the least indi- woman feeds her gestible. Rothe sated fede For the Active Adult. ow that the farmer studies care- 7, active adult, on the other hand, the protein and other elements needs a large quantity of starch and feeds his cattle—often weighing yu1, os well as protein, to enable him ie Oped etnctiy? to do his work.” The amount of fat Now, I'm not a crank on scientific noeded will depend upon the season. in the family. Families won't We asd ieee tet in Waste weather or pd for being treated like patients hospital. But at the same time, ‘ woman who doesn't know the on elements of food and won't herself in the important mat- # controlling and balancing these pts on her table, for her family’s 's sake, is certainly not a re- ble mother. She is to blame for n s of some foreigners who merica has the worst cooking of f civilized country. A Copyright, MORAL: There, Little foods fall into one of the follow- ONSIDER the Violet, 1622 model! C 3 Make way for the Modest Vio- let, the Boy of To-Day! This immaculate individual, this new son of the Old Adam, Is pictured for us, in moving lan- guage, dy a lady uplifter, The burden of whose song is not that ‘“‘we must protect our girls,” But rather, must protect our BOYS FROM girls! 11" Manly modesty is in peril at the sub- deb dances. Probably even the social life of a suburban high school Is, for its Galahads, just one terrible temptation after another. For what says the lady uplifter? Fate, like butter, lard or of She quotes the appeal one young Par- other animal origin. sifal makes to his mothers BUGA4R—This food creates heat: ‘‘How can I'’—laments the ingenuous } Cane ougar and beet sugar. one—"keep in mind ‘The loveliness and purity of girls— with this cheek-dancing? PROTEIN—These foods make Grains, like wheat, oatmeal, &c. Beans and peas, especially dried. 2. STARCHES—These foods make nergy and fqt in the body: ite, our Any, form of cornstarch, tapi- oa, Ao. "ATS—These give heat and en- to the body: bal Fate from meat and fish. Olive, peanut or other vegetable oils. ay Sugar in milk and in many vegetables and fru ‘And if I pull away, they. call me a . MINERAL SALTS—These are prude.” : aie Gleanse the body and keep 4 soseph, yea, a Joseph come to juds- ? gure: ment pein a slieie On Miss—not Mrs,—Potiphar. peaches, berries, melons, ap- No one, of course, would be so unkind ples, grapes, &c. as to suspect Joseph-Parsifal BULK FOODS—~These help elim. Of Preparing in advance an allbi such Eh aon end Keep the intestines empty: 2 bis father Adam used Cabbage. AFTER the robbery of the first apple- 1 Spinach. orchard— 'B Coterz. “The woman tempted me!'’ But really, there are infinite possibili- li Lettuce. | All green and coarse vegetables ml with fibre and seede. “palance meal” is one which has ties along the lines of excuse laid down by this blushing male cheek- dancer, 4 Lucile the Waitress By Bide Dudley Copyright, 1922, (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. ' SEH by the papers,” said Lu- something with sense to tt.’ { cile the Waitress, ae the ‘‘‘All right,’ I says. ‘How many | Friendly Patron explored the Bones does tt take to make the sol Sor a clean lump of sugar for bis + ‘Never mind her, Isaac,’ 4 “that Oklahominy has got # voem e's bate ae ee . preacher only thirteen years old. 3, lye she's one of those infant won. lsee, tell us—what comes after 12 we hear about at interludes, eb?" ~— ‘Lunch,’ he pipes. ‘Must be,”’ he replied. “This guy with the kid laughs ris \y | beare must! They say she's been head off. I go to the kitchen pre'ty | isplred to preach by reading church says the sore, I will admit, and when I come back the man’s got at<her for me. “Listen, lady,’ be says, thinking he's smart, ‘what makes Water rap down hill?’ I see my chance. I give one look and reply: “‘Because Mr. Hill @rinks it, I pie- 1 We get a infant won- fe Bere now and again. Fellow it a 4-year-old boy in this morn- who was supposed to be one. He to the kid: ‘Isaac, tell the lady many etter’ there are in the al- et.’ The kid says twenty-six. 1 laud and then I think of that joke “It brought home txe bacon. That guy seen his portion of the ent tainment Was Mnished and he keeps @ jona Winter, Amelia Summerville ou've got quite a jocular vein, ‘ of them seasonable actresses haven't you?" asked the Frienc to get off. and I say: ‘How many One. Lucile put her hand to her rs in the Post Office, Isaac?' The | \, with the kid gets sore, | “MeREME HIT be cave, throat. Gosh!" she said. ‘Can you see my Jusslor vely ao pluip we thatr’ ‘Ack bin’ DO YOU FEED YOUR FAMILY AS INTELLI- GENTLY AS A FARMER FEEDS HIS CATTLE? Fables for the Fair VAMPS AND VIOLETS By Marguerite Mooers Marshall sneeesemmJ 1922, (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. if we do mental work than we do in cold weather or if we do outside work like gardening, driving, &c. For the Desk Worker. The other.kind of person is the one who sits at a desk or does most of his work with his head and not with his muscles, The point here is to remem- ber that the diet must be light and especially planned with an eye to avoiding constipation, The person who takes little exercise needs a quantity of fruits, vegetables, salads and lighter foods. He cannot stand heavy puddings, rich satices or any kind of food that ‘stuffs him up.” For Growing Children. Growing children are doing two things. They sre building their ac- tual body tissue and also using up a great amount of energy, in play and school work. A boy of ten will re- quire as much food as a man of thirty-five doing desk work. The point is to furnish the child sufficient food of a kind to “hold him’ so that he will not need to eat such a quan- Violet, Don’t You Cry, You'll Be a Reformer By and By! Probably it is Marie who forcibly ab- ducts Tom and Tom’s motor car When they run away for a highly rep- rehensible petting party. Doubtless Dollie places a first sinful cigarette between the pure young lips Of the college Freshman who has asked her to go skating with him. Sallie is the siren, we may be sure, Who lures John to trample under foot his simple boyish creed— That his first kiss should be saved for the girl he has promised to marry. (All boys, of course, believe this— All boys always have believed it!) If indeed it be true, as a novelist of note declared in a recent magazine article, That the boy of to-day gives first aid to his complexion— Some _unscrupulously made-up maid must have shown him how! Shade of Clarissa Harllowe, how art thou avenged— The world, it appears, is now filled with Lovelaces of the feminine gen- der! It's really a wonder that every grad usting class at the big men’s colleges Discovers even ONE kissless youth in its midst. ‘The flapper has been answering for her own sins, this year or more. Now she comes to the bar charged with vamping the Violets— Endangering the morais—or, at least, the ideals—of that ‘‘very singularly pure young man," The Boy of To-Day! He just can’t stand it any he tells mother so! So shines a good boy in 4 naughty world, Well, let’s do everything we shield him— Give him a catcher’s mask when he dances. And blinders, And a sandwich boaid, legend, ‘‘Not to Be Kissed," And a perpetual chaperon; And if all else fails we can send him to Turkey, longer: van to fo wear the Where, as Shaw's ‘John Tanner"’ re- marks, ‘Men are protected from wonten!'’ For, if we take awfully good care of him And see that he iso’t the helpless, victim of some designing vamp of sixteen-~ For, i we enesmmmge him in his yesthful tendency to blame it all on the women And to pride himself on his own vir- tue, ‘white as a sheet—whiter, And to see deep-laid assaults on that virtue from cheap, idiotic, transitory fad or folly. we do all these things ward us! He'll be a reformer When he grows up! ! every i helt How to Classify Foods, Balance Meals, and Improve Family's Health. a in dil PY 7 THE EBViwinu wORLD SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1 a ‘4 BRAT Lighten Work, Save Expense tity. Peanut’ butter, beans, cream cheees, lentils, milk and eggs are all excellent. The child also needs a large quantity of fruits and vegeta- bles in order to keep his system pure while growing. For Girls and Women. Girls and women need more vege- tables and solid foods than they usually take. Think of the cream- puff lunch which so many business girls take as compared with the “ham and eggs" which their brothers order, Girls should avoid the over-> sweet foods, the pastries and desserts which make digestion more difficult. The more a woman knows about feeding the easier will become her cooking and the greater will become the health of her family, while her pocketbook will stay much fatter. Articles by Mrs. Frederick are pub- lished on this page of The Evening World three days each week. How They Began STEEL PENS. E first machine for the manufacture of pens was the invention of an American, Samuel Slocum, who was born 130 years ago. As a result of his invention steel pens, although made by hand long before, came into general use and displaced the quill, Before Slocum’s ma- chine began turning out pens in large quantities, steel pens sold at wholesale for about $35.00 per gross, but by 1830, thanks to the improved process of manufacture, the price was reduced to $2.00 per gross. The ancient Egyptians used a brush or reed pen in writing on the delicate membrane ob- tained by unrolling the stem of the papyrus, a water-plant once abundant along the Nile. The ancient Greeks and Ro- mans also used a reed cut to a point similar to the modern pen. In the Middle Ages a metal stylus was used to write on wood coated with wax. Quills were first used as pens in the fifth or sixth century, and their use became general. “Iron pens’’ were made as early as 1685, but the quill held its vogue until the inven- tion of machinery for pen- making placed steel pens with- in the reach of all. WHAT CAN Wi DWE AVE NOTHING DIN NER 1022, rue NE WIFEY /AN BRINGING A FRIEND oF MINE HOME FoR. DINNER. / ‘LL Go lo THE DELICATESSEN STORE AND -WE CAN How to Keep New Serles by Gee ! PRETTY | Appearance—Health—Job 9 Derte Doseher SHorr Notice / THIS (ala) C10FS THE'S ie GHT- Be JOHN The Thief of T By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1922, (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co E steals your golden moments And leaves you nothing in return The Thief of Time. He finds his way into your heart when you are weary And talks twaddle that leaves you more dishea ened, In the beehive of lite Where humans Doing the work of He is found. He never works his way, but worms it, And halts the wheels of progress. His ways are devious. his tongue is silvers And his mouthings are full of flattery His voice is like a song, That makes you pause and listen A song that never satisfies Because it is born of illusion. And its strains die Ere he is gone. Always he seeks something—something to sap your strengt He has nothing to do, and seeks you to do it with ‘him Ever he reasons that the world owes him a living, And you are the world, so he collects from you He is the King of Philanderers, Because he ne'er works for thai which lie But takes—in one way or another— That which belongs to some one else He is the drone of the everyday; He comes or goes without your wi And you wonder at his daring. In various forms is he seen— For he is your idle friend, or needy Or your borrowing one; Your never-paying neighbor, or the eveilast And the cure of him ts yours In absent treatment. For the Housewife’s Scrapbook Copyright, 1922, (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. LD meat will pot be tough when prevenw the jars from slipping i reheated if it is not allowed to refrigerator. Her reasons for cook. Heat the gravy, then set on back of range or in the oven. Put thin slices of meat into this and let It stand a few minutes before serving, are busy the world, wants one ng seeker of favors ery, the jars take up less space dishes and they can be covered but be careful that it does not cook. Rubber gloves will tast much | Cold roast bee prepared in this man- with proper care. After we ner is delicious, nem, wash them and thorough! — with a soft towel. Tf the hands add This | When cream refuses to whip the unbeaten white of un egg usually works admirably One practical house ruses slass jars to keep left-over foods in F steel cutlery use a co und she fastens a rubber ring to the apply (ie cleansing powder bottom, using china coment. This more satisfactory than a oloth e dust talcum inside soon 4% YOU notice adhesive tape. the a tear s ‘or th ime | are that she has less knicked croc opyright, 1922 (The New World) by the Press Publishing Co. EAR MISS DOSCHER: Will you kindly advise me as to my hair? It h been falling out for the past three years and is now very ‘thin, It was very pretty, light and curly but now hase lost its curl and is very much darker | have been using a medicine, but it leaves my hair very oily. Do you think t could have ringworms or any other scalp disease, as my head vary itchy and seems to have considerable dandruff, as! call it? | am very much worried, as | am only twenty-one years of age and afraid of losing my hair. Do you think bobbing the hair would rt help it? H. D. Bobbing the hair will not cure a ' d condition of the scalp. In ‘lace of the medicine you have been using try airing, massaging and sun- ning the hair and occasionally apply ng a few drops of liquid vaseline or olive oil Shampooing the hair twice — 4 month with pure Castile soap, thor- oughly rinsing afterward with cold water, try the following: Quinine sulphate of nux vomica we. Medicated ‘aicohoi ‘ Way rum Water (enough to make) 16 fhe quinine should be dissolved in the alcohol and the tincture of nux vomica, then add the rest, Part the hair and apply the lotion with a tooth brush to the s¢ p. Dear Miss Doscher: Kindly print in the paper a quick and effective method for reducing the bust, calves and ankles. Either exercise, diet or massage. onge 1 think you will find that by a@riNK tning all three you will ha y dry quickest results, Diet and exerci: Per that bring inte play the Joves. Hust, and also bathing pateh wat 1 an astringent icing the bust, ‘The calve kles respond to such exer and leg cirelin the n th this than musele with are help rk to th Me is ty, squat Look Your Best ‘By Doris Doscher——"_ & gael was York Evening and then if that is not cffec- of the cold ful ond ing the leg at right angles to —— By Roy!. . Copyright, 1922, (New York venting that talk Mr, Dinkston was giving you here in the office the other day on the psychology of salesman- ship?” asked the boss. “That's a great gan, ‘The Psychology of Salesmanship.’” “But It don't mean anything, Mr. Jarr moodily, ‘It's what I Would call sloganberry juice. It doesn’t even cheer and it certainly has no kick In J “In these days it is not by industry but by slogans that we thrive," said the boss severely. ‘I would have liked to have heard what Dinkston had to say." “He left a little printed tract full of the dope behind him," said Mr. Jarr, wearily, ‘‘and if you are interested 1'Ub read you the rest of it.'* So Mr. Jarr proceeded to quote from the paper before him as follows: “ "The only equipment necessary for business is office furnishings, so that practically all the money our for- tunate clients invest with us goes to earn profits and dividends. It is not like a business where land and build- ings and machinery and labor have to be paid for before the profits can start. As for the questions the merely curious may dsk, how do we do it? the salesman's reply should be: 1 should have confidence in our executives, their connections and ex - perience. Would you go to a bank and ask its officials what kind of a said our bargain they are offering on their notes signed by manufacturers and jobbers and protected by insur- ‘So from every standpoint, you can percelve, Mr. Blank, your invest- ment is absolutely safe. The experi- ence of other great financial concerns like that of J. P. Morgan proves this conclusively. Just think, Mr. Blank, what business is there where the loss ratlo per year is ope-tefth of 1 per cent.? It only remains for you to de- upon the amount that you are ed to invest, and if you wish to rticipate to a greater extent than is 1 by cash or assets you nave in hand, ) as Liberty Bonds, we have arra for a deferred pay- nt plan we will exchange our for your Liberty Bonds at par. could be fairer?’ p provid the su m or stock What The Jarr Family McCardell Worlds bf 1S THE Ee HAVE Alt THE TIME a9 Publishing Co. go on!” said the bow vember that one of the leading of the United States satd un published in a Chicago Nobody can make a fore from salary or Lonker un interview newspaper tune by saving money wages.” You now proceed to close with a prospect," Mr. Jarr con- tinued, “‘After you have handed the fountain pen—be sure it is in good working order—for the client's vixnit ture to your sales form and to siga his check, ond he has signed both, vompliment your new client on his splendid judgment in having raade his investment in this organization. Tot him you will see him again tn a few deys and take him to luncheon; 46 cure from him the nume of any of his felends he thinks has money, thon cordially bid him good-bye and hurry to call the next prospect on your list. Remember, ten calls a day puts the law of averages to work for you.’ ” “What company ‘lid ba represent ‘"" arked the boss, ‘the U. Bteel Cure poration or the a iarilias interes ests? “No,” said Mr. Jarr sadly, ‘a Texas oil company that busted.” Going Down! EAR TIRED ONE: We live and move in a world ef our own making. The poor boy on Side of New York millionaire. What is the world you have created for yourself? Your wondering why you are here and whither you are to go ie part of your progress. | Roses progress; everything pertaining to Nature does. All life is a movement for- ward or backward, We are where we are to-day because the world has moved forward. If you move backward you are out of step—you clog the action of the Universe. Move forward, pleas Faithfully, ALFALFA SMITH. the East to be a

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