The evening world. Newspaper, November 27, 1922, Page 21

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

pecial Thanksgiving Menu Favorite Recipes By Famous Men Celery Soup BY GEORGE GAUL if (Actor.) HIS is how to make a celery soup that will start your ThankseW- ing dinner right. The ingred!- ents are: 2 cups of celery cut very fine. 1 pint of milk and 1 pint of water. alt and pepper to taste. 2 tablespoons of butter. 8 tablespoons of flour. The celery must be tender. Add the water, mill seasonin, and theiken with the butter and flour that have been creamed Cranberry Sauce Y FRANK CRAVEN (Actor.) recipe ts and The Merely require 2 cups of water Pick and wash Put in stew. pan, add sugar ing Water and boil ten minutes. and cool. Any recipe for cranberry « highly important feature Thanksgiving { must include the admonition, ‘Don't let it boil over The main thing is tu watch it. Roast Turkey BY LUTHER BURBANK (Naturalist.) For an- ordinary ten-pound turkey @team 2144 hours or until the muscles of the leg can be readily pierced with a dining fork T steamer from the fire and carefully remove the tur- key to the roasting pan. Meantime prepare the dressing as follows: One loaf of bread, ordinary baker's size, or same amount of other bread. Slice and slowly but thoroughly a light golden color; while hot, spread butter on cach slice Just s a hungry boy would like it. Place in a deep dish The cooked giblets, with the juice of one lemon and three wh hould be ground a meat grinder with 1 teaspoon salt. Yp teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 teaspoon powdered sage. 2 teaspoons summer savory. 2 tablespoons sugar. These should be well sifted and then added to the ground vegetables and riblets, and with the meat juice saved from steaming, thoroughly mixed with the bree? nd all cut and mashed to about the . — stency of thick mush. After filling, the turkey should be Placed in an oven not too hot and slowly roasted an liour or more Prepared as above, little of no bast- ing will be necessary, but a few thin Slices of Lacon laid over the fowl will add flavor very simple. You » cups of cranberries, sugar and 2 cups of boiling over cranberries, nd boil- Skim auce— the st onions, na Oyster Dressing BY JOHN GOLDEN (Producer). To my notion, turkey becomes turkey only when it iv properly atuffed with oyster dressing Mr Burbank's stuffing is undoubted wonderful, but [ think that nothing oan beat the stuffing made ord.ng @o this recipe: 3 cupfuls of soft breadcrumbs 2 tablespoons of butter. 1 tablespoonful of finely chopped onion, 2 cups of oysters cut in half Ye oup of chopped small celery The whole tnust be tho @oned ag it is in the making ° +39 “Lightnin Salad BY FRANK BACON (Written shortly before this famous actor's recent death.) Take crisp hearts of of sliced pineapple, half cu chopped nuts Add a little cream t rin nuts and r Mound into individ place one on cach slice ot Place on lettuce Mayonnaise dressing Mince Pie BY WALTER PRICHARD EATON (Writer). Affix the grind firmly the table e alega inno Beene t the latter 6 oughly sew lettu 1 can and ) the cheese 1 st isin a1 balls and rppl ands fm the dark Lkeept Wher oO Summank =O SSuoen Corepiled by Contributors to The Evening World's ‘‘Feed the Brute’’ Feature as much of the wet it with boiled cide: cider, too, if possibl stiff, and who ake ingredients meat as you desire, and with fresn so that it is mot crusts, below. bet ai n the are given 2 tablespoons each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice. 2 tablespoons lemon extract. 3 cups liquor in which ber Eat hot, with soft dairy cheese und cooked. coffec. If you have wine or brandy, put in The meat should be thoroughly » cupful after taking from the fire boiled the dh; is made, and the cider should be boiled down at home—not bought—until it is before the the consistency of molasses. Hero are filling: 5 cups cooked beef, after grinding. 212 cups suit. 7/2 cups apples. 3 cups cider. 1% cup vinegar. 1 cup molasses. 5 cups sugar. 34 pound citron. the ingredients of the mincemeat Juice and rind of 2 orange: be put through arinder). Salt to taste. Juice and rind of 2 lemons. 1 tablespoon mace and nutmeg (or 2 nutmegs, grated). * T ~ Exercise Chart—No. By Doris Doscher Evening World's Physical Culture Authority ani the New York The Lecture r for (The New Prening World) by the M For the crust take 2 cups pastry flour, sifted, with teaspoon salt, and 4 cup (generous) of lard, mixed in with fluger tips till the combination is fine and powdery. Wet with cold water, mixing with knife, and cutting till you can take the dough from the bowl without sticking to it. Divide in half, pat gently on floured marble slab and roll out thin. Lift lower crust carefully, place in tin and trim off edges. Roll out from trimmings a strip half an inch wide and place on top of lower crust around edge, first wetting edg» slightly with cold water. Put in fill ing, place upper, crust on top, first wetting edge of rim slightly with cold water, press together with tines of fork and trim off overhanging of upper crust. Bake in hot oven till brown. (Copyright, 1922, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 2 City Board of Education Exercise. 1—Stand in correct po- sition; place hands on hips. 2—-Bend right knee quickly toward chest, 3—Replace. 4—Bend the left toward chest and re peat alternately twenty times to rapid count. knee Save This Chart and Watch for the Sixth Next Mon- Evening World One day's in Prone Pub, HE above exercise is the fifth of a series being demonstrated by Miss Doscher in the Washington Irving High Set every Saturday at 2.80 P. ol gymnasum Charts of these exercises pi are lished on this page of The Evening World the following Monday, Ciy) them out, save them and complete the These exercises arc also being broadcasted by radio from Newark, every Thursday, from 6 to 6.15 P. set Ww M, Maxims of a Modern Maid By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. I 922 (New York Evening World) by Prese Publishing Compan When a woman tells her husband that she hopes he'll be happy some one else if anything happens to her she’s at least 99 per cen ertain that nothing ever will! 1 child ¢} it’ ries shame for you have the he gets off, but if a woman cries for it moon to & m cnd see if 1 can't earn some extra it's , (tes iauerite fl ye one know v her husband say Yes, durin without it, and Wil do some night wer money to get it for While every woman ts doing | 4 mae reasons for thankfulness, #1 Mdn't forget 1 down the item that DIDN'T marry tl fi 1 who over kissed he A man tells you s use t WOLET 4 kne it is im th fash t i y ny shapes the cruel truth th women ha bi Sometimes a cat ys “miau! miau and she wishos she wore like you and didn't CARE t she got! If the old-fashioned woman was oy modern woman js bouse-impatient. Her house chalhs her t many places where she doesn't want to stay, and ite ever-yawning maw deprives | t so many Joys she might otherwise obtain: Now that the fashion has changed, all the little « re finding tha easier to get it bobbed than lo get it bac What the cynic wonders, when one woman speaks admiringly of an hether wishes to impress him with her friend's charms with her broad-mindedness and magnantmity The onl letters worth keeping are the kind It ian’t wafe to keep ‘ ny in i \ ny * cS Lf. 5 INFORMED ME i THAT SHE WILL NOT RE HERE \\ cook Our > ye BE A SPorT/ THAN KSGIVIN, J) NER iam . | ' | } ) At yr (ase CAN ONLY ae DIE ONCE ) git le eed ( co" \ ) Can You Beat It! Trade Mark Mea. U. 5. Pat. Off. . THEN Wwe'le iO OuT- For DINNER 1D RATHER NOT,DIE Fon (NOIGESTION sewers Kotor me) [ WILL YOU AND YOuR AUSBAND |e DINE WITH US THANKSGIVING | y a Nes WE ‘lL BE “Shi to come ove his wife Now Rangle ERY GLAD "phoned me out and he wants me ons pean oe suid, * when I a little while this. Rangie, No Sir! HP LUNOT LET ALL THE Foop [| HAVE ORDERED GO TOWASTE . ILL COOK IT) MYSELF / ‘LL TAKE A HANCE ON ? POUR ING (F YOU'LL LET ME ) < ) ae Soneboor The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell. came in!" which she had York Evening S¥orid) by Press Publishing Company iood evening,’ to Mr. retorted not Jarr Mrs "Amd byt iahing ¢ evening aid Mr Jarre in a hesi- I'm sure Mr. Jarr will excuso my re EAR MISS DOSCHER Jating manner the other night after mark about how things are, but 1 D Myibaip was bobbed aucut ppe know his wife wouldn't like it if her i resign Go by ull means!" replied Mrs. husband had made @ pla pen of the @ month: ade. Ghorsly:afte ut she sald ft in a most un- house! And, furthermore, Mr. Rang! it began to fall out. Do you wit manner knuws I do not tolerate gambling! 1 think this is due to my having if you don’t want me to T thought T had burned those horrid had it bobbed! 1 have used a rked Mr, Jari cards! Um sure [intended tot! 7 do anything strange or n, We Weren't gambling; just bottle of hair tonio, but it did not 1 Mrs. Jarr. “Tam used playing for fun, you know!"' star help. Could you please suguest night after night, Of mered Mr, Jarr, and he seized his be something to stop its falling out course, friends come first 1 and muttered his farewell, without and also something to make it poor Mr Fungle will be #0 lonesonim, getting his two bucks Blow) thicker? Af Not that | believe a word of it, how Well, this is a nice tim ' over home!" began Mrs, Jur. TL suppose 1 har t hayi Well needn't, then ox. You waited till Mrs. angle ume would have cuuse ou f claimed M Jary in buff ck? How would you like § out. The K of So, after some more discussion pro running out and staying till all fetint fccon, Mr, Jarr attendine to the jours as she does? Maybe she doe ation in your ali ” nee to Rang it on purpose, for [ suppose that man overcome | ‘ are von tite Rangle got you gainbling and A little vaselin ‘ gent 1 haven't a eheate ut of all your mones assayed) ‘ 1 bs Why you \ out brush Al 1 friends are that kind sole think tt d Jn asure Mer. Jart creasit, welt ” was of 1 wouldn't 4 ‘ Dear Miss Voscner i ' s amd Mrs, Jary You know | am fifteen yea jht 5 ne us mu two hat me of curds fant cB inches’ and 5 nt n any just u little game or wo of pounds, Kindigiler ine daa} ' ne rummy. | won two dollar aid Mr Mivawelght should + t Jarr did not know They Ja obtain it without ' oinily some twenty gam Let me see it," said Mrs. Ja It health fe ne $2 0 u 1 doo win anythiy 1 ve just 1 and over to me Fast his wife and) Mr. Jaw ‘ ra 1 ptly ' mone dollar bill 'w My ' MEhe. Y \ think uit Mes. dollar bills a I i t 1 migl 1 " i‘: ; n who ae ; \ M hed quit t Twas ever thus! asad aecereoeeaiaioatee Dear Miss Dosche lam a girl fifte Ee Do It Yourself pounds. Please ¢ anateia powder my as New though | have al J 4 | tried putting en at Cc a i tana ay E L ' nt k ot « is k moving es enlarged should be suf ' worn tier catise most of 1 Ne n be pur 7] Remove nie ° Then he ‘ nto ' " from ) cut great dimentty, By Maurice Ketten (1AM A F YOUR » COOKING mf VA SCO AHEAD. [fF C Oy HAVE AN ENENY'S The Sewing Basket Barbara’s Beaux By Caroline Crawford” Copyright, 1922 (New York Bivening Ww, by Prees Publishing Cu. € ¢ BEGIN THE STORY TO-DAY. Rarbara Benningtoo, beg years old, leaves her i Comes to New enna She secures Sarre Fetweee = cee ring iB RAR inne il ac8 sbogt to's leary Bai He (rae West reia- live, refusing to wed he too has 510,000. Meanwhile paints Iniadure pictures of el io New ‘ork and entertains Vao Brunt ¥ den and’ sther. young men le, her hich do you think HEN Dan Dover left Barbara « studio and she realized the; engagement was off she fair! ced around the room for joy. A first she felt Ike flimging herself on the sofa and giving vent to tears be cause she had read that that was th: way the average girl usually acted when the young man of her hea walked out saying he was “through. But Barbara couldn't cry because fv) many days she had realized Dan we not the man for her Whether it was his going West, hi» desire to make ten thousand before they wed or just the fact that she had so many other beaux which bac caused this change of her heart, sh» knew not. Nor did she stop to anu lyze herself, Instead she felt a wild desire to speak to Lee Randall. She wanted to tell him she was free, that whe and Dan Dover had quarreled over her numerous studio parties and parted for Ife. Rushing to the telephone she asked Randall to come to the studio at onte The clock pointed to eleven but when an engaged girl is suddenly free, when she realizes that she almost married a man whom she could never love time does*not matter, “What's all thin fuss?’ laughingly demanded young Randall, ‘Barbara what do you mean by routing me out of my den at this hour of the night?" “Ask Marion."’ said Barbara pola ing to a very sleepy college girl try ing to write a ten page theme ufte: dancing until her feet ached and he: eyes burned for sleep. “Oh, Barbara and Dan have’ busted up,"’ exclaimed Marion, dipping he pen in the ink and going on with he work, r “Of course knew you would,”” smiled Randall, coming over to Rar bara’s settee and sitting down besid: her. He even took het) hand tand Barbara thought, “Now he ixy going to propose. Ho's b lying to ight along but he was too honorable to while Don and I were stilt engaged.” But Ran didn't prog He stroked Barbara's hands and tulked very low and sweetly to her qhout marrying the wrong type of man and what a serious thing matrimony was after all. Then he spoke of the easel he gave to her and how proud he was than she was winning fame upon the board he had purchased for her. But” did ne y a word of love which migh Bandanna Handkerchief ~ arter liad gone Barbara Ap. Sinan i i hated herself for giving him the op- for Your di. portunity to declare lis love. He by Preas Publishing Co © known that she told him HE bandanna i having all sorts Cree URE Cone ay Oy aera wet out that silk one which you next morning, however, her had been saving for just thix aevasion, Heart was light and gey again, Tt Twist it into a hat, if you will Vu was not halt t to te 4 oat asful Will be rieht in styte wien you walk Miniature painter, a magazine cover upon the atrést in that new designer and p So.00N to the Twist it just hte good letting the top-of your A largo bunel of chrysanthemuma OG OBIS AIA RIISOU at her brevkfust platy brought the thing for wear with you color back inte her cheek# again. The evening dress card told her they were from Van Tie It around yu 4d ina folled Brunt Varden and a note signed As string letting th on weve awa vt oad * told herb had heerd of her one side and. y« U have a sports frecdem and was coming to sce her adidveas. te wear when wre Rolfe that evening . ing or bikin Barbara pb i the chrysant If you winh you can wear it for near her easel but shook her hea searf with t 1 that \winely as she whispered, “S'. not New Hintte ing out ite make it quite suo easy for him te we SLATER ; Til put every cbstacle.poe 0 w Li 1 sible in his way, for I lieve that's hat with ' wr nd what a veal man wants,** mappen t To: Morrow—The Coquette, Courtship and Marriage By Bett y Vincent. A SILENT SUITOR EAR MISS VINCENT—For over a year | have gone steadily with He says ho are young man but is only one adores not engaged. It sod that we shall marry some day, He seems very reluctant that any should intend to marry. Ifa asks if avoids the nif denies it. | am Fr hearted and | nd this. My it is a man's w underst know we outsider we are engaged 1e either answer o neh and un father tells me yet if he cannot ‘ys loves me why will he not a he te engaged? ALWAYS Dear I met a gir ENGAGED 3 Vincent—Las iat t and liked he a summer * mmengely e naked me to call when | returned to the ¢ t did call and asked her to accompany me to a theatre wetting the dato. She said sie wae engaged for that particular night but would go some other time. Every time | call her on the phone to make a date she says she is en- gaged for that evening, Do you think she is kidding me? She i 1 wonderful gir! and 1 admin greatly x, ¥, T on way to find out if al iT ) nd really wishes to go out a to let her own if sho refuxes to do thig yo wt t cares for som Tyrees Powder Safe Germicide recommended

Other pages from this issue: