HOW TO REDUCE KITCHEN HOURS It’s Wise to Cut Down Work in Heated Season. By EDITH M. BARHER In Cutting down time which must be spent ir the kitchen in hot weather there are two completely different plans which may be followea or com bined into a special program which Is better than either One incindes cooking making up cookies cake and other things which well, several times a week, serving them hot the first day and cold the other days Cold meat cun also be made up into quick. not dishes The other pian consisis of using all quickly prepared supple mented with cakes and other desserts from that good bakery or made ap from the fruits in season, If the ramily is of will find the first plan more ical, as roasts are costly per pound than suctr meats as steaks and chops Many modern have returned to a8 modernized fashioned custom of which once every well-managed household celebrated just as regular ly as wash day and ironing day. In most households Wednesday or Sat urday was selected for this purpose and many were the tempting which eame of the kitchen from roasts pastry, keep large and will dishes any size, you econam fess housewives old “baking day, ont NOTIONATE tie (nervousiy)--1 think to kiss you. 8he—My, what an impulsive man. I'm guing ——————— o———— ! nie conference is being held. baking bread and rolls, from cookies. from baked beans, or other roasts which were always prepared while the oven fire was “up.” Of course there was usually a roast, fresh or warmed over for the malp dinner dish. Chops and steaks were not considered respectable dinner dishes. They were reserved for breakfast or luncheon. With our medern refrigerator facil ities we can make a new baking day program which will be appropriate to our present-day life. Werure able to keep a roast, for instance. for more than one day and to vary the in-be tween meals with another meat We can make up cake and cookies. bake part of them and reserve the rest to bake fresh another day Here is a plan for more justly call a “mixing” which we will be more choose Tuesday or Friday than Wednesday or Saturday, as we like to have our week ends as free as pos. sible. In the morning after break. fast is cleared away. mis first soe cookies and bake them-—all or part of them. Then mix a cake and have it ready to go in the cookies come out. Then mix up pastry, which is such n quick process and put away in a refrigerntor to chill. Also a veal lonf and nave ready to oven, when cnke comes out—ar to put in refrigerator to bake the next day what we can day for likely to when mix v v Says: > ~ FEW drops of scatlered will save books weather, oil of through =a from lavender bookcase mold in damp To clean a white raincoat two ounces cut up of good yellow soap and boil it in a little water til) dissolved, then let it cool a little and stir In half an ounce of powdered magnesia, Wash the raincoat with this, using a nall brush for the soiled parts: rinse off the dirty soap and dry with a clean cinth, . » » Save time in eooking by soaking beans, rice and dried fruits overnight. eo» Use scissors to trim off the ple crust after It has been fitted into the pie pan, (© 1923 by the Associated Newspapers) WN Service Bolt Scares Woman; Car Plunges 40 Feet Chicopee, Mass. —Miss Marion E. Chapin of Providence, R. I, es caped serious injury in a peculiar accident, Startled by a flush of lightning In a storm, she lost con- trol and the car, skidding on hail, went down a 40-foot embankment, It was wrecked, A menu plan for the week end, based on these foods might be: Friday Dinner. Broiled sword fish, Potatoes with parsley, String beans. Tomato salad, Fresh cake, Saturday Luncheon. Crab salad with sliced egg, Bread and butter sandwiches, Iced Jerries, tea, Cookles, Saturday Dinner. Hot veal loaf, tomato sauce, Creamed potatoes. Carrots with lemon butter, Cucumber salad. Janana tarts with whipped eream, Sunday Dinner. Melon. Oven fried chicken, Baked sweet potatoes. Corn on Romaine salad, Ice cream. Cake. cob. Sunday Supper. Cold veal loaf, Vegetable salad, Ginger ale. Cookles. There are other dishes which can be prepared advantageously ahead of time. Icebox rolls, for instance, can be mixed and put In refrigerator to finish near meal time. "" ak ed work recently Met Cliffora W hurrying along Hartridge as he was West Forty third street. The name Isnt familiar? A little more than a quarter of a ¢en { tury ago it was on frst pages all over the world. Twice a day he held con ferences with newspaper men, the dean { LOPKED EVERY elt | your own salad dressing, it and your French dressing can be made and stored In the until need ed A jellied dish of some sort, either for salad or dessert or for a cold snap may be made up for chilling and set ting. A ham may be bolled, ready for the last hour's cooking in the oven A plan based on this might be: refrigerator Friday Dinner. rolled soft-shelled crabs, Scalloped potatoes. Baked tomatoes Cabbage and pimiento salad lorries Saturday Luncheon. Jellied vegetable salad, Cottage cheese. Tea. Apricot tarts Saturday Dinner. Jaked ham. Hot rolls laked potatoes. Spinach. Cucumbers with sour cream, Melon, Senday Dinner. Tomato cocktail Broiled steak, Creamed potatoes. Peas, Lettuce with rogquefort dressing, Raspberry monsse. Cake. Sunday Supper, Mixed sandwiches, Sliced tomatoes. Iced tea, Coffee, Cookies. Cake. © 1921 Ded Syndicate — WNU Service frvin 8 BAY Was and of which was none other than Cob had bb, Whatever he BCTO8Ss carried by wires down the and rectly nation He was quoted di Newspaper men lay in When he appeared on the was stared at. In an overcrowded never (eft move was noled Clit wait for him streets, he A courtroom, eyes his face and his every ford W. Hartri record in the Thaw, charged Stanford White, * » - dge was the attorney of trial of Harry K the slaying of first with Not a head turned as Mr. Hartridge continued along Forty third street His appearance, according to those who knew him then, has no! changed greatly since those exciting days when he faced Willlam Travers Jerome, who was trying to send the scung Pitts burgh millionaire to the electric chair But Mr. Hartridge Is no longer in the public eve. He was one of the trag edies of that famous ocuse, which caused so much furore at the time Because of that case, he was disbarred and has never been reinstsled. . * ». After the case, Mr. Hartridge brought suit against the Thaw family for his fees and money expended He had been pald some on account but claimed that approximately $0 000 was still due. He started the suit in the state courts, but on petition of the family, It was transferred to the Federal court. Mr, Hartridge intro duced proof that the fee, out of whick he was to pay his law partner who had died before the case came to trial was not all for legal services but in cluded also about $30.000 of his own funds which he had spent in Thaw's behalf. He lost the suit and the mat. ter was taken up with the Bar associ: ation. That body held that his bill of particulars had not been ethical, and #0 he was barred from practice. - *. Before taking the Thaw case, Mr. Hartridge had been a successful New York attorney, his Income at that time. so It was sald, having been about $25. 000 a year, not a bad figure for 1008 Fate took a hand in his entering the Thaw case. Through his Interest in bridge, Mr. Hartridge knew Thaw. Seo when Thaw was confined in the Tombs, after that tragedy on the old Madison Square Garden roof, he went to see if he could do anything for him. He was at once engaged as Thaw's attor ney. Others came Into the case, in cluding Delphin M. Delmas. but Mr Hartridge was the aiterney of record Thus he became known over the world. And now he goes about New York unnoticed. Curiously, to me at feast. hin interest in brides Is undimin. ished He pot only stili plays but = - » After a short chat with ridge, | continsed and at Eight inr with The > With Mr. Hart along Forty third avenve met =» the weys of depression sireet friend famil the hit fas well has out the sw nid Employesyr of rack longer get past For 8B petty the wages insta theft nee, for anyone “pt arm on” A beating so se risk of 8 murder $150, and 8 bomb These prices are per fob of imber en and beat op 3 and it the for $100, there is done culls for £100 for the totnl cost of the depending on the n | Byudicate. — WN1 1 How It Started By jean Newton Bervice “John Barleycorn’ *VERYBODY knows John Ua: corn; has heard of him, bas talked iriey hag seen him extolled and praised and damned, excused Phere is probably nothing snd no people have stubborn sides and clung more their but John personifying hard liquor, over which taken ore obstinately to ideas ; Barieyveorn goes Nis was The “Ii i% af course easily ifleycorn part of the name identi®ed as thy itt of which the ent involved why “John Barleycorn? ‘John synonymously Originally Barleycorn™ was innkeeper’ its the entitled se with from the obvious cnnnection: but eariiest recorded use is dated to publication in “Sir Jol i651 of 8 song n Bariercorn.” © Bel Byndicate «WNT Bervie British Railway Runs Planes in Daily Service London.—~Oune British raiirond has turned to air transport in ite effort to combat the competition of the high ways The Great Western has opened two daily services between Cardiff, on the south coast of Wales, and Plymouth, on the English channel const The line is operated under a bill passed in parliament four years ago. but this is the first time the weasure's provi gions have been put into effect. The entire time for the air journey | is just under an hour, as compared with more than four hours by rail * HUNGRY Patron—This canvas is not up to | your standard. There is an emptiness in it which 1 do sot like, Artist (sadly)--Alas yon are right. 1 hadn't eaten for three days when | did that, New Englander Donates Trophy for Dumb Flyers Boston.—Capt. “Joseph A. Wilson, U. 8 A, has donated a trophy to be known us “The Flying Dumb bell” for New England reserve alr corps flyers guilty of “boners” during 1033. For every error in fiying which a court of inquiry adjudges as stupid, a pilot will have his name engraved on the base of the trophy. The first pilot to com mit three “boners” will retire the prize which, true to its name, consists of a winged dumb bell, HEAT IN Slow, Moderate and Hot Are Degrees in Order, First of all, the first ald to the cook Is a good stove, which is an vestiment that brings terest in form of success. If this good has an regulator it wii the baking question much eas all standard recipes now have Ing temperatures stove has no regulator mometer is the fact, it is a good plece « equipment to have sn hand case, a i in the glove oven attached. next &8 you to che oven regulator, whieh out of do not have hold aids temperature perience, A slow oven, accord DE to estimat is from 275 to 550 degrees F. A hot up. accuracy some either of You nn fi successfully oven Is from 400 deer: For starting for for fish for pastry, a For erate tart wlartir hot oven is | butter cak “8 § Over £ ” ew on PY i, wi Gegroes | * . : % for angel sponge cal oven, 325 degrees F., whic hotter oven than for these cakes hat 29% A... . that 320 degrees is rookies Sprinkle Ant Food along win. dow sills, doors and openings through which ants come and 0. Guaranteed to rid quickly. Jsed in a million homes. Inex- pensive. At your druggist’s. A AAV ANT FOOD PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Lovparts or Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair! d $1.0 at Drogpists ORESTON SHAMPOO } connection with Parker's Hat nm. Makes the Bair soft and Sully. 50 cents by mail or at drag- gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue N.Y. A single dose of Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot” expels worms. Tones up the stomach and bowels. No sfier purgative necessary. All Druggists. 50c. Deod Ryd Le a) mE atALS THE RAADISTONRN = 2% wrewiy THE JEFFEESTR 30 weexy mE MONTICELLO 1210 weexyy ook lets ama 2 ATLANTIC CITY ma ADJUSTED RATES Ei hs SOUTHERN HOTEL SITE LE FIT onl | | CENTRALLY LOCATED AE WNU-—4