A.. .JtW' tV; - ,. H' EVEH1XG LED&EIPlIILADi3Ll'HlA, FK1DAY, SE1MMBEK 2l, 1917 AR bread making to be taught from demonstration train smart fashion NOTEg w I , w , . r k il-i POKING' THE SCHOOL CLIQUE v HOW TO BE HAPPY IN SPITE OF IT liai a College Girl of Twenty-nine Told a Miss ;'" of Sixteen; It Made Her Decide She Was L Wasting Precious Tears - : - JfiiRAn a tlcna In Rantmhtr. 1917. ' .,. i.l ..I-... ........ MM ArAA VUllfi Sill B1A1WCII jrcnio win ."- mid not go back to high school. irents probed her for the reason. ive. several, each one as flimsy as "her, Every one was surprised. It stated In the family plans that the 'should graduate. ., press J re of Inquiry grew stronger. Interview assumed stormy pronor- j BnJ finally !n an outburst of tears ,. were almost fierce In their bitterness. girl confessed she was leaving be- Jte she'd "never got In with the eu heartbreak In the world was slajd Into those bI.x worili. They triable.. Pitiable, because as the I'Jrt sobbed them out between ' tears that had probably been 'ijs In her heart for months she was inj the very depths of her soul on most unimportant thing In the world le clique that is born in school. (Vhat Is the school clique? What Is magical standard of "belongins"'.' No le has ever been able to tell. There nre orfiely elrls In the crowd ana pretty ones (utsti!e. There are pretty ones In and lOmelj ones outside. Students In and hii((.rfll" nut anil vleo versa. Just as an. as you have found a workable classl- itcaUlon you bump Into something so abso. utdly contradictory that you despair of 'Vel dolnj anything but letting the clique est to the end. A Htl' that's what you have to do, let ra.he cllaue rest. "While there are f. i)s there'll be cllauos. kourse, when you argue with a girl toeen It's hard to be able to convince Jpt the thing which seems most lm ect In all the world to her Is really ast Important. GoadSns-on to ex "co In studies as a substitute for ,."ln on things" doesn't work. j parents of this particular girl a? unsuccessfully tiieJ these things, In despair. It was finally a twenty-'ear-old girl who hud been "boss" clique through her four years In col 'who made the girl telephone to the elpal and take the trolley car for high ol the following morning. CACSB cliques are manifold und .sixteen-year-old gl! Is who have to ?k" them even more numerous. It is th while to pass on the cure employed THE WOMAN'S Jrffr ixi ffoi K,hrnitird In Ik In drpcrlntrnt t.t b; wrtlttn m one lif e ' rii.tr .nil nnd IbhI i-.IIi 1'ir mt of the tcrlter. Spclol ltk thoat alvn I'ltittXtr lurllrtf. (I li ... n. r.toml thnt lli ttllor fot nol nerjarlly ldor li "tlmit Jil!. All ror'Mt.iilcnl.o)-. lor (hit 'T.nrltHt thauli l ud&rrlttd at ollouii: TUB naiyU T-,ril.'GK, Kvt,eo I.rdatr. PJH.'mWii.Ma. Pa. ,t of hor TODAY'S colhat sh- btter nerilee than pen'.nlfe ldjr 0f xtor for rlpplni oeams? ou Vht l the lft tu dont H aenlnt ne? '1 C. In frlnc douthnut nliat nlll pretent the Leo frum abaorblns too much of the create? ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY'S INQUIRIES I, When the lleht l poor the needle of a lns machine ran be enllr threaded 1 olns the needle to Ihrendinc bullion and ' f Im a mnall niuart of nhtte paper dlrectlr lAlrr It. 3 A "fruit kliower" U !mllnr to the brlde'n lnn fthower. In plare of rlrrrs of linen the ritetii brim clae of Jcllj nnd Jurn of Jam, l.i- K'.ylns tho bride "a eood tart" In home- lade drllrjrle. .1, Clocced lea nnd rcneo trainer ran be Jllj cleaned "by rubblns "lib lnmp of roarae all. Pattern for Crocheted Sweater "o the BdUtr of IVomoii'j ragr; Dr Madam Will you pleaie print direction! f how to mako a crocheted an cater, alio 38 lid open down th front? I wnt to use a bane ledla with a hook. I would like a fancy (Upper lteb, and If not that Hitch Just a plain one. A RKADEIl. The. .pattern for a sweater In the plain Orr stltph Iff nowhere to be found. A. rei are several fancy Rtitches for the kins: of slippers I picked out the simplest Ithest. pie stitch used In this pattern Is called "half-doube crochet (wrap. Insert hook In ch; wrap, pull yarn through; wrap and V off three (oops). ie sweater calls for a colored border p the front and around the neck. It be mad In any colors you desire, but ,t will call the main shade whits "tlie trimming shade "color." j. . stitches equal one Inch ; three rows Ci one Inch. 'Vth white chain 101 for lower edge of I work twenty rows even. Decrease ono Tlde' ersry sixth row five times. Work ltev.1 fat 1,1 rows even, then Increase one each ry, row four times. On next row Thtm twenty-two stitches. Work of tlrrIpIn- Across row: aaa a cnain or y-pple'fwi stitches. Add a chain of E(rfiytw9 stitches each row until eighty ln?poYP'ara gained for each sleeve. Twenty Ward a evsn, Xext row work 114 stitches, (The 'a,n on' ,lx row!l ven' Then In. "fclev aln at necl ever' row twenty times. Ii-enua" "no vn unt'' "'ere ars forty- "Vep fows, then shape like other side. BrlvedT now dn '"P,nr front even, shape ntthin.' follows;. Three rows even, Increase .Very four rowa sixteen times, do T,heUj .the row where you began the ill pt'thtim lfAV thirty stitches for back of wlu lyiAIn yarn In next stitch and make has ki .front like first. Eight rows even. utyjiy. With white Join yarn at wrist. onsj;.eiHS-.rtfw 0f single crochet. one stitch ' tsi.lt .f" ten rows. Increase one In tHiirth rojr.t Join color, twenty rows wai.-Kew up Bleeves and under-arm team. Whiciflj!rWlth white, beginning at lower 'I JFot rlcbt front malt three stitches for "Ulfry two raws. Increase one stitch at ak. one stitch for each stitch across back. the unto way on otner iront. join work, twelve rows (Zi). Increasing ii her row at corners around sweatsr. w dtt4t front work, twtr row to the neck Jftariliur. three, Inches from lower (dm In five, skip four stitches, work sSrrt - nro.timrB. snkM With white chain twenty- KmiK flfteet) row even. Fasten off. (K)f sivtn row.s lit) even, flew three h from lower edge and front band. Ktra With lor chain sixty-one. Work ,rta. wb owr r iiicum uora VWm' xmnt mn iwt be continue around ltN as. jHff belt r,a ci VkJflHwP !StfMHHHKnHsssH sllBslBtsHBfBBIBpRSsssHisBsffls .fm M siflsisiiiiasiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitW Wssiiift.XBisiHsiBsiBllsiBsnVPi WttJitSSStttKiMfi JsflsHMsl fl&lsWfe ML K wtWKr jtttsttOB 1 H A hat that reminds us of the little song of the "Three Trees" "one there, and one there, and one theah" and there you have a picture hat. by the college girl. The treatment lasted two hours. It consisted of a college rec ord, n lead pencil and a few nnnotatlons. The older gill took the senior lecoril of all the doings nnd standings of her class mates and carefully penciled off the pic tures of the girls who comprised the A Number 1 clique of tho school. Every Greek letter, every little friendly Jibe that Indicates being "In on" nit things de sirable In the school was carefully pointed out. Then the pictures that were piti fully bare of Greek IctterH and Intimate phrases were noted. WHAT happened next ruined the oldsr girl's class record, for she wrote down beside each 'of nhose pictures, right on the beautiful paper, as far as she knew what had happened to those who be longed to the likenesses after they had gone forth into the world. But the pencil marks did the trick, and what the little girl of sixteen lead beside the pictures taught her forever and ever that she had Indeed been weeping about the most unimportant thin.t In the world. The girls who belonged to the clique had drifted Into singularly uninteresting lives! Coincidental ns It may seen., the "outsldes" had achieved everything from successful matrimony to stardom In the movies. EXCHANGE INQUIRIES I. Uhat l "nfrlntl furniture"? 1. Ik It proper for man la remain tented nhen it neoun enteni the room nr rie to leae It? 3. AVhnl nlll preient the fraklnx" of powder on the noe? dlftarrreabte. I. .lane Aridnm l n fuinou" eettlement norker nnd a writer and lecturer on nolltlral nnd aoclal reform. 8b nai one of the founder of the Hull Ifouikr, a nettlement house In I'lil raco uhleh hna ochteied ronntry-ivlde fame, Nlnre Ita' Inatttution In 1889 MIti Addarnn hu been head resident. She l l chairman of the Woman' Pence party. !. (iimnlhorl l n ninth, lone-wrnie ma terial belnt liked In unit nnd roalo till ea'ou. It I medium In welcht and nlmllar in char acter to lioptacklnr;, S. Wide onUtandlns pocketa are a new Inno Tatlon on the plaited iklrt. Ther are attached at the eldee of the nklrt unite near the Up. Clothes for "War Poor" To tin Sditor at Woman's Pact: Dear Madam Will you klndlj- tell me If there If any Place In jour city yet where they collect clotnta for tho war poor7 I would like to have the addren of It If you pleaie. J. B. By "war poor" I take It for granted you mean the families of men who have gone to war. In Philadelphia the civilian relief com mittee of the Ited Cross collects and gives nut clothing to members of soldiers' and sailors' families In cases where they really need them. The address Is 1607 Walnut street. I am told there, however, that only the families of Pennsylvania men can he cared for by a Pennsylvania branch of the Red Cross. However, the Red Cross societies In most of the large cities are carrying on this same work of caring for the dependents of soldiers and sailors. As the postmark on your letter was blurred and the name of your town hard to make out. I am not sure whether I am right In taking it for granted you live In Mlllvllle. N. .?. If you do. At lantic City Is the nearest larse city. If you write to Ked Cross headquarters In Atlantic City you can get full particulars about what H being done In your section of New Jersey for the families of men who have gone to war. No otner address Is necessary but Just Red Cross Headquarters. Atlantic City, X. J. Use of Silver at Formal Dinner To tfc Editor o Women't Pooe: Dear SJud.m X nttended a formal dinner re rtntly. and I had not been solus nut for aev eral years found I was very much puzaled about the arrav of forks and kulvea on either a'd of my plate. How la one to know which tn uee nm? CLAMEKCE. It Is customary to use the sliver for the different, courses starting from the' outside of Jhe row in toward the plate. For In stance, If your first course Is an hors d'osuvre, you will find a small fork on the extreme end of the sliver placed at the left elde of the plate, whereas If oysters or clams constitute the first course you will see a long-handled, three-pronged fork at the extreme end of the silver on the right hand side of the plate. Xext to the oyster fork toward your plate Is placed the soup, or bouillon, spoon, then the dinner knife and the silver knife for the cheese at the salad course. If there is an entree that will require a knife It Is placed between the dinner and cheese knife. On the left side you will find the fish fork at the extreme end If there Is no hors d'oeuvre, then the dinner fork, then a third smaller fork for salad. If there Is an entree before the salad there Is a fourth fork plactd between the dinner and salad fork. The silver for dessert Is placed on the table with the finger bawls or dauert UNCLE SAM'S "CONSERVATION SPECIAL" VISITS CITY tBSk HPSrslssiiiiiiBsiiiiiiiHsi VsiiiiiiiiliiiiilsHBiiHslsRsiiBHHsfoBliiK i .9isHiBHHHHiiiH FOOD CONSERVATION Kd'f EXHIBIT ON WHEELS )lJMSSB Special Train lo Travel Through M$S$ "01SS WX State Under Direction fsPv "BS i P K of Experts Jr'i K X !-wm,w i I' ImL' $cHWM As part of Its educational campaign In Instructing people In food conservation, the Department of Food Supply of Pennsylvania has equipped n rpeclal train of three cars for food conservation demonstrations throughout the State. Tours to various towns and cities through out the Stnto will start next week. Visits to Downlngtown, Weft t'ltcfter, Columbia, Vt-rk. Lancaster, Parlivshurg n"d Rending hnvf already been arranged. The train Is to he tn charge of Colonel Kofter. of the State Department of Kood Supply, assisted by tho Misses Pittntnn and Newcnmb, from Sla'p College. At i-very etop made the ptilillc will ho taught the latest methods of canning, preserving nnd bread making. TIip first car contains ex hibits of canning anil preserving, tin- sec ond Is fitted nut a a hnhery. In which a new method of making bread front n Hour composed of rj c, potatoes and wheat will be demonstrated. In the third car pictures and a series f Illustrations depleting the nel of uar-llme economy nre to bo dis played. The train, which Is now at Thirty-second street and Lancaster avenue. Is brilliantly decorated on Its exterior. Vivid colors are painted on the sides nnd on each enr Ih the coat-of-anns of the .State of Pennsyl vania I'ntll next wreli the train will be open for Inspection at Thirty-second street and Lancaster avenue between the hours of 10 and noon and S and 5 o'clock. IN THE MOMENT'S MODES J Hercules Braid Is a Favored Trimming for Fall 161 Ctt At-ui6u eA. Braid is one of the smartest of fall trimmings for one-piece frocks, two-piece coaf suits and the new one-piece coat dress. Not the nar-1 row soutncho, but wide braid the braid we have long known as "hercules" wide, flat and accom modatingly pliable. This trimming is peculiarly fitted for combination with navy-blue serge, and with the employment of this combina tion the style creators are evolving some 'very effective little frocks. Navy-blue serge has gone into the fashioning of the one-piece street postume pictured today. Collar, cuffs and vestee are of heavy, oyster-vhite silk. Black hercule braid trims the skirt and supplie (w M-M MLtfU a 'w 'K ' ' V'll The special train, by means of which the United States food administra tion is seeking to educate American housewives throughout tho country to economical practices, with the "crew" of demonstrators, is shown above. Two of the latter arc illustrating a demonstration in canning. Both photographs were obtained nt Thirty-second and Market streets, where the train today remained for several hours before resuming its tour of the State. PATSY KILDARE, OUTLAW By JUDD MORTIMER LEWIS A Narrow AFTKIl I woke this morning I did not llo still long enough so you could notice It. for It being Saturday Rowdy and I wanted to be on our way. So out I hopped and got tho coffee made nnd the pancakes stirred nnd the milk In. The milk made me think of Jim. and Jim made me think of Maggie, so that made me think of where to go. When my father had fed his face and I had fed mine and Rowdy had fed his Rowdy and I rambled. I thought I would surprise Maggie, so we went to the bathhouse by the river and there was nothing there. The blankets were gone off the bed and a lot of dead leaves had blown in there, so I took n hwim and Rowdy stood on the bank wondering what bad happened to Min riroarty. Then we went to Jim's and Jim was not there, but another man was up on a ladder painting Jim's house. I lio'.leied. "Come down :" He just laughed and didn't come, so I shook the ladder nnd it slid at the top. Ho dropped his paint and caught the eaves to keep from falling, nnd ho hold the ladder with his toes. Relieve me, it was a Job to push the ladder back under him. When he came down he looked pale and he raised his hand as If he was going to blam me one, but Rowdy growled away down In his neck and stood up stiff legged The man said. "Why did you do that?" I said, "Why didn't you come down? Where are Jim and Maggie?" He said, "Jim and Miss Groarty were married yesterday and I have gone on a wedding trip. I nm running his milk route and painting his house wlill he Is gone." Then ho said, "Are you ratsy?" I said, "Yes; what's it to you?" He said. "Jim told me to tell you he would bo back next Saturday and his wife said to give you her love." So then Rowdy and I went nway and went to the Iron dog man's house and the Iron dog man was not there and his sister was Just going out riding on a horse and she had on breeches like a man's. She said, "Good morning, Patsy." I said, "Good morning, old maid." Then she laughed nnd said she would be back In abotit an hour. I said, "You nre not going out on the street. I hope." She said, "I certainly am." I said. "For cat's sake, don't you know some one is going to see you with lirecches on If you do?" That made her laugh so hard that her hat fell olt and Rowdy nnd I ran to get It and the horse jumped and kicked so hard that the old maid fell off and the horse's foot went past my ear so close that I felt the wind of it. Then the horse ran out of the gate and down the street, and the old maid helped me up and asked me if I was hurt, which 1 wasn't. Rowdy came back from running the horse and we went Into the house and the old maid said Bhe was very thankful that I did not get my head kicked off, and I told her that she did not have anything on me. Then she laughed and went to change her clothes. She told me her broth er's name is Lunny Smith and her name Is IJell Smith. She noticed my hair was wet and I told her I had been swimming. So she went and got a little bundle and got me to show her the place and she went Into the bathhouse and there was a bathing suit In the bundle and she put It on and we both went swimming. She knows how to swim, but not any better than I do. This has been a good day and I felt very Infants-Mothers Thousands testify Hoiiick's The Original Malted Milk Upbuilds end sustains tha body No Cooking or Milk required Uid for Vi f a Cntury ik iuueu Cntury Escape happy when we folded our paws and prayed, "Dear mother which art in heaven, you pretty near had me today. I felt the wind of that horse's foot or elso of your wings. If that foot had landed under my ear I would be up there now with you. Tell air. Carpenter that the new boards have been carried Into his back yard, but I don't know what for. Tomorrow Is Sunday and I have got to start early and get a look at old grampa's grave, though I know ns well as you do that It Isn't showing sprouts. Amen." "NeeUlnsr Information," the next l'ntsy Kll 'hire ndicntiire. npiienrH In tomorrow's Kvenlnc l.edser. m DALSIMER STANDARD SHOES The Greatest Style Value Offered Today We want you to come in and see these two new models, which we consider being equal in quality and style to footwear shown elsewhere at higher prices. On display in our Df iiiiuu j ITt JRsM uftflf Kflafr a u, tyw cMjjjja3j the Bid GOOD HEALTH QUESTION BOX By JOHN HARVEY KELLOGG, M. D., LL. D. . i nk ,..l!rm. Doctor Kellooo t IM fpact will dallu pli-e advlet on reiii.. In oTMtrer fo eo V''"Z,I , ,V ' rhfc o tnnHnd dlotmoies of or prttcrlbtno to -?i Yv medicine, t.:iic-eJll n'( 0(. rfr Health uueMfojs iclff be promttli" ments requlHnff rie , '""',' inauir, wha Inclose stamped rtiffopes lor renfi. eurrru ou pcrun" ........ - - - Chew Your Food CHEW nnd chew as long as there Is any taste In tho food. That's one thing ,-e chew for-to crush and soften tho food so that we can detect nnd enjoy Its flavor. Food hurriedly eaten Is only half appre ciated. The flavor Is carried oft before the "taste buds" have felt the tang and the thrill of It. There are no taste buds In ino stomach. The Talmud tells of a man of gluttonous disposition who wished that he had a neck like a crane a mile long, nnd that he could taste his food all the way down. One doesn't need a longer throat nor more taste buds. If we chew our food until all the taste In extracted, we've gotten all the satisfaction possible out of It. nnd it takes only about half as much food to produce the sense of satiety that says "Unough I" In recent years Horace Klctcher, who pioneered a renaissance of chewing, has proved that a man can live on half ns much food If ho chews well, and will enjoy his food Immensely more than when he gulps It down without half tasting It. So don't havo any fear of a food famine. Just chew, and get everybody else to chew, nnd there will be a surplus of food. But If you sit down to the table and say to yourself, "Well, It's wartime and Mr. Hoover says we must economize," and begin to try to "scrimp," you'll get more hungry every minute and end up by eating twice ns much as usual. But If you forget Mr. Hoover nnd the war and Just go In for a good time with your palate by chewing each morsel as long ns It has any taste In It. you will enjoy eating as you never did before nnd will cat only half ns much. And what Is more, you will be better nourished, stronger, more enduring nnd more efPcient. So our advice Is to chew. chew, chew, and be an epicure of the real sort. And you'll cat all you want to oat and rave half you used to eat without tasting or digesting it. Gum Chewing I turn chewlni an Injurious Imblt? A. T. M. Yes. The Constant activity of the sali vary glands excited by gum chewing, especially when tho gum Is flavored, ex hausts the glands so that they lose their power to digest starch, a very Important function which Is necessary for good diges tion. This has been proved by actual ex periment. A man was made to chew gum constantly for several hours. At the end of the first hour there was slight decrease In the digestive power of the saliva At tho end of the second hour there was a verv marked loss of digestive activity nnd at the end of four hours the saliva had almost entirely lost Its activity. The habit of chowlng tobacco or gum exhausts the sal ivary glands and thus lays tho foundation for Indigestion. The thorough chewing of the food Is essential to good digestion, but gum chewing Is a useless nnd more or less harmful practice. Tuberculosis and Ozone Is mono useful In the treatment of tuber culosis? M. K. A. Ozone Is a very active form of oxygen. When Inhaled even In very diluted form II Is highly Irritating. It has' many times been tried In the treatment of consumption, but has proved to be entirely useless. Snuff What are the effects of taklnx snuff? P. II. The systematic effects of snuff taking are the same as those of tobacco taken In any other form. Also tho sense of smell Is destroyed through the chronic catarrh Induced, the sense of taste Is impaired and the sight may be seriously affected. This deadly habit certainly Is much less common than In former times and, on the whole, it Is less Injurious to the general public than either tobacco chewing or smoking, ns the effects are virtually confined to the user. Tomatoes la the tomato a wholesome food? A. M. The tomato Is an excellent article of food. It is properly a vegetable fruit. The tomato is valuable because of the citric acid which It contains, and also on account New Military heel model. Dull calf vamp with silver grey fabric top. Dark tan calf vamp with fabric top of harmonizing shade. I KH3 111 WhMmm MMmW 8!-' Mwrm i , ft wixm i High heel model of dull calf, with a fine fabric top in Ivory or silver grey shades. Same model in button of patent colt. Our corps of competent sales people are ever ready to nssiBt you in your selection, and will fit you correctly. 'TIS A FEAT TO FIT FEET ,7)amet Shoes and Hosiery 1204-06-08 Market Street Lytt DtpU Third Flodr aitoc jrrotei " '" of Its large supply of vltamlnes and i,. One pound of tomato contains enough i to supply the body needs for one daV il tomato Is an excellent fnml tn ' ln' ferlng from n deficiency of blood ! VbloM coloring matter. blood Denial Bridge "Work My dentist it has advised brldao work f. rd this ns sanitary? -Ir.' . Dn SOU TRt A person who has bridge work must tA. very particular care to avoid Insanitary conditions In his mouth. However tit, sufllclent pains are taken tn cleanse th. mouth, thcro Is no reason why It may tm bo kept In a wholesome state. Ilrldga wort Is of great value because It allows i. thorough chewing of the food. (OpsrlA-ht.) Friends to Meet at Cnpc May in 19U PAPH MAY. N. J.. Sept. 21. The cxecti tlve comtnltteo of the Friends' Confersn of the United States havo decided to told their next biennial conference at Capo mv opening nit July n. 1918. The conferene will last two weeks nnd - ore than toon representatives are expected from all nan. of the United States. The last conferen was held In Capo Mny In tho summer of lnifi. waste fruit Store up an extra supply of preserves jams jellies 11 A Franklin Sugar for every use" Granulated. Dainty Lumpi, Powdered, Confectioner!. Brown Soldlnl.laadS Ik. cartons ana Inl.S.lO.ISaad SO lb. cotton baft. Where Shall I Send My .Child to School ? i That question can bo an swered quickly and satis factorily by consulting the Educational Bureau at Ledger Central. Herewith out fuss or bother, yu m,a.y obtain complete and reliablo information of any board ing school for boyt or girls, military academy, business college, conservatory of music, college or university. Our intimate knowledge of the advantages of the va rious institutions -will en able you to make a wisi choice. , This service is free and available to every one everywhere. Ledger Central CHESTNUT aiWOAP Bo not m Summer mxd pay dearly for it Ie Winter - 'imii in J rati ml mrnm V I i HA -m ;vi V Vi "W s4t. ui ukia girdiei-v. - OsMBiaaBBBj vsjk aw SBBbbi npa, j WfcMrt'l ' lll MM i r 3Jr' Jl .-. K. -.-iai-, .' V' . . :3i'.l , r .4 '' ., 'fc.t.'.J - . 17 ,'J'J ..( -'. YmeSS? &tii XTW . ,. MKSfl. . " H $Sli .' t,Hitt-.kiif'- J-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers