EVENING" PUBLIC LED'GER-HIL'ABELPHIAV TUESDAY, MAHGEf '4', 101D AT THE TABLE IN LENTENTIDEWHEN A MAN'S GROUCHY A SUIT FOR SPRINGLETTERS xi V flm tro I) op tr 0 1 MENUS AND RECIPES FOR LENT MRS. WILSON'S SUGGESTIONS Seven Nutritious Dinners in Which No Meat Is Served Tasty Salads and Good Desserts PLENTY OP SALAD IN LENT .- The Right Way to Fix Planked Shad, an Old English Pease Pudding and Bean Croquettes Br MRS. M. A. WILSON CopirloM. 119. bv Ur: it. A. lfiljon .411 WhM rrneurd. rpHE word Lent is from tlio Saxon term Lenlcntide, which means the lengthening of the days of the coming of spring. Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, may come as early as the 2d of February or as late as the 8th of March. Aside from the religious observ ances of Lent, it is a most accepta- J ble time for us to give our bodies a spring houseclcaning as well simple foods, meat once a day, using plenty of fresh vegetables, fruit and garden greens. If this period in the early spring is overlooked or neglected a rich diet of liberal amounts of beef as the spring approaches finds the body overloaded with acids and slug psh with overrich blood. This period of the year brings to mind that after months of cold weather Dame Nature is awakening 0ne .. w f(d topped to life once more. The robins arc 1 fme twittering, the pussywillows are in , 0'. urf me.,ial eHpMa of toa. bloom and the trees bursting into toes pH, through finc siecft duo, so we may awane eacn any ,.-,,.- Inh,r.nn,lf,.,s , ,.,, I I . " y r y y . T n"uaiMMBMA f3&ftvhF&4'-- : 'xyn KLYytSwt fflMnrrV iyv!: B$flHi" $ffaBP$&liljilj-iaiw l.vcn aMtlr from the relipious obserxallon nf Lent, it is a mott acceptable time for "princ Itnmerleanin;: with one's health. A crisp tdlad, tempt ingly scnpil, a the one in the picture. should make fretpient appear ance on the menu One egg, And So They Were Married By HAZEL DLYO BATCIIELOR Copyright, lot), ly 1'ubllc Ledger 00. T3 UTH was hardly conscious, of taking xv oft tho lovely Turkish costume; she only knew that somehow she. got out of It and Into bed. Sha lay thero shiver ing and crying for hours. It seemed i going over In her mind what had hap pened, trying to think of a way to tell Scott, wondering If the could ever be the same happy carefree Hulh of a, few weeka back! startled nnd amazed at the Ion way sho had come, hating nnd despising herxelt for the part she had plnyed In what had turned out to be a sordid Intrigue. "I'm no better than any woman who deliberately seeks to deceive her hus band," she said over and over. "Nick Carson was right. I d.'d play a game. I tried out all of my charms on him and expected him to treat me like a friend. Why did T do It? I don't ctro for Kick Carson, I halo him, and he held me In his arms. Ho kissed me. How am I going to tell Scott?" Thus her thoughts ran over and over as sho looked wide-eyed Into the dark ness trying to think of a way out. Sud denly a definite nolso detached Itself from tl c hum of noises that can always bo heard around a city npartment Ituth listened a moment and then sat up In bed. Someone was In the hall outside their door. She strained her cars and was suro she heard a key fitted Into tho lock. Instantly she was out of bed. She pulled a bathrobe oxer her and tiptoed Into tho entrance hall to listen. Some one was certainly trying to unlock the door. Her nerves were all on edge anyway and sho stifled a scream. A wild thought I pierced her brain that it might be Nick I Carson come back And so she stood cowering against tho wall, as she had I before that night, when the door swung In quietly and Scott camo In. The relief was so great that she slag- cered. nnd he caught her In his arms. One and one-half tcaspoonfuls of I 'Dearest, dearest," he said oxer and I. ocr again in an ccsiascy u si.uiuvao feeling buoyant, hopeful and eager and willing to be about our work en joying health and success. Some Lenten Menus Many attractive meals may be pre pared without meat. DINNERS No. 1 Watercress Egg Cutlets Cream Sauce Baked Potatoes Braised Onions Celery Salad Baked Apple Whipped Cream Coffee No. 2 Radishes Navy Baked Beans "Whole-boiled Potatoes Cauliflower Coleslaw that he had found her there. All the way home he had visualized her at the Dayton nmsquerade, scintillating, bcau- ... . . ..... .... VI.... Two icaspoonfuls of finely chopped I nul' rri"fKn.d and One leaspoonful of paprika. Two leaspoonfnh of grated onion, Two leaspoonfufs of sail. One tcaspoonful of while pepper, parsley, One-half teaspoonful of mustard, Mix thoroughly and then pour greased casserole dish or individual ' mumbled words, holding to him, kissing over the beans. Then add sufficient custard cups. Set in a pan of warm him, touching the rough coat, pulling his water to cover and bake slowly for 'water and bake in a moderate oven 'ca,i dn. cl0ber ,0 I"'r- " "as B ' trembling, held fast In his arms in tho Beat to mix and then pour in well-, "" KE ,VnTV to" Mmwlth A FAVORITE TYPE OF SUIT FOR SPRING Ituth was caught helpless. She had no time to plan what to say, no oppor tunity to tell Scott diplomatically. The time had romo cither to tell him the , truth or to bo miserable In concealing it from him. "Xo, I didn't go," she began help lersly, nnd then flinging discretion to the winds, sho threw out her hands to him beseechingly. "Oh, Scott, I can't pretend any longer. I hate N'lck Car son. I haven't wanted to be friends with liim. but I've done It because you said a woman needed men friends. I wunttd you to think that I was as modern ns the women ou knew. And then, then," her voice trailed oft miser ably. "Vch. dear, tlien ," ho prompted. "Nick came for mo tonight." hc walled, "and when I opened tho door for him ho caught me and kissed me and said I deserved It for leading him on, nnd now I'm not the same lluth any longer, but It's your fault." This Illogical arraignment was strangely feminine, but ex en In her own i tortured mind Ituth was amazed when Scott only held her closer and admitted his part In tho matter. "You couldn't understand, and I didn't try to make you understand, so I know , It was my fault. Dearest, listen to, me; don't cry so, I trust you. I know that you1 haven't meant to do anything wrong. I was afraid of something like this, but jou wouldn't understand tha' ' that was what 1 meant when I told you about Nick Carson's reputation. You thought I was jealouB. Of course h thought you were playing a game with him. He plays It with every woman ho meets whom he, takes a fancy to. And you were playing n game becauso your friendship with Nick Carson was no more llko my friendship with well we'll say Hetty than day is llko night only that It wouldn't have done any good to tell ou so." Ruth's soba had become less agon ized. She began to feel wonderfully safe and protected. And let It bo said to her credit she did not resent the . fact that Scott took the entire thing as SJr- WH11H1 rM4 he did. If she had expected him to be THIS GIRL WAS AFRAID NO ' . , MAN WOULD PROPOSE TO HER Dut They Did, Four of Them, Four Years After She Had Thought, the Thirifi Never Could Happen How What She Wanted Camo to Her When She Stopped Thinking About It ( . , rpiIEltE are Just two ways for a girl was true. Not only did Janet givs . to grow up. to await from day to day the coming of a man who will marry her and to lust bo straight ahead acting as If llfo were perfectly wen worm living- oven lr a husband novcr turned up. And It Is a queer paradox that the girl who docs ko straight ahead building Interests that have nothing to do with men gen erally makes a success of matrimony while, the ulrl who builds dreams around every other man sho meets frequently turns It into a shilly shally failure. When you don't wish for a thing It generally comes nround and camnu on your front doorstep, but when you do, It seems as though wild horses cannot drag It from tho hidden places. This applies to happiness, husbands and money, but most particularly to husbands. HERB' Is an Instance. Janet was a nice-looking girl, with clear skin, nlco bluo eyes and brown hair that she knew how to fix nicely. After she finished high school, occasionally bovs called her up and asked her to go out. J put tnero was no reign of popularity in the main street of the principal into which otner or her classmates town In the little Island of Kos, a Turk plunged. There wero no flowers, for lsh possession oft the coast of Asia Instance. As for Invitations to frn-1 Minor, stands one of the most famous ternlty housepartles, to tho bggest'1"? In "" world. It Is a hugo tree, football camen nf llin trasnn bw im. eighteen yards In circumference and iuuiuiiM k aincs ot tno season, tncy sim- , thBn nnn vpnr- nl(I itnri., ,. tho best that was In her to her stuaiesi In the dnytlme. but sho went to the public library at night and took out books about children In labor fields that opened now worlds to her, THAT was four years t' o. Today; Janet Is twenty-soven. She has an excellent position with the Department of Labor with headquarters In Wash ington and traveling quarters nlmost anywhere. Since that Important day four years back, four of tho nicest men In the world have asked our Httlo friend to marry. How did It happen? Jnnct, who has always told me her troubles, freely confesses that from tho day she abso-.J iuteiy stopped worrying about men. In some accountable way they began to worry about her. "I have decided," sho explained, "that men llko best tho girl who Is smartly dressed and womanly, but who at the samo time has tho air of being able to worry on through her whole life, If necessary, without them." A Famous Tree ready to right Nick Carson for what had happened, and to divorce her, she was no longer surprised that ho took the matter so calmly and blamed all three of them equally. "And as for friendship with other women," he said to Ituth, holding her close, "I'm going to leave tho entire thing to you, deareat, after this. We've both learned a lesson that I'll never forget." 4.iwt aiia mt rnilltr nn . knotlmn rl. ., ' .i. 1...!. ..,.. ...... i;i...i .- lead over the others. ciuintT uuu t lilt; nvaiuc j uu nuo iiuoitu i This little suit is of a type that i extremely popular this spring. The otic in the picture is in man's blue serge -1 Daily fashion Talk by Tlorcncc Rose SOMETHING like the survival of the flttost takes place every season In tho realm of suit fashions. Of all the many .types of suit that are brought forward liy the designers and shown oy tho shops or made by the tailors there Is always one tjpo that for some rea son cr other assumes a ery marked It Is not so popu three hours. Planked Shad Shad arc now coming in from the Junket Cake for twenty-five minutes or until firm in the center. Remove from oven and serve from the dish with cream southern wuter.s and will cost very """"7 .' "a"? , " M"'s u,s"' " little more than other fish. Have ed .!" "" c,ups' ,turn out " the fish dealer split the shad for th'n sllc03 of' last an cov,f Wlth planking. Soak the plank in cold ("earn sauce and garnish with pars, water for two hours and then place (Let he CUp 'iand or th ., r t. it. ii iii .. 'minutes after removing from tho the fish on the plank, and brush it , ... b ., -,, , Tii il i oven before unmolding, then run a with lemon juice. Place in the low- ... , ., , , ' ' . , , .i , ., , ,v knife around the edge to loosen, est part of the broiler of the gas " range. Begin to baste with cold Bean Croquettes water after the fish has been in the , Mush the leftover beans nnd then oven for twelve minutes. Allow! mold into croquettes. Roll in flour thirty minutes for planking a two-1 and dip in beaten egg and then in me so," she half I to be home. I "You frightened sobbed. Then reality swept down on him and he remembered. He drew her into the living mom and snapped on the electric light. "I thought jou'd bo at the masquerade. Why didn't you go?'" exen if I hated 117" she asked, a catch' "a.,1" "'' l-' " " "" l"' " V, In her breath. "No xoman Is really kissed by a man If she' Is kissed against her will," aid Scott gravely. "I ould have pre vented this thing If I had forbidden you to i.ee Nick Carson, but I felt that you xvero big enough to learn tho lesson by GUrsclt through experience." Please Tell Me What to Do By CYNTHIA Coffee No. 3 Scallions Planked Shad Baked Potatoes Braised Celery' Hothouse Cucumber Salad Sliced Oranges Coffee No. 4 Coleslaw Old English Pease Pudding Mashed Potatoes Buttered Beets Tomato Salad Banana Gelatin Coffee No. 5 Celery Bean Croquettes Potato Cakes Stuffed Mushrooms Lettuce Cheese Dressing Cup Custards Coffee No. 6 Home-made Relish Corn Pudding French-fried Potatoes Peas Tomato Salad Sliced Pineapple Cake Coffee No. 7 Olives Fishcakes Tomato Sauce Creamed Celery Succotash Stuffed Tomatoes Jelly Cake Coffee Egg Cutlets One cupful of milk, Five level tablspoonfuls 6f flour. Place in a saucepan and dissolve the flour in the milk, and then bring -to a boil. Cook for five minutes and then add Three hard-boiled eggg, chopped fine. One and one-half cupful of fine oread crumbs, One and one-half teaepoonfuls of ealt, One teaspoonful of paprika, One-half teaspoonful of mustard, v Three tablespoonfuls of finely minced parsley, One tablspoonful of finely minced tonion. Mix thoroughly and then turn out ; en a well-greased platter, setting to vcool for four hours. Then form into croquettes and dip in flour, then in beaten egg, and then roll in fine crumbs. Fry until golden brown in hot fat This amount makes eight Mali croquettes. Baked Nary Beans ,' Wash one pound of beans and then overnight in warm water. In , morning discard the bruised s. Place in a saucepan and r with cold water. Bring to a Wfl and cook for five minutes. Drain ad then return to saucepan. Cover wWi boiling water and cook for ten mhwUt. Drain and then place in a toUaff pan or bean pot, and add thte-kklf cupful of vegetable salad and-a-half-pound bhad. Old English Pease Pudding One cupful of cream sauce, One cupful of canned peas, rubbed through a fine, sieve, One-half cupful of bread crumbs, "ding recipe, bread crumbs. Fry until golden brown in hot fat. Corn Pudding Substitute the corn in place of the peas in the old English pease pud- Mrs. Wilson Answers Questions My dear Mrs. Wilson Will you please give me a recipe for mak ing chocolate maraschino cherries, also one for making sticky cinna mon buns? I hud the paper with your recipe in it, but lost it. It is not clear to me just what ' you mean by cream sauce. Do you simply mean the thickened milk? One more question, in your recipe for souffle of spinach you say serve with cheese sauce, but give no recipe for it. Will you kindly give mo your recipe for these sauces, and also am thanking you in ad-ancc. Mrs. M. R. was snow white and fine; delicious as any fine white mountain cake I have ever tasted. Indeed, we all preferred it to the cake. 1 would like to find a recipe for it again. There was also a seven-pudding, so called from the seven ingre dients in it, flour, raisins, etc., a fruit pudding like plum pudding, but taking only one-half hour to cook. II. L. S. Virginia Potato Bread II. L. S. Three cupfuls of mashed potatoes, Five tablespoonfuls of butler or shortening, One -llllflll nf ti. e,.M,7 ..! Chocolate Maraschino Cherries ' cooUd t0 80 degreea Fahrenheit, Mrs. M. R. Melt the Dot choco-, One-half cupful of sugar, late in double boiler and then add one Three level teaspoonfula of salt, tablespoonful of butter or salad oil Two eW- in each one-half pound of chocolate. Mix and then add one yeast cake Shave the chocolate fine and then crumbled in fine. Stir until the cake melt slowly, stirring frequently to I is dissolved and then add sufficient prevent streaking. Drain the cher- j flour to form a dough. Turn on a ries well and then drop them in the molding board nnd knead for fif- chocolate and place on wax paper to i teen minutes. Wash the bowl and dry. See the Evening Public Ledgeh of December 27 and 28, 1918, for cinnamon buns. For cream sauce, yes. tablespoonfuls of grated cheese to one cupful of cream sauce. then grease it. Place in the dough and then rub the top with shorten ing to prevent crusting over. Set in a warm place between 75 and 80 "MMWV,! J Tl 1. . . To makf. cheese sauce add four uerees "renneit, ana let rise for inree nours. t'unch or knead dnW My dear Mrs. Wilson Will you kindly advise me in your paper how sticky coating for the top of cinnamon buns is made? Also in form me how to make sweet pickle chowchowr Mrs. J. L. Mrs. J. L. See the Evening Pub lic Ledgek of December 27 and 28 in reference to information about cinnamon buns. Recipes for chow chow, etc., will be given in the pick ling and canning season. My dear Mrs. Wilson Thank you ever so much for the rich ginger cookies and the ginger bread recipes. The southern prize hrpnrl wna i-nlsort Willi vnt Tfc nA na T hM VinnrA millr. Enrnr' and potatoes in it. The crust was a rich brown. The bread itself Ash Mrs. Wilson If you have any cookery prob lems, bring; them to Mrs. Wilson. 8he will be glad to answer you through these columns. No per sonal replies, however, can be given. Address questions to Mrs. M. A. Wilson, Evenkio Public LrtKirn, Philadelphia. and then let rise again for one hour. Turn on a board, mold into loaves and then place in well-greased pans and let rise for forty-five minutes.. Bake in a hot oven for thirty min utes, then reduce the heat to mod erate and finish the baking for fif teen minutes more, baking tho loaf full forty-five minutes. You may use one cupful of home made yeast in place of the yeast cake, and either sweet or white po tatoes. Is this the pudding that you want? One cupful of sirup, Two eggs, Four tablespoonfuls of shortening, One-half cupful of sour milk, One teaspoonful of baking soda, Two cupfuls of flour, One cupful of raisins. Beat to blend and then pour in well-greased mold and bake for lorty minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with fruit custard or vanilla sauce. Spices may be added if de sired. My dear Mrs. Wilson Will you please publish a recipe for oysters au gratin and oblige? Mrs. P. W. Mrs. P. W, See the oyster recips for the week of February 15 In ref erence to oysters au gratin. ' To Kathleen It would not bo necessary to haxe an cxcnlng dress to go to a supper at a hotel, unless the affair Is a formal one. Haven't you home tort of Utile nftcr noon drcs-j that you could freshen up with a little chiffon yoke. Or If the af fair is to be formal, couldn't you buy f,onio cheap bilk and havo your mother help you to make up some sort or a little evening dress. What you suggested in your letter would bo out of the quebtlon. To "Blue Ejcf'' Tou do net seem to bo ashamed of the fact that jou are going around xvlth a married man. If you xvere a young wife, how would you like to feel that some ono xvas meeting your husband and willing to xvln his love away from you? I am sure vou do not realize what you are doing. Make up your mind not to bother about this man again. He does not care for you. He does not een keep an appointment xvlth you. Things like this bring untold misery and the girl always lotes out In the end. There Is a good man waiting somewhere in the world to marry you. "Blue Kves." Watch out for him. Make yourself worthy of him and the little home you xtlll have some day. Let the married "flirts ' alone. To That Contented Bachelor Dear Cynthia Would llko to say few xvords about should a husband help his wife with dishes. In the first place, It Is not when a couple are first married that the wife requires a little help It Is after twenty years or more of the tiresome routine of work. It a wife is a real housekeeper and home maker It Is no small task. As tho Contented Bachelor says. It is not such a difficult task to take care of a few rooms and wash a few dishes. If that Is all housekeeping and homemak Ing is compoied of. But what about the hundred little things that come In be tween to bo done, such as washing. Iron ing, mending, baking, and preparing meals, and also making ones clothes. If the wife is not fortunate enough to have some of this work done7 And to prepare the kind of dinners I am suro the Contented Bachelor would enjoy. It takes more than a half hour. The terribly fagged-out husband often dresses after dinner and spends the evening out. Not loo fagged out for thnt Then comes Sunday, his day of rest What about wlfle's rest? Sunday Is usually her hardest day. So while we all know it is not a mans place to help with the dishes. It Is such a small thing for him to take a towe and dry the dishes for wlfle that It re pays well. It Is such a help to her and mIim ,!na nnnrenlate It. I am sure. The Contented Bachelor better stay the way he Is, for I am sure he would make a nice girl verymuch discontented. For myself, I would rather be a man any day. I do all the above things and plenty others I have not mentioned, and xvhen night comes on am very tired. I don't have any help with the dishes, either. ONB WHO KNOWS (MHS. M.). I. S. This Is the nrst time I have xvritten to you, but have often been tempted. Am very much interested in your letter. lAiellenl Advice for T. G. Dear Cynthia: I nm deeply Interested In "Thoroughly Disgust edV' letter on tho IMth of February, having fought the same battle and indeed It Is a battle, the thought of knowing that the one per son In the world xvho should know yu best and trust you most won't trust you out of his lght Is maddening. My case was Identical xvlth T. O.'s. tw-o babies In the first three years married, and an Insanely Jealous husband. If I went out of an evening he sulked for txvo days; fair-minded and liberal n other respects, he made life miserable for me. . . ., L ... We had no one to mind the babies either. I was heading for a nervous breakdown which ox-ertook me on the way and T, a. Is on the same road. Oh, I know the symptoms and the cause, broken reBt, care of two babies and worse than all, the Iron band of Jealousy crushing the life out of you. I would like' to tell T. Q. how our trouble was settled. First she must right about face, stop crying, get a good hold on heraelf, square her shoulders and say what she has to say plainly, and stick by It. If she ! afraid, then all Is lost. . . You ow It to your babies, T. 0.,yoa mutt check yourself now. I can tell by It I? tho model that you would select If you xvlshed to nppear most modish at the time, anil thero Is no reason why this should not bo your ambition. I Noxv tho txpo of suit that persisted 'this spring, the type that won the lnu ' rela ns far as this universal appeal Is I concerned. Is just the tsort of suit that jou se here iortrayed by our artist. It . nP I. rY.H T... t i ? ' ll"' dominant line Is the same. The waist tomorrow. It It celled "Temptation. ) , , . ,... lcre aH(1 , nt that ' flares slightly from the neck to the 'hips. In any oilier season you might hax-o declared that this was not cspe I ciaily graceful. In truth, it is rather trying to the xvoman whoso figure is not willowy, but It Is tho choice of the sea- For some reason it Is tho one and xvitli most of us that is ply did not ever come her wav To tell the truth, as the years went bv Janet wan worried about It. Who. sho would feverishly think, as eve ning after evening went by when thero was nothing to do. would evpr mum' her? What If no ono ever did? It Is no exaggeration to say Rho xvas tei. rlbly worried and afraid. Rho was afraid no man' would ever ask her to marry him. I THINK It was ono of her school friends who first put It into Janet's head to take a course In a lino of study that had to do xvlth investigating fuctory conditions where children xx-ere employed. Janet was worried. Rho xv.oh getting older and older, you see fully txventy-thrce! So silly as it may seem to some. It was desperation and neither interest nor ambition that led Janet to the school. Then thero happened to Janet the thing that happens to every girl with normal Intelligence xvho takes up work that has to do with dealing xvlth hu man beings. She became amazingly xvrapped up In her xvork. Her parents xvere surprised, tho girls sho had gone around with, xvero loath to believe It more than 2000 years old. Under Its branches tradition says that St. Luke and St. Paul rested. 3 I I I poll. tho tone of your letter jou are worked i model that stands out as pre-eminently up to a terrible pitch, t selected a nice I in vogue, (tulet exenlng, bablcn In bed, husband cn,Ri,c aunched mv sunirise attack Tl'u ono 'own her ls made up ,n launched my surprise attack. , w, , bably tlle beRt lnntcrlal for admired so muchT' Ho stared at me stantly man s tyge in navy blue. The as I went calmly on, "do you know my coat, of course, Is a box model and tho xveddlng dress hangs on mo shamefully, ' collar Is turned down. The trimming Is Do you know It's n mental condition ! the notn that characterizes this suit causing most of tlls or don't you care? and ma,es It different from tho other3 at n wu, iuiuui; i.i.yv iiiii. n niriiitiu 111..--U,, no recreation. I will tolerate this con dition no longer, I must have an evening of its like. (Copyright. 1010, by Florence nose) Hnnniuuiiui & aiinncnira off occasionally. il'uderstanl the next time I plan a little pleasure and you spoil It I will take It that you no longer euro and something will happen that I hate to do, but in Justice to myself I must This Is my declaration of Inde pendence and I stand ready to see It through." After that tilings were very quiet; I u barely courteou.1. I was afraid It would blow over if I was my usual self. Three days later he said. "Don't you think you have carried tills thing far enough7" The whiteness of his faco alarmed me. I stepped hack a few steps and said. "I m not going to slip back , into my old life; something must give." I Ho tnrew niinseir on tho couch nnd hurled his head In his hands. After a while in a voice xvhlch shoxved me what 11 fight he had had xvlth himself, he said, "I cared too much, I was selfish ; I satis fied myself regardless of you: f see It all now and hate myself. You will nexer bo troubled that way again," Now he fluggestn a goo movie, dries the dishes, puts the babies to bed xvhllo I'm gone and smiles xvhen I come In. I am so happy. Oh, T. O., don't leave I hhn. Teach him a lesson, but you must ' be Ann. INTERESTED, i T(TTHn mt ituin inti iiiEtn it r i i unti i i i tr.iiuiim 1 1 nurrciunmii mn nZlBtmifJUIJiaiftU i I &ljclfur&jHtUmer e&Ijop. 3fne. 1423 Walnut Street ' FURS HATS WAISTS CLOTH AND SILK TOP COATS SILK AND WOOL SWEATERS NOVELTY BAGS i.piiiiiiiiii;ii,Mk f( 'g' j ppjjgJiTO l! GlZminut Streef if 5 i J I M i initial presentation fashionable modes Spring 1919 iy ittonnortmnalon a flu 'nnCi KZOM16 n&apd )aM6 tlormal 0tsninq tKoncUuiarc&'Uhuil Wl Woman SHE is savins money every meal buying second cuts, using up odds and ends and her. husband says the food has never been so good before.' She is using the miracle worker of cookery Al&VCE PARIS NEW YORK Slh Ave. at 46th St. New York. mm$ 1422 Walnut St. West of BeUevue-S:ratford J:hl6 teawyth cu.AncJhdortmaJ&& aa .pftuMLu Among the new ideas now being introduced arc vari ations of the Russian Blouse and Box JOoal Suit in plain embroidered or braided effects, as well as smart adaptations of the waistcoat idea, in contrasting shades. M 5 s ( . MARCH 8 Then the specialists will be through and tfill re turn to jtau tho CfjUb of tfjc BHouHBiufuea as nice as before the war. Watch thil pi je jri J4 a . x'
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