Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, June 26, 1919, Night Extra Financial, Page 12, Image 12

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EVERYBODY CALLED HER "HAPPY" WARM WEATHER RECIPES A CHARMING HATCYNfHIA
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xfoRS. WILSON GIVES COLD SUPPER
'' DISHES THA TARE TEMPTING NO W
These Warm Evenings Cold Spiced Tongue or Delicately Seasoned Cold Meat Loaf
Appeals Learn How to Prepare Them Here Three Menus That Will Inter'
est You and Other Recipes That Help to Follotv Them
TTOT evenings make most folk long
11 . it -l I
for attractive disnes inai. can
be served cold. Nature is a faithful
teacher to those of us who are willing
to study her at this season of the
year. She urges us to curtail our
meats and use abundantly of fresh
vegetables and fruits. When you re
quire meat, use the light meats; their
delicate proteins are easy to assimi
late. This season is particularly favor
able for all kinds of fresh fish. Fish
does not, with a few exceptions, con
tain a large amount of ojl.
" When you decide to have the main
part of the meat cold it is wise to
start with a plate of soup or bouillon
to stimulate the digestive organs.
Tomato, various cream soups and
bouillons are desirable for this.
Here are a few suggested suppers
to replace the hot dinner:
Clear Tomato Soup
Young Onions Salted Nuts
Cold Sliced Spiced Tongue
Baked Tomatoes
Lettuce Russian Dressing
Gelatin Iced Tea
Cream of Asparagus
, Sliced Onions
Cold Sliced Meat Loaf
Potato Salad
Fruit Cake Iced Cocoa
Swiss Bouillon
Cold Sliced Spiced Beef
Tomato Salad
Coleslaw
Fruit Turnovers Iced Coffee
Cold Spiced Tongue
Select a medium-sized tongue
without the gullet and wash well,
then soak for four hours in warm
water. Place in a deep saucepan and
cover with warm water and add
One carrot, cut in dice,
Two onions, sliced.
One fagot of sorip herb.
Tico bay leaven, '
Two allspice.
Four cloves, .
One cup of strong cider vinegar.
Cover closely and bring to a boil;
then simmer and keep just below the
boiling point for three hours. Let
cool in the liquid and then, when cold,
chill in the icebox before slicing.
The coarse left-over parts of the
tongue may be used for meat loaf,
croquettes or hash. It will be a real
economy for the housewife to pur-
Mrs. Wilson
Answers Queries
My dear Mrs. Wilson Will you
kindly print a recipe for creamy
salad dressing and aiso a boiled
dressing?
A CONSTANT READER.
Boiled Dressing
Add one-half cup cream to one cup
mayonnaise for creamy dressing.
Place in a saucepan
Three-quarters cup of water,
One-half cup of cider vinegar,
Four tablespoons of 'cornstarch.
Stir until the starch is dissolved
and then bring to a boil and cook for
five minutes. Add one well-beaten
egg and beat hard to blend. Remove
from the fire and then place in a
small bowl
One teaspoon of mustard,
e One teaspoon of salt,
One-lalf teaspoon of paprika,
Two teaspoons of sugar,
Eight tablespoons of salad oil.
Mix smooth and then add to the
vinegar and water mixture. Beat
hard to blend. Reduce to he desired
consistency with sour cream or vine
gar. This dressing will keep in a
cool place for three weeks.
My dear Mrs. Wilson Will you
kindly instruct me how to make
the best pie dough? Mrs. W. M.
See reply to L. S., a lesson on
pastry making which will appear j
toon
My dear Mrs. Wilson Having
been a reader of the paper, I would
like if you would kindly give me
fci the recipe for making layers for
any kind of layer cake, and kindlv
give the recipe for chocolate corn
starch filling? Mrs. C.E.N.
Layer Cake
Place in a mixing bowl
Three-quarters cup of aigar,
Yolks of two eggs.
Cream and then add
Four tablespoons of shortening,
Two cups of flour,
' Four level teaspoons of baking
powder,
t Three-quarters cup of milk.
v , Beat to mix and then cut and fold
jrt the stiffly beaten whites of two
jj . . VK6 iianc 111 lajrci- wants pana
Vtj, twenty minutes in a moderate oven.
K. r . Chocolate Filling
f-.fa.sP PUce in a saucepan
a One-half cup of water,
' -t Ont-half eup of sirup,
- fs ; , Two tablespoons of cornstarch,
Tkrte tablespoons of cocoa.
Stir until starch is dissolved and
K'brirjg to a boil and cook for five
By MRS. M. A. WILSON
ICotvrtoht. lilt, by Mrt. St. A. Wilton
All Riohts Re$ervei )
chase one-half dozen cans of soup.
TVlU wilt AllmUnfn U UAn t. .V...
This will eliminate the heat from the
kitchen.
Meat Loaf
Left-over meat, such as boiled,
stewed or cold roast beef, tongue,
ham, veal or chicken, may be used
forvthis dish. To make the loaf suc
cessfully you will require one-half
cup of well-washed rice, cooked in
two and one-half cups of boiling
water until soft and the water is nb-1
sorbed. Cool and then rub it through '
a sieve. Grate three medium-sized
onions; chop very fine
Three red peppers, l
Two cups of finely chopped meat,
One-half cup of finely chopped salt
pork I
One tablespoon of salt, ,
One and one-half teaspoons of
paprika,
One tablespoon of Worcestershire I
saueC)
Three-quarters cup of
bread
crumbs.
Mix well and then put the whole
mixture through the meat chopper,
using the nut butterknife. Return to
the mixing bowl and add
Two eggs.
One-half cup of milk.
Pack into a well-greased and I
floured loaf-shaped pan and pat the '
top smooth. Place this pan in a '
larger one containing hot water, i
Bake in a hot oven for fifty minutes.
Cool, then chill and serve.
This loaf will keep three or four
days. Serve cold and then make into
croquettes and cutlets. Or use it as
a filling between sandwiches.
Vegetarian Dishes
Many folk dislike meat during the , Cook one-quarter pound of maca
warm weather, preferring dishes I roni in boiling water for twenty min
made with peas, beans, fish, cheese J utes and then drain. Cool and chop
and milk and plenty of fresh fruits j fine. Place in a bowl and add
and vegetables. Appetizing menus. One-half cup of grated cheese,
will almost make folk forget the j Two tablespoons of grated onion,
77ni- t a ' ne ablespoon of fieI m
Stuffed Olives Tomato Appetizev nnrsleu
Cucumber Cutlets Egg Sauce
l- T-. -.
Steamed Squash String Beans
Onion Salad
Cup Custard Iced Tea
Radishes Coleslaw
Eggplant Croquettes
Peas Com
Lettuce
Raspberries Iced Coffee
Watercress ' Young Onions
Macaroni Cutlets Tomato Sauce
String Beans Corn
Cucumber Salad
THE ORCHID FROCKS
ARE SMARTEST
This daintiest and most graceful of
frocks Is In orchid organdie and
the hat Is orchid-colored taffeta
A Dally Fashion Talk by Florence Hose
IT 18 quite remarkable how narrow
minded the warm weather makes us
all. One may be ever so energetic when
the air is brisk, but with the firet ex
tremely hot wave, unconsciously there Is
a letting down and a desire to "take it
easy." At any rate we are all selfish
when it is hot, If we are at no other time
of the year. Then, too, it makes a violent
change In the fashions, which seems to
be even more marked this year than
ever before. Aside from the fact that
the women have had every reason to
turn from the somber colors to the
brighter hues, they have persistently
clung to the drab. Here and there, of
course, there has been a woman who
took to colorul things, but the majority
have been quite couteut to use color only
in their hats.
' The first hot weather, however, turned
the trick, and they all began to think
of comfort, and among the throngs of
women on Fifth avenue in New York,
1 tSH tS
1 r-$v-c ...
Stewed Blackberries
Cake . Iced Tea
Cucumber Cutlets
Pare the cucumber and cut into
long slices about one-half inch thick.
Sprinkle with salt for one hour and i
then wash, wipe dry and dip in flour,
then into beaten egg and fine crumbs.
Fry until golden brown in hot fat.
Place in a hot oven for five minutes I
to finish cooking
Egg Sauce
Three-quarters cup of cream sauct,
Two well-beaten eggs,
One teaspoon of salt,
"C""V teaspoon of paprika,
l'vo '";'" of butter. I
t cat untl1 w nd then add two
tablespoons of finely minced parsley
nml servc-
Onion Salad
Cut three white onions in slices
and en parboil. Drain and chill.
Prepare the lettuce and then lay the
"'""" anu l" naru-Douea eggs, cut
in minYTrtm nn if QnYVa wifU ...nt.n..
Eggplant Croquettes
Pare the eggplant and then cut in
slices and cover with boiling water.
Cook until tender and then drain
well. Wash and place in a bowl and
add
One mtdium-sised onion grated.
Two green peppers chopped fine,
One well-beaten egg,
One-half'cup of fine crumbs,
Two teaspoons of salt.
One teaspoon of paprika.
Mold into croquettes and then dip
in flour, then in beaten egg and roll
in fine crumbs. Fry in hot fat.
Serve with cream sauce.
iuuiuium vuueiH
I ' at
Two teaspoons of salt.
One teaspoon of paprika,
One well-beaten egg.
Mix thoroughly and then moldthree ;iears older I w-Rnted to settle
1 into croquettes. Roll in flour and
! then dip in beaten egg. Roll in fine
crumbs and fry in hot fat. Place in a
hot oven for ten minutes to finish
cooking. These menus contain suffi
cient food values for the sedentary
worker and they will supply the body
with much of the needed vitamines
that are found abundantly in the
vegetable kingdom.
fereut color sehem'e from that which we
had known for so many months. Not
only were the frorks and hats light col
ored but the footwear, too, changed to
the cool boots of white.
Xo one could possibly think up a
eooler or lovelier dress than the one
shown today, and while this might well
be classed ns a plain frock, it is never
theless a very smart one. and could be
worn to formal afternoon affairs or
informal eening functions. This dre-s
i made of orchid shade or organdie,
and eeept for the rows of tuelts
whieh enhance the sreeve. bodice and
acain the entire lower nart of the skirt
it is untrimmed. The collar is a softlbiB fimilp' evcn if.our hf!rt wee.P'5'
fold of the oigandie. which slips through because hearts can t weep long when
the girdle, is made in loops ami forms U a" br"c "k "Xee is" Verv
sash ends at either side of the front. care- Ju1an'U' twPnty; hre j? T
The large hat worn with this dress is
of orcbidcolored taffeta, and is trimmed I
with an ostrich of the same color at Mie
right of the crown.
(Copyright, 1019, by Florence tlostt
Miss Rose JVM Help You
with your summer clothes. Per
haps you arc wondering just what
color in vogue now will be most suit
able for you. Or perhaps it is the
present-day styles that perplex you
Miss Rose will be glad to give you the
benefit of her advice. Address Mia
Rose, woman's page. Evening Pun
Lie LcnoKR fend n self-addressed
Ftamped envelope for personal reply,
as none of the answers will be
printed.
Foulard Is Cool
There is something about foulard
which is particularly appealing in the
warm weather; not only is it pleasant to
look on, but it is particularly cool to
wear. Rlue grounds with white broken
cheek designs are a new departure.
Curiously enough these dresses are fre-
rquentlv made up in old-world styles
decorated with June Antoinette and
other fichus of lace and lawn. Another
conceit is for the skirt to be simply
gathered on to a band, topped with a
cross-over bodice The bodice is often
finished with sash ends so that it may be
wound round the figure and tied in an
obi or other bow at the back or sides.
F
urs: Our expert
garments personal attention: remodel
ing, repairing,
ing, beautifying, insuring more style and
greater service. Work done now a third below
regular.
"Pay the Cost in the Fall"
Matfson & DeMan
1215 Chestnut Street
IN ROSE-PINK STRAW
f TLSSWftr-' 1
A hat that U as rharmlnE as the loveliest day In sumtnrr! It Is rose
pink straw and the urwith is nf pink and blue flowers and purDle grapes.
I'Yfnrh blue crosfraln ribbon adds a finishing touch
Please Tell Me What to Do
Dy CYNTHIA
The Soldier Who Forgot
Drar Crnthia ReinR a utoady reader
nf your Krcpii'K Vp Hope Hub and al
ways reading different letters I thought
I would take a chunoe anil write a little
note to II. D. C. Well, my dear man,
I noticed toii stated that it's hard to
get a girl like ma was. Hut take a tip
from one who knous. it's as liaiU to get
one like daddy, too. T am a young girl
who deoted all my time to trying to
make a sweetheart of mine hunpy while
ill camp overseas. Kept him well sup
plied with all good things to eat. ulso
smokes in ramp. Well, at last the day
and only day came when he returned
from oversea-, after eleven month
there and ten months at camp.
I kept quite steady company with
him before he enlisted and then he told
me of his good intentions nnd I promised
to marry this hero of mine. It is past
three jears since we met nojv. Then I
i fnnntr nf course now being
dowu and help him along in ousincss a
I knew it was so bard for a boy to
make good after being away so long.
Well, to male a long story short, I
am like Happy was. He surely turned
out to be a cad. not a hero. Beeause he
eame back safe and sound he does not
know me any longer. He happens to
be from New York and I suppose saw
some one who he thought looked better
to him and when he started to act nhaky
I gave him his walking papers and told
him I'd get a man who knows a good
girl when he gets one, for I want you
to understand. H. D. C, I am consid
ered good looking among my friends,
am a girl who can cook as good as any
fellow's ma can, and besides make all
mv own clothes, try to look like a
million dollars' worth on one dollar's
worth.
Still, all in all I have a big smile even
If my heart weeps. Now, what do you
say to this? Does it pay to be as you
have stated nnd as I am? I-ook nt tin
luck one like myself has, wasted three
years on a' man who proved to be
nothing at all. Let me tell you that
you men are a mystery that no woman
can sofve. Dear Cynthia, am I right
nt that? .TUANITA.
You are right, .luanita. to have "the
7U"F "" V"r iZTJZ -Ufc
a man who sooner or later would show
his true colors.
GuticuraWillHelpClear
Eruptions & Dandruff
i
The Soap to Cleanse
The Ointment to Heal
Don't wait to have eruptions, red
ness and roughness, dandruff and
Irritation. Prevent them by malting
this wonderful skin-clearing com"
plexion soap your every-day toilet
soap, assisted by touches of Cnticura
Ointment to the first signs of little
skin and scalp troubles, and dustings
of Cuticura Talcum, a fascinating
fragrance. In delicate Cuticura med
IcatlonThe Cuticura Trio Is wonder
ful. 25c each. Sample aeh free ef
"Cuticura, Boston."'
furriers will give your
cleaning, dazing enrich
Kissing When She Says No
Dear Cynthin : Why do the boys like
to kiss a girl against her own will
as asked by V. V. A.
Well, I am past that age but I
have been "through the mill," to I
know what It is. To begin at the be
ginning I might explain why people
like to kiss at all. This is my theory:
it's Just human nature!
However, 1 don't see wh. bojs should
like to kiss girls against their own
will unless they want to tease them or
else they think the girls just protest
so as not to appear too anxious. In
my opinion, though, a boy or man who
knowingly kisses a lad; against her
will Is a coward. In conclusion I wish
to ask to become n member of the Keep
ing Up Hope Club founded by Lieu
tenant It. OLD TIMER.
Welcome to a nencomer, and that is
about what vou meant, wasn't it?
r
Made Thursday Delivered Friday
Enjoyed Saturday
MADE with milk fresh each morning from the farm!
Shipped the same day or the day after by our thrice-a-week
auto truck delivery!
Supplied your dealer immediately we ask him to
order "in small quantities !
This is the story of the freshness of Klein's Cream
Nut Almond Bar. Here you have the Big Reason for the
supremely delicious goodness of the most popular choco
late bar sold today.
Lota of Milk Smooth as Silk Eat Ona Every Day
HsV - WMSmJ
On sale at all canity and grocery stores, druggists and news stands.
KLEIN CHOCOLATE COMPANY
127 N. 13th St., Phila. Factories, Elizabethtown, Pa.
JV i-' '
IDGl
liflU
Piedmont Peanut Oil
is rich, in body-building and food
values.
To Saratoga chips and French
fried potatoes it imparts a delicate
nut flavor more delicious and dis
tinctive than anything you have ever
tasted.
Aek for PIEDMONT
The food
the nut
IbVs.
mm?
Adventures
With a Purse
IT WAS Nan who told me about the
powder boxes, "You really should
write about them," she said. "Mine's
the greatest comfort. I slip It Into the
pocket of-a summer dress, or tuck It In
my purse, and It takes up such' a little
space." I find myself slightly piuzle
when I come to describe It, but I knov
that If, I can really make you see I
you will want one. It Is metal, rouw
and quite flat. There I have It It's
the size and shape of a butter thin
cracker and It's not very much thick
er. The lid unscrews, and in it jou
find a good, clear mirror. The bottom
of the box, into which fits a big' flat
puff, opens and closes like the top of
a powder can. This keeps the powder
secure when you don't need it, dnd
enables you to sprinkle It on the puff
when your now Is shiny. Of course,
It Is an attractively colored box, nnd,
of course, It has tiny little flowers
painted on It. The price Is seventy-five
cents, plus war tax.
I tell of cameo pins clear-cut and
uncommonly attractive. The head is
well formed, with finely chiseled feat
ures, against a background of pale pink.
The surrounding band Is solid In some,
with a delicately traced design, while
others have cunningly cut bands, and
still others have lines of ttny pearls.
For exceptional value you would go far
to find their .equal, for they are priced
st fifty cents.
When Is Ice cream good ice cream?
Why, when it Is made in the newest
work -snaring freezers, of course. As
the circus man says. "You puts it in
and you takes it out. No turning, no
work." The Ice cream ingredients are
made In the usual way, and then you
put them In the freezer, clap on the lid,
and forget about it. In half an hour,
peering anxiously into the can, behold
you have really, truly ice cream. For
enrrvlnc to nicnics or taking along on
a motor trip, a freezer of this sort is
unexcelled. Now, I do not profess to
he technical. I cannot tell you the
whys and wherefores of this magic
freezer. This only I know one filling
of Ice will freeze two fillings of cream
nnd the ice cream can be kept eight
hours. The rest you must find out
for yourself.
For the names of shops where ar
ticles mentioned In "Adventures
With a Purse" can be purchased,
address Editor of Woman's Page,
Evening Public Lkdoer, or phone
the Woman's Department, Walnut
3000.
"Tht
- MvHhh
Bar
with
tht
Green
Wrap.
per"
- i' 'r ' -
otl with
flavor
A
i
- s
w
"JUST TELL HER I TOLD
YOU TO ASK FOR HAPPY'
" ' -
"Sltc'll Know!" Even Her Husband Calh Her That W hat
Corking Good Sports Are Women Who Never Get Out of Sorts
TT WAS on the street car, and the
J nIMit tn excessively warm: to'
warm to do anything but try to perk
up some interest In your neighbor's con
versation. That's a perfectly good ex
cuse for overhearing conversation,
isn't it?
"Everybody calls her "Happy," the
first mini was saying. "Her husband
calls her Happy. We always called her
tiiut at the office and now they say her
husband calls it to her and so do all
her -friends. Never saw her cross or
out of sorts in my life. Alwnys with
a smile on her fore. Ymi toll U. i
told you to ask for 'Happy.' She'll
know." p
As the street car crawled on throii
the busy nighttime street where tin
men and women sat out on the navemen
and called out to wrnngling children
me tnougnt could not help come. Be
tween you and me and the lamppost
don't you think it must be awfully hard
to be nlwa;s happy? And don't you
think we owe a great deal to the person
who leavens the ill temper of life in
this way?
CJURELT it Is not given to any human
J being to be absolutely impervious
to disappointment, ill health, changes iu
the weather or any of the thousaufl
little things that creep into our daily
lives and try their best to steer them
away from the course we planned. That
would be too much. No, It must be
that the person who always appears to
be happier than the rest of us is simply
stronger than the rest of us : spiritually
stronger nnd. to put It plainly, a better
sport in playing the game of life.
There are some who claim the al
ways happy person is tiresome. And
MIMMH&m
eaW . Tm law .. aWVaaaK eaW -saaiaV -aak (H a eWJeatl
904 MO SM ,3iflfcWBUrjsii 44t M.
1422 lalnut Street
WEST BELLEVTJE-iTlUTrORB
Continue with Renewed Interest
Their
5 emi -Ann ual
FIearanee
FRDEK5
Ed ats
Wraps
BLDU5E5 MlLLfNERY
Sweaters -Skirts
At Very .
Interesting Reductions
Corns Lift Off
With Fingers
Apply a few dops
of Freezone on a
touchy corn or a cal
lus; the pain stops,
then shortly you lift
that bothersome corn
or callus right off, root
and all, without pain.
g- "H
i! iii Tlny bott,es cost ony few cents c-"i
fzLJS at drug stores anywhere! .
CsmsOone!
MjJJ M& Tbsm M
et it Is one of the queer little minor
tarndoxes of life that the very per-,
on who makes the complaint is 'the
'rst one to say "what under the sun
lis her?" when the never-out-of-sorts
woman happens on rare occasions to act
therwlse.
The always hnpfy person must not
.confused with her sister, who goes
nbjmt with the' firm, fixed and jolly
little idea that her mission oh earth Is
to spread sunshine, to ram It down her
neighbor's throat If she can't get It
down any other way. The true ray of
sunshine docs not have to wear labels.
Neither docs it try to cut dents IntWS
shade. It simply shines, and those who
sit In the shade are happier for the
watching.
noitw
OF
AND
DLUN5
ass!
p-J -4
L-.Art.i3
It Doesn't Hurt!
Hard corns, soft i
corns, corns between
the toes, and hard-
ened.calluscs on hot
tom of feet lift right
off. You don't feel
one particle of pain
or Irritation.
SifOP McPhilorays
AWV 1624 Market St.
w2L (Nest to Mtanttj
ft HOSIERY
V for the family
mm Silk & Cotton
WW I A" Irlre and HtjlM
Jf X I Own Man.. Fri. and
4. l s'?fe" J
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cooi ana tnen use.
for Instance, (here wis, an entirely dif
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