Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 30, 1919, Night Extra Financial, Page 12, Image 12

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HALLOWEEN PLANS ADVENTURES
MRS. WILSON SUGGESTS
MENUS FOR HALLOWEEN SUPPERS
And Also Gives Some Ideas
for Unusual Decorations
on the Refreshment
Table
While Icing Decorates
Cakes of Various Kinds
With Lantern Faces and
Appropriate Symbols .
Hy MRS. M. A. WILSON'
Copyright ram, bv Mr. r A. II IIoh.
A ! I'loht. Krtrnrif.
QN HALLOWEEN evening the
good fairies are permitted to
make themselies visible to their
many friends so the traditions of
Ireland tell us. And the little ones,
as they are called by the romantic
fun-loving Irish nation, play a great
many tricks this night on their ene
mies and tliey reward their true
friends with many blessings.
It is truly a wonderful night for
the romantic maiden to delve into
the future and find., or try to find,
her Iu"k when seeking for the
knowledge of her future life part
ner. In those good old days of long
"ajo the lad and lassie spent a pleas
ant evening trying all the lucky
spells to insure them success in their
love affairs for the coming year.
And in the mid.st of much hilarity
many games are played; there aft
bobbing and ducking for apples,
spinning the plate, postoffice, heavy,
heavy, what hangs over and forfeits.
These weie some of the old-fashioned
ways the boys and girls of
Yesteryear passed n happy evening.
Other old legends told that this
one night in the year the spooks or
ghosts were permitted to roam the
earth, so that, to escape their notice,
all must go masked hence our
young folk disguised themselves and
wandered forth from house to house
seeking entertainment, for many in
formal parties were held on this eve
and no one was refused admission;
each visitor was treated to apples
and nuts, and then he wandered on
his way again.
Let your young folk entertain
their friends with a good old-fashioned
Halloween patty; let them play
the old games of long ago and then
close to the magic hour of midnight
erve a real old-fashioned Hal
loween supper.
' SOME SUGGESTIVE MENUS
No. 1
Cider
Salted Nuts Olives
Sardine and Potato Salad
Jack o' Lantern Cakes CofTee
No. 2
Cider Cup
Radishes Celery
Gloucester Cod a la King
Cheese Sandwiches
Fruit Cakes Coffee
Nuts Raisins Apples
No.' 3
Celery Salted Nuts
Baked Virginia Ham
Potato and Pepper Salad
Rolls Butter
Ice Cream Coffee
No. 4
Radishes Home-Made Pickles
Fried Oysters
Potato and Celery Salad
Rolls and Butter
Fruit Ginger Bread ' Coffee
Have corn husks and pumpkins for
the decorations; use autumn leaves,
1 strung together, for wall decora
tions. Cover the table with a silence
cloth and then with linen tablecloth
and place in the center of the table a
new wooden pail filled with cider.
Bank the sides of the pail with corn
husk, golden ears of corn and au
tumn leaves.
Now wire the handle so that it will
be in an upright position. Wrap the
handle with yellow tissue paper and
fasten a small jack o' lantern made
from a small pumpkin to they handle
so that it will hang in the well of
the bucket. Anange the tabic in the
usual manner. Serve the cider from
this well during the supper.
Hollow out a medium-bizi'd pump
kin and cut in it n jack o' lantern
and set bowls in the pumpkins to
hold the radishes, jiicklc and sand
wiches, sugar, etc., and make tiny
pumpkins from the yellow crepo
Mrs. Wilson Comes
to the Rescue
And offers practical suggestions for
overcoming the lack of gwects dur
ing the present sugar shortage.
This Is Her Advice.
When the recipes call for one cup
of sugar, uso ouo cup of white coin
sirup In plucn of the sugar ami then
reduce the amount of liquid required
in the recipe to one quarter. This
means that a recipo that calls for:
Oho cup of sugar,
One-half cup of milk or tenter,
may be adjusted to this formula :
One cup of tchlte com sirup,
Four tablespoons of water,
or
Ona and one-half cups of sugar.
One cup of mllh or tcater.
Jn place of which yon may use;
One and one-quarter cups of tchite
corn sirup or molasses,
Vight tablespoons of water or milk
or one-half cup.
Tlio regular amount of shortening,
flour and baking powder may bo
used that the recipe alls for.
ANOTHER HALLOWEEN TABLE
(Mil 3I.ui riiinplilti ornipjiiiB Hip place of lionor in (lio rrntrr nf llilnss,
Mirroiiiulri! by all Hie oilier autumn proiluits flint ought to share in
(lie (eli'br.itii)ii tomorrow riciilnj;
ilrs. l ihon at Food Fair;
What She Docs and When
Mr. M:ir - Wilson, food eppit
of (In- U cnliij: I'ulillr Lrtlcrr, Is
Klilnc cooUIiic ilrmonstr.itions ilally
at (lie rood K.ilr in (lip first l!egl
tnpiit Armor), Uriud and Callow lilll
stippls.
Hit proiram for todaj and
l'ridn.i follows:
'I bis Afternoon
i! p. m. I'sins Ieft-mers, brr.ids. A
prclal ddiiaiistr.ition nf
meat ciittint;. A side of
hei'f and a sldp of l.unb ullt
bp rut at Hie Public ledger
booth.
Tonight
8 p. m.. Dried fruits, inunins.
Tomoriuw
ii p. in. .MilU dishes, rr.-id.
8 p. in. I liocolalo cake, fruit salad.
paper, filling them with hard candies
for souvenirs.
How to Make the Cider Cup
Place in a large bowl some crushed
i ice and
One gallon, of cider,
Three bananas, cut into thin
slices,
Tivo oranges, cut into thin slices,
Three baked apples, cut into bits.
Mix and then serve.
Sardine and Potato Salad
(Twenty-fhe persons)
Wash and then cook eight pounds
of potatoes until tender and then,
when cool, peel and cut into thin
slices into a large mixing bowl.
Now add
One cup of finely chopped virions
One-half cup of finely chopped
parsley,
One cup of finely chopped green
peppers,
Two cups of finely chopped celery,
Two cups of mayonnaise or cooked
dressing,
One-half cup of vinegar,
One tablespoon of salt,
One teaspoon of pepper,
One and one-half teaspoons
mustard.
of
Toss to mix thoroughly and then
prepare individual nests of lettuce
and place three-quarters cup of the
potato salad in each nest. Mold it
into a cone and then lay four sar
dines, tail-end up, against the salad.
Garnish with finely chopped parsley
and seivc.
Jack o' Lantern Cakes
Bake a sponge cake in individual
or muffin pans and then ice with
chocolate water icing and make the
lantern face with white icing.
Gloucester Cod a la King
Select a thice-pound piece of bone
less .salt cod from the center cut;
soak for thieo hours and then place
in a piece of cheesecloth and tie
loosely, plunge into boiling water
and boil for thirty minutes. Drain.
Place two quarts of milk in a sauce
pan and add one and one-half cups
of flour. Stir with a wire spoon to
dissolve the flour and the,n bring to
a boil and cook slowly for ten min
utes. Now add
Two well-beaten eggs,
The prepared fish, broken into
flakes with a fork,
Juice of one lemon,
piiiffifiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiinmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinni
s? 5Sy,,35'?
fjc Jfitr & iflrtlmerp fjop, 3nc.
1423 Walnut Street
CLOTH-TOP COATS
m to $250
SOME TRIMMED WITH FUR
We have such a charming showing of new
models that we urge you to make an early call
if you would have first choice.
EVENING PUBLIC
SOME
Tivo green peppers, cut into pieces
ana parboiled,
One tablespoon of grated onion,
One teaspoon of paprika.
Heat slowly until very hot and
then serve on toast.
Fruit Cake
Place in a mixing bowl
Two and one-half cups of sirup,
One cup of shortening.
Cream well and then add
Eight cups of flour,
Four level tablespoons' of baking
powder,
One cup of milk,
One-half cup of cocoa.
One tablespoon of cinnamon,
One teaspoon of cloves,
One teaspoon of allspice,
Two egg,
Tuo cups of finely chopped Ka
nnts. Beat to mix thoroughly and then'
grease and flour a baking pan and
turn in the batter. Place the raisins
one at a time on the top of the bat
ter and gently press them into the
dough. Bake for fifty minutes in a
slow oven. Cool and then ice and
decorate with Halloween figuies and
then cut into blocks.
Adventures
With a Purse
T I'AVSKD before t
J- miro theiii soft
the blankets to ad-
woollv looking
things with big bands of nink nud blue
Then I saw the price, and I was doubt -
in. .'i,i ur. iin-j nntj, uir iriiiiiiiv- i
able price of S.-..-0 eaused me to doubt
tin. l.oely as tliej weie, the reman
the pre-eiue of any wool in them. But
I was told tlntt the have. And then I
was shown some fur ST. ."ill n n.iir wliirli
' 1, fl 1 II ,J lit! tf nnl !.. Hi..., If ..in tm.n
.... . V .. t.'l ... ,.,.,. I ,1. nil U. .1 ,, ,FI1 llll.V
bad occasion to look for blankets this
cnr, j on know well that $7.50 for
part wool blankets is a real bargain.
Ate you thinking of buying n washing
machine? If ou are I wish joii would
et nie advise ou. Of washing ma
chines, ns of many other things, tliere
are all kinds, and sometimes jou choose
the best, and other, times jou make a
mistake. Particularly when ou are
buying an tiling ns expensne as a
..nri. iiinu'u , ,mii,it iu ue surr
that ion make the right choice Because I
i i ... a i
f .ir ." ;r'.:;T '."... .:' ":"" ""." me column, so U. A. Y,
w l-eh . 1
llt'l llll , I'll IIUUUI, J. Kill lltlllU ,ll
lias no parts in tnc tuu to run aga
lour clothes nud wear them out. This
jou about. I can advise yoi sl(1 ,.anuot complv with lour request
The machine I buic in mind nor jth T0Ilrs eithc Sunshine,
arts m the tub to rub against I " '
means that it does not tear them, or Jn S'nr'rirr
snatch off buttons and hooks. And , mvi iny
there are no heavy cylinders to lift out' Shoe- should be put away in a place
and clean after the wash is finished, Ujhcie theie is a tirculatiou of oir.
works electrically, of course, and the ,, . , ,
wringer can be swung from the washer . ."""ssp- should be coiered with enm-
to the riuse water, then to the blue1 br",' nr periale slip-, or old nightgowns
water, and then to the clothes basket"1"" m"'R "!' caietullj
without moving or shifting the washer.
lou can get this machine at jut one i
shop in t lie city; it costs about the I
same us any electric washer; unci jou i
may pay for it in part payments, if jou
like. And, oh, jes, it has a special
moiement of the tub which is the s.
cret of its superiority.
She was showing me hei hope ehe-t
and what a wealth of lovclj things she
has! Hut she is eminent! practical,
and would not be one to have onlj
Huffy, Incy things, and Insurious Ma
deira pieces, and linen towels. "This."
she said, "is a gas toaster. Isn't it
nice?" And it ii. When not in use it
folds nwny into a ver.i small corner
One opens it and places it over the
burner on the gas stove. The advantage
of this particular toaster over any that
jou may previously have seen is that it
distributes the bent eienly, and so
makes the toa'st a nice golden brown all
over instead of in spots. The price is
only thirty-five cents.
Tor nmn of hoi Hddrrsn IVoraan'n
Pale Kdltor, or phone llnlnut 8000.
?j- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiDiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiinii'M
LEDGER PHILADELPHIA; THURSDAY,
WITH A PURSE DANCE
Please TellMe
What to Do
Hy CYNTHIA
Shall She Take His Arm?
Dear Cjnthln Should I take n jouns
man's arm when walking in the street
uitn Mm? SAKAII Ii.
It is not considered good form for a
girl to take a man's arm when walking
In the street unless the girl is lame
and needs assistance.
A Bit Behind Times
Dear Cjnthla Head with much in
terest letter signed "Until." Ruth
'ertninly eomes out with the truth. She
expiesses the opinion of about 1)8 per
riii. in me mnip KPX about "(lolls."
I. wry fellow likes lo s.rp his elrl loot
good and attractive and a little paint
and powder never did or never will hurt
a girl h face or reputation. I'll admit
there are nme fieaky make-ups that
an- uueriy Disgusting, but such are few
lompnred to all that use powder.
We are living in- the twentieth
century and beauty (osmetics are only
the signs of progiess. Just ns the air
plane was imented for the betterment
of tiinel so nie cosmetics for the better
ment of n woman's appearance, which
s an important faUor to her success
In life.
"Will some of the "plain" and angelic
hiii- iMiir inn wnv tnc ilon t use
paint arid powder? Let's be reasonable
and do away with the Mill ideas that
our pi-cat-grandmas had.
,, , , . , M.M'RY '..
the only hitch about this is that cos
metics are not modern, but have been
used for many, minny centuries.
There Were Some Answers
Dear Cynthia Do von remember
ludy, who wiote a letter to vour col
umn n few weeks nun'' I hum ..
answers published to nn letter, but per
haps I missed them, a- I Imio been i
wiij nom Home quite frequenth. At
any rate. I should m-uiri in.,. i n'.i.i .,.,
contribution to the "K I" H (' "
ine subject of UK-ing is, Know,
worn nlmpst threiidbaie. nnd jd. Ct
thi.i, no one has Act expressed' nn ideas
on the subject. So often we bear it said
that u man loses bis icpivt for a girl
when she allows him to kiss her. This
I believe, is quitp trUP w0 0 i,011II
people Sy fpsncrhlllt thn Uu. '!..
don't tlie girls snip their kis-'es for Uiir
husbands-to-beV" N',i t um mn.ii (..
ask mj questions :
Jhy not apply the rule both wins?
bj is it any worse for a girl to gne
pi i lieges than it is for the man to take?
hy should not a man keep himself as
he would hnc the woman he is to
marry?
Here is the whole thing in a nut
shell: The majority of men expect girls
to measure up to standards of which
the themselves fall short.
Remember. I am not saying all the
men. for that would not be true. I
number among inv masculine friends
several who bae the highest ideals, and
who lhe up to them. This i- one thing
that I bine discovered. Cynthia, flint
the man who has n sister whom be
loes and respects is almost nlwajs sure
to treat other girls with the greatest
respect anil consideration.
H hat I lime said in regard to one
Sl,i vtr""'''"',ls in the matter of kissing
applies also to innnj other more serious
things in life. (Jirls nie condemned for
llirtiiig, for attending publlr dances for
; .. . ," : :
B"'n?, t0 I1""-'"'""''''' shows, etc.. and
et the at cruse man considers himself
n free lance to do just what his rather
elastic (onseienee penults I, for one,
am :i belieier in sex equalit.i. so far as
morals are concerned, at bast. I be
lievo T could wiite a jolunie without
stopping on this subject. C.inthia, but I
think what I bine written will be suf
ficient to express my opinion.
I hope that some man with ideals
will answer mi letter and let me km, .
that there arc some who agree with me.
.TL'DY, AN AMDItlC'AN GIRL.
To G. X. Y. and Sunshine
t t tl ( Ii I n 111 CrtVIM lint or. rim I. n H n
.miiihu ii wii i inn in ,sr uns, vi-
piamed inrious times, she cannot bring
about introductions between persons
on nnngers.
Hove Ifou Seenlfiis
Stunnmj Style
$A45
Style 845-
Popular Bat
tleship Grey
vamp,. Beau
tiful cloth top
to match.
Leather
Louis
heel. Alu-
minum
plate.
SHOE FOR WOMEN
Other Styles At
$3.95, $4.45, $4.95,
$5.85, $6.85 & $7.85
Newark Shoe
Stores Company
587 hTURKS IN 07 C1TIKS
1331 Market. I,t llith and inth
33 H, (loth ht ncur Market
Stii KriiKincton Aif bt. Yor and
Cumberland
2(118 Keniliicton Ale., nr. Hurt I.n
17 N. 8th. near Cherry HI.
44S houlh M.. ni-ar nth
tut S, BM Mt near C'hulnut
2Ja . l-ront Mt near Dauphin
11632 (prmuntoHii Air., near Chelten
1431 Mouth, liet. llroad and lBth Ht.
4084 Luni'imler Ale., near 41st St
210 N. 8th. Ix-t. Uatu i. Vina tits,
424 Market Ht liet. 4th and Oth
4S8.I l'ranktord Air,, nr.Orthodox 3t,
3348 Itlilte Aie.. near Columbia
Main St.. Munurunk
no
I
lillllisfif
iteworfc
PRETTY DANCE FROCK
OF ROSE-PINK SILK
Ml "7l
III 'lli ' I
III .flM
I fl
UJjf
You must danrp this sea.son. and
.ion must baie a charming dress, to
dance in. The one shown ahoio
inmhlnes rose-colored silk iillh
gold lace and steel-blue ribbon
A Dally Fashion Talk by Florence Hoso
TVVNOlNCt is going to be eien more
J-' popular this -winter than it was last
winter or the winter before. The bo.is
who bale been coming home from
I'rnuce are keen about it, and whether
ou arc .lining enough to be their sweet
heart or old enough to fie their grand
mother they will like jou n lot better
aim nnd jour societj a deal more con-
genial if jou can go through one of the
new dances with them.
When a business friend comes to
town, the aien't going to hang around
his hotel for the owning. They an !
going to get him to come home' with j
them. And if home is a place where j
the can pas n little time and forget
their woriics bj dancing, so much the '
better. After nil, the otilj two requl- j
sites for darning are some soit of
music muebine and a girl with a dance
frock, because really the spiritof the
dance is somehow lost if the woman
wears an uninteresting frock. Of
course, in the afternoon she dances in
her suit for the occasional tea-time
dance. But for most men dancing is a
diversion, nnd they do appreciate it if
you slip into a dainty eveuiug dance
frock.
And really it is perfectly nppalliug
the number of dance frocks of the sim
pler sort that huie already been bought
at the stores ami ordered at the dress
otaoc
30E30I
15
IOBI
MjrjnjtrZtVy
One Door Above Walnut
Winter Millinery
Charming bats that nro worthy of the tfi -g w --
consideration of any woman who would 7 o -v JP Jn B W
combine economy with quality uml btjlc V f ml (fVT f I tl
Specially J'ricrd ... , -. s-r w . J
JT) That arc quite original with us, hand-
kJal.filM.sir.SS comely made in dainty and tailored models,
XJ(UUOI0 inexpensively priced.
"""' ""! ini-u ini inr-
OCTOBER 30; 1919
FROCK DO
DOES THE POPULAR GIRL
GET THE BEST JHUSB AND ?
Or Is She as Apt lo Marry as Her Less-Courted Sisters?
Anstvcr to One of theJLattcr
VTOT so long ago an unusunl letter
ai came to the page. It told of a girl
of twenty who by all the laws of every
thing should lio popular. Thnt is to
say, she is pretty, well dressed nnd has
a nice borne with parents willing to let
her entertain in it. In addition to this
she is cheerful, ami, judging from the
letter, intelligent nnd "human." Yet
the girl is not populnr.
I call this letter unusual becnlisn it
was n frank outpouring of a wish so
many girls nro a bit too proud nnd
luin to own up to.
"Now, to be honest," the letter reads,
"I want to mnrry I want a homo of
my own, I wunt a husband nnd chil
dren. I want all this and I fenr I am
going to mist it nil,
LDT nie tell ou, dear little friend,
ion nro not going to miss it all.
It is the gill of jour tpe who, in the
slang of the day, "makes the best
match" in the end. I'ollow the couise
of the uvernge popular girl for five
Jems, How do ou find it? It runs
tempeltuousl.i through case after case;
through (lowers and botes of randy, and
where does it end after the five jean?
If doesn't end. That's just it. The
career of the popular girl trails on in
definitely. She seldom marries early,
frequently neier mnirics at all and
when she does it is more often than not
a mariiage mediocre in love.
maker's. Not mere evening gowns,
these but gowns of the sort that are
made wlJh the express idea that the
skirts arc neither so long nor so narrow
as to impede dancing.
The sketch giies you an excellent
idea of the sort of gown that is ordered
by the discriminating woman for her
ei ruing (Inuring. It is of rose-pink
silk bung over a not too narrow diop
of gold lace. The little shoulder
s'eeies are also of gold lace and the
ribbon that goes over cadi shoulder
and in a long loop at the left side is of
steel blue.
Copjrlsht, 1010, hy l'lorcnco Koso
first- -quality
P0MPE1AN
OLIVE OIL
"always fresh"
Make
Rich, Creamy,
Mayonnaise
Dressings
Sold Everywhere
IOE30E
aocto
141'
South-
th STREET,
iocao
Wtf
POPULAR GIRLS MARRY?!
-An
Do you know why this is? Have
you ever been.in the position of picking
out a very good fur coat and going
from fashion book to fashion book nud
then from store to store not knowing
where or what to choose, afraid if jou
do choose jou will See something ou
ike better the next day? Well, marry
lug with the popular girl seems to b'e u
process something like this. In other
words, popularity breeds a frequently
fatal indecision.
The girl with any number of men at her
beck and call is waiting for the per
fect suitor. And more often than not
lin never comes.
Thus it frequently happens thnt the
meu who paid her such devoted 'atten
tion nre all settled in a cosy little home
with a happy wife sind chubbi children
while she is still rushing around with
orchids On the front of her coat nnd
uncomfortably beginning to wonder if
she didn't make a mistake. s
rpiIEN, too, there is this to ronsidcr
J- about the popular girl. A great
ninny men are aftaid to undertake the
job of marrjing her. She is too feted,
too pretty, perhnps too brilliant, nnd
Mr. Average Man does not feel he would
be able to keep up with this for life,
ho like as not be marries a girl
i .ii ' "" " regular ueail Lreroie-in
l;er life. And that Is what I would like
to point out to jou. dear, who call
yourself n failure with men at twenty
lou never know what minute some
wondeifu one is going to come witli
out warning into jour life, for jou nro
Ill '"" y - ' i r iW -ir. t? Vi v ' - , II
ffli'5 7?
;; ' dJ6SlUyj0r
,:v 1214 Walnut Street
i '; W&L. lcrc Style I
I " -xL rc(omnatc
! ' )vl r Fashion's favorite w v
I ' M!$r JHK autumn tea hour, III
! ,'- MWVtt lp squires f rocking
'-'' mil' I'll fill le!surcly critical ?
-K fflJl If Kazc o'er the dainty ,"
1 , T jlf Our own moderately i,
Classic bim- i ' , pn'ce(i twelve to six ('
' ; pressed in 31H gowns reveal .i
: I satin for T7n exclusivcncss and '!i
: i o r m a i J L .. .. ., , ,
III ' ..f. Ilttonlion 'in rlnfnll ( 111
Ml , illlCl UU (III it 1 v... vV .I.
, wear. W that is gratifying. j
B '" -' -: - " ' "" -' 'N W t$$
U IMI J .,.,.- ii"" - ,, , ,,.. lf f xi, t-l
GIRLS! BEAUTIFY Y
HAIR WITH -
Get a Small Bottle! Freshen Your Scalp! Stop
Jailing Hair! Remove Dandruff! Grow Lots
of Wavy, Glossy, Beautiful Hair-You Can! :
aViiaKat
IW
.' w
mM
fee , ,, -
"DANDERINE"
GROWS HAIIl
Ileildej ilouhlliii- the
beautj- of your linlr
at onee, you will
Ljhortly nna new
liolr, line and downy
new linlr BroiVliio
mmVSKvII m ? V
just the kind (if girl who gets the w'on
derflil woitlrwhlle ninn. Hut j,ou must
giie him time to (lnd jou, for you nro
jus; a child.
Some ona ninte to the page nnd sug
gestcd that jou get some hobby or oe
cupatldii and 'bug It to jour bosom.
Why don't j oil do that? Where worth
while things nrcTlonq jou arc just thnt
much mote apt to meet worthwbilo
people. And, besides, it is n queer Juit
undeniable fact that as so(m as we stop
worrjing about men they, the nonundcr
standable, begin to worry about us.
r I1' '"!. KM'IIIA J
jf IIUWNtl ii, couldn't
L t"i.v In hii-lncs. MxKW'
k. mid wouldn't mml
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