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. k ' THE STANDARD-EXAMINER TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1920 " 51 H llLOW and MARRIED LIFE! I( Izq, thie noted author J 1 Idafa MgGlone Gibson j I'l BB RECONCILIATION ALMOST, ft Mff It is a str.ingo quirk iu human na il B , turc tnat noL evt?n the knowledge of t HJR lne passing of thoso we love best can ' J keeP our tnouShts long from living is f sues,. Death, eventually vanquishes K life, but even in victory death must W give way to life's great problems, M hd11 UVer fa tll0Se who are left be" ' 1 did not tell these thoughts to Al j iff.. Ice,, perhaps becauso just at that mo I J IS, ment John opened the door. He seem 1 !f ed relieved to find mo with his sister 1 m instead of Helen, and with his face; Kc smiling he came and took me in his 1 Kt arms, saying, "Well, girl, I was able to get a drawing room for you, and IwSe you can go in and shut the door and &Y 1:0 alc-ne at rest. Yes, my. dear, you Hfc ean even keep mo out if you want H "I always want you with me. John, when- you are kind and loving." K'' "Girl, I am always loving even when perhaps I am least kind," he said Mt with a-little sigh. I "But I am going to try and get your n , pointy of view, my dear. I gue.3s I( l WI1 nave to," he continued, eomewh.it H ruefully. "Because it seems to me! Bf that you can never, by any possibiliiyj I o une win speak. I fciv? " n,u soing downstairs now, honey, I fp7 and don't you worry about anything.! R jj All you' v.'ill hvao to do is to get ready j S jf ao that when the taxi comes you can I get into it and go straight to your own jJ? drawing room In the train. No one! shall speak a word to you if you dc kf I not want them to." j M I 1 mu3t have looked so relieved at '.I1 this that even Alice did not .stop to m chatter'.-Sho helped me with my hat and wraps, and, almost in a .laze, H ai last found myself shut in from alll p the world in my own compartment. I ! Still in a kind of stupor, I managed' to undress and gel into the berth. I1 thought 1 was going to sleep immedi ately, but having stretched myself out and closed my eyes 1 found them open ing wide again. Sleep had flown away. It seems to me that all my great sor rows have been connected in some ,way with long railroad journeys. When 1 went to my father In his last illness ! 1 spent the night listening to the ' mournful sound of revolving carj 14 MARION HOLMES 1 1 RECIPES I, ! CORN CUPS. I "; , v " Fill buttered cups with cut off corn! and pour over each a custard made of! i U one and .ond-half cupfuls of boiling ' K milk, two eggs slightly beaten, salt, I L - "white pepper.' Bake until set, turn out; g; carefully and serve with savory string1 V ) s R beans and brown bread sandwiches. M? The savory string beans are made by' l m cooking tender string beans the last! J W half hour (draining off the water iu I ft which boiled) in enough cut up loma-j i it to and finely minced onion to moisten, Bj m well. Add salt, a little sugar, a piece J m of butter and serve very hot. Swiss i m carrots are' prepared by splitting tiny! m carrots down the middle or slicing' . m larger ones and sauteing them in a mt flTing pan. Sprinkle with salt and a ' I wT very lj'ttle brown sugar and serve hoti I Lfr BAKED HAM. 1 I E Scrub ham and put in kettle covered f "with cold water. Bring slowly to boil- I -iug point and cook slowly until ten- , I,' der. A fireloss cooker is just the thing :. for ham. It will take three to four I' -t hours for a twelve-pound ham. Partial- 4 h- ly cool before removing from water. jr Remove skin and surplus fat. Sprln- t lo well with brown sugar and crumbs, I ick well with cloves, one-half inch ' jarL Bake in slow oven until brown, he ham may be .prepared the day be ore used and if carefully carved it will last several meals and for sand If' j APPLE SAUCE. ' Apples for apple sauce should not I"1 necessarily be .peeled; wipe them well, fcuCUt up without peeling, add water and Eook till thoroughly soft. Then rub m gthe pulp through a coarse sieve. A ffififi- , D?JteIy coft and refined; wk ( y compicxlon aided by ft kW Nadine Face Powder H v, y 'rhls exqultlto bcautlfkr 1m- VM part0 n Ind'efinablo charm V, j Q chnrrn and lovellnosa S J , which enduro throughout B V' tho doy oad lirjcer In the I I niemorj-. jS lt0 coolnws la refreihlriff. B' f ' j nnd cannot barm tho ten- i flyf dcrctt okln. ' J I wheels. When I returned home at the time of tho newspaper scandal about John another long journey gave me , time lo think and worry. When I came to Atlantic City the endless 'hours of that dreary ride were passed in unhappy retrospection and fpars of the future; and now I was going home to lay my mother beside my father In the little cemetery where generations of my family are buried. In Her Mother's Room. When wo arrived at the station I hurried directly to a waiting motor Jand soon was in my mother's room at ,my old heme. John stayed behind to jsee that all the arrangements wre (carried ouL Helen and Bob had de icided that it was not necessary 'or 'them to come with us and Alice was coming on a later train. 1 found the house and my mother's room filled with flowers anil a great basket of the omnipresent white vio lets" greeted me with fragrance and sympathy as I opened tho door of myj mother's room, which had been prc-i pared for me. j j I would not allow myself, however, ! to dwell upon this message from Karl iShe.pard. I had determined never toj think of him again. In fact 1 had de termined to show John his letter, tell ! him of my mad moment when I had! i contemplated self-destruction and then !by word and deed that I had returned Jhome with my readjustment of life's I values 'complete and that I was de void of every interest except my in terest in my husband. "I will be an old fashioned wife, mother dear," I said aloud as though 1 were making a promise to my 'dead mother. Only to Break Them. But alas, we make resolves only to break them. When John came in and I tried to tell him of the awful hour I spent on the storm swept pier at At lantic City; of how led by a mad im pulse almost to the point of hurling myself into the beckoning waves I was saved from this rash act by Karl Shepard. he grew perfectly furious. The idea that I was trying to kill my-: self seemed to have no effect upon ! him, but the fact that Karl Shepard was near me and able to rescue me en raged him beyond words. Tomorrow John Misunderstands. j SALAD COMBINATIONS If mayonnaise is to be used with fruit salad omit the mustard, use lem I on. juice rather than vinegar and when j the oil is thoroughly incorporated with I the egg add two tablospoonfuls of pine ! apple juice and the stiffly beaten white of one egg. This will make a i lighter and more suitable dressing for j such a salad. I A tartaro dressing Is especially I adapted for use with crab, lobster or ; salmon salad. I.t requires the yolk of one egg, three-quarters of a cupful of 'olive oil, two tablespoonfuis of lemon juice, salt, paprika and a tablespoonful each of chopped gherkins and capers lor a cupful of diced" cucumbers may i be used instead of the capers and gher kins to give variety. Finely chopped .pimento or green pepper may be combined with mayon naise for the sake of decorative effect jas well as flavor. Onion or garlic ex tract is an improvement to every kind i of salad dressing, but it should be so I skilfully used that it would be im j possible to detect the taste. j HAIRPINS AND NERVES A treat amount of carelessness Is j found in tho matter of hairpins, yet both the effect of the coiffure and its comfort are to a great degree depend ent upon them. Nothing looks more hopeless than to see the ends of hair pins sticking ouC from the folds or colls of the hair, yet this is by no means uncommon. Not a few cases of headache and a great deal of tho strained expression noticeable on so many people's faces in theaters, etc. Is directly due to the pressure of the" Pins on the scalp, a pressures which with the possessors of senslthe scalps causes inflammation of the superficial njrves, resulting In an almost intoler able sensation, part of pain, part of irritation. TOMATOES IN SALAD When you put tomatoes in salad skin them first. This is easily done by putting them In a basin and pour ing: boiling water over them. Let stands for a mnluto or two and the skin can be removed with east. An otrer good method that does not re quire scalding water Is to run the back of a knife rather firmly over the tomato and then peel. This loosens the skin from the pulp and it can be romoved with comparatively nttlo trouble. HOUSEHOLD NOTES Handsome curtains can be made only of good material. As spring comes on be' sure to serve 3. salad once a day. Old quilts can bo washed and saved Cor lining now ones. Vinegar can be used as a substitute for. brandy in souces. Apricot tapioca can be made exactly as peach tapioca ia. If flatirons aro sticky wash them carefully and dry thoroughly. Honey can be used instead of sugar for sweetening custards. .(in FOOD CHOPPER Food chopper will always leave two bad marks on the board when in use. Tit this way and prevent it: Cover the clamps with small stTlps of adhesive plaster; it not only prevents marks, but stands any amount of washing-. lOM TALMHDGE OKI TOmiGHT Jennie Malone, the character played by Norma Talmadge in "A Daughter of Two Worlds," loved her father so much that when the judge, who was about to dismiss the charge of for gery against her, recognized him as Black Jerry Malone, keeper of a low dance hall, and assailed his reputa tion, she broke into a bitter tirade against the court with the result that she was ordered held under heavy bond. The sceno in the photoplay, which will be screened at the Or pheum theatre tonight and tomorrow, furnishes one of the best hits of acting in the film version of Le Hoy Scott's novel of the same name. Jennie calls the old judge a hypo crite, pounds the bench and shakes her tiny fist in his face. "How dare you speak to my father like that?" she asks indignantly. The judge's attitude of leniency promptly changes, but Jennie's Uncle George gains her temporary release by providing bond to insure her appear auce at the trial. Jennie does not wait for her trial. She is taken away to a fashionable hoarding school, where under an assumed name, she breaks Into "upper cruet" of society and meets the man who wins her love. The stain of the past creeps into her new environment, and Jennie faces a com j plex situation, when the life of a friend of the underworld depends on her rc- I voaling the whole truth, i i Save Money On Meat i i Three more nutritious dishes pre pared from less costly meats. Recipes issued by Woman's Division of Depart ment of Justice 'QUICK MEAT LOAF. 55 pound round or some other .solid meat run through meat gTmder twice 34 cup softened bread 1 beaten egg Salt and pepper Lemon juice , . A little nutmeg Onion juice - - Added lo bread. Add the bread mixture to the meat, j Shape in a bowl and sprinkle well Trlth flour. Melt two teaspoons of butter in i a frying pan, put in a sliced onion, j cover and cook slowly, until the onion is a light brown; removo the onion; put the meat loaf into the hot pan with the floured sido down. Cover and cook for ten minutes, then sprinkle the top with flour, turn carefully, and cook for i five minutes longer. Lift the meat loaf on to a platter with a cake turner, ' place the cooked onion on top and pour over the juice remaining in the pan. This moat loaf can be served either hot or cold. BRAISED OX JOINTS. 1 ox tail (cut in two-inch pieces) 2 cup tomatoes 2 small onions 1 tablespoon chopped celery. 3 whole cloves o bay leaves If tablespoons flour Brown ox tail well in oven. Cut onion, carrot, celery and brown all to gether well. Sprinkle with flour and brown fifteen minutes. Add one cup hot water and tomatoes, bay leaves, cloves, salt and pepper. Cook until meat falls from bones. BEEF BALLS WITH DUMPLINGS. To a cup and a halt of beef from the shank, put twice through a food chopper, add a third of a cup of bread crumbs, salt, pepper, a teaspoonful of lfmon Juice, and a little nutmeg and a beaten egg. Shape Into balls lightly, and let them stand for half an hour or more to become firm, then roll them In flour and brown in tho frying pan with three tablespoons of lard or some salt and pork fat Then add a table spoon of flour to the remaining fat and a cup of stock. Season well, add this mixture to the meat-balls and simmer In a closely covered dfah for an hour and a half. NEW BLOUSES Many of the latest blouses are com binations of two shades of georgette. oo WOOLWORTH GIRLS TO MANAGE ESTATE NEW 'OKK, April 5. Mrs. Jenni Woolworth, widow of Prank W. Wool worth, founder of the Woolworth five and ten-cent stores, is seriously ill a! her home on Long Island and little hope is entertained for her recovery according to affidavits filed in the supreme court here today by her phy sician, Dr. William H. Zabriskie, the court approved a report of referree Carlyle Norwood recommended the ap pointment of ehr daughters, Helen Woolworth McCan and Jessie Wool worth Donahue, as co-members of the committee of their mother's estate which is valued at approximately S30, 000,000. oo LIQUOR CANNOT BE USED FOR COOKING BALTIMORE, April 5 Tho follow lng ruling was received today by Pro I-.Jbition Commissioner Richard S. Dod son from Commissioner Kramer in Washington: "Commissioner Roper, after consid ering this matter very carefully, has decided thai, under the law, there is no authority for issuing permits to use liquor for culinary purposes. In the further progress of your work therefore, you may goyern yourself ac cordingly. "No further applications for with drawal should be approved under per mits outstanding." oo FILING IS LEGAL. LINCOLN, Neb., April 5. The Ne braska supreme court has ruled that tho filing of former Governor John IT. Morehead, as Democratic candidate for governor, is legal, and that Ss name shall remain on the ballot to be voted at the primary election, April 20. oo- Two of the vessels' used by Colum bus on his first voyage to America were caravels. t GEHMII ! Encounter Warm Receptions When Identity is Discovered Hard Row to Hoe LONDON, March 19. Large num bers of German and other undesirables who were deported from England in the war have managed to make their way back to London but have encoun tered warm receptions when their identity has been discovered. They managed to cross from the continent by working their way as sailors on tramp steamers to northern English and Scottish ports. These Germans who have come back to England to take up business again find it a hard row to hoe, says the Evening Standard. One German busi ness man gave it up and returned to his fatherland after being refused ad mission to five London hotels. He found rooms in a Bloomsbury boarding house but two days later "the other boarders discovered him, and notified the manager they could not live under the same roof -with a German; and he was turned out. A German butcher in a London sub urb was proven (ed by his neighbors from reopening his old store the other day although, he had lived in England for 40 years, and there arc many sim ilar cases. Neither captain nor crew of the steamer Snica. thn rirf. Gormnn onrrm ship to enter the Firth of Forth since August, 1914, wore allowed ashore at Methil and, in deference to local feH- ;ing, the vessel did nqt display the I German flag. On the other hand, a revival of "Tannhauser" at Covcnt Garden opera recently drew a crowded and apprecia tive audience of sqciety people. The cast, however, was wholly English. 'UU Polish President Musi Be of Christian Faith WARSAW, March 10. The constltu tional commission of the diet adopted a resolution recently .providing that to be eligible to the presidency of the Polish republic a candidate must bo of Polish nationality, at least 40 years I old, .and Roman Catholic or Protestant I In religion. The commission began its 'task of framing the Polish constitution I nearly a year ago. U. S. UNPREPAREDNESS DUE TO WASTE WASHINGTON, April 5. Unpre paredness on the part of the United States was directly responsible for icuuui cAiKuagduues in jives anu money, Senator Wadsworth, Republi can, of New York, said today in open ing discussion on the army reorgani zation bill submitted by the senate military committee. Defending tho committee plan for training boys be tween IS and 21 years, Senator Wads worth declared it was unfair lo ask the vetqrans of tho great war lo con tinue to fill the role of defenders of the country which was rightfully the Iduty of "their successors in age." i oo JOHNSON ATTACKS TREATY SUPPORTERS NEWARK, N. J., April 5. Senator Hiram W. Johnson of California, open ed his New Jersey campaign for the Republican presidential nomination with an address hero tonight in which jlic renewed his attack on supporters Of the peace treaty. J "Lots of people are having a clinngi of heart on the treaty," he said. "They are now saying: 'Let us accept the roservations ' Tho reason they have come to this conclusion is that they don't want the people to pass on this Infamous document, but in one way or another the American people are going to pass on it this year." Senator Johnson referred to Horbert Hoover as "the candidate who is run nlng on all tickets." uu PASTOR TO TELL OF "GILDED PALACES" NEW YORK, April 6. Tho Rev. John Roach Stratton, pastor of Calvary Baptist church, was recruited today by Assistant District Attorney James E. Smith as the latest witness in New Y'ork's vice war. Mr. Smith called on the clergyman who yesterday delivered a sermon in which he described "gilded palaces" visited on a personal inspection tour of Broadway. Alter the conference It was announced the minister had agreed to appear before the regular grand jury. COURT OF APPEALS DENIES JURISDICTION SAN FRANCISCO, April 5. The L. S. circuit court of appeals decided to day that it had no jurisdiction in the appeal of Eugene Sol Louie, a Soeur D'Alone Indian convicted of second de gree murder, for a review of the de cision of the United Stnles district court of Idaho, northern division. The appeal should have been taken to the U. S. supreme court, the decision stated, since its sole question was as to whether tho state or federal courts had jurisdiction over crimes commit ted on former Indian reservation land which had been patented by the In dians themselves. -oo- FAIL TO RECOVER BODIES OF VICTIMS COLUMBIA, S. C, April 5. None of the bodies of ten persons drowned when a flat boat on the Savannah riv er turned over at Harper's Ferry, five miles from Lowdensvillo, late yesler day, had been recovered tonight ac cording to reports received here. Thos. Bradshaw -was the only one of tho elev en young people on the boat who rang ed in age from nine years to the ear ly twenties, escaped. f UNION CARPENTERS WIN OUT IN BUTTE BUTTE, Mont., Aprli 5. Following ratification yesterday of the agree ment between tho union and the build ing contractors, union carpenters re ported for work today and non-union carpenters who had been employee since the failure to agree on a new wage scale more than a month ago were called off the jobs, it was an nounced. i oo FOREIGN PAPERS TO PUBLISH "ENGLISH" PORTLAND, Ore,, April 5. Judge Willinm R. Gilbert of the United Stales Circuit court today issued a temporary injunction against the en forcement of the Oregon law requiring newspapers printed in foreign langu ages to parallel their columns in English. oo BOND DEPRECIATION TO BE INVESTIGATED WASHINGTON, April 5. Appoint ment of. a house committee to inquire into tho depreciation of tho market value of Liberty bonds is proposed by' a resolution Introduced by xepresenta tivo Magee, Republican, New -York. oo BULGARIAN PRESIDENT DEAD. WASHINGTON, April 5. The death of President Pavlovitch of the provis ional national assembly at Belgrade, Saturday was announced in a cable gram today to the Czecho-Slovakiar. legution here- SUB-COMMITTEES FOR SOLDIER RELIEF BILL WASHINGTON, April 5. Five sub committees were appointed today by the house ways and means committee to consider all pending soldier relief, measures. INSOLVENT BANK HAS $1,000,000 DEFICIT STRUTHERS, S. C, April 5. A de ficit "in tho neighborhood of a mil Hon dollars" will have to be met by the insolvent Slruthers' Savings and Bank ing company, which was closed Sat urday by State examiners, William McCombs, president of the hank, said this afternoon. oo STATE OF NEVADA IS ENJOINED BY COURT ! i i SAN FRANCISCO, April 5. Actioi. by the Nevada-California Power com pany to enjoin the state of Nevada from collecting a tax of $533,517 on Its properties for 1914 was decided in fa vor of the company by the Unitot Slates circuit court of appeals here today-. ' uu r GOBS OUT OF BUSINESS. Norfolk.' a., April m SI. 13. Walker, president of the Old Dominion Steam ship company, today announced to business interests of Norfolk that tho company virtually had gone out of business with the sale of tho ocean going ships and suspension of nearly all its service. The ocean-going ves sels have been sold to McDonald & Trude, representing Italian interests, it was said. LANSING'S PLANS TO I BE USED BY COLBY f WASHINGTON, April 5. Plana' j H made by former Secretary Lansing for the re-organization of the state depart ; . ment so as to belter equip it for ban- cling the enormously increased respon- sibiiities growing out of tho changec world conditions following uie war, are receiving the attention of Secretary Colby and may be carried out in part. at least. 1 QUEENSLAND PREMIER. IH SAN FRANCISCO, April 5. Pro-J , H mior Edward G. Theodore of Queens land, accompanied by Mrs. Theodore and G. L. Beale, under secretary oi ! ' the troasury of Queensland, arrived , here today from Australia. oo I H Rain gauges on lofty buildings col- H lect less than at the ground. 1 H Drugstores SeS fl . " I 1 Five million pcople j H use it to KILL COLDS J ILL' j I S.ROMiB j I fcSkv Standard cold remedz far 20 yttn . B. in tablet form safe, sure, no f ' opiatei breaks up a oold in 24 y ' 1 9BK. hours relieves crip in 3 days. sZZ&M Money back if it fails. The H. nfl n nx2rv fienuinc box has a Red if , 1 Effl Mft 38ktop- witb Mr- Hni's I XjJ At All Drag Star H