Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 7 December 1934 — Page 2

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1934.

The Beauty Of The Stars “Beauty is the natural right of every woman; her privilege is to make the most of it.” —Lentheric

Playthings Ranked With Bread As. Vital Childhood Necessities

Anne Darling, featured player in Universal pictures, whose charm lies in the freshness which is the UitMj nailnr of youth. Summer Fenumes A fashion expert, recently returned from Paris, is quoted as saying that the most important interest in a woman’s life is fashion— with tns single exception of perfume. It seems unnecessary to differentiate between the two, however, for they have much in common. Most of the best of both are created in Paris, and they are used by lovely women the world over for the same purpose — to make themselves lovelier. The beautiful stars of Hollywood are constantly striving for as much variety in their wardrobes as is possible without sacrificing any of; their,^wn particular individualities, j So they do with perfumes. Every woman needs changes of perfume from time to time, and in summertime she should not use the same fragrance that she wears in winter with furs and heavy clothes. "ForSt yierge,” an outdoor perfume inspired by dewy woods, fernery, and the deep, fresh coolness of moss, is an ideal summer odor. "Asphodele,” the flower of the ancient Greek paradise, has a predominent gardenia note, softened and rendered more mysterious by its other mellowing ingredients which number over a hundred For summer neauty, nothing is so appropriate as a floral bouquet. While, in the evening, sophisticated fragrances such as “Miracle” are

Variety of Toys Held Essential to Child Education “P V E R Y American youngster *- r must have the toys and games required for normal child development.” With tliis slogan for equal play opportunity, communities in every part of the country are organizing to provide under-privileged children with the toys and games suitable for their age. The everyday need for constructive play opportunity is recognized to be as vital to each child’s development as bread and shelter. Babies need stuffed animals, balls, bath toys, baby walkers, play pens and chime toys. When baby learns to toddle, push and pull toys, blocks, picture books, dolls and wheel toys help him to adjust to the strange new world. Youngsters from two to four need easy construction toys,

drawing boards and blackboards to help them co-ordinate their eyes, minds and muscles, modeling materials, weaving sets, skates, express wagons, little autos, sidewalk bikes. Toys that produce housekeeping and business activity are play essentials for children from four to six, and are educational too.’ Doll carriages, doll furniture and wardrobes .encourage imaginative play. Electric trains, more difficult construction sets, board games that help with school work, chemistry and microscope sets and carpentry, tools direct the energy of children from six to ten to wholesome educational play. Because play Is the serious business of childhood, toys that efficiently reproduce grownup activities have great educational value. Children require a balar" ' var riety of toys to stimulate ' active interests which are < insurance against delinqr

How To Care For The “Perfect Food”

Buy Fresh Milk In Bottles, Keep It Cold and Clean

By Dr. J. Lynn Mahaffey Director, New Jersey State Department of Health

Dr. Mahaffey

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iRICULTUKAL AtlTHCRITII

In my last article I spoke of the attention .which health officials give to see that milk, “the most nearly perfect food,” reaches your door- - step in the finest

possible condition, fresh and uncontaminated. I also admonished housewives to keep the milk in this condition in its final journey from doorstep to table. This subject seems too important to

leave without further discussion, for in this last step from the dairy to the ultimate consumer, all of the fine work of producer, distributor and health officer may be nullified by carelessness and thoughtlessness

In the kitchen.

Buy Freshly Bottled Milk In the first place, milk should je purchased in bottles if possible. This is such an important point that in most large cities and in (nany smaller communities it is now illegal to sell milk in bulk, by the

‘dip” method.

When your bottles arrive, provide i place for them at the doorstep— a little wooden box with a hinged !id will do. Leave a note for the nilkman to place them inside. This yill protect the milk from the heat )f the morning sun, and also from :he attentions of stray cats and logs, until you have had an opporunity to pick up the bottles and out them in a better place. Bringing in the milk should be he morning’s first chore in warm veather, for the longer it stands vithout adequate refrigeration, the greater is the chance for bacteria ;o grow in it. Bring the bottle directly into the house, rinse off the ■iottle and cap ..nd put the milk in he refrigerator unless it is to be ised at once. Do not open the milk •ottle until you are ready to use the ttilk. Before pouring out the milk ■arefully wash the rim of the bottle »ver which the milk must flow.

BECOME

ACQUAINTED WITH YOUR HENS

By A. G. Phillips

Formerly Professor in Charge Poultry Husbandry Purdue

V. University

In this age of mouern youltrykfeoping, involving electric lights-, hoppers for mashes and grains, racks for alfalfa, heaters for drink-

, . , 1 ieep the milk cold and covered at I producing m an average kind of ^ t j me „

| way. II a Hock of a hundred pul-j This is the sixth of a series of j lets is producing forty eggs a day , lr n c i es on health and cleanliness “ n ,.. 0 /.J.' h .?"! prepare# for this paper. Watch

j for Dr. Mahaffey's next article ibout “How to Be Sure Water Is

| only few are doing so every day. Some are plump and in good

flesh, and others are not. Some sit ^ „ on the roost most of the day, while ure ’ others are at the mash hopper or ( drinking vessel, or are scratcing | 1 in the litter a good part of the day-1

In +#varr» I 101 Ui dl. UUlt.1 UU Ufc>,

, MyFavoriteRedpes

though they must remain in town. Violet, Lilac, Jasmin, Muguet, Rose, Chypre and Fougere are popular.

W. H. DORTON & SON PLUMBING, HEATING AND GENERAL REPAIR 900 Wheeling Avenue Phone 4816

labor and make a convenient and comfortable enviroment for the hens, a person is apt to allow his flock management to become mechanical, and he is inclined to forget the individual bird in the group. It s doubtful if many laying birds in a given are alike in feeding requirments, ability to perform, or in efficiency. Some are laying a long cycle: some are not laying at all; and the largest number are

Phil Baker Returns To The Air With New Saws and Old Stars

and some sing and cackle. A flock of polutry is very cosmopolitan in its make-up and action. This means that any one plan of feeding or management may he suitable for all flocks. Birds laying thirty per cent need a different feeding program from those laying sixty per cent or those that are moulting. These variations in performance and condition may not be well known to the poultry keeper, unless he spends some time each day watching and handling his flock. The interested student will Lake time to “just watch” the way his poultry are acting. He may even sit in the corner of his poultry house for a few moments each day “just looking.” If lie does so, he will discover that the statements made above are true, and he will then care for his flock in accordance with his observations. He may do some of the following things: Regrade the birds in different pens; offer wet mash once a day; put a screen in front of the roost during the daytime; move the water vessel nearer to the mash hopper; or change the location of some feeder. No one rule of poultry management fits all conditions. Therefore, it is practical to observe your birds as often as possible and become acquainted with your hens. In such a case, familiarity does not breed contempt but does increase knowledge. • o “CORNER” IN SIGHT It is not a far-fetched statement that if President Roosevelt continues his attempt to stimulate the heavy goods industries along sound lines, and to keep additional disturbing burdens off of industry, that the old phrase of recovery being around the corner might come true soon.

Frances Lee Barton says: mo ■ WITHEN my two oldest-children— i» both of them boys—became filled with culinary, ambition, 1 was tempted to say, “Fm too busy to teach you to cook.” But I decided to give them a few easy -lessons, and in one short year-they have made big strides inland have become really helpful to me. ! Here is the recipe I used for tbd first lesson. Coconut Dreams /I cup sweetened condensed milk; 4.cups (Vz pound) shredded coconut; % teaspoon salt; 2 teaspoons vanilla; % teaspoon almond extract. p. Combine milk, coconut, salt, and flavoring, and mix well. Drop fromi teaspoon on greased baking sheet. Bake in moderate oven (360® F.) 10 minutes. Makes 3 dozen cookies.

When baking or cooking dishes become very brown inside, fill them with buttermilk and let them stand several days. The acid in the milk will disolve the stain.

No old saws, declares Phil Baker, the Armour Jester, as he prepares to return to the air by cutting himself a slice of rare beef. y7RESH from a six w^eks jaunt “Italy was great, but Baker will j

. : through Italy, and with a "posjitively fresh” assortment of laughs and accordion tunes, Phil Baker re- , turns to mock and rock the air waves at 9:30 o’clock E.S.T. on Friday night, over the coast-to-coast

NBC-WJZ network.

I His first six broadcasts will be

’ from Radio City in New York, where the huge studio will give ; Phil’s chief heckler Beetle plenty of elbow room for his nefarious (work. After that half-dozen sparkling programs, the Armour hour will be heard from Chicago, where lit regularly originates

be greater,” was Phil’s only comment upon his return to America. “The chief hitchback is that my first air show will be inaugurated by a blast from 'Chat prize blaster

Beetle.”

The Armour Jester will also have with him the bungler. Bottle the butler, and Mable Albertson, commedienne of the trouble. Martha' Mears, clear-voiced contralto from the University of Missouri, will be the featured vocalist when the programs are broadcast from New York with Leon Belasco’s orches- '' tra providing the music.

ASKED THE WRONG MAN During the trial of a celebrated will case, an Irishman was the principal witness. “Was the deceased,” asked the !■ lawyer, “in the habit of talking to himself when alone?” “I don’t know,” was the reply. “Come, come, you don’t know, and- yet yon are intimately acquainted with him?” “Yes,” said the witness slowly, “that’s so; but you see, I never happened to be with him when he was alone.”

Cake ingredients should be at room temperature before the cake is mixed.

More Funnies In Color! You will Find 35 World Famous Comics in NEXT SUNDAY'S CHICAGO HERALD AND EXAMINER, Be Sure To Order Your Copy Now From Your Newsdealer,

Blue Beacon COAL

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A BETTER COAL More Heat Units per Dollar

6.

Muncie Lumber Co. Muncie, Ind. 316 Ohio Ave. Telephone 145-146

The Stars’ Christmas Tree

Notice is

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by the under-

ists for a<

osirtacy

meet.’.nr; oX the low^shir. Adtisorj 1 Board of '4i. 1’Ieasant To'vrnsbli). Delaware County, I%d:aoa to ina**. Appvorr.aCions of additional a mow at 5 ol money for expend!-' iwire* u/r s-.it* 'rovvDsnJU during the cur*' rent vc*r of :«S. as follows, to-wit: , runrl No. Book.'.. eUitonery. print!n? and advertising $ lou.00

(•’UTid No. 22: Repair of building and care of graundn Ttuid No. 23: Repair Of other cauinment ru/id No. 20: School supplies...., Ruud No. 2»: Janitors' snaNwies... Fund No. 27: Fuel for seboois... .. l ar.d No. 35: Miscellaneous ex-

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Nund No. 30: Ray of tcsc/icrs , And that a tn.cstir.r; of the Mt. Pleasant Township Advtsc-.ry Boi-td and the Trus-, tee thereof, wilt ce keM at toe office of, the said Township Tr.i-dee at Yorktown ln| the said Township ot Mt. Pleasant on the 10ch dav of December. 1334. at 7:30 o’clock; p. m. of said day at which time said ap-

500.00 400.00 300.00 1 900.00' 400.00 300.00!

5,000.00

propriaUons^wllrtbe considered.

30,7

be considered.

THOMAS H. MILLER,

Trustee of Mt. Pleasant Township.

TAUGHINBAUGH CO. Our Phone Never Sleeps 4014 DAY or NIGHT Lady Attendant Howard at Proud St.

. THEORY VS. PRACTICE “Mother, is it true that an apple a day keeps the doctor away?” “Yes, Jimmie, Why?” “Cause if it is, I kept about 10 doctors away this morning—but I’m afraid one’ll have to come soon.”

A SPIRITUAL IMPOSSIBILITY “Do you believe that people follow the same occupation in the next world that they do on earth?” “My mother-in-law won’t.' She makes ice cream.”

The piquant features and elfin grace of Dixie Lee are currently to be seen in “Manhattan Love Song,” a Monogram picture. .(2) Silent Messengers 1?RAGRANCE is a silent messen- * ger—a song without words. There is no more delicate way of saying all the nice things you want to say at Christmas time than silently, in perfume. First of* all, it must of course be good perfume, but it need not be expensive, particularly if you select that newest of personal accessories, the perfumed eau de cologne, “Bouquet Lentheric.” Lentheric perfume, as combined with eau de cologne in “Bouquet Lentheric,” is one of the most satisfactory Christmas gifts. It comes in three different odeurs in a cylindrical box, glamorously named “Three Silent Messengers.” For Christmas, this box is appropriate to the season in red and gold, and the three diffei’ent perfumes Asphod&e, Miracle and Lotus d’Or, offer a choice to suit any mood or occasion. Nature arranges things. Those who can afford to loaf all ihe time can also Gifford nerve specialist.

JUST GOOD COAL Eagle Coal Co. PHONE NO. 9

No Long Waits

* No Short Weights

Fcr a Real Glass of BEER ON TAP OR BOTTLE Go to Hughey Haugheys’ Corner of Willard St. Hoyt Ave. Tasty Sandwiches Also Served. Haughey keeps his beer always in first class condition.

GLENN’S Sheet Metal Shop See us for Skylights, Metal Ceilings,. Slate,- Tile, and Metal Roofing, Blowpipe and lob Work. Gutter and Leader Ripe. Rear 213 E. Main St. Phone 310

Get Your Gas and Oil At the In-and-Out Service Station Madison and Willard Muncie, Ind. or the SUNNY SERVICE STATION 18th and Madison

WHEN IN CHICAGO STOP AT Hotel Crillon

Michigan Boulevard at 13th Street 300 Rooms Fireproof One block from Illinois Central, Michigan Central and Big Four Main Depots, and but a short distance from all other main Depots. One Block from Union Bus Depot Garage and Parking Space in Connection Radio in Every Room WSBC broadcasts daily from their studios in Hotel Griffon. Guests are invited to witness the broadcasting. Single Rooms from $1.50 Double Rooms from $2.50 All with Private Bath. Few minutes walk to shopping, business and Theatre districts.

SAMUEL COLE, Managing Director

W. C. SKINNER, Manager.

Wonders of Science

and Invention

rOVER 400^ PICTURES Pictures tell the story. The articles are short, concise, and fascinating. Here are a few subjects covered: Arts and Craft Work--Astron-omy—Automobile Repairing —Aviation—Boat Building— Care of Tools—Chemistry—■ Electricity — Home Made Furniture—Hunting, Fishing—I deas to Make M oney in Spare Time—JigsawWock— Metal Working—Model Making - Motion.Pictures— Radio —Toys—Wood Turning. "WritUn-So You Can

Understand It*

Told In Simple Language Would you like to keep posted on all the new developments in this remarkable world of ours? The new Inventions—the latest Scientific Discoveries—the amazing Engineering Feats—-the progress made in Aviation —Radio—Electricity—Chemistry— Physics — Photography, etc.? These and many other fascinating subjects are brought to you each month through the pages of 'POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE, Something for Everyone! Special departments are devoted to the home craftsman and praetical shopman. The radio enthusiast has a I arge section filled with new? and helpful information on construction and maintenance of both transmitting and receiving sets. For the housewife, there are scores of hints to lighten her daily tasks ... It’s the one magazine everyone in your family wifi enjoy. At All Newsstands 25c or by Subscription $2.50 a Year Stop at your favorite newsstand and look over the current Issue, If your newsdealer is sold out, order direct. FOPUULE. MECHANICS 200 E. Ontario. St Dept- N. —

Buy a Milk Goat

For Health, Investment^ and Economy. You can’t Afford to Be Sick At Our Prices. We have a real milking strain of registered Toggenburgs. Write us regarding your needs. BON T0NMILK GOAT RANCH (Hancock County) Fountain Green, Id.

Don’t Take a Chance ON THIN SUCK TIRES! Remember that brakes stop only your wheels —it takes Tires That Grip to stop your car. For your own and your family's safety, buy new Goodyears now—the new cost is so small it’s not worth thinking about and you may save a lifetime of vain

regret,

THE QUALITY TIRE WITHIN REACH OF ALL !! REACH OF ALL! " Stepped up in safety—in appearance—in mileage—stepped down in price! The new Goodyear Pathfinders are even better than 17,000,000 former Pathfinders which made a reputation for

thrift. Priced

thrift. Priced

as low as 54e9U

And up

THE WORLD’S MOST POPULAR TIRE. Year in and yrar out, ou the basis of tested quality, the public continues to buy more Goodyear All-Weatkers than any other tire. Greater mileage, greater traclion^greater safety and low prices'all contribute to still greater, value in the 1933 edition! Priced as ^ g low as

And up

Store PARK GILLESPIE, Service Station 307 E. Main St. Manager 116 S. Jefferson St. Phone 730

Crushed Stone

Roads, Auto Drives, Garage Floors Concrete Aggregate Muncie Stone and Lime Company Phone 1266 P.O.Box 1212

When You Need SAND or GRAVEL Phone 100 Good Sand is very important for the purpose of Quality Construction. OUR SAND IS THE BEST Muncie Washed Sand & Gravel Co. Burlington Pike W. M. Torrence, Prop.