Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 52, Decatur, Adams County, 2 March 1925 — Page 3
•»» •* , , th.m ■l» *" *!>'■ »'»•"'•* ' ,,y * It •••*“* ■ *yMATTOEAT H „ „ friT lru.| ft.g •"’" , "’ ,n| - ■>‘ re ,P f* r , ,-M-iv: 1,,3 ‘ cr op bu« X - H| I Ilf pound | f M-nl »>uA H [,.tu e. ‘'Of yf four. I. p-mad I's K Rest pots. VST 1 ■GSr* i r ni.i-'i in » t*->i - puu, ■.: n dr;*<: n<" » ::1 l! '’ ,f > - ’ei-M " f 1 -f »>*'•'•'■ “ i " 1 , **‘ t ' ■ <-* M ti.c --D table* nnttifii add Ihe '*>«■"> **■■'■ m |; , , m i i„o :alles; nful« tlf |K T . r r»blr<‘ t.,iue -im.m-r for , |HL. and -I'*- l.i-m-J 111 ;*r ~f a bet platter with a r.ng !,••: bo-e-t r. <* ar«#und It. WM l: ' rtl „ y !>•..* i "I e !of „t and br*iiili ii in l"u t«- j of suet until both me |H , .1. A-l : i'ot aii.l one of water to S'lileil K llir three quarters ~f an hour at —. le i.p-Ta; ne. tio-n ml-t if !*• ' fatoes ■ mol {«, ~r - roe. ’ook until in j^E\/ r »;ti. sal: if needed. i-eppef, ,. JS rutile same desired. . Htir Cu-r> i lut" small thee. < ’ook one - • aeli lender mid time ||H* r , . f -■ t:,b.e«|MM.iifu |f »:.! Stir over the fire for two then add one vmir apple sr.d i: "1 one and one Imlf H'.;, ~f .ta'er or »!--• k. the chirk cm. . ' half an e.ir, Add j^Hg;tee.,e with ii Imrder seasoned rlee.
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(j t £ VV ti'ei .'•evs spa,.ri L ilian ) (HB Our cuutry .« prosperity was SB Mil up by Industry and thrift, fi-rbeh: s had a lust for work ir.u to n.pl.shriirn :. I tint tad of our youth of today are seekBB -s «•**> iuvs or nuhsistence. when !!• e is no h think us an eu»y *«y t-xctpi at the expense of their ,{ kful our country a future, — . s N. Vail. ■ .‘3OUT potatoes HH ' a '■ ’•'■*' art* s*-v.*r:» 1 hundred way* W t»"kini! a.;.! M-rUug imtittues, ue r "ill try tu add a few
recipes occasionally to our menu hook. Rhode Island Potatoes.—Cut five mediumsized raw potatoes into slice* one-eighth of an inch thick. Cook in boiling water (salted), for five minutes. Drain well and spread out in a
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|| ~r* • "vhv ui u I buttered pan. Pour over pm one-half cupful of melted butr "bleh has been mixed with one P '">» half teaspoonfuls of woreesr ,lllr - Pul >re, one and three-fourjhs ptpoonftiis of salt, und one-fourth F«»|ioonful of paprika. Bake until the Ikatws are tender, busting often with F* f»'T. Serve at oih-e. I Pot * to *>-—Wash, pare and medium-sized potatoe* until / “ r ' tlien force through a rieer. Add H tableapjonfula of butter, two tea-, jNnfuls of grated onion, the yolks EL, well-beaten, salt and penL Beason - Work until well-blend- ■ lien form Into oval balls, roll In hm ,* nd , l ’ lßt ' p around the roast of »t, basting often until the potatoes I* brown. Serve round the roast. £Hr ! ndl#nn *—Cdok one small, P « union in two tablespoonfuls idd / Un,U ioft ’ but brown, diced L?! ? n<l °' ie ' lmlf cupfuls of >i,mt a 4 b ,° lit “' 1 ll(>| atoes and cook Meanwhile mix ! tuii ljt ° e aud oue balf teaspoonliiif iL'‘ y , fowler, one and oneiuUf “ fi Ulß ,° t f ,nlt ’ onp hlllf ally ,1.., , paprbsa ' and add gradu-' f) ythr e-fourths Os a cupful of b'espoonfui* 14 R . ni ]. , ’ ne and one-half in-'-if, of fi nely-ehopped plmen«v * mluutJ SenVTof'* Bnd , '°° k 'C!: , a ii,t,e ° ni ° n or adds much t, * “ aßhed Potatoes. It «# nan ofthe ’* Palatabllit - v ' «nd If "nlots, this t, * huuse d «‘sn’t like ®*ror without
tea tmc UcabinetlS i i JMJ. Wniitt Noieer I’ulun ) ITli.wsrs of oil th« »««ry earth »,• • IttpllK. Know dilfta; the northern ntnd whits, cold and ht»n; Iwoii the eheltered hearth ijutcti Aainss rlee, leaptns la agony of dumb, resiiunslva err The gate dire down; the tall, dark ptnee ctnae blowing And calmly loom with hovering tough* nutepiead, l ast snug, warm panes, white client bakes elide flowing; fence holds a world from which all sound has fled — Katherine H. Oakes. MOT PUDDINGS Take one cupful each of chopped net, milk, mule «»<•*, three cupful* of flour, one ten one und one hut! teaspoon fule K.' .e-fj ~-tm IM Shit, one half tea ■ spoonful each ot JP ginger, clove and nutmeg and otu teH sp o onfui ot cinnamon. M I s and sift the dry Ingredients. Add nmlnshes and milk to the suet, com bine mliturei. turn Into a buttered mold, cover atul steam three hours Serve with: I Sterling' Sauce. — Cream one-hall i cupful us butter, add one cupful ol sugar gradually and one-third teaspoonful of lemon extruct and two thirds tenspoonful of vanilla. Graham Pudding Melt one fourth ' cupful of butter, add one half cupful of molasses, one half cupful of milk, one egg well beaten; then add one and one-half cupfuls of graham Ibmi mixed with one teaspoonful of sail and one-half tea spoonful of soda, one cupful of raisins cut Into pieces. Turn Into a buttered mold, cover and steam two r.nd one-half hours. Serve with: Fruit Sauce. —Cream one-half cupful I of butter, add one cupful of powdered sugar, three tablespoonfuls of pine ■ apple Juice and a slight grating of I nutmeg. Snowballs.—Cream one-half cupful of butter, add one cupful of sugar Htid two and one-fourth cupfuls <>f flour, sifted with three und one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder added to the butter and sugar alternately with one-half cupful of milk. Kohl in tiewhites of four eggs beaten stiff and steam thirty-five minutes In buttered cups. Serve with preserved fruit, quince marmalade or strawberry | sauce.
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t Western N'vwwpaper Union > Ability doesn’t count, knowledffs Is useless, experience has no worth without the driving force of optimism.—Kaufman. WITH THE COMMON POTATO It Is surprising in spite of all the teaching in schools, magazines ami by
lec t u rers, lu-w few people know how to cook vegetables properly. \V he n boiling potatoes onlv rapidly boiling! water should be used and adding
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when nearly cooked one tablespoonful of salt to about eight potatoes. Drain carefully and shake mer the tire to dissipate all steam and leave the potatoes dry and mealy. If potatoes are to he rieed, foree the hot drained po tatoes through a rlcer; If mashed, a wooden masher used long enough to masli every lump, then add the sea soiling and bent with a spoon until light and fluffy. Hot tnllk, butter nrul salt should not he added until the potatoes are thoroughly mashed. Serve at once In r hot vegetable dish. All dishes on which hot foods are to he served should he well warmed. There I* nothing more unpalatuhle than good, hot food chilled on cold plates. With a well-boiled potato as a basis, there are any number of good dishes one may prepare--among them are: t Savory Bpanlsh Potato. —Turn the hot : bolled potatoes Into a hot vegetable dtsh in which two tablespoonfuls of butter and one tahlespoonful of scraped or finely chopped onion ha* been Mended, then chop with two silver knives, mixing the butter ami onion well through the potatoes. The amount of butter and onion will depend upon the number of potatoes. There Is never any leftover with this dish, so provide aplenty. Savory Potato, Another. —To four cupfuls of diced boiled potatoes add one-half cupful of finely chopped green peppers, two tenspoonfuls of salt and one-fourth teaspoonful of pepper. Put Into a well-greased baking dish, sprinkle with two tablespoonfuls of flour and pour over the top one and one-half cupfuls of milk and dot with two tablespoonfuls of butter. Bake In a hot oven twelve minutes. Small, even-sired potatoes, boiled and then rolled In butter and chopped parsley makes a good-looking dish of potatoes when the new ones are out of market.
DECATUR DAILY DVMOrR \T MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1925.
} Chicago Man Defends {' 11 is Victorious Wife [I _ ( j| Chicago, March 2.—Richard Torn . klns-m. a wealthy adverti-ine man who agreed to divorce bin wife -m that 1 she might marry the man she loved today added to the eccentricity of hla), position by coming to the defense of ‘ his -victorious rival. The marital tangle marled at the Tomklrwton breakfast table on N-w Year’:! morning when Bradford Whit log. a Hiest, turned to Tomklnnon and raid; '‘Dick, I'm in love with your wife. | want to marry her." At lira! startled hy the confession tin-1 request, Tomklnson agreed to the proposal, promising to divorce his wife, Peggy, providing Whiting got a divorce from his wife, Mrs. Paul--1 ette Picard Whiting, j The affair was about to be settled, the principles agreed, when Mrs. Whiting changed her mind, and ire I ste.nl of suing her husband for dl--1 vorce, asked only for separate main- { talnances. That made it Impossible I for Wbttlng to marry Paggy—already , divorced from Tomklnson. I "My wife has violated her promise” i Whiting asserted “She promised I faithfully to divorce me so that I might marry Peggy." Hut Peggy Is protected hy a "trust, fund,” which Tomkinson insisted I Whiting set aside for her in the event I he failed to win Isis own divorce. And now erfmes Tomkinson to the , defense of Whiling. “lie was always a good friend of 1 mine." Tomkinson declared. “We used * to go yatching together. 1 admired ' his frankness in puttiug the matter t .-quarely up to mo. That's the reason I 1 agreed to his proposal. While 1 didn’t „ really love Peggy any more, I was ini lerested in her enough to see that she ;i lie taken care of. : "I will help Bradford got an out andI out divorce from his wife." I The Whitings ari* wealthy members of exclusive North Shore society. Mrs. Whiting, who is now obstructI ing the marriage, is a . beautiful young I woman from another prominent fam- . ilv. She charges her husband with * "heavy drinking" and accuses him of li being a dope addict. ’> “Her ehharges are lies." Tomkinson declared emphaticallv. “He's a clean i j chap anil I'm perfectly satisfied to have him marry Peggy.” r ' Business Men Warned Against Confidence Men .1 , i Chicago. March 2. Business men | hi all towns and cities surrounding | Chicago, today were warned hy the -American Bankers’ association to beware of several confidence men who have secured SIOO,OOO in the past few ‘ months. The swindlers represent themselves as employes of big financial agencies and ask business men to sign cards showing their financial ratings. in addition to obtaining the signatures on the cards, the business men ‘ | are asked to sign their names to their ■ business stationery. Checks on their f ' r I banks are then secured, and forged . and cashed. A note written on the stationery. : over the signature of the victim, helps - show the bank cashier that the check ' is legal. * 0 Declares There Is Moral 1 Lapse Among Young People fTTVTTEP PRESS SERVICE) * i Des Moines, la.. March 2 —(Special j'o Dally Democrat) —“Men lecturing 1 ' about the wholesomeness of the ! present generation of young people l - should base their assertions on facts I and not beliefs,” James Rlsden. head > |of the state bureau of investigation. “Itoday declared In answer to an assertion of.Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, ' noted eastern dlvlr.p. ' | Fosdick. in a recent address at 1 jOi'nnell, said: “Many folks are discouraged about | the younger generation, hut that is | ail nonsense. The younger generation as a whole is a lot cleaner than the last one. and 1 know, for I belong to both of them.” ltisden insists that advice and records of county attorneys and peace officers show a moral lapse among young people today that is unprecedented In this country. As head of the state bureau, he is in close contact, and co-operation with law I enforcement officers not only in lowa, hut throughout the country. State agents, operating under his direction, serve In solving and checking major icrimes about the state. He points to existing conditions in lowa at the present time as examples of the delinquency and degeneracy of the modern trend. Recently in Oelwein a youth was sent to the state | prison for intimacies involving nearly j a score of school girls. Risden menjtlons a small town where one physician is treating 125 cases of social disease spread by the indiscretions of school boys and girls, j "Blame for existing conditions lies in the homes of the country," Risden said, and the automobile is designnt-
• -I by hint ns a contributing factor In ihe prevalrttice of youthful delln ' qtionoy “Motlc i ■ min t pay tuur-- attention I I - the wh- r< about* of their daughter day and flight and fathers rnnn inak*-| pals of their sons before desired good can he accomplishi-d.* Risden declared. > RpailjustnipnLs Come Slowly In Agriculture The Agricultural Outlook (Written for the linked Press.) Indianapolis, .March 2. "The farm Is u good place to come from und a poor place to go to," a youth who quit his father's farm In quest of a for tune In the city remarked. Thousand* upon thousands of nth era have thought the "ante thing and have acted accordingly. Other thousands will probably do the same thing before conditions get well settled again. Many who have left the farm in the last f- w months and many who are still sticking in the country had hoped for conditions to get better. Agriculture Is a large Industry involving more than six million independent heads of businesses. Movernents of the industry are sluggish, therefore, and readjustments come slowly. The essential difference heiweeis agriculture and city Industry is that one has been going through a period of low prices for the past few years because of accumulated surplus and the other lias been going through a period of accumulated scarcity, rcsultlng ill higher prices. The situation is not new for agriculture. Following the Civil war, there were large surpluses of agricultural products Tor a number of years. Both the homeopaths and the allopaths were called in to suggest remedies and each prescribed according to him own doctrine. When all was said and done, the
PAID Ointment A Guaranteed Remedy CHD ITCHING, BLIND, Oil ITC rUI\ Bl.EffhlNO OR PROTRUDING I 1L.H.0 It is now put up in collapsible tubes with detachable pile pipe making it very easy to apply. I DRUGGISTS refund money if J mES it fails to cure. Special directions enclosed with each * - package. Your druggist will order it. (Also put up in old : i > le Tins, COc.) wssmmm I THE ADAMS Theatre I LAST TIME TONIGHT ‘ ‘ M I AMI” | The Big Paramount Production Featuring Hetty Tompson. A drama of the ultra-smart society. Starting Tomorrow—“lNTO THE NET” A detective serial written by Commissioner of Police Enright, New York City. Hf Also—“ Tomorrow’s Love” feature picture. NOTE—With each paid admission tomorrow evening one person will be admitted FREE. i, I liTWkintIMMWMWIWMBBMIi’W—II——I—Tm—WMI’ Mi lOTimW Your Gas Bills j v : Are due j The first of the Month And No Discount will be allowed After 10th of Month Pay Now and Save the Discount. Northern Indiana Gas and Electric Company j Wm. O’Brien, Ix>cal Manager
thing that did merit nit art tha moat I good was an application of Hie old-j I fashioned bleeding pro-c * whereby, la suhntnuilal portion of the rural[ i population wa: drained '-wav to the jellies. / This same slow I ', lint at the same i.irnn reliable remedy, bus been working again In the recent period of distress. The unmarried young men of anv community nr« usually the iirst to join the -Hy ward movement when farming is unprofitable and city Industry is thriving. These young men have lest at stake In the change than any one else and so they are the first to go. If the Job in the factory or machine shop does not pan out as expected, or th-re Is a prolonged shut-down, the young man can shift for himself. Married men leave the farm lea Another Nurse Praises Tanlac "At a nurtt l have teen many matttlaus remits from Tanlac Tor anaemia, nervousness, stomach trouble and building up the system after operations I consider Tanlacgreatl" Mrs. K. .)/. Lowe, Walnut Turk, Cal. NURSF. Lowe’s statement merely backs up what over one hundred thousand grateful Tanlac users have said about this r great natural tonic and builder. Our filet are packed with such testimony. 1 If your system is run down, if you can’t , seem to eat or sleep, have lost weight or I suffer from try ing pain, why not let Tanlac start to bring you back to vigorous 1 strength and health. No long, wretched wait to get results! Tanlac starts right in to build you up. ■ It deans the blood, revitalizes digestive organs, fixes up the liver and makes you feel like a new person. For Constipation Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills TANLAC FOR. YOUR HEALTH
, roudlly titan Mingle men and there iuj much Icmh likelihood of their returnIng. For the young married man It ! mnina returning to hlr life .ind that of hi* fatuity. Each worker prodticca enough food fur liimaelf ami three In the city. When u worker leaves the form he j iniH cut off the food mipply of three
] Start That Account Today and when you think of a Bank, think of our Bank then come in and get acquainted. YOU NEED US WE NEED YOU As business friends we are tx>th made stronger. We invite your patronage. The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. \ “Bank of Service” I 0 Why a there are more than a million Buieks There would not he more than a million Buieks in active use today if Buick had not, through the years, produced a motor car of unvarying and superior quality. In every detail, ever)' Buick is an example of how well a motor can be built. WILBUR D. PORTER Monroe & First Streets I’hone 12) When better automob''es tire built, Duick will build them. |! ~ " | OUR CUSTOMERS | feel at home | in this Bank [ Confidential, Personal Relations Are The Basis Os Our Service To Customers. They tive not dealt with (impersonally .as depositors merely; they tire treated as ilienls, in whose financial K problems our officers take a personal interest. Regardless of your need or request you can come to us with the assurance that yen will he assisted ami advised to the heat of our ability. 1 Old Adams County Bank * t
~ already In the city and adds more to the number of con*nm*r*. Each* 2fl there Is an Increase In city population equal t-i the popula lion n! ill-' state of Nevada. All of thee are ivtnauniers of farm pro ducts. ——— ——o' ■ ■ - - — Call 43G for Taxi. ts ■i— ■ ■" ... 1
