Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 13, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 August 1920 — Page 2
I R&iin-dom Reels I By HOWARD L. RANN ' I V " I
i;ki:ai) pudding BKKAD iMKMIriK Is n conscientious tfTnrt mi the prt of a thoughtles but wrll-uieanln;: housowife- to economize nt the expense of the hunmn stomach. For at least one hundred years In rnpid succession woman has been funking bread pudding and man lins be n eating It. It has l;?en observed that women who manufacture bread pudding very seldom eat .enough of It to founder anybody. Love und devotion can nach no greater heights than when a bright, new husband, unused to life's ways, partakes of this dish and retain enough courage to kiss his wife good-by at the door. Some of If Th GRaT HOW 5pcC4!lUEAT PfiUNE WHlf IKI A ?JKCfl- I'LL WALK THIRTY-EIGHT MILES W1 OLD APPLE. DUMPLIN 8oT I DRAW lYt LINE AT THE ULTIMATE, FtNAL, COMPLETE ZERO IN EAT - BREAp UDDlN - - HOf'.eVa THfcCt "WS Aon Once in a Vhile Some Husband Will Break Into Open Rebellion. the greatest hypocrites the world has ever produced are conciliatory husbands who 'eat several slabs of bread pudding and then begin to praise its tout ensemble. I read pudding Is usually served nt the close of a full meal, just when everybody Is tilled with a feeling of entire content. It is then led onto the table and planted in front of each guest in a threatening manner, and it is worth a man's life to gaze over it at the vinegar cruet and begin to toy with the salt cellar. One of the Jut Folks By EDGAR A. GUEST THE TRUTH ADOUT ENVY. I like to sec the powers grow, IY see the pansies in a row, I think a well-kept garden's fine, And wish that such a one were mine, lint one can't haw.. a stock of jlowers Unles he digs aed digs for hours. My ground is always bleak und hart, The roses lo not flourish there .. .. . -. . . , i And where I once sowed poppy seeds j Is now a tangled mass of weeds. I'm fond of llowers, but I admit, For digging I don't care a bit. I envy men whose yards are gay, Hut never work as hard as they; I also envy men who own .More wealth than I have ever known. V in like a lot of men who yearn r-'or joys that they refuse to earn. You eannot have the joys of work Ami take the comfort of, a shirk, I find the man I envy most Is be. who's longest at his post. I ' ould have gohl and roses, too. If I would work, like those who do. (Copyright by Edgar A. Guest.) MOTHER'S . COOK BOOK y l'f there n act so worth my mood. No ttenl of daring high and pure. That shai;, when I am dead, endure. A well spring of perpetual good? T. H. Aldrich. Almond Blanc Mange. Make a paste of four tablespoonfuls f cornstarch, wet with a Utile cold milk. Stir it into a quart of milk with four tablespoonfuls of sugar, and boll until thick. Flavor with a few drops of almond extract and stir in half a eupful of blanched shredded almonds. Moid, chill and serve with ireani. Br-au Pudding. Take oüo quart of milk and one pint bread crumVs, two well-beaten eggs, pinch of sal; and one tablespoonful of butter. Fake about twenty minutes. Nut.' or raisins or both are an addition to this pudding. After it is baked. Jam or jelly may be spread over the top and a meringue to cover, until a delicate brown. Hake Jam Pudding. Mli three tnhh"pnontuK of butter: add tw.i well beaten eggs and stir In. ii cupful of any preferred Jam. Huttcr u pudding moid and put in it a layer! of crumbs, then a layer of the Jam mixture; repeat until tin dish Is full,1 having the crumbs on top. Hake or -ste;im and erve hot or cold. Bordeaux Pudding. ut it spnuge rake into three layers, j spread with Jam. put together again, j -oer with whipped cream sweetened) and flavored and sprinkb with chopped nuts. Serve on a platter. Another dessert similar to this which is mnt ttttrnctlve Is prepared as fob ;
most tense moments In married life Is when a well-muscled bride of a week places a sector of bread pudding hefore the man she vwnro to cherish and protect, and watches him edge away from thV töle with a crestfallen look. This culinary misdemeanor Is made chiefly of bread which has died of old age and general exhaustion. After a loaf of baker's bread has been put in the cake bin by mistake and allowed to remain there until two strong men couldn't slice it with a cross-cut saw, it can always be saved by hammering It Into the form of ;i pudding. After surrounding- it with a dollar's worth of sugar and two pounds of butter It becomes able to stand alone and throw out Its chest. True, the law does not compel married mm to eat It. but It Is cheaper to do so and avoid court costs. I ri some homes bread pudding Is served twice a week, on stated days, and it will be noticed that on those days the restaurants and cafeterias are crowded with apprehensive husbands. Once in a while some husband will break into open rebellion, but this does not last long, owing to man's , forgiving nature. There is something about a bread-pudding diet, however, that stamps the victim more indelibly than being tattooed on the left wrist, .causing him to glance about furtively at the close of every meal. Copyright.) O Diversified Decoration. "William was leading the way to where he kept his rabbits. The visitors followed and finally reached the rabbit house, where they Mopped to admire the little white, gray, and black-spotted rabbits. "Look," William exclaimed, pointing to the rabbits, they are all decorated differently, aren't they?"
SCHOOLDAYS J j j P 9 iaojtlic poor S6quitamx 7&Qr ffiyv Copyright;
. VWivtü lows: Hake. a light" sponge, a round tin; split and put cake in together with a thick tilling of sweetened whipped cream flavored to taste. Serve cut in wedge-shaped pieces with a siK)onful or two of any fresh berries as a garnish. Chocolate Pudding, one cupful of stale bread and enough milk to make a paste when boiled with the Take crumbs smooth crumbs. Add two tablespoonfuls of butter, two tablespoonfuls' of cocoa, sugar and vanilla to taste. Take from the tire and add three egg yolks well beaten, then the whites beaten stilt and folded in. Put Into a buttered baking disfi and bake carefully. Serve with whipped cream or plain cream with sugar. -0 -MILITANT-MARY We re -each decended-fronva beast J-tbi?K-tbat It helps -me understand myself (THE MAP MARCH 'HARE WAS MINE!
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Last Night's Dreams What They Mean
AC0RN3. THAT simple little fruit of the oak tree, the acorn, has divided the mystic world of t'.wse who profess, or have professed, to read the riddle of dreams into twu violently antagonistic camps. According to one set of penetrators of the? veil the acorn shed by the tree of night through the visions of our slumbers is as much to be desired as rubies and line v. cold; to the other set it is a thing to be abhorred. Those who sit in the camp of the pessimists and the predictors of evil declare that to see an acorn in one's dreams means dire poverty ahead if you don't watch ,out. Another one wails that it means that you are about to commit an Irreparable fault. "Not )," comes the cheerful and confident cry from the other camp; the acorn seen In dreams is one of the happiest auguries; the acorn is one of dreamland's most desirable products. Those who say otherwise are iiTJiht birds of ill-omen, croaking in the leafless dreamt rees whereon acorns never grew. To dream of acorn., say this school of optimistic mystics, is a sure sign of good things ahead; much happiness in store for yen. It means, among, other good things, that you will. derive much gain from your present business, which will increase under your fostering care. If you dream that you are picking acorn from the tree it means that, after trials, you will have, a sure success. . If you arc row a laborer, or a worker of any sort, and you dream that you are eating acorns it Is a sure sign that, from your present condition of toil, you will rise to a condition of peace and ease ami plenty. When doctors disagree who shall decide? Give us the optimists, every time! (Copyright.) O A favorite has no friends. Gray. Word er By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS yCOXDKH is able to make big men VV and women of us all. for when we most sincerely feel that we are small and unimportant, that moment are in reality biggest and greatest. Look into the Heavens at night. Wonder at its magnificence. Take note of the worlds in Stars as they wink and blink abong themselves millions of miles away. Wonder at them and how heedless they seem of you so small, so tiny so intiuitesimal ! Wonder but as you Wonder, THINK. Look about you no matter where you may be. There are always things to Wonder at. Kvery spot of Nature is a Wonder (iyrden. Kvery Seed and Tree and Kock and Hreathing Life in Nature transformed through the Mind and KflVrt of Man. is but the further arranging of chances for Wonderment. " Wonder hut as you Wonder, THINK. As you go to your I Jed tonight, hefore closing your eyes iu Sleep. Wonder at it allSleep, that for the time obliterate conM-ioiiv I,if and takes you away from activity and turmoil, but to return you again in safety recharged with Strength and Will. Wonder at the imracle of Sleep. Wonder but ns von Wonder, THINK. Lethe power of Wonder that is so free to you cor' Tt your distorted viewpoints. Let ir lift and brace you. Let It abolish the false Conceit within you. Let It convince you of your hllmanness and lead you through your work In this world, fomented with you !ot an Unromplalner.
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New Frocks, Hats and Shoes Are Most Attractive. Costumes Featured by Simplicity; Defy Reproach: Represent Best Kind of Dressing. The qld gaieties are gradually coming back to Paris, and every day some renewal of the social season, as we formerly knew it, is announced, writes u Paris correspondent in the London Times. In the Dols for tea und tennis most attractive frocks and hats are worn. Navy blue allied to white, to cherry color, and to copper color, Is more than popular. Occasionally it Is worn with vivid emerald. Numbers of smart women keep rigorously to tailor-mades for all ordinary occasions. These costumes are simplicity Itself, and defy the reproach of finance ministers and moralists, tyut they represent the best and most expensive kind of dressing. They exact the most perfect details, and a- hat, which Is the last thing in smartness, as well as a dress. Fine navy blue serge, embroidered lightly In jet or dull silver, in white, o. In some color, is much seen. Open to the waist, where it fastens with, on? button, the coat discloses some striking color note In the blouse of the Juniper, or short tunic pattern, low at ! the throat or quite high, with draped colla. band. The hats vary greatly, from the ribbon toque, with sv chin strap, to the wide-brimmed I ace-covered frame trimmed with flowers or feat fers. Hli.ck and white are as popular as blue. Foulard, plisse silks and crepons, offer a wide choice. Lace plays ::n important part in gowns, and emA summer toilette in ivory tussore embroidered in ivory and black, worn with a black ribbon sash, black hat and a chiffon sunshade in black and white. broidery has lost none of Its charm; but striped and checked black and white taffetas look well, and may be counted among the less expensive luxuries; for It represents less handwork, and consequcntly-saves time and labor. It Is noticeable that skirts are most moderately draped, and are deRo ces on iviost Miniature Blossoms Enhance the Loveliness of Dresses Appropriate for the Warm Days. Hoses bloom on most every summer frock and enhance Its loveliness. All those little organdies, for instance, would lose half their charm If you took away the organdie roses that are scattered over the skirt. Those same roses can add a good many dollars to the frock, too. and so It might be a good plan to lenrn how to make them nt home. One of the prettiest frocks of the reason had Its roses made from accordion plaited organdie, in strips a little oer an inch wide, says a writer in the Philadelphia Record. The edges had first been picoted. and the material was then plaited and wound round and round from the center out, the center being, tilled with knotted ends of yellow soutache braid to look like Ftamens. A button mold covered with organelle and beaded with crystal beads mado the center of some lovely little wild ross from deep pink organdie whlcfc framed the girdle of a paler pink organdie frock. These were tivepetalcd roses, the petals made In the simplest way in the world from a bias Ftrip of organdie doubled and shirred In zigzag fashion so that when the shirring was pulled up, It shaped the band into little, puffed and rounded petals. On n very stunning frock of dotted $,drÄ large white .organdie roses were ippMqued The bias material hod
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CHARMING SILVER FOX SCARF iy mm :: i - v A silver fox neckpiece like this beautiful model gives the needed finish to the early fall costume. cidediy longer. A woman dressed In black and white foulard, gracefully draped on the hips and softened round the shoulders by a tine organdie fichu, looks extremely well. Her hat Is. in fine organdie, also embroidered in black silk, and she carries a sunshade to match. Her shoes are strapped patent bather, and the heels are not high. The sleeves of her dress are short, and she wears long white suede gloves. Of quite a different aspect is the toilette of a vivid brunette. She wears navy taffetas, with a full tunic-skirt of tartan muslin iu brighter colors than any Highland chieftain could imagine. Her hat is in black lace, and the tartan is repeated in her sunshade, which shows a navy blue foundation, with a deep plisse tartan hem. 'STRIPES IN SUMMER MODES Dresses and Millinery With Lines of Various Widths Among the Popular Styles. Stripes .are one of the features In this summer's fashions, says a writer in the London Times. Whole dresses are to be seen In silk with colored stripes varying in width. The material Is used in both ways. The skirt may have two deep plisse llounces with the stripes perpendicular, and the bodice may show them horizontally. A skirt in cloth may be plain and have a striped coat, or the other way round, and, again, there are some smart little dresses all in striped material, sifk or voile, with which plain cloth coats, handsomely braided, may be worn. Striped ribbon is much used in millinery, and when ribbons of two colors and widths are used together they are made to look as If they were striped. Black and white and black and rQyal blue are the most favored. Foulard Frocks Favorites. Foulard dresses are favorites this summer. Graceful trailing draperies are features of the newest foulard frocks. Many sashes are used, their long ends more often than not trailing below the edge of the skirt. Touches of red on foulacds that are navy or black In their major tones are featured by some of the best designers and the effect is decidedly pleasing. summer rrocKs been folded again so as to leave no rough edges, pulled into petal shape, puffed up realistically In the center and held to the material with long uneven stitches of black silk. Even the gingham dress cannot escape the rose trimming. The cutest gingham rose can be made from plain chamhray to match the gingham color- ! Ing, using, the bias band again folded and the folded edge whipped over and over with a coarse white mercerized cotton. This rose Is rolled cabbage fashion, rather tight In the center and looser toward the outside. To Clean Gloves. White kid gloves merely soiled at the finger tips ran be nicely cleaned for the first time before resorting to gasoline, if the fingers aro nibbed against a moistened cake of castlle soap. Remove the soap by rubbing off with a bit of clean white flannel. Another first cleaning recipe Is to rub the gloves thoroughly while on the hand"? with French chalk.' Lay the gloves away for a few days and then shako the white powder off, with which will come all soil, Park gloves can be cleaned with gasoline, but great care must be taken to wet the gloves evenly all at once and not to rub off nny dye particularly with an. Inexpensive pair. Leather Belts. The narrow belts of leather In colors and patent leather are used to a considerable degree on wnsdiablc frocks of gingham, linen, organdie, volle aud novelty printed cottons.
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Bäck Lame and Achy? ITouscwork.ii too hard for a woman who is half ick, nervou and alwayi tired. But it keeps v'ditig up, and pive. rreak "Icidneys no time to recorer. If your back is lame and achy and your kidneys irregular: if you have "blue Fpell.," ck headache?, nervousness. di7ineH and rheumatic pain, use Doan's Kidney Pills. They have done irondcrs for thousand cf worn out
women. An Indiana dee Mrs. W. L. Towne. 314 Missouri Ave., Jeffersonvllle. Ind., says: i naa oacKacne nnn - j r through my kidneys. I ly.Ä, L felt dull and and had dir; and dark spe( before my tv action of my languid J was irrjrular read a U Kidney Pills and took them. They soon reff- 'ttTw -ulated my kidneys and xpl " It the pain Jn my back and me. dizzy spells left &Sum Get Doan's r.t Any Store, COc Cos F05TER-MHBURN CO BUFFALO. N. Y. Tho reason yfs TiiirppjigSores Remember, I stand back of every box Every drupcist puarant?es to refund the purchase price (35 cents) if Peterson's Ointment doesn't do all I claim. I guarantee It for eczema, old sores, running sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore nipples, broken breasts, ltchlns skin, skin diseases, blind, bleeding and itching pile as well as for chaflng, burns, scalds, cuts, bruises and sunburn. 'I had SO running sores on my leg for 11 years, was In three different hospitals. Amputation was advised. Skin crafting was tried. I was cured by usins I'eterson's Ointment." Mrs. F. K. Knot, 2S7 Michigan street, Buffalo, X. Y. Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Cuticura Soap AND OINTMENT Clear the Skin i Soip 25c, Ointment 25 aai 50c, Ttlcun 25e. Shskespearians. Lout pavt Iht classes a lst iu which sIih asked them to name live of Shakespeare's plays. Anions the titles received were these: Kins Liar. A Merchant of Venus. Old Fellow. Mclinth. Ohu-Jet. Which reminds lis of the hish school pupil who said that Shakospeare's most famous pem wax 'Venice and Adenoid." Cleveland I'lam Dealer. Gone for the Day. My hoss h.ad friven me some speeial work to do. and had departed saying he would not return that day, writes v a correspondent. It was exceedingly warm and to work was torture. IMittins my hooks and papers away, I stlected the most eomfortahle rhair in his ottice and sat down to read a magazine which I found on his desk. Yon can Imagine my chagrin when he returned in an hour and asked for thr work. Kindly Passed It On. "I'm sure it was a woman who first found out ahout kissing." "Yes and womanlike, couldn't keep her discovery to herself !" New York Central Magazine. SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder apd uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL bring quick rtllef and ofttn ward o3 daadly diseases. Known as tha national remedy of Holland for more than 200 yaart. All druggists, in thrte tixat. Uok foe tU CoU Ml tt box and cpt do imitation PESKY BED BUG (Pesky Devils Quietus) F. D. Q. Is a new chemical that puta the everlasting to the Fesky beJbußs. roaches, fleaa. ants and cooties Impossible for the pesky ievils to exist where F. D. Q. Is u?ol. Recommendations of Hotels. Hospitals, ttallroad Companies ami other public institutions are a guarantee to th public that the safest, quickest and mo.n economical way of ridding the pesky Insect is by the use of F. D. Q. as this chemical kills the eggs as well as the live ones, and will not injure the clothinir. A ZZc package makes a full quart, enough to kill a million bedbuss. roaches, fleas or cooties and also contains a patent spout to iret the eßx nests in the hard-to-getat-phnces, and eaves Juice. Your druggist has 4t or he can get tt for you, .or sant prepaid on receipt of price by the Owl Chemical Works. Terre Haute. Indiana.
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