Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 39, Jasper, Dubois County, 18 February 1921 — Page 6
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AH over the use this soody for its benefits, as well as its pleasure. Keeps teeth clean, breath sweet, throat soothed. The Leather Profiteer. At the l'lnycrs' club in Graniercy park they were swapping profiteer stories. IJutler Glacnzer, n critic and collector, said: 'I recently helped a -leather profiteer call him Peter Sweeney Johnson to choose a library for his new Fifth avenue house. "Among our lucky finds was a famous old English dictionary. The book was in bad condition, so we sent It off to be rebound. WeH, when it came oack, gorgeously done In green morocco and gold, the leather profiteer flew into a rage. He pointed to the title 'Johnson's Dictionary, on the back, and yelled: 'Why didn't they use the full name Peter Sweeney Johnson's Dictionary?' M New, York Times. A Little Cliff Dweller. Four-and-n-half-year-o!d Marshall, who Is acquiring a reputation for his childish repartee, added new laurels to his honots at a Christmas dinner. Ills young Interest was centered for a time listening to the grown folk asking conundrums and guessing as to the proper answers. Childish repression finally burst the bonds when one of the hier guests put this ancient query: "When is a door not a door?" Instantly came Marshall's retort: 'When it's a In-a-door bed !"
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Kept l&tehf Smart Boy. "That boy seems to be the most popular caddie around the club. Everybody wants to take him out" "Yes." "Is he a better caddie than the others? , "I don't think so. He's just the best diplomat we have around here.'" "A diplomat. I don't get you." "It'tf this way. The artful little chap is wise to the game and every time the man he Is caddying for makes a poor shot the boy looks sad and apologizes to him for having coughed or moved. That gives the player an excuse for losing the hole and keeps the boy solid in his job." Double Rations. The time had come to dole out tha day's rations, and in an Irish regiment the quartermaster and his assistant were portioning them out In preparation for distribution. At last, ju-st before the orderly men were due to arrive, the assistant turned to the quarter. With a twinkle In his eye, Mike said: "Av ye plaze, sorr, there's a loaf short. Who'll I give it to?" "Keep it yourself, Mike," replied the quartermaster. The majority of women do not seera to realize 'that pretty women are In the minority. c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c Co. Inc, Battle CreekMich. c cr rc
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"I wonder whether people will vr fully realize that happiness Is not to sought after as an ultimate end. but that It should come Into one's life as a child creeps -into Its parent's heart, unbidden, but not the less welcomed nor uncherlshed." FOOD FOR THE FAMILY. 0 A FROZEN dessert is always a welcome one, which If not too rich may tx enjoyed even by the little people. Fig Ice Cream Junket. Make a Junket custard with a quart of warm milk, a cupful of cream, a can of condensed milk, one tablespoonful of vanilla, a half cupful of sugar, and one crushed Junket tablet dissolved In a tablespoonful of cold water. Let stand In a warm place until Jellied; cool and freeze. When partly frozen add one-half pound of figs cookiHl, chopped and mixed with onehalf cupful of sugar and three tableFpoonfuls of orange Juice. Finish freezing. Fig Ice Cream. Scald one quart of milk, mix three teaspoonfuls of cornstarch with a little cold milk, and stir into the hot milk: continue to stir until the mixture thickens, then cover and cool fifteen minute's, stirring occasionally. Something to Think About THE JOB AND THE MAN By F.A.Walker HANGING in the offices of one of the best known business men in this country is this motto: "You cannot get out of a man what God Almighty did not put into him. You must suit the man to the Job; not the Job to the man' Perhaps there Is a simpler and more direct way of putting it than that. Perhaps you can do it better. If you can, there is a Job waiting for you in the office of the ram who first wrote It becaust he is a man always on the hunt for writers who can say things with a punch. There are a good many young men who try to succeed in lines for which they are not at all fitted. 'Ambitious parents often Insist upon mapping out the life work of their children when they would do a much more kindly thing to let the boys and girls follow their own inclinations. A tree that is bent is never so good as a tree that grows according to nature. Thousands of excellent carpenters have been spoiled In the making of poor doctors and the world is worse off for the experiments. Almost every child .shows an Inclination toward some special thing. It enjoys work of a particular kind when other efforts are drudgery. The wise parent will seek to find out what that inclination is and offer every aid to the highest endeavor. A child's mind is not ' essentially different from the mind of a grownup. Both offer resistance to doing what is unpleasant and irksome. tfbre than that individualities are Just as distinct and different each from the other as one kind .of matter differs from another. They have different uses and different applications. To attempt to drive a nail with a sponge would be Just as fruitless, if not as destructive, as to try to wash a window with a hammer. To try to Yuake a boy who loves mechanics and wants to study machinery into a professor of Greek is to misapply his talents and diminish his efficiency. Every child should be studied. There is no greater and no . more interesting process In the world than the development of the human mind. The baby with his fist in his eye Is the seed of the man that is to be. Put it in the wrong soil, give it too much or too little mental food and water and the final product -will be distorted and twisted. ' Put it in the right surroundings, give it as far as is proper its way and it will grow Into a strong and sturdy plant; a source of joy to itself and you. Don't plan too much for your children. Let them have a little of their own way in following their Inclinations as to what they shall be and do. Remember that you cannot get out of a boy or a man what God Almighty did not put Into him. (Copyright.) -MILITANT-MARY-Wben-l-get-blue QS'indigO'Qod bope)e36astbe TOMB Morce-a-gnn-tbat-never-foils TO -SWEEP AWAY- THE GLOOM !
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Beat the yolks of four, eggs,, add a half teaspoonful of salt and one-half cupful of maple sirup; beat Into the hot mixture and stir until the egg Is set; add two cupfuls of hot cream, and let chill; add one teaspoon ful of vanilla and begin to freeze; when half frozen add one-half pound of figs cooked tender in boiling water, then chopped fine and mixed wltlP half a cupful of maple sirup, a grating tf lemon rind and two tablespoonfuls of the juice. Finish freezing. Oatmeal Cracker Cake. Heat one-half cupful of shortening to a cream, add one-third of a cupful each of honey and sugar, the yolks of two eggs beaten light, one cupful of milk, two and seven-eighths cupfuls of rolled cracker crumbs mixed with three tea spoon fills of baking powder, half a teaspoonful of cinnamon, and one-fourth of a teaspoonful of salt. Lastly add the stlflly beaten whites of two eggs. Pake In two well greased layer pans about eighteen minutes. Put together with Jam or Jelly. Cover the top and sides with chocolate butter Icing and decorate with tfie Icing piped over the top. Chocolate Butter Icing. Peat one-half cupful of butter to a cream. Add gradually one-half cupful of honey, one cupful of confectioner's sugar and two ounces of chocolate melted over hot water. Flemish Carrots. Cut corrots In thin slices with a vegetable sllcer and cook tender in boiling salted water. For one , pint of carrots melt one tablespoonful of butter In a saucepan, add one-fourth of a cupful of chopped onion andmehalf teaspoonful of sugar. Cover and let cool slowly until yellowed a little, add one cupful of beef broth and let simmer until the onion Is tender; add the carrots and let stand over hot water twenty minutes or longer. Sprinkle with a tablespoonful of finely minced parsley just before serving. (. 1921, Western Newspaper Union.)
SCHOOL DAYS "frurre arter yv1- -Witt 0 I H; . ,r i I
umiiiiiiuiiiimmmiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiNMiii 1 THE GIRL ON THE JOB f E IIow to Succeed How to Get 5 E Ahead How to Make Good E I By JESSIE ROBERTS 1 iniiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiE XOW THE FOREW03IAX BEFORE the war the forewoman was unknown; now she is becoming Increasingly common in the great industries, especially those that employ large numbers of girls. In some of these plants, like that of the Artificial Limb company, women are admitted to the foreman training classes on an equal footing with the men. There are two types of forewomen, called the instructional and theproductional. Women who are. working In the plant are those who usually get these appointments, and it Is an incitement to women to go to work In these large Industrial establishment; that was lacking before. One of the great questions for women today Is that of .equal opportunity. It runs hand in hand with the one concerning equal pay. The fact that hardly any big factory or mill employing women is now without its forewoman shows that progress Is being made. Every woman should work toward increasing these opportunities for her sex. Many industries are employing iore and more women in their regular work, especially factories where delicate work has to be dow, such as the assembling f adding machine, electric appliances and tbe like. And women are gradually ousting men from the watch-making industry, so much better Is their ability to handle the minute parts used. The fact Is that the girl of nineteen or twenty has become the
THE WOODS
BY DOUGLAS MALLOCH MY MAN AN' ME. MY MAN nn me fer forty years Have hiked it up the hill. Q An' side by side, an' Jound an tleu; As was our youthful will. He come upon me like a dream Of all I hoped to he An so we stood, fer ill er good Mode one, my man an' me. It was a rosy way we went When life was in the dawn; I heard the birds, I hoard ;he wordei A young wife feeds upon. Ills arm was 'round about my waist. He led me tenderly Twas long ago we traveled so The road, my man an me. Though still we travel side by side. We travel now apart For older wives live lonely lives. An' hungry Is the heart. Tvas long ago I felt the kiss In youth he gave so frei Still side by side, but years divide Us two, my man an me. Yet once he held my hand in his; We knelt beside a cross. Together knelt, together felt An shared a common loss. An' there was four Instead of two (Er so It seemed to be) Yes, there was four the babe I bore. My God, my man an' me. The river yon Is covered now With Winter's ice an' snow; Upon Its breast no lilies rest Where lilies used to blow. Put underneath the Winter's ice The waters flow ns free As in the Spring we heard 'em sing Their song, my man an me. So age may sit upon his lips An' cool the speech of youth ; An yet I know he promised so To love, an' spoke the truth. The Winter days oMife may chill The ways of such as we; Put 'neath the cohf the love of old Still warms my man an me. (Copyright.) typical watchmaker of the country. Where the women have a chance to prove themselves they are making good. . They will get more chances and it seems likely that they will continue to make good. There is a real future for the ambitious woman in the industries of the country today. (Copyright.) o THE ROMANCE OF WORDS "JOB." THE connection between Job, the Piblical personification of patience, and the word "job" commonly applied to a piece of work; is cleverly worked out by Southey in his book "The Doctor." "A job in the working or operative sense is evidently something which It requires patience to perform. In the physical or moral sense, as when, for example, In the language of the vulgar, a personal hurt or misfortune is called a 'bad Job it is something which requires patience on the part of the public to endure and In all these senses the word may be traced to Job, who is the proverbial exemplar of this virtue." Sheridan, whose definitions are always ns amusing as they are direct, states that "whenever any emolument, profit, salary or honor Is conferred on any person not deserving it, that Is a Job" From which it would appear tint -It. Is riot the jobholder that emulates the patience of Job. but the pnblic. (Copyright.)
DRESSMAKER MADE WELL
Followed a Neighbor's Advice and Too!: Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Vernon, Tex. "For three years I suffered untold 3ony each month with nains in my sides. 1 found only temporary relief in doctor's medicine or anything else I took until my husband saw an aavertisemcnt of Lydia E. PinkhanVs Vegetable Compound. I mentioned it to a neighbor and she told me she had taken it with sood results and advised me to try it. I was then in bod part of the time and my doctor said I would have to be operated on. but we decided to try the Vegetable Compound and I also used Lydia E. Pinkham'a Sanative Wash. I am a dressmaker and am novr able to go about my work and do my housework besides. You are welcome to use this letter as a testimonial as I am always glad to speak a word tor your medicine." Mrs. V. M. Stephens, 1103 N. Commerce St., Vernon, Texas. Dressmakers when overworked are prone to such ailments and should profit by Mrs. Stephen's experience. Write to Lydia E. lMnkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., about your health. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a v;o:nan and held in strict confidence. Dr. Xartllne'ft Catarrh Rtnlr tm! In a 8phro of Its own. For over twntjr years there has never bren known of ft Mngle cao whero it failed to brm about tho desired results. WHY? Hecaune It Immediately annihilate thu catnrrh perm, check the mucui Uncharge, heala the ulcer, and restores free breathtn: In a word It r'.vea a new lea?e of Ilff It la highly rn!orafd by users and d!spen.er alike. 30-60 at Druggists' und Oeneral sturen and by mall. If you have never uevl thin irreat preparation eend 10c to the Nardin Medical Co.. Johnson City. N. Y.. today, and you will receive a smplo box by mall If you mention this paper. FLUSH THE KIDNEYS Take a hot cupful of Bulgarian Blood Tea Sweeten the stomach, tone the liver, cleanse the blood, kill colds, ward oft "FLU prlppe and pneumonia. Sold by druggists and procers everywhere. Would Take a Chance. Tht? school teacher was explaining the meaning of "11. C." and "A. I)." and to see if his lesson had got homehe asked the boys what they would do If they found an old Roman coin stamped with the year R. C. 08. "Ignore it as a forgery," said one boy, whose experience ns a stamp collector had sharpened his wits. "Very pood," said the master. "Obviously pre-Christ mlnters would know nothing of Christ." Td pick It up. though," said a black-haired boy with a prominent nose; "it mißht fit a slot machine." Shave With Cutlcura Soap And double your razor effciency as well as promote skin purity, skin comfort and skin health. No mug, no slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no Irritation even when shaved twice daily. One so.ip for all uses shaving, bathing and shampooing. Adv. Movie Theaters in China. There are about half a dozen motion picture theaters in Tientsin, of which the leading foreign bouse has a capacfty of 000, and the Chinese onvs seat from r.OO to 'J, MX) persons :md givo two shows daily. Films from most of the large American companies are exhibited, the popularity of the stars being about the same as In the United States. The Placid Exit. "Why, oh, great philosopher, do you permit yourself such lengthy discourses before quailing the hemlock?" Inquired one of the member:; of the Socrates Yessing club. "it's this way," answered the serene sage. "Xantippe promised to slip a cake of yeast Into the mixture and I am waiting for it to work." Our Language. "This Man Jenkins, who Is running for ollice " "Well, what about him?" "What does he stand for?" Ex-heroes can't understand why the world has such a short memory. CIGARETTE No cigarette has tho samo delicious flavor as Lucky Strike. Because Lucky Strike is tho toasted cigarette.
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