Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 50, Jasper, Dubois County, 6 May 1921 — Page 6
COOK BOOK Rest 1 not. Idleness, and to lie sometimes on the jjraM under the trees on a summer's day, listening to the murmur of water, or watching the clouds float across the ky. Is by no means waste ol time. Lord Avebury. EVERYDAY FOOD. IT IS not n llfflcult problem to nrranso n meal for some occasion and have It both Rood and unusual ; but the daily nioal preparation does become a burden sometimes when economy, variety, wholesomeness and digestibility all enter into the problem. Leftover Salt Mackerel With Potato Balls. Cut enough pared potatoes Into quarters to till a pint cup. Turn Into a saucepan, cover with boiling water THE WOODS BY DOUGLAS MALLOCH THE LETTER. I CAN'T tell you. girl, how I love you It Is something the woods never teach; 1 can He all the nlRht anl think of you, but I can't rut the matter in speech Hut lt'B love like the blue skies above you that around the whole universe reach. It Is love that Is wide aa the arches of stars from the cast to the west; It Is love that Is Ions as the marches of sunrise to sunset and rest; It is love that is strong as the larches that mount to earth's uttermost crest. In the woods we are rougher than others you know In the parlors of town; To the wolf and the wild we are brothers, we are kin to the creatures of brown; It Is long since we crept to our mothers and slept on our pillows of down. For we sleep In the huts of the humble and we llv on a sturdier fare; And the music we hear is the rumble of thunders of earth and of air Where the pine and the tamarack tumble and the puthway of progress prepare. Yet this land Is the land of the lover, Jhe place for a love such as mine; Oh, sweet Is the scent of the clover, but strong Is the heart of the pine; Love's cup In the town bubbles over, but here It Is purple as wine. We live and we love and we labor up ! here on a mightier scale; To the north and the night we are neighbor, we are kin of the star and the gale; The lightning It threats with Its sabre, the northwlnd it stings with its hall. And the heart of the man Is made stronger with the strength of the thing that he lights. And the love of his heart Is made longer by the length of the loneliest nights Kör the. lover whose heart is a-hunger longs moat for a lover's delights. The fellow away from the city the tricks of the city forgets: He can't say the tiling that is witty, he can't breathe his soul In regrets; lie can't say the thing that Is pretty to please the pink tar of coquettes. For the bigness of life Is about him, the bigness of heaven and star; Though the city runs onward without him, forgetting tie forest afar, When he speaks let no cleverness doubt him. for he speaks of the things as they are. And this is the love that I bring you, the love of the man out-of-doors; And this Is the song that I sing you, the song that the nightingale pours. The song that the nightingales tllng you from eventide's musical shores. The shepherd boy carols his meter, and follows the feet of the herds; The song of the skylark Is Hot ter because of the absence of words; Is the language of mortals the sweeter, more sweet than the music of birds? My lips they may tremble to say It. however my pulses may beat; The tale that I tell you may elh It and llnd It a tale Incomplete . Hut here Is my heart, and I lay it, all voiceless and mute, at your feet. 1 can't tell you. girl, the oM story, embellished with city-bred lies. The tale that a planet Rrown hoary still hears with the olden surprise Hut the night s all starshlne and glory because I have looked In your eyes. The nlKht Is all starshlne and splendor up here in the tamarack lands; The nlqht Is all moonlit and tender tecause of the touch of your hands And your eyes they may widen with wonder, hut I know that your heart understands. (Copyright.) O A Mere Trifle. Physician You have a broken !er. three fractured ribs a dislocated arm and bruises and abrasions too nutner'us to mention. Your injuries will keep you in bed at least two months. Mr. ITopper (the movie hero) Two months nothing! I can sleep them ! in twenty-four hours. Film Fun. -MILITANT-MARY-jm-nor belligerent; . in-fact,Move TRANQUILLITY, But-wbeo oberes trouble UNCLE BAM-KNOWS HE CAN COUNT- ONME!
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and one cupful of flaked leftover mackerel in the centor of the potato dish, above the water In dish or steamer. Let cook until the potatoes are tender, drain and press them through a rleer, heap over the fish, add a teaspoonful of butter, a few dashes of black pepper, one ejrg beaten light and shape Into balls. Fry at once in deep fat. Serve with lettuce or cabbage salad. Pacific Salad. One cupful of spaghetti broken In bits and boiled; one good sized stalk of celery cut In bits, two green peppers cut fine from which the seeds and white membrane have been removed ; two sweet cucumber pickles, cut in thin slices, and plenty of gocd boiled salad dressing. ( 1321. Western Newspaper Union.) Something to Think About THE JOB AND THE MAN By F.A.Walker o SK of the greatest troubles with the average man is that he does not pet excited frequently enough. Excitement is only MULTIPLIED ENTHUSIASM. The man who lacks enthusiasm doesn't get far, whatever road he travels. One of the chief faults of a .snail is that It never has the sensation of excitement. It crawls along in a seemingly aimless fashion, and having reached the nowhere for which It was headed. It stops to contemplate its effectiveness. Nobody Is ever interested In a snail, and only the dullard copies him. If you want to see enthusiasm and excitement in animal life, watch "an ant. Everything Interests him. Everything has a meaning for him. Everything he sees or feels is a matter of investigation and study. He Is excited all the time and accomplishes something every minute. SCHOOL (jo on.. Jiatfjr. gimm wi A- (. I n drmk tnncV. ; noit. C ry 4 ! Gest. 1-1 Id", tit (ia An . Vru Xnov tnc . CCPTf(CHT i i l i i i i : i i i i i t l i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i I THE GIRL ON THE JOB E How to Succevd How to Get E Ahead How to Make Good E 1 By JESSIE ROBERTS 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 W03IKX IX BANKS THE big brinks and trust companies an' boginning to put women into important positions. And the girl jut out of ((liegt who is looking for a job may find it well worth her while to interview a banker as to getting a start. She will have to begin at the bottom, but she stands an excellent chance to get well up to the top. Take the case of a woman who has recently been made assistant secretary to the New York Trust company. , ller special work will lo to assist the clients of the company to prepare their personal budgets, and to advise minors in the charge of the compauy now best to manage their allowances. Thero is a real opportunity for women win are capable of it to do very valuable and well-paid work in this line. Another woman is employed by the luaranry Trust company in the caI'.n ity ot" bond salesman. She is as yet !". of the very few women who are making a success m this business, but Iter opinion is that it is a work women can do well. Any rrirl who has a leaning toward timiihv will be wise to specialize in soine '(k-Ml vcliool. isjj Is advised to take a job in ome financial house at , the siinc time that she Is taking her j course at niht school. Her Job will i pn hnbly I a -mall one. but It will
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Every boy and every man ought to be excited about what he Is doing. He should be so Intensely Interested In it, so thoroughly in love with the task and Its accomplishment, that Its finish should find him thrilled with enthusiasm. Can you Imagine Edison working without enthusiasm and excitem.'nt? Can you conceive the feverish eagerness with which Galileo worked through the night on that lirst crude telescope and with what excitement he took his first look through It toward the far-off stars? Yet that telescope was not as powerful 'as the opera glass you carry to the theater. Can you imagine with what excitement Mine. Curie looked upon the first tiny speck of radium which she had distilled from the tons of material which concealed it?
THE C.LOItY OP LAIlOIl IS ITS ACCOMPLISHMENT, v v The real wages of work is the satisfaction of production. The man who makes a machine of himself, who finds no interest and no basis cf enthusiasm in his daily task is little better than the ox. There Is no labor so menial and no tnrk so hard that it has not In It a reason for enthusiasm. The 'scrub woman whose knees are calloused and whose arms ache from her lowly labors may still find a distinct pleasure and an actual enthusiasm when she sees the glistening cleanliness ncompiished by her hands. The teamster can be enthusiastic about his horses and his wagon. The office boy can get excited about the rush of business where he is employed. Everybody has some reason to get enthusiastic and excited about their work. If they have no reason they are either following the wrong vocation or they an looking on the world and its doings with distorted vision. If your present work doesn't enthuse you. If you cannot get excited and happy about It, find something else to do. Get another job. Find something that will stir you up and rouse your mind and hurry your fingers and leave you. when the day is done, anxious for tomorrow and the bigger accomplishment that It will make possible. ' Don't be content to be a snail. A SNAIL NKVKIt GETS ANYWHERE. (CopyrlBht.) DAYS T ray no", o . ii 1- TW - :v .c o help out her theoretical work immensely to be in actual touch with conditions in n financial office or bank. There Is a dignity about work of this sort that appeals to many girls who have graduated from college and who do not want to enter the ordinary otllce. What is more, it holds out line possibilities. P.ut It requires a type of mind that is not found in every woman. If you have the gift, and get the training, you now stand a good chance of finding full opportunity to go as far as your capacities permit. Prejudice against women in this field is rapidly disappearing. (Copyright.) o Toys cf Past Ages. The earliest toys of the ancients which have been recovered and preserved are those of the Egyptians. One of the most interesting of these is! the figure of what looks like a ram crudely carved in stone, with six perfectly funned cloth sacks piled on its back as a load. The sacks are filled with sand. The toy was found durIng an excaatin by a party sent out by the Metropolitan Museum of Art at Hukes-dair-el-Pahri. It i n relic of the Eleventh Dynasty, about 'J1GO . ('. Another find, of the Twelfth Dynasty, about lTs I. C. consists f (hrce very crude doll. All are of vvl. fiat, thin and of the most simple dcign. merely suggesting the outline of a dressed figure. O Revised History. "Why did Washington cross the Delaware?" "Please, teacher, he wrntcd to go to Atlantic City." Poston Transcript.
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IN LATEST WRAPS
Picturesque Garments for Afternoon and Evening. Vogue for Dance-Teas and Restaurant Parties Creates Demand for . Attractive Apparel. Picturesque wraps for afternoon as well as evening are immensely popular this year. The ever Increasing vogue of dance-teas and restaurant parties may be answerable for this. Certain It is that the fashions of the present hour are extremely decorative and becoming. Some of the latest designs for evening wraps are so Intricate that ordinary women feel a little afraid of them, but much of the elaboration Is centered In the design itself and In the linings chosen, for it is truly the day of linings. Several different materials may b mingled In these mantles those Intended for afternoon wear as well as evening cloaks. This Is aspecially practical fashion. Old garments, made of good materials, may be taken to pieces, freshened up and then combined. In this way very rich and beautiful effects may be obtained without a great outlay of money. Take for example an exquisite evening wrap recently launched at Monte Carlo by Cecil Sorel. It was long, almost ankle-length, and it was made of several different materials black chantilly lace, silver tissue and rut red satin the latter used for the lining. In addition to nil Jhls there was a shoulder cape, attached to the mantle all round the border, of seal musquash, and this rape was cut in vandykes. It seenieil ns thourzh the lower part of the cape depended from a long shoulder yoke, but in reality the cape had been a separate garment. There Wrap With Detachable Cape. were two flounces of black chantilly, each flounce bordered with n narrow band of seal musquash, and there was a high Medici collar of the same fur. Leather Decorations. Disks of black patent leather applied with royal blue silk on a black crepe de chine dress are a striking trimming.
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Use of Tints and Colors
Best Judgment Should Be Used in Selecting Shades That Suit the Complexion. A girl with delicate coloring and transparent skin should choose tints, rather than colors, lest she detract from the delicacy of nature's endowments, whereas the girl with the clear olive skin and sunkhsed complexion can wear the vivid and intense colors that challenge her own. Yellows, ochre and greens call for a very clear skin, whereas reds and its derivatives lend a glow that is llattering as do also the warmer shades of purple. The eternal blue and green color scheme for the red-haired girl has at last given way to a range of colors in perfect harmony with or by contrast, running the gamut from a pale and faint pink to brilliant orange which well offset the rare coloring of hair, which the minority of us. alas, are favored with. As ever and ever in matters of taste and dros? let us watch what the rarlsienne dos and what results she achieves with her enviable gift of savoir-faire in this field. Would .she wear an unb-oming color? Not she. Yet she will, at times. Haunt a color perhaps unsuitable to her general stylo, yet so daringly will she wear this, ?o utterly regardless of consequences, that her very indifference becomes :;udaeiousness and creates what is known ns the bizarre. Hut unless tbls Is !one with super tkill It crtato a vulvar, tinp'enlr.g
FUR FOR THE SPRING COAT
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EL FI Fashion' experts are evidently expecting a cold spring, for the fashions they have designed for that season have fur trimmings. This coat, trimmed with marmot, is worn over a dress of black and gray stripes. TO REJUVENATE VELVET HATS Headgear May Be Remodeled by Buttonholing Edges Over and Over With Worsted. If your velvet or felt hat shows signs of wear on the edge of the brim, It may be rejuvenated as well as trimmed by buttonholing the edge, over and over, with contrasting or self colored worsted. The stitches may be dose together or far apart, and be shallow or deep according to the dnmage to be covered and the effect to be gained. A dot from a colored pencil is a good way to Indicate the distance between stitches', the needle pricking through the hat brim In each dot. y taking stitches of gradual length, outlining points or scallops. Irregular edges are easily worked. Kach stitch may be finished with i bead and a fancy headed pin to correspond used for a hat trimming. By means of this fancy stltchcry, novel color effects may be introduced into n hat, as henna may be used on mack or brown; gray Angora wool on blue and white or any color. Use n largeeyed needle which will pierce a sutliciently large hole to carry the coarse wool. Pretty Trunk Cover. Take cheesecloth the size of your trunk top and place on top of cheesecloth one layer of cotton. Then use cretonne for top. Uaste around edge and knot the same as you would a comforter with baby ribbon. Make a ruffle of cretonne and sew around top piece. Iiace this over top of trunk, and with pieces left make a round or oblong cushion and place on top of trunk. Cretonne and plain chambrny may be used to make over If one wishes. Use cretonne to match color scheme in your bedroom. Impression ami makes of the would-be-daring one an object of ridicule. This, needless to say. Is well to avoid, for the truly well-dressed person Is the one who does not clulenge atteir tion, but holds It nevertheless. Panels, Panels, Panels!I'anels at the sides are also belns used. This fad is especially noted in black and white costumes. One house is showing an importation of wide w:4e white serge or twill handed and paneled In black satin. Small pearl buttons outline the bandings and hip panels. Panels, by the way, are very chic when used as ovortunlcs. One shop Is showing a street gown of midnight blue serge and black satin. Tinsatin is used as a rather clinging underslip sintl the serge is the tunic. It fs about knee length and is cut Into deep points of uneven length. Some of the points are edged with tiny silk tassels that flop about most piquantly. New Knitted Dresses. Knitted dresses are considered Ideal to wear under motor coats. Thov arc trade in many Interesting color combinations. Pleats are knitted right Into the skirt, mnking them wear well. Drown is used for one pretty model. It has collar and v.ff of biege-col-ored nneora. A cord of Mere rotor drr.wn through nt the normal waNrline ends In ta -e? j. Lzr.n.VJz'rAed Dresses. Ixn-w.iNted dresses are ZUl rrt .Olep .-d vcrv s::nrt.
11017 MEN OF MIDDLE AGE
May Escape the Dreaded Sufferings of that Period by Taking Mrs. Block's Advice Hopkins, Minn. "During Chrvnpo of Life I had hot flashes and suffered for two years, l saw Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound advertised in the paper and otgood results from taking it. I recommend vour medirinA A to my friends end you may publish this fact as a testi monial. M re. Köd ert Block, Box 542, Hopkins, Minn. It has been said that not one woman in. a thousand passes this perfectly natural change without experiencing a train of very annoying and sometimes painful symptoms. Those dreadful hot Hashes, sinking spells, spots before the eyes, dizzy spells, nervousness, are only a few of the symptoms. Every woman at thisage should profit by Mrs. Block's experience and try Lydia E. Pinkharn's egetable Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound will help you, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., about your health. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. Vi C!"OlATl;' ft a. . mi 9 .1 Rg U S Pat Off. CAR m LATE D PETROLEUM JOLY Acleaixcounlerirritant for scratches, cuts, etc. Healing and antiseptic RERJSE SUBSTITUTES CHESEBEOUGH MFG. CQ (CONSOLIDATED) State Street NewYrk MAN BEST AGE A man i3 as old as his organs ; he can be as vigorous and healthy at 70 as at 35 if he aids hia organs in performing their functions. Keep your vital organs healthy with GOLD MERAL The world's standard remedy for V!dnj, liver, bladder and uric add troubles eine 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates vital organs. All druggists, three sizes. Lok for Ü na Cold MJ1 en mrty bom ftsd accept bo imiUlioa 50 good cigarettes for 10c from one sack of GENUINE DURHAM TOBACCO Cuticura Tetlcum is Fragrant and Very Healthful Soap 25c, Oiatmcct 25 aad 50c, Talcum 25c. i;X.ir PHOTOGRAPHIC t'Ul'U. Halt In . from Snap-Shot or I'hotop. fcSc. prepaid. ColoreJ. 11.35. Turner & Co, Aurora. III. Ladine varieties. Very b?st purebrM chlckl at rock bottom jrlcea. Write tolay portal will do for circular nrlee llt itj IlIO ICO PAGE POULTRT IOOK. beth FI! EE. Chick ont rKütrall to ycur door. Llva arrival guaranteed. ALLEN POULTRY FARM Route 20 Windsor, Mo. W. N. U.f Indianapolis. No. 8-1921.
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Baby Chicks
