Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 44, Number 17, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 February 1949 — Page 2
Practical Pretties IjradPaaa|@! LKA? o X A°l Imm^i 310 1117 ANT to perk up your kitchen? V* Make these gay potholders and oven mitts of bright scraps. They are big bazaar or gift items too! • ° • • Pretty potholder* and mitt* for heavy duty! Pattern 510; transfer of four potholder* and two oven mitt* S*wia* Circle Needlecraft Dept. M 4 W. Randolph SL CUca*e M. 111. Enclose 30 cents for pattern. No Kune— Address — — (falsified Department AUTOS. TRUCKS A ACCESS._ CNEVaOLKT I*4l DUMP T-ton capacity oral bOdy CHAS Bt DDEKK COAL CO.. JA 5M3, LeabvlUe. K». IBUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR rrs stcpcndov* Ill’s hot year round teller Ea»y sales. Earn money fast. Agent* write TIP TOP 'Ml'- Sellin* Prairie. Indian*. FARM MACHINERY A EQUIP. INTERNATIONAL. t» Crawler '.'pe tractor wjth power take off. 3 14-Inch John: Deere plow on new rubber. 3 14 inch International plow HAY LOPASSA - Ewtaeaee. M MISCELLANEOUS STIX-ALL •feeding cementMlNOS evsryttetof W_ - For. Wood—Tile—Metal—Qoth S F GUta-Chlna-Crocknry—Alum- •* “ Inum—Leather—Furniture leather Shoo Lace*—All length* AtA Your Dttltr at Writ* t't G. W. UNDERHILL CO. 11* Ceolral Street ' • X*e*e* City, M*. ~~ NER RUN DOWN? Hale** Iron Tonic will aid you to ENERGIZE — VITALIZE - Feel your best—Look your best Hale's Iron Tonic will aid In building vigorous, robust health: and is suggested to can't sleep well, eat well. and to those men and women who are “always tired " Three tablespnonsful a day supply 353 LV of Vitamin 81. the minimum daily requirements of an adult * Hale's Iron Tonic definitely i* not a laxa«ve. yet man, report after takm* it. the : boaela move free.' without the aid of mMiestkMi Vitam.n BI Hi: -ulate* the digestive tract. iron aids tn building rich, red blood cilia The regular 18 ounce bottle <a hill plot! eon Ums a 3 weeks' supply for one ; adult 3 botUes <3 pints-, a 8 weeks' supply bi usually sufficient in mild cases of nonaraante nutritional anemia. Iron deficiency ‘rabe women of tovellne**. men of vitality, causes tisUeasneos. nervousness, tiredness. Order your 3 bottles a 8 weeks supply today B*oo will bring you 3 pint bottle* of Hale s Iron Tonic Regular price 83.30 per bottle Order I bottle. 3 weeks' supply for J 3OO. Send check, money order to BALE 'ROD! < T- F O Rex «SB. Dsytea 1. Okie. Distributer—Hair's trea Tania Hale’s No. 1 Frodaet Write for free literature. POULTRY. CHICKS * EQUIP. Devil "fellerwn felted” Chicks for Broilers end layers New H ampsklr** and other broiler breeds for immediate dalieery in Urge or small, Saaatities. Write today tor catalog andIQ savings on early booked orders. Davit Poultry Farm & Hatchery loeto 20-C Reassooy, led. •*■■■ ■ ' “ ■ ' ■ ■ * ' WANTED TO BUY ~ WANTED-JOHN DEERE 38-tnch separator straw walker rack Also Model D tractor, tie Meal. 1*37 model or tmce Write ROBERT TROYBR Ikoelo 8. Box M MUiersberg. Ohio. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! FOLEY PILLS Backaches Sluggish Kidney* —of BOMM.C YOUR NONCY OMNI WHILST 06-40 IP YOU WERE A WAVE* WAC, MARINE or SPAR Find out what Nursing fVp offers you! Vjp —edacaUoa kadi Mg to B. & RBasw *e*py yoar la gahtto iMM&k, sAOb — yen* afie<ra»M eatfaeft fee C. L Bill odKlgW. afte. covers year eMire ■Mbtag eowhej*- ■' —mA 4*r 'store iafcnoatUa ■8 the infeti »here yen weald like leeMManrsUg. want BylLjnw™ O * Not cxaggeratJ Ml claim*. Owe jl advertisers ottaf .tamest- values and sell their wMSL itii merit*.
El Turkey In F| The Hay frit By Dorethy Roeeboreegil CLETA BROWN wa* furious. For the third time Seth Jones had caught her turkeys in his alfalfa. Now he was acting as if she had driven them in. Angrily. Seth ran across the field to head the turkeys from the newly flooded alfalfa. you keep those dang birds off my place?" Cleta slapped her sunbonnet at the flustered turkeys "Do you , think I want 'em 3MlnH«a over here? " sh ® • Minute , napped •‘GetFiction ting their feet wet and dying from it. maybe! They're under the fence and in your place before I know it'J- ■ "Under the fence!" growled Seth. "They rise up and sail right over, the flyin' fools! Why don't you keep their wings clipped? Reckon you figger the mor< green feed your tom gets the better his chance to grab off first prize at the Fair." Cleta flushed with 'That’s a low-down remark!" "Another thing." broke in Seth. "1 don't want your tom with my flock. Keep your birds on your own place." He strode off to the irrigation ditch. Cleta was proving up on her desert claim with a crop of milomaize. The scattering grain made wonderful forage. But the field was | some distance from her homestead and the turkeys bad to be driven there every day. Before they started fussing about the turkeys Seth looked at her a lot. Maybe she could make him ! look at her again with that warm ! eagerness in his eyes. *, THE smell of autumn was In the air the morning Cleta rode into 'town to enter her tom for the show. Coming home she checked her horse to a walk as she passed Seth's place. j Then she saw the turkeys were in the alfalfa again, and she turned in at Seth's gate. No bne answered her shout aS. she galloped by the house to the field. Jumping off her horse, Cleta snatched at her sunbonnet and beat I frantically at the fighting gobblers. “Get away, you devils!" Cleta panted. She drove them off and. dropped on her knees beside the; birds which had dropped bleeding. She watched the victorious gobbler strutting and drumming his wings as he rounded up the hens; the bronze hens, the new members of Tus harem She knew for sure then Her bird had killed Seth's tom. Cleta stood up. She saw Seth turning in at the gate, and as he ! hurried toward the field a hot tri-, umph flooded through her. With Seth's, gobbler out of the running her turkey would surely win. But this worm eed everything, she told herself. Cleta knew she could not bear to keep on fighting with Seth. “So you let ’em get in again." he stormed. "Anyone with a brain might know this would happen. > Z\P> .ww***- ■“ ito-P/W '. ’ z . - —’W Cleta slapped her sanbonaet »t the flustered turkeys. "Do you think I want ’em over here?” she snapped. By beck!" he exclaimed. "Blamed lif 1 know which one it is!" He knelt and turned the gobbler over. I 3 "Well. 1 know my own bird, even if you don't" Cleta retorted. “So i now you can go ahead and win that : prize money you’re so bet up i about.” "Dunno as 1 was any more bet up than you." Seth jeered, his bands still busy with the bird. Seth looked from the dead bird to the swelling gobbling tom with the bens. He grinned. "Say. Cleta." be in the old friendly teasing voice. 'Why don't you take that bird of yours home? He'r cutting up something scandalous round them windows. Cleta reddened. "I tell you he's your bird.” she insisted, moving I toward her hoFse. 4 • Seth eaught be< by the ‘wrist "Hey! Wait a minute! You know dAJTi ’well that’s your tom with my bens. But if you are honin' for proof He spread the dead wing. Clipped in the thin membrane Cleta saw a narrow reg istration band- . He was out Cleta saw that bls eyes were intent and eager "It doesn't matter now.” she mur mured. "It’s just that 1 felt so ter rible lonesome. l*y WNU Featana , Ugbining Caodnctors JBk assembling lightning conduc - tors, ft Is preferable that all parts be made of the same kind of metsi or of combinations of metals which will not produce excessive corro sion by galvanic action in the peea ence of moisture. Exilngaisb RabHsh Fires Best way to extinguish a tire that originates in rubbish is to use approved fire extinguishers containing foam, vaporizing liquid or soda andjcidagentßr
START THE DAY WITH A GOOD BREAKFAST (Sft Rtcipti Btlou)
BRIGHT BEGINNING ONE OF THE biggest services which any homemaker can give her family i$ to feed them a good, substantial breakfast to get them off to work and school with proper spirit. This is the, best way—at least to my knowledge—of preventing that mid-morning lag in energy as well as having the mind razor sharp whether you apply yourself at a school desk, sit in an office or work in the bam. fields or your own kitchen. A good breakfast need not be elaborate to serw its purpose. Start off with a simple pattern including fruit, cereal and milk and you can be well fed. Naturally if you want more, there are any number of foods to be added. Too. there's no need to feH that breakfasts can't have variety. You can very fruit and cereal dully, while eggs, breakfast meats ci d het breads have infinite variety. If mother will start fragrant odors In tne kitchen when the family is scheduled to hear the alarm clock, this will help keep them interested in completing the process and get them down to a good breakfast. FOR THOSE of you who depend upon the oven to take the chill out •;f the house in the morning, here are some splendid quick-to-mix ho’ breads for breakfast or any other meal; Honey Nut Bran Muffins {Makes 16 large muffins) H cup honey 1 cup flour M teaspoon soda *4 iteaspoon salt >4 teaspoon baking powder t cups bran 1 tablespoon melted butter I'x cups milk ) cup walnuts, chapped fine Sift together flour, soda, salt and aking powder. Mix with bran and add other ingredients. Place in greased muffin pans and bake in a quick <42s’F.> oven for 25 to 30 minutes Raisin Bran Muffins k (Makes 6 Muffins) V* cup sifted flour 3— I'4 teaspoons double-acting baking powder 4, teaspoon salt I ? tablespoons sugar 1 egg. well beaten S cup milk I’4 t« hjespoons melted shortening cup raisiu bran Sift flour once, measure, add bakjnf powder, salt and sugar: sift again Combine egg and milk and add to flaur mixture Add shortening. then mix only enough to dampen flour Fold in raisin bran. Turn into greased muffin pans, filling them %.full. Bake in a hot 1425'F.) oven 25 minutes. Ftake Gems (Makes 13 muffins) I cup sifted flour 4 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspoon salt 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 egg h cup milk 4 tablespoons melted fat 2 cups corn flakes or wheat flakes
LYNN SAYS: AM Variety To Breakfast Dried fruits, cut and added to any of the cooked cereals, then served with brown sugar and rich milk picvide an interesting dish. Cinnamon toast made this way w -delicious: toast and buttes bread, then sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon and broil until bubbly. For maple toast, make as cinnamon toast, substituting shavings of inaple sugar for cinnamon-sugar mixture; broil. A good way to reheat cooked cereal is to place the cereal in top of the double boiler, add water and cover. Do not stir until cereal is Serve reheated cereal with a different kind of fruit for variety. Never waste leftover cereals. Mold and chill them, fry and serve with apple rings and sausages. Many of the cooked cereals may be used in muffins or hot breads. If the family likes Jams and jellies, have several colorful bowls of them on the breakfast table.
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL
LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Breakfast Orange Juice Cooked farina with raisins Honey Juchen Butter Beverage Recipe Given Sift together flour, sugar, salt \and baking powder. Beat egg until Tight, add milk then stir in dry ingredients. being careful not to overmix. Add slightly cooled fat and stir just enough to mix ingredients. Carefully fold in com flakes. Fill greased muffin pans, 2 inches in diameter, ’3 full. Bake in a moderately hot (400 F.) oven about 20 to 25 minutes. Honey Kuchen (Makes 1 square) Topping:. % cup brown sugar J 4 teaspoon cinnamon J 4 teaspoon nutmeg ' 2 tablespoons butter H cup bran or wheat flakes Kuchen: s i cup sifted flour 2’4 teaspoons baking powder Vt teaspoon salt 14 cup milk W cup honey 1 egg 3 tablespoons melted fat 1H cups bran or wheat flakes Sift together flpur. baking powder salt. Combine milk, honey wellbeaten egg and add to flour mixture. Add fat mixing only enough to combine. Fold in flakes. Place into a greased pan 8 x Bx 2 inches. Sprinkle topping over batter. Bake in a moderately hot (400 3 F.) oven 25 minutes. • • * ANOTHER WAY to include cereal in the menu is to cook, chill and fry it. This may be served with fruit or breakfast meat, or with syrup. It’s a hearty, tasty dish. Fried Wheat-Meal (Serves «) H teaspoon salt 2% cup boiling water % cup wheat meal Add salt to boiling water in the! saucepan. Add cereal slowly, stirring constantly. Bring to a boil and cook 3’ minutes, stirring constantly. Pk»ur into cold, wet mold. Let stand cvernight. or until cold and firm. Turn from pap. Slice into %-inch slices and in a small amount of fat. turning to brown both sides. Serve with Jmaple-flavored syrup. < Leftover cooked wheat-meal may be used in this way.) j Fried Wbeat-Meal with Fruit: Add h cup seedless raisins, chopped dates or chopped figs to the cooked cereal before turning into mold i f Fried Wheat-Meal with Apples: Add cup apples, peeled and cut in *4-inch pieces to cooked wheatmeal before turning into mold. Either of the above are excellent when served with sausaiges. prepared this way: lay pork\ patties or links in a cold frying pan and fry slowly for 12-15 minutes, tuning occasionally with 2 forks or’ a spatula.- being careful not to puncture the casing. Pour off fat as it accumulates. Serve the fat for seasoning vegetables, frying eggs, potatoes, French toast or for making s; uces of gravies. Released by WNU Features. Orange toast is a delightful variation to serve for breakfast. To make it, toast and butter bread, then spread with a mixture ol sugar and grated, orange rind .which has been moistened with orange juice. / Never stack toast as it win : become soggy and lose its fresh, crisp texture. Make toast as needed end cut in triangles or fingers to make it more interesting. Adding several teaspoons of honey or molasses to cereal while coefcihg will make the flavor more interesting. Flaked cereals are delicious if heated in a shallow pan, dotte<L««ntb butter and sprinkled with sugar. Heat in a moderate oven for just a few minutes and serve at once. Two or three varieties _of ready-to-eat cereals may be combined in a single dish for interest in texture and flavor. Maple feonejL- syrup (which now comes in honey as well as sorghum flavor), molasses, fruit, juices, preserves and jelly may all be served on cereal in place of sugar.
wl—- — Mark 3:1—3:«. DEVOTIONAL READING: Luka 11: 3MS. i —— . Inevitable Critics Lesson for February 13, 1949 J UPON a time, so the old |V. story goes, there was a chaI meleon, a lizard that can change its color to match whatever it stands on. They put him
Dr. Foreman
on a black cloth and he turned black; on a red tablecloth and he turned red; on a green billiard table and he turned green. Then some mean person set him down on a Christmas necktie —and the poor little
I thing exploded. This is a parable of ‘the person who tries to please everybody. It can’t be done—and it 'ought not to be tried. "Woe unto you."' said Jesus, "when all men speak well ot you.” Jesus Christ himself did not please every one. Not even a perfect personality can be 100 per cent popular. Not that Jesus enjoyed rubbing people the wrong way. There was nothing perverse about him. He was deeply, sincerely friendly, and to lose any friendships must have been more painful for him than for us who are so selfish. Nevertheless he did make enemies, he had his critics; and his followers may expect no better. • • • Misunderstanding Motives ONE POINT on which Jesus met terrific opposition was his attitude toward the Sabbath. Repeatedly he or his disciples would do things on the Sabbath which (as Jews then understood the law) were quite wrong. It was just that sort of thing that Jesus ran into, more than once. • His enemies misunderstood, or at least misrepresented, his motives. They claimed that he was “blasphemous,” that is. that he was deliberately making light of, God’s law. The truth was that he was acting by God’s highest law—the law of love. Helping people in need was more important than keeping the letter of the Sabbath law. Jesus’ example may help us here. If our best motives are misunderstood, we have a right to explain ourselves, as Jesus did; but we are not obliged to change our ways to please those who persist in misunderstanding us. .• • • Stepping Ont of Bounds WHEN Jesus healed the man with the palsy, it was not the cure his critics found fault with, it was his first saying “Your sins are forgiven.” “Who can forgive sins but God alone?” they said. In short, the Pharisees thought — some of them perhaps sincerely—that Jesus was stepping out of bounds, pretending to do something that he had no right to attempt and no power to accomplish. Now Jesus did have both the right and the power to say what he said to that sick and sinful man. And he made no apologies for going beyond the limits his critics set for him. So we too may sometimes be ac- j cused of ’’biting off too much.” of going beyond our powers or capacities. Our critics may be right, you know, though Jesus’ critics never were. But how often they are wrong! If Lincoln had listened to his critics he never would have left his backwoods law office; they did not U)ipk him fit to be president •If the Wright boys had listened to their neighbors, they never would have flown an airplane, for who would have thought a couple of bicycle mechanics could do what so many scientists said was impossiI ble? Are you sure you are right? Then go ahead, in God’s name! • • • - - < The Company You Keep JESUS’ friends got him into trouble. as Mark shows As. For one thing, some were the “wrong sort” ihke Matthew the tax-collector. Then | his friends had an unconventional kind of religion, they actuallyseemed happy about it instead of g’oomy like some of John’s disciipies. And to make matters worse. . his friends "broke” the Sabbath ; laws much as Jesus did. All in,all [ Jesus' critics complained that Jsus' i friends were a bad lot, and/they judged him l)y the company he kept. But Jesus knew his friends better tharTbis enemies did. He never gave up or lllHnri , a single friendship on his critics* account Some of his friends gave him up, but he never gave them up. ' (CbpjTtglft by the International Council of Religious Education oa behalf of 40 Protestant denomination*. . Released by WNU Features ) ORDINARY PEOPLE COUNT Democracy is based on the coi> victian that there a*e extraordinary possibilities in ordinary people.— H. E. Foadick,. The generation that cannot learn from the past will never understand the future. People who give ad'dee free!;, are apt. to reluc’?n- l.' ->toy L. Smith.
You Build It Children Will Love This Wogon
LJ ERF is a gift idea that appeals ** to everyone. It’s a circus wagon plant holder that makes a delightful center piece for the table. Ivy and other small potted plants thrive in this gaily decorated circus wagon. If there is a child in the family, forget its use as a center piece and make several wagons to form a circus. Youngsters love to cage their wild animals and move them about The full size pattern offered below offers a quick and easy method of building. No special tools or skill are required. User merely traces the pattern on the wood pattern specifies, saws and assembles. To insure painting with a proses-
Why Red Star S&UL-ACnie Diy Yeast ® ves yOH -II best results 1 ■ails TEA. BETTE A W M . ted ■( THE INSTANT YOU ADO ) ■ ' HTAAMINATEA. s' If you haven’t tried Red Star special active / Dry Yeast, get a supply today. You’ll find ▼ K! that Red Star will save time in all your l recipes. And, as for flavor and texture of baked goods made with Red Star, just let your family be the judge. RID STAR TEAST A PRODUCTS COMPANY, MILWAUKH 1, WIS. 1 ■M I*l LEARNED * 3O ? I ’ VE - I = reRyEARs -- 1 I I 30-DAYTEST— V* M,tP ~ ™ Ar I I is great: I I F In a recent test of hundreds of people who smoked only Camels for 30 I H 4 noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported I ■ /not one single case of throat irritation W due t 0 «"<*“« CAMELS g J t -- —MMMWMM3MHIIIBMINUN■■■■«—I■■MMWi>—■ >'■—«"■■■■■■■■•" 1 He's your next door neighbor, a B i friend who depends on your supI port - just as you depend on his. - -'' 'l'-'® < I So whenever you go shopping, be ■ y i sure to shop at home. It’s your | i guarantee of quality merchandise " at prices that are RIGHT!
sional touch, full size decorating outlines are provided. These are traced on the wood and painted the colors pattern suggests. Pattern specifies using small pieces of wood that can be purchased at any lumber yard. ... Send 25c for Circus Wagon Pattern No. 46 to East-Bild Pattern Company, Dept. W. Pleasantville. N. Y. No Longer Constipated 'Since I made all-bran my breaklast cereal I’ve stopped taking laxatives!”—Mn. V. Dtßonis, Philadelphia, Pa. If your diet lacks bulk for normal elimination, this r ” delicious cereal »' will suppy it. Eat an ounce every day in milk—and drink plenty of W water. If not sat- w isfied after 10 days, send the empty carton to the Kellogg t~!n, Battle Creek, Mich., and get DOUBLB YOUR MONEY BACK. Order all-bran today.
ThisHome-Mixed Cough Syrup b Most Effective Coagh medicines uauaUjUaontain a terye quantity of plain syrw—a good mgredienL but one wiaiett you can easily make at home. Take 2 cups of granulated sugar and 1 cup of water, and stir a few moments until dissolved. Or use corn syrup or liquid honey, instead of sugar syrup. Then get from any druggist 2% ounces of Pinex, .pour it into a pint < bottle, and fill up with your syrup. This gives you a full pint of wonderful medicine for coughs due to colds. It - makes a real saving because it gives you about four times as much for your money. Never spoils. Tastes fine. This is actually a surprisingly effective, quick-acting cough relief. Swiftly, you feel it taking hold. It loosens the phlegm, soothes the irritated membranes and makes breathing easy. You’ve never seen anything better for quick and pleasing results. Pinex is a special compound of proven ingredients, in concentrated form, a most reliable soothing agent for throat and bronchial Irritations. Money refunded if it doesn't please you in every way. Pinex Is Dependable! J withCop-Brwlufwm. k UKKHbUtEr wM * \ FUTHEFWinfo chirlir-
