The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 September 1928 — Page 5
PICTORIAL LIFE OF HERBERT HOOVER No. 10 . By Satterfield . ’ ■ t
1. After their romantic years in China the Hoover® settled down In America with their two boys. ■•ill ' L ' Wtf MW s V' 7/KZ . |i l |, i UWhSF-- , I ■ -'III — H 7/4W UA* WHfi— r—- — nun HI i\ // "lid ii h * 'Hl h- V //-< mF mil xIJ \E >—\ 8. His leisure time was spent in scientific experiment in his own private laboratory* • * 1 ■ ii —-■» «. _. » — _.«»—. -* ~
PICTORIAL LIFE OF HERBERT HOOVER No. 11 By Satterfield ’ A _____
lf\ n Ly/ / H ** 1. In Europe on an official mission in 1914, Hoover was farmed at the international hatreds that he saw* wflp 3. Then arose the call of the refugees. Hoover stepped into the breach to handle this relief operation.
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i TrnTr ■ (o) n 2. During this period, Hoover made extensive contributions to the scientific literature of engineering. ~ WSainni -jßnßshy Z 4. Camp life was his vacation hobby. He is the only man who can poach an egg on the end of a stick.
liff f l|i 1/1 -EM I ' i . l< I l/wx f sx .saHHSfer £ I Y _ r—> 2. War came, with 200,000 Americans stranded in Europe. Hoover took the emergency job of helping them. 5 VAVE- n“V —■' 4. The invasion of Belgium stirred his sympathy and imagination. He felt that fate had called him.
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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
STOCKING THE BUNGALOW I —" 7 x F~ i ~ zj MMH: b» mmmnin»»
’? will get me away to the waters that glass the clouds as they pass. i will get me away to the woods.” Yjf OW often have we all felt the Jrl nostalgia of which Hovey "* spoke in this verse — and v*at rapture it is to gratify it. Th oughts <>i the little house in the woods with the “Meadows trim with daisies pied, Shallow brooks and rivers wide,” will nurry us off o our vacation as soon as possible. But no matter what else is purhased. there is always one need that receives earnest attention: the food. No longer does the person who goes to the woods for his vacation expect to live on bacon and flour and sugar and coffee- To be . sure, he takes those essentials along, and in generous quantities, but to them he adds canned foods which relieve him of any necessity • of trips to town for supplies. Os all the canned foods which are used in summer camps, milk, | either dried, evaporated pr condensed. has worked the greatest revolution. With its aid delicious biscuits, flapjacks, soups, gravies — even cake if you are skilled — can be concocted in the woods. Com--4 Mete directions for using the milk *e given on the labels or can be
II S II grsTjftAN/T**y IswwllSk < ’ KH The Court of Last Resort H
H The court of last resort in business Sggffijl is the public. Their decision is final, nrall the public places its approval on BUtSI a product, accepts it, and buys it BliW * n i ncreas * n g numbers, there are K.wiK good reasons for it. BNrl And if this happens in a highly Illa II competitive field like the automoBhdfl bile, then there are special reasons HJIK for gratification. Bviffl Durant Motors is experiencing this nil 0 ver y t hi n g> a °d w ' e want the world to know about it. Bli 0 starte d with a modest proMlxffi duction in January—the month of motor shows, and with each showVllfl ing the demand increased, until MgM[ the country gained the knowledge ■|f I { that the Durant new models were worthy of public interest. ■isl And this is what happened during Elin the year: During the first six months of 192.8 ■ilffi the ent * rc automotive industry—■SdH motor cars and motor trucks—pro- ■ JI ■ duced 6.4 per cent more units than in the same period of last year. BWI During this same period of time ■IIB Durant Motors produced 49.9 per cent more cars and trucks tnan in ■l|V the same period of last year, ■h&fl The industry as a whole produced ■ll ■ 131,906 more cars and trucks during the first six months of 1918 ■VI than in the same period of 1917. Kill Durant Motors alone produced 13,000 more cars and trucks durkSl ing the first six months than
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obtained from the manufacturers before going to camp. If the amount of baggage you can take is limited, you will doubt- ; less choose for your vegetables, 1 peas, corn, tomatoes, and beans. With those on hand you can provide a great variety of djshes. For instance, the bean# and corn mixed < together will provide succotash. Corn with tomato sauce is another i variation. 1 And Fancy Touches, Too! 1 But if you have more space, there arc many little refinements that will add a lot to camp life; for instance, asparagus, beets, sauerkraut, sweet potatoes. Peaches, pears, apricots, and pineapple head the list of fruits, for they are popular and. like the leading vegetables, can appear in many guises. Sometime when you have caught a fine tness of fish, try dipping circles of pineapple in fl<?ur and then frying them in the fish' fat and serving them with the fish. The combination is both new and delicious. Or with roast wild game, you -might serve pears. Lay them op the fowl about fifteen minutes before it is done, in order that they may heat through and impart sopre of their flavor to. the fowl. Apples (including apple sauce), cherries. I and plums are delicious additions.
-It may sound rather like carrying coals to Newcastle to suggest that it is desirable to take along at least a few cans of meat and fish to the camp, but after ail there are days when the fish won’t bite and the game stays hidden. It is then that the cans of salmon or tuna, eod fish, or elams will wear the air of life-savers. Did you ever realize what a wide variety in canned meats can be obtained? Os course you know sliced bacon comes in cans, and you probably know of chicken, tongue,, and stewed kidneys. Many “Meal»” in C«n> But did you realize that Irish stew, hash, sausage, liver with bacon or onions, veal loaf, and beef prepared in five different ways are all obtainable? Then there are the entrees such as goulash Hungarian style, chicken curry, chicken a la King, chop suey. and others. Wouldn’t it be amusing to sit down to a dinner of exotic chop, suey in the midst of the woods? It is just as well to take a few prepared desserts along, too. Fruit cake, plum pudding, fig puddings are all put up in cans.. And of ’ I course fruit butters, jams and jellies are easv to transport and are econom’cal. Pickles of various kinds should be remembered, too. i
in the same period of last year. Durant Motors alone scored a gain of 17 per cent of the increased HEK production of the entire industry HKEH Returnsfrom the forty-eight states ■! |fß| of the Union show that Durant Kill gained 10.5 percent in registrations during the first six months of 1918 mllj| over the same period of last year. Durant Motors is growing seven ■■■ times as fast as the automotive O|S2|H industry itself. We appreciate this BIN increased public confidence. In the next few days we are going to |VI make a newspaper announcement KAK relative to new Durant models. They will appeal to the public KIIK strongly for these new cars possess ■ml the features the careful buyer ■lll wants, and expects in his car today The public will be given a new ■'IN conception of motor car value. KIBK Your motor dollar will buy more • Ijfß than ever before in the size of car, K||l in beauty of body design,in power, in appointments, in speed, in dur- ■ H K ability and accessibility, and all up- I3SI to-the-minute features. WIFI And this statement is made with a fullappreciation of what is goingon lErH in the entire automobile industry Kill The name“ Durant” will continue to stand for those principles in motor ■ II ■ car designing, engineering, build- |S|| ing and in the selling of popular ■ ||l priced automobiles to justify an ever-increasing demand from the public. IM
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