The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 6, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 June 1929 — Page 6

We have it! j Tfie new Oil-Burning | (Refrigerator — for s rural homes 4 A Let us show you SUPERFEX, the astonishing new oil-burning Refrigerator the greatest con- 4 venience of the age for the rural home. 3 Let us demonstrate how .t keeps all food cold — •’ dean — PURE! Delicious frozen desserts, too, and sparkling ice cubes for cold beverages any time. 4 Year around “Refrigeration from Oil Heat*’—the 4 most economical household refrigeration ever 4 known. No electricity—lo gas—just 1c to 3c I worth of kerosene a day- And a host of new and delightful dishes available from its use. SUPKK- 4 FEX will prove a revelati hi. Come in and see it work. 4 Superfex is made by ** 3 the Perfection Stove Company in a number (SWSiljl A of styles, sizes and 4 prices. Exactly the aw 3 one you require for | I | £ ;i your home. Convenient | L jf terms arranged if you Ik | w B wish- 'WisiiF i I* •We are anxious to in- X I 11 troduce SUPERFEX to 4 you. May we do it J > soon? 4 Osborn & Son i

Indiana Weekly Industrial Review So. Milford —Church of Christ dedicated. 05g00d—5277,666 contract is awarded for paving 14.5 miles State Highway No. 29 ‘ north of here within 3 miles of Greensburg. Construction started on University of Notre Dame’s $35,000 law school building at So. Bend. New building erected for the Krompp Lumber Co., of Jasper. Indianapolis—New addition is built to L. S. Ayers Co. ’ Goshen —Numerous street improvement projects under way here. Argos—Modern building will be erected here for garment factory. New Nussbaum Novelty factory building completed, Berne. Jennings County Farm Bureau Association of North Vernon incorporated. Decatur —Contract will soon be awarded for remodeling court rooms in Adams County courthouse. Producing oil wells drilled in on farm near Clark Creek. State Highway No. 10 to be

REFRIGERATION rW efficiency ®

By KATHERINE G. CORNELL Director of the Kelvinator Domestic Institute iIRST plan your work, then r-< work your plan,” said s'-me wise person. And his advice is good in every undertaking, whether it be the building of a battle ship or the correct use of an electric refrigerator. A working understanding of the mechanics of the refrigerator wiil make it a much simpler matter to get the very best results. First, one should learn all one can of its construction, and study its insulation to see whether it may easily be kept clean and immaculate; whether its doors close securely and quietly, and whether the corners in the food chambers arerounded so that no bits of food or unpleasant odors may be harbored there. Dry Cold Air Best The type of atmosphere and the temperature of the inside of the refrigerator are of tremendous importance also. A dry-cold atmosphere is preferable to a moist-cold atmosphere, for the reason that moist air, unless it is very cold (45 to 50 degrees F.) will engender mold; and mold is the first step toward the formation of bacteria and decay. Delicate berries; fragile, green vegetables; meat, milk, and eggs all require dry-cold air for their safe-keeping. Cooked foods also require the dry-cold atmosphere of the electric refrigerator if they are to retain their nutritional qualities and their flavors. , , . . . Proper storing of foods is the next step toward complete refrigerator efficiency. And when we remember that cold air drops, while warm air rises, we have the

oiled from Kersey ? to Argos. North Judson—Eatmore confectionary remodeled. Plans under way for erection of Aurora’s new- school buliding. Hoagland Hoagland road will be improved from here to intersection with state highway No. 27. Jeffersonville — Miller-Jones Shoe store established store on Spring Street. New Albany—Contract awarded for East End sewer projetc. Approximately $3,475 to be expended for improving Shadyside Park in Anderson. Ft. Wayne —Extensive street paving work under way in this city. North Manchester — Cornerstone laid for Thomas R. Marshall school building. Plans for Warsaw’s street paving program approved. Indianapolis—s 693 000 bond issue sold to provide funds for the construction of municipal airport. Wolcottville—Home Grocery & Market recently changed hands. Contract will soon be awarded for paving Highway No. 50 from east of Butlerville to N. Vernon. Buliding permits issued in Elkhart during April amounted to $84,339. Anderson —Construction of a

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key to the entire situation. Therefore, all the more perishable products such as milk, butter, meat, milk desserts, and soups should be placed on the lowest shelf. Remove the wrapping paper from the meat and place it in a covered container. Keep butter and milk also in covered receptacles. On the next to the bottom shelf store cooked foods and the leftovers, always closely covered. Also the fruit desserts that are being chilled or congealed. Fish on Top Shelf Lettuce, celery, and other fragile vegetables; the salad dressing, eggs, etc., come next. And on the highest shelf should be placed the cheese, fruit, melons, fish and any strongly flavored food. Store berries, cherries and simi-

PRESSURE COOKER BRINGS OUT BEST IN VEGETABLES p •! ' -jiml I ''Wl • T I A- 1 ®®'W ' ’W 3 % VME’ .... . □KF \p

Your doctor will tell you that most too much meat ami that no family is the worse for an occasional dinner without any meat. A vegetarian dinner can be inexpensive, appetizing and extremely nutritious, and very little work to the housewife if it is cooked in a pressure cooker. By using a pressure cooker, the full, delicate flavor of the vegetables is retained, none of the valuable vitamines of mineral salts is destroyed because of quick cooking. An entire dinner can thus be cooked over a single burner, which is a saving in fuel, as well as in dishes to be washed. Also, it is a great saving in time, because owing to the high pressure at which it is cooked, only twelve minutes’ time is required. A good combination for such a meal is boiled potatoes, buttered carrots, spinach and custard, all cooked in the pressure cooker, with bread and but- (©. National School of

USE KITCHEN UTENSIL TO STERILIZE BABY’S BOTTLES

The baby has all he can do to keep growing and developing, without having to fight disease all the time. For this reason everything with which he comes in contact must be thoroughly sterilized, especially as regards his food, says the National School of Pressure Cooking. If this seems like a great deal of unnecessary bother, remember that caring for a sickly, puny, fretful baby Is far more trouble than taking precautions to keep him healthy. As a matter of fact, however, it Is no great nuisance to sterilize baby’s bottles and food utensils if you will make use of the same pressure cooker which you have perhaps learned to use in canning fruits and in cooking entire meals for the family. As a sterilizer alone, the pressure cooker would really justify its place on your kitchen stove. Simply put one cup of water In the bottom, then arrange the utensils, which of course are first carefully washed and rinsed. The bottles go in firsv, lying flat on the bottom of the rack, then fit In benew Federal Building progressing rapidly. - Contract of $209,426 awarded

lar fruits in ventilated containers; and do not wash them until just before using them. Wrap pie dough or cookie dough in waxed paper and place on the top shelf of the refrigerator all ready to roll oat when needed. Air Circulation Important • It is well to leave a space between the food containers and the walls of the refrigerator to allow free circulation of air. It is the circulation of cold air in the refrigerator that preserves food. You will save electric current in operating the refrigerator by opening the door into the food chamber only -when necessary. Get all the foods ready to place on the shelves at one time; and when preparing a meal, take out the butter, milk, salad and fruit at one opening of the refrigerator door.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

ter and cheese and possibly a plate of raw apples to finish off with, none of which requires any preparation. If the potatoes are small and new, scrub them well but do not’ pare them. Likewise, scrub the carrots thoroughly, but do not scrape them. Cut them in slices or dice. Put the potatoes and carrots together in the inset dish of the cooker on at the bottom. To prepare the spinach, wash it well and shake off the water. Season to taste. Place it in another inset dishf •she recipe for the custard is: 8 slightly beaten eggs, 2 cups of sweet milk, 3 tablespoonsful of sugar, l,teaspoonful of vanilla and a pinch of salt. Place in the inset dish next to the potatoes and carrots. Then place the dish with the spinach above it. Fill the cooker with warm water up to the rack before putting in the dishes. Cook 12 minutes at 15 pounds’ pressure, and your dinner is ready. if Pressure Cooking).

tween the small jar containing the nipples and its lid which holds the corks for the hotties. Then add the funnel, spoon and any remaining bottles' and finally, turned upside down over them, the inset dish of the cooker, used for heating the milk. Next clamp down the cover and place the cooker over the fire with the petcock open. When steam comes from the petcock, close it, and as soon as the pressure gauge indicates 13 keep the fire low enough to maintain this pressure for five minutes. Then remove from fire, open petcock to let ■out the steam. Pour the milk In the pan and prepare according to your formula. By the time this is finished, the bottles will still be very hot, especially if the top has been put on the cooker again. Fill them and cork them as well as the empty bottles. Put the top on tile nipple jar and now the business of preparing baby’s food for the day is finished. All that remains to be done is to fix the orange, prune of tomato juice or whatever the doctot has ordered.

for paving 7.5 miles of Highway No. 52 between Metamore and Brookville. Ft. Wayne—sloo,ooo station recently completed for Select Tire and Service, Inc. Indianapolis & Southeastern Railroad Co. inaugurated motor freight transportation service between Greensburg and Batesville. Kraft-Phonix Corp, will spend more than $6,000 for installation of additional equipment at Sullivan cheese factory. Ft. Wayne—Contracts let for construction of $75,000 addition to Anthony Wayne Motor Car Co. building. Huntingburg — Sound equipment installed at Gem Theater. Many factories in Anderson operating at capacity. Palmyra—Urban Kepley road to be improved. Building permits issued in LaFayette during April totaled $122,900. o DIPROVE SECONDARY ROADS The vast sums of money col* lected from automobile licenses, gasoline taxes and bond issues for road construction, have been spent largely for building trunk highways. The result has been great development along these roads, towns have built up and property values have increased out of all proportion to the growth that has been enjoyed by communities lying back from the main highways. ( Smaller places on the trunk roads have been almost entirely wiped out of existence and the farms which are left off the main routes have not improved in value. It is estimated that 74 per cent, of rural mail deliveries are on more or less unimproved roads. Our system of building main

highways has been to parallel railroads rather than to strike off through the country. Thus we have added to traffic congestion in centers which are already badly congested. It is time to broaden our highway program and improve rural, or secondary roads which rfeach country not now developed as it should be. A farmer may haul one or two loads a day to town over a mud road. If this road was improved to an extent sufficient to serve rural needs, he could probably make five trips or more a day with a bigger load. It has been found that with expenditures from SISOO to SSOOO a mile, roads which are now liability can be turned into an asset of inestimable value. This has been proved in many states by the judicious use of gravel, crushed rock, oil and asphaltic materials. A definite program should be adopted to improve five to ten miles of secondary roads for every mile of trunk highway in the majority of our states. o NONSHATTERABLE GLASS The type of nonshattcrable glass used in windshields and windows of automobiles consists of three layers. The two outside layers are plate or sheet gflass. The middle layer is a transparent sheet of cellulose material, like celluloid, which may, in fact, also be used, iwo pieces of glass and one piece of this material are first cut to the exact size and shape of the desired windshield or window. This must be done with care, because after it is finished it cannot be cut or altered in size. The three layers are laid together and put through 17 different processes, including elaborate chemical cleaning, pressing between huge presses (which exert many tons’ pressure on each piece of glass), heating, grinding, polishing and sealing. The three laminations become so closely weeded together that they are actually one piece. In thickness it is the same as ordinary glass. o — SING SING Sing Sing is a famous New York state prison located at Ossining, ‘a town on the Hudson river about 30 miles north of New York city, says the Kans? s : City Times. The town itself was originally also called Sing Sing, supposedly from the Sing Sing or Sint-sink tribe of Indians who once lived in that vicinity. In 1901 the name of the town was changed to Ossining, the old name having become objectionable to the inhabitants because of its popular association with the penitentiary. “Ossining” is merely a different form of “Sing Sing”, both words being corruptions of the Delaware Indian word “assinesink,” literally meaning “at the small stone.” There is nothing to the popular story that Sing Sing was named after a friendly Indian whom the whites called John Sing Sing, READ ALL THE ADS

Just another good thing added to the other good things of life Qamel CIGARETTES WHY CAMELS , ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE ' Camels contain such tobaccos and such 1 A blending as have never been offered in S aK y ot ber cigarette. M They are made of the choicest Turkish and tT iO f CeSSrOWn - . ... Y V ** \ Camels are always smooth and mtld. VM \ Camel quality is jealously maintained . A -v world’s largest organization of 1 expert tobacco men ... it never varies. •A i W Smoke Camels as liberally as you choose. .. I A they will never tire your taste. Nor do they ever leave an unpleasant after-taste. " © 1929, R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.

Weekend Specials OILS 5 Gal. Polarine $2.95 5 Gal. Iso-Vis, $3.95 TIRES 29x4.40 Goodyear $6.54 30 x 3 2 Goodyear Reg. $5.33 30x3 2 Goodyear (Oversize) $5.77 Syracuse Auto Sales

RADIO Doctor SERVICE AND SI PI’LIHS All Guaranteed Owen R. Strieby Phone 845 Syracuse, Indiana. If every family in this vicinity would have the Journal come ; nto their home each week it would help us to enlarge the use fulness of the paper. Be sure to hand in your news items each week. O. It. Bigler E. A. Steinmetz Goshen Auto Top & Trimming Co. Wrecked Auto Bodies. Fenders. Frames, Tops and Doors Repaired New woodwork replaced on all Coupes and Sedans —Expert Radiator Repairing— TOPS. CURTAINS, CUSHIONS and all kinds of trim work a specialty Plate glass for windshields and Doors cut and ground to Fit All Cars Best equipment. Mechanics and prices in Northern Indiana All Work Guaranteed! Authorized Harrison Radiator Service TELEPHONE-4-3-8 GOSHEN, INDIANA Cor. Third and Washington St.

PIANO TUNING and REPAIRING CALI, PHONE 107 All Work Guaranteed! G. W. Wyatt TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Room 30, Hawks-Gortner Bldg. TREASURED FOR ALL TIMES— The bride’s photograph, and all the wedding party. Portraits in your own home, or in our studio. The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN, INDIANA Walter E. Sloan Painting Contractor Outside and Inside Painting Get my pt ices before you let your paint job. Syracuse, Indiana. CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardhoard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office.