The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 July 1931 — Page 2
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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
The Home Censor . • 1 ' . I Il .{EVj't**'" IP O iw IPOMTPEIItveiOM Htil WANTING ME. ,p—A: • SHOULD SEE This TO CUT WE LAWN -y _J - ORSOMTHIN6 4 MT W P. I \ It ; 1A J s \ _ If {tSSripit. w c.) / »U I -IF LmJ i ’ . ’ ~
oqoooooooocooooocooocoQyp I <The Kitchen § Cabinet 06000000000000000000000000 (©. 1931. Western Newspaper Union.) To hear the call of the thrushes some late green plush afternoon, When broken, fading shafts of light go groping for the one last sight of songsters In the gloom. To swing along a rugged trail that spruce and hemlocks climb. ZTIII on the hill's high top you come to stand exalted in the sunl Ah, this is summer time. —Beulah Rector. FOOD FOR THE FUSSY There are grown-ups who are fussy j about their food, but sometimes they Bare hopeless; however I with children a firm hand 'I and eternal vigilance will I accomplish wonders. ChilJ dren are naturally imaginative and keenly enjoy j I a fairy tale, no matter J what it is about. Why o ,*s not use this method In teaching him to eat the things he should. Every ' woman should be a good istory teller, ’ able to picture interesting tilings out of the ordinary. With really ill peo--1 pie in bed, one may use about the ' same story for even grown ups, they get pleasure out of the things that the child will, if presented in a whimsical manner. A dish of floating island, sb good for children who will not eat custards and refuse milk, may be presented in ' a glass dish with the cooked white of I eggs on top. It may be a treasure 1 island, an iceberg with a “nut” to be rescued or a raisin will dp. If It is not real enough make legs and arms of cloves, a head of a large clove. The rescuer will eat his way to being a hero. Floating Island.—This old fashioned i dish of our grandmother’s day will 1 never go out of style, for it is so ■ wholesome and good as well as pretty. I To prepare the custard take three egg yolks, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, a j pinch of salt, one and one-half cupfuls of scalded milk and when cooked until it coats the spoon add one-half teaspoonful of vanilla to flavor. For the island, beat the whites of the eggs until stiff, add four of sugar and drop by spoonfuls on hot water in a shallow pan; Cook until firm or set in the oven to brown. Remove the islands to the custard, chill ' and serve. Our grandmothers used to I cook the egg white on top of the cusi tard while It was cooking, thus they 1 conserved time and heat. "HlLCa< Credits Lower Animals With Power of Thought Os all the questions asked of the I animal-man, the one which is often- ,■ est repeated is this: “Do animals really think?” The answer, according 1 to Sherman Horne, famous son of a ! father famous in the animal business, i is an emphatic “yes." Wild animals do n«|t merely imitate- \ or act by instinct, he insists. ‘'They 1 have brains, and they use them,” he writes in the American Magazine. “The chimpanzee is ’ the greatest thinker of all, closely seconded by the other man-apes—the orang-utan and the gibbon. In third place I would put the elephant. * “But keep in mind that I am speaking only of wild animals. A good dog is pretty hard to beat. “Apes possess a surprising ability ! to learn the meaning of words,. The 1 elephant’s- mind is also very keen ;• he ; can be trained to do almost any kind 1 of work within reason, and he will think for himself, too.” Rice Mo»t Important Food Rice is the principal food of more than one-third of the entire population of the world, find is the most extensively cultivated of grains. Workers of the American rubber plantations in Liberia eat It, along with the coolies of Japan and China, the Kaffirs of the South African diamond i mines and the head hunters of Fiji. The League of Nations’ statistical I survey of what is what in foodstuffs indorses the United States system of rice grading as being a desirable ! method to follow, explaining that ex- ' port rice from that source is invariI ably accompanied by certificate of in--1 spection as evidence of quality delivered. A million packets of rice are : yearly exported under this provision. Horseshoe Superstition Silversmiths, goldsmiths, coppersmiths and blacksmiths have always been held in a sort of mysterious renown. Their work of welding and shaping had a good deal of mystery in it which ministered 'to superstition. Some relics of this superstition made much of smiths, and their work, especially of their horseshoes in later times. Portugal’s Downfall . Portugal first lost her hold on the colonies about 1580, because of difficulties in the home country. Some of the colonies were recovered in 1640, but because of political troubles Portuguese colonial history since then has not been important. “Goose Flesh” The contraction of the erector muscles of the superficial hairs—goose ‘flesh—is Induced by cold, fear, and other exciting causes. Swiss Citizenship Outsiders are rarely admitted to citizenship in Swiss communes, this being regarded as a very valuable possession, as some of the communes are wealthy and able to assist their citizens In time of need. Happiness at Home To be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition; The end to which every enterprise and labor tends and of which every desire prompts the prosecution.—Johnson.
