The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 April 1935 — Page 3
THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1935.
Germany Prepares for the 1936 Olympic Games ■ MMMWI IWWIMiIM—I . i - r " —m—i ■ EL j— •** r -JK! F i. / Td jF JI T. 1 11 kbhbhs®
MO HE than half a million spectator* can sit comfortably in this enormous sports arena, the greatest con central ion of stadia, gymnasia, fields and halls ever constructed In one single unit. Nine-tenths of all the activities of the next Olympic games will be centered here. But It will not take more than thirty minutes to fill or empty the great space, with the new transportation facilities created especially for the purpose. The center bowl is the Olympic stadium. On its opposite side, looking In the picture like an open double-winged door. Is the swimming stadium. The large space to the left of the Olympic stadium la the assembly field, serving also as polo grounds. It cover* more than twenty-four acres and accommodates 400.000 participant* and spectators. On Its left side rises th* "Fuehrertunn” (Leader's tower) from which the Olym-
BEDTIME STORY FOR CHILDREN is Dy THORNTON W. BURGESS
DANNY USES HIS WITS Who hesitate* of fear May lots ths th|PK be holds most dear. IT HAPPENS over and over again among human folk* a* well a* among the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadow*. Perhaps It wa* because he had seen It happen more than once that Danny Meadow Mouse acted as quickly as he did. If be had stopped to think about it fear, might have prevented him from doing a* he did and thing* might bare turned out quite differently and not at ail so fortunate. But Danny's wit* are *harp and he ha* learned to use them quickly. There 1* nothing like danger to sharpen one’s wit* and Danny, a* you know is In danger a great part of the time. A* he sat there peeping out of the little hole in the bank of the Smiling Pool where he had sought safety he was surrounded by danger and he knew II It wasn't safe to leave and It wasn't aafe to remain. Could anyone possibly be in worse fix? He was doing hl* best to think of some way out of hit troubles when he saw the Big Pickerel which had .been hiding under some illy pads, swim out tc the middle of the Smiling Pool and there stop close to the surface as if to enjoy the aun. Not two minutes Inter there was a sharp swishing sound in the air. I'anny looked up to see a dark form shooting out of the sky. It was Plunget the Osprey, often called Fish Hawk. His great claws were spread tn seize some one and that some one was the Big Pickerel. With a great *( lash Plunger struck the water and disappeared right where the Big Pickerel had been a second before. Grandfather Frog dived from his big green Illy pad with a Martled "Chugarum Snapper the Turtle
—;— — I MINUTE MAKE-UPS | IVI =By V. V. ) w Hair around the temples and ears la apt to collect cream and powder and should be cleansed between shampoo*. Use a dry shampoo—even cornmeal rubbed on these strands and brushed out briskly srill make the hair look live and shining again. CoprrtaM St Public L*d««r. Ya*.
The Baseball Season Opens 111 ILJMLAW if JJK *r* f .xdSIL LflfluuT jj Vr4 I i j W I £ ’ hqnwv r 7 - fralr Jfc t _» irrsarwiP \ \ 1 * L IHaewomtM^L ■ '' Ik jM I JM 1 1 *** &*** tfeWfcJ k * ys ««*<>■© n - it I J . - . ■ ■ ■ ' .. ~. - . . ’ ■< .
pic bell will ring In the games The oval near the lower left-hand corner, above the railroad cut, is the equestrian stadium. Opposite, in the midst of the wooded section in the upper left-hand corner, is the Dietrich Eckart openair stage. To the right of it, the small round space, Is the dancing arena. At the distant right, there Is a group of gymnasia, pools and training buildings, with the “House of German Sports” and an auditorium for 1.500. On the extreme right, straight over from the big center bowl, are parking spaces for ten thousand automobiles. Just beyond is the hockey stadium. In the lower right-hand corner Is the railroad station “Relchssportfeld." An underground railway station, also called “Reichssportfeld,” Is opposite the hockey stadium. There also are basketball fields, recreation halls and many other parts.
sank from sight. Billy Mink disappeared. Reddy Fox stood up on his hind legs the better to see. With a quick glance up co see that Redtail the Hawk was not watching, Danny darted out of his hiding place and scurried along the bank of the Smiling ‘ Pool towards the Laughing Brook. He knew that for a few minutes the attention of everybody would be fixed on Plunger. He hoped that no one would notice a scared little Meadow Mouse. He heard the water falling from Plunger and the'* beating of his great wings a* he rose in the air, but he didn’t even glance to see If Plunger had caught the Big Pickerel. He simply made those four little legs of his go as fast as they possibly could until he reached a tangle of matted grass, under which he crept, his heart going pit-a-pat. pit a pat, pit-a-pat Not till then did he look back. ©. T. W. Bur****.—WNU Servlc*.
♦ MOTHER’S ♦ COOK BOOK
ITALIAN GOOD THINGS TN ITALY a little child may prepare * the meal for a workman’s table. But for those with more mean* much elaboration Is used. lu recipes using grated cheese the correct mixture is one-third Gruyere and two-thirds Parmesan. Risotto a la Milanaia*. This is a very thick soup which, with the poor, is put on the bread, thus making a substantial meal. For use ar a dinner it should be considerably diluted. Cut up half of a large onion In fine pieces, add butter the size of an egg and fry to a bright brown, add one pound of washed and soaked rice and one quart of bouillon. Cook until the grains arc soft but not crushed. Set the dish aside to keep hot. add one-fourth pound of grated cheese and two ounces of butter. Season with white pepper, salt If needed, and a bit of nutmeg. Egg Entra*. Peel one-fourth of a pound of onions and one-half pound of mushrooms, add a clove of garlic and cut into stripe Fry In three ounces of butter until the onions begin to color. Add a teaspoon of flour, salt, pepper and let that color, then thin with stock to make a sauce, season to taste and simmer half an hour. Cut the white* of six cooke<t eggs Into strips, leaving the yolks whole, add to the sauce and when thoroughly heated, serve. Potag* au Chou. 801 l one-half pound of rice and the heart of firm cabbage in boiling salted water until tender. Drain and chop the cabbage in targe rough pieces. Put back into tn* soup pan with three ounce* of butter, three onion* minced and lightly fried in the butter, add one quart of good soup stock, salt and mixed spice. Boil up for half an hour.
| PAPA KN€)WS~| “Pop, what I* a honeymoon?" “When ignorance I* bliss.** ©. Bell Syndicate— WNU Service, Platinum Fish Hooks Before America’s discovery, metals had no value except for beauty or usefulness. In the Indian world, and fish hooks were sometimes made of platinum or gold.
Set aside and add grated cheese to the soup before serving. Herring or Mackerel a I’ltalienn*. Split and trim, removing the heads and tails of the fish. Let the fish soak four hours in seasoned oil and vine gar. Use salt, pepper, sliced onion, and chopped parsley. Drain and dust them with fiour and fry them in oil. Serve crisp and hot ©. Wastern Newspaper Union. Home of the Redbird The redblrd is found as far North as Massachusetts. Geographical race* of the cardinal extend westward to southern California and Mexico and allied species are found In Mexico and Central America.
Ruler of New Country in an Old Laud *TpHE Emperor Kang Teh of ManchuWEGEH kuo as he n r , l*' arevJ on bls thirtieth r“ birthday, in the imperial palace at Changchum. Manchukuo is the !nde- - I pendent state set up in Manchuria by * I Japan. The state became a monarchy I Jn 1934 when Henry Pu-yi. deposed boy emperor of China, was crowned Em- * peror Kang Teh. It was renamed Ta ' Manchu Tikuo.
THROUGH A \X4>mans Eyes By JEAN NEWTON GETTING YOUR OWN WAY USUALLY ISN’T WORTH THE COST WHEN a wellknown clubwoman spoke recently, on “Making a go of marriage,” she said. “Let neither busband nor wife strive to be the dominating person in the household. A victory for either in this respect means failure for the partnership.** And that Is true. The emptiest victory in the world is the victory of being the boss; and particularly in marriage. Not only does it mean fail ure for the partnership if there is a •‘boss’* —it means the death of love—the kind of love that really counts in daily living. For we can hardly be “in love** with anyone we have to be afraid of. from whom ft is expedient to con real something, someone who by get
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
TO HELEN By ANNE CAMPBELL THE fabric of your friendship never -wears, Nor does it gather dust and pull apart. It falls with tenderness upon the cares That press, when evening comes, upon my heart It is a shawl to keep my shoulders warm When all the world is cold, and chill winds blow. It is protection from the winter storm, And shade In summer from the hot sun's glow. The fabric of your friendship, woven fine With ail the beauty of your lovely thought Embroidered in an Infinite design By wisdom that your garnered years have taught, Is to my life the same as the blue sky To the tired earth—a background that Is sure. When all these lovely years have drifted by, The fabric of your friendship will endure. CoDTrlrht —WNU Sarvle*. " J QUESTION BOX I By ED WYNN... | Th* Perfect Fool Dear Mr. Wynn: I read In the newspapers that the Statue of Liberty’* right hand measures 11% Inchest Is that true and If so why did they mrke it just 11% inches? Yours truly, HUGH GOTTA SHOWME. Answer: Her hand was made 11% Inches long because the sculptor knew that if he made her hand 12 inches long it would have been a foot Dear Mr. Wynn: For years 1 have watched kettles on a stove just to see the steam come out It has always fascinated me and yet I must admit 1 cannot understand what makes it -ome out Please explain to me why the steam comes out of the kettle. Yours truly, L B. DARNED. Answer: The reason steam comes out of a kettle >s simply so a wife can open her husband’s letters without the husband knowing it e h* Associated Newspapers. WNU Service. jgYOU Know— W That in England horseracing has been popular since the Tenth century, when Hugh Capetr in return for the hand of King Athelstan’s sister, sent him a gift of several “German running horses.” McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ' WNU Service. Ancicat Meeting House The "Old Ship’* meeting house of Hingham, Mass..' is one of the oldest religious edifices tn this country. It has been used for worship since 1862.
ting bls or her own way. “puts one over” on us. We can hardly await that person's homecoming with Joy. or In the case of a man. look forward with joy to going home to such a per son. We can’t have that warm feeling which means lor * and affection and pleasure in being In a persons company. If we stop to think about it, that must be obvious to any of us. And yet people don’t stop to think, appar 1 ently. For constantly, around us, we ’ see going on between busbands and ’ wives that struggle to get their own ' way—to be -boss." They do not ■ think of it. so much In terms of being 1 "boss.** of course; they are Just Impelled to get their own way. And ’ they get It—or the one MSJLJb® moßt r dominating temperament and the ’ strongest constitution does. And both .eve. * If people would only stop to think about It. I believe in nine cases out 1 of ten they would conclude that the „ thing in which they got their own way wasn't really worth making such * a fuss about, and was certainly not worth the high price it cost e BMI Syndic*!*—WNXJ S*ry|o*.
SJSJJJJSSSSSJJSSSJSJJJJJ? - ■■■■■■ IMPROVED' UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. ». D, Member of Faculty, Moody Bible Institute ot Chicago. C. Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for April 28 THE HOLY SCRIPTURES LESSON TEXT—II Timothy S:l4-1T; Psalm 19:7-14. GOLDEN TEXT—O how love 1 thy law! It Is my meditation all the day.— Psalm 119:97. PRIMARY TOPIC—The Book God Gave Us. JUNIOR TOPIC—The Book God Gave Us. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—How to Use the Bible. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPlC—lnspiration and Authority of the Bible. I. The Origin or Source (II Tim. 3:16). They are Inspired of God. which literally means “God-breathed.” Peter says “Holy men spake from God. being ■ moved by the Holy Ghost" (II Pet. 1: [ j 21). When Paul declares the Scriptures to be God-breathed, he means : that the utterances resulted from God’s breath in men’s mouths. Because they i are God-breathed they are the veritable words of God. The holy Scriptures not only contain the word of God. but they are in verity the message of God to men. 11. The Value of the Scripture* (H Tim. 3:14-17). L Able to make wise unto salvation (v. 15). Salvation is alone in Christ. It is obtained through faith tn his finished work on the cross. 2. Disciplines the life (vv. 16, 17). It is profitable for doctrine, which Is the divine standard of conduct In the Holy Bible alone is to be found this standard of life. Not only is it the standard of life, but of all thought Then, too. It reproves, that is. confutes error. The way to deal with error Is not denunciation, but the positive presentation of the revealed truth. It also corrects, that Is, sets straight many of the dislocations of personal and social conduct The Word of God is the standard of measurement which sets straight the lives ot moral 'beings. Further, it instructs in righteousness and thoroughly equips the minister for Christian service. The mastery of God’s holy Word Is the indispensable equipment for Christian service. One who lacks this knowledge of the holy Scriptures Is utterly unfit for the Christian ministry, no matter how well trained he may be in other things. 111. The Nature and Effect of God’s Law (Ps. 18:7-11). 1. It Is perfect It is without a flaw. It converts and restores the soul: it turns man back to God himself to lead a life of holiness. It not only converts sinners, but restores the saints to divine fellowship. 2. It is sure. It is absolutely dependable. Man's reasonings change, but God’s Word endures forever. “ God cannot lie. It makes wise the simple. £ Common men and women as to natural gifts become wise even in the rightful ; things of the world, because of their j mastery of the Word of God. 3. It is right. The precepts and judgments of the Lord are expressions of absolute righteousness . because they proceed from the righteous God and are*, therefore, inherently right. 4. It Is pure. There is no admixture of error. There is no compromise with that which is untrue. Because of this. It enlightens the eyes. All that mars the spiritual vision is taken away. Conduct for the Christian is clearly defined. 5. It is clean. This is seen in the effects of the Word of God upon the life. The Individual who is sanctified by it is clean within and without. 6. It Is true and righteous. The decisions of God’s Word are true without exception. The judgments of God's Word are unimpeachable. Because of. these qualities. Gods Word Is more to be desired than the choicest of gold. Obedience thereto brings great reward. IV. The Prayer of the Believer (Ps. 19:12-14). The life brought face to face with God's Word Is seen as sinful. The soul cries out for L Cleansing (v. 12). The perfect law reveals the imperfections of the life. The Word of God reveals sins of which the individual may be Ignorant. 2. To be kept from presumptuous sins. Presumptuous sins are peculiarly dangerous. In the Mosaic economy no sacrifice was provided for such sin* 3. Freedom from the dominion of such sins (v. 13). How awful Is the slavery of those who are in bondage to presumptuous sins. 4. That the words of the mouth and the meditations of the heart be kept In line with (bid's Word (v. 14). From many dangers the believer would be saved if the words and meditations of bis heart were kept In line with the I Scriptures! MEDITATIONS Doe* It strike you that the mischief of our life is really our constant fret- I fulness? Christ would not be diverted from the main issues of life and destiny. He j observed a strict economy in his re- I sources. * • • • That silence is one of the great arts of conversation is allowed by Cicero, who say*, there is not only an art. bnt even an eloquence in it —Hannah More. • • • To live is not to learn, but to apply. —E. Legouve. • • • Against the superiority of another there is remedy but love.—Goethe. •• • . There was no seif-centeredneas in our Saviour's grief. . He wj s the Good Physician even when his body was mangled on the cross. • • • Citizenship, carried out in its highest and fullest sense. Is the authentic. divinely ordained state for man’s present life.
Hot Breads and Fine Cakes - Baking Powder Has Important Part in the Preparation of These Typical American Foods, but It Must Be Employed Wisely.
Hot breads and fine cakes are typical American foods. Modern cook books, magazines and newspapers devote much space to directions for their preparation. Cook books of an olden time, however, furnish few recipes for these dainties because “yeast powder,” as baking.powder was first known, is a comparatively modern invention. In these olden recipes w-e find directions for the use of soda and cream of tartar or vinegar, molasses or sour milk. Modern recipes use the two latter ingredients with soda, but most of them add as well a little baking powder in order to overcome the inconsistency of the varying acids. Baking powders, of which we have three types, are all made of a soda base, but the acid, which is the othi er principal ingredient, differs. The three types of baking powder are known as combination, phosphates { and tartrates. To lie successful with i a recipe which calls for baking powI der you should know what type of baking powder you are using. The phosphates and tartrates demand more in comparison to the amount of flour than does the combination. Experiments made at the University of Chicago show that in most* recipes about two-thirds as much combination baking powder should be used in most recipes. Other experiments show that for muffins, biscuits and cakes, excepting where extra eggs are used, the proportion of one teaspoonful to a cupful of flour gives generally good results. In using phosphate or tartrate baking powders, the proportion for cakes is generally one and a half teaspoonfuls to a cupful of flour. For biscuits one and a half to two teaspoonfuls to a cupful of flour, according to the type of crumb you wish. For absolutely accurate results, it Is a very good idea to use the tested recipes • supplied by the companies which manufacture each type of baking powder. The use of too much baking powder produces a porous, coarse, dry crumb with a cracked, sticky crust. A great excess will make a cake fall. If too much baking powder Is used, your product may have a slightly bitter taste. Too little baking powder produce a heavy cake, which has a rather bready consistency. When sour cream is used, we particularly need baking powder as well as soda, unless we use another acid, because there is not so much acid In sour cream as there is in sour milk. It takes one-quarter of a teaspoonful of soda to produce leaven with one cupful of sour milk, but a cupful of sour cream needs only a quarter of a teaspoonful of soda to neutralize the .acid, and we do not get so large a proportion of gas to raise our mixture. Because chocolate has a slight acid reaction many recipes for this favorite cake demand a small amount of soda, which produces a dark color and makes a tender cake. Let me warn you that an over-use of soda produces an unpleasant flavor and a slightly soapy texture.” The improvement in the prepared cake and biscuit mixtures is largely ; due to the scientific combination of the baking powder as well as to the good quality of flour, shortening and other ingredients used. One of the prepared gingerbreads on the market claims to have been developed from the recipe used by Mary Washington, whose son pros ided a birthday worthy of an annual celebration. Plain Muffin*. 3 cups flour % teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons tartrate or phosphate baking powder or 2 teaspoons combination baking powder 2 tablespoons sugar 1 egg 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons melted shortening. Mix and gift the dry ingredients. Beat the egg, pour the milk into it, and stir gradually into the dry Ingredients. Add the melted fat and fill the greased gem pans three-quarters j fulL Bake twenty to thirty, minutes in a moderate oven (400 degrees Fahrenheit). Standard White Cake. 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons tartrate or phosphate baking powder or 1% teaspoons combination baking powder % cup butter or other shortening 1 cup sifted sugar % cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 egg whites, beaten light Prepare pan. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and sift again together. Cream shortening J thoroughly, then add sugar gradual-j
*” ' ' —■—— NwH Says Mrs. M. E. Ryner--Ji of Clayton, Indiana. / -ggc, Q/k “My cakes and pastries won 44 awards at the /js Lfls X Indiana State Fair last year and all were baked / KJo with Clabber GirL" “Siokociiz Makes the Finish Last Longer” —\ play safe! Simcms your carl Don’t let “finish —\ rot” go on and on, ruining its beauty. Simonii stops this destructive decay. Makes the finish last longer and keeps it beautiful for years. If > I your car is dull, first use the new, improved \ y/ / Mhnmis KUener. It quickly restores the lustre. l\lj I
ly and cream together until light and fluffy. Add sifted flour and baking powder to creamed mixture, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time. Beat after each addition until sinooth. Add vanilla, fold in egg whites. Bake in loaf or layers in moderate oven. (Ix>af, o\ie hour, 350 degrees Fahrenheit; layer, twenty to twenty-five minutes, 375 degrees Fahrenheit). DeviPs Food Cake. 1 cup butter cup white sugar 2 cups brown sugar 3 egg- yolks 3 Whole eggs 2 cups flour i -1 teaspoon tartrate or phosphate baking powder or H teaspoon combination baking powder 1 teaspoon soda 1 cup sour milk 2 cups coconut 6 squares chocolate Cream the butter and sugar together, add egg yolks. Beat well and add one-fourth of the mixed flour, soda and baking powder. Add unbeaten eggs, beat well and add the rest of the flour alternately with the sour milk. Add coconut and chocolate melted and bake in three layers or in three small loaf cake pans, thirty to' forty minutes in. a moderate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit). This cake will keep moist a week. Frost with boiled frosting, using three egg whites left from cake. Baking Powder Biscuits. 2 cups flbur 4 teaspoons tartrate or phosphate baking powder or 2 teaspoons combination 'baking powder 2 tablespoons fat H to 1 cup milk or water teaspoon salt Mix and sift the dry Ingredients and rub in the fat with the fingers or cut it in with a knife. Make a hole in the flour at the side of the bow’l and add half a cupful of liquid. Add enough more liquid to make a soft dough. Roll on a metal surface or oilcloth until one inch thick. Cut into rounds and bake ten or twelve minutes in a hot oven (450 degrees .Fahrenheit). This recipe makes ten medium-sized biscuits. Date Ginger Cake. 4 tablespoons fat& % .cup sugar 1 egg % cup sweet or sour milk H cup molasses H cup cut nuts 1 cup cut dates 1 teaspoon cinnamon . • 1 teaspoon ginger 14 teaspoon salt H teaspoon soda 1% cups flour Cream the fat. add the sugar grad--1 ually, add the egg and beat well. Mix the molasses and the milk. Mix and sift the dry ingredients, add alternately with the liquid to the creamed fat and sugar. Add nuts and dates. Bake in a moderate oven thirty to forty-five minutes. ©. Bell. Syndicate.—WNU Service. Mental Blindness If one doesn’t read, nothing much, j after all, seems to be going on. t '
Cutiriira Soap «mmT Ointment Containing emollient and healing t properties, they soothe and comfort tender, easily, irritated skins and help to keep them free from irritations. FEMININE WEAKNESS Mix H J. Palmer of 1*0! Albert St. Youngs town, Ohio, said: "Some '■ Im time ago my health failed. jOMi everything seemed to be wrong—my appetite was < poor. I lost weight and had .. pains in my back. I took kt Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and I can truthfully say my health became better from that time. I had greater strength and felt much improved in general” New. size, tablets SO cts., liquid SI.OO. Large Use, tabs, or liquid, SI.3S. AU druggists. Believe the Ads They Offer You Special Inducement • Sometimes in the matter of samples which, when proven | worthy, the merchandise can be purj chased from our community merchants.
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