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ROARK Furniture, WaJlpixper, Shades, Moldings Undertaker's Goods: Coffins, Caskets, Robes, Wrpper, Slippers, Grxve Vaults. Disinfection ROARK TO BUILD CONCRETE HOTBED && slslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslslsl & SL A POSTPONED ROMANCE SL Our Name Ws rise by the ililnta that are under our feet; Bjr what me have mastered cf rood and caln. By the pride deposed anJ (ha paalon !afn. V And ih -nnaulnliftl Ills vva Lourlv 8TRAWBEHRIE&. arly season, when berries ", a very few used for a . ,5niiBh or in pleasing , .onibinallona with other l. ft (iv ft S t dishes will not make ex pensive) dikhes. Cold ' molded rieo with straw berry sauce la always de licious. A cereal pud ding using ..cream of wheat or farina, molded and served with the saoce, is also very good. The strawberry shortcake la the na tional dish which everybody likes. To make it, use a rich biscuit doue with out sugar, or. If any. not more than a teaspoonful. Make tho shortcake and roll out a half-inch thick. Spread with butter and place tho other half on top. bo that when they are baked there will be no rough, broken edges which are apt to come when cutting, to say nothing of making the cake soggy. There are so many delicious straw berry and gelatine combinations that one will make no mistake in serving any of them. Strawberry Salad. Wash and hull the berries and cut them in halves lengthwise and let stand 30 minutes in a boncy sclad dressing in a cold place. Drain and arrange on lettuce leaves and serve at once. To make the boney sclad dressing use: Two taMespoonfuIs of honey, three of olive oil and one and a half of lemon juice, a dash of salt and cayenne if liked. Beat until frothy. Frozen Strawberry Fruit Cup. Take one cupful of cubed pineapple, one cut of cut orange, one-half cupful of water and sugar boiled together five minutes. Mix the fruits and sirup when cold and let stand half an hour or longer to blend. Make an ice of a pint of straw berries, a cupful of sugar and a cupful of warm water. Hash the berries with tt t6 ao.4 let aUiflTW-? rub through a sieve, adding the water to hurry the process; freeze. Half fill sherbet glasses with this and hollow the center to heap the fruit mixture. Pat piped whipped sweetened cream over the top and finish with a whole berry. LCCCcX- rsfifl ftfAi "' ' TGllEN 'ABINET It la difficult to be alwaya true to ourselves, to ba 'alwaya what we wiaa to be, what w teel we ought to be. As long as we feel that, as long as we do not surrender the Ideal of our life, all is right. Our aspirations rep resent the true nature of our soul much more tnaa our every-doy life. Max Muller. Yet it Is by our lives ws are known and Judged. GOOD THING8 TO EAT. While bran bread la so popular with many people it may be well to have a good recipe which has been tried aud la well liked. Bran Breads Take three cup fuls of bran, a cupful of graham, a half -cupful of Coot, a teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoon fol of soda dissolved la three-fourths of a enpful of molasses, one cupfvl of raisins, dates or figs or a mixture of the three, two cupfuls of sweet milk, tlr and let stand a half-hour to let tho soda act on the mixture. a it does not make It light enough without Bake In a largo loaf two hours. Nut Loaf. To two cnpfuls of mixed But meats, using Brazil, pecans and peanuts, add one-half a teaspoonful of alt, next stir la six finely chopped bananas; when well blended press Into a mold and steam steadily for three hours.. Cook on ice and servo In slices. For sandwich filling sprinkle over a few drops of catsup on each lice. Chopped Steak en Casserole. Put two cupful of chopped steak in the center of a casserole, flavor with eel cry, salt, pepper, mace and a rule mushroom catsup or Worcestershire sauce. Surround the steak w ith a cup ful of pearl barley, pour two cupfuls of boiling water over it and bake in a moderate oven for one and a half hours. Keep closely covered while cooking. Just before serving cover with a brown gravy or tomato sauce. June Salad Dressing. -Use any fruit combination with this: Beat the white 4f one egg, add two tablespoonfuls of ugar, on tablespoonful of lemon Juice, one of orange Juice and a third as much whipped cream as there is of the mixture. Serve very cold. Portuguese Eggs. Peel ripe, round tomatoes and scoop out a small hole large enough to hold an egg. Drop in aa uncooked egg; dust with salt and pepper and grated cheese, with bits of butter. Bake until the egg is set mem Concise Directions Given for Four Saah Bed Which Can Be Ex tended to Any Length. Wo referred recently to the con ctetn hctbeds now built by florists and vegetable growers. The following directions are given for a four-sash bed. wliicb of course could be extend ed to any length desired. A standard bulbed sash is three, by six feet. Lay out the bed clx feet eight Inches wide by 21 feet 10 inches long. The con crete walls are six inches thick. Dig the foundation trenches two feet six inclun deep within the lines given Kbovf. Make forms of one-Inch lum her to carry tho south (front) wall six Incite and the north (back) wall Inches above ground, says the Rural Now Yorker. Forms are not required below ground level. The tops of the end walls slope to the others. Before filling the forms with concrete test the dimensions of the bed by means of the sash. See that the sash la? the forms two Inches on all sides. Mix the concrete mushy wet in the proportion of one bag of cement to JV. cubic feet of sand to five cubla fret of crushed rock, or one bag of cenmnt to live cubic feet of bank-run pravil. nil the forms without stop plr.g for anything. Tie the walls to geiht. at the corners by laying in thoia oM iron rods bent to right an- ( ni Frame Grooved . Sash. ties. While placing the .'ncrete sj 4 Inch bolts about two fet anart to hold the wooden top-framin of the bed to the concrete; or make'" ooves In the top of the concrete for co iter slnking the sash to the- level of ,.he walls with an allowance of one-qu. tor inch for clearance. This can bl done by temporarily imbedding in the concrete wooden strips of the neces sary dimensions. During this opera tion, by means af blocks nailed to the strips, make provision for the center bars described below. Remove the strips as soon as the concrete stiffens. Tako down the forms after five days. The extra 24 inches in length of the -WuiuaUowance for the three center ur5"TutnritT VhH "IVsASfc atV supports are of dressed one-inch stuff, shaped like a capital "T" turned up ri'lo down. The length of the stem of the -T" is equal to the thickness of the sash and the top is three inches l,le. Sufficient materials for the con- trete be Eupplied by 14 bags of cement, IV cubic yards of sand and H cubic yards of crushed rock; or II bags of cement and 2ft yards of (It gravel at a cost of sio. PAYS.TO FERTILIZE MEADOW Increase In the Yield of Hay Estimat ed From Three-Quarters to One i Ton Per Acre. j Several years ago when cutting hay next to a patch of wheat in the same f! e!d. I. e.. there was no fence between. I noticed that the hay adjoining the wheat was much heavier In widths of a drill than elsewhere, writes F. P. Cerlarh in the Michigan Farmer; in fact, there was so much difference that I began to study out the reason, which .explained lt?elf simply enough. In drilling the wheat the fall be fore with 250 pounds of 2:8:1 ferti liser per acre, and running the drill out on the meadow, there would be from two to four feet of meadow fer timed while In going back the drill would not be set in gear until at the edge of tho wheat field, consequently every other width of the drill would show a marvelous difference in the grass. This set me to thinking that it would be a good Investment to fer tilize meadows, and the following fall I fertilized five acres with the same result raisins the disks and drilling the fertilizer over the top, and since, then we have been dolnif so, and I am satisfied we harvest from three quarters to one ton of bay per acre more where we use the fertilizer The fertilizer can be sown lata in the) fall before the snow covers th ground, or in the early spring. Success With Cattle. . Said Prof. J. M. Truman, of the State Agricultural college: "If success has been obtained In one breed of cat tle, stick to that breed." President W. H. Lee advises that the summer silos should largely take the place of the pastures after June. He predicted a great Increase In the average grain yield and in the culture of alfalfa. He thought that many farmers In remote districts would do better in raising good cows to sell than shipping milk, cream or butter. Egg Yield and the Feed. The egg yield can be controlled by the feed and manner of feeding. , When fresh-laid eggs have an off en I site odor when broken or cooked, it I lma In rTnmln thM minlltv of food the bens are getting. Onions, fish, manure piles and the like have a strong tendency to cause a bad smell and Savor in eggs. Diseased Trees. It is well to remember that the olq" and diseased trees not only, take up t'uaWe space in the orchard, but tuey ro liable to spread disease am-T.j. he healthy trees. an1 thej always harbor pests tv we 'njurl--iuk 'm lit ciitiro orctj-- By JEAN 8HEAR. "What made you ask me to marry you? inquired the bride, as one aska what the weather is likely to be. "Why," the bride's husband paused. "I guess it was because you were looking around and picked me out." "No," replied the bride, meditative ly, "it could not have been Just that because Miss Mary-McUee's been pick ing out husbands for 20 years, and the'd just quit that unprofitable oc cupation and had begun to be happy, when tho found him!" Who's this Miss Mary McGeer "She's just Miss Mary McGee!" the bride laughed. "I don't know how I can explain more, if that doesn't tell you! Sho's the woman down the block who lives with the children and they all call her Miss Mary McGee. So every one else does! She's been w ith the chidlren until she's just like one but she didn't begin until she'd given up the hopo of getting married, you know." "How Interesting." commented the man. "Yes, but she'et hao, a genuine ro mance! You s. it got out natu rally." said the bride, taking a deep breath to mark the beginning of the story, "through the children that Miss McGee wasn't invited to Jane Benton's wedding, because she was needed by some one or other to take care of the children. And no one thought she'd think anything of it! But the children talked it over before her. "Mr. Manning Wis Interesting." and her feelings were hurt She im agined that she had become nothing but a nursemaid in the eyes of the world, and gave up her play with the children! "So she shut herself up in the house and wouldn't have anything to do with anyone! "Miss McOee's tall and angular, and sort of eccentric looking, but she's got an awfully sweet nature, and every one was sorry that her feelings were hurt. However, she wouldn't let any one console her, or explain. "Then one day old Lawyer Manning passed the house and, hearing music, be went up. She was so surprised at his visit that she let him in. and what do you suppose she was doing? She had saved a lot of newspaper articles on how to dance the tango, and she was learning it from them, playing until she had a tune in mind and then singing for the dancing!" "And so Manning is the happy indi vidual?" anticipated the husband. "Now, you just wait till 1 finish!" finished the bride. "Mr. Manning was interested in the tango and Miss Mary klcGee promised to teach him all about It So he went almost every after noon. "And then the minister, who every one says was fond of Miss Mary Mc Gee years ago, called. Of course, bis visit occurred when Mr. Manning was there, and it sort of woke him up. I guess he'd been thinking Miss Mary McGee would always be there, and there was no hurry about asking her. Anyway, he began to call frequently, and Miss Mary McGee always let them come in, and they remained hours and hours, each trying to outstay the other, and thus get the opportunity to propose, I guess! But they always bad to go away together, for neith er would give in! "And actually Miss Mary McGee got so pretty with the activity and ex citement " "But which one got her?" interrupt ed the man. "Why, that's the romance of it!" triumphed the bride. "They'd been calling for about a month, steadily, al most every afternoon, and then one day the minister brought along his brother, who was visiting him. be cause he couldn't leave his visitor at home, and he wouldn't let Mr. Manning get the advantage of a call alone!. "And the minister's brother had the wit to invite her out And he pro posed right away, and now they're married!" Chicago Daily News. Knows Better Now. Wifey Do you recollect that once when we had a quarrel I said you were Just as mean as you could be? Hubby Yes, my dear. Wifey Ob, Tom, how lttUe did I know you then. BosUm Evenlny Transcript 1 c sl : & 8. .& SL SL SL 1.SL SL SL 'SL SL SL SL SL&SLa&aSL&SL&SL&&SLSL&SLSLSLSlSlSLSLSLactSL& fioark li SenakJ win maie toUTIfS COMPANION Better Than Ever in 1915 Then the Family Page, a rare Editorial Page, Boys Page, Girls' Page, Doctor's Advice, and 44 a ton of fun," Articles of Travel, Science, Education. From the best minds to the best uwaus,inc oesi tne woria CUT THIS OUT and tend it (or name of this perer) wrtk $2.00 for The COMPANION foTl91S.andwewiUaend FRFF. AD tt. Im of THE COM-riVC-. PANION for the V weeks of 1914. FREE J COMPANION HOME rrU-1". CALENDAR for 1915. TUCM The 52 Weekly heaea ef arU-TI THE COMPANION lot IMS. SUBSCRIPTIONS THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK GREENYIUE .KFMIf MY rTDr?"T"M"p wr a urn isuc i w . . wicKiiite, w. u. Uurtan. C. EL Martin. R T.Martin. E. I. I. Keynolds, Jr. The standing and responsibility of the mm who constitute our Board of Directors are guarantee of careful, judicious management. has been before the public for on the spot where we are now Our Aim constantly has been to sell the best goods in our lines, at the most reasonable prices. Our services are of the highest grade, our wares the best, and our equipment compares with the best "of the larger cities. We endeavor constantly to increase our usefulness. Our Claim On your patronage is based on a service the duration of an ordin ary life time, and a square deal assured every one. The accum ulated experience and knowledge of this third of a century are at your command. The J. L. ROARK Estate ORIEN L. FURNITURE UN ERA L humtiim Loot Dlstmce the fall beauty and charm of your curtains and draperies The attractiveness of any room depends more upon the curtains and draperies, than anything else. They need not be expensive, but they must bans right. Made in colors to match ' woodwork or draperies The new "Bon Cb-r covering it guaranteed not to ciup, crack or pecL You should have Kinca . Flat Rodi on every window and door of your home. I Rods are consorted to the brackets quickly and conveniently, never come down accidentally, but detached instamly when desired. Guaranteed not to sag, rust or'tarnisb. ia and well be glad to full of life and action, filled with the fire of fine inspirstion and followed by 250 short stories of adventure, can produce for you and everyone in tne nome. i here is no age limit to enthusiasm for The Youth's Companion. I ci TV-... - V-. not 12. Send to-day to The Youth's Com panion, Boston, Mass., for THBEE CTOBENT ISSVCS-nUTJC RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE . ri Purvear. CL M. w , 30 years, most of the time right located. ROARK, Manager D EALERS IREC TORS TelepScnes: Store 7 float ICS At last we have Shumate's Sizes and shapes to fit G. E. COUNTZtEIi. JUST Alany Patterns fef; 1 4 V. i 'if ., w 7 ' &eir ( J 4 a A 1111 ii L I . COME and SEE THEM J. L. ROARK ESTATE I I L SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL SL a razor good enough to Guarantee for Life Tungsten 2.75 any face and adapted Xr any beard. ' POSt SALE BT . RECEIVED of 1914 Wallpapers ws - ' ii i . - ft Vi -J J I 7. )r i