Newspaper Page Text
OUR ' FEATURE SSECTIOIQ ,Department Devotel .to Attractive Magazine Material I MOTHER'S" COOK BOOK "1 wonder a rth'r petle Ail! (.%r ful- alpe ly realize thIat Iiain, -: I. ,r,' . sought jater a- :u I1 t .1 . r" It should coU le r' ,t. a.t. 4 11 creeps Ilnt. Its par..h( t htart. 1 . ,,.'. but not the lets wula'a-dl In: n i. . 1 FCOD FOR THE FAMILY. v4[l a --- trz oA coni. wc. H ih t, o rih May be tenjoyedi even by 11 the li;,o- ,' , pie. I" t ie . Fig Ice Cream Junket. Make a junket custard with a quart of waftn milk, a cupful of crea:rn, a ea of condensed milk. one t.al,h.lan- tIo i" fat of vanilla, a half cupful of luar. ea h and one crushed junket tablet lls- of solved in a tablesp4ionful of ci!d wa- if n - s, Let stand in a warm ilhnae until r julled; cool and freeze. Wlhen part- thlr' !D fI u ot add one-half )pounld f fl hailf intnad. chopped nud mixed with oane hit upfuol of sugar and tlhrte table- i s s@lpooatals of orange juice. Finish of r a- plag. lave - I'ut Fig Ioe Cream. er , Stald tme quart of milk, mix three butt 'suooaftls of cornstarch wfth a lit- Iin told milk, and stir into the hot : continue to stir until the mix, tbickens. then cover and cool Ipliutes, stirring occasionally. crer .4of I _au to mel Think About 15 JoB AD' THE CAN y F.A. alker boll of lin the oflfes of one of iut b su Iknown business men in of a tly e this motto: flal an" get out of a man what let ilaaghty did not put into him. add lt suit the man to the job; sIm Ji b to the man." the there Is ausimpler and wal ect 'way of putting it than Sp, yeu can do-it better. If ly I mere Is a job waiting for tIam ae.det te mrn who first saues .he sas a man always t for writers who can say mie a, good many young men ! o'ciced (e lines for which smt at all fitted. tios parents often Insist upon the t ife work of their i :they would do a much tidga to let tLe boys and .theIr own Inclnatlons. t Is Ipat Is never so good that graws according to na o eteelletnt earpenters s' p elled in the malting of 1ta and the world id worse h expertments. Svers child shows an In iaward poime special thing. work ot a particular kind efrits are drudgery. a I prat will seek to und that laminatlon is and offer to the highest endeavor. td s not essentially •ot te mind of a grown Blre l sistane to doing V isasauit and irksome. , a" that lndltidualities are astmet and different epch .ther ps eN kind of mtter ,eg s. aother. -tit dlferent uses and differ Mttsmpt to drive a nail with a would be just as fruitless. If *i destructive, as to try to wash with a hammer. trl to stake a boy who loves me- - ead wants to study machin- . S a professor of Greek is to g la talents and diminish his { Ild "boiuld he studied. is no greater and no more Sroeeass in the world than deoelopment of the human mind. ,hel btaby with his fist in his eye apShe of the man that is to be. tt'ia the wrong soil, give it too or too little mental food and sater and the final product will be ' oited tand twisted. 1 It Ia the right surroundlngs. t i It as far as is proper its way l i It will grow into a strong nnd e ,ilrdy plant; a saurce of joy to itself t qdoa. on o't plan too much for your clil I 0I.' have a littlt of their own t I. folowing their inlatli:tons t to what they shall he andl do. mtber that you cannot at ot it [ yW' Tmarwinat Gol Almighty t . pt Pit .hiQlI. 4Copsd ght. .MILITANT MARY , t-ot never f/ils r TO.wEEP AWAY* THE - LooM! - 4-s~~ lelit !l, d llk;. f erf ur ell u- -, ,,,1 - half tena-I-,, nful of .al!,t a d one half ah,-f i all " irtltp; heat lite the 'l, ll tUiix l e :il stir unl til the egg is -It ; :Ii tw' , ('lipfU i .ls of I , ' rerl anll alad Ie t clhi ll ; el,,1 one t ,lelon tfi'l fill v ia, : la l a i ,. e it to f 'ieert ; w\ e h'alf frozni :oi. -lei-haluf pne of ti;es e re ad,,' teP ler in l ol h lrr t w:er, then c.hl tetd one tunixeil w ith half a cauIful of n:aliple sirup. a gr-tiln of I leiaiin ril andl two lnlespoonfuls ofa the juice. lFini.h freezing. Oatmeal Cracker Cake. Ileat one-half cuful oif shorteliin o ae iream. A tl i one-third f it cupful eache of lhoneiy rail .ear, the yolks of two e;< let:ll liilcht, one cupful f millk. etwo I nt .even-eighth, cupfuls of rolled eralker rlulbs li ied with threev a lltepnfuls oef akineg powder, hnilf I ea n-potiful of cinnlanlon, and one-fourth rof a teaspoonful of salt. Lastly addl the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Itake In two well greased layer panis ailbout eighteen minutes. Put tongethier with jam or jelly. Cov er the top and sides with chocolate butter icing and decorate with the icing piped over the top. Chocolate Butter Icing. Beat one-half cupful of butter to a cream. Add gradually one-half cupful of honey, one cupful of confectioner's sugar and. two ounces of chocolate melted over hot water. Flemish Carrots. Cut corrots in thin slices with a vegetable slicer and cook tender In boiling salted water. For one pint of carrots melt one tablespoonful of I butter in a saucepan, add one-fourth Sof a' cupful of chopped onion and one Balt teaspoonful of sugar. Cover and t let coo slowly until yellowed a little, add one cupful of beef broth and let Ssimmer until the onion is tender; add the carrots and let stand over hot waler twenty minutes or longer. SSprinkle with a tablespoomful of fine f ly mlncedl parsley just before serving. r ra 1921. Weaterl Newspaper Union.) SCHOOL DAYS r,,, s drat u L s.ý :.bve d* yeml me )u. dttc " coia. &- Iait. Gof cat @iLe +& ,t Ig - * V. b 1,e- ii ?iV.LL8, l -IiIIHIIYrmHwll8llHllmllm Initnllltuuu l GIRL ON THE JOB How to Succeed-How to Get Ahead-How to Make Good By JESSIE ROBERTS ýIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIW NOW TIlE FOREWOMAN B EFORE the war the forewoman Swas unknown; now she is becom ing Increasingly common in the great Industries, especially those that em ploy large numbers of girls. In some of these plants, like that of the Artifi Scial Lnmb company, women are admit f ted to the foreman training classes on an equal footing with the men. There are two types of forewomen, called the instructional and the produe 0 tional. Women who are working In the plant are those who usually get these appointments, and it is an in t citenent to women to go to work In T these large Industrial establishments that was lacking before. One of the great questions for wom en today Is that of equal opportunity. It rumns hand In hand with the one coneerning equal pay. The fact that hardly any big factory or mill employ ing women 1i now without Its forewom au sOiw s that progress Is s being made. Every ronman should work toward In I creasing these opportunities for her M1it y ttntagries are employing more and more women in their regular work, especially factories where dell vcate work lhas to be done, such as the assembling of adding machines, elec tric appliances and the like. And wom en are gradually ousting men from the watch-imakin aIndustry, so much bet Is their abltit to handle the minute parts used. 'fo j act Is that the girl t ameteem or twety hu bmeaooe h -me I THE WOODS BY DOUGLAS MALLOCH MY MAN AN' ME. Y I.\N an' me fer forty years Hav\e hiked it up thle hill, .\i' slt by hside. tan' Ihnd an' tied, As was' our youthful will. lie (cm"ie lion ume like a dream if all I ho1 ped to be "An ' e sto'ol, for Il er gotd Made onle, mny nuln an' l. It wa: a rosy way we went Whenll life was In the dawn; I heard the birds, I heard hle words A young \ife feeds upon. I Ills arm was 'round about my waist. lie led tie tenderly 'Twas long ago we traveled so The road, my nun an' Hme. STholugh still we travel side by side, VWe travel now apart For oiler wives live lonely lives, An' hungry Is the hIart. *Twas long ago I felt the kiss In roullth he gave so free- Still side by side, but years divide Us two, my man an' me. e Yet once he held my hand in his; e We knelt beside a cross. Together knelt, together felt An' shared a common loss. Aln' there was four Instead of two a (Er so it seemed to be) Il Yes, there was fofr-the babe I bore Ms My God, my man an' me. The river yon Is covered now With Winter's Re an'. snow; Upon Its breast no lilies rest a Where lilies used to hlSw. a But underneath the Winter's ice it The waters flow as free )f As in the Spring we heard 'em sing :h Their song, my man an' me. id So age 'may sit upon his lips e, An' cool the speech of youth: st An' yet I know he promised so " Id To love, an' spoke the truth. Lt The Winter days of life may chill . The ways of such as we; e- But 'neath the cold the love of old g. Still warms my man an' me. (Copyright.) typical watchmaker of the country. jere the women have a chance to pro themselves they are making good. Thef will get more chances and it seems likely that they will continue to make good. There is a real future for the ambitious woman in the indus tries of the country today/ THE ROMANCE- OF WORDS "JOB." THE connection between Job,. the / Biblical personifica tion of patience, and the word "job" commonly applied to a piece of work, is cleverly worked out by Southey in his book "The Doctor." "A job in the working or op erative sense is evidently some thing which it requires patience to perform, In the physical or moral sense, as when, for ex ample, in the language of the vulgar, a personal hurt or mis fortune is called a 'bad job.' It is something which requires pa tience on the part of the public to endure--and in all these senses the word may be traced to Job, who is the proverbial ex trfplar of this virtue." Sheridann. whose definitions are alays as amusing as they are direct. states that "when ever any emolument. profit, sal :ry or honor is conferred on any pers'n not deserving it, that is a 'oh. " From which it would appear that it Is not the job holder that emulates the pa tience of Job. but the publle. (Cepriht.) Will Tackle Highest Peak Younghusband Gets Permit to I; Scale Mount Everest, "Roof tu' of the World." .NEVER YET SCALED BY MAN a to No European Has Ever Approached lti Nearer Than Sixty Miles From Its 1 Base and Few Travelers Have ( Seen Its Upper Slopes. New York.-Mount E'erest, the di Ilimulaya:l leak culled "thile roof of ar the world," u hich Sir Frptncis YThng- th husband, the British sollier-explorer. In will attemlipt to climb next summer, has never yet.been scaled by uma. Ipl Towering above therfrontiers of the ft hitherto forbidden land of Tibet and in the remote province of Nepal, India. si another land of mystery, the ditlicul- thi ties in tven approaching Mount Ever- tii est have been sufficient to bafle et- at plorers. fl The world's highest peak lies in Tibet, north of the British Indian bor- m der, yet, so far as known, no Euro- ft pean has ever approached nearer than - Ci) miles from its base and 'w trav elers have ever seen its upper slopes. Explorer Gets permit. The attempts which have been made to ascend some of yount Everest's sister peaks of the Himalayas usually have been mcade though Nepal, be cause access to them through Tibet was not open. The approach to Mount Everest through Tibet is said to be momte accessible and presents greater prospects of success than from thea Nepal side. Sir Francis Younghusband an nounced that the Tibetan government had granted him permission to at tempt the ascent of the mountain by ( the Tibetan route. It was Sir Fran- i cis, who as colonel commanding a British mission to the forbidden city of Lhasa in 1903-2, opened Tibet to civilization. Mount Everest, named for Sir George Everest, famous British sur veyor general of India, is the highest known mountain in the world. Its trigonometrical altitude is 29,002 feet ; its probable height is 29,151 feet. The next known highest of the Himalayan i Flag Raising at Home for Lepers . . ...... :. ":. .'i' "- .:. .. . ".. . q ".: .1 :.... Scene at a flag raising at the Lepers' home In Carville, La.. isaid to be the largest institution of its kind in America. It has just been taken over by the United States public health service and will be enlarged to care for all the lepers in the country. DROP IN CROP VALUES Decline of More 1Than Five Billion Shown in 1920. Corn Leads the List With $1,682,000, 000-Ten Crops Show Gain in Value, Oranges Leading. Washington.-The value of farm crops-of 1920 anm of the farm ani mal produ?ts and animals sold and slaughtered, as finally determined by the bureain of crop estimates, United States Department of Agriculture, is $19,856,000,000 or $5,10.5,000,000 below the total of 1919. The drop is almostJ entirely confined to crops, among which the chief declines in value are: Corn. $1.662,000,000; cotton lint and seed, $1,300,000,000; wheat, $854.000.. 000; hay, tame and wild. $325,000,000; tobacco, $248,000,000; and oats, $161, On the 6ther hand, as many as ten Ku Klux at Midnight Mountain Gathering in Georgia `. 2'. .",lym ,,, : Once more the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan answer the call of their leaders, but now tile gittlUerings aire for en tirely different purposes, states W. J. Simmons, Imperial wizard. The Ku Klux Klan has been granted a charter by the state of Georgia and has organisatlons in other states. Mr. Simmons says that the Klan is a respectabl, law-abiding tratwnal organization aud ha no conasetinm with nlght rldiw and pn burners. peaks are Kinnilnjunga, 283.22 feet, and K-2. or Bride peak, whose alti tude is 2S.191 feet. Duke Holds Record. The intrepid duke of the Abruzzi, who reached the to,1p of MoIunt St. Eli;is in Alaska (1.0M2- feet) and who at ure' tuime held the rc'-ord of "fa;rth Ses-t north" in arctic exploral.tion, tried to climb K-2, or Bride peak, in ItS9, lbut failed beieniause from whaltewr I;oint of the colmpass lie uadnced he could lith no wa;y up to attain the summit. At 24,(.K) feet he and his (compllaioln were In good physical cou dition. although progress was slow and Ighorious; a thick mlist warm.d them lint to go on "would have been inaidlness." This achievement of the Italian ex plorer, however, Is the world's record for mllountllin climbing. Bride peak is in the Karakoram Ilimalayas. IBe shies It and its two higher slster peaks, there are In the Himalayi.s no hess than 75 peaks about 24,01) feet, 48 above 25,0tW), 16 above 26,000 feet and five above 27.100 feet. SMountain climbing Is one of the most ancient as well as fascinating - forms of adventure. Its chief dangers Police Work Made Science Every Policeman in California University Town Is an Expert in Some Line. StEKS TO PREVENT GRIME Each Patrolman in Berkeley Has Mo tor Car-Entire Force Could Be Concentrated in One Place in Five Minutes. I~erkeley, Cal.-Policing a city rs a science, where every policeman is more or less a specialist In some line, wher the prevention of crime is made a crops gained In value, chief of which are oranges, with a gain of $32,000,000, and sugar beets, $24,000,000. Other items of gain are cabbage, $11,000,000; cowpeas, $10,000,000; sorghum cane sold and sirup made, $7,000,000. Small gains were made by soy beans, sugar beet seed, maple sugar and sirup, and otlons. Apparently. the products of the farm wood lot have gained $223 000.000 in value in the comparison with 1919. After offsetting, gains against losss, the net crop-value reduction in 1920 below 1919 is $4t088,000.000. while only $237,000,000 is found in the total of farm animal ,products and farm ani mals sold and slaughtered. The wool decline is as yet unrealized, but it is reckoned at $37,000.,000. Of the anti mals sold and slaughtered, the decline for cattle and calves Is $223,000,000, and for swine, $427.000.000. But on the other side of the account, dairy products gained $311,000.000, and poul al ' nav ttlil ells. , Iillet dtlll hl , 11! rocks. lizzards. fallit: iice fallls frT.ill preciples , or into cei lie' . fulll.' s i r 4ti Ie' slopes "r do\n ,I t l-\v 1hll,. in pea1,ks " i liistorh andul the year ill \vhich the ks of lhe irl4r ts ii,- ;nl 171, the t itll, the l ,ri t i true Iw mountain; 17tIkit . le i:t te litt "S it lt l nlit rearivhe for tiSe - tinl'; 1,11. IlA i .f nctli. l':; i l I -1 . th..' l,'inl l ral ;rhilh rli i 1i1::i. teill ter tt . l i -I il; l e' 1\..5, tiht t;ii e V Wilt, : ; l1 'i.-. ht e I -tt terlhrtl ; 1.71. 1'him,4al:iol; I\\:{. !he ,(' rll'd il 'lr ; 1'-" . tih Slkir" ;, 1"'. ' l tll it. 1 " i iii t .\: I I t 1 :1 ; h1ouilnt liNl:l4r i. l'h-tre hd i e I" it n l lrl -te linlit.tl i tii \, llntli ct y he - iplorers sel- thi, ie in;'- r: or dto la . Have You Seen Anything of a Lost Indian Tribe? \Vashilrloi.n, 1I. (.- Ills any hbody Secn a lytllin llti ly 411t the Monlnuk itlhiian- .lAt lh.at ne . untsil t t inly w re, lii\ i l Lrn. i stlahd, bui the.y -· i to ihave. f drillfted wit ay aill iLl the X44\ erinlent is asked to plfk up the trail. ('hairmii Sny1i er of the house Indian vomillItlte,, intro : ldued a I.(olution a direct the secretary of the interior to In } vestigate uie repo'rt. study, where every effort is m'tde to use the latest and most modern tueth ods in preventing and combating crime, and where there is an unusual ly friendly relation between the police and the general public, are some of the distinguishing features of the pio lice department of Berkeley, Cal. This city, In which is located the University of California, the largest student body in the world, has perfected a system of policing regarded by experts to be nearly perfect. Proud of Police. Pride in the work of itp police is the boast of every citizen of this Call fornia cit). In forwarding the efM Seency of the department every po liceman is provided with an automo bile, that is a combination police ma chine, ambulance and fire apparstes. Each patrolman is qualified as a first aid man. Through the use of signal lights and police horns, this department of 32 men, handling a population of 00.000 persons, covering an area of nine sqluare miles. patrols every street and section of the city, day and night. No man patrolling a heat is at any time more than a minute away, from .com munication with the station, and the entire force could he concenarated. t the extreme limits of the city h tlla five minutes. Beggars Are Barred. Through the method applied by the police department and the ordinances passed by the city, beggars have been barred from the municipality and the soliciting of dims by the fake cripple has been virtually eradicated. Gam bling has been reduced to a mininlam. One feature that has attracted uon - usual attention to the department Is the mapping of crimes. By a pin with colored beads,' which indi cate .thd nature of the offense, the locatgpn is marked on the map. This quickly indicates where the most seri ous crimes are committed. A general map shows all the complaints. Au- v s other shows the bad boys of the com- C r munity. Still another shows the hours I r of the day on which crimes are com mitted. 9 try raised and eggs prodpeed, $100. S000,000. It is the rule that, in the upward and downward movements of prices, h farm animals and animal products lag , behind crops. So extreme was the lag er in the price of animals and animal ); products In 1920, on account of the ae extraordinary fall in the prices of ill crops with a short period of time, that the total crop value of 1920 is ad reckoned to be only 56 per cent of o the total value of all products. s. In the estimates for f series of on years, this is the value esti mate that has tfal low 00 per cent of the total of , roucts. r20 ' fly Spain to R others. of Madrid.-Mlost of Spanish prov at- Inces are organizing fetes for the in 3ol auguration of "Mothers' day," a fea is ture of which will be the awarding of at: prizes to conspiciously meritrtgs Ine mothers. The government and the To. 00, cal authorities are providing funds to on organize and promote tihe tmov.'aent. iry which aims at the encouragement of sul- large families. It's toasted LUCKY STRIKE cigarette. Flavoris s aled in by t,,astii £. ,S. The best clothes for routh work ar made of Stifel'slndl Cloth. They never b6de, shrink or stretch. Pattern positively will not break in the prinl the boat trade 9ark oN the back of the cir il t c Aliit of Frost Mahle--Did aPery propose to 99 OUT OF 100 Sthe winter ailments such as &void Imitations.-Adv. Rather. - '"That man works by fits and "Fits and stops, I should may." How we all do love to crush and there is a vanity in that. Hollow Ey M and dark circles under the Sare a common symptom of Smanly disorders. No Sse r to cover them up with I t- and powders. Go to the r the trouble in the system 1 Take Dr. Pierce's flavorite scription, the woman's tonic strengthener. This mnedici v- real beatifier, for it hel L- estahli-' sound, vigorousIIS en- and a healthy woman is the Sattractive thing in the worl your beauty is lost, Favori Sscription will help rest SSenld lOc to Dr. Pierce, In H Iotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for package of Tablets. Comfortable, Hea Nights for Baby follow the useof the safe, ant, purely vegI ta! ,, tecd non-alcoholic, on' preparatian MRS.WINSLO SYRUP 'e fs' mad C ldren '£ Medicalskill haq. .." ri more matisfacr ". - corning colic,: -'' conmt'patlon a d Thoussadsofpr ... i b in health to%: wS'; w They find ;t n, 'D- .nd grtllUfy.: . 1 take, plams an " "" irtel rmuLaar- , avh- d abl, A. D: "°asaee