Newspaper Page Text
PAGE ElilEl ROCglNGHAikt POST-PtBPATCg. RICHMOND COUNTY, If. 0. 1 E. B. Terry's Big 10 Day Clearance Sale Begins Friday Morning, July 22, 1921 Good News for Everybody ! Rockingham and Richmond county's greatest and only real cut price general clean-up sale at E. B. Terry's Dept. Store. First come frst served; all have the same chance at our sales. We -are making a clean-up, not money, during this sale. We have 20 years of successful sales behind us - this will be the biggest yet. We think too much of our record not to make this the biggest and best. When we say "Sale" we mean this a 10-year-old girl or boy can buy goods at our sale just aj cheap and securely as mother and father. Everything marked down, not a few things, but our entire stock. Read the following prices, which represent only a few of the hundreds of "Bargains" we are offering for 10 days only. At our Sale prices we cannot guarantee these prices longer than 10 days. Come early and get the benefit of them. Calico, all colors, ... 5c yd Bleaching 5c yard for Friday and Saturday. LL Sea Island sheeting, and Father George sheeting, the finest grade, sale price 7kc yd Extra good dress ginghams, sale price ,. 9c yd 1 yard wide percale, light and dark patterns, 25c value, sle price i 10c yd All Toile-de-Nord, Amoskeag and Kabbarnie ging hams, 32 inches wide, the Uest made. Sale price : 1 15c yd This includes all of our very best ginghams. Women's good grade hose be pr. Men's sox, good grade 5c pr. 81x90 and 72x90 Pepperell mills. Bleached sheets, seamless, sale price 98c Not over two to a customer. Krinkled dimity quilts, 81x90 inches, sale price $1.25 Extra good grade long cloth, 10 yd bolts, sale. price as long as they last, bolt $1.19 O. N. T. crochet cr-ttcn, ball 10c Work shirt, sale price. . : 49c Gauze vests, each 10c Red Star 27-inch diaper cloth, sale price for 10-yd bolt.-- $1,45 All voiis, organdies, nainsooks, table damask, and entire stock of dress goods sacrificed fo- 10 day sale yiffiiiwiwiiiHiiiiriiliffliiii i m ii ii minim i Msamcfl Ti!.iwwwi!HiiW!ffii'iii)Wii)ii;i!iwimiiii,i!iii AU men s and boys rants, clothing, overalls, shirts, work shirts and underwear sacrificed in this big 10 dav sale. Extra good men's overalls, sale price 89c pr Men's dress shirts, each' 89c All men's, women's and children's sooes sacrificed for the 10 days sale. The highest price ladies' oxfords or pumps " $4.95 The lowest t 95c pr eeasaauaei eMeeeMa?ssBBBanBmBuei aasssnaw hhmmbmmi iBIB'IB'"IMMBalMMBiB We have hundreds of "Bargains" not on "this advertise ment. Come and see for yourself that E. B. Terry gives'better values for less money and have what we have all the time. WWMMHffllPflllmii me mcrm ike mam l'J2l. Western Newspaper Union.) , ((c), UiL Western New mw im rw i iHTTr Tirnir at era asaaaarmi i mi in i im ii iii iwnw hi . i i two m tiiciu in and oiu courscij until ; Every task wrought out in patience Brings a blessing to tlie doer; Joy cornea to the waiting worker. JBut eludes tlie swift pursuer. A FEW FOREIGN SOUPS. Many of these soups are too com plicated for a mere American to pre pare, for tliey call for too" many things not easily obMinuhie; the following Is a good example: Russian Cab bage Soup. Cut into small suuares "ilium si.:ed onions and fry two ounces of butter, a,dd one '-liulf pounds of nutter l.raut chopped and stew together ill moisture is extracted. Sprinkle Wiih a tablespoonful of dour and three tablespoonfuls . mt sour cream. Mis well and moisten with thive quarts. Of broth. When boning arid one partly roasted duck, one pound of breast of beef cut in tliree or four pieces and a few pork sau sages. Let simmer gently until the in gredients ate well done. llemove the duck, beef and sausages from the soup, add one cupful of sour cream, season to raste, add ihe meats, chopped parsley and serve.. Japanese Fish Soup. Slice very fine one carrot, one turnip, one onion and two leeks, fry gently in one-fourth cupful of butter for a few minutes, add the same nmount of flour, mix well, add one teapoonful of curry powdi t, stir for a few minutes and niolston with fish jock. Roil for twenty minutes, then add one small potato cut in squares, two ounces of cocked rice, one small chili pepper and b-.lf the rind of a lemon grated; simmer twenty minutes. Add eight , ounces or half a pound of flour er cot in squares and the same amount of cod shredded small. Let boll for eight minutes, season to taste and - serve. Scotch Stew. Put sis good-sized ;onions and one and ope-half pounds of hamburger steak Into an iron ket-' tie. Season with salt, pepper and let icook In the Juice of the meat for in hour or more. Then set over the heat and brown thoroughly. Now add one and one-half quarts of water and cook gne-half hour longer. Add six peeled and slleed raw potatoes and 000110110 to cook more rapidly until these are done. Season to taste with salt and Si . tlec L'niun. ) "Give them a cheer! In "anil's dim cull, places. Those who are toiling unceasingly on; Tired are tli.Mr hearts and discouraged I their faces. Give them a lift of a hearty "well done!" Theirs Is the burden of care and of striving, Carrying forward tlie world on its way; Ton With your greeting can aid their arriving, Yours is tiie chance to make glori ous, their day." SAVORY SATISFYING DISHES. When a little corn is 1-ft fml the meal even if cut from the cob, suve it and add to a potato sfilad. It makes jt dlu'er eut sa'sd. Hot Potato salad. Cook the pototdei in thin jacket! and cut them up after peeling them as hot as can be handled. Mix with a good dressing and 'some chopped ouion as the seasoning will very quickly enter, the potato and thus make -it far more palatable.. Add a cupful of shredded green . fiiUsfnrd an 1 a lltHo chopped celery if nt baud and serve at once. . Toast With Ham Sauce 'Prepare a white sauce using thin cream, one cupful and tw.o tublespoon fu Is each of butter and flour cooked together before adding the cream. Season with salt and pepper and add one-half cupful of minced cooked ham. Pour over well buttered toast and serve hot. Spring Soup. Peel and slice ihree green onions and cook In a tablespoon ful of butter fftCr minutes, then add four cupful of chicken stock, with one cupful of dry bread cntmbs. Bring to the boiling point and simmer forty-five minutes, then nib through a sieve and add one cupful of -milk. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add an equal amount of flour and when well blended pour over the hot soup. Cook for five minutes, add one eupful of cream and season well ; serve hot Prune lee Cream. Soak one cupful .of prunes in water to cover over night. Cook In the same water until tender, put the pulp through a strainer. Add one cupful of sugar, four tablespoon fuls of lemon Juice, a pinch of salt, and one and one-quarter cupful s of heavy cream whipped. Freeze and garnish with chopped nuts. Thin cream may be used with the juice of two oranges, making a change which Is very agreeable. M ' KG AN OPPORTUNITY. ! I There Is often fun at the baseball ground;; outside bl the ft'une, espe cially among the boys who try to see the game without being admitted. One youngster who was fortunate enough to find a knothole in the fence was heard tp shotli to another Who was munching away on a juicy ap- , pie: - - "Say, I'll quit this bole If you'll gt' me a couple o' them." "Go on!" fji)s the reply. "Yer cun't see through the ginks on t'other side o' the fence." , "Jrl right, sonny," waR the rejoin der, "keep 'em. But Hint's where you missed it, for there's a sawed-ott guy In front of this hole, and there ain't nobody in front of him. See?" Good Example. Wife It's quite noticeable-how Har old is getting to look more and more; like ylou every day. Before long he'll be a perfect Imitation of his father. I Husband if'm ! Is that SO? What' mischief has he been up to now? THE s KITCHEN CABINET Parental Anxiety. "Were yon successful in your inter- j view with the girl's father?" , "Not exactly. The old man demand" I ed to. know if I was prepared to sup lort him in the same style his dnugh- j ter was accustomed to do." Why He Picked Pictish. An F.iglish mother was visiting her son at college. "Well, dear," she said, "who lan guages have you decided to take?" "I have decided to take Pictish, mot her," he replied. "Pictish?" said the puzzled lady. "Why 1'ictlsh?" "Only five words of it remain," he said. As Woman Will. "Tour wife seemed pleasant enough j nt tne reception. Seemed to give me quite a little consideration." "Yes, she was trying 'to figure out just, what I could see in you as a friend." Hog Meat. "I once printed a poem for that ru ral subscriber and today he sent me aiiotlu r valuable contribution from his pen." "Eh?" "A prime pig." WHERE THE MONEY IS First Kid: I b'lleve I wanna own a mbvin' plcsture theatre when I orow up Sliai. They's sure makln' money outa the movies these days. Second Kid: Why I Jes heard my father say yesteddy that they was makin' plenty of money out "stllla" too TRUE TO EXPERIENCE The House Manager: What'a the Idea repeating that picture of the man at the telephone with a cut In reading "several days have elapsed?" The Producer: Realism. The man's still waiting for the number he called. A Financier's Experiment. His system felt a chilling shock That troubled his repose. He put some water in the- stock, And then-the water froze. 1 Afraid of Mice. There was an old lady of Nantucket, Who never stirred out of the houoe; But she carried her cat In her basket For fear of meeting a mouse. Different. Employer Did you notice that ad In this morning's paper, "Learn to earn $25 ?er week at stenography?" Stenographer Sure, but I wasn't in terested, because I am getting that al ready. Employer Yes, but the ad said "earn."-Fsrm Life. Knew What Was Coming. "Pa, what Is an idiot?" "I can't give you a brief definition, son, but I can point ont to you "Just leave my family alone, and m s to bed. WUile," atxdn uo his A Bald Assertion. "You've got, to be pretty smooth to get fo the -top nowadays." "Rigbtpl And you usually get smooth on the top before you get there." Hazy Recollection. "Why didn't Maud Muller marry the ludger "My recollection Is that she threw him over because the Judge fined her tor speeding." Musical Comedy. "A musical comedy T Tee." "Who wrote the bee r A prominent (, 1921. Wet-tern Newspaper I'nton.) If there were no such thins as dis play in the world we mcht jret on a great deal better than we do. and might be Infinitely more agreeable company than we are. t WELL TRIED DISHES. When the early summer apples are large enough they are very good served with sliced onions. Use a pint Ot sliced apples and one cupful of sliced onions', doubling the amount If the family is -fond of such wholesome dishes. Cook the onions in a little fat until they are ' well softened and yellow licrore adding the apples, sprinkle with a' little flour and sugar, a sprinkling of suit and paprika and add a little water from time to time, as need& . Stir and cook until well blended. Serve around pork chops or steak'. Fried Apples. This dish will take a large firm apple whicn does not lose Its shape when' cooking. Wash the apples and core them, then slice In rather thick slices and cook in bacon or salt pork fat until well browned on both sides. Sprinkle,; while cooking with a very little salt and a bit of sugar. Serve In overlapping slices around pork chops, or sausages, Those who have been forehanded In sowing some mustard seed will have the best of greens to cook or to serve -.lth fi-esh lettuce. The green mus tard cut In bits tnd added to potato salad is especially, appetizing. In fact added to almost any vegetable com bination, it is fine. Baked Bananas. Remove the peel from half a dozen bananas; scrape them to remove all coarse threads, and lay in a well-buttered baking dish. Grate the rind of an orange and half a lemon; mix together with the juice of each and three-fourths of a cupful of sugar. Pour over the bananas, dot with two tablespoonfuls of butter and bake until the bananas are tender, Unripe bananas are best for this dish, aa they keep their shape when cooked. Spiced Carrots. Cook until tender, very young carrots; sprinkle with fleur, powdered dove, butter, lemon Juice; reheat aad serve with minced parsley. ' Flemish Apples With Onions, Slice thinly un peeled apples; sprinkle with flour ; add bits of butter and sugar, and place in layers la a baking dish, using buttered crumbs en each layer with a few thinly -sliced onions, fcake untfi wen cooked. j The Story of Our States By JONATHAN BRACE XXVI.MICHIGAN rE French and fur traders were the first whites to pen etrate ' Into M ichlgan. Their first visits to this region date back to 1C10. It was not until 10(58 however, that the first actmjl settlement was made. This was the mission at 'Sault Sainte Marie, founded by Father Marquette. Mackinac was es tablished a few years later, and Detroit's growth was slow. After Hie French and Indian wars the English took over" this territory, and In 1774 It was for mally dealared a part of Canada. Detroit 'rapidly grew in impor-1 tance nnd during the Revo!uMrn was the basevof operations for many raids ty the British and Indians against the Americans. By the terms of the treaty of Paris 'in 1783 this region became a part of the United States. What is now Michigan, Wiscon sin; a part of Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio was known as the Northwest territory. After Ohio was set off as a separate state the Lower Peninsula of Michigan was joined, to Indiana territory. In 1805 Michigan be came a separate territory with about its present boundaries. There was, however, a great dispute over a small strip of land In the extreme southern portion which was claimed by Ohio. This almost led to blood shed, but was finally settled by Michigan releasing her claim to the disputed area and receiving as compensation an addition to the Upper Peninsula. On this basis Michigan wag admitted to the Union In 1887 and became the twenty-sixth state. Michigan has a unique situa tion, , as It la bounded by tine three largest of the Great Lakes, and divided Into two peninsulas. This gives It a coast line larger la proportion to Its area than any ot the ether states. It Is named after Lake Michigan, which Is the Algonquin word, "Mtcbl-gan," meaning "great sea." It la entitled to 18 votes la the electoral college, (arawaen Wiirssmi araateu. 1