Flesherton Advance, 16 May 1928, p. 6

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Attractive Ways to udt held Honr [cold water. Add the milk ftnd stir; [add well beaten egg yolka and then C /\i 1 r\5-U^» '"'' y^^* *»«at«" white*. Cook In a OerVe V/ia L/lSneS rlnK-mold, eet In a pan of boiling I water. This should be in the oren Hare you ever noticed how your about forty Ave minutes. Bo sure to children and your "lord and master" butter your mold well before placing win fairly gobble up the plainest foods the mixture In It when they dine at another's home, though they would refuse the same In their own hornet Of cource! Every homemaker has had such experiences. But did you ever slop to consider the reason? "Oood manners!" you reply. Maybe; but think about It, didn't the hostess who served mere rice and shrimps, beefsteak and onions, chops and poUfoes, or meat balls and that old tuber, or such ordinary dessort as pie. do It lust a little more attracttyo- ly or surprisingly than you served similar foods at every ^lay meals? In other words, didn't she bedeck them tastofully. so to speak T This can be done, you know, without much If any extra work by drafting the Imagina- tion Into service In the otherwise humdrum task of feeding a family. Spaghetti, Eggs and Cheese. Boll sticks of spaghetti (without breaking them more than necessary) An (Md Game Revived A TIRED FEELING IN SPRINGTIME Not Sick, But Not Up to the Mark â€" You Need the Help of That Sterling Tonic, Dr. WU- liams* Pink Pillsâ€" They Give New Vitality. with the passing of winter manjr people feel weak, depressed and easily tired. The body lacks the vital force and energy pure blood alone can give. In a word, while not exactly sick, the Indoor life of winter has loft Its mark upon them. A blood-bulldlng, nerve- restoring tonic Is needed to give re- newed health and energy. Dr. WU- In the usual way. Meantime hard boll ' Hams' Pink Pills are an all-year-round several eggs, shell and slice them. ' blood builder and nerve tonic, but are Now place halves of firm tomatoes, ] especially useful In the spring. Every well seasoned and dotted with butter, under a hot broiler. Make a cream sauce and add to li enough grated rhoese to give It a rich yellow color. Place the spaghetti (after It has been drained) upon a large platter: place the broiled tomato halves upon It; top them with the slices of hard-boiled eggs. Cover the tomatoes, eggs and spaghetti with the hot cheese sauce. Sprinkle with paprika and serve at once. A Crown of Lamb Chops. Mash potatoes in the usual way. tak- ing care to make them smooth and creamy. Meantime broil your chops. Just before serving, center a warm plattetr with a cone-shaped mound of the potatoes, topped with a large piece of butter. Next stand the chops meat end on the platter against the side of your potato mound. Qarnlsb the platter with either mint leaves or springs of parsley. Riced Potatoes and Meat Bali*. Boll potatoes and rice them in the usual way. Mix your chopped meat with butter, salt and pepper, form it Into balls, then center each with a pimento stuffed olive. Broil or bake the meat balls. When ready to serve All a warm platter with the riced po- tatoes. Upon the riced potatoes place the meat balls. Garnish the outer edge of the potatoes with alternate with alternate dots of butter and slices of pimento, stuffed green or plain ripe olives. Serve piping hot. Rice, Eggs and Shrimps. This Is a very partyfled looking dish and is almost no trouble to coucoo<. Place boiled rice In a flat cakeahaped portion upon warm plates. Upon each suci' portion of rice put a mediumly har.l-liolled or poached egg. Top the eKR with a single shrimp. Serve with a plain curry sauce. Colored Vegetable Plates dose helps to make new, rich, red blood and with this new blood return- ink strength, cheerfulness and good health quickly follow. If you are pale, easily tired, or breathless at the least exertion, <f your complexion Is poor or you are troubled with pimples or eruptions. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are Just what you need to put you right. If you have twinges of rheumatism, are sub- ject to headaches and backaches, if you are irritable and nervous. If your sleep does not refresh you, or your ap- petite is poor, you need the treatment Dr. Williams' Pink Pills alone can give â€" you need the new blood, new strength and new energy this medi- cine always brings. Mr. A. Marcotte, North Ham, Qua., writes: â€" "I have found great benefit from the use of Dr. WilUams' Pink Pills. Before I be- gan using them I was in a badly run- down condition, and at times felt scarcely able to work. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have changed all this and since taking them I am enjoying the best of health. Every man who feels rundown and easily tired should give this great medicine a fair trial." Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for anaemia, rheumatism, ueuraligia, Indi- Jestlon or nervousness. Take them as a tonic it you are not in the best physical condition and cultivate a re- sistance that will keep you well and strong. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mall at 50c a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Out. Askt Doctor to Tell Girl He U Unfit to Marry Berlin â€" That the ways of eugenics ai;e best with pItfalU wa« demonstrated by the following let- ter to a physician of Berlin, which was published In "Die Medliinl»cl>« Welt." "Dear Doctor: Kindly forglTe me for troubling you, but I hare heard that a Miss â€" intends call- ing on you to-day to Inform her- self about my state of health. Should this really be so, would greatly oblige me by telling her that I am suffering from pulmon- ary tuberculosis, have a valvular disease of the heart and am utter^ ly unfit to marry. On my next visit to you I shall take occasion of expressing my gratiture for this courtesy with ten marks (|2.&0). ''Nitrated SteeP Reduces Motor Wear and Tear MacMillan Helps Navigator Proposes Scheme To Aid Trans-Atlantic Flyers Montreal. â€" If plans matariaHie ac- cording to the wishes of Lieut. Donald MacMillan, a navigating officer now connected with the Cunard Line, trans-Atlantic airmen will never be out of com-munioation with the main- land, according to reports received here. It is stated that Lieat McMillan, THE PRINCE OF WALES A PING-PONGER When the Prince visited a working lads' hostel in the east end of I»ndon ^ , i- he played table tennis with one of the boys at this old game which is once j"'P«-f»««'^.'"">, the number ofjiyes more coming to the front. No New Idea Historian Finds Women Adopt Scanty Dress After Great Wars London. â€" The theory that women always dress scantily in the years following great wars Is advanced by the Hon. Sir John Fortescue, K.C.V.O., the historian, who was formerly the King's librarian at Windsor Castle. "It seems to be the rule," writes Sir NO BETTER MEDICINE FOR IHTLE ONES lost in attempting to fly across the Atlantic, has devised a scheme where- by it would be possible for the air- men to keep in constant touch fith shore. The scheme proposes an unbroken chain of wireless athrisers to the main- land on the Atlantic from Ireland to I the coast of Newfoundland. The plan, Is What Thousands of Mothers it is understood, has been submitted Say of Baby's Own Tablets. ^ the directors of the steainship cwn- ' pany, who have inooned It heartily, A medicine for the baby or growing and are said to be eommanieating with French Discovery May Great-' ly Affect Automobile and Airplane Industries Paris. â€" Profound changes in tlM automobile, airplane and allied indiuk tries using larg^e quantities of at«<d, are predicted as a result of the r»* cently discovered "nitrated steel" by a French natural scientist. Leon Guillet, director of Ecole Centrale, in an ad- dress before the French Academy of Science, announced that this new steel will bring about a diminution of two- thirds in the wear and tear of motors. Tests which were held showed that the wear and tear on an automobile using "nitrated steel" and running 90,000 kilometers was practically nil, and further that after 100 hours the cylinders of "nitrated steel" required only four to Ave grams of oil as con»- pared with 1 to 15 grants consumed during the same time by an ordinary motor. M. Guillet pointed out that the pres- ent cylinders of airplane and automo- bile motors, being composed of nickel or other alloys, wear out quickly, and as this takes place the oil consumption augments. On the other hand "ni- trated steel" cylinders having passed through 500 degrees of heat are ren- dered practically immune from wear and tear. Furthermore, this steel increases the possibilities of "direction friction" to 400 revolutions per minute- sibilities. Lieut- McMillan, in a letter to his directors, is understood to have d»- clared that he has given the plan asT- eral months' consideration. H^ says that at the end of each Spice arid Sweetness unaccountable way, suggests sum- mer. When the hum of bees is heard in a monotone of buzzing rhythm, when the warmth of the sun, when all assured is absolutely safe as well as efUclentâ€" is found in Baby's Own Tab- lets. The Tablets are praised by John In "The Evening News," "that thousands of mothers throughout the when men take the shedding of blood | country. These mothers have found on a large scale, women must begin by actual experience that there is no to shed raiment." The author then ' other medicine for little ones to equal I hour the airplane will be required to proceeds learnedly and at length to them. Once a mother has used them 1 send out a call sign, which would be support this thesis by tracing the his- for her children she will use nothing , picked up by one of a series of ships tory of women's styles from the time ' else. Concerning them Mrs. Charles ; lining the proposed route, which will of the Norman conquest. He em- ' Hutt, Tsncock Island, N.S., writes: â€" i be situated at a distance erf 10 d e gree s ph'asizes particularly the flimsy and ' "i have ten children, the baby being longitude all the way across. The shipe abbreviated clothes which became jjugt six months old. I have used would be in communication with the fashionable after the French Revolu- j Baby's Own Tablets for them for the main ship and would report weather tlon and the World War. Incidentally, ' past 20 years and can truthfully say conditions to her, he dates the popular evening "chem- 1 that I know of no better medicine for ise frock" from the Egypt of at least mtle ones. I always keep a box of the Tablets in the house and would advise all other mothers to do so." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all medicine dealers or will be mailed upon receipt of price, 25 cents per box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brockville, Ont. « 3,000 years agoâ€" -preBumably it was designed following some heavy flght- iag around the Pyramids. The author concludes by predicting the return of long skirts. "I hope I The mere thought of clover, In some may yet live," he says fervently, "to Fill a warm platter wtth triangles of l" ?"«<•«'"' •'"'•o'- ''n <^^»^^ ""^X- '•>«'â- Â« crisp buttered toast. Cover each toast triangle with a mound of well season- ed string beans. Center each of these mounds with either a young boiled beet or with a beet cone fashioned with a veKetable cutter. Fish With Asparagus. For thi.': dl.sh use either a boiled whItcdKh or KHimun. (If you use the lattrr, merely steam It until It Is thorouf^hly warmed). Place the flsh upon a hot platter, cover It with as- paiagus lips which are also hot. Over this potir a hot cream sauce, made with tiutler, flour and milk. Cover the sauce with minced green peppers. (It preferred, the fish topped with the •sparagUH lips may be first presented without the !(BU<:e, that the color scheme of green and white or green • ml pink may be noted. The sauce snd the minced green peppers are then passed in separate dishes. .Kvery one knows that vegetables are Kood for grownups and children alike, hut it Is dlfflciilt to make the average being enthuse over these health-giving foods. Maybe If you. try these color-Hchemo vegetable platters on your family you will have the sur- prlHlng «u<'(e8H wlihthem that other houiiewlves who have served them have met with. A Red and White Platter. Thoroughly wsHh a largo head of cauliflower and boll It In fresh water. Do not salt the water beforelianil, as that lends to discolor the vegetable. Meantime either heat some canned to- inatoes or .ilew some fresh ones. Just before seivlng place the stewed to- matoes upon a warm platter. Center them with the head of cauliflower. (If you have separated It before cooking build It up mound-fashion In the center of the platter). Garnish the cauliflower with strips of pimento and â- errs at once. Or. if tomatoes are seasonable, hair* small, firm tomatoes, sprinkle with coarse bread crumbs and cheese aad broil. Arrange around the mound of oaullflower and serve with cheese A Ysllow and Qrsen Platter. An Ysllow and Qrsen Platter. Plaoa creamed spliiach upon a plat* ••r. Around the edgs lay â- llesi o( oookad carrots. Center th« ipiBAek wtth alloss of hard-bollsd sgfs m^ laacsd In mound ihapa. Nosdie Rlnf. Noodle ring Is dsllghtful to serrs with spinach or with creamed lUh, meat or chtcksn. It. Is mads thus: 4 eggs, 2 cups dry noodlss, 1 cup milk. 1 small piece of butter, salt to taste, three wsttlaft the cans seat bottom Cook Chs i^tfdlM »nd rinse thsm Is wilt bs M Hfht a« a new on*. Is sure to be clover growing close by ("lover makes for busy contentment: an cudless round of honey-gathering for the brown and gold bees, dipping Into the sacks of the white clover, emerging tinged a dusty yellowlsh- whlle with pollen. A drowsy monot- ony hums â€" only the bees are working, for all else is hot and goldenâ€" asleep In the sun. Even scurrying wasps, a black and shimmering blue in the glinting sun- light, hover over the sweet smelling clover. Slender striped yellow-Jsckets glance and hesitate; dash away to their homes in a hollow telephone pole. Rndless green stalks, thick as pen- cils, rise to the height of a man's waist. Clover leaves make a forest of light green un^er the nodding white cylinders of the clover blossoms. Tiny flowers comprise these cylinders of white sweetness, whose secnt has a delicious tang. Not a cloying over- powering scent, but a mild, pleasant aroma, reminiscent of summer's own fragrance. On the lawns tiny white clovers, close to the grounjl, their long petals curving to form' diminutive clover- heads, perfume the atmosphere. When they are not fullgrown, green lips the petalsâ€" petals almost like tiny chrysanthemums; when In full bloom pink floods the tips, emitting a sweet- ness that is the very essence of sum- mer. When dry and powdery, a cop- pery brown tint changes the fluttering petals, but a faint scent above the dryness still Is easily recognizable. . Maroon shades claim the larger red see again graceful, flowing draperies In evening dresses, setting forth the lines of the perfect body, and what Is no less important concealing the de- fects of the imperfect." ^>- Larkin Not Selling Salada Tea Business Ofllclals of the Snlada Tea Com- pany, Toronto, have Informed this paper that the Hon. Peter C. Larkin. Canadian High Commissioner in Lon- don has cabled a denial to the rumour that he was selling his Salada Tea business. "There Is not a grain of truth in It", he said. "Wie have had numerous offers for tbtt business since I took ofBce under the Oovemment, but I would not entertain the Idea of parting with any of the business In- terests of myself or my son, neither would my son". Hon. Mr. I^arktn said he hoped to return to Toronto to resume his former Ufa there when the Canadian OoTemmsnt no longer requires his servioss In London His son, Gerald R. Larkin Is presldnt »f tfce Salada Tea Company. A Great Nag "Why do you always speak of your wife as trotting around? She isn't a horse." "Well, maybe not; but she's a great nag." :: *^- The Wife: "Quick, Qeorgle's swal- lowed one of my hairpins." Her hus- band: "It doesn't matter a bit, dear. They're no use now, are they?" Lord Jeltlco The famous admiral makes a drive. His lordship is captain of ths Roeh- ampton club in England. Out-Doing Our Own Prospectors clover that covers the Oeld which 11*4 j fallow. On the wind the sweet clover* scents come flying; even far awa} i from the fleld one can picture tb4 1 maroon-colored clover blossoms; their) pointed oval green leaves that have deep centres veins, their pliant light green stalks. In the wind the bios- some bend; the under surface of light- er green spreads as It follows ths wind's courss, hiding its soft red blooms under Its obelsancs to the sum- mer b reels. Spies and iwsstnsss; whits and ffssn and maroon blossoms In th« warmth of summsrtlms. A New Remedy For Sagging OiurBottonw Chairs with laMlng oane-ssat bot- toms can be made comfortable to sit on again by wstting ths oanMisat bot- tom wtth bolllag water and by Isttlns It dry in ths opsn air. Attsr two or Sees Ex-Kaiser's Cash In Junkers' Campaign William Hohenzollem, one-time Kaiser of Germany, is about to put up from ' a quarter to a half million dollars to help the German National- ist Party in ths Reichstag campaign that will end in the elections of Hay 20, according to a report from Berlia printed in the New Yorker Volkssel- tung. This story, which the German- language newspaper avers comes from absolutely reliable sources, runs as fol- lows: A tew days ago there were interest- ing and mysterious conversations In the Netherland Palace in Berlin, ths present headquarters of the general administration of the HohenioUern properties, between the HohenzoUerns' general representative and German Nationalists. The HohenzoUerns' agent declared that the former King of Prussia would put up from 1,000,00« to 2,000,000 marks for the campaign. "Only the Lord of Doom was said to be considering whether to give the money to the German Nationalist campaign fund or to give it to an already existing Royalist Party. As was shown some time ago, Hermine of Hohenzollem during her last Tislt to Berlin established a faithful Royal- est Party and named its candidates for the Reichstag. This was a feature of the quiet struggle among the Con- servatives, l.e„ between the group that still was politically linked with the German Nationalist People's Party and the 100-per cent. German NaUon- allsts. "Then the German Nationalists, through their most prominent lead- ers, got in touch with the Hohen- zollem agents in order to get ths money for the German Nationalist campaign chest. As they declared themselves ready to nominate abso- lutely reliable Royalist leaders for ths Reichstag, the Hohenzollem represen- tative said he was satisfied and was ready to turn the money over to ths German Nationalists. Furthermore, the German Nationalists had to obli- gate themselves to work oat a law tor submission to the Reichstag prorldlng for the remission for at least two decades of ail land taxes In Prussia and all national taxes on real esUts on the Hohenzollem properties. "In connection with this part of the deal the Hohenzollem agent complain- ed that the Hohenzollem settlement had proved to be a fiasco, because the income was greatly reduced through heavy taxes imposed by the Prussian Ministry of Fiance. It was necessary for the HohenzoUerns to invest mors capital and for the Immediate future little could be made on it. Further along in his remarks the Hoh3nsollern agent emphasized the fact that the campaign millions were not to be re- garded as a gift, but as a loan, which was to be repaid in case the bill re- mitting the land taxes should not pass. The German Nationallsta were not very highly edified by this last condition, but as their treasury was low they had to make the best of It." THE FIRST PLANE USED ON A GOLD RUSH Kloyd Dennet and Herat Balchen used It to stake several valuable claims at Reindeer I.Ake, Manitoba. It Is being tested for Byrd's expedition. Many planes will be used this comlnc season In the hunt for precious minerals. Sentence Sermons (By the Rev. Roy L. Smith, in Buttalo Courier- Express. ) I HAVE NOTICEDâ€" That no man tUnka he is rich untS he liias ^utt a little bit more. That no woman enjoys betns told how clever some other woniaa ts. That the man who Is oompJalninc Is usually doing lesa work. That the woman who Is moat woa> anly usually cats mors o( a womaa^ rights. That most men work bsttsir u a r» suit of appreciation. • Judge: "Tou say that tMs man i«h- bed youâ€" can you recognlis anythinf of yours hsreT" Flalatlir: "Tm. this handkarchlsT." Jndge: "But tLat Is no proofâ€" I have one ess^tly llha It" Ptolntiff: "Tes, your honcf ; I *»• rofc had of two." m^ sAtm mm

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