Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 May 1923, p. 3

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t , ' " ' ^ . "4 ^ ' '„ " ' *h® mtmsxwr*FLATTCM?**,™. iw«HEinrfv mt. . • * •. • r-*"-* o 0WK Mh Army Mask Has New Features Hakes It Possible for Officers to > £m Orders in Battle Without Removal. Washington. -- The chemical warfare service of the army has developed a new gas mask so constructed Of to enable the wearer to carry on conversation while using it and thus making it possible for officers to give orders in battle without removing it. finch a mask will be of vital importance in troop operations, and the invention of the speaking device in this new type of mask is regarded by army etperts as the greatest improvement in gas masks since the close of the .World war. They regard it as the most nearly perfect device of its kind 111 the world. ,< Wearer Can Talk. • The new maak has a sort of dlailtiragm attachment somewhat similar in appearance to that used on phonographs. By means of it the wearer of the mask can carry on conversation With about 80 per cent of the efficiency of the average speaking voice. American experts had been trying to Achieve tjie same result through a telephone attachment, but with the development of the diaphragm idea the attempt to arrange the mask so as to provide for telephone conversation has been abandoned. The diaphragm attachment is less cumbersome, not complex, and experiments conducted by the army have demonstrated that the tinman voice Is reproduced efficiently , through use of the new attachment The perfection of the new mask has reached tiifc point where orders have been given for its production on a con- & sdderable scale at the Edgewood arsenal. The new mask embodies a number of other recent developments. It contains a new canister which, through the addition of new chemicals, not only protects the wearer against the ordinary gases used in chemical warfare but also against ammonia fumes and the deadly carbon monoxide. It Is expected that this improvement will make the new mask Invaluable to firemen In great cities, as well as to mine workers and those who are employed in the fumigation of vessels. Other New Features. There are also features embraced 1n the construction of the new "allpurpose" canister that lessen air re- «lstance and reduce the distress of breathing to practically a negligible quantity. This Improvement Includes elimination of the nose and mouth pieces and has resulted In considerable reduction In the amount of charcoal used in the mask. The new mask likewise contains a device for passing dry air from the chemicals over the eyeglnsses of the mask. This prevents collection of moisture and considerably improves the vision. A special arrangement also enables the chemical containing case to be carried under the arm Instead of on the chest, as lit other types of masks, and thus provides greater freedom in body movement of the wearer. Experiments are also being conducted with chemicals that render cloth impervious to burning gases, but which will at the same time permit moisture from the human body to efr cape. FISH TRUST JAILED SMALL HALVES BRUNDAGE BILL Governor Lops Off $523,200 From the Attorney General'! Appropriation Measure. ANESTHETICS LONG IN USE STARTS HEW POLITICAL WAR Sizzling Veto Message Executive Reviews His Battle With Brundage--^ Senate Grants Women RighKto Sit on Juries. Chinese Drug. Used Many Centuries Ago, Had Much of the I Effects of Ether. ^ An anesthetic, whose effects were like those of ether or chloroform, was used in China in 220 A. D. by the surgeon Haoua-t'ouo. This is established beyond doubt by the text of Kou kin yi tong, which was brought to the attention of the Academy of Sciences in 1849 by Stanislas Julien. The Chinese anesthetic, known as ma yao--that is to say "the remedy which takes* away feeling"--was extracted from Indian hemp, which also yields hashish. The old Chinese text tells ns, "Haoua-t'ouo gave a dose of ma yao to the patient. > who a few minutes later became unconscious--that Is, as though he were deprived of life. As the case demanded, Haoua-t'ouo would operate upon the person or amputate, and remove the cause of the sickness. Then he would draw the tissues together at the point of Incision and apply ligatures. After a few days the sick mnn was on his feet again without having felt the least pain during the operation." This text from the year 220 makes the controversy^ over who first discovered ether »seem childish.--Georges Dubarbier in La .Nwuvelle fidPMt (Paris). More than 90 per cent of a blanket of new snow 1s sometimes made up of air. Tay Pay O'Connor/ celebrated " Journalist and "father" of the British house of commons, confesses that to have to make an after-dinner .speech fills him with terror. .. . Wealthy defendants in the fish trust cases, sentenced to juil at Deer island, near Boston, are shown" above going on board the Hibbard for a doleful harbor Voyage which ended at the house.of correction; Louisiana Tree 2,500 Years Old Edenborn Brake Is Placed by Scientists as Fifth Oldest Living Thing. New Orleans.--The fifth oldest known living thing on earth, and the third oldest in North America, Is a giant cypress tree in what is known as the Edenborn Brake, in Winn parish, this state, according to Carleton F. Poole, of the Louisiana state conservation department. The age of the tree has been placed at 2.500 pears by Prof. Herman Schrenk, of St. Louis, and other scientists who have examined it. According to records, it is exceeded In longevity only by the Santa Maria del Tule cypress, near Oaxaca, Mexico, 5,000 to 6*000 years old, the Dragon tree at Orotava, Island of Tenerlffe, 4,000 years old, the Sequoia trees, California, 4.000 years old, and the Baobab tree, Senegal, 4,000 years old. Fastest Milkers in South Dakota i m I I The" Edenborn cypress was budding Into life when Jerusalem was taken by Nebuchadnezzar. It j was a lusty young sprout when the battleis of Marathon and Thermopylae were fought, when Assyria was at the apex of the world dominion and when Rome was a village of mud roads and hovels. The tree was GOO years old when Christ was born in Bethlehem, a veteran when the Roman legions were withdrawn from Britain to leave the savage tribes of those Islands to fight out their differences, and was more than 2,000 years old when Columbus sailed Into the Atlantic to begin his voyage of discovery. The tree was one of a number of its kind in a tract of p'lne timber purchased by William Edenborn some years ago, and when logging began he refused to permit it and three others almost as large to be felled, although the giant contains approximately 23,- 000 feet of lumber. It Is peculiarly situated for one of Its species, for while the cypress usually grows In swamps the Edenborn specimen stands in a hollow between hills. One of the three cypresses left standing with It was felled by a storm .«<>me months ago. Mr. Edenborn has offered the aged giant and its two companions to . th<* conservation department to do with as It sees fit. so long as none Is Injured. The department plans construction of a highway to them so that the spot may be visited more easily by tourists and home folk. • I Big Telescope for Russia. St. Albans, England.--One of the most wonderful telescopes In the world is nearing completion here, for shipment to the Nlkolaieff observatory, Russia. It weighs about nlye tons, the inside diameter is 43 feet, i he refracting telescope for photography is 112 Inches, and the whole will be fitted to a revolving turret of steel. At the right it> Miss Emma Lunoiu ol Springfield, S. D.. v.-- won -first honors as a milkmaid at the little International live stock and grain show held at the state college at Brookings. S. D. She drew 22.8 pounds of milk In 10 minutes. Miss Hazel Chrisman, at the left, was winner of second prize, drawing 16.7 pounds of milk in 10 minutes. _ ' t Fox Fur High in Leipzig*. Leipzig.--The fur auction here, which has closed after three weeks, was attended by many American buyers. These paid high prices for raw fox furs, which were even higher than the usual figure for this class of pelts. EARTH'S SURFACE ADRIFT, H , _ There BELIEF OF SCIENTISTS Police Dancers Found <$>- Theories of German Savant Arouse New Controversy. London.--An Interesting controversy fjas been excited In British scientific circles by the remarkable theories of Prof. Alfred Wegener, a German, who •declares that the earth's continents are •drifting westward. His thesis is that the earth's continents are of lighter material, and float like Icebergs on a heavier plastic material, which reaches Its highest level at the bottom of the oceans. This startling theory has been strongly criticized by P. Lake of the Boyal Geographical society. By ipeans of maps be showed the way In which Wegener has reconstructed the land surface of the globe. According to this reconstruction North America was once and South America was brought into contact with Africa. * Since then the continents have drifted away from one another into their present position. Among a number of carefully reasoned criticisms, Mr. Lake pointed out that In order to ipeet his theory Wegener had flattened out the Himalayas In order to lengthen the peninsula of India, but he had not flattened out others of the world's mountains In a similar way. He also declared that the argument based on alleged correspondence In geological formation In the various continents would not hold good,, because Wegener's geological facts were not accurate. As an offset to Mr. Lake's views, a number of other British observers seem Inclined to support -Wegener's revolutionary theory. Prof. J. Jolly of Trinity college, Dub- In physical contact with Europe: India i lin, writing in the current issue of Nafltted in between Africa and Australia ture, thinks that Wegener is In error In li The police of Rochester. N. Y„ wound up their annual dance with the band playing "Hall, Hall, the Gang's Ail Here." When the merrymakers retired to the cloak rooms, they found the gang had gone, and with It the choicest furs, overcoats, and other wraps that the members could lay their hands on. ' • ' The loot Is expected to ran fatfour figures. working out the theory on the basis of a westerly drift of the continents. The theory, he says, grows In probability If an easterly drift is indicated. When an adult human body Is cremated the resldium is a mass of gray ashes weighing about two pounds.^ Polar Natives Say Slain Kin Hold Nightly Revel Anchorage, Alaska--Some natives of Alaska profess to believe that the angry spirits of the Aleuts massacred at the behest of the early Russian discoverers and traders under Shelikoff, Baranoff and Chirikoff are lurking In the •volcanoes of the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes. Beneath the thin crust of the earth covering the lower Alaskan peninsula and the Aleutian archipelago, these spirits, the natives assert, are holding nightly revels and emerging periodically to hurl fire, smoke and thunder at the heads of the Invaders. Tire fanciful recital of the natives is that on Chirikoff Island, long famed as haunted, a half hundred natives were lured Into a log compound, set npon by savage enemies under, direction of the Russians, murdered and •despoiled of priceless sea otter skins. Their spirits are appearing again In protest. The eruption of three vol- •canoes In January is, they say, a revlsltutlon of these spirits and will continue until they are avenged. Gets $1,000 to Repay $51 Loan Made in 1912 Horn ell. N. Y.--Edward Congdon, Erie train despatches has received a draft for $1,000 In payment of a loan of $51 In 1912. Congdon and Jake Griffin of Omaha had been friends In Ja- ' pan. They met later In San Francisco, where Griffin was broke. Congdon bought him a ticket to Omaha and gave him money besides. Griffin promised to repay. Congdon got a letter from an Omaha lawyer saying ^1,000 had been deposited to his credit by Griffin. \ ........... i. .«• !'I • For many years Chirikoff island ha* Been a place seldom inhabited by natives or whites. Many harrowing tales from Chirikoff were brought here by Captain Nick Galkema, who has visited almost every nook and harbor along the Aleutian*. Last summer the skipper braved the Valley of Smokes, emerging with the shoes burned from his feet and with muny stories to tell. alse Teeth Choke Man Falling in River Pittsburgh, Pa.--Charles E. ^ogan, marine engineer on the government steamboat Swan, was choked to death by his false teeth when he fell Into the Monongahela river. It had been thought Logan was drowned when he fell Into the water while hurrying back to his boat from a visit to ills four-year-old daughter. He had dreamed the child had been drowned and hurried hom4 to learn the dream was false. Qrave Digger Finds 55 SnakM, Strattonville, Pa.--A nest of 55 garter snakes was dug up here by Frank Freeman and Anthony Richardson, Jr., while they were digging a grave In the Methodist cemetery. The'grave diggers were down about four fee] when the wriggling mass-of reptil was unearthed. Springfield.--Governor Small In * message to the house of representatives vetoes $528,200 of'appropriations totaling $1; 125,240 given to the office >f Attorney General Brundage by the general assembly. The question now is:, "Will {he legislature repass the bill from which the huge sum is cut over the veto of the .governor?" By the vigorous use of his veto ax, the governor leaves the attorney general with only $01,2.(>40 to spend in two years, instead of $1,125,240 allowed in bills passed for the state's law department, which include $75,000 I'cr the Herrin massacre prosecutions iiad an Item of $53,01 H) in the stale officers' appropriation Mil. List of .Items Vetoed. Following are the items vetoed by Governor Small: Special investigation and the collection of inheritance tax in Cook-county, $10,000 per annum--$82,000. For attorneys for the department of finance, agriculture, labor, mines and minerals, public worl.s and buildings, public welfare, public health, trade and commerce, registration and education; for the Illinois commerce commission^ for road work, deep waterway, blue sky law enforcement, for enforcement of law a»d assistance to state's attornews, special assistants, special attorneys, Investigators, brief writers, extra help, costs In United States courts, investigation expenses, preparation and trial of suits in United States and state courts, $125,000 per annum-- $250,000. For expenses of litigation arising from the construction of the Illinois waterway and litigation over title and recovery of state property, $50,000 per annum--$100,000. For costs and expenses in disbarment proceedings, $5,000 per annum-- $10,000. For employment Of inheritance tax attorneys outside of Cook county, $45,- 000 per annum--$01,200. For dissolution of defunct corporations, hot including the cost of pub Mention--$30,000. ; Total, $523,200. Battle of Small and Brundage. Two years ago Goverlor Small cut from the attorney general's ordinary and contingent appropriation bill $644,000. Mr. Brundage lias charged that this amounf was taken from his bill to hamper him in the prosecution of the conspiracy case against the governor. Governor Small has come back with the retort that the attorney general would not have had him indicted had he not vetoed the Items at that time. All^pf^IiKitems Just cut out were included In the veto two years ago. In bis message to Jthe house the governor cites his demands upon Attorney Geperal Brundage for an accounting under oath of the expenditures of his office. The governor' charges that "Instead of availing himself of this opportunity he flatly refused to obey' the constitution, sought to construe It to suit his purposes and then entered upon a. lengthy tirade of vile and undignified .abuse directed against the person of the governor." Senate Passes Jury Bill. The Hamilton bill permitting women to serve on juries was passed by the senate with but one dissenting vote, that «t Senator-Snaw (Hep., Saline). Two companion bills were passed, one making this bill apply to Cook county machinery and the other proriding the women shall be given special quarters in the Jury riiom. Senator James Barbour (ltep,, Chicago) voted against applying this to Cook county. He said the experiment should be tried downstate first. Small's Road Bill O. K.'d. Passage of Governor Small's $100,- 000,000 road bond bill was recommended by the senate roads committee. The bill was sent to the senate with 40 amendments which added more than 125 miles to the original 3,tu0 which are in addition to the uncompleted mileage of the first 4,s00-mlle trunk line system. The meeting developed Into a veritable "grab-bag"' affair. Senators deluged the bill with amendments to take care of their Individual territories. Finally Senator' Barr (Rep., WiVD took the floor. "We shouldn't spoil this bill by adding a lot of mileage and make tt top heavy," he said. Illinois News in Brief. Polo.--The seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of Buffalo Grove Presbyterian church was celebrated May 0 and 7 with a reunion of present and former members and their descendants. The church was formally established on May 5, 1848. Springfield.--Development of oil roads In Illinois to a position second only to the state hard-road system has led the state highway department to plan an experimental oil road in Henry county, similar to the Bates experimental hard road. Crystal Lake.--A skunk farm Is to be established near here by Klrl K. and Donald E. King, who have leased a suitable tract of land and are enclosing it with a tine-mesh wire fence The Star Black breed of skunks will be raised, and the King brothers expect to develop r. good-gayIng business In the sale of pelts. Ottawa.--Collapsing from fear, .Mr*. Joseph lirazites of Spring Valley died A few minutes before the bodies of her son, Joseph Brazites, twenty-two, and his chum, Joseph Stanlties, tw^ty-one, were found in the Illinois Mver. History of Baldwin Appls. The Pepartment of Ag-iculture says that soon after 1740 the Baldwin came up as a chance seedling on the farm of John Ball Wilmihgton, near Lowell, „Mass., and for about forty years afterward its cultivation waS confined to that Immediate neighborhood. Eventually the farm came into the possession of a Mr. Butters, who gave the apple the name Woodpecker or Pecker, and It was also called Butters. Deacon Samuel Thompson, a surveyor of Wolburn, brought It to the attention of Colonel Baldwin of the same town, by wlicm It was propagated and more widely introduced in eastern Massachusetts as early as 17S4. From Colonel Baldwin's interest In the variety It came to be called the Baldwin. In 1$17 the original tree was still alive, but it perished between 1 SI 7 and IS32. A monument to,the Baldwin apple now raa^ks .the location/;' Gratify your liking for appreciation by appreciating your neighbor.; On the Night Shift Nighthawks and whippoorwilte work chiefly at night, when most of the other birds are off duty, and at daybreak their good work Is taken up by the swifts and swallows, says Nature magazine of Washington. These birds are provided with big scapnet mouths, and as they swing through the air rover wide areas of country, they scoop up almost unbelievable numbers of insects. Six hundredowere taken from the stomach of ajslngle Arkansas n\jjhthaw'k.' . ' .V. ' » IMPORTANT: Save this announcement, read it car6* fully, and keep for reference. It map. meanmonz-j and knowledge to yoa. Over $7500.00 for Grape-Nuts Recipes The Postum Cereal Company will buy not less than 101 Recipes or suggestions for new Uses of Grape-Nuts, paying $50.00 for each one accepted. And in addition-- Good Housekeeping Institute, conducted by Good Housekeeping Magazine, will decide an award of $2500.00 for the best four of the 101 or more Recipes or suggestions for new Uses of Grape-Nuts, so purchased: $1000.00 for the 1st selection $750.00 for the 2nd selection $500.00 for the 3rd selection $250.00 for the 4th selection Read carefully the terms of this offer so that you may have the fullest opportunity to share in its benefits. The conditions are so simple and fair that every housewife in the United States can take part in this National Recipe Festival! There Is No Other Food Like Grape-Nuts W HILE p r a c t i c a l l y every man, woman and child in the English- speaking world knows Grape-Nuts as a delicious, nourishing and wholesome cereal, and while it is common knowledge that Grape-Nuts with milk or cream is a complete food, many housewives do not know of the appetizing and economical dishes that can be prepared with Grape-Nuts. It lends itself, we believe, to more uses than any other cereal. The" convenience and economy of Grape-Nuts, and the flavor, zest and wholesomeness which it imparts to other food, make it invaluable in every home. • Frequently we receive interesting letters from women throughout the country, telling about the attractive dishes they make with Grape-Nuts--delicious puddings, salads, dressings for fowls, etc. No doubt there are thousands of women who are finding varied uses for Grape-Nuts in their home cooking, and even more thousands who will be glad to learn of those varied uses; for while we all cling to old favorite dishes, we also welcome and enjoy a change. So that is the thought back of our offer of more than $7500.00 in cash (or new ways of using Grape-Nuts. To those women who are already using Grape-Nuts in various ways, other than as a breakfast cereal or in the recipes given here, and to those women who would like to try their hand at developing some new way to use Grape-Nuts, we offer to buy at $50.00 each not less than 101 new Grape-Nuts Recipes. We plan to include these new Recipes in a beautifully illustrated cook book. What Is Grape-Nuts? Grape-Nuti it a highly nutritious food in the form of criip, golden grannies. It contain* the full nutriment of wheat and barley, including vitamin-B and mineral element* required for building sturdy health. These elements are often lacking in the ordinary diet, chiefly through "over-refinement" in the preparation of food. No other food is so thoroughly baked ' •s Grape-Nuts. More than 20 hours ar. consumed in the baking prooesa which makes Grape-Nuts easy to digest, and also develops a natural sweetness from the grains themselves. The form apd orispness of Grape- Nuts invit. thorough mastication--ls< decided advantage because this not only provides proper exercise for the teeth, but makes for ^od digestion. Every housewife in the Land should take advantage of this extraordinary opportunity to earn the tidy sum of $50.00 by a little pleasant and educational effort in her own home. Also the fair and equal chance to secure one of the liberal awards to be made by Good Housekeeping Institute. Moreover, there's the greater knowledge of the value of Grape- Nuts, not only as a delicious breakfast oereal, but in the preparation of a variety of appetizing dishes that add to the health and pleasure of the whole family. Wfcsr* yoa don't God Grape-Nats you won't find peopls «'There*s a ason' Sold by ftroccri everywhere I 1 Conditions Governing the Purchase of, and Awards for Grape-Nuts Recipes The Postum Cereal Company will'tray not ten then 101 Recipe* or tuftfestion* (or new Usee of Grape-Nuti, pirinl SS0.00 (or each one accepted. Thii offer ia open to every per ton ia the United State*. Good Housekeeping loititnte, conducted by Good Housekeeping Magazine, will decide aa •ward of $2500.0(1 for the best four of the 101 or more Recipes or sugfeitiont for new U«e» ol Grape-Nuts. »o purchased. $1000.00 for the 1st selection; $750.00 for the 2nd aeleetion; $500.00 lor the 3rd selection; and $250.00 lor the 4th •election. Recipe* ranat be mailed betweea May let, 1923 and August 31st. 1923. Recipes or suggestions (or new uaee submitted for purchase must not duplicate any of the tea Recipes printed in this announcement. No Recipe will be purchased from anyone directly or indirectly connected with the Postuqt Cereal Company. Inc.. or Good Hpueckeeptni laatitnte. *• Ii more thaa oae Recipe is offered, each moat ' be writteu oa a aeparate sheet. Write name •ad addreaa plainly oa each Recipe eabmittad. la the ereat ol a tie (or air award offered. « award identical in all reapect* with that tied Iw will be made to each one tying. It is not necessary to purchaee Grape-Net a. A suitable quantity will be eent upoa reqoeet to those desiring to submit rccipca. Your Recipe should state the exact number intended to be aerved. Recipes should be carefully tested to make sure that proportions and directions (or preparing will bring best re- •aha. Form of Recipe: First, write name of yoa Recipe et top of sheet; underneath list all ingredients. using /ere/ measurement* only; then the directions (or preparing, worded simply and accurately . Do not tend specimen dish. Ia considering Recipes for purchase. e^J foe awards by Good Housekeeping Instltate. aCaiwnt will be taken ol the followiag poiate: (a) Palatabilitv. (b) Simplicity and economy. <e) Accuracy and clearaeea ol CTpraaai-- Ol recipe. Aaaonacement of the Recipes pnrchased. and Awards by Good Housekeeping Iastitata, will be made ia January Good Hoaaekeepiag. Recipee eabaitted to the Poem Cereal Cspipaay far porehaae will at he isgaaasd. y« cups chopped American cheeea Recipes must be addressed to RECIPE DEPARTMENT Postum Cereal Company,Inc., Battle Creek,Michigan. Below are ten Recipes showing a few of the many appetizing dishes that can be made with Grape-Nuts. Read them over, try some of them, and then you will find it easy to work out a new Recipe or tbiaV of anewusefor Grape-Nuts, that we may purchase. And remember, your Recipe or suggestion for new use of Grape-Nuts may also merit am ol the large awards. GRAPE-NUTS lee Cream Prepare plain flavored icecream in the usual wa?< Jutt before the cream hardens in freezing, add Grape*Nut* at it comes from the package, in the proportion of one*haif cup of Grape* Nuts to one quart of ice cream. If you buy ice cream ready made, add Grape-Nuts in placc of oat* meats. You'll find the resulting flavor unique* GRAPE-NUTS SaLd 1 cop Grape-Nuta 2 cubed bananas 1 sliced orange 2 teaspoons lemon- Vi cup cubed piM* juice apple Cream Salad DreaaiaJ Cut up the fruit.add lemon • juice, mix with Grape- Nuts, and serve on bed of lettuce with Cieam Salad Dressing. Makes four to six portioos. GRAPE-NUTS Six Minute Pudding 1 cup Grape-Nuts 1 tablespoon sugar 1% cups scslded milk cup raisins Cover Grape-Nuts with scalded milk. Add sugar, raisins, and a little nutmeg. Cook six minutes directly over the heat, stirring constantly, aad wrve with any good pudding sauce. Makea fotf to six portions. GRAPE-NUTS Cookies 1 cup Grape-Nuti 2Vi cups flour Vl cup shortening ' j, 2 teaspoons bakiaf* 1>4 cups light brtlVB powder sugsr I teaspoon cinnaflMM Vfc cup milk ft teaspoon clove® 2 well-beaten egga V4 teaspoon salt 1 cup chopped seeded raisins Cream shortening and sugar. Add milk and well* beaten eggs. Add weli-«ifted dry ingredients, and rsisins thst have been dusted with p«rt of the flour, and then the Grape-Nuts. Heat thoroughly and drop from a spoon on baking sheet one and one-half inches apart. Bake in a mo<icr * ate oven for fifteen minutes. GRAPE-NUTS Cheese Casserole K cup Grape-Nats Vi teaspoon pepper lVl cups milk 1^ 1 tsblespoon butter y4 teaspoon soda 2 eggs 1 teaspoon salt Few grains paprika Scsld the milk. Add Grape-Nuts, butter and seasonings and combine with the cheese an<5 «.•£*», the latter slightly beaten. Pour into a buttered bsking dtsb, surround with hot water and Hnktslowiy for forty-6ve minutes in a slo* oven, v e as the main course at luncheon, supper. m meatless dinner. Makes four to six portions. GRAPF.-NUTS Fruit Pudding 1 eup Grape-Nuts 1 pint boiling wster Ipackage iemon Jell-O H cup seeded rai&ios or lemon flavored or chopped dates gelatine Add the boiling water to the Jell-O or lemon flavored gelatine and stir until it is dissolved. Pour into a mould, and after the mixture has cooled slightly, add the,Crape-*N4)ts and fruit; ther ah low the mixture to chill and harden. Makes sous to six portions. GRAPB-NUTS Meat Loaf 1 cup Grape-Nut# 1 egg I pouad real, mottot W tablespoon Itnw* or beef juice Vt pound salt poc% 2 tablespooog tomato 1 teaspoon salt ' 1 • catsup Vi teaspoon peppif Vt tablespooackopped 2 tsblespoons milk psrviey V2 minced onion Pot the meat through a food chopper, add season* ings. Brown minced onion in a little fat before adding Grape-Nuts. miik. and slightly besfen egfis- Pack in a baking dish, shaping like * of baked bread and smooth evenly on top. for forty-five minutes, basting frequently • • • « one-half cup of hot wster, a tablespoon at a Just before taking from oven, brush with iobw the beaten white of egg and a little milk. Brown for one minute. Make? four portion a. GRAPE-NUTS Loaf Cake 1 car Grape-Nate 2Vi cups Pastry floor 14 cap buttar • 2 tcacpoooa bikiol- IVt cup* n4ar powder 3 c(|s 1 teaspoon lak 1 cup milk Vi teaspooa vanilla Cream butter and ratfar; add ett-yulkt well beaten; then milk and Grape-Nuts. Beat <hc mixture thoroughly, fold in alternately the st fly beaten eg(-whites and flour silted with ba^ n*- powder three times; lastly.add thevanilla. Have cake pan previously greased and lightl* flouted; 611 two-thirds full and bake in a moderate oven (or (orty-five minutes. GRAPE-NUTS Tomato Soup |4 cap Grape-Nats I sliced onion 1 quart tomatoes 2 teaspoons salt 2 cups water H teaspoon soda 10 peppercorns 4 whole cloves 3 taMeapoocs butter Cook tomatoes, water and seasonings twenty minutes: strain and add aalt and soda. Crush the Grape-Nuts with a rolling pin. Melt the b«u?er. add the rolled Grape-Nuts, combine sod fjcst the soup to the boiling point. Substitute *v?iwe Grape'Nuts for croutons ia serving jodiviJuai loop plates. Mskes four to sit portions. GRAPE-NUTS Fud*e U cap Grape-Nuts 2 squares cbocolsH i caps granulated sugar teaspoon salt 1 c«p milk 2 tablespoons butter ^ teaspooa vaaitla Combine the anger, milk, chocolate and taft: place over a slow heat, aad stir constantly unci! ths sugar is dissolved. Thro continue K ong gently, without stirring, until the the*naor cfcr registers 238 degrees F.. or the mixture for -:* s soft ball when dropped in eok! water. pan •« howl of cold water and aMo** to staiK* - disturbed unttl there is no heat ir fudge tore. Remove snd add the butter «asi v<i t Beat the cnnture unttl cream* sad thick. <frets add Grape-Nuts and coatiuuc banting until aoougb to knead. Turn oet en e battered i^int* and cut into desired squares.

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