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■ kitchen
■ CABINET
--r*.’". •'• s P“’ er unioQ - )
Hron,. t!w that lately
b!O CTTj A frosty bud and
lerecting white
M 3 I ea A.u,r-H :-lden plunder of
HTAIAB. Adhered boßtelrles
■&3R CAT 1 - ,h
- bleak be
'Vlnt:!: A: A- hours behind
■ J:k, far. faint voices of
■■V-v- -awakened streams—
Mh r„ catch the laughter of
little garder* dreams.
■R:\valk the tiny, drifted paths
■■V I l enow shadows dim,
■CI the wicket-gate and
H niowio.: fountain brim,
IIS.. ra sl l v eyes of greeting
H"*here'the > llac stand J*’ •
■A.,;, f: l. bud-blown prom- .
H d |s C witiun entail fragrant..
■ Haskell Clark.
|H WHAT SHALL WE EAT?
H vi,ri...> purtT of tire country
deer .mound, venison Is, now
Hi being-served. The ganoey,
Hnn il.i liavor of the meat
' s eh>'odally attractive'
■HBJ ] o ;1 11 lovers of the chase.
SjjKffM Venison is one of the
ukl meals which should not
he overcooked; it should
Is i'O served rare to have it
it its host.
Sauted Venison Steaks,
Sauce. - Cut venison
into circular pieces and use the
H, _ for making stock. Saute
in hot butter in a frying
■■and serve with
Himberiand Sauce.—Soak two ta-
of citron cut into short
SjßlHke pieces, two tablespoonfuls
i -los, one tablespoonful
■Hltar.n as, in orange juice for
hours, drain and cook thq
M in a little fruit juice, add one-
of a cupful of currant Jelly, and
ISoon as the jelly Is dissolved add
SI and one-third cupfuls of brown
Ho and two tablespoonfuls of
almonds.
Lee of Venison—Lay a leg
IMenison in mild vinegar with one-
Wih teaspoonful of ginger, one
onion, six cloves and .ten pep-
Turn once and leave two
H. Remove from the vinegar, wipe,
well, dredge with dour and
■t as usual.
the clamor of the street
fancy often fills
far-off thoughts; I live again
■■Among the streams and hills.
■ —•William Dunn,-
E ■ .*• ’ - ,i
Hdoo things for the table
9< r a Change from tiie usual method
chicken try
Cadillac Chick
en-;—Wipe a chlck
cn ’- dress ed as for
J trolling, sprinkle
with salt and pep
” I per, place in a
J well-greased broil-
B er and cook eight
K. minutes. Remove
*>itu and rub over with the follow-
WR Cream four tablespoonfuls of
|B t ' r - u 'i'i ene teaspoonful of mus
-0I)e-half teaspoonful of salt, one
of vinegar, and a few
Vies of cayenne. Sprinkle with
jV-fourths of a cupful of soft, but
cnnil,,s mu] bake until the chick
s'* and the crumbs are
Salmon,— Cook one cupful
■ ,jl * i crumbs and one cupful
1 to u smooth paste. Add four
V'-spoonfuis <,f butter, one cupful
V !lk, -" ! one-half teaspoonful
kk| lediih of a teaspoonful of
fold in t up stiffly-beaten whites
e^s > ii'l buttered mold two
s f ' ll; and set In a pan of hot
H tr ’ co '" r ui,!l buttered paper and
■V.' 1 u moderate oven until firm.
V l '-' " slices of ‘hard-cooked';'
and parsley.
■ rtnch Macaroon Cream.—Sogk one
„( geWtln = ln 4 -, br 4
1 , Uls of cold water. Scald
Bchocni 1 f ° f Illllk wllh one BQtiare
Violate, add the yolks of three
R r J °? tan wlth one-half cupful of
B thirll Const!in,l y until .the mix-.
Ken ur? ’ then add ' the
■nucaro 8 ' t ' V °" thlrds <>f a cupful
■of ° lled aud one teaspoon
l<ii am wi. Turn Into lndlvldual
■ m chin. Serve with whipped
■rttTf". C# "\ Cak -To three
■ one-haif 3 CUP / Ul of caDD ed corn
I ' fal °f milk, one-half
■ beaten , and two e SS B
Hiths of fi *’, lx and slft seven-
B -' of flour, one table-
„ k '2 t Ta^ hal f
U> 111 Combine rnlx
| spoonfuls into but-
H and baim 7 n Set ' nt ? a drt PP ln ß
By nice to a moderat e oven.
Be of i Jet .‘ sicken or a
Good-by, Old Year
By Gract Strickler Dawson, in Kansas City Star
Old Year, good-by,
I I bid you farewell tonight,
And I watch you go with a
bit of a sigh.
But my heart is strangely
light.
For in my hands I hold
The treasures you brought to me,
Gifts more precious than wroughten
gold
Or gems from a tropic sea.
A friendship proven true,
A hard task fairly done,
And a love which lives to bloom anew
With the light of every sun.
And you bear away, Old Year,
In your garments of trailing white,
An old regret and the ghost of a fear
As you vanish from me tonight.
Good-by, Old Year, good-by t
Smiling l watch you go;
We have been good comrades, you
and 1,
But you cannot stay-, I know.
The New Year s.tands .at the door,
Her promises fair 1 hear,
But still 1 linger to say once inbred
Goodby, goodby, Old Year. ; 1:
S7>e
“IWilf Spirit
BY DEAN MARQUIS
—ln Detroit News
S'" - ' ' OU ure going to make a New
Year’s resolution. You may
not believe in doing so. You
may not want to do so. You
may stoutly affirm that you
will not do so. But to say
that you will not resolve to do any
thing is in itself a resolution. It
meuns that you are determined to hold
to your present course. If you have
been a wabbler, then you are j?oing to
keep on wabbling; if you have been a
drifter, you are going to keep on drift
ing; if you have been without a tar
get at which to shoot, then you are
going to keep right on banging away
with hotli eyes shut. It is a law that
a body unsupported falls to the
§ ground. And It is
also a law that a
man unsupported,
by a definite pur
pose . ,and resolu
tion is dragged
down by the
, force 1 of tircuih-'
stances until he
bumps, the bot-
I agrde with
you that the av
erage New Year’s
resolution does
not amount to a
picayune. ; There
are three good
reasons why It
seldom lasts beyond the first week in
January.
In the first place, most of our res
olutions are not resolutions at all.
They are merely Idle, sentimental
wishes. And wishing is a long way
from willing. The man who wishes to
be or to do a certain, thing looks to
time and circumstance to help him
out. The man who wills to be or do
a certain thing, gets up ahd goes to
it regardless. The man who wishes is
generally long on prayer. The man
who, wills puts ‘.up a fi#ht as well as
o prayer.
***•* . * ,•
Another reason why* our resolutions
amount to little is •'bfedajise; Urey -are
in the wrong tense. Some years ago
and . than • came into .ufly study *aud
dropped limp, heipless. and hopeless
Our Postman s Perquisite
By C. and. KAZAKS '
(©,,1J23, Western Newspaper Union.)
B 1 PATIENT commuters along
the the J>. L. & W. R.
It used to call it the “De
lay, Linger and Wait route,”
and those who for various
reasons were in a hurry to
get their mail were tempted to apply
the term to our postman. Certainly
they could not call him “The Fast
Mail.” To the pace of a tortoise he
added conversational nbii'ties that ar
rested him with passing acquaintances
and interests that detained him upon
irtreet corners, so that agonized lovers,
\6dio had not lad letters since yester
days, would see him heave in sight
down the street long before he deliv
ered the precious messages, fretting
themselves in the meanwhile.
But he was so interested in our
postals, so sympathetic in our disap
pointments, so willing to take packages
THE DANIELSVILLE MONITOR, DANIELSVILLE, GEORGIA.
into a chair. “I’m no good,” lie begaa
“I have no power of will left. I have
been fighting a habit for years. .*
I have resolved again and again to
cut it out And after every resolu
tion I have gone out and gone lower
than before. It’s no use. I’m done
for.”
“Get out,” I replied, “you have as
much will as any man. The trouble
is, you do not know how to use It.”
“What do you mean?” he asked.
“I mean,” I replied, “Just what 1
say. You don’t know how to use your
will. I’ll bet every time you resolved
to quit this habit you put the resolu
tion in the future tense. You said, ‘l’m
going to quit.’ And something in the
back of your head said, ‘No, you will
not. You have said that before.’ ”
“What else could I have said?” he
asked.
“You could have put It in the past
tense —put the thing behind you In
stead of in front
of you/ You could f \
have said, ‘I have r"i \
quit;.' It’s a thing ...... FT y 'l
of the past,’ and /\y M /
gone on n bout / LJ /'
your business with'- / 1 /
something had f vSr |
“Thank you,” he
see wh at yo u
mean. In the past
I have said, ‘I will
quit. The old life j
is behind me.’” \
That was years *
ago. He has stood true. It may be
a psychological trick, but it is a good
one to put the thing you want to over
come behind you rather than in front
of you.
Another weakness In New Year’s
resolutions is that as a rule they are
not backed up by a plan. Asa mat
ter of fact, It would be a great deal
better to quit the business of making
a resolution for the New Year and
instead make a plan for the New Year.
Frame up a reasonable program that
l§ads toward the thing you want to be
or do. No one ever arrives at his goal
in one leap. That’s the weakness and
deception in so many resolutions.
Don’t try to muke it from the vulley
to the top of the mountain in one
jump. Look up the slope and fix youi
course as far as you can see. The
higher you get the farther you will be
I able to see and the faster you will be
able to go. Yqu gain strength in
climbing.
, If you take a tumble, keep your eye
on the top, pick yourself up, and go
on. Hold to the main plnn, and don’t
bite off more of it at a'time than you
can chew. As long as you keep going
tyou’re a winner, no matter how long
it takes you to get there.
'(©. 1923; Western Newspaper Union.)
N OLD-TIME custom on the
first day of the New Year
was for a group of people to
prepare surprise baskets
filled with fruit and nuts
and candles and a Jar of
jam or a pudding, and fixing the bas
kets gayly with ribbon, tuke them
around to less fortunate ones.
Many and many were the small
towns where the people followed this
custom, and as the basket was present
ed, a happy New Year’was wished to
the, recipient. ,
It Would be well for many of the
old customs to be preserved!
•. If ylrtqe were not Its own rewaro
It would go unrewarded in most cases.
r a : nd fetters ddwn to the' 6fflce and to
buy us stamps, and such a bond be
tween as and our. friends afar,* that
we forgave him even when he was a
missing link and brought us nothing,
and always upon New Year’s day we
were glad to make both him and our
selves happy with not unexpected, but
fairly earned bills on our Uncle Slam.
GROWS BETTER AND BETTER
Oi Old Father Time grows tender and
mellow
As, roving the round earth, the sturdy
old fellow.
Year in an.l year out, keeps going and
coming.
In winter's wild wrack and in summer's
green blooming,
And he very well knows
That wherever he goes—
(’Tis as plain to be seen as hla frosty
old rose) —
In each new broken fetter
He reads like a letter
That this lolly round world grows bet
ter and better—
This Jolly, round world grows better
and bettei.
The time is here again, and yet no
one has invented a handy set of un
breakable resolutions.
New Year Surprises
•; 1 *
By Mary Graham Bonner
OLD thoughts are like old habits—they are hard
to ( change. We would not care to change all old
thoughts nor all old habits, but what a stirring of
sap there is in the brain when a £fie, brand new
thought blows in!
Perhaps it’s a very simple thought, about a
different way to do something quite ordinary;
but just that tiny jolt is enough to put newj
J|ergy and interest into the affair. |
Don’t be forever thinking # along gj
monotonous lines; nobody in the ||
world can prevent you from
having "parties in your
head” If you have a 11
crazy but beautiful
notion about jjjJ^
SI " ■ traveling O /
Ifjff somewhere,. TifST 1
jj keep thinking ii '*'7 '
nJI ’ ’ cheerily, abqut it; jjj
pi even-if you*- never get ..,., .11..
ll,there, it 4irs out , your; il ' 1 - -
brain arid presents*, other Jplm B
'll i. • r •• "• • L r If **i
/ J discouraging suggestions rrom ,||
' 1 pereeping in.
4 Nobody ever got anywhere, made any fj
material or otherwise, without dream*
mg about it first.
The engine will grind and pound and be
thoroughly disagreeable unless oiled regularly.
Don’t be stiff and rusty! Get into gear right
away . ... oil your cylinders with daring thoughts.
Who owns this old world, anyway? Habit —or YOU?
‘ Happy TSlp' 'f&tr! _
MARTHA B. THOMAS^f||;fS
‘ Copyruke, 1933.' Wtm Nw<papr Union ‘'shiMMi
Time’s Up
SHE close of a year makes us
think of the passing of
time. The following max
ims, old and new, should
make us think of the value
of time;
No reward' can recover lost time.
He wbo has most time has none to
lose.
Be always In time; too late is a
crime.
Take time when time la, for time
will away.
You may have time again, but nev
er the time-
Time present Is the only time you
can be sure of.
The time that bears no fruit de
serves no name.
A who does nothing never has
time to and anything.
■Any time me9ns.no times.
Nothing is ,ipore precious .than time
and nothing less valued. ,
..Life is. but time; waste'the*latter
and you reduce the‘former. ’ •'*
None can be provident of time who
Is not prudent in the choice of hli
company.
BEST NEW YEAR WISH
The superiority of North American
civilization to that of South Amer
ica has been thus accounted forj The
Pilgrim came to America in search of
God; the Spaniards came In search of
gold; the difference between spiritual
and material foundations in the state.
The best New Year wish for our na
tion is a spiritual wish. —0. G. Hazard.
CANDY BONBONS
Into the white of one egg, beaten
lightly, mix powdered sugar until stiff.
Add very strong black coffee to flavor
and slightly color. Drop In a few
halves or quarters of walnut meats
one at a time. Drop from a fork onto
paper. Leave to dry over night