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SERVE MILK WITH OUTDOOR LUNCH
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Even at Picnic Parties Milk Is Important.
(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.)
Let the children lunch out of doors frequently in the good weather of the
next few months, suggests the United States Department of Agriculture,
If you do not have a convenient eating porch, you can set a table for them
right out in the yard, There they can have the regular foods that would be
given for a meal at this hour indoors, including the milk they all need.
Liquid foods like milk and soup are easier for children to manage at a table
than in pienie fashion, although there is much to be sald for the simple
plenie lunch of sandwiches and fruit on summer days. Whatever sort of
junch s served, milk should be ‘included for the children, Every growing
child needs at least a pint of milk a day and may take as much as a quart.
Some W elcome Recipes
The ideal life 18 In our blood
and never will be still, Sad will
be the day for any man when
he becomes contented with the
thoughts he 1s thinking and the
deeds he is dolng—where there I 8
not forever beating at the doors
of his soul, some great desire
to do something larger, which he
knows he is meant to do.~Phillips l
Brooks,
1t may be Interesting to study some |
of the forelgu or national soups which
are so well liked
[ by these people.
Q” German Rice
A Soup.~Prepare a
B white roux or
%?-—:’ sauce with four
Na\ ounces each of but
= Y ter and flour, Moist
o > en with three
quarts of chicken
stock or veal broth and let it glmmer
on the side of the range for twenty
to tme. Parboll three ounces ¢
i ll o serving, add one pint of
mm n beaten with four egg yolks,
season with salt, pepper, grated nut
eg and minced parsley.
Russian Cabbage Soup.—Cut Into
very small squares three medium-sized
onlons and fry them in three ounces
of butter; add one and one-halt
pounds of saurkraut and stew to
gether until all molsture is extracted,
Sprinkle with a tablespoonful of flour
and with three tablespoonfuls of sour
cream, Season to taste and ndd three
quarts of broth, When bolling add
one partly roasted duck, one pound of
the breast of beef cut into three or
four pleces; remove the fat from the
soup and add one cupful of sour
cream. Season to taste, add the
meats, some chopped parsley and serve,
' Batwina, Polish Soup.—l'eel one
dozen cooked beets and place In a
stone Jar with one quart of warm
water and one pint of vinegar, Let
stand several days. The day the soup
is to be served strain the liquid from
the beets, add one quart of water and
put it Into the pot together with two
pounds of beef; boll and gkim, Cut up
the beets finely as well as two or
three onions and add them to the
soup. 801 l gently for three hours;
take out the beef, cut it into haifs
inch square pleces and thicken with
one pint of sour cream beaten up
with four egg yolks,
Orange Cookies.—Cream one half
cupful of butter and add one cupful of
sugar; blend well, then add alternate-
Iy one-half cupful of orange juice and
three cupfuls of flour sifted with four
teaspoonfuls of baking powder and
Use Apricots for
Pudding
Dried spricots have many uses be
fore the season for fresh frults re
rns, A very good steamed pudding
¢ 0 be made with them, The burean
of home economies nas tried the recipe
and found It excelient.
% b dried apf- 2 epge
cotn 2 tep baking pows
1 cup water der
1 cup four W% tap. salt
W cup butter 1 or 2 ths, aprieot
W cup suger Julee, If peeded
Soak the apricots overnizht In the
water, Dreale and eut them into small
pleces with scissors. Cream the but:
ter and the sugur, ad! the beaten
egps, and the flour In which the sait
and baking powder have been sifted.
Stir In the apricots. If the batter Is
o little stiff add one or two table
spoonfuls of the lguid In which the
apricots were soaked. Partlaily ) o
greased mold nnd steam for two hours.
Serve hot with lquld or hard sauce.
one-half teaspoonful of salt; add a
well beaten egg and the grated rind
of an orange., Mix and roll out, cut
into any desired shape, decorate with
a bit of candied orange peel and bake,
Try Some of These.
When one pays seventy cents a
pound for fresh mushrooms for a dish,
it is well to re
)\ : mind the cook to
[ " save the peelings
) and all the bits,
4 3 after the mush
v 8 rooms have been
%_;__:,“m. washed. These
_ may be stewed
and add flavor to
white sauce or soup stock.
Fried Peanut Salad.—Blanch and
chop a cupful of raw peanuts, Place
in a frying pan with a tablespoonful
of salad oao Codk until the nuts are
delicately wned, ‘sprinkle with salt
and cool on brown paper. Meanwhile
scald and peel six tomr chill and
scoop out the centers of serve thém
sliced. Arrange on nests of lettuce
and fill or heap on the slices the fresh
ly cooked peanuts, Serve with a
French dressing by adding a teaspoon
ful of sugar to each quarter of a cup
ful of the ordinary dressing.
Butternut Wafers.—Dßeat two eggs,
add one ounce of chocolate melted,
one-half cupful each of honey and
brown sugar, one-half teaspoonful of
salt, ane-half teaspoonful of soda,
two-thirds of a cupful of flour, one
teaspoonful of lemon juice and one
cupful of chopped butternuts or wal
Brims That Are Becoming
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BIIHM Yes, Indeed! And they are
belng welcomed Into the realm of
willinery with utmost enthusiasm, At
last after so many seasons of wateh
ful walting, long-suffering woinen may
agnin enjoy the privilege of wearing
hats which are Lecomingly brimuwed
CHARLTON COUNTY HERALD
Kiddies’ Bedtim Sto“ry
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CLEECLYOOOD By MARY GRAHAM BONNER CECLORERERO®
The lions always call to e other
when a storm i 8 coming | have
often told you. e
At night in the zoo they r and
call out to each other. A ‘they’
call, always they answer, :
They do it in thé jungle @ ZOO.
But in the zoo they are not so friend
ly. Two of the king lions xo of
the prince lions cannot it to
gether, |
They would kill each '& So
would two of the queen, lions, “Some
times the king and queen or a‘prince
and princess will be trlendl&r they
do not like their own Kkind in thé zoo.
The male hates the male, the fe
males other females. This ig« 00
way. ek
Out in the jungle théy are 'oo busy
hunting for food to be so wgnrllkq‘\vlth
each other and the zoo isn’t thelr nat
ural home, of course. - o
But still they call to each o at
night in the zoo. Just the verg§way
they would if out in the jungle. *
And when a storm comes they warp
each other of danger, although it they
were put together even at such a time
they would fight. :
It was the following morning and
the big storm was over.
Princess Lion was looking at the
cubs in the next cage. She sat there
with her paws crossed and her big
eyes looking very fierce,
The cubs were playing with their
breakfast of meat bones and red meat,
nuts. Drop by teaspoonfuls two
inches apart and bake in a hot oven
eight minutes. i
Pineapple and Cottage Cheese Salad.
—Take one cupful of well seasoned
cottage cheese to which tWo table
spoonfuls of thick cream has been
added, add a can of crushed pineapple
and a cupful of the juice. Heap on
lettuce, add salt and garnish with
maraschino cherries. A salad of plain,
nicely seasoned cottage cheese with or
without a few minced nuts, served on
lettuce with a good boiled dressing,
makes a most tasty salad.
Lentil Croquettes.—\Wash one-half
cupful of lentils, cover with cold wa
ter and let stand over night. In the
morning bring to a boil and simmer
until tender. Drain and pass the len
tils through a sieve., To the puree
‘add one-half cupful of dry, fine
crumbs, four tablespoonfus of cm
one beaten egg and salt and mp:
a pinch of nutmeg to season, Ma
into croquettes and roll in beaten egg
to which two tablespoonfuls of wa
ter are added; roll in crumbs and fry
in deep fat.
Mint Srerbet.—Bruise the leaves of
a bunch of mint, add to them the
Juice of two lemons with the zest
rubbed from the rinds with cubes of
sugar. Let stand covered fifteen
minutes, Cook a pint each of sugar
and water for five minutes then add
one-half cupful of orange juice and
the mint, When cold strain and
freeze.
(©, 1928, Western Newspaper Unlon.)
As If to celebrate the fact of thelr
return to favor, Lrits ure making
most spectacular reentry. That Is
they are Introducing all sorts of novel
silhovettes, Scems as If designers
have determined to give us m
ehapenux at ull hazards this season
“Oh,” thought the princess, “if I
could get my paws on one of those
cubs and tear him to pieces.”
“l hate my children anyway,” sald
Prinee Lion the first, who was pacing
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Princess Lion Was Looking at the
Cubs.
up and down in the cage at the other
side of the princess.
As he talked he swung his head as
though to tell her how much he
Rompers for the Youngsters
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Auri('ullur‘(-\)
Here is a romper liked by many
mothers for little runabouts between
a year and a half and three years
old. The flared cut at the sides and
the use of two materials give the
garment a somewhat more “dressy”
air than the severely plain play suits
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A Good Type of Romper of Two Ma.
terials—Front View,
of dark materials often needed for
mornings spent at the sand pile, A
romper of this kind is appropriate at
any time of day. The one in the il
lustration was made by the bureau of
home economics to bring out certain
points in the construction of romp
ers of this general type. Several pat
tern companies show designs very
similar to this one, which can be
Wherefore brims are slashed, folded,
kinked, and submitted to all sorts of
ingenious maneuvers on the part of
the modiste, So if you are seeking a
becoming hat, there’s one for you
somewhere, just suited to “your indi
viduality. That is why millinery is
80 amazingly interesting this season,
there's every class and clan from
whi¢h to choose,
Some of the hats in the pleture are
brimmed and some are not, which is
exactly in accordance with the trend
of millinery affairs at this moment,
Those that are brimmed as here
shown, present a most interesting
study as the whimsical ways of new
brims, Note the top hat, its brim is
slashed and scatloped, which makes it
very becoming, The pasted feathers
banding the crown are very Parislan,
the newest French hats stressing
many straw shapes trimured with gay
novelty pasted feathvrs,
~ That charming hat to the right be
low I 8 one of the new, exceedingly
smart smooth linen-like siraw weaves,
The brim folds back over the crown
In front, drooping at the back and
‘over the ears, The amusing ornament
18 decidedly chie. The body and head
of the crane are thickly set with
rhinestones.
~ The large, bakon straw hat Is navy
~one of the seuson's leading colors,
A crease In the crown with a series
of horizontal plaits acress the front
brim gives to this shape smart style,
In contour and In quality the model
ih& center right Is all that pleases
most discriminating taste. The brim
Is manipulated to reveal the bandeau
_effect meross the eyebrows. It too Iy
Jone of the new liven straws In the
‘much tatked-of oatical shade,
. The last little hat really had no
peed of a brim, sceing that it had
‘such & clever qulll effect 8o arranged
a 8 to partly frame the face. It is a
black, shiny linen weave, The all
black ”‘ Is eonsidered tres chile
a 8 an e spring number,
" 1928, Western New: paper Unlon ¥
meant by what he was saying to her,
“Oh,” he continued quite cheerfuily,
%] always hate the children. The
mother lion keeps them from me. She
seems to like them,
“Now, my cousin, the cat, is just
the same way. He hates kittens. It's
only the mother cat who likes them.
“And even though I'm a lion and a
cat is a cat used to living under
stoves and by the fireplace, still he i 3
my cousin and there are many quali
ties alike aboug us.”
“] thought he was a cousin of the
tigers,” said the princess,
480 he'is,” said the prince. “But
he's my cusin, too, for we are what
they call the ‘cat animals/ the leo
pards, tigers and lions.”
“1 wouldn't object to the cubs,”
said the princess, as she kept watch
ing them, “if they were my OwD.
“What 1 mind is seeing the little
things and knowing they belong to
the queen.
“I am so jealous of her anyway.”
And the princess snarled and gave
a deep grumble, to prove she meant
what she said!
adapted to the needs of the child.
The length from the hip to the ieg
bands should be given attention. If
the rompers are not short enough at
the sides they will hang dewn over
the child’s knees and prove a great
annoyance to him, At the same time
sufficient length must be allowed
through the crotch. In the illustra
tion the material is folded between
the legs, while the leg openings are
sloped upward to make the sides of
the bloomers short. FKullness is pro
vided in the width of the garment in
stead of in its length. The leg bands
must be loose so that they can slide
toward the hip when the child stoops
or climbs. Measurements for them
should be taken on the child's thigh
about five inches above the kneecap.
It is a common mistake to make them
too broad for comfort. Inch bands
are satisfactory. Elastic leg bands
are never advised.
The bloomers and bands of trime
ming are made of fast-colored print
in this case, and the upper part is
white. Any firm white cotton mate
rial such as broadcloth, cotton poplin,
fine cambric, madras or lightweight
sateen, are good fabrics for the pur
pose. Plain chambray or broadcloth
matching of the eolors in the print
may be used instead of swhite.
There are four, instead of theee.
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Back View of Child's Romper, Show.
ing Placing of Buttons at Side and
Back,
buttons on the belt of the drop seat.
These are placed near enough to the
underarms for the child to reaeh
when he learns to dress himself, The
lower part of this romper may be
made separate from the upper, but
toned to it both front and back. Two
pairs of bloomers to one top would
insure a maximum of cleanliness with
very little trouble,
Household Notes
Tough ple erust Is generally the re
sult of using too little shortening,
N 8
It you fasten the Ironing board
cover on wet It will dry tight und
straight,
.
When the knob comes off of a sauce
pan cover, insert a screw through the
hole from the bottom and screw a
cork on It -
2 9
When oranges are espensive or dif
fieult to obtain, canned tomato julce
way be substituted for the baby's
orange julce,
.0 9
A mattress wears best if It Is the
exact size of the springs. In buying
@ new mattress, remember that it win
m from oune to two inches as it
.
Cute in aßaby~
Awful at Three
~and it's Dangerous
by Ruth Brittain
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Thumb sucking does look sweet in a
baby, but it is disgusting in the three
year-old and sometimes it hangs on
until fifteen or sixteen! The habit
may cause an ill-formed mouth or in
duce adenoids; and it always inter
feres with digestion. Pinning the
sleeve over the hangd; attaching mit
tens, or putting on cardboard -cuffs,
which prevent bending the arms at the
elbows, are some of the ways to stop
the habit.
Another bad habit—irregularity in
bowel action—is responsible for weak
powels and constipation in babies.
Give the tiny bowels an opportunity to
act at regular periods each day. If
they don’t act at first, a little Fletch
er's Castoria will soon regulate them.
Every mother should keep a bottle of
it handy to use in case of colie, chol
era, diarrhea, gas on stomach and
bowels, constipation, loss of sleep, or
when baby is cross and feverish. Its
gentle influenee over baby’s system
enables him to get full nourishment
from his food, helps him gain,
strengthens his bowels.
Castoria is purely vegetable and
harmless—the recipe is on the wrap
per. Physicians have prescribed it for
over 30 years. With each package,
you get a valuable book on Mother
hood. Look for Chas, H. Fletcher's
signature on the wrapper so you'll get
the genuine.
No Wonder
“My husband was furious yesterday.
He came across one of my love let
ters unopened!”
“But if it were unopened what could
he be angry about?”
“It was one that he had sent to
me !"—Stockholm Kasper.
Protection
Hunter—What'’s all the trouble?
His Wife—Willie has swallowea
one of your cartridges and I daren't
wallop him for fear it will go off.—
Passing Show.
; R
GIRLS—LEARN HOW TO BE BEAUTIFUL
Send your address and receive advice and
dollar coupon free
LANGLEY AND CO.
6448 AA Harvard Ave, - =~ Chicago, IIL
If a man borrows trouble he must
expect to pay the highest interest.
Don't think that every man wheo
‘asks your advice really wants it.
Mrs. Steele Saysof Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Pratt, W. Va—“T was so weak
and nervous that I was in bed most
all the time and
couldn’t sit up
o and I am only
30 years old. I
B & | saw your udver-
T tising in a mag
i f azine and after T
e e ] had taken three
i el doses of Lydia E.
'~ L;\ Ml Pinkham’s Vege
i} table Compound
: N T could feel that
o I was better, As
— 10T taking two
bottles I began doing my work and
I feel like a new woman. I recom
mend the Vegetable Compound to
my friends and say it will do all it
claims to do and more. 1 will gladly
answer all letters I recive,”=—Mzus.
8. E. SteeLg, Pratt, W, Va.
In a Plach, Use
ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
For Tired Foet It Can't Be Beat
At night when your feet
A aretired, sora and gwollen
NV from much walking or
W § dancing, sprinkle two
ALLEN'SFOOT-EASE powders
in the foot-bath, gently
rub the sore and in
®) flamed parts and
/) reliet is Tike magic.
)‘ Shake Allen's Foot-Ease
g Into your shoes in
7 the morning and
N/ walkail day in com
fort. It takes the
friction from the shoe, For FREE Sample
Address, ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, Le Rey, N. Y.
SAVE YOUR BABY
FROM WORMS
The most dangerous ill of
childhood is—=worms! You
may not know your child has
them. Disordered stomach,
gritting the teeth, glckiu the
nostrils are signs of worms.
Take no chances, Give child
Frey's Vermifuge today, ‘v:u“ the
Tyt
Frey's Vermifuge at m’:nuhfl‘
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms