Newspaper Page Text
NOVEMBER 4, 1920.
L
liLL-UED
Should Be Provided With Whole
some} And Appetizing School
Lunches. Some Suggested
Basket Lunches.
How much time and thought
you put on your children’s
basket?
“Children have such appetites
they will' eat anything” is a
often heard. They may have
appetites now, but if school
are allowed to eat the wrong
the time may come when they
eat the right things.
Growing children have certain
cial needs in the way of food.
grown people, they must be supplied
\v ; h that which is necessary
health and strength, but, unlike
they should be given also that
IS necessary for development.
Even one hot dish obtained at
school at noon makes the lunch more
appetizing, and many schools are now
providing it. When a child must carry
lunch and can not obtain at school a
hot dish, the task of filling the box
or basket demands great care to make
suie that it is appetizing, nourishing
and sustaining.
One of the best investments to
make for a child who carries his
lunch to a school that does not serve
a hot lunch is a bottle which will keep
liquids hot or cold for sometime. Co¬
coa or soup piping hot on a cold day
will make a feast out of an otherwise
uninteresting lunch.
Five Groups of Food Needed.
In general, the school lunch, like
the Child’s diet as a whole, should
contain representatives of the five
food groups. In it should be found
foods rich in protein, such as milk,
cheese, meats, fish, dried beans, peas,
peanuts nad other nuts; cereal or
starchy foods, such as bread, mushes,
es, rice, and tapioca; f foods,
such bacon; as vegetables butter, cream, and sa i^B^iils, f^Ee, and but
such as cereals and dried beans are
not put under this classification; sim
I ie sweets, including cakes and cook
ies that contain little fat; cane sugar,
plain candies, maple sugar, sweet
* chocolate, jellies, preserved fruits,
marmalades, honey, molasses, sirups,
and dried figs, dates, and other dried
f ruits.
Some Suggested Basket Lunches
Here are some recommended com¬
binations:
Sandwiches with sliced,
© mm
©
<D PAST-The Days of Yesterday. m w
© © Prcsent-The dawn of a new tomorrow.
© Fu tUre-Sunshine-when the clouds roll by.
m
(§>
<g> The birth of many storekeepers who had only to hang out a shingle during war periods
© and do a successful business is a thing of the past.
©
® © « All mushroom growth of those who sprang up over-night during the home-coming day
® find their the prolonged prosperity at a close. The heroes of yesterday must shoulder arms of
(©) today in battle of commerciality. It is time now to re-build the business on a sounder
c© basis. You can not afford to experiment with war-born merchants. NSURE YOUR PURCHASES BY
[©)
( 0 ) BUYING THEM AJ AN OLD ESTABLISHED FIRM THAT STOOD THE TEST OF TIAAE. FALL MERCHANDISE S NOW MORE REASONABLY
(©
C©j PRICEO IRAN II WILL EVER BE AGAIN.
(©
IRIS IS NOW YOOR MOST OPPORTUNE TIME TO BUY YOUR NEEDS. We do not mean by this that you
should speculate and buy more than you need. But we do say it is a good time to purchase
© the merchandise you must have. THE WELL ASSORTED LINES OF MERCHANDISE WE RAVE IN OUR SIORE FOR
© THIS SEASON ARE TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION HERE. BUT WE CAN ASSURE YOU IRAT YOU WILE LINO THE KIND OF GOODS
© YOU NEED FOR EVERY MEMBER Of YOOR FAMILY AT VERY MUCH REOUCEO PRICES. ,We are not quoting prices
© here for the simple that price list from general stock of merchandise does not
C©j reason a a
:©) anything to the purchaser unless the goods compared with the class of
© mean are same
© merchandise offered by other reliable firms. WE ASK YOU TO GIVE OS A CHANCE 10 SHOW YOU OUR COATS,
©
© SOUS, ANO DRESSES for this season. Then we are confident that your verdict will be in our favor.
©
m Respectfully Yours,
©
© H. Moskovitz
C©j
c©
/
meat for filling; baked apple, eookies,
or a few lumps of sugar.
Slices of meat loaf or bean loaf;
bread and butter sandwiches; stewed
fruit; small frosted cake.
Crisp rolls, hollowed out and filled
with chopped meat or fish, moisten
e( l and seasoned, or mixed with salad
dressing; orange, apple, a mixture of
sliced fruits or berries; cake.
Lettuce or celery sandwiches; cup
custard; jelly sandwiches.
Cottage cheese and chopped green
pepper sandwiches, or a pot <of cream
cheese with bread-and-butter sand
| wiches; peanut sandwiches; fruit;
j cake,
Hard-boiled eggs; crisp baking
powder biscuits; celery or radishes;
brown-sugar or maple-sugar sand¬
wiches.
Bottle of milk; thin corn bread and
butter; dates; apple.
Raisin or nut bread with butter;
cheese; orange; maple-sugar.
Baked bean and lettuce sandwich¬
es; apple sauce; sweet chocolate.
Nearly everyone knows the neces¬
sity of dainty wrapping and packing
if an appetizing lunch is to be the re¬
sult. A container that can be sea Ided,
plenty of parrafin paper, a jelly cup
with a cover, , and bottles with screw
tops all assist in the making of a
dainty lunch.
PINE BEETLE INFLICTS BIG
DAMAGE TO SOUTHERN TREES
Approximately $20,000,000 dam
age was inflicted by the southern
pine beetle in its attack on southern
timber forests during two de ‘ades,
according to investigations made by
the United States Department of
Agriculture concerning destruction
caused by insect forest pests Added \
to this damage is that of tin- black
and the red turpentine beetle !
The hickory-bark beetle is found 1
to be doing extensive damage in the
northern tier of States from Wiscon
.
sin to Vermont and southward!
through the Atlantic States to cen-j
tral Georgia. 4 three'
The department has issued
bulletins of particular interest to;
farmers who have hickory or pine i
trees on their lands. They are: “The
Dying Hickory Trees, Cause and j
Remedy,” Bureau of Entomology I
Circular 144; “The Dying Pine Trees,,
Cause and Remedy,” Farmer’s Bulle-j
tin 474; and “The Black Turpentine!
Beetle and Red Turpentine Beetle,”
reprint from Bulletin 83, Part I, Bu
reau of Entomology,
The department is urging farmers
who use the slack time of late fall
and early winter in getting in fire-j
j wood to select trees that have been j
infested with insect pests.
-
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT GEORGIA
PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES
“Four Reasons Against WORRY, * •
in 11 o’clock sermon.
"David’s Nobility of Soul,” in 7
o’clock sermon.
Sabbath School at 9:45 a. m.
Last Sunday Mr. Stokes preached
two helpful sermons to interested
audiences. Next Sunday morning his
sermon will set forth a fourfold rea
son against worry. At the seven
o’clock service he will show wherein
the strength of David’s character
was found.
Then is an offer made to Southern
Presbyterians by Mr. C. E. Graham
of Greenville, S. C., to give $200,000
provided the Southern Presbyterian
c hurch gives $400,000 by Dec. 1,
1920, to purchase an office building
in Jacksonville, Fla. The building is
worth a million dollars and yields
$60,000 net each year $5,000 a
month, which would go to care for
aged and infirm ministers and the
widows and orphans of deceased
ministers. Every church, school, so
cicty and individual is called upon to
do all possible and to do it now be
fore too late to meet Mr. Graham’s
offer. The Fort Valley church will
make its gift next Sunday.
Come and worship and find a wel¬
come at this church t
THE METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday school 9:30 A. M., H. A.
Mathews, Supt.
Preaching 11 a. m. and 7:00 p. m.
Pi'ayer and Praise service 2:30
P. M.
Junior Church 2:30 P. M.
Epworth League 6:00 p. m.
Midweek prayer meeting, Tuesday
evening, 7:00.
C. R. Jenkins, D. D. Pastor.
■o
THE BAPTIST CHURCH
C. C. Pugh, Pastor.
Sunday School 9:30 A. M.
Preaching 11 a. m. and 7:00 p. m.
B. Y. P. U., Sunday 6:00 p. m.
Prayer meeting, Thurs., 7 :00 p. m.
-o
PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES
The Sabbath-School meets at
9:45 a. m.
Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m
Lay Service every Sunday
ing at 11:00 o’clock, except on
Sunday. Celebration of Holy
munion and sermon on fourth
day at 11:00 o’clock. Evening
vice on fourth Sunday.
Rev. J. F. McCloud,
0
WHEN THE ANIMAL AND
TABLE KINGDOMS MEET
(From The Dearborn Independent.)
The sight of a fat white
some four or five inches long a nt
half an inch around, might not
tract unusual attention, but if
caterpillar had a small green
growing out of his neck—well, any
one might look a second time to be
sure that he was not suffering from
the ailment commonly known as .. see
ing things.”
Yet such a sight would not be un
usual in parts of the Aslan jungle,
where nature is unusually extrava
gant. The caterpillar starts out at
birth to be very ordinary fellow, one
of the puriri moth family, hatched in
the bark of a puriri tree. Once the
hatching process is finished, the new
born insect generally' tunnels into
the soft wood of the puriri tree for a
couple feet, and makes himself a
able home where, safe from his bird
enemies, he,will be able to live
fortably until it is time for him to
appear as a beautiful sliver moth.
But, as in most families, there are
a few wanderers; some strange desire
to see the world causes some of these
caterpillars to climb down the tree
trunk after weeks of hiding, and for
a time they are lost to view in the in¬
sect life on the floor of the jungle.
Then something very strange hap¬
pens, for while burrowing in the soft
earth at the foot of the trees a fun¬
gus spore of a vegetable growth fast¬
ens its small pin-like roots in the
folds of the caterpillar's body close
to the head—and starts to grow.
This growth is fairly rapid. The
roots push into the caterpillar’s body,
and at the same time a thin, green
stem starts upward. At first the cat¬
erpillar pays no attention to the
strange plant, but goes on his way
about the forest floor.. When the
plant stems get to be three or four
inches high, however, the caterpillar
can carry it no farther. He gives up
his search for food, his wanderings,
and buries himself two or three inch¬
es in the soft earth. From that time
on until his death he is the animal
root for a vegetable body. The plant
grows quickly, reaching a height
eight or ten inches when the
grown, and resembling closely a
iature cat-tail, or bullrush, such
we find in our own marshes with
I i eaves a single stem, and a
brown head, or seed-pod.
When it is ripe, this
breaks and the seeds float away
' find a resting place in the necks
other caterpillars. The bursting of
; seed-pod marks the death of both
j plant and its animal-root.
y
| ALUMINUM, AUTOMOBILES,
ARKANSAS.
In these days, when the number
automobiles parked by
around apartment houses in course
construction is greater that the
her that may be owned by the
pants of the finished apartments
when street-ear companies see
revenues decreasing because so
people have their own
the demand for aluminum greatly
ceeds that of a few years ago,
automobile^ were less common,
bodies, engines, and other parts
some automobiles are made of
inum to reduce their weight, and
use and the other uses of
in the form of castings and drawn
‘ and pressed ware has necessitated the
enlargement of several
1 making plants and the construction
of new ones during the last
years. The increasing use of
foil to replace the more
pensive tin foil has also
an increase in producing capacity.
In view of these facts it is
j what primary surprising aluminum that produced the value in of
:
United States in 1919,
was about 6 per cent less than
in 1918, according to the United
States Geological Survey, Depart¬
ment of the Interior. This decrease,
however, was due chiefly to the ac¬
cumulation of large stocks in 1918.
With a favorable market the output
in 1920 may be greater than ever.
The automobiles and aluminum in¬
dustries are closely connected with
Arkansas, because that State fur¬
nishes nine-tenths of the bauxite
mined in the United States, and
bauxite is the claylike mineral from
which most aluminum is derived. The
total quantity of bauxite
in the United States in 1919
376,000 tons, of which 333,000
valued at $1,855,000, was mined
Arkansas.
A report on bauxite and
in 1919, by James M. Hill, just
lished, can be obtained free on
plication to the Director, U. S.
logical Survey, Washington, D. C.
PAGE FIVE
I
WARNS HOUSEWIVES AGAINST
USE OF CANNING COMPOUNDS
The United States Department of
Agriculture warns housewives
against the use of any preservative
j powder or canning compound in home
I canning. Their use encourages care
less and uncleanly work, and in large
amounts they may have serious ef¬
fects upon digestion and health. It is
entirely practicable to put up fruits
and vegetables so that they will keep
indefinitely by processing the pro¬
ducts with heat. There is no reason
for risk by the use of canning pow¬
ders.
Boric or salicylic acid is the basis
of most canning compounds on the
market to-day. The directions on the
packages usually call for one tea¬
spoon of the compound to each quart
of fruit or vegetable. The use of boric
and salicylic acid, since they may be
harmful to health, is regarded by the
Department of Agriculture as a
violation of the Federal food and
drugs act. The laws of many States
also prohibit the sale of foods con¬
taining boric or salicylic acid.
■o
AGED FRENCH CHAR WOMAN
FOND OF AIR THRILLS
France’s younger generation has
been encouraged to use air locomo¬
tion by an old lady of eighty-three,
says a Paris correspondent of the
London Times. She is Mme. Hemery,
a charwoman, who lives in the coun¬
try, where airplanes pass every day.
It was in 1878 when she first left the
ground, when she tasted the delight
of ballooning, and, seeing, as she
did the new airbird daily above her
she could not resist trying the new
sensation. Thus one day she had
meager earnings and took a trip in
the air. She did this without the
knowledge of her many grandchil¬
dren, who were completely shocked
when the news reached them. She is
in no way perturbed and is deter¬
mined as soon as funds allow to try
looping the loop.
■O
W. C. T. U. TO MEET AT
HOME OF MRS. TAYLOR
The regular monthly meeting of
the W. C. T. U. will be held with
Mrs. Chas. Taylor on Wednesday
Nov. Tenth. The program will be in
charge of Miss Alida Hiley, Evange¬
listic Superintendent.