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THE CLEVELAND COURIER,
Jbr Economical Transportation
HY Chevrolet can offer
such marvelously fine cars at
ices /
Only when you know the facts tremendous volume produc¬
about the Chevrolet Motor tion makes possible enormous
Company is it possible to un¬ savings, both in the purchase The Touring
derstand how Chevrolet can of raw materials and in the or Roadster J C') C
offer such marvelously fine cars manufacturing
at such remarkably low prices. processes. The Coach ^595
A unit of the General Motors These savings Chevrolet passes ^625
Corporation, on to the purchaser by provid¬ The Coupe
the Chevrolet ing the dollar-for-dollar
Motor Company is backed by greatest The 4-Door $ 695
value in the history of the auto¬ Sedan
the vast resources and tremen¬ The Sport $ 715
dous purchasing of this motive industry. Cabriolet
power
mammoth organisation. The Come to our showroom and see The Landau ^745
twelve great Chevrolet factories the Chevrolet models—and
are equipped with the will know why thousands The Imperial SrtQA
most you Landau - - *
modern machinery known to of buyers are selecting Chev¬ Vi'Ton Truck *395
engineering science . . . while rolet each day! (Chassis only)
I-Ton Truck $^QC
(Chassis only) *
All prices f.o.b.Flint, Mich.
Check Chevrolet
Delivered Prices
They include the lowcai
handling charges and financing
available.
The Coupe
Davidson-Alien Chevrolet Co.
Cleveland, Ga.
QUALITY AT LOW COST
To help you
With charming effect Pee Select^ Color
Gee vjee China <_______ Fnamel _______ Gloss
White is used on doors,
stairways, and all pillars, wainscot¬
ing, interior or ex¬
terior woodwork. It gives a
•mooth hard, brilliant finish
that does not yellow with
age. Also made in various
tints and eggsitell finish. VT’OU home reflect that feeling of “home
want your to
ness.’ Harmonious colors will help do that.
There are a number of color groups that you can choose
from on a Pee Gee Color Selector (which we will give
you) which will quickly give you the desired effect.
The necessary Pee Gee Paints to carry out any one of
jjj j||ljl i these delightful color harmonies are available.
Never sacrifice paint quality for a temporary saving. No
ill better paint is made than that bearing the Pee Gee label
| A D«RBi£ fflAHEl and the price is no higher than ordinary grades are sold for.
Of MSHEST QtiAUTt
11 6L0SS amtuts WHITE i sui»» H. A. JAKKAKD 8 SON
til Cleveland, Ga.
m,,
WJTHEN ww have your you first visit glimpse Hawaii of and
a
* * pineapple plantation in full
growth—when you see endless
miles of magic carpet spread out
through Hawaiian valleys and over
hills, with nothing else in sight:
when you stand at any angle and
see military rows of spear-like
leaves, evenly spaced and embed¬
ded with golden fruit, the rows
curving perhaps to conform to the
contour of the land, but always
with that same mathematical spac¬
ing—you will think pineapple plan¬
tations have grown in Hawaii since
Hawaii began.
They seem as much a part of
native Hawaii as do the great vol¬
canic mountains which encircle the
island, as old perhaps as Haleakala,
which Maui, the Polynesian demi¬
god, is said to have climbed, and
from its peak lassoed the sun and
made it stand still.
On the contrary, however, pine¬
apple plantations are one of the
newest things in Hawaii, and, for
that matter, the newest big planta¬
tions in the world. They are less
than 25 years old.
The plantation land which to¬
day boasts the most beautiful and
highly developed farms in the
world, was a few years hack,
wasteland—poor grazing land
cattle. Wild pineapples used
grow there, hut they were a
inferior quality and eaten only
the natives.
How then, in so short a time did
the growing of pineapples become
one of the big industries of the
world ? The answer lies in the
goodness of the Hawaiian pineap¬
ple, canned.
In European countries, slips of
LUNCH BOX APPETIZERS
By CAROLINE B. KING
Culinary expert e :cl lecturer on
household science.
Biscuit Chicken Sandwiches
Make baking powder biscuits cut¬
ting them rather larger than usual,
bake in a hot oven. Split, butter
and spread with chopped chicken,
mixed with a very little white sauce
well seasoned. Put together in sand¬
wich fashion and wrap when cool in
paraffin paper. Ham or any pre¬
ferred meat may be used in place of
chicken.
Prune Rice Puddings
Wash a tablespoonful of rice and
cover with a quart of milk, place in
a moderate oven, in half an hour add
one-half cupful sugar, one-half tea
spoonful vanilla, and one-half tea¬
spoonful salt. Stir and cook slowly
for an hour then add a cupful of
prunes cooked in the usual manner,
then drain, pit, and cut iti small
pieces. Continue baking one hour
longer. For the lunch box fill paper
drinking cups with the pudding when
cold, sift a little powered sugar
over the top, and cover with paraffin
paper.
Peanut Butter and Lettuce
Sandwiches
Spread thinly sliced whole wheat
or graham bread lightly with peanut
butter, and arrange lettuce leaves,
washed and carefully dried, on half
the slices. Put together sandwich
fashion, press lightly and wrap in
paraffin paper.
wild pineapple brought by early
Spaniards to South America were
grown in hot houses and provided
a rare luxury to delight the jaded
taste of kings. Everyone would like
to eat what kings eat—and the de¬
mand for pineapple was estab
Iished.
An English nurseryman, Captain
John Kidwell, went over to Hawaii
to experiment with the pineapp'e
on its native heath, determined to
supply this demand. He found
that Hawaiian sunshine was better
than hot-house glass for bringing
out the rare juices of tlm fruit,
since pineapple belongs to tl fam¬
ily of air plants, and literally
lives on this sunshine.
When he found that these lus¬
cious, fully ripe pineapples could
be exported by canning, reaching
the consumer with more flavor and
food value than the fresh pine¬
apples which must he picked
green, his problem was solved.
Today, the automobile trip to
Wahiawa, the chief center of
Oahu’s pineapple plantations un¬
folds remarkable pictures of the
home of the “pine.” Leaving Hon¬
olulu the roadways wind down
deep gulches and up again, and
finally out of sugar-cane into
pineapple. On each side of the
wide expanse of table-lands rise
jagged mountain ranges which
form a background fer magnificent
fields of pineapple extending up
the slopes and seeming to hang
there like gorgeous patterns on an
unending tapestry.
Growers, many of them native
Hawaiians, take delight in explain¬
ing the cultivation of the pineap
ple: how it is planted from slips in
soil which has boon disked, and
later floated to the level of tin
Stuffed Eggs
Hard cook the eggs, and drop them
in cold water, remove shells, and cut
in halves lengthwise. Take out the
yolks and chop fine, adding any cold
’ am or bacon that may be at hand.
Salmon or sardines may also be used.
Season nicely and moisten with a
littie mayonnaise. Fill the cavities in
die eggs, and put the halves together,
rap in paraffin paper twisting the
ends slightly to hold firmly.
Pickled Prunes
Wash and soak one pound of
prunes in a quart of cold water, then
place over flic fire in the same water,
adding the juice of a lemon and the
thinly pared rind; also six doves and
a small piece of stick cinnamon.
Simmer one hour, then add a cupful
of sugar and one-fourth cupful of
vinegar. Continue to cook for fifteen
minutes longer. Remove the spices
when the prunes arc done.
Brown Sugar Cookies
Cream a cupful of Hitter with two
cupfuls of brown sugar, add a tea¬
spoonful of vanilla, two well beaten
i ggs, one-third cup of milk in which
three-fourths teaspoonful of soda is
dissolved, and add gradually three
cupfuls of flour. Drop by spoonfuls
on buttered tins, bake in a moderate
oven. A cup of chopped black wal¬
nuts or other nutmeats may be added
to this recipe for variety.
Fields are mulched with
asphalt-treated paper so spread
to provide spaces necessary for
Plants are set in dou¬
rows through holes punched in
paper. This mulching reduces
costs and increases the
of fruit.
In twelve to fifteen months af¬
planting, purple blossoms ap¬
and six months later the
is matured and ready to be
The picked pineapple
i* s journey from the field
the can the same day, or within
hours. No other fruit is han¬
more quickly.
At the factory the pineapple is
to siring and trimming ma¬
and the peel comes away as
halves of a cylinder, leaving
fruit ready to ho trimmed of
defects. This is done by 1 women
wear rubber gloves for two
first, for sanitary pur¬
as these canneries are the
word in sanitary methods;
second, because pineapple has
highly d'gestive ferment,, bro
which attacks the skin.
Syruping is done by machine,
the pineapple is then subject¬
to a treatment not common to
fruits, that of mechanically
the can in order to
every hit of air out of the
The cans are then'passed
cookers and cooler, and
ready to be shipped.
Aboard the big steamships which
the langorous waters of the
for the choppy northern
are thousands of cans of
which bring with them
rtchncss and flavor that has
their native heath one of the
spots cf the world.
Watch For Scarlet Fever
We may reasonably expect some o!
our children to develop scarlet fever
soon; it is indeed a dangerous disease,
often disabling a child for life and
occasionally one dies from the
effects of the disease. It leave ;
behind many complications, one
of the most serious being im¬
pairment of the kidneys. Inflamma
tion of this most important orga:
often producing dropsy and disablin
it for proper functioning througbov
life. The heart is often attacked, an
to often the disease extends throug
the tube from the nose into the ca
producing deafness and intense su
fering. It may possibly, if neglectoi
invade the bones of the head, requi
ing surgical interference to relieve i
and sometimes death results from tl;
invasion.
Sometimes this disease is call
Scarletina, Rose Rash, Roseola, oi
It is a crime to give it soft soundu
names; it should l>e called Scarl
Fever. It may be so mild that it wi
not attract attention; the eruption
may lie so slight as to escape deter
tion; then the physician is inclined
to give it the soft pedal. These ver;
cases are the danger cases; they are
often the causes of the disease spread
ing; they are not kept isolated an 1
controlled, and quite often these are
often the causes of the disease spread¬
ing; they are not kept isolated and
controlled, and quite often these are
the very cases that later develop in¬
curable heart lesions, kidney lesions
and deafness in varying degrees. Call
it and all similar conditions Scarlet
Fever and control it accordingly.
The danger in transmission is in the
secretions from the nose and throat;
these secretions should he looked
after carefully.
As schools are opening it is a dan¬
ger period for this as well as other
diseases of childhood. Be careful;
watch the children closely.
Write the state Board of Health for
information about this and all other
infectious diseases.
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