BADIN BULLETIN Health and Home Home is the foundation of society and nation. '^he foundation of home is health. Health should exist in every home. Under proper conditions, health would ®^ist i,j every home. Sickness and disease come when there 3s been a failure to consider proper ■wealth conditions. traced to its source, it would be ^'^nd that sickness or disease in nearly case could have been avoided or prevented. The person afflicted may not be to ^ ; but only to those who do not y*' erstand or will not learn it seems too broad. When the cause of sickness is not ’nown, it is often attributed to a visita- lon of God. This is an admission of Si^rance and superstition. , laws are established. When Served, they promote health; when invite disease. ^11 laws of health may not be known, enough are understood to make ill ealth rare if observed. • of the home is in the hands of ^’viduals and the public, i habits of living are often more Poitant than medicine. —N. C. R. News Wet Feet On and colds are germ diseases, y get inside a healthy body, they ®P on retreating until they succeed in the^*^’"^ something. Wet feet are among of frequent causes of colds, many Y ich pave the way to pneumonia— 'sease which, at its present rate of Progre: as will soon be as much dreaded ‘Consumption. Saving of Sugar oil cake can be made with corn stitute flour, sour milk, and Karo ^®real well salted requires less sugar, as g Karo sirup will serve as well The sweetening baked apples, fruit Hav* ^®*^oved from the oven. ^ith ^ tried to sweeten coffee ^he Your husband will not know ^0‘iference. ^re only suggestions, and in si'k the sirup is an excel- two Do ®'^Kar, so that even arnpie sugar a month will seem Try it. Escalloped Apple One pint of sliced apple. One pint of bread crumbs. One-fourth cupful melted butter. One-half cupful of water. Two-thirds cupful of brown sugar. One teaspoonful of cinnamon. Mix the crumbs and butter; put a layer in a well-greased baking dish; add a layer of apple, and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. Repeat until material is used up. Let the last layer be crumbs; add water; bake twenty-five minutes. Pumpkin Patties Into a bowl put one pint of cooked and sifted pumpkin. Add half a cupful of corn sirup, half a teaspoon of salt, two tablespoonfuls of bread or cake crumbs, half a tablespoonful of melted butter substitute, and one teaspoonful of orange extract. Line a few patty pans with plain pastry, fill with the pumpkin mixture, and bake in a hot oven for from twenty to twenty-five minutes. If liked, the patties may be decorated with a little whipped and sweetened cream. Seme Smile-Compelling Answers to Questionnaires Relatives of soldiers who apply for allotments at the War Risk Bureau in New York and other cities must fill out a form which contains twenty-three questions. It is then forwarded to Washington to be entered at the Pay Department. The following are speci mens of the quaint answers written by the applicants, which have been selected by an official at the New York Branch of the War Risk Bureau: “I ain’t got no book lurnin, and I am writing for inflammation.” ■ “Just a line to let you know I am a widow and four children.” -Previous to his departure we were married by a Justice of the Piece »He was inducted into the surface. “I have a four months’ baby and he is mv only support.” -‘I wL discharged from the Army for a goitre, which I was sent home °n.” “I did not know my husband had a middle name, and if he had I don’t believe it was ‘None . “I am left with a child seven months old and she is my only support. “You ask for my allotment number, I have four boys and two girls.” •‘Please return my marriage certifi cate, baby hasn’t eaten in three days. “Both sides of our parents are old and poor.” “You have changed my little boy to a little girl; will it make any differ ence?” “Dear Mr. Wilson I have already written to Mr. Headquarters, and now if I don’t get any reply from you I am going to write to Uncle Sam himself.” “I received my Insurance polish and have since moved my Postoffice.” The following is an extract from a boy’s letter to his mother, which she sent to the War Risk Bureau to estab lish her identity: “I am sitting in the Y. M. C. A. writing with the piano playing in my uniform.” Roll of Honor (Continued from page 3) Orr, Thomas, Camp Jackson, S. C. Pearce, J. W., Jr., Detachment Signal Corps, A. E. F. Peterson, J. E., U. S. S. “President,’* Norfolk. Va. Peterson, Wm., A. E. F. Price, Luther L., Company “H”, 323d Infantry, Eighty-First Division, A. E. F. Price, R. M., Infantry, Durham, N. H. Quinn, Clifton, Navy. Rennick, Hov/ard, A. E. F. Roberts, P. A., Lieutenant, Second E. T. R,, France. Russell, Chas. E. (Chad.), “E” Company, Ambu lance 16, A. E. F. Russell, Lane, A. E. F. Russell, Richard, Camp Hill. Sellars, Benj. H., Battery “E,” Ninth Regiment Field Artillery, Camp Jackson, S. C. ♦Shankle. William. Sheffy, W. E. Siceloff, L,. H., Headquarters Company, 323d Regiment Infantry, 8ist Division, France. Sikes, G. H., Company “K/' Fifth Pioneer Infantry, Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Skidmore, Loyd Slack, Bud ♦Sledge, Edward L., Company “F,” Twenty- Eighth Infantry. Smith, Henry, Camp Jackson Smith, J. D., Machine Gun Company, France. Smith, R. B., Charleston Naval Training Station. Snuggs, Marvin, Camp Jackson, S. C. Spencer, J. C. Stanback, Fred, Camp Jackson Stewart, Ray Stogner, J. Stuckey, J. Sullivan, Herbert, A. E. F. Swing, Ed, Camp Jackson Talley, Jess, Camp Jackson Talley, Jim Tally, Mack, Camp Jackson Taylor, Jos. G., Naval Aviation, France. Taylor. J. M„ A. E. F. Terril. W. C. Threadgill, Lacy, Camp Sevier Thompson, Walter C., Wounded—-in hospital. Thornton, Vann, Fort Thomas, Ky. Tripp, Robert, A. E. F. Trotter, J. Troutman, Love, Camp Jackson Turnmeyer, G. N., U. S. S. “Cobb,” 178 Border Street, East Boston, Mass. Vann, Chisholm, 318th Machine Gun Company, France. * Vann, James, “F” Company, C. A. C., Fort Barrancas, Ky. * Vereen, James H., Camp Jackson, S. C. Vickar, J. A., Jr., United States Naval Aviation A. E. F. Vinny, J. C., A. E. F. Wane. G. W., A. E. F. Watkins, Picrce, Camp Greene Webster, E. J., Lieutenant, Machine Gun Com- pany, France. Wolff, King. Younts, Chas. R., Fort Caswell, N. C. ♦Killed in action.

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