Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Dec. 19, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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Receipts for Cooking. OyBter Stuffing forf Turkey.' IIim stuffing for turkey of a large eupful of crumbs, seasoning with parsley, sweet marjoram and thyme, and moisten with, melted butter. Chop twenty small oysters fine and Mix with the dressing. If you pre fer you may leave the oysters whole With this stuffing f f ill he breast of turkey. Fried Oysters to Garnish Turkey. For this you must select fine large oysters, take them from the liquor carefully and dry on a soft doth. Dip each oyster ini owdered crackers, rolling it over and over mntll well coated. Fry them In enough hot butter to cover them when you put them in the frying pan. Take out the momen they are done and lay around the edtt f the hot dish in which the turkey is established. Cranberry Sauce. Put one puart t cranberries over the fire with half a Dint of coldwater and let Some Good them cook until broken to pieces. , for coldS) coughs, sore, tight chest Add a pound of sugar and cook un an(j throat troubles SCOTT'i til this melts no longer, as lengthy EMULSION gives the greatest relic! eroking tends to make the sauce bit- known. ter. Take from thefire and set aside to coo. Corn Pudding. Chop two cup fuls of canned corn and beat into it two eggs, whipped light, half ni, . .v,i, i, waarx ii-.to solved a pinch of baking soda, a necessary clerkships in the Legis tablespoonful of melted butter, a ta- l"". Mr- Clarence Foe recently blespoonful of sugar, and salt to wroto tler to e KeW8 and ob taste. Turn into a greased pudding "rver concerning this species of iish and bake, covered, fifteen min- Sraft. and the letter has attracted ,. ,!,. v,to ,wlde attention. It Is as follows: minutes longer. Serve as a vege- etable Filling for Fumpkin Pie. Press through a colander a quart of stewed pumpkin and add to it two quarts of milk. Have this rich, and it you can make it part cream it will improve the pic Stir in a cup ful and a half of granulated sugar. a teaspoonful each of cinnamon, nut meg and mace, the yolks of nine eggs, well beaten, and finally the whites of the eggs whipped to a standing froth. Ueat all well and turu into pie dishes lined with good 1 paste. Pastry for Pumpkini Pie. Have your pastry board, mixing bowl, shopping knife and other utensils rv nntri as well no iho 111 crrxl lunta. . . . , , Chop three-quarcrs of at pound of butter into a pound of flour; when well mingled the butter in bits no larger than a pea stir into the mixture a small cupful of iced wa ter. Mix together lightly with your chopping knife, and just as soon as blended, turn out on your floured pastry board. Roll out lightly, foitd , in three, roll out again, fold in three and roll out once more. Handle the pastry as little as pos sible. After the third rolling put tke pastry on ice. If you can, it is better to make It the day before it is to be used and leave it in the cold until needed. When you roll It out for the pies, cut it into rounds with a very sharp knife, and when you spread it on the pie plate do not pinch the edges or press them. Press the pastry down around the sides end the bottom of the pie v plate, but leave the dge unouched. cnpfuls of powdered sugar with one I . ,, . , ,. . . . , , , , We wish to call your attention to eupful of butter; add one cupful of 1 fact that most nfectlOM dl9 milk. Sift two teaspoonfuls of bak-' oa9M Buch as whooping cough, diph ing powder with four cupfuls of therla and scarlet fever are contrast flour and beat stiff the whites of 'ed when the chl'd has a cold- Cham ten eggs. Add the flour and the . bean's Cough Remedy will quick .bites of the egg. alternately to Z&S&ZZTS: the other ingredients. Flavor to easeg- This remedy is famous for' taste with rose water. Have rady . its cures of colds. It contains as two cupfuls of citron shredded fine opium or other narcotic and may bs and well dredged In flour, and stir ' ? i"?" 00- this ine last. Bake in a loaf or in f SM V maft cakee. ' f . Deafness OaaneC Be Owed ... .. not reach the diseased sortiea olTu,a Morrl8- the ear. There is ealy one wy ts 1 ear deafness, aid that Is by soa- stltutlonsl remedies. Deafness is eaased by aa Inflamed conditio st the mucous Using of the KuituklM Tube. When tsU tubs in laflsBwl you have a rubbing sonad or la- perfect hearing, and when It Is ea- Orely cloned, Deafness Is the r nit, and unless the Inflamatatloa rsn be taken omt aad this tube re - stored to Its sormal condition, war ing will be destroyed forever; sias eases ont of tea are caused by Ca tarrh, which la nothing but aa la flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dol lars for any case of Dsafnews on now, says the big, harsh minerU (caused by catarrh) that cannot bs j pills to bowel congestion and suffer er red by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send lng follows. Dr. King's New Life tor circulars, iree. A FIVE CHAXCE. Do you wkh a FREE TRIP to WASHINGTON C1TV cm the occa sion of Wilson's Inauguration? It you do.write at once for partiri;lara. Atldross Iaaugtirr.tlon Department, News and Obsorver, RakJrli, N If you have a friend who wu.M ' also lil.e to take this trip and lifiv i t -1 1 a frc ticket, se-nd In his or lK.rjffi name riht away. i j, AfteranySickness nothing so rapidly restores health and vigor as SCOTTS EMULSION. It is the essence of natural body nourishment, so medically perfect that nature immediately appropri ates and distributes it to every organ, every tissue feeding, nourishing and restoring them to normal activity. SCOTT'S EMULSION is not a patent medicine, but is nature's body-nourishment with curative, upbuilding properties and without a drop of drug or alcohol. It con tains superior cod liver oil, the hypophosphites of lime and soda with glycerine, and is so delicately emulsified that it enters the system without digestive effort builds, tones and sustains. After croup, whooping cough, measles and other child ailments it is nature's ally in restoring health. After grippe or pneumonia it Imrmrts strength and health, and Scon & Bo whs, Bloom field, N.J. Stop Petty Grafting. A determined effort will be made stop so much graftiiig in uu- "Can"t we begin, now and get 'something done to stop the disgrace- M grafting lnunnocessaryclerkships the Legislature? It isn't so much that the people's money is wafted in a lot of miserable little jobs that ought to be done for one fourth the actual cost. This Is worth considering, of course, when we thiuk of the P'x,r' hardworking men out of whom the bulk of the taxes are wrung, ar.d the fact tlint tht, average school torm in North Carolina is still about the lowest in 11,6 American Union. "But the worst fea feature of it all ts Xhe shameful lowering of our stand ards of political moarlity. Every year we Irirg a let of new men here to serve the State as law-mak- m:ney of the common people.a trust ..... themselves as trustees of this tax ah sacred as that of guardian for a ers men who ought to think of ward. Many of these are young mrnl who come with high Ideals, men. wh believe it Is just as wrong to rob the State as it is to rob an Individ ual, And yet we taint all these men with an atmosphere polluted by the grafting in clerkships, this wasts of the public onemy, until the legis lators themselves and the men. whos business brings them Into touch wit the law-makers suffer an insidious lowering of thePr standards "There is so little and has been fw little of outright grafting in North Carolina, it seems a pity that we cannot free ourselves from this petty fraud and see to It that our law-makers forever after live and move and have their being in an atmosphere thoroughly free from . ., . , . ., such suggestion and infection. Third Month) Ninth grade JuanJta Kevns, Sixth grade Ada Hammond, Cat Hammond, George K earns, Louise N a r1 ' J Fourth grade Tom Hammond, Estley Kearna. Sid Kearna, Thelma (Trogdon. . . . , . ... , I Th,r Krade Elate CaShatt. ' Second grade Rosa Elliott, Madge Kearns, Hasel Trogdon. First grade lvlaa Keans. Move Ob Now, says a policeman to a street crowd, and whacks heads if it don't. "Move Ptlla doa-t bniidoze the bowels. They gently persuade them to right ac- t.ion, and health follows. 25c. at Asheboro Drug Co. Twenty-one negroes were brought orfore the Reoorder's court charged vUh vngi-an-y in High Point last IThurs'!.'.; . One was given a 30-day ron wsritpnce, three were fined.' four I gi.llty of vagrancy and the rk were allowed to go upon ;:i n of costs. ' Tax Welath, Not Poverty. Of the fourteen States that have not ratified the Income-Tax amend ment the votes of two will make up the thirty-six needed to Incorporate it in the Constitution of the United States. Circumstances favor its final adoption before the special ses sion of Congress to be called next spring. In discussing the approaching re vision of the tariff, Represet&Uvei Un derwood assumes the previous rat; flcatlon of the Income-Tax amend ment and plans to use the power thus gained in framing a new and fairer revenue system. But so im portant a matter should not be left to change. The amendment has nothlg of a partisan political character. It was submitted to the States by a resolu tion passed by a Republican Congress It has been Indorsed in successive Democratic national platforms. The States that have ratified It have exi pressed themselves In about equal proportions through Democratic an Republican Legislatures- Of those that remain undecided or have vot ed In the negative the Legislature in some will be Democratic, in' some Republican. Those States are in the South and In New England, in the Middle West and the Rocky Moun tains. There should be an organized movement to secure the adoption of the income-tax amendment as promptly as possible. If the Re publicans, from political motives, at this late day choose to pursue the course of inaction or hostility, then let the Democrats take up the work. There are half adozen States with Democratic Legislatures about to convene where a favorable vote may be expected this winter if the mat ter is pressed. In readjusting the burdens of tax ation the coming Domoeralc Con gress will be under a plain mnndate from the country to do justice to tl , . consumer. An income tax lightening the heavy burden on consumption is a nledKO of the party platform which! Democracy must redeem. Reduce the cost of living. Tax wealth, but not poverty. New York World, Escapes An Awful Fate. A thousand tongues could not ex press the gratitude of Mrg. J. E. Oox, of Joliet, 111., for her wonder ful deliverance from an awful fate. "Typhoid-pnev.monia had left ne with a dreadful eough,"she writes. "Some times I had such awful couga i nii t tl,mih T vnnlil die. ,' 0ld gn no he,p from doctors- treatment or other medicines till 1 used Dr. King's New Discovery But I owe my life to this wonderful remedy or I scarcely cough at all now " Quick and safe, its the moot reliable of all throat and lung medlclnna Bverv bottle guaranteed. 50c. and 11.00. Trial totue iree ai Asheboro Dg Co. Oole Blense. Lincoln used to tell about the Southwestern orator who "mounted the platform, threw back bis head shlned his eyes,, opened his mounth and left the coneequencs to God." No more accurate description ol Cole Blease , Governor of South Carolina could ,be written. But how long are the people of that unfortun ate State to tolerate the Blease type of public official? Has not South Carolina's humiliation at Richmond been a sufficient lesson? New York World. Judge H. G. Conner Gives way to Emotions at Trial. There was a distinct sensation in the Federal Court at Raleigh last Wednesday morning when, in the midst of the trial of a decrepit prisoner charged with selling whis key at Wake Forset. Judge H. G. Connor completely gave way to penta0f up emotions and declared in broken sentences that he wished so much that everybody had that grace, off God in their hearts that would mak them orderly and law-abiding cltl sena. The trials, lie said to which h si a judge waa put in dealing with the great number of liquor selling and blockading eases seem ed to him at times unbearable and he felt like quitting the bench. Already at this term of the court he has, be said, practically made more than 40 orphans and numbers of widows by having to send hus bands and fathers to prison for thes offenses, applying, at the same time ithe most humane sentences. The case under trial was that of Lonnle Whitley, who was drawn with rheu matism and has a large family. Card of Thanks. I wish to express my appreclattlon for the help given me by friends in winning the automobile in the contest which has Just closed. Not only do I thank the people in my own and adjoining countiks but also in other States. JdHS. D. A. CORNELISON, m FRIEND'S GOOD ADVICE The Results Hade This NewborJ nay waa ne followed Suggestion. Nswbsrg, Ala. "For mors than year,'' writes Myrtls Co thrum, of this place, "I suffered with tsrrlbls pains ia my back and head. I had a sallsw complexion, and my facs was covered with pimples. Our family doctor only gars m temporary relief. A friend of mlns advised ma ts try Cardui, so I began taking It, at once. ana witn the best results, for I was cured after taking two bottles. My mother and my aunt have also used Cardui and werq greatly benefited. I shall always praise Cardui to sick via Buaenng women. uaraui is a purely vegetable, per fectly harmless, tonlo remedy for we men, ana will DeneQt young and old. Its ingredients are mild herbs, hav ing a gentle, tonlo effect, on ths wo manly constitution. Cardui has help' 1 a million wonea back to health and strength. Uavo you tried It? If not, pletss do. It may bs Just what yoa need. W.B. BWtetar Udln' Advisory tot., Chatia. aaofa Mf4klnCa..Chaf noon, Ttnn.. lor SprciiA iwiMKHOTi, ana n-wn soon. Home rmt far WsuuV'tant la aiai. wrapaar. as aasb Platform and Resolutions 0f the Democrats of Randolph Count Convention Sept. 7. We, the Democrats of RaadolsU county in convention sfieeniblcd, be lieve in the rule of the people, and dvclare the following for the guid ance of tke nominees of this couvta Uos: We heartily endorse the National and State Democratic platforms. We invite those who believe in the principles enunciated in our f latforni to uslte with us in elect ing our national leader and great chieftain, Woodrow Wilson, and our Lxloved lad distinguished orator aud statesman the captain of our force in the State, the Hon. Locke Cralg.who is at U.e head of the tk'k- t on which the distinguished citi- ffn ",d JrTe Vo" soldier. Col. V. P. Wood, of our own coun- ty ta al)so m mmllnw5 or the ruio- cratLc party for a high office- We favor rigid economy in every department of our government aad eepecially so in the administration of county matters. e congratulate the r.eoule of the State and county on the honest and economical administration of public affairs and especially aie we grati fied at the record of the Democratic party Ju Randolph county. We pledge a continuance of the honest upright and economical administra tion of the affairs of the county If our party nominees are re-elected, and if we are again entrusted with the duties of public office. We endorse the Torrens land title system and declare that it Is the sense of this convention that the General Assembly enact a law so tht those who desire to avail them selves of its advantages may do so. That State and county convicts should be put to work on the roads. We favor a legaiited primary for the election of public officials. We favor salary for the register o deeds, sheriff, treasurer and clerk of the Superior Court, or a substan tial reduction of fees, If after a care ful and accurate investigation it Is found that there would not be a saf flcient saving to the county to jus tify a change to the salary basis. I event it Is not found, after a thor ough and accurate investigation that the salary system Is a substan tial saVlng to the county, we favor ths reduction of the commissions of the county treasurer to one per ceat oa all, school funds and to two per ceat. on all other funds coming into his hands, on which the law al lows commission. And that fees of the register of deeds paid by the county be reduced substantially sad the same be done as to ts clerk of, the Superior Court. 1 To the end that the actual income Of the county officers may bs ss certatLaed we request that the reg ister of deeds and clerk of the su perior Cosrt soak ont a sworn and itemiawd report of toss aad perquis ites of their respective offices for ths three moatks eadiag Dee. 9, 1011, aad tor the three months end ing Feb. a.itis, tke same to bs approved by the conaty attoraanr la due form aad filed with the board eonatv commissioners withla Urea daya after the espiraUom of the two aforesaid periods. That tke absrlff of ths county is requested to keep a list and report likewise aa to all teas aad perquis ites ef kta office except commis sions ne receives, wsleb. are sacer talned and determined by the settle meat of the sheriff and are known aa a matter of record. The board of eommisuoners are t tnveatiaata the laoome of all other fees for the lssl two years, etc.. oi each offlcSal by Jan. 10, llt. We heartily endorse the forward movement aad dacattoaal progress in the county aad favor an economi cal admlalatratlom of the pnbllo mat ters. catting down administration ex knenaas where possible. we I Tor a caasfe im wm prajeuv system of aaaesasnent and listing of property- We are in favor of a system of good roads extending throughout ths county and throughout the State, and tot bis end we favor State and National aid to the build ing of good roads. We pledge ourselves to the enact ment of laws favoring the reforms demanded in these resolutions. Children Cry FOX FLETCHEf S CASTORIA M&yb The Reliable Household Lantern There is always need for a good lantern around the home in the yard, in the cellar, in the attic wherever a lamp is inconvenient or unsafe. The RAYO is ideal for home use. It gives a dear, bright light like sunlight on tap. It is strong, durable, compact, handy. Doesn't leak. Doesn't smoke. Easy to light and rewick. Will last for years. Ask for the RAYO. At Dalwn Evnyiehm. STANDARD OIL COMPANY ' (incorvonlad ia Naw Janar) Nraik,N.A i Real Painless Dentistry I Set of Teeth, $5. Bridge Work, $4. Gold Crowns. 94 sad SS All Operators experts. Lady Attendant Saik Refer ences furnished UNION PAINLESS DENTISTS, he. Permanently located at 102 S Elm t-, over Gardaar's Drug Store. Opp Postoffice, GREENSBORO. N C Phsas 1710. I J. D. GREGG, D. D. S f ;: Will be in his office at Tuesday 1 Wtdnesady and at Ramseur Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday to do all kinds of Dental work. I try to do good, honest, first-class work at reasonable ;; prices. I use the painless method of extracting : ; OAf-fi Prnirn on1 Rfi4ro wmrrrr anil nenA IM1 iags are my specialty. altyj ,, ,, ,, ,, ,j aill4iiajlllll Asheboro Offers superior inducements Its population wuhin the last tew years has grown wonder fully. It has recently installed a water works and sewerage system. Our manufacturing establishments are many and more are to be built giving employment to everyone who is wil ling to work. Wages are high here compared -to other towns. Asheboro Wants you and will extend to you a hearty welcome. You could not do better than move your family here to educate your children. It's inexpensive. Living here is cheap and exceptional advantages are offered in the best graded school in the state. ' Asheboro Is the terminus of the High Point, Raadleman and Ashebore Railway and a branch of the Norfolk Southern. The Ran dolph & Cumberland connecting the mouatains with the sea shore will be running through Asheboro within three and oae-half years it is said. This will give us additional facili ties and assures one of the wisdom of investing money in Asheboro t Ycu can't .g wrong. All over the state" there was a large increase in values last year. The increase in raluea dur ing the next twelvemonths will exceed the past. It takes no prophet to see this. When you th;nk of the wonderful de velopment in railroads and in fact along all lines ot industry. No One Has Ever Regretted Buying property from us. 'They have rr.ade end saved money by dealing through us. Ask our many satisfied customers. We can sell you anything from a town lot to a 1,000-acre farm. Write today. JOHN M. HAMMER, Asheboro, N. C. Bhhnsts.Md. Our improved scisntifia quip ment and nodara Bnetheila su able ua to perform priMbicalfy all dental operations painless ly. Liberty, N. C., Monday, j; of each week prepared i Satisfaction guaranteed. I sfraH. .fr.fr.fr lfr.fr afr.fr t"H" 41 to those looking for a location.
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 19, 1912, edition 1
2
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