A- fv. rv- >. -y■ f>~. (s~ t*- (*■ (*■ f*- I ASK ME ; ANOTHER f ; * A Generol Quiz * £ The Questions L TW earl of Beaeonsfleld Is teat kaown by what other name? X. What are belles-lettres? I Whore is the world's most fa- Mk whirlpool? L Why do our men in the Arctic iwid standing up too suddenly? 1. What is a raconteur? C What percentage of the *J. S. jopuiaun is in uniform? 1. How did rhinestonos get that ft. Wh ere was the first petroleum ■d drilled in the t'nitcd States? The Answers t. Tfc* earl of Beaconsfleld Is 'lntf knewn as Disraeli. X. Po.ite or elegant literature. L The maelstrom i IT Norway. C The .skv and white ice and '■m sc blend as to destroy the Smrnoa and cause the men to top ple k A.n i. because t vy cannot *r£ when they n:e standing erect. 5. A story telli r. •. About 8 per cent. S. Tf-*cf were first made along fee Uhrv* C It T.tusville, Pa. jM'MOROLINE r3K\ PITROLIUM JELLY if|c \ **' * '"**!> dS VIA.* tea |y> IT/7 * VJrJF \ \ \J|t Aw orifovi must get through to our fight- for emergency comrruni jatai ttu Merchant Manna depends upon mrUbtt, battery-powered megaphones. •»*aa tkx*. of batteries on the Komefront mm hacMtc they're needed to power count -4m 4b» Mvmg. life-saving instruments or mt W sea. Use your ava lai'e Burgess Mtonts sparingly. . . keep them cool and *X For Fre* Battery Hints-Wr.te Dept. U 3, tagest Battery Company, Freeport, Illinois. CWlf Htlpt Htr§ and o**ri«oif fSgfi! BURGESS jUOhji BATTERIES Get Y our \\ ar HotuU ★ "k To Help Ax the Axis distress of MONTHLY^ Female Weakness 'Also Fine Stomachic Tonic) t,?4)a t Ptnkham's Vetrt'abl« Com i puuad la .'jtnnvt * > rcii.i .e p« rtodlc p*ta ar.ci accoc&panyir.g nervous, wfu it r» •::-1 —w».t»n due to fL-iCtloual ir.cuti.ly disturbance* Tureo regularly— Fir.kham'a Com pound helps b'.lld i p resistance zucs aKCjjtng iymptoma i Fintf-r .\v« C«»irjpi imd la made arprri,.;. 4 /or u " n—if hrlns na tu/t Abu tl>i\Vn i •» kitul of rr.tMlcln* to bujl Follow label directions. J.YDIA E. PINKHfIM'S com"ou11^ like good-tasting tonic mat doctors recommend fltfdk cold cosily ? Listless ? Tire quickly ? loot up your system 1 Take Scott's SMliion—contains natural A ft D your diet may b« lacking. It'* UJL great! Buy today. All druggist* Ml HOUSfHOlvfe)f MS M OS »•» fyjfynWMk&t Cheery Beyinners for That Morning Starter iSee Recipes Below) Breakfast Patterns A recent surv> v made tells us that 6.3 p r o r.t i f the doctors and 88 per cent of the ti aiders say the aver age person tats too little for break fast. Ot.:er interesting facts reveal that most people bi; iVi t!:e> get about UU per .cent of f~." J F-r- 'l tnen daily uour f" '.y v *. breakfast. Doc h.; -j 'y 'jf J tors and teachers t. 11 L ji ■ ■ | ;t ri . agaiti esti- n.ati ti.ey get I.*".' ..tj)j about 28 per cent ! k nourishment from l\ -. . - J breakfast. One of the rea sons, perh.aps, fir skimping on breakfast is t! at time is limited. Tiie survey goes >:. t, say that people theinse Ai s t.-un.ate they spend around 12 minutes eating breakfast with fartiu :s ,-p. riding more tl.an that, factory workers less. On Sun days, when. t!n re is no work to dash to, the t.tne f r breakfast stretches enormously, and so probably does the nourishment. These, then, are the findings. Here are Hie facts, a breakfast is one of the three meals of the day and as such should provide a third of the day's food requirements—calories, vitamins, mini rals, etc. In fact, planned correctly, the breakfast can take care of that serving of cereal, that citrus fruit or juice and the egg a day requirements. If the worker has a heavy schedule, the food can be made extra nourishing, such as cor king the cereal in milk, or at least serving with cream i>r rich milk and sugar. Have both eggs and cereal for breakfast if the cal orie intake has to be upped, and serve jellies or jam with toast ui ad dition to the butter. Why Breakfast? Breakfasts, good breakfasts, are Important if we are to keep mental and physical en- ergy at the high- -fIL ~ S est level during morning hours. V The tane elapsing I between dinner ■ —*^T and breakfast is | ' the longest inter- | val between any P ; J| r nual. The stretch between the eve- ~ mr.g meal and the morning moat is usually as long as 12 hours. Sleep consumes energy, too, for the very process of living, while asleep re quires approximately 65 calorics for the average-sized adult. Now here are some breakfast pat terns that will lit nicely into your schedule even if you have only 12 to 15 minutes in which to take break fast Pattern I. Stewed Fruit Cooked Cereal Milk and Sugar Toast and Marmalade Coffee or Milk Tattern 11. Half Grapefruit Ready-to-eat Cereal Milk and Sugar French Toast Syrup Coffee or Milk Pattern 111. Orange Juice Cooked Cereal with Milk and Sugar, Eggs or Baron Rolls and Jelly Coffee Pattern IV. , Fresh Applesauce Wheat Flakes with Cream and Sugar Fried Ham Slice Muffins and Butter Coffee or Milk Company Breakfast Fruits-ln-Season Cereal with Cream and Sugar Scrambled Eggs with Chives Bacon Curls English Muffins with Butter Jelly Coffee There need be no monotony in breakfasts with all the variety avail- THE n.\\»ri{V REPORTER. BANBURY. N. (\. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 2 fi. 1914 LYNN SAYS Color Notes: Use different col ored dishes and pottery jugs for breakfast to make the morning as bright and gay as possible. Here's how: Mix orange juice with cranber ry juice for unusual effect. Fleck scrambled eggs with bits of parsley, chopped chives or of bacon curls. Add raisins to oatmeal and serve with yellow butter and sugar. Apricot halves go well with wheat cereal; ye Low peach halves complement brown bran (lakes. Contrast the crisp brown of sausages with fried red-skinned apples. Splash grape jelly or. golden fried cornmeal mush. able in fruits, juices, cereals, and breads. Here art some tnp-of-the morning recipes to give your family a grand send-off: Flake Griddle Cakes. Makes 12 cakes, 4 inches in diameter) 1 cup sifted flour teaspoons baking powder a i teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 egg 1' 2 cups tnilk 1 cup slightly crushed bran, wheat or corn flakes 3 tablespoons melted shortening Sift together (lour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Combine well beat en egg and milk and add to dry in gredients. Beat until smooth. Add cereal flakes and shortening. Bake on hot. lightly greased griddle. Serve with syrup, honey or jelly. Variation: Butter thin hot pan cakes, spread with tart jelly and roll. Serve at once with additional jelly or thin syrup. Coffee Cake. l l i cups sifted flour cup sugar 2 teaspoons baking powder s i teaspoon salt 1 egg 1 • cup milk 3 tablespoons melted shortening Sift together dry ingredients. Beat egg, add milk and shortening. Stir together with dry ingredients, mixing only enough to moisten Hour. Pour into lightly greased 8-inch square pan. Sprinkle with streusel topping. Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) 25-30 minutes. Streusel Topping. 3 tablespoons melted butter 1 1 cup brown sugar 1 cup crushed cereal flakes 1 teaspoon cinnamon Combine all ingredients by rub bing between fingers until mixture crumbles. Sprinkle over coffee cake batter before baking. Prune Bread. (Makes 1 loaf) It cup shortening 1 cup sugar 2 eggs, beaten cup chopped cooked prunes 2 cups sifted enriched flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon Vi cup milk li cup chopped nuts (if desired) Cream together shortening and sugar. Add beaten eggs to creamed mixture. Blend in prunes. Sift to gether flour, salt, baking powder and cinnamon. Add to creamed mixture alternately with milk. Add chopped nuts. Pour into greased loaf pan. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) 1 hour and 15 minutes Do you hart rectilet or entertaining sug gestions which you'd like to puss on to other miller*? Send them to Mis s Lynn C.hamher», Western Nensimper I niun, 210 South Drs/iLiines Street, Chicago 6, /Hi. noii. Relr.ucd by Wasltrn Nawnpaper UIJMV, IMPROVED i UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I CHOOL Lesson By HAHOLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D. Of lii«' Moo»l> Rible Institute of Chicago. Kclrjsed by Western Newspaper Union, i ■ Lesson for October 29 L4>«!>on subjects and Scripture texts , lected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education; used by i permission. TIIK CHRISTIAN MOTIVE FOR LIVING International Temperance Sunday LESSON TEXT—Psalm 4:5-8; I.uke 4:4; John 0 35, Romans 12:1, 2: 13:12-14. COLDfcN TEXT—Seek those things which j »re abjve.—C'jlossians 3:1. Disciplined living should be the goal of each of us. Life is not to be lived careleasly, influenced by ! chance events or passing impulses. , Such discipline of life would keep | men from the temptations which ' lead them into intemperance and ' sin. A life can be properly disciplined, only as it is controlled by Christian motives. Such a life has— I. Spiritual Gladness (Ps. 4:5-8). The psalmist had faced the dis tressing questioning of men who | derided him for his faith. They were unbelievers who demanded of him what good his religion did (v. 6). lie has an answer, and it is the testimony of his own experience. Those around him sought glad ness in the harvest of grain and in the wine which was supposed to give a lift to their spirits. This was their joy. Well, the man of God had ! something infinitely superior. He had gladness in his heart. It was , not dependent on outward circum stances—it was within. 1 Then note, too, that it did not rest on something that happened, or on some fellow man. "Thou (God) hast put gladness in my heart." That means real joy and satisfaction. 11. Spiritual Food (Luke 4:4; John 6:35). It is delightful to have true glad ness, but man needs food if he is to grow and to work. That is true spiritually, for he must have the needed nourishment of life here also. Jesus when tempted (Luke 4:4) because He was hungry saw beyond the temporal need, and declared that life should bo controlled by a higher principle. The spiritual has a place of supremacy over the physical in the life of the Christian man or woman. The body with its desires is to be subject to the defi nite control of the spirit, which takes its orders from God. The explanation of the awful alco holic debauchery of our day is found right here. Men have given their , bodies the supreme authority and they are driven by the lusts of their flesh. What they need more than legal reform or restriction of sale of liquor (and we believe in both) is the regeneration of their souls by ! the grace of God in Christ Jesus. ; Let us bring them the gospel. ; John 6:35 makes known the fact that Jesus, the bread of life, satis fies every need of men. Every nor mal hunger and inirst finds full sat isfaction in Him. Have you tried Him as the One to meet the need of your hungry heart? 111. Spiritual Service (Rom. 12:1, | 2). "Reasonable service," says the Authorized Version; "spiritual serv -1 ice," says the Revised Version. Both | are right. The man who is really reasonable will be spiritual and will , render to God a sacrificial service. 1 Note that it is a "living sacri i fice" that is said to be "holy, ac i ceptable to God." This is not a case of a single act of deep devotion (great as that may be), but a going on in the daily walk to live for Christ. That calls for grace and power, and He is ready and willing ! to give both to each of His chil , dren. That experience with God means a non-conformity to the world, which is too little spoken of and i less practiced in the church to day. The one who professes to fol ; low Christ is simply not to be con ' formed to the ways of this wicked world. There is to be a completely [ transforming experience of the grace of God, that takes you out of this world while you are still in it. IV. Spiritual Walk (Rom. 13:12- 14). Christians are the children of the morning. They walk in the light (I John 1:7). This world walks in darkness. No one needs any argu ment to prove that point—just look about you. The deeds of darkness are evil deeds, and men dwell in darkness because they love evil (John 3:19). That means that the children of light must walk circumspectly and "becomingly" (that's a good wordl) in this world. Thus we may attract others out of the darkness into the light, so that they too may put aside "reveling and drunkenness," yes, and also "strife and jealousy." Those go together. The way to victory is to be clothed with the Lord Jesus and His righteousness (v. 14). That is a real "armor of light" with which we may ■ be protected. Note also that we are studiously to avoid making any provision for the desires of the flesh. Put such things away, and with them will go the temptation to use them. Some professing Christians need to heed this word by destroying some beverages which they may have oo hand—just to give one axample. 1 SFiri\C CIRCLE PATTERNS Princess Lines Flatter One Jumper Frock, Simple Blouse fa* H 1242 * 34-48 Trim Morning Frock. (")UR idea—and yours too—of I something pretty in a morn ing frock! Your favorite princess ! lines, so flattering and trim, will , make you look nice and feel com ; fortable too. There's added inter est in the little rolled collar and pocket design. You'll like it in all cheery cottons or ginghams. • • • Barbara 801 l Pattern No. 1142 li de i Slcnod (or sizes 34 . 36 , 36. 40. 42. 44. 46 anil 48. Sl/e 36 requires 4}» yards of 39- Incli material; lor trimming, 4 yards of ricrac. For tills pattern, send 2J cents In coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted. With Puff Sleeves. , A GAY, pretty little jumper ' ** frock which has the easiest, : simplest blouse to make, wear and launder you've ever encountered, i Notice that the "pulTs" of the I sleeves and the gathers of the ; neckline are just pulled up by means of a ribbon drawstring. • • • Pattern No. 8090 Is In sLies 3. 4. 3. 8, 7 and 8 years. Size 4 Jumper requires l'j yards of 39-lnch material; blouse, ** yard. Election Precincts I I The United States has about I 125,000 precincts or elections dis ! tricts the potential voters of which range in number from some 200 to 2,000. f Mm A _ M Never neglect head colds I \ I MM - M m _ M They can cause much tuf- IHifaMjn MMtMr ferlng. A little Va-tro-nol yVCfff mfrnmM up each nostril worts fust W W • Ww W W right where trouble la to re • m I ■' lleve sneezy, Etufly distress nrSaifffySsteey I 4 —l of head colds. Soothes lr ' ' | « *J L rltatlon, reduces swelling, M I Cfflß* I makes breathing easier. I Try ltl Also helps prevent I I many colds from develop* W f V'lw I BfL -5* \S I lng If used In time. Follow Mkl vmmhoi V I — f / JB"' I ..RUBfN Sen-Gay • Here's why gently warming, soothing Ben-Gay acts fast to relieve muscular soreness and pain...Ben-Gay ac tually contains upto2 '/a times more methylsalicylateand menthol—those famous pain-relieving agents known to •very doctor—than five other widely offered nib-ins. So —insist on genuine Ben-Gay for soothing, quick relief! For this pallrrn, icnd 23 cents In colna, your name, address, size desired, and Ui* paUcrn number. Send your order to: SEWING CIRfI.K PATTERN DEPT. 530 South H'rlls St. Chicago Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desucd. Pattern' No Size Name Address Woman Reveals Reason! MRS. HALL—Gpodnessl You don't mean to say that tiiis is mar garine? MRS. HULL—Yes, it's Nu-Maid ... the Table-Grade Margarine ... made especially for use on the ta ble!— Adv. m* 0» QU.CK«UET *g ®saioD A Soothing C A I WC ANTISEPTIC wnl. V k Used by thouiands with satisfactory r®. tulta for 40 yeara—six valuable Ingredi ents. Get Carboil at drug atorei or writ# Spurlock-Neal Co., Nashville, Tentu Upset Stomach Relieved In S minutes or double mo nay back Whonexreaaitomach add rau»f» painful. •uffo.-at nu k«v tour stomach and heartburn. doctor* usually prvacrihe the fanteat-actinir im-di.Mnca known foe . ■vmptouiatte relief mcii.Mne* hke thow In HHI-una ' fat* let* No laxative. lU-11-ana comfort in • jiffy or double your money back on rrturn of botti* to ua. 26c at all druggist*.