KENAKC VILLE, NC There's NolLing Dctter to I Serve on Vara '4 , By EDITH t:nq tastes better for det : on a warm night than Ice Cf course you know what - ! i your neighborhood offer - f Torlte Ice cream which may sit In so many flavors. Ton a to serve a chocolate, cara- erushed fruit sauce with this ; -a have an automatic re frig- t yon: will, of course, like to i a frozen dessert with lt help i time to time. For this yon 1 need special recipes, as It Is : possible .to get a smooth mix- j with the use of a recipe-whose tlons call for turning In a freex '. All kinds of mousses which are Je with flavored whipped cream a be made successfully la your re ra tor. J r - - v ; .f , i J; i'bere are also a number of other "pes which are not quite so rich, : nt which give satisfactory result lei-hups the easiest and least: ex ruslve are those made with ' the a of sweetened condensed milk. I can make them In my own, re , ', -:ratpr without stirring, but re ! orators differ and you may And it necessary to beat . the mixture v-'-.en It Is half frozen. The. time vHch frojteu mtactures take nlode rands upon tUe type of. refrigera tor. If yon have a cold control, two hours Is usually long enough, other wise yon will have to allow four to five hours. , . ( '.,,' , - . Vanilla lee Cream.. ) 1 cup condensed milk ..' 'i.V. cup water ytit-Zrfyi VA teaspoohl vanilla ; j l-. -!; L! i .Salt ;' V.Vr'vV1! i . cup . cream,;1 whipped v . .-'-. ;' Mix milk and water, add vanilla . ana salt Fold In whipped cream. Turn Into freezing trays and freeze three to four hours. :-z;; ; , ' WVVy'. Variation. '; ' Peppermint Ice Cream Substitute mint flavoring for vanilla and color with green coloring. . ; :.- .: v i Burnt. Almond Ice ' Cream--Fold" In one, cop macaroon crumbs and freeze. ':S",T?;,';CtWS'?K','ti;i . Coffee Ice Oream Substitute strong coffee for the water. -. Chocolate Ice Cream Melt two squares of chocolate In double boil er, Add condensed milk and water. ' Stir1 until thick and smooth. Coo, add whipped cream and one tea-spoon of vanilla. . Strawberry Ice Cream Substitute ope and one-half cups strawberries Wins Pulitzer Prize -v. ' Zoe Atkins, shown above, 1 was awarded the Pulitzer prize for her play, "The Old Maid," as the "orig inal American play, performed In Tw lorkv -that best represents the1 National value and power of the AMAZE A r fCTNT! FACTS " CDING LEN6TH- Ome specie of vclam sucks in f IT LONG. r ""OO TIMES AWfX ,.Y THAN GOLD. A POUND OF : WIR6 - ") TO MAKE r 1 1000 WNU ) i,.V 1. 1? . r Nights. M. BARBER for vanilla and reduce the water to one-half cap. Crush' the' straw berries very fine. , , i Strawberry DtUJa.1 ! -, . 1 cups (1 can) sweetened con- : densed milk .-'iijjii-' S tablespoons lemon Juice ' , 1 cup crashed strawberries ' 1 cup vanilla wafer -crumbs 18 vanilla wafers , ' .Thoroughly blend Sweetened con densed ' milk, :' lemon Juice, and crushed strawberries. Stir until mix ture thickens. Place In six sher bet glasses alternate layers of straw berry mixture and crumbs,-, leaving topping of crumbs. Push three whole wafers.. Into mixture around sides of each sherbet. Chill,; Top each sherbet 'with a, whole berry If de aired, , ' , .' . ' : Strawberries ' and Bice. n; . i' cup rice - f - r cups mashed strawberries f" H cup sugar - dream or custard' sauce ;:' ' Steam the rice until tender. Add the berries and sugar, Mix thor oughly and chill in a moid. Serve with cream or custard sauce.,--' C Bli 8m40Mr-WNP Sanrin, . -: Lydla. A, OBANDMOTHBB who finds herself mothering an adopted child, an orphan and a son- of a nephew, told me recently that she was finding the rearing of children today far more puzzling to parents than , when she wag bringing up her own family. She, herself, is fvery active In probing Into modern meth ods and discovering their virtues as well as their pe culiarities. - " - "Parents don't punish f their children today," she r told 4 me. "They watch the youngsters, seek ing to understand motives.. They reason: with the tittle children antn the UtUe brains are weary and muddled. Sometimes I find a Child' appre ciates authority. He likes to know lost " wliere. ; he stands in ; the distinctions v be tween jlght and wrong. Many times the. child finds it baffling to decide a cor rect course, ' It may be irksome to do as he Is told, but when he relies on. the Judgment of father and mother, as most children do, there Is a foundation of principles, something to stand on. A child does not love yon any less if he Is Justly punished," ' ' ; " . , 7 i 1 s Problem' Children. r Then she -spoke of the parents, and . of problem children about which we hear so much today.- TChe problem child was an anomaly when my children were little," she said, "for every mother found all her children problems, not one out of many. Some were more easily managed than .others. .Some MINUTE BY ARNOLD - NO YEAR Without ecutces- ; Every veartheb ARE AT UEaSI TWO EOIPSCS, BOTH Of THE SUN. 1935 AND 1982 WIU. EACH SEETHE MAXIMUM NUMBER! OP ECUPSES IN ONE YEAR Jv seven Service. 1 A V4L V r 1 : 'tfnen numerous1 housewives' in one district In Detroit, Mich., com 'plalned that the' cream was being stolen from' the tops of their milk bottles after the morning porch deliveries, police Instituted an Investi gation.' An apparently partly tamed crow whs picked up as a suspicious character, but no direct evidence could be established against the bird, 'who loudly cawed his Innocence, until the Humane society was called Into the case. A lie detector was employed, by placing the crow alone In a room with a quart of milk, f olice peeking In saw the guilty crow look around to make sure he was alone, then' bop over to the bottle and neatly puncture the top with his sharp beak and drink the cream. nu;rahMa Le Baron Walker "' quick to learn, - others -were- slow.. We were proud of the former and regretted the misfortunes of the latter. , "I have found that being slow In accumulating facts does -not In dicate a, poor intelligence. It may indicate a thinker, a child who is trying to understand - what be is told, and assimilate It, rather than swallow i( whole, because he Is told it "Is so. Frequently I have found , In later years that what : is accounted a problem child Is mere ly one. of pronounced Individuality and a personality which Is distinct I might almost say " distinguished. These very characteristics prove a niark;'of ;Ins.:-;;;y- Parents and Teachers. . . ' "Parents and teachers work to gether splendidly today," she con tinned. ."Bach has the welfare of the children at heart. A child may be different when at school than when at home. JU. school he Is with minds of his Own age, many such minds. At home he is but one . of his age unless there' are twins or quintuplets I : At : home lie cannot shine except .as he- Is Sppreclated by hi elders.;. At school with play mates he rises to be a leader, or becomes one of the rank and tile of average- hpportm&fyi,f,; v: -It "1'5 mmelous v to jwatch ; a child develop; It is a pity . to ham per him either' by freedom unlim ited when he Is. too young to know what to do with It, or to hem him in with too many restrictions which make him rebellions, We parents fend grandparents have an Interest ing work to do with affection as a guide." - - ' '" - ., O. Bill ayndloML WNU SwvlM. ''' ' "f Atoms of FaitH LEONARD A. BARRETT The atom is at the present' time being seriously studied by the physicists.. They are' endeavoring to split the atom, 'which, if accom plished, will, ef fect Important changes in our material and economic values, 1 lie vOthe ef fort" Is : to har ness or control the power' latent in the atom, ,We are credibly in- iJ rormeo mat in .:vf j'.- single .atom there Is' resident sufficient power,, which. If released, could; run all the dynamos of any largo city. The power is there, but now to Telease It, Is another question: a problem about as interesting and baffling as the effort to -extract electric current out of the sunlight . Perhaps some day our children may live to see the4 solution of some of these problems. , The theory is not without its Sug gestive values. : We Sr- told: 'that long ago the greatest of all teachers said, "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, nothing (hall be im possible unto you." Since the day of that ' utterance, experience - has demonstrated its truth. . ..The .mus tard seed was the smallest possible thing with which faith could, be compared an atom of faith. 'There U great creative and enduring pow er resident lb the so-called atom of faith. No race Is ever won without the runner having sufficient faith In himself to win. No great achieve ment is ever accomplished, or. prob lem solved,' without the exercise of faith.- Faith creates the Ideal, fires the imagination, and, furnishes mo- j Act tive power for; all heroic efforts. The overcoming of obstacles is largely attributable to the exercise of faith. Faith is the basic element In friendship. Remove faith from business and we have! bankruptcy. When One country haa faith in an other country, we shall hare Inter national peace. Our country is sore ly lacking in something.' What that something is, no two persons seem to-agrees Upon ' .one answer all could agree; and that is, the resto ration of confidence Is essential to our social, political: hand business life. There is sufficient reconstruc tive power, locked Up in an atom of faith, which, If ; -released, could work wonders In restoring our coun try to its normal economical and social life. :-A'f;f -' C. WaUn Mwnpr Onion. Knitted Costume The smart umbrella goring,, first launched by Luclen Lelong, is here achieved by sun-ray pleats knitted right Into a skirt and cape of navy wool mixed with - silk yarn. ' Ro vers are faced with white pique to match the Waistcoat that fastens with navy-and-whlte enameled buttons. The wide belt is navy blue leather. The toque from Taly Is in navygros graln ribbon. . My Neighbor Says It is better to scrape raw pota toes than pare them when prepar ing them for boiling. Full food value la thus regained. .', N f': '-:- '- Y t ? Silk -. handkerchiefs should ? be washed with borax in tepid water.' Use little or no soap. Colored hand kerchiefs should always b washed In cold or tepid water and dried in the shade." 4 ,' , ' Td remove the fat that forms on the top of soup, put a piece of Ice In cheesecloth and pass it rapidly over th hot soup. All fat will ad here to the cheesecloth. . . . White woolen blankets, which have become'' yellowed -with age may be tdyed pink, rose,- lue, or any favorite color. - Bind thorn with braid of the same ahade, ; , VvWUSwvlM. , ' , ' I . TREMENDOUS ft - 1 - ' I ft - i'-W. TRIFLES 85 By ELMO SCOTT WATSON TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR IN THE spring of 1898 a Swedish . tailor in Berkeley, Calif., read an advertisement In a San Francisco paper that said "Tailors wanted for a) whaling cruise In Alaskan wa ters." Some ancient memory of his Norse ancestors stirred in him. He applied for the Job. A few days later be was aboard the whaler "Re liance." "Get aloft there and help unfurl them sails!" bellowed the first mate to Eric. - "You go yump in the ocean," was Eric's calm reply. But before the mate's fist could crash into his face, the captain, Swedish born and a kindly soul. Interfered. To his demand for an explanation Eric produced a crumpled newspa per clipping and pointed to the "Help Wanted" advertisement "The newspaper made a mistake," said the captain with a laugh. "I wanted sailors, not tailors." But Eric was very angry and only the captain's assurance that he could travel on the ship as a passenger until they put in at Port Clarence, calmed him. There he got a boat and started down the coast. At the mouth of the SInrock river he met with three prospectors who had found a lit tle gold there and they gave him a small nugget A short time later Eric showed this to an Eskimo chief who pointed up toward the hills and exclaimed excitedly, "Umalak tok, umalaktok emetna!" meaning "much more the same." The chief then took him up the river to where It forked and there by searching In the gravel they were able to pick out large pieces of coarse gold. At first this place was known as Snake river but later when a horde of frenzied fortune-seekers pitched their tents and built their shacks there It became Nome City. Thus a typographical error launched one of the greatest gold rushes in all his tory. HIGHLY IMPORTANT COMMAS A COMMA is only one of many punctuation marks and, except for the period, is about the smallest and most insignificant of them all. But put it In the wrong place and disastrous results may follow. Once upon a time a misplaced comma cost the United States gov ernment the tidy sum of $2,000,000. A clerk transcribing the tariff free list did it For Instead of writing "All foreign fruit-plants are free from duty," he wrote "All foreign fruit plants are free from duty." Two million dollars' worth of for eign fruit had come Into the coun try before this little comma could be removed. Then there is the story about the Russian empress, Marie Feodorew na. Emperor Alexander III had Imprisoned one of his political ene mies. Then the empress accidental ly caught sight of the following note, written by her husband on the margin of one of these death war rants: "Pardon Impossible, to be sent to Siberia." Marie had pleaded for the life of this subject His wife was one of her childhood friends and she had done all she could to save the con spirator. Alexander could not, in duty bound, release the plotter, and the sentence stood until Marie transposed the comma so that it read, "Pardon, Impossible to be sent to Siberia," The man was released, thanks to a woman's big heart and a little comma. ... ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN A CCIDENT is the mother of x invention, DO times out of 100," said Loula Brennan, the tor pedo Inventor. One day be saw a frayed driving belt on a planing ma chine acting queerly. He got the Idea that it was possible to make a machine travel forward by pulling it backward. Be made use of that principle in Inventing bis engine of death. Careless workmen in a paper mill forgot; one day, ..to add sizing to the pulp, and the whole vat had to be thrown away as waste. A short time later the proprietor came- by. He saw the discarded rolls and tore oft some strips to use for making notes. It absorbed the Ink as fast as he wrote on. It, so he called it "blotting paper." We've used it ever since. - In another plant a workman play fully tossed a piece of cheese into the plating bath solution, used for producing copper disks for stamp ing phonograph records. The disks from this particular bath were far superior to any others. The casein In the cheese was the one element that chemists had been looking for, A French scientist, while experi menting In his laboratory, acciden tally opened the wrong valve. Sev eral drops of moisture settled In a glass . tube- . Horrified at his mis take, the scientist was about to throw the tube away when he re alized that he had discovered liquid oxygen. - - V Wwtni Ktwiptpw gnloa. - , Crocheted Rug Uses New Modern Design .i-Mfp s- ',.;.,, ,!.:,. P'M This crocheted rug called "Con ventional'' jrugr -rH made In sop colors.. The design and -border are fn black and the background In green and lavender.:- When finished It measures about 21x36 Inches and approximately three pounds of rag strips are used In the making. v The colors suggested are ohly one com bination, many combinations. can oe worked out to match the colors In the room in which It is to be Used. This rug will prove a practical as well as beautiful rug in any room In the house. ' , "' Full Instructions for this rug and 25 others are included In rug book No. 25. Both braided and crocheted rugs are found In this book. Send 15 cents to our Rug Depart ment and this book will be sent to you postpaid. Address HOME ' CEAFT COM PANY, DEPARTMENT C, Nine teenth and St Louis Avenue, St Louis, Mo. Enclose stamped-self addressed envelope when writing for Informa tion. Canadian Sourdoughs Seek Legendary Cavern of Gold One of the most amazing gold hunts In Canada's mining history Is planned by Alberta prospectors. Without proof that It even exists, hardened sourdoughs are planning to hunt the ninny hills of the White Court area for the legendary "gold cache" of Old Moostas, seventy-nlne-year-old Indian, around whose gnarled figure a legend of fabulous riches and superstition was weaved by prospectors several years ago. At that time he saved a tribe of Indians from starvation by bringing back a "bag of gold" from the secret cache in the hills. Moostas believed that the gold was put In the cache by the "Great Spirit" for use only in time of dire need, and died without revealing where it was, and refusing to tell how he found It. The cache Is believed to lie among the hills in the White Court district. It is described as a "prospector's dream a cave lined with pure gold. The legend Is that although Moos tas knew of the existence of the cache for years, he visited it only once. Several years ago, when an Indian tribe In White Court district faced starvation, Old Moostas hitched up two ponies and went Into the hills. Two days later, he walked Into a trading post at White Court, dumped a "poke" of gold nuggets on the counter and bought out the store. He distributed the food and other goods among the starving Indians, and then retired to a lazy existence on the Indian settlement Then started a long battle of wits between prospectors and the old In dian. For years white men tried to wrest the secret from him. They piled him with questions and made many enticing offers, but tha old In dian rebuffed them with stoical si lence. For months bis every move ment away from camp was cjosely watched, but Moostas never visited the cache again. America's Health Army Numbers Over 1,500,000 More than 1,500,000 persons In this country, according to an estimate In the Statistical Bulletin, Issued by one of the leading life Insurance companies, are employed directly or Indirectly In caring for the sick and preventing disease In this coun- IlL ttbeai 0 fP to the Ijy future Cunttiiciimrc: OIIVTIvIENT aided by shampoos with CssUeauFss Soap, will keep the scalp dean and help to prevent 'dandrnff and itching scalp irritations which cause tailing hair and baldness. .- .: - Ointment 15c and 50c Sceptic, Sold t mil drugilttt. , ' ,,7 T$ H-M'tiin tr -'rlM-M-fr y?P ' 'v. 'mm try about one for every ti person! otherwise engaged. - . i . ; ' The list includes 161,000 legally qualified physicians, 24,000 attend ants. 294,000 nurses. 150,000 "prac tical nurses," nearly 6,000 physiothe rapists, clinical-laboratory -. workers and masseurs; 70.000 dentists, 1-4,-000 dentists' assistants, 2,000 oral hyglenlsts, 20,000 dental technician and assistants of various kinds; ap proximately 86,000 osteopaths, chiro practors and "healers," 47,000 mid-,' wives, 0,000 chiropodists, 20,000 op-, tometrists; 653,000 hospital superin tendents and other Hospital person nel, 5.000 clinical attendants, 11,500 health department workers, and sev- : eral thousands in private health or- - ganlzatlons ; 125,000 registered phar macists, 17,000 asssistant pharma cists, about 60,000 apprentice pharma cists, and 2,500 medical-social work-' era, Literary Digest. , X . won by Mrs. M. E. Ryncrsoa fat htt baking. She now u t c t CLABBER. GIRL Exclutlvtly hi - Advice to Girls Some girls who set out to be agree able score a victory over those who spend hours trying to look pretty. Many a Friend Recommends BLACK-DRAUGHT People who have taken Black Draught naturally are enthusiastic about it because of the refreshing relief it has brought them. No won der they urge others to try it! ... Mrs. Joe G. Roberts, of Portersville, Ala., writes: "A friend recommended Black-Draught to me a long time afro, and It has proved its worth to me. Black-Draught is good (or constipation. I find that taking- Black-Draught prevents the bilious headaches which I used ato have." ... A purely vegetable medicine for relief of CONSTIPATION, BILIOUSNES9 CHILDREN Like Milnesia Wafers PIMPLY SKIN from clogged, irritated pores, can be relieved, improved; and healing aided with . Resinoli Boacle, 91.95 lb Complete line of knitting yarns. Write for 300 free amples. MAGIC YARNS. 6314 Walnut, Philadelphia. Pa. Simply prlnkls Peterman'i Ant Food along window sills, doors and openings through which anta come and go. Guaranteed to rid quickly. Used In a million homes. Inexpen five. Get It at your druggist's. DO you suffer burning, scanty or too frequent urination; backache, headache, dizzincu, swollen fct and ankles? Are you tired, nervous fcl all unstrung and don't know what is wrong? Than give some thought to your kidneys. Be sure they function proper ly,for functional kidney disorder pan mils excess waste to stay in the blood; and to poison and upset the whole system. Use Dean's Pills. Doan's are for the kidneys only. They are recommended the world over. You can get the gen vine, time-tested Doan's at any drug (tore. mmm i I 1 v-? V 1 f

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