Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 15, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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'1 1 -1 1 1 ! - '- '"SMALL Monday niirht about 8:80. thn hooar ; A. mam urates occupied by John Pag on the Balaam -Road, was destroyed by fir. The property was vwned by Clem Smath era and Melton from Lakeland. The structure was not insured,' and very little household furnishings were saved ' .. t ' t;.:... . . .. - i,. .f ... . . Joseph Diver and Kenneth Drake of Jacksonville attended the Seinmea Ray marriage Saturday and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Semmea. I -d i n v wiva i it ; w v vmm ,.', t"i d:..'--.i,r J J 1 111 """ 1 " I'M m i mum "Z "" JfU ' ' W Waft" . ow ft f U '. m.t A J 11 :Jt I Modem ImprovemenU in Method, and Equip. .kSfflf ! ment Are Taking the Drudgery Out of II kmWMmmm $ HomMaking rE charge h boat tfotight by certain loag-bcardod. vober faced geotleoMa tht th Americas boaaewifa U not what th nsed to be. No toagr U ber kitcbaa her itronghoU, graced by bar pM ence from 6t to might houc ukj day as tbm balte bread) seira cakea and pica, "puts up" jam and jetty and regetablea, scrubt, wuhoa, rons, and all tb while keepa watch ful eyee on the children. These pesaioiiata ait for hours and talk about the good old daya and long for a piece of home made bread and home baked beana and home cooked jam. That only one out of every thousand giru ever kneaded a loaf of bread in her life is something which to them has all of the aspects of a national cal amity, and they view with ominous alarm the fact that the mother of the household now buys her baked beans and jam in cans instead of spending hours over a hot stove cooking them in her own kitchen. The old-fashioned kitchen, they point out, is going out of existence as one of the institutions of the great American home. And, thank fortune, they're absolutely right It is going out of existence. Only most of the really intelligent peo ple in the world aren't weeping and wailing and gnashing their teeth about it. They're rejoicing. Now don't jump too hastily to onclusions and get the idea into 4-wheeJ arc included I new Advanced Six its EIlfvWTGRCO. GAIIC yor Head that begins mg with next year all houaea will be built with out kitchen. It ia.nl likely that this will ever occur. As long as maa must eat there must be kttch eaa. But the kitchens which are different from the big, hot, incon venient ones of twenty years ago. Industry is co-operating wkh women in taking the drudgery out of home making. And thanks to he success which has attended their united efforts, women have at last time for the really important tasks the making of a home and the rearing of childrea. With a washing machine in the basement to do in one hour what formerly was done in four, the mother of the family has time for reading. The electric range in the kitchen with an automatic current regulator makes it possible for her to go to a matinee. No longer is she forced to spend her afternoons at home in order that her family may have a hot dinner at night. The mangle robs ironing of its terrors and the vacuum cleaner akes most of the toil from cleaning days and gives the mother more time to be with her children and to study their needs and problems. But the innovation which, per haps, has brought out a greater change than any other in the mod ern menage is the use of londu cooked outside the home. Here :n- The New ADVANCED SIX SEDAN, $1485 SPECIAL SIX SEDAN, $1265 brakes, full balloon Una and IS disc wheels I at no Ktra cost. Prices f. o. b. sactory. Outside and insidein the engi neering and the body craftsman shipin completeness and quality dustry in one stroke has cut the housekeeper's duties in half. it furnishes her with food the prepara tion of which is nine-tenths com pleted and thus lifts from her shoul ders their most onerous burden. By making use of canrled prod ucts she saves herseli hours of time. No longer is it necessary for her to wash, peel, scrape and cook her vegetables herself. All that is done in the factory and done much more effectively and cheaply than she could do it at home. Her fruits, jams and jellies also are made oatside her home so that she is saveu long bouts of stewing over a hot stove surring boiling syrup tu keep it from burning. Her bread is baked at a central baking plant. Her fish, prepared at the sea coast and shipped to her in cans, has al ready been scaled, cleaned, cooked. Just about fhe only thing left which she is forced to prepare her self from the initial stages to the finished product is meat. But even there industry lends a helping hand. Beef-steaks, pork tenderloins and choice rib roasts the canning in dustry of course leaves to the cul inary ministrations of the individ ual housewife. But her beef loaf. PIES TIE i;rcat American pie might1 well be called our national dish, so universally popular is it. Men, particularly, like pies and many of them feel that a dinntr is not really a dinner unless it is top ped of! with pic. Many women, however, object to making it because of the labor in volved and they hold out for more simple deaserts against the irate protests of their husbands. It is not that the mixing ol the dough i nrh m task, thev point out. but ' the preparation of the pie filling re quires much washinft peeling and coring of fruits. There are thousands of wise hoosewivea, however, who are ef fectively solving this problem by making use of canned products. This means that their pie filling if : immediately available and that they are saved a great deal of tiresome .labor. Practically the only work in connection with the pie is the mivlnm mall rollinir of the crust It bakes while the housewife is doing other thinn about her kitchen and is ready to be eaten by the time the dessert course is due. That it. of course, if you tike hot berry or fruit pies. Or if you ; prefer, too can hare squash, sweet i potato, pompkin or mince pica i iron tow larder of canned JraiU. Many good cooks also use can ERNEST L. WITHERS & CO. Insurance Protection a PHONE 100 WA YNESVILLE, N. C. ner coined beei. tongue and other meat products ol similar nature she finds prepared for her in cans ready to serve on live minutes notice. In a word, the American house wife is at last alive to the fact that in availing herself of the ser vices of agencies outsiilc her home to assist her in the preparation oi her meals she is rendering a dis tinct service to her family. In the time so saved she has the leisure necessary to give herself a broader, more efficient outlook on life and to render herself more truly a home maker and a mother. FROM CANS ned milk for their custard pics and use it so successfully that it is im possible to distinguish pies made n this fashion from pies made from fresh milk. The following recipes have been tested and found deli cious. Cream Pie. One cup evaporated milk, 1 cup water, cup sugar, 1-8 teaspoon salt; 3 eggs, 3 tablespoons flour, 1 tablespooit butter, 1 teaspoon van illa extract Dilute milk with water and bring to scalding point Mix dry ingredients thoroughly to gether, add slightly beaten egg yolks and add gradually the scald ed milk. Cook in a double boiler, until thickened, stirring constantly. Cool, add flavoring, fill baked crust. cover top with meringue made from stiffly beaten era white, and 4 tablespoons sugar. Brown slight ly in a cool oven. Date Costard Pis Two cup rcliqumed powdered milk, I cop chopped dates, Z eggs, 1 tablespoon sugar, H teaapoon salt Heat milk and dates. Beat egga slightly and add sugar and salt. Add hot milk and date and poor Into Descry lined Dtn.H Put into hot oven. After ten txdfturtea redtsoe beat and bake twenty-five flinching. It takes a mighty good oil to stand die withering blasts of burning gases that whirl past the cylinder walls hun dreds of times a inmate. Long ex perience in refining has taught us how to give oil that quality. "STANDARD" State MOTOR OILS 9dVCf OH ortr 30 yean? experience. r-SAVE YOUR ISQflEY- One box of Tutt'i Fills dollatrla Oectot'a bill. A ramdv tot dlKiKt of iht dm, tick htad KM, drtptptlt, corutipttrion. bu- J nfMBUIT lour I mUlloo popl ndora (Tutfs Pills or thirty minutes ?onircr or until custard is firm. Cream Strawberry Pie Drain canned strawberries, lay in an open crust and sprinkle with sugar. rit on an upper crust Put M p:nch of soda in a gill ot cream mixed with a gill of milk and put over the fire. Stir until scalding hot and thicken with two teaspoons of cornstarch, wet to a . paste with a little cold milk. Add sugar to make the mixture sweet, take from the fire, and when cool, pour the cream upon two egg whites whipped very stiff. Kemove tne upper crust from the baked and( cool pie, pour this cream mixture over the berries, replace tne crust, sprinkle with powdered sugar and Mar aachino Pear Pie Drain and chop 2 canned pears. Chop ii cup maraschino cherries Add H cup syrup from pears and 3 tablespoons of lemon juice and bring to the boiling point Add H cut sugar mixed with 2 table spoon flour. Cook until thickened, stirring, constantly. Add 1 table spoon butter and cool. Line a pie plat with pastry, put In the filling and by narrow strips of pastry over this top. Bake in a hot oven fcr 2S minute. r r 4 i. t 1 SH s t ' ' A? V " ' wk.;-'. - ' ...... J
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 15, 1925, edition 1
7
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