Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / July 8, 1915, edition 1 / Page 7
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A. If. O. -1AL13. .... . : r J.--- V.'- 4 t q 1 1 1 1 3 a 1 1 in 1 1 1 1 1 LookForThis Name Olives ana Pickles k'c a qmlily sail for ctoepdoo By food tsbls dsiaiies. Ou MsaunitU sad Quota Olives, pleis f etufed, ens boa lb fsaous otwe frove id Dpwa. . UWikSeil Sons snd Dill Piciies eiv pqueot end nrm. kji Yost wnnwf mask sod J 1 picas beikets ue nol com pile without them. biU M IMy'i f yottr (racer's. Ubby.M'Neill AlAby -t. i IB 1111111110 ' Nearly Lost. ' Bh If you could have only one ; Wish, what would It be? - He It would be that that Oh, If I only dared tell you what It would be! She Well, go on! Why do you sup pose I brought up the wishing sub- Ject! . -Tetterlne Cures Itching Piles. f Fort Beott, Kensas. . Asaln I am railing; for the but salve I Over used. Enclosed Hnd $2.50. Send me one-hall dosen boxes of Tetterlne. N. J. Klpp. Tetterlne Cures Enema. Tetter. Ring worm. Bolls. RniiKh Srnly Patches on the Fare, Old Itching Pores, Itching Piles. ., Cankered Scalp, Chilblains. Corns, and every form of Sralp and Skin Disease. Tetterlne 60c. Tetterlne Soap 26c. Tour druggist, or by mall from the msnufac- . turer. The Shuptrlne Co., Savannah. Ga. With every mall order for Tetterlne we tlve a box of Shuptrlne's lOo Liver Pills ree, "Adv. Envious. ; : What Is the matter, Alice?" asked her mother as the little girl came home crying as If her heart would break." Mabel Jones has got adenoids and never have anything," sobbed Alice. , V For Galled Horses. When your horse la galled; apply . Banford's Balsam of Myrrh and yon can keep on working. Try It and 11 " your horse Is not cured quicker than by any other remedy, the dealer will refund your money. Adv. Her Worry. "Darling, will you love me when I'm old?" "I will if you'll promise to love me If I should grow fat." m m m m as m ,v To Drive Out Malaria "i f And Build Dp The System '-, Take' the Old Standard GROVE'S . TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know .what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is . Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The '-' ' ? Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds np the system. 50 cents. Adv. V-vv;" '"'':' Never Get Tired. "You dance like an angel." V: ; ;'You flatter me," said the girl. "I .'-' could keep going much longer If I had Sowings." ixrxnt BABBK A GOOD TONIC . And Drives Malaria Oat ol the System. MYourHabka!ts like meglc ; I have given A to numerous people In my pariah who were ; suffering with chills, malaria and fever. 1 ree sommend H to those who are aufferera and In need of a good tonic" Rev. S. Biymanowskl, St. Stephen's Church, Perth Amboy, N. J. Kllxlr Babekt 60 cents, all druggists or by rarceie rose, prepaid, irom juocsewsju m mo Washington, D. 0. If a woman Isn't Jealous she isn't Interested. To remove soreness use Banford's Balaam. Adv. Beads of perspiration are' the Jewels of honest labor perhaps. B The General Says: Zt Ton M buy th nott dt.f-.ble roofltif n. m Ihavornrlflat mils thai It rrsaaimahtss If insj n 8 oa p Certamteej Roofing A : 8 Tow leesl bsidwaes sv hnaber Sealer esa n Bsnppir roe wiia uertaia-veea bootids. GuanateM i, IB er IS reals aeeoMlag S 9 the tanHsMS. boat aesept a asbsUntat I GENERAL ROOFING MFG. Ca LADIES!! USE GILBERTS - JE WEI TALCUM POWDER The Tslonm of Quality, for refined psoplsi Perfume riob, Issting, and ez quUlte; Powder of velvety nueneta. -- lsGlaaJaie-Ue.aa4aSa. " ' V;: Sold by all dealers.. : - HADBBT : GILBERT BROS, ft CO. ' ' BALTIMORE, MD. e aeei 1 1 BDirrs en the l'anoBS Warren SrtllAL rKILtO Strmtn, Single Ooaib White lrftehoms; greatest ess laying Strain la Amerioa. f rantlBeally bred on largeit and best equipped v ..itry fana south of Mason and lXxon line. The sin roe will eveutuhiir en?, tmb vihsh LTaf l-ABM, X. a. Best, owner, WISH, H. 0. "-TT BHabSM. WaeeakM. .' (at Lasaart Fricaa. SjmIUX CoM Eambicaa . oM3tkJiih- : tt Cltlitil AaVUUREStl W. A. lUWREKNEIWALB. PA. WAiTEiHoBtifhr for amiMt ! houMhold rtlo.v.; .rxctu.lv. trritory. P-rt-: Tta Keno Nov.Co., Dul, Loo ainIea,C4ll MANY STATES USE CONVICTS Dlffersnt aystemt of Kmploylng Prison Labor on Public Highway Improve ment la Described. : : Thirty states at the beginning of the present year had on their statute books laws providing for the employ ment of state prisoners In road build ing. Arltona, Arkansas, Idaho, Louisi ana, Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Vir ginia and Washington follow practical ly the same system, providing that the control of this work shall be vested In the state highway commission, The highway commission or state en gineer makes requisition for such number of prisoners as he can use eVectlvely, and the prison authorities turn over to him such prisoners as are suitable for the road work. The prison commission or board of control of state Institutions is held responsible for the development of A 4 v A Convicts Building Good Road. che convict road work In soma nlnsj states Colorado, Indiana, Iowa, Kan' sas, Michigan, Missouri, North Da kota, Oklahoma and Wisconsin. State prisoners are turned over to the coun ty authorities to be worked on the county roads in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. This system Is not approved by the national committee on prisons and prison labor, which holds that the state nnder no circumstances is Justi fied In delegating the responsibility for its convict wards to county au thorltles. The system In New York state di vides the responsibility for the, con struction work and maintenance of the camps between the state highway department and the commissioners of the counties In which the roads are to be built, with the state superintend' ent of prisons in final authority. In Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming the highway department and the pris on department co-operate In the con trol of this work. The prison depart ment is fully responsible for the care and discipline of the prisoners, while the road department Is called upon to do the work which It Is equipped to do, the building of roads. The committee has found this lat ter system essential to the successful development of convict road work. The prison department Is in a posi tion to care for the prisoners and to handle such matters as food, clothing, housing, medical attention, the afford ing of educational facilities and recre ation. GOOD ROADS ARE INCREASING United States Leads France In Miles . of Improved Highways Stat SAId Now In Effset According to the Good Roads Tear Book of the American Highway asso ciation, recently issued, America now has 6,000 miles more of good roads than France, the total tor this coun try now amounting to S1.000 miles. Of this 6,000 miles were built In 1912 and about ,000 In 1914, making a total of over one-third of the entire mileage of the good roads of the country. - New Jersey was the pioneer state to provide state aid for public highways, In 1891, and Massachusetts and Con necticut soon followed, but It is only during the last ten years that the state aid policy has been In effect to any considerable extent Los Angeles to Improve. Seven million dollars will be ex pended on the roads of Los Angeles In 1915. Three hundred and twenty-four miles of concrete boulevard and 160 miles of decomposed granite highway will be constructed.. ; s . Farmer Realizes Value. No other citizen realises the Talus of good toads as does the farmer. Judging a Community. .' A community can safely bo judged by the kind of highway a It maintain. MAYONNAISE EASY TO WAKE Popular Dressing Has Wrongly Boon Considered Too Difficult for the . Busy Cook. . The making of mayonnaise dressing aa formerly regarded as a Tory trou blesome affair. Exceptional cooks or housewives. It Is true, would assert that It was no troubls, one the knack was acquired; but as a rule It was not popular dressing with busy cooks. The reason was not tar to seek. In the first place, tradition held that U mayonnaise dressing curdled It must bo thrown out and a new mixture started; and, as It often curdles, this waa not a cheerful prospect to facs when time was short In the second place, tradition asserted that good mayonnaise could be made only by adding the oil drop by drop a lengthy and troublesome process. Tradition In both Instances was wrong. If the mayonnaise curdles, an e;g yolk should be broken Into a clean bowl and beaten thoroughly and the curdled mixture added to this drop. In this way the mayonnaise will be recovered. The three-minute mixture that saves the tedious drop-by drop process is made as follows: Measure out the salt and mustard Into a bowl and add a whole egg, both yolk and white. Beat this mixture thoroughly and then add one-third of a cupful of oil, all at once. Beat this until It begins to thicken, then add an other third of a cupful of oil. This makes a fairly thin mayonnaise. If a thicker one Is desired more oil must be added, making a cupful of oil In all; beat until very stiff, then set the bowl on Ice until the dressing Is wanted. , Mayonnaise made' by this process Is less likely to curdle than that made In the old way, and the mixture la quite as good. A bowl or Jar of mayonnaise will keep for some time If put In the re frigerator, and It is very useful to have on band. It Is well to remember, too, that a mayonnaise can be trans formed Into a tartare sauce by the ad' dltlon of chopped gherkins and capers. Therefore it Is economy in time so to plan your menus that a fish dish served with a tartare sauce is fol lowed the next day by a salad requir ing a mayonnaise dressing, or vies versa. FOR USE IN THE LAUNDRY Beet Sosp Is That Made of Fat and an Alkali Excellent for Disin fecting Clothing. The best laundry soap (made of fat and an alkali) Is, during the proc ess of making, kneaded like dough. This admits air Into the soap and cauaes It to float when hardened. A soap that floats dissolves easily In wa ter and is excellent for disinfecting purposes. The alkali and the salts of the fat acids combine with the water and this solution readily penetrates porous substances and adheres to solid surfaces, killing any fully developed bacteria that it touches. Such a soap solution combined with boiling water Is Invaluable for disin fecting clothing from the sick room, where there haa been an infectious disease. Pour the boiling water and soap solution down tbe pipes of the kitchen sink and the bathroom con nections. Use It once a week at least for cleansing the garbage receptacle. The solution may be used for disin fecting floors. Have one pall of the soap and water and another of clean hot water. Scrub the floor and base board with a stiff brush dipped in the soap' and water, rinsing the brush carefully In the hot water after each application. Today's Magazine. Strawberries In Jelly. Make some lemon Jelly with one pint of water, six small or four large lemons, ten ounces of sugar, about an ounce of gelatin and one wineglass of sherry wine. Squeeze tbe Juice from the lemons on the sugar, adding the water, and, when dissolved, strain It and add the gelatin which baa been dissolved. Pour this Into small folds or cups and set on Ice to harden. When ready to serve, turn them carefully from the cups and cut ct the cen ter, which Is to be filled with choloe berries and whipped cream. Rise Meringue, " . Cook half a cupful of rice In one quart of milk until tender, and the yolk of four eggs beaten until light and mixed with half a teaspoontul of salt and half a cupful of sugar; cook two minutes longer, then remove from the fire, flavor with two teaspoonfuls of vanilla and turn Into a baking dish. Beat the whites of the eggs until stiff, fold In three tablespoonfuli of pow dered sugar, flavor with a few drop of lemon. Spread this over the pudding md brown lightly. . ' Vanilla Ice Cream. Two quart of milk, two cans con. densed milk, one-half pint of cream, one tablcepoonful vanilla and-vary lit tle, if any, sugar. This I smooth and line grated. Coffee ice cream Is made In the aame way by using three pints of milk and one pint of strong coffee. Strawberry Sauce. S.'-'-v.-'.-Crush large cupful of strawberries and mix with halt a cupful of granu lated sugar. Whip a cupful of cream till very stiff. Then stir the straw berries lightly Into It' " -. Preserving Rhubarb. Just wash It and cut In small piece. Put In Jan all It will hold, then 1111 up with cold water until It runs over. Put covers on. Will keep a year tt you want tt U. :., -.v.- rst Content 15 Tluit Drachma! esSifl M se-l"-i '"!--Sh. SB ALCOHOL'S PUR CENT A VrgctaMt PtvpenlioafcrAA slnulatinatbcrbodndhWuli tin, the Stomachs and Bowls of Pwmofts DiScntioriAwfflil ntu and Rrst.Contalns nrithtr Opiumrphinc nor Mineral, Wot Narcotic. beeS A ptrfccl Remedy forCtiiuttlpa-"' lion. Soiir StomJk-riDiarrhiH.-h, Worms. rewrishihTM and LossofSlbep FacSimll Sitfrtalure of XHCaTAURCoHnucf; NEW YORK.- m UsMt Copy of Wrapper Calm Reslgnstion. Reference having been made to beautiful resignation. Congressman Joseph J. Russell recalled an appro priate story. During a dinner party some time ago, the congressman said, the topic turned to the connubial state. Among the guests was a bachelor person. "Speaking of marriage," eventually remarked tbe bachelor, "It aeems that tbe longer a man Is married" "The happier he is," impulsively broke in a spinster party with a hope ful glance at the other. "I was going to say," resumed the bachelor, dtsregardlngly, "that the longer a man Is married the less he seems to mind it" From the Way It Acted. Little Atmee was learning to sew, and one day after vainly trying to thread a needle, she said: "Mamma, what do they call the hole in a needle?" "It Is called the eye, my dear," re plied her mother. 'Well," continued Aimee, "I'll bet this old needle Is cross eyed." - . Laudable. "What is your idea in reorganizing the choir r "I want to put It on a sound basts.'' The production of gold In the Phil ippines last year gained 39 per cent over the year before. Summer Comfort is wonderfully enhanced when rest and lunch hour unite in a dish of ; There's a mighty satisfying flavour about these thin wafery bits of toasted com. So easy to serve, too, on a hot day, for they're ready to eat right frcm package fresh, crisp, clean. Not a hand touches Post Toasties in making or packing. Served with cream' and sugar, or crushed fruit, they are delicious. Children ,. y-. visji isjja DMvmmnimmmmmimmimmBmvmwmfwmmw fm?HMm mm mmm i w' What Is CASTORIA Caatorta 1 a harmless anbstitnte) lor Castor OA, Pare Boric, Drop and Soothing Byrnps. It 1 pleasant. It contain neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karoutio substance. It aa-e 1 It guarantee. It destroy Worm and allay Feverlshnes. For more than thirty years lg lias been in constant nsa for the relief of Constipation. Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething; Trouble and Diarrhoea. It re (folates tbe Stomach and Iiovrels. assimilate tbe Food, giving; healthy and natural sleep. The Children' Panacea The Mother' Friend, GENUINE CASTO R I A ALWAYS y7 Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought HADN'T THOUGHT ABOUT THAT Of Course Young Mother Could Only Reason That the Fault Must Bs With the Scales. The story Is told of a young mother who, after her first baby had been born, hurried to a hardware store to purchase a pair of scales, that she might be able to keep tabs on the re markable growth of her first born. When she got them home and weighed the baby for the first time the little bunch of humanity did not quite measure up to her expectations and she promptly carried the scales back, stating that they were not satisfac tory. Asked by the storekeeper what the difficulty was, she replied : "I think the scales are not right My baby did not weigh as much as I think she ought to." "Did It ever occur to you," asked the hard-hearted seller of hardware, "that the fault might be with the baby and not the scales?" She saw the point and kept the scales. Brockton Enterprise. Otherwise Not. "Why do you want to get divorced?" "Because I'm married." Philadel phia Public Ledger. Regular. "Is Branson a regular church goer?" "Well, he goes every Sunday when It's raining too bard for golf." Cry For Taking Paps Along, The baggage master halted the fam ily party and politely explained that under the new law the value of the contents of each trunk must be given. After a brief consultation with her daughter, mamma pointed to her own trunk and said: "Please put this one down as containing one thousand dol lars' worth of personal belonginga. This one," Indicating her daughter's trunk, "you may put down for eight hundred." "How about this little oner asked the baggage master, resting his heel on Its top. "Oh, that!" replied the lady con temptuously. "Ten or twelve dollar will cover that one." "1 see," returned the official. "Fa ther's going along too." A Scoop. "I'm wr'tlng a hlstary of the Euro pean war." "But the war Isn't over yet." "That's where I get the bulge on the rest of the historians. I can put my book on tbe market the day after peace Is declared, and theyll have to wait two or three months." Pa Knows Everything. "Father, what Is a 'sepulchral ton of voice'?" "That means, to speak gravely." A woman would rather be Incon sistent than otherwise. f V j :.H ir 1 II'!? V.
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 8, 1915, edition 1
7
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