BADIN BULLETIN I-' ife. ■ 1^ .--•■■■-.ife'-'’'’ ■ ’lp:'''tSf''; ^ «j^n. .jUM—varBTKeg^^-.r -■ ,r , “• i- ‘ ■ j; '■• £j^ii.iVM-*;;^i*,i»i-'' 'I***•“•"Ii-.iWAj-w.iiJ4' M iV ; ' T "--•>« ' ■•' •. r ■ •■'W.'f :- -A'-'-' ' ''■••. ' " 'i!'®- V ' "’.■ ' ■' THE CLUB IN WINTER You Would Not Think This Possible, Now That April’s Here water wapon just as they sometimes do the milk depot now when the market is inclined to be bullish (Stock term, not dairy). After the water line had been lowered into the ground a couple of feet, we again had water in the spigots. Just about the time everything was running along nicely, we had another cold snap, and I awoke one morning to find the water pipes in the kitchen burst in ten different places. The house occupied by the Fullers had four rooms, and in every room there was a stove. The houses built at the Falls were built in a hurry, and no great pains were taken to make them cold-proof. The Badin Supply made one delivery a day to the Falls, and it was considered a lucky day when they didn’t get a truck stuck in mud between Badin and the Falls. One Buick car belonging to the Company did noble work over all but impassable roads. Everyone agreed that the scenery at and around the Falls was very pretty, but the women folk “allowed” that a chocolate ice cream soda would look mighty good to them, and as soon as the weather broke they began hiking into town. Soon Spring came—while this is going a couple of months past the subject of this article, I feel that, in justice to those fellows who had gardens, I should tell how hard they worked, and the results they obtained. In all there were about two acres plowed up and planted. Several onions, a dozen snap beans, a couple of tomatoes, and two acres of the most stalwart weeds I have ever seen were produced. —L. G. D. Favorite Recipes Cheesecake One and one-half cups cottage cheese, one-half cup sugar, three eggs, three tablespoons cream or milk, grated rind of one lemon, or one-half teaspoonful vanilla. Paste—Mix together the cheese, sugar, cream, and lemon rind; add the well beaten eggs. Line small tins with paste. and nearly fill them with the cheese mixture. Bake in moderate oven about fifteen minutes. Blushing Bunny One and one-half pounds cheese, one- third teaspoonful mustard, one level tablespoonful butter, one-third teaspoon ful pepper, one cup cooked, strained tomatoes, or canned tomato soup, one teaspoonful lemon juice. Melt cheese, add the butter and to mato, stirring, constantly; season, and add lemon juice just before serving. Pittsburgh Potatoes Four cups raw potatoes, tablespoon salt, one onion. Chop fine, cook in boiling water five minutes, add one-third can pimentoes, cut fine, and cook five minutes longer, and drain. Make a sauce of five tablespoons but ter, four tablespoons flour, two cups milk; season, and add one-third pound cheese, grated. Pour sauce over pota toes, onion, and pimentoes in baking dish, cover with buttered bread crumbs, and bake in slow oven three-fourths hour. ^ Doughnuts A cup of sugar, one of milk; Two eggs, beaten fine as silk; A pinch of nutmeg, lemon will do; Of baking powder, teaspoons two. (If self-rising flour is used, omit bak ing powder) Butter of a walnut size. Pinch of salt will help them rise; Flour to suit your own discerning. Fry them brown, just short of burning. What American Legion Means J. A. Moore Tells What the Legion Is Trying to Accomplish—Local Post Needs More Members It seems the ex-soldiers (and others) do not fully understand the purpose and meaning of the American Legion. They seem to be under the impression that it’s an organization similar to the National ✓ Guard of 1914; but they are wrong. It was about March 15, 1919, in Paris, France, the American Legion was organ ized, with pledges to carry into the fu ture government of the United States the principles for which American blood was shed on land, at sea, and in the air; and at a convention in St. Louis, in May, 1919, Lieut.-Col. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., as temporary chairman of the original Paris Committee, presided, and placed before the American people the purposes HOME RESTAURANT THE BEST OF STANDARD PETER ENDRES, Proprietor MEATS HOME COOKING-QUALITY—SERVICE Also Fresh Produce, Fish, and Oysters of the Finest Kind NEXT DOOR TO BADIN BAKERY ORR’S MARKET Phone 25 BADIN, N. C

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