Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Feb. 20, 1931, edition 1 / Page 2
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I l T I I I i i ; i i i I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I l l I l I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I ' I I 1 l I H I I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 I I I I I; Approved Model of State Department Building ?_t ? ? ? t t T ?. t. t..t. f > t. it ? T . T T f T. I. t I t ?? I I' f/iKlu lures h| I'V Hie national commission of fine arts, showing what tlie State department huii'iing In Wash ? U'-r ; ! e pr?>|M?s?Hl extensive alterations, it will conform with the design of oth**p federal struc y* * * izxixmniiiiiiitllTllllXIXniia 3 Vegetables. Fruits Are Important jj HCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XJ By NELLIE MAXWELL tXXXXXXXiXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX-J TJ. r- i I t ? 1 1 r 1 k e whl-b wp t ' I nrs' '? .*-?!, renantless of our clrr*;ni.s" ? , ? \V < ? \v ? - 1 i ai'oid to b?- tolerant of the > i ? f others. 1? must ? if we nre ? our ?-?An vta*\v8 are cer tain t W ?? ? !1 to lulieve that ?huh ?<! J ? ;ni.se on i > ihe Rood ii- t < ii ?? Kenj.-initti Franklin. \\ r 1 1.! \v?* are eating the acid * * u foods iii more nhundance durit:: tie* cold weather of winter, wo must r? inl ourselves Hot green veg etahtes lit!' I fruits must have mi Ini portant \ ? on the m, ? ti There Is nothing i : e appetizing than h let luce fcji ! ? :i which is served four or five >? .?;!.< ?? i 1:1 ap?*fru;t. sprinkled with u i-'t of chopped celery and with (i Roi.fl dres-in^. A sprinkling of si i red ded alnioiels or other nuts adds to the nutriment. Savory Butter Sandwiches. Put sill the folios ing Ingredients /rno a howl and heat until creamy : Two t< spoonfuls each of anchovy paste ii n ? ! lemon juice, two teaspoon fuls of mustard, four tcaspoonfuls of finely cut roquefort cheese and four tahi?>-poonfuls of hutter. Spread on crackers and cover with another cracker. Bran IV'uffins. Sift one-haif cupful of Hour with tnc-half t *?. spoonful of suit, and mix Willi cue cupful of l. rnn. add three fourths of cupful of orange juice in which a half tea spoon ful of soila has heen stirred. add one and one-half ta blespoonfuls of molasses and two tablespoon fuls of melted hutter. Heat \ igorously m <i bake in hot, buttered gem pans. Walnut Sausages. Mix one cupful of cooked rice and one cupful of toasted bread crumbs, one cupful of milk, two tcaspoonfuls cf sage, oni-naif xenspnonrtil of pa prika. one and one half rupfuls of ground walnut meats, two e-_'s. one half teaspoonful of salt, one fourth (easpoonful of celery seed and a tea spoonful of onion Juice. When well blended 8hu|?e into sausage-shaped roils and brown In :i frying pun. Gar nlsh with bacon mils and lemon. Serve with a brown sauce. As n most pli-i dnu hot broad, the versatile rict lends Itself well Sift together two and one linlf cupfuJs ot Hour. live to:'N|H?onfii!* i?t bilking pow der. three yihlc*p<Kiiifuls of sugar and oiiedialt tcaspootiful ot sail Heat one egg. add miedialf cupful of milk and 1 1 1 1 ? i:ddi>s|MMinfuls of incited shortening or oil; beat into the dry Ingredients. Into the milk add one half cupful of cold boiled rice, stir J COl'i.I) 1 turn hack the leaves ol I line. As 1 can turn this calendar, Perhaps no folly and no crime The record of the years would mar I would erase m\ errors and ITi do the evil ! have done ? But what is written now must stand I cannot turu them hack, not one t'ould I turn back the leaves of life And live it over day by ?lay. There would he peace where there was strife. And when1 I grieved I would he gay. I would trust more, or not too much Or I myself would worthier be ? Hut nil the moments that we touch Are ours, and then eternity. Could 1 turn hack, hut I can turn The leaf alone that lies ahead. G'.it! gra:-t thai som?-ioiog wise i learn From something foolish that i said The hook is closed, the record there Is written for a life, an age; Rut I can lie more good. mor? fair. Ami make the next a cleaner page Rice Muffins. By Douglas Malloch '' ?fcl 1931 lioiiclas Mnlloih t AMERICAN ELM ( U I tius Americana) THE American elrn is a large orna mental tree, usually with spread ing branches and drooping branchlets forming si v?*rv wide-spreading top. The trunk divides gradually a short distance from the ground into two or more stout Ranches, which curve gracefully npvmnl and outwaid to form a sytnmetrf ?al. rounded. wide - proa ding or rasp ke top. This tree's hrown sh gray bark is ? urrowed into per i>endi cula r Hat topped ridges, very rough and soliii. with whitish in?>ci layers. The tr*?e marked h.? droop Im; l wigs, and by pointed leaves which are usually quite rough above, sharp'y double-toothed, with straight, pale veins clearly marked and extending to the teeth on the margins. The elm is com icon and thrives in rich, moist soil. With Its high-arching crown, its gracefully drooping foliage of bril limit green, the American elm affords a summer picture not offered by any other variety of tree. CD I S3 1 Weatern Nrwspaprr Union.) MThert aren't any ancient ruins in t.iis country." says Limping Lena, "but it hat Its share of fallen arches." 'CMrrlthtl weJI into the other mixture and bake ; in sent pans for 1H) minutes. i _ Baked Bananas With Rice and Eggs Cook one*- fourth of a cupful of rice until lender ami all moisture ah ?sorhod. Place in .1 buttered hakin;: dish and rover one inch deep with sliced ha lianas. Place in the oven f??i ir? minutes. I.a.v on a poached ens for each serving with a crisp slice of bacon. Carnish with, parsley ami serve. Take a pint or mora of milk, add a cupful of heavy ''ream. Add salt to t :i st ?? white pepper and paprika and a few grains of cayenne. Melt 1 he butter, u.anu two. three or four tuhlespoonfuls as desired and add an eipial amount of flour Prepare its fur brown sauce l?o not have the same thicker ih:m Hon,! cream. Cook and heat, taste often, adding Just which it seems to lack. This sauce is served with chicken, whiteflsh. lobster ami any delicate dish It is suitable for an jrralin dishes as well. ( c ! 931 WV.-iern NfWsi?niM i l?nl?n.) Originally a Prayer The word head comes froin "hede," the old Kn^lish word for prayer. OOOOOOOOOOCXXWOCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXJOCOonooOQ ^ Birthday Presents for Daughter MOOCOOOOOOOOOOOO By BETSY CALLISTER*OCXXXXXXXX?0<Wv WZ* I ;< give Peppy for Tliiil was a question that members i of Poppy's family wore asking, be j cause Poppy, who was approachinp twelve, was just ;<*> old f??r toys and ! playthings and still too young f??r jewelry and other grown-up presents I ? nii*l no one could afford to give Peggy a saddle horse or a canoe or any of the things that would have been precisely what Peppy thought slip wanted. So they decided to pet together on the very nicest present that a girl of pe-j-iy's age coujd receive. They decided to do over Peggy's room and every cute who would he expected to pive iVupy a present was taken into the secret and assigned some accos s??r> of the new decoration. Brother Pill and hii: sister Noll scraped and washed off the old paper and put on new. while Peggy slept In the guest room utid was merely al lowed to guess what was p??ing on. Mother bought material for new cur COOOCCCOCKXXXX^OOOOOOOOOOO Ithe seductive! & YEEK 8 By Hugh Hutton. ii Author of Nuttv .\ntural History V rlll-J yeek is quite plentiful in west ern Siberia, where it lives In small ?aves in the Ural mountains Max im* 11 mild appearame. it is erased by the wild droshky. which pur sues it into the cave. The droshky heing mueh larger than the yeek. he ? oines wedped in the entrance of the rave and I bus furnishes a good supper for the rest of the yeek family. The > eek takes an important place In Rus sian folk-lore, and Is said that the Scherzo of Tschaiknwsky's Symphonic Pathetique was inspired by the gallop inp of the pursued yeeks toward their eaves. As shown above, the yeek has an al mond head with peanut-shell ears and walnut body. The legs are toothpicks, and the feet are peanut kernels. ? fc4 Metropolitan N.-winai rr Ri-rvlce.t tains and put tliem up. and helped sister Nell paint over the old furni ture all in the same soft tone or ^ray. Father bought a new rug, graii'lm* made the covers for a bureau and bed side table. Aunt Mary contributed a picture for i the wall that she knew Peggy admired. Uncle Tom paid for a desk set. And small vases, lamp shades and candle sticks w.ere chosen for smaller pres ents from Peggy's other friends. ((?\ bv McClurc NVwspkDer Svndlcatto = SUPERSTITIOUS ? Z ? ? ? SUE ? ; SHE HAS HEARD THAT? Sailors used to believe that an a? j cho? worn somewhere about them was a hope charm for a safe return when they went out to sea ? well, that being 1 the case, it also makes a mar.eous mermaid mascot. '1 <(c> MfClnre Newspaper SynolcatG.1 This^That The linrd boiled can have soft heart* nillidence Is not necessarily mod esty. It may be an uilment. If you have picked out your hat with care. It won't blow off. What should make the world In teresting? Its physical mysteries. When you begin to take life eaar It often turns out to he hnrd work. Cupid might do more business If he would exchange his how for a popgun. I \ \ I III Y prominent woman executive 1** recently made a statement ??t ureal significance which, because ot [ her own ini|ionant position, wiic r?' j port <m] in newspapers all over the I country :is an almost oilicial announce ! in. -ni on the position of women today She said that Industry, wldeh has always been a "man's world." is now adapting itself to women That fai from keeping women out. as they used to. employers are now even adapting their plants to "labor demands.** In other words, women have now become a vital factor In industry. This decreasing industralizaflon of woman, we are told, has given tier a greater purchasing power than that exercised when "she was solely a housewife." and this reorganization of society has made the home "less itn portant" In the life of women today. It Is that conclusion that is so sign! tlcant. followed as It Is by this frank declaration: "The home a. an econo mic Institution has passed out of our lives. CJirls no longer find enough to do in the home and must go out of It if they are to he of any economic importance whatever." With that 1 take direct issue. I feel that as lone ns civilization remains as It is. as long as we have children and families, the home can never he "less important." It must always be of paramount Importance. 1 believe that the trouble with the home for the alert, modern girl who wants to retain her personality and I grow as an individual is not that shn "does not find enough to do In ;he home." but rather that she Ic in dan ger of finding too much to do? that is thai she needs outside interests to keep her from becoming suppressed by the home. 1 am the last |>erson In the world to minimize the importance of these outside interests or to object to outside work for which she may feel a temperamental need. But when such work Is an all-dv? Job for a woman with growing chll- | ilren. when It menus that her home has become unimportant in her life then I tlsink it is loo had. In fact I know it. Incidentally, the comhina lion is ? ?rt?!i! deal for the uervous system of any one woman, llut par tictilarly I tie objection is on behalf ot the husband and those children whose home has been said hy a woman Indus trial ist to he unimportant. It In simple to answer the dec laration l ha* we must get out of the home If we are to he of economic Im portance? assuming that it is vital to you to hf? of peniiitm!" pointing out that a woman who brings up children to live up to the best in them and he good citizens can hardly he said to he "no economic" Impor tance." <(?l 1931 Bell Svndtcate. \ ^wwVVVSAAAAAAAWW^iPOOOOOOOOOq I FIRST TRIANGULAR BRIDGE EVER BUILT "oOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOfHWW-K-wv>~i?~^~? View ol the first triangular bridge ever built. It is a railroad spun ?* Duren. uear Berlin, Germany, and was designed by Dr. Z. Tils, a noted engineer.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 20, 1931, edition 1
2
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