Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 29, 1926, edition 1 / Page 5
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THE WAYNESVIL'LE MOUNTAINEER. FAVORITE CREOLE DISHES AND RECIPES ON a recent visit to New Or leans I secured some of the famous oUl Creole recipes which I was told had attained pop ularity throughout Louisiana. The onrly French settlers taught their negro servants many secrets of the expert cookery for which their nation is famous. The negro "mam mies" added certain savory touches of their own. The dishes that re sulted became known as "Creole". I soon found that only hy using prepared foods doc the busy mod ern housewife have time for this elaborate cookery of a day v. lien servants were plentiful. Corn, Creole Style Cook 2 table spoons chopped green pepper in 4 tablespoons butter. Add 4 table spoons flour and 1 cup canned to mato soup, stirring until smooth. Season with a little salt, onion juice and chopped parsley. Stir in 2 cups canned corn and heat thoroughly. tents of a can of peas into a sauce pan. Add 1 herb bouquet, 1 lettuce-heart, 1 onion and 1 table spoon butter, and let simmer a few minutes. Drain off liquor, remove onion and herb bouquet, and lay lettuce-heart on a dish. Add an other tablespoon butter to the peas. Cook five minutes, then pour peas over lettiire-heart. Serve hot with chops or cutlets. Peas a la Francaise Turn con- Shrimp Gumbo File Blend 1 tablespoon hot butter or lard with one of flour. Add 1 large white onion, chopped, and 3 sprigs pars ley. Fry, and when brown add 1 chopped bay leaf and 1 spritf of thyme. Add 2 quarts oyster liquor and 1 quart water. Let come to a boil, and about five minutes be fore serving add 2 cans of shrimp. Take off stove and add 2 table spoons "File" (powdered sassafras leaves'), and 1 tablespoon flour. Season to taste with salt, black pepper, and a dash of cayenne. Serve hot with boiled rice. Okra may be used In place of "File". The Camping Tourist's Diet HE who would seek adventure on the American highways must set forth in his motor well but lightly equipped. Food supplies, mainly canned, must not be bulky and must be planned so that the diet is balanced. No one could ever go camping without beans. Other ready prepared foods such as tinned meats and fish, corned beef, sauerkraut, spaghetti, chili con carni, succotash, crackers, and bread belong on the list. A fin; camper's meal combines chili enn carni, spaghetti and tomato s.iuce, one can each. Take some cans cf sweet potatoes and several packages of brown sugar; for sweet potatoes can died over a camp stove and served under spreading trees are about the most delicious thing one could ima gine. Boston brown bread, canned, may be served with the baked beans or made into delicious sandwiches. Other vegetables should be included, for some of them, lentils, beans, limas, peas, onions, may be used in place of meat. Coffee is all important buy it vacuum packed in tins, ready ground, alwajs fresh and crisp. Dutter is a problem, for t!ie camper cannot carry ice. Substitute spreads are peanut butter, canned cheese, mayonnaise or other salad dr?ssin;;s; for cooking, canned shortenings. The list of dry groceries should include flour, sugar, srdt, sea5c:ii"gs. Canned milk is an important hem. For desserts ?rl beverages, take canned fr:;:.-.. Thoir juices, added to clear spring writer, make delicious drinks. A supply of lemons will be found useful as a basis for these drinks. With this well planned commissary, the tourist need never have the scen ery spoiled for him by gnawing pangs of hunge-. DAVIS BROTHERS MOTOR COMPANY Successors to Abels Garage CRYSLER DEALERS General Repairing, Parts And Accessories Wrecking Service 44 Haywood St. Phone 98 SPECIAL MUSIC AT THE EPIS- CUl'AL CM I KCH. BALSAM NEWS. .... j. , Old Bald and Double Top and ay" Dr. Abe! In Waynesville for medical th haJ w0nderful tiroe. I .11 a: o I iit i I j j- Mr. i v -i "wnuon. au vu Jf w T Lee, Jr. had as her din Mrs. Lizzie Norman passed away be taken and he seems to be re- , . .... T ... The offertory solo on Sunday in Wednesday of last week. She was covering nicelv. 7n,l v, r a v j V ' Grace Episcopal cchurch will be sung 79 years of age, but until recently While walking a small log across lkl"noma "V a Mrs- Jotla by Mrs. J. F. Carlton of States ville, was quite active. Her grandson, Mr. , stream with rubber boot on, Mr. S , V ! " J 1L1 a N.C. 'Fred Norman, lived with her. She j.me, R. Porter's foot slinoed and T.t p-Jleaves one son and several grand- he fell, injuring hi, arm and he was T " TB LT , I -children and great grand-children. takn to W.vn..vHl. fnr mdil Mrs M.ud Brooksh.re of Ap- . . .t ' paiacman Han and young Mr. by attention. , . ... . . - At 10 A. M. in the Parish House, Kev. M. A. Norman and the body Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Coward. ' , " ' " . " the Church School and Bible Class was laid to rest in the Crawford the 23rd a girl, Alice. nryaon . cemetery Thursday. The bereaved Miss Sallie Christy left Wednesday ' ' e Kuesls Bl ha-, e our sympathy. to spend some time in Lakeland. Fla. I f"" Sp"ngS Htel nd mre Cra" Master George R. Bryson, Jr., five Mr. A. H. Mehaffey was here from g CVery y" year old son of Mr. and Mis. Geo. Henderson ville last week. R. Bryson fell from the front porch I Messrs. George T. Knight, Henry of his home here Thursday and cut Christy, Floyd Mehaffey and Grady I his lip so bad that he was taken to Queen spent last week camping The Sacrament of the Lord's Su per will be administered at the ele en o'clock service will convene. Everybody cordially invited. REV. ALBERT NEW, Rector. RATCLIFF COVE ITEMS. There is much being said and a , vast amount of money being spent , for education of the youths of our country. It is the concensus of bpin-; ion and is readily accepted that edu- ! cation is a great thing, but is the ac ceptance really true. It may be true or it may not. It is a good thing if worthily used. For instance, a boy or girl may learn to read and ui' their knowledge in reading the Bible, (food books, wholesome literature which tends to lead the mind to n higher conception of the aims and ideals, to qualifying them for good citizenship in that ease education i is a great tiling, tiut on tne otner , hand they may as readily use their ( knowledge in reading Tom Payne, j Ingersol, Jesse James or the ficti- . tiua literature now in vogue, which ; is designed to portray the human life , without a practical lesson in view. ; In that ease education is not a great thing. It was' the labor of a gener- j ation of scientists that ' enabled the . medical skill to give us remedy for j riiabetis, antitoxine to immune the human family against contagious dis eases. It was the knowledge ot science that taught us how to utilize steam and use it to carry on com merce, harness our streams for man ufacturing electricity to produce power for running machinery and il luminating our cities, telagraphy, telephone, radio, etc., which proves a ereat blessing to mankind. It was the labor of the same scientist used ; to teach us how to make spirituous liquor, alcohol, poisonous gas, such as was used in the World War, with out some knowledge of chemistry neither would have been accomplish ed. The vast amount of money that is being spent in North Carolina for nf har ohWAvm mnv be the tUUtailUll vi. ..v. ; salvation jf the state, but it is not inevitable that it will be. mere are some thin,; that the best scnoois tn the land cannot teach. iney can teach a b. y or girl to read and nil ,1.-1 ....,,.,, tn mm irv. tnem ior mat is utxi-aij -v 1- good citizenship, but they cannot teach them to become ladies and gen ii imiimi thp instincts have been implanted in them before the teacher gets holds of them. There is a growing tendency on mc part of parents to shove off on the ..i i nlv the resDonsibility SCIlUUin iiv.. ......T . that belong to them, but which be long to the home as well in a great many instances parents mm or more comfortable to blame the school when their boys get into ras cality or their girls happens witn misfortune than they nna it to w own duty before tlie scnoois ta . . . ' u:i.i.. There is a period in every l...." .-. . ,i .. u u ttio i mp or beiore tney ieov.i. age of fourteen or sixteen they will arrive at the parting of the ways. Once at this critical period the mind is easily swayed one way or the other, as to which would be the most plaus ible for the future life and if they have been brought up under proper parental authority, surrounded with good environments, good and whole some literature, that would be up i!,.i: a o.io nn insniration for lilting o" , the higher ideals of life is placed in their hands for reading matrml which is a great factor in shaping the' minds and character of the young and prepare them for the higher duties of life, then chances are that they will become good citi zens and prove a blessing to church and state. On the other hand if par i ...iu Ui Kppii taxed, sur- ienvs aunium-j " i rounded by environments of the low ! er elements, placing in their chil dren's hands the fictious books, 'trashy literature which so prevo ! lently read in the homes and en 1 . . . r.t the couraged by a large uei -- - older people, permitting them to spend the Sabbath evenings in pleas ure and sport, staying out late at night, not knowing anything of their whereabouts, all of which has a ten dency to lead to evil. The chance, .... u: i; ,;n bn snent drifting are men n aimslessly without any practical good , a: nn,t in dis- in view ana ninny umw cm.. ." - : . i' .- . . 0, 1 tkn grace with no real Denent; tu church, society or the country. What a boy or girl may learn in the county school or high school may be a little expenence w : it nn..n liniTa . laoVnoH ftTIVthiniT ll nicy iic.ci iitiTi. luitiu.- i. at all by some experience of re straint in the back yard or under For Sale Hardwood ashes suitable for fertilizing land, $1.50 per load. Apply Suncrest Lumber Company. Aug.Sc yi fMMM imJM trss. . a r " " " r " " " s '."T v ., - ' " ... f V 1 ' ' J THE ADVANCED SIX $" gg I 1 1 ' THE ADVANCED SIX $" 4-DOOR SEDAN JLDjf'D i. o. b.actorv "Enclosed Car" motor, 7-bearing crankshaft, full force-feed lubrication, air cleaner, gasoline filter, oil purifier plus 4-whecl brakes and 5 disc wheels included at no extra cost. Wonderfully smooth and quiet, this Advanced Six 4-Door Sedan 23 faster pick-up. Come in and DRIVE it yourself. Bell Motor Co., Canton and Waynesville, N. C jrueks too feel the di eremee New lubricating oil shows gas saving of 17.Q HUNDREDS of road tests on many types of cars and trucks prove that the new "Standard" Motor Oil gives astounding results. A 2Yi ton Mack truck, for instance, run 1,572 miles from September 24th to October 2 2d, 1925, showed 22.8 increase in oil mileage; 17.9 increase in gas mileage; smoother oper ation at all speeds; no carbon accumulation; better all 'round lubrication. These results can be verified in your own car. Just get your crank-case filled at a "Standard" Service Station or dealer. Then expect results. You can actually feel the difference. 7 Advantages of "Standard" Motor Oil 1 . Constant lubrication. 2. Minimun. friction. 3. Less "breaking - down" under load or at high speeds. 4. More miles per quart of oil. 5. Better hill climbing smoother operation. 6. Negligible carbon. 7. Actualsjvingingaaoline. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey)' oA Quarter MOTOR Oil 9 9 i j I? tne wooa Bnea. s-,amff;-..;-1,v,-f5,..hjtti:
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 29, 1926, edition 1
5
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