Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / July 25, 1935, edition 1 / Page 3
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Ilany Favcrks eggs for breakfast, ., after the theater and i mealt They are at "3, and did yon ever y to be left over? Platei a are always (craped,. . t everyone baa a favorite Cne person will Insist the nit be' cooked In a doable ; another tella yon that they frying pan, . One man who i in scrambling, eggs for fulng parties Insists that the a errge must be mixed with i, Most recipes call for milk, . r .mo experts will tell you that r is better. ' , i like to use cream, bnt I nave . converted to a different meth i ly Nannie, my floe, household r. Nannie has taught me how tike what we all think are the r. scrambled' eggs In the world. ' Lue oses neither cream, milk nor rr. She, Just mixes- the yolks i I whites slightly and poors them a frying pan, babbling, with y of melted batter. . She stirs a over a low Ore and, of course, 'fs them at once. w If you want' to dress bp your r : you may add to the batter a i...r sliced' mushrooms, or a little minced onion and green-pepper and cook about a minute before yon add the eggs.',v,:.;v'':''H,ir.;fr,;:;;.f; Variations of Scrambled1 Eggs , --. Scrambled " eggs with - anchovy J.te add ' two- teaspoonfols ... an- t.iiovy paste to jne cooked eggs. scramoiea eggs with minced nam,' tongue or dried .beef add half cup ful minced bam, tongue or dried beef to cooked eggs. Scrambled eggs with cheese add . two-thirds cupful of coarsely grated American cheese to the eggs before they are 'scrambled k- . Savory scrambled eggs add one tableapooaful chopped pqrsley, two tablespoonfuls stewed tomatoes and a few drona of onion lulce to the , eggs as they are cooking." . 1 For the quick meal I am suggest ing: ;jv ;v i. 'i- ..: ' . Onion soup '' Scrambled eggs. --fV -Crisp bacon" 'Corn on the cob v Mixed, vegetable salad . Huckleberries with cream " ii Coffee Method of preparation: BoQ'wa Scout Chief at 85 Daniel Carter Beard, national inmlssloner of the Boy Scouts of America, photographed at his home In Suffem, N.'X,' on his eighty-fifth AMAZE A 4 Cotton surplus - Thb US. CONSUMES t UESS THAN ONEHMJS ANNUAL 'COTTON CROR I I KM.'' M Sl I I II 'r mi 4 - m , .uuoaE . ,C 3t, SC.HFICU. RATOKVl A t iner r.'-iTiMos. V. . A ' ill Recipes for OQ3 ter for corn. ' Prepare salad and chin. Open can of soup and heat Prepare corn and cook. , Cook ba con, -Scramble eggs. Make coffee. , Cream Frosting ', - 2 cups confectioners sugar . -. . . 8 tablespoons or more cream 4 ft teaspoon, almond flavoring " , cup sliced Brazil nuts : ' Sift sugar and . stir In enough cream to make a smooth frosting. Add flavoring and spread on her mits. :. Sprinkle tth sliced Bratll auta. J . ' V " ,. - . Baked Rhubarb. With Raisins 1 qt diced rhubarb "-, ' 1 cup. or more sugar ;V 1 cup raisins .i . i : Place 'rhubarb in alternate Mayers with sugar and. raisins. In baking dish. Cover and bake in moderate oven 875 degrees Fahrenheit about half an bour until fruit Is soft ' Bll Srodloat, WHO SanrloaC LyditL Sevea Chinu Wedding Gifts Ranging THB : second anniversary . of a marriage dayis- called the calico wedding or the cnlnts . wedding, as .preferred.. The latter name Is not only more up-to-date, but, In. terms M accuracy It ranks a degree high' er. ' Calico originally was just as apt to be unpatterned. The very name comes from the Hindu word "chlnt," Islgnifying f painted or stained, and . pertains to the fast coloring of designs or varigated staining or 'painting. ' .Calico comes from the name of the port of 'ex- port,. Calicut In . India, where line cotton -cloth was. woven, and might or might not have designs; on it It was the foundation ; textile for kih "chlht" work. ' In America th name Calico! was the quaint one for printed cotton cloth. n .which de signs were generally small, and . a bit crude. l;m;s & Sf-y, K M IN UTE vi OF ITS J VHITE CROCOWLES ' Albino crocodiles ' are held in great VENERATION St NIGERIA . NATIVES. w V ,3 CI1 liL- r?7 v r-" I Claw' ' tO C- - -.-.- 03 'A ' "Setting 'out from Seattle, this little 24-footer, the Happy-Go-Lucky,, pointed for Alaska where, in Innumerable Inlets and coves she will pro vide, amusement for' the Eskimos, not primarily for the fishermen, trap-. pen, hunters', canners. and prospectors of. the Far-North. Capt Gordon. Clements and Mate J. P- Dobba are. carrying a complete equipment qf motion picture apparatus and thousands of feet of film. Something new In the'show-boat line.. ... ,t v- ' " i - .-.a '"' v f. f" ouiF&no o L Baron Wialteer ' ' . From the Apron to the Hot Dish Bolder .With the understanding' of the two words calico- and chintz, it re- mains for personal 1 preference to decide which to call, the wedding anniversary, the calico or the chlnta wedding, although It Is maintained that, the latter Is the accurate onei. Assuming that you all agree that cblnts weddlhg It sha;i be, let me suggest 'ways of celebrating the day, and gifts' appropriate, to the occa sion. ' sche invitations i stress . the kind of wedding when they are sent out on chlnta stationery; which,1 as you know4 Is of cross-bar-design in two or more colors or tints. ; . - Chihts Cestnming .r.J-V::- The hostess wears a .genuine .chlnta dress, or a cotton print which may be stretcneo, rn textiiesv to mean a printed silk. The women, guests should wear chlnta or print ed frocks. Gifts of chlnts articles, can tango from 'one,' 'two,; or .more pairs - of ,'chlqts window draperies,, or just the 'tie-backs. The; giver should be guid ed In the selection ot the pattern and color t go with the bomemak er's decorative schemes, ' either by consulting, her beforehand, by pre senting the. pair or pairs, subject to exchange," or by showing samples for 'selection on the anniversary. The tie-backs jean be given' with out such.' meticulous, care,' as- they are. not so Important - 8mart tle backs ' rare very -Inexpensive' when made of circles 2 or 3 Inches In dlatneter.veach gathered around the turned-ln edge to form . little floral cup. ' j! Sew : tllese. on Wide white or green ' tape, - spacing them td touch, and . allowing . enough plafn tape tf tie' about the tie-back hook.' . ' J Cifls in Variety 6)- 'A chlnta bedspread would delight a bride of two years, so also -would,' a cblnts runner,; edged, with a j-tnch bandit of- plain . glazed cotton cloth; now- termed glazed - chintz. v Chlnta sofs cushion covers,-either on cush ions or not are very' welcome espe cially now when' summer covers are wanted., Chlnttfcovered boxes, a chlnta bag with cheesecloth dusters In It, a set of chintz-covered hot dish holders, a chintz work bag, and the necessary ' kitchen apron when made of chlnta, are among dainty and', appropriate chlnta ' wedding giftS.: '; V W-1 "7 ''" f' W'- The first ten. anniversaries are apt? to be celebrated each year in turn.,. Then comes a lapse until the fifteenth,' with' another ... between that and the twentieth, -which by the way Is the china wedding, fol io wed -In another five years by the silver. Then, comes vthe long, in -7? terim M twenty-live years to the fiftieth,, 'the '-golden wedding, and another twenty-live to the diamond. ' "' .) Ball STBdlemta. WNU Strvloa. ' ECONOMIC t t CONTHOL LEONARD A, BARRETT v A strong prejudice .exists in many minds . against , economic controL - Any form of con- ' fol means pow- ef which may be directed Into constructive as Well as destruc 1 1 ye channels. The electric cur rent passing along the wire may be used either to warm and light our ' homes or for the purpose of tj. sen aestruc- ' t ' Hon. Economic power ' therefore In v itself Is nei ther good nor evil. t Its use deter mines its' ultimate . value. " Economic powers means conges tion of wealth which In turn means accumulation of pTofltswhlcirBgHln means activity In some industry beneficial . to humanity ; otherwise the poblto would not have purchased that particular commodity. Wheth er labor was exploited In order to produce profits Is another question, and should, be settled upon an en, tlrely 'different basis than the de struction , of , the means -through wbkh labor was made noSaUila anil Vthe public benefited. ' .. , W destroy Initiative '.and .crea tive enthusiasm the moment we de prive industry of the power-to ac cumulate' profits. The Inevitable question arises, can we have mate rial prosperity without economic control? " The driving force in any kind of - business is not ' altruism. Many business men, however, are Imbued .with the altruistic spirit and cheerfully, give away large sums of money, which must be made out of profits before it can be distrib uted, for the-public good. . Most of our colleges, libraries, art museums, public parks, and many other Insti tutions were grants from men, who, because they had accumulated large wealth, were, able to make the gifts. '.Money must be earned before ft can be given away. Wq cannot give something we do not possess. This does. not. argue, however, that the:' congestion of wealth which means economic control Is not. dan gerous; frankly It is, but again, like dynamite,. It depends upon how tba power Is used. js'vJWhy not argue that economic con trol be directed into channels of so cial values and moral uplift rather than' destroyed by legislation T . Is tt not a problem which could be bet ter solved by a proper appraisement of social values with an appeal ,to conscience? In short, It Is a moral and;, not a legislative problem, and shou(d be settled upon an author-' ized system- of moral values which,' according to the spirit of our democ racy, ,1s our Inalienable right of "Life, liberty and the Pursuit of Hanplness,", 3f : " ' . et Fruit sfalna - may be - removed from table linen If sponged with lemon Juice and washed with hot water. '. : i , ; -" i " ! ,. Hybrid! tea roses will bloom late In tbef fall If after the summer blooming' Bushes are cut back , to two eyes and given a feeding. -of bone meal. , '" ' Glazed chlnta covered with' white organdie : and . bound with chlnta bias binding . In- contrasting ' color makes , an attractive , bridge' table cover: - v ' r"r '. "' ' v iiwv SMALL UZZn YET . ' 1 TO WOSRY, ABOUT Vvv MCE RECESSION it appears that our refrigerating plant Is breaking 'down. : The matter pf the. receding,; polar ice cap has for a long time engaged the attention of scientists. Within recent times the recession of the cap has been of such' proportions that evidence of It baa been observed within- the span of only a' few decades. ' - ; for Instance, the Russian Arctic expert,' NQ. Datsky, In re-examining areas surveyed 0 years before, found. ' that In Siberia, .where his predecessor Professor Shrenk, found eterhal frost at the depth of two meters, , there was now1 no frost at any depth, hot even In the marshes. In other localities, where- Professor Shrenk found only shrubless tundra. Mr. Datsky saw.,nevir growths ef Umber I . ;'' r' 'v'v ' , Only, recently, Prof. R. t. Belknap of the University of Michigan came j- upon pyramid of rocks and a note originally placed at the foot of the Cornell glacier by the late. Professor Tarr. The note was' dated 1896. In the tlme,lntervening, tle glacier had moved back three-quarters of a mile from the marker. 1 B. Fw Griggs of the University ot Washington tells us that in the Alaskan tundra country the forest line Is advancing at the rate of a mile a century. Trees are now grow ing on 'land which had been barren for 100,009 .years. If this keeps on, you say, Hudson bay will eventually ' become a sub tropical body of water. Well, what of it? It has been several times be fore, and, if geological evidence Is anything to draw conclusions from, It will be again. ' , According to W. J. Humphries of the United States weather bureau, if all the Ice of the polar caps melted, the ocean levels would be raised 151 feet) And that's something else, to try out on . the slide rule. Earl Chapln In Forum and Century. America Lead in Cars Of the 85,058,378 motor vehicles known to be in operation throughout the world, at the close of 1031, the United States had 25,814,103, or 73.6 per cent; one car for every 4.7 persons. England, France and Canada were the- only other countries who exceed ed the 1,000,000 mark In motor car registrations. CARLVDUR DISPLAV OP TEMPER CONVIMCED N cant, use yocw the TOURNAMENT; VOU'RE ALWAVS r?LDW;r46 OP I fAS IVE TOLD V0U CARI-, VOtf JTinAPVV1 flM ADWCE ISWU-AUCUR9K! THAT 1 HAVG COFFCe-NERMES. j I'D TAKE ALL THE I I CUT OtrTCOFFEE I RIGHT, f BtASTEP MEDICO J I HEAOACUK AND WDI6ES1KW f WOfHO AMD DROWN 1 POSTUM. VWU IF VDU W PostUM ALWAVS J ; fJfM THAT rJ0THlN6 J J or prevent sound sleep!' Lii IHERE'SATIP. ON-APIP , n. i . Mr i w- . f ITS A''. , ' I I HOW THEY I . IWOR(T ;i : CRAVE FOR IT SWEET -AS HONEY 1 IT'S THE MONEY OnCE you taste Grape-Nuts Flakes, youH 9 cheer toot These crisp, golden flakes have a de- 1 l ljlgl licious flavor and they're nourishing. One If ffW dishful, with milk or cream, contains more varied If I Mfl nourishment than many a hearty meal. Try it your grocer has it I Product of General Foods. I kU w. a HELLO, CAKU I 1 WfclL.IM KOT! I NfcUtK PIO jj If AW-TELLryMTO J I HEAR V00"R6 WE COACH kUkETrllS 0OSTJ?)M& Hl i 60lrJ6TOPLAVw KICKED ME OUT.' r0OCToR! HE'S I RACKET HE'S A I 1 THE INTER-STATE HjSAlD I LOSE IW TDOSlVWIfr.J EiOUSV COACH j I TENNIS T&ORNAMGWf "TEMPER XOOJ HE'LL MAKE 1 sweetened. It's ply of Poatuni GsnsitAi Foom, Battle Crulr, Mich. w. n. v. ; Bwd tqm, without ohHstinfi, wssfc's supply of Pottma. Thi( offer "Why was coffee harm ing me, Doctor? X thought only children should never drink it!" ' ,'Oh, no! Many adults, too, find that caffeln in coffee can upset digestion, or nerves. If you believe coffee disagrees with you . . .try Poe tum for SO days. Postum contains no caffein. It's simply whole wheat and bran, roasted And slightly easy to make . . and costs less than half a cent cup. It'a delicious . . . and may prove a real help. A product of General Foods. FREE. Let us send you your first week's sup reef Simply mall the coupon. fill in eoawtateb -print nan am ttddnm vpItm DwMbarSl, IMS ,.. " , ) )
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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July 25, 1935, edition 1
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