The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 23, 1911, Page 60, Image 60

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THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, ' PORIXANTJ, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY ' 23, Ml' , V
irilhc
Edited by Marion Harland
I( kL'.rrls:""..l.l "V i . ."' ... . -u..tjL .:. .. . :::a
Home
e m ;v-t r..-.Li- v .r.:.rvijw mammw av aaas h w asr r w m tr eas. aa. w stsw sa am mm mm m
i; turn -v n v s 11 "i v . - v..; . .i.e.; it
"The Cbildren'g Crusade' of 121S."
? . I
THE story of the Children's Cro- his em character; to act out hla native)
sade of tha jtr Of Our Lord Impulses;-' to develop hla Individuality
1211 la too familiar to tha Ion- Unas of hla (altaa nature'a) lac
reader of history to need repetl- t tlon. In a word, aa I beard a lecture
don here. It la one of tha aaddeat page
, la the annala of civilisation. Out of tha
, t thousand of boys who aet out to wrest
tha Holy Sepulcher from the infidels not
ten aver aaw Jerusalem. Hundred died
. from hunger and exposure in tha jour-
y across .the continent before Brlndlal
: waa reached. Those who embarked for
tha Holy Land were lost at aea or sold
- Into alavery to foreign masters.
Prom our twentieth-century atand--
point wa amy that there could have been
but one endjnc to the piteous farce.
In the ito breath, but with absolute
eUasoctatlon of the two Ideas, we
apeak proudly' of our a aa "the chtl
. arena ate." Some go further and see in
. It tha "children's millennium," cast up
' . (WMt the somber background of the
are. of pairnal supremacy and parental
discipline. - These apostles of the new
school of family . government dwell
: gloatingly upon contrasts offered by
tales of the dark ages of tha American
borne, ayncbronlsed with Calvlnistio the
ology and belief In the damnation of
unbaptised. Infanta. Under that patri-
rchal dispensation parent! believed and
eld for tertaln that they were wiser
' than their offapring; that young minda
ad budding principles needed to be
trained in order to grow Into the right
ahapa and comeliness; that restraint,
, guidance and. if need, coercion entered
Into the workings of the gospel of love
. a truly aa tendernesa and petting, filial
reverence waa more than a nam j obe
dience waa accounted the first and
beaven-ordalned law In the home.
I rrant at the outset that there were
- occasional abuaea of the parental pre-
- rogatlve In that far-bafck day. Mow and
then, a child waa punished for dlso-
' bedienee when his error waa sheer In
advertence or failure to comprehend tha '
command. Onoe In a good many whiles
the wrong boy was whipped. If philo
; oophlcal. he balanced accounta (I have
heard him do It!) by reckoning up the
times ha deserved the rod and did not
, get it If morbid and vindictive, he
treaaured the memory and "got back"
t hla gray-haired father or teacher
.- when he waa a man grown. I have
. beard him do that, too. But these were
axoeptiona to the general rule of light
" understanding between parent and child
, hen the latter arrived at years of dda
; eretlon.
,t Other times, other manners! The hero
f the twentieth century crusade against
what the teachers of the revised version
Of family life condemn aa wrongs, out
raging the finer sensibilities of child
. nature, offers a striking Illustration of
a proverb with a new meaning: "The
, boy la father of the man." With' what
teadlness of brain tha utter reversal of
relative positions has left me I have
tudled the new system, and aa dis
passionately aa pained amazement
would allow.
According to constitution and bylawa
of tha society for tha protection of
children against parents, teachers and
othera In authority, every immortal be
ing has the Inalienable right to form
THE
IMPORTANT NOTlCfe
yySCAVSW of tft IHormoiu
rC number of letters sent to
fhs Exchange. I mutt mh
contributor to limit their com
munication to 100 word, esoept
tn eaet of formulae or recipe
teMch require oreater tpace. I
want all my oorretpondentt to
have a tho win u in the Corner,
and if my requett in thit rttpect
it complied with it u itl be potti
ble to print many more letter.
Attention it called to the-foot
that itarion Borland cannot re
oeive money for pattern .at eh
hat no connection vlth any de
partment that ttllt them.
Important Notice
I WRITE to ask you for the address of
"M. L J." (Oellatin. Tenn.).
Hiring- been tn invalid for years, with
every wlib sratlfled. I have accumulated a
larre supply of light fiction of the popular
sort, and I ehaJI be clad to send a box of
books to Tenneuee.
Mrs. H. B. K. CDiiluth. Minn.).
We have Ave or six upylkauons like
the above. Will "M. L. J." favor us
with her exact address? There Is an
evident flaw in that recorded in our
Index. Yet it was carefully copied from
her letter.
To the liberal-souls who have writ
ten to us respecting the wants of the
. "shut-Ins,'' I would say that not one
of their offers has been laid on the
table. As soon as we receive the cov
eted address each one of her minister
ing friends will be answered. We re
gret the delay more than they can.
Churnless Butter
I have lust seen at a meeting of Fed
eration or Women's Cluba In my city a
Stenail for making churnleai butter. You
are published so many letter containing
queries concerning the proceee that you
may Ilk to hear what one of the machines
looks like.
The one t saw very simple a square,
. heavy tin pan that looks like a cheap cake
tin, but larssr, and perhaps four Inches or
more deeper. Made to fit this is a pad of
white turklsh toweling .lust plain turklth
nun toweling), wnun lies in uie Bottom.
Over this is a sheet of what looks to be
simple heavy blotting paper. There are
clamps to fasten these In securely.
I saw the quart of sweet cream poured
Into this pea on top of the blotting-paper.
Then a tight lid was put an. It was put
Into a refrigerator, and la lee than two
snlnutea the sheet of yellow, sweet buttsr
as removed, if eae wishes It salted, it
f tha new school express It, "to exer
cise tha divine right of the human crea
ture to. possess Itself."
I write It down aa an incontrovertible
fact that the child who haa grown up
under th administration of Juatlcj tem
pered and Interfused by love to not
only more dutiful, but more' fond than
the boy or girl who haa been allowed
to "act out Ms Individuality" and "ex
ercise hla God-given instincts" in hla
dally living and hourly thinking.
Let us come down to plain practical
speech. Do not I. a gray-haired woman,
and you, my readers, a man of SO, 40
to year of age, make humiliating con
fession of folly and inefficiency, of
lamentable misuse of time and observa
tion and experience if we are not mora
capable of deciding what is right and
what wrong, what Is safe and what
dangerous In this world, and what la
the beat nreDaxatlon for the world that
la to ronow our aonoonag in tnia, 1
"By parent's hook
HOUSEMOTHERS' EXCHANGE
may be worked In. Of course. It may be
shaped like any other butter.
The toweling was saturated with wbey.
It certainly beats churning! I know noth
ing of It from experience; f am only telling
rou what I saw. I hope it may be of serv
ice to some on.
Mrs. A. T. T. (Louisville. Ky.). '
X trust I have deciphered your chi
regraphy correctly in describing the
process of bringing butter out of cream
without the drudgery of dasher and
churn. Your handwriting la unmistak
ably that of an educated woman, but
rather peculiar, and I do not like to
trues at a word In making out recipes
and setting down directions for per
forming any domestic task. If I have
erred In what I report of the marvelous
utensil and the time that elapsed be
tween the shutting down of the top and
the removal of the yellow, sweet but
ter, please let us know. We have waited
too long and anxiously for the story to
be resigned to Inaccuracies now.
In case you should be importuned to
supply further particulars, may 1 pass
along your address?
Pickles and Salad Fillings
A a favor to me on of your member
will you repeat th recipe for pin money
pick lee. which was published In the Ex
change about a year ago? I loet mine In
pickling time. The pickles were fine, and
ao well worth the trouble of nutting them
up that I muat have th formula again.
And would vou. also, print a eerie of
salad and of sandwich filling th latter
epeclnlly?
In return I nd a 2-ecr angel's food cake.
Two-Eggr Angel Food Cake
On cup of granulated sugar, 1 cup of
flour, 1 rup of scalded milk. 3 teaapoonf-jla
of baking powder, a pinch of salt.
Ret the cup of milk in a pan of hot water
and heat to boiling point. Sift dry ingre
dient four time; pour in the hot milk;
teat and stir briskly. Lastly, add ins
beaten white of 2 eug, fold'd In lightly.
Do not flavor the better or reane th tin.
Kake In a moderate oven, eliher ai a loaf
or In two layer. Use whatever fronting
you fancy. It I very good.
Mr. S. C. W. (Ontario, Cel.).
Is this the recipe you want?
Old Virginia Pickles
Ohoose small ' Cucumbers, gherkins,
etc., for this purpose.
Pack In a stone Jar In layers, strew
ing salt between these. Cover the top
layer out of sight with salt and pour in
cold wafer until the pickles are com
pletely submerged. Lay a small plate
on top to .keep them down and put a
clean stone upon the plate. Leave la
the brine for a month, stirring up from
the bottom every other day. The brine
should be strong enough to bear up an
"W prune most
m
or teacher's crook."
egg. When you are ready to put up
the pickles, examine them carefully to
be sure all are sound, if one be soft,
throw it away. Turn off the water, re
turn the pickles to the ar and cover
with cold 'resh water. Change thla
for fresh next day and leave them in
this for another twenty-four hours.
Now line a preserve kettle with grape
vine leaves and pack in the pickles,
strewing powdered alum between the
strata. A b'.t of alum as large as a
walnut will do for a two-gallon kettle
ful. Fill with cold water, cover with
green vine leaves three deep; cover
with a closely lining lid and steam
over a very slow fire for six hours,
never allowing the water to boll. The
pickles sho'ild then be of a fine green.
Remove the leaves and lay the pickles
in ice-ccld water. Leave them to
"chill" while you prepare the vinegar.
Allow to a gallon of best cider vine
gar three dozen whole black peppera, as
many whole cloves, 18 whole allspice
and a dozen blades of mace. Stir into
the spiced vinegar a cupful of sugar and
boll five minutes, covered, to keep In
the strength. Drain and' wipe the
pickles; pack in a stone crock and pour
the scalding vinegar over them. Cover
tightly. Two days later, scald the
spiced vinegar airnln and cover the
pickles with it. Hut on the close lid
and leave for three days. Repeat then,
and a week later.
Fit a tight Hd upon the Jar; tie wsxed
cloth over this and set away in a cool
dry place. In two rwnths they will be
ripe. They
month add
.lfrt iTe
for eacn gallon. This will keep
vinegar irorn s-nanpenwg.
This is the genuine old Virginia way of
putting up green pickles. If you would
nave mixed pickles, add sprays of cauli
flower, button onions, string beans (aft
er stringing them) and anything else
your fancy suggests.
The Justly celebrated pin nroney
pickles (than which there are no finer
made and sold) are put up in this way.
They have brought .fortune and reputa
' tlon to the housewife who thus Improv
ed her one talent.
As to fillings for sandiwlchesr their
name is legion. I hope you saw the
recipes for a few of these published
In the talk upon the Glorious Fourth.
Fine-Grained Bread
Her Is a recipe for fine-grained bread.
A member has asked how tn make It. -
About 6 o'clock In th evening put half a
cake of yeast foam to soak In half a tea
eupful of cold water. At I o'clock put Into
your mixing bowl t mdlum-siied potatoes,
carefully the Tinea.1
the Immature creature who has Just
begun the. course? I am not fit to bring
up a child If I am not wiser than ha
while he is still in hla nonage.
You and I know'llfe for what it la
a battlefield from dawn to dark, from
start to finish. In what are we wiser
than the fathers and mothers of the
martyred children of the thirteenth
century crusade If we allow untrained
recruits, ignorant of the first principles
of warfare, to go into It at their own
" charges? Seven centuries ago the mis
taken parents of the fanatical band had
the excuse of superstitious belief that
the god of battles would interpose to
rout the infidel at the approach of the
boy host. We have not that pitiful
apology for letting our children go un
armed into the thick of the fight.
Write It down as another Incontestable
truth, old as time Itself, that what is
learned hi youth abides forever. More
over, that ahe who falls to Inculcate
within the pliant mind the principles of
aelf -control does her child grievous
wrong.
"Untaught In youth my heart to tame.
The springs of life were poisoned,"
moaned the most unhappy of English
poeta.
I wonder sometimes If It may not be
Indolence rather than love that makes
the mother ehlrk the duty of repressing
the evil and of training, tendril by ten
dril, tlje good Impulses and worthy de
sires in her child. The line upon Una
and precept upon precept are a tedious
task. I cannot Interpret upon any other
hypothesis the negligence which pro
duces that nuisance to society and
menace to future generations the
spoiled child.
The common phrase Is darkly signifi
cant. The child who grows up like a
moral weed Is spoiled for himself and
for his fellows. The- stock may he so
good that Inherent strength may. In
time, overcome the warp of early
neglect. The chances are terribly ,
1 level kitchen spoonful of salt and 1 heap
ing spoonful of sugar. Mash ths potatoes
with the sugar snd salt, atlr in a quart of
warm (not hot) water. Beat hard for a
minute and add the soaked yeast cake and
a quart of sifted flour or enough to make
a rood sponge.
Cover and set In a warm place overnight.
In the morning add enough flour to the
sponge for a stiff dough and knead well tor
half an hour. Put back Into the mixing
bowl, which should be greased, cover and
set In a warm place until light. This
should be from ltt to 2 hours. When th
dough Is light,-fold it lightly and turn It
over. Cover snd set for another rising.
When It is light, fold and turn for ths
second time. Cover for th third time and
set for th last rising. When it is light,
mold into loaves snd set wher they will
double their original size In half sn hour.
1'ut into th oven and cover with paper for
thirty minutes. Then brown.
This makes four email loaves.
It take a longer time to make bread In
this way than In tha old style, but any on
who wishes to hare fine-grained bread will
do well to try thla recipe.
Mrs. T. C. C. (8. St. Paul, Minn.).
We always set breakfast or luncheon
rolls down for the third rising after the
sponge has been added and the dough
had the preliminary "raise."
The product is fine grained and aa
light as a tniffball.
As our Soluh St. Paul member haa It.
the process takes longer than the ordi
nary method, but the result la delight
ful. Freezing Without Ice
Following this ft the recipe for freeslng
the preamble to the formuU
published a few weeks ago in the Ex
change, In reply to the query signed
"C. A. M." It need not be. reiterated
now. The member who favors us with
it adds:
If "C. A. M." should try thla wilt she
kindly report what auccess ahe has with It?
Kj'cllly what effect tb acid has upon the
uiviieiui unu f
If I dared take
should like to aak i
take up any more spao I
K a iw questions tor my-
self or the helpful Exchange, but I have
aircsuiy exceeasu in iw-wora limit."
Mrs. J. A. C. (Newark. N. J.).
Thank you Tor noticing the mention
of the hundred-word limit! Aa I read
the line, I glance axoanlngly at ar pile
of letters on my desk, some of whloh
are five and bIx pages long; most of
which are interesting and would be
helpful If I had room for them within
Our confines.
Like yourself," I should tike to hear
from Somebody who has tried tha frees-lng-wlthout-lce
recipe. The hot weath-"
er justifies the hope that it will be
trigd soon, and by more than one house
aereinat aymmetricaJ development
"It la barbarous to chastise a chna,"
w are toli by tha new-achool teachers.
To curb hla natural kmpulaaa , and
thwart native taoto la "vlolenoa don
to tha Ideal Implanted In him by
wise creator. To mold Is to mar." If
this be true, the young of the human
. speolee are a notable exception t tho
rest of creation. We prune most are
fully and train Intelligently vlnea from
which wa hope to gather choicest
grapes; the nursery of young trees la
not left to flourish at Its own sweet
will; the dog la trained to tha chase;
the' ox accustomed to the yoke -before
he gains his full size; tha 8-year-old
colt does not learn hla paces In the
untrammeled freedom of the paddock;
nor and herein la mystery and incon
sistencydo we push ths theory of un
controlled Individuality and the unre
strained operation of natural lawa Into
practice In the mental training of eur
offsprlnx. Intellect must be cultivated
by parent's hook or by teacher' crook.
Aa the child gains In knowledge
acquired from books and preceptora,
aelf -conceit grow a apaoe. From the
cradle he haa been made tha chief eat
personage In 'the home. By the time
he dlacarded akirta for tha trousers
which stand with the modern boy for
the "toga vlrllis" of the Roman
"The dog is trained to the chase."
urchin, he has known himself te be
the master of his mother and his
father'a equal. Aa schoolboy and col
legian, he patronizes the authora of
hla being as Inferiors. At 4 years of
age, he struck hla mother in the face
and kicked his nurse In the stomach
when they tried to persuade him to
do something' opposed to his "untram
meled" Inclination. At 14, he bullies
mother and sisters, and flatly refuses
to obey his father's "suggestions."
There are no commands in the house
hold run by the new system. "Moral
suasion la the one and only rule of
faith and conduct. Appeal to the
child's highest instincts (which
should have crystallized at 14 into
principles) is the one and only way to
educate him, ethically." Disciples of
the new school make much of the
root of "educate!" It la, they explain,
"educere to draw ouf," and this
with triumphant emphasis not to
pour in, as one might All an empty
sack. The end and aim of Instruction
Is to bring out what is already In the
mother. All tbe children, and each and
every John loves Ice cream. If this
plan works, the labor of making It is
reduced to minimum.
Raisin Pie
"Mrs. I C. McC." asks for a raisin
pi recipe. I think this may suit her:
Two cups oi (leaned raisin. 1 cup of
sugar. 1-2 of a cup of vinegar. 1 2-1 cups
of water, cooked together until the raisins
are plumped. Then thicken with a
tablespoonful of cornstarch and add a
beaten egg and a teaspoon ful of cinnamon.
Bake la two crusts.
Pleaa tell me some time If there Is any
thing harmful In cocoa as there I In cof
fee. I am deliberating whether or not I
shall give it to my t-year-old boy. He la
very fond of It. .
A CONSTANT itBADHTR (Waverly. Ia).
Cocoa contains no poisonous elements.
It is, however, rather a "heavy" drink:
for a young child on account of the large
f proportion of oil found In the nut. A
Ighter and yet nourishing preparation
Is what Is sometimes called ' "shells."
This, made with plenty of milk cannot
hurt the boy if drunk in moderation,
It Is likely to make him cross If It be
comes his constant drink. Milk is the
only liquid that may be relied upon as
absolutely aafe for so young a child.
Thank you for the raisin pie. "Mrs.
L. C. MoC." will appreciate your kind
ly offices.
'Again the Schools
I am sorry that I offended any reader or
the Exchange, for I see that I missed th
point I wished to make.
As thlnsi are now, th publlo schools are
mall oo. leges, with school of music, ora
tory and languages, a chemical laboratory,
a carpenter's shop, sewing school, publlo
hospital and day nursery. Ths Idea of a
lunch counter seemed to m "the limit. If
you will pardon me for saying so. The re-
suit of trying to do everything Is plainly
een ny noticing tne graauatea.
Not on of them ! fitted for anv . one
een by noticing th graduate!.
mm, ah hav a smattering or ooiens or
things they cannot us, as they do not know
All hav a smattering of doien of
enough, aoout them to put tnem into prac
tice. Thy hav orammed for "counts."
I am afraid thla latter I longer than you '
auo
But I ahould Ilk to tell you that I
had
nttie t u i ai neinr e aseea wun
"the other half," meaning plutocrats aid
bloated bondholders. I suppose for the first
time In my lifel Hnc my great amus-
ment. "
For I am one of those wb must make a
little money do a great many things, a la
the case with , tbe "Lady From fhlladel-.
phla."
'DAMO VAN. WINKLW
T
(White Malna,
' Whose-charmingly good-tempered let
ter has lain aside altogether too long;
for my liking. It 4a eound .enough to
keep even longer, but I wish to have
ia ' Mm-k::
precious little immortal. Develop-
, ment, and not cramming, la rational
education.
The aame rational . ayatem is pur- '
sued with-regard to religion. Upon rj
thla head there is no peradventure.
A woman held forth to thla effect -the
other day, during four courses of
a luncheon party.
"I' teach my children absolutely noth
lng of religion and tha church," ahe
proclaimed. "When they arrive at
years of discretion, each muat decide
for himself or for herself what Is true
and what false In matters of this kind.
Each shall bring to the decision an un
biased mind, free from churchly tradi
tion and priestly prejudices. I have never
forced upon them the ridiculous custom
of - 'saying prayers.' Buch a travesty
of devotion as it Is? If the good seed
is cast into their souls, it will fall Into
virgin soli." ,
Whereupon the oldest woman present
craved leave to tell a true story:
Tir.n t .hi Id. a deep well waa
dug In my father'a yard. My mother
had been reading of wheat taken from
the hand of .an Egyptian munw..
had germinated in warm, rich soil and
brought lortn, nrat me omutj, u
ear.. She had a box of the earth brought
to the top of the well, put it into a pot
and took It into her greenhouse. A few
hours later she laid a pane of glaas over
the pot and set it In the aun. In lesa
than a week tiny green shoota delighted
her eyea. They ahct up thick and fast
and soon covered the surface. In due
time there were bloeeoma among full
grown leaves."
There ahe paused.
"On the contrary, they were weeds."
"Well?" Inquired the New Woman,
breathlessly. "What were they? How
very,, very Interesting! We are Imagin
ing all manner of oriental plants
acanthus, asphodel or lotual Or were
they utter strangers to her?"
"On tha contrary" slowly and Im
pressively "there were ragweed, purs
ley, lamb's quarter and .other" of our
most vulgar weeds. She accounted for
them . by supposing that the invisible
germs floating in the air had alighted
my readers share It with me. They
will recollect the lively passage-at-srms
with the Philadelphia member to which
It refers, and appreciate with me the
excellent temper of har reply to the
sister-member who misunderstood her
meaning.
Dampfnoodeln
In response to a request for the German
dish, ths nam of which 1 a grievous stumbling-block
to English-speaking housemoth-
era, I Inclose a recipe for the favorite.
Mold into rounds, about an lnoh , thick
and four Inches long, cinnamon or coffe
kuchen. after It I light. Set to rl. and
when they ar light again, hav ready In a
deep frylnr pan lard heated aa for dough
nuts. Pour into the lard half a pint of
warm water; boll up. and drop in th
noodles. The pan should have a very tight
cover, Fit this on aa soon as the noodle
are In- and let them fry until you can tell
bv the sound that the water has conked
away. Then the noodles ar don. Tak
them up; put Into colander and sprinkle
rlth powdered sugar.
I always tak the pan from ths fir het
the
for adding the hot water, a it Is likely
to make the lard apattar. ' This done. 1 set
the pan back on tha rang and dron In mv
dough.
I hop I have made this plain and not
too long. Mr. J. H. W. (Peru. III.).
The recipe la clear and conciae. We
thank you for It But, why add the
water? There Is doubtlees an excel
lent resson for doing It, for our Ger
man cook doea nothing at random.
Only, I ahould like to know why It
goes In.
And how do you know by listening to
the bubble and hiss of the pan when
the water has evaporated? .
Thirdly How can it evaporate when v
the' top Is tightly closed 7 Will you
write lo . us again and explain, these
points?
- Books for Lovers
l can sbak hands with "J. B. D.," of
Oermantown. Pa., as I sra almost In th
same boat with, hr, except that my Income ;
Is stesdy, although mU.
I am feeding three grown people and three
growing ohlldren upon an average weekly
expenditure of fS, and thank Qod that thus
far we are strong and healthy,
.-Kindly send me the address ef '"JV' B. ." .
I have magsslnea ahe may Ilk to hav, It
w)ll be a pleasure to forward them to her,
W ar bookworms, and often stint our
selve In other things In order to buy maga
, sin and books. . L H, It.. (Harvey, 111.). v
We have passed along the address of "
Our Oermantown- member to so many ,.;,
of her well-wUhers and friends that
she must be well-supplied with maga
slnes by now. If she have need of more,
will ahe let me know, and receive tha
address of.,"U H. M'. .wa..:v
1 "Once in while the wrong hoy .
: was whipped."
) - .ilvf.vv'!-.'-.;.. v . ..
there while the soil wai unprotected br
the glass. Tou see, tha air ls full of
themt" ' '. v, . ? . "
An audacious listener struck In at thla
point: y
"Moral: If you don't plant good seed,'
the bad will flow ltaelf. Is that what
you mean?"
"Something like It And that I ques
tion whether there be such thing la
thla world as 'virgin aoll.' "
I have called education of the mind,
while the moral faculties asm left to
take care of themselves, a mystery and
Inconsistent. The mystery deepens and
the Inconsistency becomes a moastroatty
.when the spiritual nature la left to
-w. v.-v
In the home. In aoclety, In the church
and in the world at large and Rive the
Juniors a free rein. Witness our num
berless Juvenile, junior and young peo
ple's associations separated and kept
as sedulously apart from organisations
run for like purposea by men and
women of years aid experience aa If
operated by different races. Witness,
also, the preference given to young peo
ple's "movements" everywhere. Tha
Twentieth-Century Children's Crusade Is
on!
Rlang-tnakers have a phrase that ap
?llea here as aptly aa If It had been
ramed expressly for the occasion "He
wanta the earth!" Nothing short of tha
world and all that la therein will satlsfj
our rapacious younglings.
FAMILY MEALS
FOR A WEEK
SUNDAY
BRBAKFABT
Blackberries, cereal and cream.
chops, sally lunn. toast, ta and coffe.
LUNCHEON
Canned boned chicken, browned potatoes
ally lunn, sliced and warmed (a left-over),
tomato snd romsln salsd, thin graham
bread and butter, huckleberry cake and
Swiss chees. fruit, tea,
DINNER
Malltgatawney eoup, crown roast ef lamb,
mint ssucs, green peas, succotash. Lady
Baltimore cak. black coffe
MONDAY
BREAKFAST
Peaches, cereal and cream, salt mackerel
with tomato sauce, French rolls, toast, tea
and eoffe.
LUNCHEON
Orecn peppers stuffed with ash (a left
over), potato, fried wholei egg and let
tuce salad, crackers and cheese, almond
meal cake, ginger ale. ,
' DINNER
Yesterday's soup, cold lamb with currant
Jelly (a left-over), souffle of green peas (a
left-over) fried eggplant, raspberry tarts,
bleak eoffe.
TUESDAY
BREAKFAST
Herri ss, eereal and cream, baooa and
broiled tomatoes, whole wheat bread toast,
coffee and tea.
LUNCHEON
Jellied tongue, broiled moshrooraa, baked
tomato toaat. Junket and cake, tea
DINNER
Split pea soup, larded cslf's liver a la
Jardiniere, stswed carrots, young beets with
tops on, boiled gooseberry pudding wits)
bard sauce, black coffee
WEDNESDAY
BREAKFAST
Melons, cereal and cream, baoon and
eggs, rto muffins, toast, tea and coffee.
LUNCHEON
Cold liver from yesterday, breakfast muf.
fins, French fried potatoes, beet salad with
mayonnalia, crackers and cheeee. berries 1
and cream, cookies, tea.
- DINNER
Yesterdays soup with th addition of to
matoes, rolled beefsteak (attilTed). young?
onions, squash, poor. man's pudding black
coffee. t
THURSDAY '
v BREAKFAST
Frnlt, eereal and cream, ptnflab. corn
bread, toast, coffee and tea.
LUNCHEON
Brown stew of steak and onions (a left
over), boiled potatoes with butter and
?arsley sauce, toasted cornbread from break
sst. cabbage salad with cream dressing,
crackers and cheeee, ginger snap and Iced
" DINNER
Sootch soup with poached eggs on "toe
veal cutlet, scalloped whole tomatoes!
string besns, raspberry mousse with sponge
cake, black coffee.
FRIDAY
, BREAKFAST .
Melons, cereal and cream, baeon and
fried hominy, toast, tea and coffe.
. T TTVmirnM
Cottage pie fa left-over), quick biscuits,
string bean and cress salad (a left-over). '
crscxers ana conag . cneese, berries and
cream, tea,
DINNER
Cream onion soup (without meat), soft
shall crabs, potatoes a la parlslenn. green'
peas, homemade , ic cream, cake, black
Coffe. ...
':, "Saturday
,:: BREAKFAST '
Huckleberries, cereal and cream. ' baron,
waffles and honey, toat, tea and eot'
i''''-:'!':';-'.;LtjNCHBON ' ' ' ' -Cheese
fondu, Saratoga chips; souffle of
green peas a - left-orV, potato salad,
fhlri bread and . butter, sugar gingerbread
and tea.; 's-i-w .r tr .;: :.v'
,:.(.:' 'i ..'j DINNER :. .. : Ao.
. "Scrap soup" (compounded of left-overs), ;
frlcass of chicken, Spanish rice, stuilM
eggplant, cherry pi, black coffee. -
; : ..V