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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1927)
EASTERN CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY, MARCH 24. 10 27 A I S C H O O L PAIJS I A ■ the : • KUCHEN CABINET ' | ' K Y as we will, be enreful still, -*• W e folks who wash the dishes, W hate'er we do, we break a few, No matter what one wishes. Yes, something slips from out the hand. Or on a cup a plate w ill land, You knock your arm, you hear a crash, And there's a saucer gone to smash. Y et some folks seem to think a dream Should never have a waking. That hearts should choose and never lose And never know an aching. They seem to think that they at least Should set the board aud huve the feast And go along the way they wish Through life, and uevor break a dish. IlpèteBCocK Book <THE .WHY of SUPERSTITIONS , H om e is the resort o f love, o f Joy, o f peace and plenty, w h ere supporting | and supported, polished frien d s and dear relation s m in gle in to bliss.— Thompson. By A Puree of Celery. Cut two bunches o f celery into small pieces and parboil, then -drain and fry in butter. Add salt, pepper and nut meg to season; cover with veal stock and simmer one hour. Blend two ta blespoonfuls o f butter with two ot flour, add a quart o f veal stock and the celery and cook until thick; rub through a sieve, reheat, add two cup fuls o f hot milk, a pinch o f sugar and a tablespoonful o f butter. Serve with croutons. Puree a la Crolssy. Put Into a saucepan a carrot, a tur nip and an onion cut fine, two cupfuls o f beans, tw o leeks and a small bunch o f parsley. F ry the vegetables in but ter and dredge with flour, add a can o f tomatoes and two quarts o f veal stock, w ith a stalk o f celery and cook until thick. Hub through a sieve, re heat, season with salt, pepper and a bit o f sugar and butter. Add one cup fu l o f cooked peas and one cupful o f boiling cream. Soup Soublse. Slice thin tw o Spanish onions and cook ten minutes In one-fourth o f a cupful o f butter, stirring constantly. Add one quart o f white stock and cook slow ly fo r 20 minutes, then strain. D ilute three tablespoonfuls o f flour w ith enough water to pour, add to the soup aud bring to the boiling point. Add one cupful o f cream, one table- spoonfpl o f chopped green peppers or one-fourth o f a cupful o f grated cheese. Season with salt and pepper. Chicken Salad. Tak e tw o cupfuls o f chicken cut In to small pieces, add one cupful o f cel ery, one cupful o f diced cucumber and tw o tablespoonfuls o f capers. Season iwith salt and pepper and mix with boiled dressing, to which an equal amount o f whipped cream has been ^dded. Serve on lettuce. vcdtQ - (© , 1927, W estern N ew s p a p er U n io n .) -------- o -------- T he y o u n g lady ACROSS THE WAY T h e young lady across the way says that often a seemingly little thing de termines the whole course o f a man's life, and President Conlidge never would have been where he Is today If he had not fomented the Bost<wi po- .Ucemen's strike. 1 ,C be M cClur. N «w »v a p «r l n l t . l i ) IRV1NQ KINQ THE NIGHTMARE A FEW SOUPS GOOD hot soup Is not only a good appetizer, but a nourishing begin ning to a meal. H. T N M A N Y sections o f the country It *■ Is customary fo r people subject to nightmare to sleep with a pair o f scis sors or a knife under the p illow as a preventive against the affliction. In some sections they w ill tell you that the nightmare Is caused “ by an evil spirit struggling with one.” This conception o f nightmare as an evil spirit Is a conception o f prim itive man and one which exists In the mimic- ism o f prim itive races today, as well as among the superstitions o f the civi lized peoples. And anyone who has ever experienced nightmare cannot wonder. Shakespeare, In a song In “ K in g Lear,” makes St. W lthold say when he meets “ the nightmare and her nine fold," “ Arroint thee, w itch ! arrolnt th e e !” and the first definition o f nightmare given by the Century dic tionary is “ An Incubus, or evil spirit that oppresses people during sleep.” Some o f us may be content to ascribe our nightmare to a poorly-made Welsh rarebit Instead o f a witch or an evil spirit but not so our ancestors or our more superstitious neighbors. In folklore, then, the nightmare being a witch or an evil spirit, what Is more potent to keep It away than a piece o f cold Iron which, as Is well known, from the beginning o f the Iron age witches and e v il spirits have ab horred and feured? The reason for the fear and abhorrence o f Iron by evil spirits lias brought forth much discussion. The belief began when man first tried to work Iron ore Into a usable metal and from the super stition under consideration, and from numerous other current superstitions, we see that It has not entirely van isbed. <(£) by M cC lu r* N e w s p a p er S y n d ica te.) -------- o -------- A t 21: Samuel Insul! Was Edison’s Secretary. M A T A B O U T this time I was en- x A gaged as Mr. Edison’s private secretary, a position I had long w ait ed and strived for. “ I had to work In the office all day, look after the financial and business end and very often I would be with Mr. Edison at his laboratory most o f the nights. W e usually worked about four nights In seven. W e seldom worked on Sundny nights hut as a rule we were at It during most o f Monday and Tuesday nights. By Wednesday night we were so exhausted through lack o f sleep that we usually spent the night In bed. “ Thursday and Friday nights saw us busy again until well Into the morning. I have known Edison to work night and day ten days on end. He seemed to be able to go without sleep as long as a camel can go w ith out water. “ In the office I was expected to clean tip the correspondence with Edi son’s laconic comments as a guide as to the character o f the answer to make. It was o very common thing fo r Edison to w rite the words ‘yes’ or ‘no’ and this would be all I had on which to base my answer.— SA M U E L IN 'SU LL.” T O D A Y — Mr. Insnll Is head o f the Commonwealth Edison company o f Chicago, the largest power plant. It Is said, for producing electricity In the world and Is one o f the greatest fig ures In the financial and business life o f this country. For a Job on the side. Mr. Insull directs the destinies o f the Chicago C ivic Opera association, which Is to the West what the Metropolitan Opera company is to the East. Ig by McClrara Naw ipspsr Syndicate.) iQ, l » l f , Western Now.paper Union.) If love Is the grea test th in g In the w orld, then hale Is the g re a t- eet evil, fo r hate te the opposite o f love. L o v e attracte, hute re pels. Love Is life, hate Is death. H ate Is tils w orst w asts that can enter a human soul.— G eorge M at* thew Adame. IN V IT IN G D IS H E S For those who cannot eat meat often a main dish Is a problem which needs thought, as It must contain nourishment a n d at the same time be a t t r a c t i v e enough to appeul to the taste. Carrots W i t h Rice.— Scrape und And sometimes when you break oue cut Into t h i c k then slices a dozen small carrots, cook them It's not a ten-cent m atter: tender In a seasoned stock to cover. Fate smashes up your choicest cup. Prepare a white sauce and place the Perhaps your big-test plutter. carrots with cooked rice In alternate You don’ t know when, you don’t know layers with the w hite sauce, season why, well, cover with buttered crumbs aud But you will find, fo r so have I, bake until the crumbs ure brown. W e’re walloped by the hand o f fate, Noodles With Peppers.— Those who And often with our finest plate. like the flavor o f the green pepper will But when you do break something enjoy this d ish : Cook sufficient noodles new. to serve the fa m ily ; when tender drain Or something old you cherish, and add a small cun o f ptmentoes, the I tell you what w ill help a lot. canned red peppers, add a cupful o f Although a dish may perish: stock or gravy, salt and pepper and a One platter Isn't ev ’rythlng— tablespoonful o f butter. Simmer to Go In the pantry when bereft gether for ten minutes and serve hot. And count the dishes you have le ft ! Spanish Rice.—Chop one small onion (© by McClure Ne w s pa pe r Syndicate.) flue, add one chopped green pepper and ---------( ) --------- cook ten minutes In two tablespoon fuls o f oil. Add four sliced tomatoes aud one-half cupful o f hot water. Cook to the boiling point, then mid a cup ful o f rice. Cook slowly one hour, udd- lng more water If needed to keep It m oist The rice should be previously By F. A. W A L K E R cooked before adding to this dish. Curried Cauliflower.— Boll a firm THE TURNING POINT white head o f cauliflower In salted w a te r ; when tender, drain and pour over I N T H E life o f every aspiring hu- It the follo w in g: Melt two tablespoon 4 man being there comes at some fuls o f butter, add n tablespoonful of period o f Its passage the moment that chopped onion, two teaspoonfuls o f calls for cool deliberation, and a finer flour aud one o f curry powder, n ten- adjustment o f purposes as regards the spoonful o f chopped apple; cook all future. together, then add one cupful each of Face to face with stern realities, w ater and milk with salt to season, as the clock ticks off the minutes, pour over the cauliflower and serve at what must be done? In what direc once. tion shall the turn be made? Cottage Cheese Soup.— Tak e a pint o f milk, a tablespoonful o f butter, tin* The row youth and the green girl, same o f flour cooked together, half a who have been playing the butterfly, teaspoonful o f salt, pepper to taste are moved suddenly to a sense of and a h alf cupful o f cheese. Add their dependence, and as likely as not. onion Juice to season If liked. Melt If they be serious-minded, an over the butter, add flour and cook, then whelming consciousness o f their In add the milk and ‘-lieese. ability crowds In upon their addled For the Housekeeper. brain until they are hopelessly over One o f the ruts In the household come with Indecision. which Is weuring deeper und deeper They had not until now an Idea that Is the monotony in menu making. The life could be so real and earnest. same old tiling In Facing the turning point they see with the same old way new eyes. Is repeuted until They are standing today where they appetite and In stood only a little while ago, their terest in food are care-worn fathers and mothers, over gone. come with forebodings and appre The housekeep hensions. er in most homes They recall how often their loving Is mother, cook, parents have tried to Impress upon nurse, seamstress and general mana them the Importance o f becoming ha g e r; this Is a man-sized Job and only bitually Industrious, o f having a high when she treats It us a business and purpose In Ufe, o f not running away brings system Into Its management, from the battle. does she make a success, providing her In their reflections they are con health and strength hold out. Try scious that they are at the turning keeping a tabulated list o f the dishes point, and that they, and they alone, liked by the fam ily, adding to them In must decide which way to shift. vnrlous ways, to avoid repetition. They are Irresolute and afraid. It Take rice fo r exam p le; make a list Is better at such times to push for o f ten or more ways o f serving rice ward pluckily and make a full than as a main dish, as vegetable, us a des to lose courage or stand Idle. sert, or In combination with other T o the faithful and unafraid an foods. Prepare these dishes In turn honorable defeat Is a form o f victory. and It will not be necessary tu serve A defeut o f this kind tenches hu them often. mility and reveals their own defects. When whole wheat right from the I f they have within them the right granary can be purchased there Is no spirit, they find a new strength and breakfast food equal to It. I f there confidence which sustain them, and are members o f the fam ily who desire the way to the coveted goal Is made to have It ground that can be done In clear. an ordinary coffee mill. When serv It Is fo lly to assume that you or 1 ing It whole It Is best to souk It over can spring up In a clap and go leap night, then cook slowly on the back of Ing to the heights. the range all day. Cook enough to The right thing to do Is to learn last fo r several duys and serve It with to labor In pntience and faith, to keep top milk. Th is Is the best possible going between the fnilures, to patch food fo r children ; g ive It to them for up unwortldness and pack the heart their supper. As It Is a food that with resolutions, to pray for help and must be chewed. It Is especially good keep ever In mind, “ Ask, and It shall fo r the teeth. be given you.” In baking cakes, divide the time ((?) by M cC lu re N e w s p a p e r S yn d ica te.) Into quarters; If the cake should bake -------- O-------- 40 minutes, tlie first ten It should be gin to rise; the second ten (o r quar te r) It should finish rising and begin to brow n; the third qttnrter It should finish browning and shrink from the pan. The last quarter It finishes bak ing. Remember to wipe the tops o f milk : bottles before opening them. Hands that deliver milk are often far from clean. Lace curtains which seem hopeless may he mended by using a piece o f net or lace to match and Ironing It over the hole. Trim off the edges and the mended place will not lie noticed. When making pastry handle with as llttte moisture as possible. Use a tray for removing dishes from the table, also use It when carrying dishes to act the table— it saves many steps. Paste a piece o f felt or velvet In the heel o f each shoe, or If the buck o f the heel wears out first, put a piece o f vel vet th ere; It will save wear. Keep the heels o f the shoes straight, j hy having a lift added when needed. I Rubbers worn over turned over heels will often be m ined In one walking “ Women used to attract men wlti J trip. fine feathers," says Mature Matilda I "but judging by the little they wrai I nowadays they must expect to hool I them with pin-feather*.” SOMETHING TO TH IN K A BO U T Pase 7 Albert Rooke Makes His Comeback Wins six-year fight for health . Notv well and strong at 60, Husky as ever, he praises Tanlae A t 1S30 West 39th Place, Los An geles, lives Albert A. Rooke, a re spected citizen with 3S years of active railroad experience, l i e tolls of a very interesting expeqgnce. “ About seven years ago,” says Mr. Rooke, “ m y stomach and liver went back on me. I t was a most distressing experience. Nothing seemed to agree with pie; I lost (til desire for food. A sound night 8 sleep was out o f the question, so I rose each morning tired and pcpless. Then constipation de veloped and mado life a continuous misery. I lost weight and could hardly drag myself around a good deal of the time. six years of that I was all ia. Along came tho ‘flu’ when I hud no resistance left. That was about the last straw. Nothing seemed tohelpme. ‘ 'On a friend's advice I tried Tanlae, and that certainly did help. I soon began to get refreshing sleep again, to eat with old-time zest. The distressing etoinaeh and liver troubles disap peared. Briefly, Tanlae put me on m y feet, with all my old-time vigor ami enjoyment of life. I put on weight and after five bottles was as well as After ever in m y life. That was a year ago. I ’m still in fine shape, ns you see. Few men of 60 are as well as I am, thanks to Tanlae.” Tanlae is nature’s own tonic and body builder, mado from roots, herbs and barks by tho famous Tanlae for mula. T ry a bottle— it may do for you whatit did for Mr. Rooke. Your drug gist has it. Over 52 million bottles sold. Between Friend» B ABIES L O V E Ida— It’s no sigu because I am en gaged to Jack that I'm going to marry him. Iris— No, dear, o f course not— ho umy bu.k out. MRiVWiSjOtS SYRUP Tie Infants’ and Children’« Regulator Pleasant to give—pleasant to tako. Guaranteed purely veg- . «tableand absolutely harmless. \ It Quickly overcomes colic, I diarrhoea, flatulency and •7 other liko disorder». \ The o p e n published B p formula appears on v «very label. nZtil If Back Hurts Begin on Salts >' f ÂÀ At All Drugs itls Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally by Drinking Quarts of Good W ater N o man nr woman can make a mis take by flushing the kidneys occasion tor — Quick— Gratify ally, says a well-known authority. ing—Satisfying—a standby T oo much rich food creates acids for over sixty years In thousands of home*. which clog the kidney pores so that H A L L & RUCKEL, Inc- 147 W averly Place N ew Y ork they sluggishly filter or strain only part o f the waste und poisons from the blood. Then you get sick. Rheu matism, headaches, liver, trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders often come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ttche In the kidneys or your back hurts, or if l HEM0RRH0 I05L SUPPOSITORIES tlie urine Is cloudy, offensive, fu ll of TMC KOKNIG MCD IONS COMPANY CHicsaO --■«•............ . * " • ^ sediment, Irregular o f passage, or at tended by a sensation o f scalding, be gin to drink soft w ater In quantities; also get about four ounces o f Jad PRICE $ 1.00 Salts from any reliable pharmacy and W rite fo r F R E E B O O K L E T take a tablespoonful In a glass o f w a I f you r druflrtdit cannot auppl? you. o rd e r ter before breakfast fo r a fe w duys fo rw a rd in g chargea prepaid, from and your kidneys may then act tine, i K O E N IG M E D IC IN E CO. Th is famous salts is made from the j 1 0 4 5 N . W E L L S S T .. C H IC A G O , I L L . acid o f grapes and lemon Juice, com bined w ith litliia, and lias been used fo r years to help flush clogged kid neys and stimulate them to activity, nlso to help neutralize the acids In the system so they no longer cause , MITCHELL EYE SALVE irritation, thus often relievin g bladder heals Inflam ed eyes, granulated lids, disorders. * styes, etc. Sure. Safe, Spt -dy 2f»c a t Jad Salts Is inexpensive and cannot a ll dru ggists. H a ll & Rucke i, N Y a Injure; makes a delightful efferves- . II« •meoputluc mid IliociiritiK i 'l v p m ut long cent lithla-w ater drink, which every Kent p o s t p a i d to nil pur ?« nf tin- \V"i Id. M a n ual an«l bo ok let s freu. Hui.--« 1 • <> . ü l j one can take now nnd then to help Kt PlHlr HL. Ch icago, III. K t . 1 1 tied 1H55. keep tho kidneys clean nnd the blood 1 pure, thereby often preventing serious FOR kidney complications. FOR PILES Coughs duclf> Colds W orld’s Candy King T h e w o rld 's candy king resid es In M elbourne, A u stra lia . Ills nam e Is M ae R ob ertson , nnd be Is know n to be the rich est man In tlie South seas. In nil lie has 17 la rg e candy iminu fn etu rln g plants, nnd he keeps m odels o f all o f them. W hy S t ifT e r I* n ln from a rut or burn? Cols' s Car b oll salve stops pain In stan tly and heals q u i c k l y w ithou t a scar. K eep It handy. A ll druggist?;, 30e and 60e, or J. W. Cole Go., 127 S. E uclid A v e „ Oak Park, 111.— Adv. Saved B illy — Is p apa's Ink in d elib le? M o th er— No, dear. B illy T h a t ’s good. I sp ille d It nil o v e r m y new w h ite stilt. 30c & 90c SU C C E S S FU L F O R « O YE AR S At all Druggists W . N. U., P O R T L A N D , NO . 12 1927. Every evil comes to us on wings and goes away limping. W r l.h r , I relian V, tali In Pm . ar. no» only a purgativa. They asari a tonlo tlos on lh** illKnMIun Tont then) yo'iroolf now. »72 Pearl SI.. N. V. Adv. A Slot 111 III man never has time. SAY “ BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSISTI Unless you see the “Bayer Cross”* on tablets you ’re not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proveJ safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 2S years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART — ■ ___i Accept only “Bayer” pjekare which contains proven directions. Iia n d v “ Bayer'* boxes o f 12 tablets Also bottles o f - l ami l o o - D m ste. U U *<k tUAtk w l V a j %X M sau X adu ra o f M v o va ..tU k a ciO «»U * o f S s iic y »u «c iO