The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 17, 1921, Page 6

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: 4 PAGE SIX BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PREPARING LATE WINTER DISHES Some New and Excellent Recipes Given to Tempt Languid Spring Appetites. VEGETABLES ARE NECESSARY) : Formulas Tried Out in Home Econom. ics Kitchen of Department of Ag- riculture for Stored and Canned Garden Products. Every housekeeper the | of Febr the average family vegetables, and yet-ve as nec ry in the spring diet, inore so, than in the diet of any other season, So the clever cook uses new recipes for the stored and canned prod- ucts of the garden and in that way tempts the languid spring appetites. The following recipes recol mended by the experiment kitchen the United States Department of riculture : Ag: Tomato Toast. Rub one quart of stewed tomatoes through a strainer, Return to stewpan und, if not alr seasoned, add two level teaspoonfuls of salt, half a tea- spoonful of pepper and two tablespoon- fuls of butter. Place on the fire and cook five minutes, Have the bottom of a hot platter geyered with well- toasted slices of bread and pour the hot tomato over it, Place a dropped “or poached egg on each slice of toast + dud serve at, once. Puree of Cabbage and Potatoes. 1 pint boiled finely- — drippings. minced cabbage, 2 teaspoontuls salt, 6 medium ¥% pint hot milk. potatod %4 teaspoonful pep- 2 tablespuonfuls of per. butter or savory Peel the potatoes and put them Ina ste’ n with boiling water enough to cover them, Couk just 80 minutes. Pour off the water and mash fine and light. Beat in the hot milk, seasoning, and cabbage. Cook about five minutes longer. Navy Bean Salad. Soak beans overnight in plenty of cold water, In the morning pour off the water and put the beans in a stew- pan with cold water enough to cover Even Potatoes Taste Like a New Veg- etable When Prepared in a New Way. 4 them generously. Let them come to the boiling point in this water, then dain, If the beans are old and hard, for each quart put a piece of soda about the size of a large bean in the water in which they are soaked over- night, also in the first water in which they are boiled. The Ssealded and drainéd beans should be put back in the stewpan and covered generously with boiling water. Add oue tublespoonful of salt for onc ‘V use of hydroe: quart, ofgeen. They should now cook | slowly,’ h the cover partially off the| stewpan until (tender, Drain, and} when cool ‘serve with the -following| salad dressing | Cream ‘Salad D¥essing. | 1 cupful cream (sour 2 tablespoonfuls or sweet). Vinegar, i % cupful tomato cat- 2 tablespoonfuls | uD. sug: | 1 teaspoonful salt. oonfuls sal- i. Mix the oil, sa.t, sugar and vinegar) together, then beat in the catsup and! finally add the cream, beating it in If lettuce is not available on which 10 serve the salad, a crisp: leaf from a cabbage heart is a youd substitute. Spinach Loaf. n of spinach, chard or 1 sorte seven or eight peo- it is made into a loaf combined with rice or bread crumbs,’ Asparagus or string beans are ulso good served this way. ry ean chopped gpin- 2 cupfuls white ; sauce. is 4 cupfuls boil e. 1 red pepper. Make a thi white sauce of two cupfuls of milk, four tablespoonfuls of flour, four tiblessanfuls of butter and one teaspoonful of sak. Melt fat and mix with flour, add io inilk and str over fire until it thiekens. Mix with the rice, chopped spinaeh iayd pepper Porm into a loaf and ba minutes, RABBIT SALAD To each cupful cf diced fj cooked Yabbit mea: add ove-halt cupful celery and one-foerth cupful salad: dressing, ene-hali few and a pepper, teaspoonful salt, eruins of cayenne thoroughly and pour tite howl Hned with Jettuece. i ole or, two tabiespoont op top and garnis’ rings of green and red U Kither a boiled drersing can be used for this: salad, Inayounaise or a NOT DIFFICULT TASK 10 DESTROY ROACHE Use of Sodium Fluorid {3 Simple and Effective Plan. Beene Obnoxious Insects:Can Be Compictely Exterminated With Little Trouble and Expense by Dusting With This Substance. One of the most effective and simpl means of ridding premises of ches is dustihg with commercial sedium | fluorid, dither pure or diluted one-hali with sofne inert substance such ay powdered = gypsum or flour, “This remedy is one recommended by. the United Sthies Department of Agricul ture. Numerous practical tests conducted in lunchrooms, bakeries, wilk-bottle exchanges, ete, have shown that with the use of this substance roaches can be completely @xterminated with very little trouble and cost and with none of the possible dangers attending the inic-acid gas, unother éfticient means of control. With the} use of some dust gun or blower the sodium fluorid can be thoroughly dust- ed over the shelves, tables, floors and the runw and hiding places of the roaches, The immediate effect of the powder is to cause these insects to come out! of thei# retrezts and rush about more! or less blindly, showing evidence: of | discomfort, to be followed in the course of a few hours by their death, The dead jor paralyzed ronckes can be! swept up and burned, and complete ex: | termination is effected within 24 hours. It- Is not definitely known whether the sodium acts through the breathing pores or as a stomach pol- son. Probably, however, it acts in both | ways, inasmych as ‘It has been found to kill caterpillars fed on foliage dust- | ed with it. f Pupils Eating Lunch at Their Desks in Rural School. Teachers and parents are commencing to realize the importance of hot | school lunches,,and thé home-demonstration agents sent out by the United | States Department of Agriculture andthe state colleges are helping to estab- which are diwake to their value. these extension workers, who are trained in home economies, helped estab- The work will be continued this year on! In some countie: vation has to be broken down before it of the hot Junch in one school, lish hot lunches in commnunitie: lish hot lunches in 2,929 schools. an even larger scale. the suc Last yeor a wall of prejudice against the inno-| an be started. Where this is true, Where it has been established, is usually followed by a demund for something similar in all the adjacent schools, | CLOSES ITS DOORS The Bank of New Rockford, hank, closed its doors Saturday, bank had a capital stock of $50,000 and a reserve of state in information received at the state examiner’s office that the bank wus not in bad condition, the closing 000. It /was|* RAR ARR RRR Re being due to inability to keep up re- serve because loans could not “be) liquidated. | LEGION DANCE The American Legion will: give dance in Legion hall Wednesday sue | ing January 19 | other | Think | you did y >| tadpoles, | white dog. Idiosyncrasles. The thing to be remembered ts. that there are personal, idiosyncrasies. in every worker,:and that each ‘worker | does some. kind. of. work ‘especially well and other tasks indifferently or poorly, stress ‘to attempt to change a It is hardly worth: whilé na natural manner. of work or | Some workers plod slowly for | hours and they are not the kind that | can ever work quickly for. short peri- Fe nds, The thing to dé 4s to try to find |/ out how they work best and fmprove their efliciency along. that particular line. i Remarkable Februarys. February without a. full moon. fs} found by S.’H. Gaythorpe, an English inquirer, to have occurred in the nine- teonth century in 180), 1847, 1866 .and | ISS5, but the present century will leave a record of only two Instances—1915 and 1931, In the next four centuries | there will be, 14 such instances, Very curiously, five Sundays in February have about the same frequency, and | ff happeh thirteen times regularly — in} four centuries, The two occurrences are not connected. Beginnings of Baseball, Abner Doubleday, who later went to West Point and ultimately became gene to major army. is given’ the credit for origin: | ating the game, in 1839, He and some young men began fo play al sume they afterward called baseball. One of these, mamed Cartwright, had the idea of a diamond to improve the “Pwo Old Cat” and “Three Old Cat” were still early forms ef | hall and were adapted probably from | the English game of rounders, same, Lock Ahead. Tt is well enough to stop and rest now and then, our eyes ought to be on the hilltop that is to be scaled rather than on the valley out of which we afve come. Never mind what It is what you are not of terday. erday, in the United States | |? | wholesome, ways in terms of tomorrow, ! fing as possible. PEANUT BUTTER GIVES RICH "FLAVOR TO NUMEROUS DISHES iba Peanut Butter Can Be Made Easily at Home by Puttina ‘Freshly Roasted . Peanuts Through Besfies making an ‘excellent sand- wich filling, peanut butter can be used to give flavor to a number of dishes | that are cheap, easy.to make, and very ‘The “butter,” which real- ly is just finely ground Heanuts,,to which’ salt has ,been -added,. can ; be made at homie very eagily by putting But while we rest.! freshly roasted. peanuts through ‘a meat grinder after the red skins have been removed from them. ‘The me- chine, should be adjusted to grind as df salt is added to | the nuts before they are ground itis | generally ; mixed in ‘more thoroughly. going to do tomorrow that you want | The following recipes, which are a lit: to think of. And he sure while you are thinking of it that you devote. to: | day to te business of arriving —John | june in Chicago Datly News, The Peanut. The common peanut grows in a pe- | culiar way that is distinetly original. | The little plant sends up its shoots, | with the fruit on the end of a some- | what stiff stalk, and then before It | ripens the stem bends over and. care-| fully pushes the frult underground. As | pigs are sald to be especially fond of these, it has been humorously sug- gested that the plant does this to hide its nuts from the porker’s too inquisi- tive Investigations, © Peculiarity of Tadpoles. Tadpoles fed on extract of the thy: | rold gland develop through the various stages of their metamorphosis into frogs very rapidly, but they do not grow in size; when their own thy- roids are suppressed—by cauterization or excision—or when they are fed pn |! extracts of the thymus gland they | grow to great size, but never develop | into frogs, remaining nothing but giant | ——<—_—_—_ Regular Teeth, The teeth should be regular, They | should not be crowded together, and there should be no aggressively notice- | able spaces between them. They | should be white or seem white, The | unromantic truth is that teeth are | never really white, But’ In contrast | with the lips they look white, and the more healthy ‘looking the lips the | whiter do the teeth look in contrast. | Had It In for Lawyers. Distrust and knowledge of his own profession, caused an Australian law- | yer to include a clause in: his will, | ; stating that if any of his beneficiaries, | | for any reason whatsoever, contested | his will, that ‘person’s shire was to be | paid to a certain charity, and no law: | yers were to make any money out of his will. _ e Awful Compat. Jane was careful not to bet her dog, Henrietta, get Into a fight. Put one day when she was out playing she found her fighting with, a black-an4- She was excited and ran for her mother crying: | beef. | be used instead of the tomato juice in “Oh, mamua, , Henrietta is fighting with a checkered | dog.” ToCure aCold in One Day Grove’s Laxative Bromo ~w Quinine tablets Be sure its: Bromo ‘et O 6. gore The genuine bears'this signature 30c, 1 tle out of the ordinary, are recom- mended by home economics specialists of the United States® Department of | Agriculture, As ‘a’ Substitute for Meat. i, Meat substitutes, especially for luncheon or supper, have been found by many housekeepers to be a success- ful way of keeping down the food bill and of giving thore ‘variety to the theuls, Peanut butter souffle has a rich, nutty flavor and fluffy texture, | and when made by this recipe supplies a little more protein.and considerably more fuel than a\pound of average With eggs at 60 cents a dozen and peanut butter at 85 cents a pound the materials will cost about 35 cents and will serve about ‘four persons. Peanut Butter, Souffle. 2-3 ~ cupful pegnut juice. butter. T'cuptui soft, stale 1 > cupful tomato breadcrumbs. Juice. A teaspoonful ‘salt. % teaspoonful onion 3 eggs. Mix together the first. five Ingredl- ents, add the well-beaten yolks of the eggs and fold in the" stiffy beaten whites. Pour’the mixture into a but- | tered baking dish and cook in a mod- erate oven for about 20 minutes. “It | desired, water and a little lemon juice | may be used instead of the tomato. Serve the souffle with tomato sauce made as follows: 2 teaspoontuls but- % teaspoonful It. ter or other fat. salt 2 tablespoonfuls 1 “cupful tomato flour. juice, Melt’ the butter, add the flour and cook for about a minute, Add the to- mato juice and salt and stir the sauce until it thickens. Either skim milk or water flavored with tomato catsup may making this sauce. An Economical Pudding. A cottage pudding without eggs, but- ter or milk may seem like no pudding at all, but here is a recipe for peanut butter cottage pudding ‘that 1s nutri- tious and good even though it contains none of these things. Moreover it is so hearty, that the main part of the meal maybe somewhat less substan- tial than usual. Peanut Butter Cottage Pudding. 1 teaspoonful salt, &% cupful peanut 1 teaspoonful soda, butter. 114 cupfuls water.: 2 tableapoonfuls 18, cupfuls flour. lemon jutce. % cupful st Sift the flour, salt and soda together, Cowbine ‘the water, peanut butter, lemon juice and susir, and stir in the . Beat the mixture e {t In muffin pans, and serve with chocolate or other pudding | sauce. . If desired, four, teaspoonfuls of<baking powder may be substituted for the soda and lemon juice. Peanut Butter Drop Cobkies. Cookies with chopped peanuts in thém er on the top have long been fa- vorites in .auny families. Cookles made by the following recipe have the same rich flavor and are économical+- because the peanut butter: replaces eggs, milk and butter in the ordinary recipes for sugar cookies, and are easy to make because the peanuts are al- ready ground. Children, particularly, will enjoy these cookies if given to them «with. milk or with a ‘simple des- sert. { 1 cupful peanut but- 2 cupfuls flour, ter. 1 teaspoonful salt, 1 cupful. sugar. 1 teaspoonful soda, 8 tablespoonfuls 1 cuptu water. lemon Juice, Rub_ together the peanut butter, i sugar and lemon juice, and add the * flour, in which has been sifted the salt and soda. Gradually sti? in the-water: Drop the mixture by spoonfuls on a | greased tin and bake for about 20 min- { utes-in a moderate oven, | | \ i | | If desired two teaspoonfuly of baking powder wn OO aad INCORPORATE The T. L. ‘Beiseker Land company ‘has incorporated, with a capital stock fof $100,800. -Incorporators, _ T. | Beiseker, C. E. Beiseker, Arthur Nei- | cher, all. of Fessenden. TRIBUNE WANTS — ry RESULTS a Meat Grinder. * may. be used ingtead of the lemon sutee | and soda. i Peanut Butter and Tomate Soup. A soup a8 nutritious as the ordinary | puree of vegetables may be easily; made as follows: | 1% guetule tomato %& B sicaeialal fap-| Peanut af Spfile polling | water. { 1 teaspoonful salt, | Add the tomato juice gradually to) the peanut butter, and when smooth ada the seasonings and water. Simmer for ten minutes and serve with-crou- tons, Well-seasoned soup stock may; be substituted for the, water; but, df; used, the quantity of salt should be reduced. ‘ j PRESERVING-FRUITS | BY FREEZING URGED Has More Natural’ Flavor Than | Canned Product. ir Useful in ‘Making tee’ Creams and Sherbets and for ‘Colking Plies, -7 Preserves, Jellies and Various | Other Deceerts. i‘ | ere i That the utilization of freezing stor. age for the preservation of berries. other small fruits and tomatoes could be profitably extended is the belief of | specialists. of the bureau of markets. | United States Department of Agricul: | ture. Many ice cream manufacturer | and canners would be benefited by} adopting practicable methods of hold- | ing such products for manufacturing | purposes, say the specialists, It fs pointed out that the preserva: | | tion of fruits by freezing, Is cheaper | than canning them, especially when | tin containers ‘are scarce and costly as at present; and that the frozen fruit, | held at the proper temperatures, tias a more natural flavor than canned or, dried fruit: The experimenters found | fruit pt rved by freezing to be fully as satisfactory as fresh fruit and su- perlor to tanned or.dried fruit for use in making ice creams’ and sherbets, | and for cooking into piés, preserves, i jellies and other desserts and confec- tions. The frozen fruits after thaw- | ing are not well suited for eating) alone in a raw state, but are consid- | ered very palatable when eaten hefdre | they have completely thawed. When | used as ingredients for desserts and confections best» results will be .ob- | tained If they are cozbined before | they are free from ice. + | + RABBIT( PIE: Skin, draw and’ cut a rabbit into pieces; put into stew pan and cover with boiling water. Cook until very tender. Remove meat from the broth and cot: | are of Norse origin, while tipcat was | electrical batteries. SANITARY av ! i 1 MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 1921 yupmenics | Hot Water and Steam Heating, Round Oak Pipeless Furnaces, All Material and_ Workmanship Guaranteed \ FRANK 6. \ Rismarel ‘Finger Prints in Banks, The system adopted by some banks | of taking “signatures” by means of finger prints Js not a new idea, but only a survival of a very old custom. | In the days when only g-few people could write-it was quite & usual thing | | for.a person to signify approval of A i document: by making a thumb print} on ‘g,giab of sealing wax. st + - Chance for Golden Service. Mark how men drain every cup of pleasure, uné#l sensibility wears out; and then health*wears out; and then ability, to feel wears out. Give me | the poet or teacher who will put a/ true picture: of this before men, and | he shall do the age a golden service.— i H. R. Haweis. Ancient Game of Hop-Scotch. All mere men’s games must, give pride of place as regards antiquity to those played by children. ffop- scotch, for instance, 1s at least 2,000 years old. \Some of the singing games | played 4,000 years ago. The Electric Fish. Certain fishes exhibit peculiar elec- trical phenomena of muscles, nerves and heart, which have given them the name ric fishes, These have |\the power! of giving electrical shocks | from specially constructed and living. \ U Set Difficulties Under Fost. It has been said that“‘a poor begin- ning sometimes_makes fi good ending.” Whether this be so or not it is certain that when handicaps are overcome there is real achievement. “Difficul- ties show what men are.” Anxious Landlord. A-woman.living in a London suburb who. said that her husband was very ill, complained to a magistrate that! the landlord called every day, and} sometimes®twice a day, to inquire if | he were dead yet. : 7 Sticking. Little Harry, not having.taken his customary afternoon nap, and feeling | | sleepy 8 along toward night, said to his! | father: “Papa, you will have to make | me a new eye, this one keeps atick- | Aine | 4 Only Survivor of Past Age. | The sphenodon, a lizard-like antmad found only in New Zealand, is the oe. modern representative of the great reptilian order living at the close centrate the broth to about one- #f,,of the Carboniferous age. half. Pick the meat from ‘the bones in as large pieces as pos- fj! sible. Thicken stock with one |}; tablespoonful flour per cupful of broth and pour ovér meat. Add two tablespconfuls alt and one-eighth teaspoonful pepper. Line the sides of a baking dish with crust, efther a rich baking powder biscuit dough or pie paste,’add meat. mixture, cover with crust and bake in hot oven, 30 minutes.- *.! evs seenoroneeroeconen E HOUSEHOLD HINTS -§ © Steaks and'chops are higher in price | than roasts and contain. more waste. ees wo . In ironing a shirt always tron the | body part Brat) then the bosom i cuffs. * eee | | When making creamed “tomato sour | mix a little soda with a teaspoontu: | of corn starch and add it to the creab.) before pouring it inte the tomato mia | ture. This will prevent curdling. BAR GIRL PRODIGIES. Wellesley, Jan. 17.—Prodigy, or no| prodigy, a girl must be 16 to enter | Wellesley College. That’s about as young as she should be before seeking | 8 higher education, school authorities | say, Pyne EE SEH) AS og t Immediate rite for priga liste ant full information. | if. BDERGMAN 5 ©. $1.PAUL -MINN. REDUCTION In Tailored Suits $85 values now $50.00 $75: values now .$45.00 $65 values now . $40.00 $50 to $55 value $37.50 $40 to $45 value $30.00 TERMS CASH Ending Feb. 28th, 1921 KLEIN Tailor and Cleaner om i SHIP 9OUR | GRAMBS kk. N..D. ie CITY NEWS 4 ST. Napoleon Visitor Herman gHart~of Napoleon, was in Bismarck Saturday. . Ashley Man Here * Andrew, Weber, vice-president of the: First National bank of Ashley, was if, | Bismarck of business Saturday. , Goes To Fargo ~ W. A. Rudow of Napoleon passed ¢hrough Bismarck Saturday on his way to Fargo to attend an auto and trac: tor school. Sick at Hotel J. M. Thompson of Still, well known auctioneer, is ill at the Van Harn hotel. Col. Thompgon, who is well known over the entife Slope dis- trict, was taken sick’ dbout 4 week ago, and has been confined his oom, it was feared at first that he might have pneumonia, but he is re- ported much improved. } Col. Di a ite ae Take one or two Cascarets occasion- ally to keep your liver and bowels ac- tive. When bilious, constipated. headachy, unstrung’or for a cold, up- set stomach, or bad breath, nothing acts so nicély as Cascarets. Children love them too. 10, 25, 50 cents. | HUMPHREYS’ ‘The full list of Dr. Humphreys’ Remedies for Internal and external use, mects the needs of fainilies for nearly every ailment from Infancy to old age—described in Dr. Humphreys’ Manual mailed free, ‘parti ust > 1. Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations 2. Worms, Worm Fever “3. Colic, Crying, Wakefulness of Prfants 4. Diarrhea of Children and adults 7. Colds, Bronchitis > Faceacho. Neuralgia ©. Headache, Sick Headache, Vertigo \10. Dyspe 13. Crou; itarrk, Influenza, Cold in Head 20. Wavoping Cough 21. Asthma, Oppressed, Difficalt Breathing 27. Disorders of the 34. Sore Throet. Quinsy 77. Grip, Grippe, La Grippe . For sale by druggists everywhere, HUMPHREYS’ HOMEO, MEDICINE CO., | Cornexs William and Ann Streets, New York

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