New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 21, 1920, Page 5

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arys the kitchen of her own home Lot Wster Mary cooks dally for a fam- Clly of> fqur @duits. She brought to or kitchen an understanding of the istry of ¢ooking, gained trom of domestic sclence in a state ty. Consequently the advice s Is & happy combination of #d practice. Every recipe is her own, first tried out d ut her family table. jpyright, 1920, N. E. A.) . -— suimmer time the nicest way N & meal is with a frult cup ktail of some sort. While any slmply served and thoroughly d is delicious every hostess likes jhing “different.” * These - fruit tons may be new to you. ;. Cherry Cocktails, - “ 15 sweet cherries. f> "] feaspoon chopped and almonds. 1 .tablespoon strawberry julce. 1 teaspoon powdered sugar Pit and chill cherries. Sprinkle s+ with chopped nuts. Mix strawberry . Julce and sugar and let stand till . dugar is dissolved, Pour over cher- ries. Serve i sherbet glasses. The recipe mmkes one cocktall Fruit Soup. tablespoon arrowroot. Juice. blanched .y 2 1.2 cups rapsberry 3-4 cup sugar. 1-8 toaspoon salt, Dissolve arrowroot in a little cold water, add fruit julce. Doil until thick. Ada sugar and salt and stir thorough- ly. Chill and serve In sherbet glasses. This fruit soup must be very cold when served. Macedoine of Fruit. Lemon jelly. Strawberries Blackberries. Raspberries. Cherrles. Us. any good prepared Jjelly. Add “two tablespoons of sugar if the fruit "t tart. Put a layer of fruit, care- fully selected, In a mold. Pour over n-little of the Jelly, not enough to float the fruit When almost “‘set,’” ndd another layer of fruit and jelly. Let set. Continge until all is used. Put on lce to become very cold and VU SHU WITH AUTO BANDITS Yictims Bravely Battle Against Gunmen Spring Lake Beach, N. J., July 21. ~=A country-wide search is being made for three members of a band of motor bandits who aitacked an au- tomobile party of six persons on a lonely road near here Monday night. One of the motorists, Charles H. Hankins, of Point Pleasant, was shot in the head and stomach and seri- ously wounded. Three of the ban- dits escaped after the fourth, who is sald to have been the leader, was shot in the leg by a bullet from his own revolver. Leonard Foreman and Charles Hankins of Point Pleasant, Captain Willlam Finnegan of the Marine de- partment of the Lackawanna rail- road, Misses Katherine and Irene Kinney and Winifred Chafey, all of Point Pleasant, left a roadhouse near Sea Girt and were on their way to Point Pleasant shortly before 1 o'clock when a big touring car with four masked men pulled up beside them on a lonely stretch of the Ma- nasquan turnpike. Bare Hands Against Pistols, One of them commanded Foreman, who w driving, “to stop his car. Hankins thought friends were play- ing a joke and he laughed at the ban- dit who stood on the running board, with levelled revolver. The bandit car suddenly pulled ahead a short distance and was stopped across the highway. effectively blocking it Hankins, realizing that the men meant to hold up the party, jumped from the ecar to the shoulders of the man on the running board. Finnegan was attacked by two others and Fore- man grappled with the fourth. Hank- ins' opponent pulled the trigger of his revolver and Hankins fell to the roadway, his left ear shot off. The bandit sent another bullet into Hank- ins’ stomach. As Hankins lost consciousness, Miss Katherine Kinney sprang from the car and attacked the bandit who shot him. Her nails tore great ribbons of flesh from his face and she tugged at his hair until makses of it lay in the a. eh she and the other women screamed. Three of the bandits fled. Made Bapdit Shoot Himself. The fourth, Hankins' assailant, aimed at Finnegan, who grasped his wrist so suddenly that when he fired his pistol was lowered and the bul- let entered his own leg. Miss Kinney pluckily held the wounded bandit, although he threatened to kill her. Policeman Arthur Guenther heard the firing and reached the scene a few minutes aftes the bandit had shot himself. He arrested the man, who said he was Rifel Merige, 23, a former service man. Hankins and Merige were brought to the Ann May Me- morial hospital here. Though several hold-ups recently have been staged along the shore, Monday night's was the boldest yet attempted. It was probably the pluck of Miss Kinney in attacking the lead- er after he had shot Hankwins that turned the odds against the bandils. The girls were almost prostrated by their experience, but gave the police a good description of the clothing, build and veices of the escaped bandits. FARMER SAVED FROM BULL BY CHILDREN ‘Three ldttle Ones Seize Pitchforks and Drive Maddencd Animal AWa¥, » e Poughkeepsie, July 2l1.—~John Bat- tistoni, a farmer of West Mountain, near Stissing, was seriously injured by being gored by a mad bull early vesterday. He owes his life to the bravery of his three children, the oldest nine and the youngest not quite seven, who all grasped pitchforks and going bravely up to the animal, prodded it with the sharp tines until they drove it away from their father, who was lying prostrate qu the ground unable to defend himselt against the attack . Mr. Battistoni and a farm hand had tied the bull to the stall in the barn, where they were going to de- horn and ring him as for the past several days the animal had been showing signs of ugliness. The ani- mal slipped his festenings. Battistoni and the man ran, but Battistoni fell. The bull tossed Lim and as he struck the ground stamped him with his feet. I W. C. T. U. DECLARES WAR ON COSMETICS Campaign Against Use of Paint, Powder and Rouge by Women is Planned. New York, July 21.—War on pow- der and paint has been declared by the same women who were so im- portant a factor in effecting the pas- sage of the prohibition amendment. Satisfied with in that direction they are now turn- ing their attention to the abuse of cosmetics, and if their utterances and promises on the subject count for anvthing an anti-cosmetic amend- ment is to be feared. Fourteen hundred women, consti- tuting the membership of the Kings county Women’s Christian Temper- ance union, wiil form the nucleus of the organization to start the on- slaught on the paint and powder excess. § At the last meeting of the season of the Frances Willlard union of the Women's Christian Temperance union of New York, Mrs. George F. Pash- ley, state superintendent, announced the new platform of the organization and was hailed with loud applause. “By dint of persistence, influence and precept the Women’s Christian Temperance union will endeavor to wide out this cosmetic evil,” Mrs. Pashley said. “The immodesty of our young girls in dressing, the uni- versal popularity of paint and powder, have reached the stage where it be- hooves all Christian women to put forth their best efforts to save our girls from these demoralizing influ- ences.” | Mrs. Pashley said she thought things had grown much worse since the war. This she attributed to the fascination of men in uniform for young girls. “Trying to cater to and please the soldier,” she said, “has led to lax manners, which have brought calam- itous results.” MUST DEFEND RULING. Court Orders New York “Dry” Direc- tor to Qualify as Censor. New York, July 21.—The right of federal authorities to.limit physicians to 100 liquor prescription blanks every 90 days will be tested by an order obtained in the federal district court here yesterday directing their accomplishment | Charles R. O'Conner, federal prohibi- + tlon director for New York state, to show cause why he should not issue additional blanks to Dr. Melville A. Hays. The order is returnable to- morrow. Dr. Hays said he considers alcohol a necessary stimulant in treating some ailments, but he finds himself unable to secure prescription blanks from the prohibition director after using up his allotment. Are Women Naturally Despondent? A prominent writer so claims. ‘Women are constituted with a delicate organism and in nine cases out of ten mental depression may be at- tributed to an abnormal condition of the system, which e nervousness, sleepless headaches, causing d and as a result desp E. Pinkham'’s Vegetah simple remedy made herbs, is the one g this condition. It g of the trouble and pondency.—advt. Sl T~ U o 1e e u OI8O IDBI eI IGD.U (a1 Memorial lighthouse at Crown Po Lake Champlain, commemo discovery of Lake Champlain Champlain in 1609. Erected TR TR 312., g B ey Sadgiite Every motor highway and byj throughout picturesque England and New York is a of the long ““Socony Trail”’. T firm. Unmold and slice to serve. v A deliclous drink for a hot day |is cherry punch. - You nee nee ‘add no THE Standard Oil Company Of York was a pioneer in the oil ref industry. It has made petroleum hist by constantly improving the quality of products, and by diseovering and devel INg NEW ONes. { M Socony products and service have ki pace-with every step of progress made the petroleum industry—and with e requirement of those who depend upoq in any way. .. i 2 cup shredded pineapple. ups stoned cherries cup sugar quart ginger ale. fced tea. 1-2 cup cholco cherries (stoned). In a large bowl put juice of lem- ons, the oranges sliced, the pineap- . ble, the cherries and the sugar. Press with a wooden potato-masher and let stand for an hour or longer to ex- tract the juice. Press the frait to a pulp and strain. Add the strained julce to the ginger ale and tea. Add the banana, sliced, and the cherries cut in quarters. Put a tablespoon- ful of crushed Iice in each glass to sorve. Even the ice-man complains of hot weather and it isn’t to be won- dered at that the baker does. MARY. As aresult, Socony gasoline today represents h a century of refining experience. It is truly th standard of quality motor fuels. y statio are ever increasing in number because motorisf are demanding, more and more, a uglf nll clean and powerful gasoline, easily obtainable. Because Socony is always uniform, it always gi full mileage with low carbonization. And this true whether you buy it in Bar Harbor or Bt ff The economy of a permanent carburetor adj ment is possible only when you can obtain you regular gasoline whenever you need it. service enables Socony users to do this. For complete motoring satisfaction, begin Socony regularly today. Look for the red, white and blue Socony sign. STANDARD OIL CO.'OF_NEW .YO! CHIROPRACTIC TALK No. 6 Nature and Women (By J. A, VOLZ, THE CHIROPRACTOR) In this great country of ours, where ne and sanitation b almost perfect Tt is sufficiently sweet because of its own sugar developed in the “Jhere i richness to Gra ]se? not found in any othertgod,of pre 1 grains. Why order a package from the cer and share in i pleasures-and economies? - Mace by Postm Cereal Ca, Inc.Rattle Creek Mich. ocon]} function and Nature intended every woman (o be healthy, full of energy, | and strons. It she is not, something is getting the There must be int in the body, for nowh: o efforts of Nature be sidetracked regulates the body by means ef force. When the nervous system is nd unobstructed there ix full nmormal fow of nerve force or energy continually going through the nerves to every part of the body. Only the nerves convey this onergy. Pinch a nerve and the nerve force when your oot '‘goes to sleep.” B pressure o woman has n tound In 93 per eent. of e Chiropractic maents remove this pressure, permitting nor- y of nerve force to pass fresly to the weakened part or organ, and health is the result, as can be attested by thousands of women who thus have been enabled to vigor t where the cause dthers with similar red completely. So can consultation at office. REG. V.5. PAT. OFF. TN TN U e Ies Ol 1115 Ol s TEA DT e 1m0 Oblie 1161« for 30 407, Fourth Floor - Greing Tours: Mouduy. Tuesdas, Thure- ESM MRS. BERTY » arday. 8:90 TLL HAVE A SET OF WELL, YoU BIG SAPPY LOOKUT WHAT You DD o THIS UPHOLSTERING= OT {T ALL BLOTCHED UP SOl GREASE AW, MUFFLE TH MOAN 1 = GHE WON'T SEE "EM = <HEYLL BE COVERED OVER WITH SL\P-COVERS, M- M- M- M-~ PERCHED W MRS BERTYS BUS LIKE A srurreD owve = MEY] GET YOUR SHAPE OUTTA THAT CAR Y UPWOLSTERING OF YOUR CAR 1N FINE CONDITION = : Exchange "Arcade Studio Kodak Headquarters

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