New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 11, 1920, Page 5

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Suits, GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE MEETING THE NEW CONDITIONS REDUCED PRICES Trousers Overcoats, Men’s,Women’s and Children’s Shoe! chenite v, M S WITH R an( We Are Going to Give the Public What It Wants LOWER PRICES The Original Prices on Every Garment. i done or is being prepared | table. | | | | | IGtchen - In the kitchen of her own home | hemistry of cooking, gatwed from Mudy of dowestic sclence in a state university,. Cunsequently the advice ho offers is a Lappy cumbination of she gives is her own, first tried our | theory and gpractice. K rocipe ister Mary cooks dally for a family of four a ults. She Lrought to her“ kitchen an understanding of the | fad sorved ot her family taple. | There are some vegetables that are sasily spoiled in the cooking by the Innocent addition of salt at the wrong time. For instance, ¥ fresh corn is cooked In what is known as boiling salted water the kernels are made lough. If the salt s added when the corn 8 half done the flavor is just a kood and the vegetable is not :mwh-l enod. H This rule applies especially to the | root vegetables coming in season now. Turndps can be salted and peppered when the butter is added. Beets, car 1 rots, onions, parsnips and even pota toes have a different flavor if the salt \s added when the vegetable is half RASH ALL OVER BABY'S FACE And Neck. Used To Scratch and Irritate, Cuticura Heals, “When my baby commenced teething he had a rash come all over his face and neck. He used to scratch itand keep it irritated all the time. He was fussy and kept me awake n: ‘‘I then Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuti- cura Ointment he was completely healed, in two weeks.” (Signed) Mrs. R. C. Lenfest, Liberty, Maine. Once clear, hcp‘:-ur skin clear by using Cuticura and Oint. ment_for -day tollet purposes and Cuticura Talcum to powder and perfume. Nothing better fi Ay ! center of each turnip. Menu for Tomorrow: Breakfast—Halves of grapefruit, salt mackerel, baking powder biscuits, coffee Luncheon—cCarrots. in hot rolls, preserves, tea. Dinner—Cream of chestgut soup, t beef, mashed potatoes, hot French sldw, blushing apples with or- ange sauce, coffee My Own Recipes. Roasts are always the cheapest cuts of meat to buy. If a roast is too much for one meal there are plenty of ways of usng up the left-over meat. Steaks and chops are higher in price, contain more waste and don't seem as “fill- ing."” turnip cups, Carrots in Turnip Cups. 4 medium-sized turnips. 4 carrots 1 cup white sauce. Pare turnips and pare smoothly- With a grapefruit knife cut out the Cook in boiling water till tender. Put a little butter in each case and fill with the carrots which have been diced, cooked and mixed with white sauce. Put in the oven for a few minutes to be sure the dish is hot and serve at once. Cream of Chestnut Soup. 1 pint chestnuts, 1-4 cup butter. 3 tablespoons flour. 1 cup milk 1 cup cream. Salt and pepper. Cook nuts for 15 minutes. Shell and blanch. Cook in water to cover till tender. Add water as needed. Press through a sieve: Add salt and pepper and set on back of range to keep hot. Melt butter, stir in flour. Add milk and cream, stirring con- stantly. Add to broth and stir and cook until the soup boils up once. Serve at once. Ginger is a great asset to character if you don’t get “snappy” over it. MARY. ‘WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world’s stand- ard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles— GOLD MEDAL OQ The National Remedy of Holland for eenturies and endorsed by Queen Wilhel- mina. At all druggists, three sizes. Lock for the Goid Medal on every bes for the! Windows and in the Store GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE FAMINE IN CHINA WORSE THAN EVER Former Local Pastor Sends Letters' Explaining Conditions Letters from missionary workers in China have been received by Mrs. F. G. Platt of Grove Hill relating the horrible conditions throughout that country. One letter is from Rev. W. F Rowlands, formerly assistant pastor of the local First Congregational church. Another is from Rev. and Mrs. A. D. Heininger who relate the experiences they have encountered there. Rev. Mr. Rowland’s Letter. Tha following is an extract from a letter from Rev Mr. Rowlands dated in the early part of October: ““This is the worst famine China has known for 50 years, and it promises to be a dreadful one. The area affected contalns from twenty to forty millions of people, in most of which there has been no harvest of any sort this year, while in many parts it was a very poor one last year also. The things that people are eating at this early aste are unimaginable, and what they are going to do the rest of the winter it is impossible to say. We are making a desperate effort to give a little help to our own Christian people,and are now raising funds to help the most needy ones to buy wheat for the spring crop, which is always sown at this time of the vear. Of course this won't give them bread to eat for six months or so, but it will be a great thing if they can exist in the hope of a harvest next May or June.” Rev. Mr. Heininger’s Letter. The following is from Rev. A. D. Heininger, dated Sept. 1st. “My survey leads to the conclusion (confirmed by the observations of others) that with such crops as there are to be harvested, together with leaves, alfalfa,and such food as they can get, most of the people will be able (some onrly with great difficulty) to take care of themselves for two or three months. Beginning with January and lasting for five months (until wheat harvest) there will be actual starvation on a large scale. Whether life is saved depends upon * whether help comes from outside believe that you want those of us who are in the midst of it to stand idly by while thousands of our human-kind are dying of starvation: nor do we he- lieve that anything iess than our ut- most efforts will be truly representa- tive of Christianity. Merely to preach a gospel of heavenly bliss will not suf- fice when men, are dving the slow death of starvation. Grain can be brought in from more favored regions, distribution centers can be organized, work can be ar- We do not | | | women and children | ! famine area. | me through seventy or eighty villages, ; from my cart, | It work for their food. But all of this requires money. Two dollars per per- son per month will sustain life. Take your pencil 1 fizure it out—7,000,- 000 people, five months, $2,000 per mo. Drafts on checks to | Frederick 14 Beacon street, Boston m “For Famine Relief, Techow, -Crina.” Word Picture of Condition. Extracts from report of Nathaniel Peffer, authorized correspondent of the New York papers and representa- | tive of a group of Pekin papers, taken from Pekin and Tientsin Times of October 2, 1920, follow: “I have juft come through one the worst stricken districts in My route has of the taken at most of which I have alighted gathered a cluster of villagers about me and got their story. is on the whole a monotonous HER SICKLY CHILD DOCTORS DIDN'T HELP Strong and healthy now. Mother says Milks Emulsion saved its life. “Last May my three-year-old baby was taken very ill, got so bad that we expected her to die at any time. Had four doctors but they did not know what ailed her and finaily stopped coming. She had been sick about 5 months when I started wiv- ing her Milks Emulsion. 1 noticed results from the first and by the time | she had taken 2 bottles she was ab—| solutely strong and healthy. I am thankful to say Milks Emulsion saved her life."— Mrs. Willis S. Texas. For restoring appetite, health and strength in sickly children, mothers will find Milks Emulsion the thing they have always sought. Most chil- dren like to take it, because unlike many emulsions and tonics, it really tastes good. Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nu- tritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy, natural bowel ac- tion, doing away with all need of pills and physics. It promotes ap-! petite and quickly puts the digestive | orsans in shape to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and strength, Milks Emulsion is strongly recom- mended to those whom sickness has weakened, and is a powerful aid in resisting and repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are prompt- Iy relieved This is Pitts, Nacogdoshes, the only solid emulsion made, and o palatable that it is eaten with a spoon like ice cream. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee—Take six bot- tles home with you, use it according to directions and if not satisfied with the results, your monecy will promptly refunded. Price $1.50 per bottle. The Milks Co.. Terre Haute, Ind. soid by arug. ! no more leaves and weeds, | resulting from underfeeding, suicides | of resignation in those who have not ! must die | Operations Unnecessary one village typical of another, this belt is _typical of the conditions Throuzhout the four stricken provinces Chihli, Shan- tung, Honan and Shansi. The fate of the million and a half or two ! million people in this belt will be the ' fate also of the twenty-five or thirty millon affected by this that promises to be China’s greatest tragedy since the famous fam®ne in the early seven- ties of the last century. Suffering Just Beginning. “The tragedy is as yet in its pro- logue. There is suffering already, prodigious suffering, but it only a black promise of what is to come. It is in eight or nine weeks that the crisis will be reached and the whole population will be affected. Then, wnless help is forthcoming on a scale that staggers the imagination, there is only one prospect for all but an infinitesimal proportion of the population-—death, ““The situation in brief is this: From one-third to two-thirds of the people in the district I have visited are now living on a diet at least part of roots, weeds, tree-leaves, chaff of grain ond cotton seed waste. After the frost sats in, when there will these will be at least half the population with nothing to eat, literally nothing. One could drop down or almost any vil- | lage by aeroplane, spend two hours | there and get an accurate picture of the conditions in four of the eightcen provinces. story, just whole of Soil Barren. | “Everywhere it is the same: Soil barren as in midwinter, prices 30ar- ing, a diet principally of chaff, etc. for the moajority, ch: dren sold wlere ever possible; deaths from cholera of individuals or even wiwic families in cases of extreme despair. One thing one does not find, bewailing or lawlessness. There is a detached air had s real meal for weeks that is not understandable to one from the west. If they have no food they A city man who did not know from the look of the soil whether the crops were good/or bad and who did not speak the Ch nesc would not know from their manner cr atticude that there was anything abnormal. Yet many of these peo- ple have but a few weeks to live. Bankers’ Statement. “In Ning Ching I talked to the | two principal bankers who are rais- ing funds for the purchase of grain to be sold at cost. Said one of them: “The crop has been almost an absolute failure, after two or three | is as yet | e | Dr. Leonhardt says Hem-Roids should completely relieve any form of Piles. It gives quick action even in old stubborn cases. It's an internal treatment that removes the cause. Clark and Brainerd sells and guar- vears of almost failure. I am in touch with ahout 10,000 families in this vicinity. I should say that eigh: out of ten must die unless saved from outside. Excepting the very small element of wealthy merchants and hig landowners, the better classes are now eating chaff. The others cannot afford this. leaves and weeds.” O ———— |Walls and Woodwork Your rooms will be more cheerful,’ more attractive and cosier when ! walls and woodwork are pamted artistically with. Dutch Boy White-Lea d Dutch Boy Flatting Oil. wilk ;:ve a dnmnccwn, m.‘:hn younfl be il proud of. Any tint you wish—mnd x crofy wash- rllfle,n{:mt:r’yl’ surface. * | Talk with us about yummunvrmo- ing. We can give you some good- {e—and save you some: money- J Reduced Prices Are Posted in O Lift Off Cornsl. For the others there are | Doesn't hurt a bit! D “Freezone” ox an achin stantly. that corn stops shortly you lift it fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a ti “Freezone” for a few ¢ to remove every hard o or corn between the toes, luses, without soreness or wm WILLIAM C. SODERG

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