PPSP^T Face Six
^ ■ -
CAP* MAT COUKTY TIMB8. SEA IBLR CTIT. M. a.
ill m fitERT ‘ wiih my lies
ereSL^WSr-^: PRACTICAL PLAN OUTLINED FOR KILLING
fiennan Agent Is Using His Whispering Propaganda.
PROOF IS NEVER SUBMITTED
Center* Efforts on RaliC'oui. Racial, Agricultural, Commercial and Such Top.ca as Are Likely to
Cause Friction.
It la brine promoted by the knlwrite The Truth About Price Fixing. It la Dot true that there has been an attempt “to regutnlr the prices of form product*." There line been nt attempt to regulate the price of any farm product but wheat. The allied COTeeomenta In Europe tied net np alo gle agencies to huy food supplies Id America. Their purchase* of American wheat were sufficient to control the price. They could drain America of Its wheat and lease our poorei clmasea to atarre. In order that rich and poor might be treated alike, II was necessary to establish a gorernmoot control of price and distribution And the price of $220 a bushel for No. 1 northern wheat baaed on Chiengo was ncreed upon by an Independent commissloa. appointed by President Wilson,' upon which commission the farming community was represented by six members out of eleven. la some Instances the food admin- ! latratlon has intbrrened. at the re-
quest of the produci rx. to ohtala a set- ,
tlement In a local dispute about the , price of milk. In the case of pork products the food administration, on I he recommendation of the producer*, undertook to use the purchases of the
allied governmenta for tlie purpose of j
matntalnlng a minimum price for live hogs In Chicago. Beyond this Invited assistance In the case of milk and
AND DRESSING HOGS FOR SUPPLY OF MEAT j
The Dressier Separate Skirts
(Prom th* Conunlt'ee on Public Informa-
tion. Washington. D. C.) By HARVEY (PHIQQINS.
(This la the serond of three aruclee by tor o'Higgins dealing with the propaganda of the enemy In our country.) In a previous article we have noted how the German agent* in thl* country are using their “whispering propaganda" to set us against the French, the British and the Japanese by circulating among us all aorta of slanders and 111 reports against these allies. In the campaign to promote domestic disunity the ppvGerman rumor-monger haa been even busier. He Is working here exactly as he worked In Italy, upon religious prejudices. He has spread the report that the Masonic orders have protested to the govern-
ment against the Knights of Columbus _____ ___ ^ _ __
bring permitted to build re-reatlon huts In the ramp*. No such protest 1 was ever madr. He has circulated stories that Cathollr nuns were refused permission to do Red Cross work unless they wore Red Cross nnlfortfis, snd that Catholic soldier*—and Jewish soldiers—were being discriminated against by Red Cross officials. AH such stories are outright inventions. At the same time he passe* around every kind of rumor of Cathollr disloyalty. suen as the famous one that President Wilson's secretary, a Cetbrilr. I tad been executed for treason. He has filled the mall* with printed gopies of an alleged "bloody oath of
HOG HELD IN GOOD POSITION FOR STICKING.
tl'repsrrd by t
h« Palled Slate* Depsrt-
„ of Agriculture)
Ordinarily It I* not neceasary to
pork, and the regulation of the price „„„ or a hog before sticking.>1of wheat, the food administration haa > though thl* is done In some localities not interfered with the price of farm humane reasons. If the hog la products, except In so far as the con- rtuck ^pout being stunned, be should trol of sugar prices has affected the „„ ju* back when stack. *■» of sugar beets. Two men can reach under and gmap The Truth About Profiteering. the leg* on the opposite side af the Those measures of food control hare body and with a quick Jerk turn the been directed more against the middle- hog over on his hack. One man can man than the producer. While fixing gt Bn g astride the body with Ms lar* for the firmer an arbitrated price for jnat hack of the bog's shoulder*, taking his wheaL they hare established a g good grip on *he foreleg*. In thl^ system of licensing, by which m'ller*. position the hog can be held la place bakers, grocers and wholesale and re- while the other man doe* the sticking, tall dealers have been prevented from Sticking, profltii ring on the farmer's dollar. A narrow. stralght-bUded knife, eight The fuel administration has fixed the inenes long, sene* very well for atickpriee of coal, because the miner would i n g a hog. The knife should be pointed
work for reasonable *
s as long directly inward the root of the tail
as the mine owner was making an no- at ,d held In a line with the back bone, reasonable gain. Profiteering in army Thrn*t the knife In six or eight inches nnd navy contracts and In ahipbulld- directly in front of the breastbone.
.> r^n lnt h * 51 "“'PI** b r ,hr P 0 *" «*• The knife should be kept In a straight o wJ. nrinted in ,rMn ronrT ’'«* to 0x ,br P ric ® line so a* not to stick a shoulder, raua- ^ I 1 , " l ro * t P ,u * “ reamonMe profit; and laf; plood to clot, which results In Ihe Record because It was read Into a thr | DrrfUP 1n ^ pa* gone U “
debate Wore the house of repre- j workman. Dot to his employer.
wa«e in trimming or a shoulder which keeps poorly. Thin severs Ihe arteries In the neck and will Insure better bleeding. Avoid slicking the heart, for
any country. But the tax on ex- , f ,hi F i* done the blood will not be . profits and on swollen Incomes pumped from the arteries. After stick•nfl*c*tcs the Illicit harvest and pours , n - the hog may be turned over on the
scntatlves on nn election protest. In profitwlnj . ^ not ypt ^ rn ,,,^ arder that ll might be denounced as u Th) . way fo ^ , t ^ not , M ^. n foun(1
forgery and a libel upon a Catholic- ln mud Mate. A pro-Gc-rman agent ha* | __ been caught distributing cople.-- of this
-bloody oath" In New Jersey and sent , t intV^'^ntirs'^'r rt^L^The 'JZ'
grievances that remain are not class grievance*. They are chiefly the In- ,
Scalding and Scraping.
In Spain nnd the Catholic countries pvltahle common hardships due to a ^Vin^uror** af South America the kaiser p~ck a. war that ha* drown mill Win. of pr«v for and -the champion of Catholic Bavaria and durtlTt . w .rkers Into the world'. : u .c^Tov^f^ren^r,^ Oa*hollo Austria against Protesunt nrmle. and tncrewwM the coat of the , ‘‘ Z. England. Infidel France, and social- necessaries of Hie by decreasing the mr>l[t . f . which tstic Italy, the enemy of the Vatican." available supply. In that hardship ^
He docs not preserve (hat pose In the former* share, as we all snare. Catholic Belgium or Catholic Poland. Kainerltns on Both Sides. A,on,: wl,h ,hl " ,0 ^ ,h ® h^vy labor can be avoided by means
inrt^ I tDrm * r •K» ln « 'h" government's war of , hoist, such as a block and tackle.
measures there ha* been proceeding a for lifting the hog In and out of ihe
ta Italj the t.eiman Bgrnt used it In . , wln rtmiuilcn to arouse feeling elding vat or when hanging th, hug
I aeslnst him hv *een*ine hi* western for removing entrails.
If the water Is heated In the bosse.
t receptacle
i scald a hog. unless the hog Is too large for the barrel, in which case a
used. Hurt) " “
*n unsuccessful attempt
Italian Cathol'c*. aad now 'n omer-, farnitT1l . Ir|g;w , of gntoyalty. That kw serusea the Italian Cathollr* of a wort „ d of |b( , wmy . • having *ucmm!>ed to the seduction. Thr west.ni farmer* have contributed *s a matter of fart, the Catholic chap- |hpIr „ , od .In* in the Italian army were mmons , lrafl> „ , „ ar ^
the first to discover this prnnugmndn j ^ve sut.«-rlbcd to the I.ltH-rty kmong thr soldier*, reported it to the |oan|| and xn thP war re-
It should be boiling when removed from the stove nnd carried to the barret At the time the hog I* scalded
any rltlxent. tpo water should be at a temperature
if 185 to 195 degrees F. If no therm amis at hand, stick the finger into
work with unfailing patriotism. ( | IP water three time* In rapid succes-
affleer*. and combated It diligently. | , j(
Various persons and publications I They have had their quam-l* with th* , lno . and If It burn* severely the third
men whom they suspected of exploit- || B ie tije water is alxiut right. If the nemv in,: 0,rm ' , " bor b “* , '* d 118 water Ik too hot the hair la likely to
i "'tVh <|UarTrU ^ i,h ,u employer*. But It Is »*, causing even more trouble than if
' : ecanomlr quanto, and ns long os too old. a too spoonful of lye or it is cooducted without Interfering shovelful of wood ashes added with tlw- tiatlon'K war work the chuigo eri . r , - M gallons cf water will aid In f dislortlly is ItKclf trollorouf. In removing the scurf. After cither one nil these disputes K is certain that of these alkali* is added the waft* 4-ncujy agtfi'j. will Iw found on tsith diuuld be stirred thoroughly, sld.-s. They at one preach violence i nMTt lh e h.-s hook in the lower among tin- I. TV " :,,,| l lead taoba ) uu ,,| uct . t i„. hog on the table and - "orknicn a<-cu*ed of Inring ,iide It into the hanto. The rear end 1 W. W ». They piny Ihe Knine game of , b ,. h( « | s ^id.d first for the ream every quarrel with whl.h they enn Umt , f ^ water Is too hot and l.oj- to divide the iviuntry. Re ware. Ih( . hair set* It can be removed easier Mr. < any nttempt to make fnmi ,| |t . r ,^ r .hun from the fore part
you Is Hieve that any cIukk of American cliir.-ns as a cIosk, are disloyal.
It l» a German He.
that made a living out of sectarian animosities before the war are unconkclonuly doing the work of thi by asKistlng the spread of antl-Cath-
alic and anti-Protestant siand-rx.
They can only lie slopped by an appeal
to public reprobation. They arc representing the trouble in Ireland as
purely a religious troul lc, and the vpposltlon to •-.nscriplh-n In Quet>ec *» the xatnc sort of thing. Even Itudyani Kipling recently fall Into the
Crop ct-d •h-nouneed the pqie and the C.-.ii-r and the neutrals In one
brealh. Such d>-nuneivil»ns overhs*W tlw f».ct tliat Cardinal Merrier, the f Sth dlr prelate of It. Iglom. hn« h.s-n
the most effective popular op,HS.ent of
• kulM-r that Kurape has itroduced.
move tbs entrails. Cut through tbi
midUne. beflnnlng at the cop and coo ,
tlnue cutting down to the head. Cal
arc nod the rectum on each aide ant
pull It out between the pelvic bones. Place the knife between the first and second fingers of the left bund, insert ing the fingers where the opening ha; tieen wade and with the right banc
force the knife down to the breast i
The fingers will serve as s guide In making the cut and protect the Intestinvu from bring cut. Whet this opeslci; has been made remove
the fat whim surround* the stomach , . ruttln, th. Kflllet „ won a* It 1* drawn TV, -.pamtup far pooch. Col oo UO. ot lh. of ■ow— lo .Ht: tholr „oc.p lo looora It OOP poll It oot .12 *”* ““S lOoppmrtjCTt Now rat throof h tht >111 popllo ood Mrel*. Sotta. It oh iteastbooo, bcCnolo, ot th„ Iroot rad «>»'' -rttbrnt wloo. I. drat o l»Cot opward olltbU, td ooc old,. Ke Portoora-K 1. o»d to. oboot .11 tbo ok,v. tbt pluck, which cooBloti ot th. "«v Ronurats ot womco. tram bob, bran. lobh. lullct mol wlodplpd. b) tw.llppraw TScoldt I. . “J' , unio, the dlnpbtofoo. TbU l> lb. « cooipotl«». Wt to opprarad b, tb. mcmbraoc which raporatra the ocriot »»•< womra .od „[ the eben Ireto the tidioocb. bow.li wpllok ore tnml opd fnmlbur to c—CJ
and other abdominal organa Cut Jus! 00r
the light and dark portions o! Beside* these silks for dressy sepn-
the dlsphragm.
nU skirts there are novelties in besv-
Cut down along the backbone and H ler wesvex for sport ^kirts. The atiort ..ill be easy to pull cut the entirt sMrt. in fact, has roached height* of pluck. Put a piece of corncob or smal beauty and style far In advance of any block of wood in the bog'a mouth *< thing In It* animated nnd remarkable air cm, circulate. Wash out the InsW* history. Possibly the restraint and rent the carcass with cold water and s ^rre •hnt mark, wartime designing doth. Take a stick about a foot or IF has operotetj to the* advantage of Inches long nnd spread open the aide* sport apparel. But the time is comallowing a free orculation of air. Tt ln S when n new ctacs. attth a new facilitate cooling, the bead can be re «mme. will be formed for many of the moved and the carcass split or sawed smart. Informal garment* that now down the backbone. In splitting ot come labeled for sport wear, sawing the carcass be careful to cut at A handsome separate skirt, to be near the mid-line as possible. worn with a dark or Ugh' blouse, preLeaf Lard. ■ I « u lI * new features In U-e plc-
I ure. Of course It haa panels to make
Thl* Ik i
*tnnt i
nation :
1 in-lslu
- Austria. Anyoi
lea today 1* m-tlnr ok u German agent, whether he knows It <»r im>I. a* truly a* If he wen* blowing up munition plants. All loyal rttlxen* should dlsi-ourage him. Aggravating Our Race Problems.
The Parson.
At nn A-hlund avenue home they have the fashion of giving names to chickens nnd other creature* about the place. Some days ago the mother bouxht a flue blaek rooster in tnarkel. "W i'll urine him 'the I'ur.-oa,'" said
the molh'-l
r thr
ml faile
II.- ha
of the hog. The hog should be kept moving in the water to be Min- that no part "iil rest against the ride of the barrel. Occasioually the hog should he drawn out of the water to air. when the hair may be "tried." When the mlr and scurf slip easily from the surface. scolding is complete. Pull ihe luig out upon the table and remove hair and scurf from the leg* and feet it once. The simplest way to un liish this is to twist thr legs in both
m-w preacher land*. Use the hog hook to remove | 1*1 to dinner, he dew-claws at the same time. Re- j • awaiting the nove the hair and acurf from the rear] iv i-auie hur- tod of the hog by means of a beU-j
in There the , tii.i|>ed scraper.
to h- ..n h.-r t'ut the skin sl«out threi- or four! t Nsiii I.nth- Inches long Just ImHow the horks In for liii.i '-r." both hind leg*. Loonen the tendon* aid M.ir.-uret. and insert the gambrel. Be sure that •*l and a . tbo hath tendon* In each leg an- iiio*ened
before tn»ertiug the gambrel. Now
iii-fw-n!. over- scald the front |wrt of the hog. After uti-ii si mi-- di» the front iiurt of the hog l>- m aided l. nil exi-i ilia liUll II out on the Uhle a* liefore. Be-
ll vi' the hair and scurf from the ear*.
- foi cleg* and head Immisliately. a* .,, th these lorto cool very Qllldtiy. Uae states half Hie |k-II >hBpi*l scraper to remoVi ii! pH a-ut rn- *'vnamii.g hair and acurf. If the lialr uhi.-ii i,id* fair ' ' F'eld in any particular re nimrtiiiil ei.d* * , '*cr iluii |Kirtioo with a gunny .1 .1 ...t .. . and i-.ur on hot water. When tie
While the carcass Is still warm, remove the leaf lard or kidney fat. Tbti | facilitates cooling the carcass and les* | ens the danger of the bams and loins , souring. The leaf lord should be spread out on a table to cool, with the thin membrane side turned down. Ths j gut fat should not be mixed with lha
leaf lurd in rendering. Cooling the Carcaae.
The cart.oa should he cooled after ala lightering, but not allowed to freeze Temperature cannot be controlled on . the farm, but it la poasiblo to kill when i the weather I* favorable. Select a day in -Inter w*'«n there Is chance for i cooling the carcnaa before the surfs.* | freezes. The desirable temperature for cooling meat I* 34 to 40 degree* Fahrenheit. In the summer time It t* , necessary to have refrigeration. In the fall it Is best to kill In the evening allowing th- carcass to cool overnight Hung the i-itrcnsa In a dark cellar or » coo! room In the ham before the flh-> can gel ut IL Freshly Wiled meat al> sorbs odor* very readily; do not hang the cairns* In s freshly painted rootn or In u room w ith tar. kerosene or gas
oUna.
A pork carcass should not he cut up until it is thoroughly cooled.
It eligible to the company of olbo fashionable clothes—the panel U *1 ways among those present In sny semblnge of new appareU. Thm three of them, one nt the front i’J two. shorter, at either aide—all 9* lahed with fringe. The shaped girth with pointed end. Is of the sol the skirt I* noticeably longer tbu sHrts have been Tor This particular,aklri Is In one of IN rich shades of terra cotta—whirl rote i* called by Several new nuns-* tliii acaaoa ns “mchopiny,‘*"cmit tod ■« carole." TW In** de*eitbe* It N' lint In tiny Of the fasMongofe etHot* only n.-eda a Mouse of gsorgntt match it to pises a fcandsoipe ro«tf nt tbs command of Its -owner. WM lighter blouse* on# ‘hty rtTC odwrtttt of variety apd It remains a *-T»=a mn. tc< Cold Brocaded Ribbon Metal ribbon* and ribbon in h* linnt colors such v merai'l cerise and royal bine, richly hroe*4»4 In gold nnd In contrasting ciHor*. «* used for girdle* on dark colored « black allk ‘
Suits Piquant and Plain
(Prepared by Um United tSlato* I p»rtmtr.t of Agriculture.) Make your work count for the ' most by barking the nation's si rlcultural war program: Back up the county agent; Back up the farm bureau; Bark up the stale agricultural ; college; Back up the IL 8. dejiartm-at of ugriculturn; Ami by so doing help— BACK THE KAISER OFF : THE EARTH
i *<-urf Is rstooved pour »r the entire cnrru*• and means af a knife, the hair Hun* up thr hog and -tfu] of cold water over iiHl Ki-rape from the *ur--.itiing dirt and M-urf. *
noving Entrails-
bog U Imng up sad (hr r»r tor a-st *1ep is to fw | fl.
UTIUZE ALL OF WINDFALLS By Picking Up snd Feeding to Hogi Much Trouble for Next Year-
Can Be Prevented.
By picking tip snd feeding to hogi nr ut Hiring !<■ other ways oil of tht apple* that fall, much trouble f>4 next year run l>e avoided. Til- larvar or worm form of jhe codling motli U often found lb these, and if di-Ktroyd Ju-t that murk is done towards pro •Jui'lng Iwiter fruit next year. Tc pnxlucv giMid fruit one must be on
the Job all thr time.
them plain, some of them piquunt but none of them fn**v With the »u|iply of fabric* growing precious no ros- ■ Utuer venlures to um- more tlian the reguiotloo allotllM UT «f rHoth Iherrfore *kii1s are narrow and straight and
cut t
is in a Ktuooth-*nrtaiv might he davetyn. '' oo:
hroadcloth, In deep
and eoiplnceiaciits in lb*- c« MO HM. Th- awl Mas front. fsKtening with u '*' r button In gray to the •••B
Htertnl. Bat
put to I
•implied and given U* a van
nodrl* It) •'«! suit* and I lo th-tu grist credit. Fklrts are a little longer
have li-en. aliK-r they mi Inches below tie- sho top
tops are not a* high a*
and
.leaded Into .
hock Tlie high muflh r crtlldr—tlie cuff* vrrj
IsWIgi i
skirts ’
Roving Dog Is Harmful.
ban they materials, and thl* be two | »des out by uniting clot! and shoe | A very *ti»|4e and p*'* ir> were, j v«Hoors appears at the '
and rather large » to pieces let with Individu»l
The cult at the toft Uf the p 1 furs 1

