Cape May County Times, 11 June 1920 IIIF issue link — Page 6

Fifteen-DollBr We Htlf cup rugar. 1 tablespoons flort 1-J tables poor butter. Juice 1 iemou 1 eg* yolk. 1-2 cup milk, 1 white of «**. few Brain* salt. Mix auxar and flemr and me'ted batter, lemon Juice, e** yolk, slightly boa ten; milk, egg athlte, Btlffly beaten, and salt. Bake tr. one cnuit. and cortr with tcoringne or not. ae deelred Merinue—Three egg white*. 1 1-2 cups powdered sugar; scant: grated Hnd orange or lemon; beat egg whites with eggbeater until stiff, gradually add I-S of t-ttgar beating rigorously: fold In remaining sugar; add grated orange or temor. rind in flavor, an.; bake S minutes In a moderate oven.

Lemon PU

Mix 1 cup sugar and 3 tablespoon* cornstarch together, add 1 cup boiling water, stirring constantly. Cook until clear; then add 1 teaspoon of butter and the beaten yolk of 2 etg* ptwie and rind of one lemon. Let cool Line plates with paste. Prick the paste and bake Kill with lemon

Meringue—Beat whites until stiff, add 1 1-2 tablespoon lemon Juice and 8 tabletpoona sugar, and 1-4 teaspoon

vanilla.

Pumpkin Pie 1 1-4 cups steamed pumpkin, forced through a strainer. 1-f cup sugar. 1-C teaspoon clmamoxi. 1-4 teasr ger, 1-g teas won cloves, t-2 teaspoon salt. 1 slightly beaten egg and 7-fc b lx ingredients in order given. Make in a pie t*-j llne> 4 with

pavtry.

L tmon Pi e Juice and grited rind of 3 lemon*. 3 eggs, 3 tab], spoons sugar to each ’em on. No top crust R' ubarb Pie Mix togethe' 2 cups of rhubarb cut small pletes. 1 cup of sugar, 2 tablespoons butter. 2 Ublespoons of flour. 1 egg. 1 teaspoon lemon Juice and a pinch o( salt Bake with two

crusts.

Mr wpple Pie

One can of jtneapple chopped » fine. 1 1-2 ; ape of sugar, 2 tggs. 1 Urge tableepco ; corns .arch, 1 cup hot

One of the cowboys working at whom we came In contact” remarked Universal City under the direction oi McRae. ~was so sincere that we never Jack Ford was bargaining with thai j worried about bur money or othe youthful rrtist for one of his several belongings Only once, in the tnhorses. The price asked by Ford was terior of China, we met a cross-eyed much more than the bronco boater Inn-keeper who did not impress as as

FASHION NOTES Interesting I urns for the Fair Sex

mixture end cover with meringue and water, a little salt stir all together

. bake tintll the meringue is brown. and cook v-ith

Baby Sucks It’s Thumb And all the Scientists in the World Can’t Stop Him

How ir It to be explained that i!,tng t{ m habit was the worst thlm baby, when stni too ronag to Units; jtLat could happen »o a biby. we be what is going on around It and -ill.- gan to try to cure this one of suckout being taught, acquires what manvjing bis thumb. Ws tried S0 i 0 . coctors and demists declare to be : tlon, but be enjoyed the bluer taste.

very bad habit? Baby mud-wasp which hatch after their mothers and fathers ate deed know how to build their oompHcated mud nests without being t.- gbt. In this human habit of’ thumb-sucking, which has appeared successively generation after generatlo* In very you nr bablw, or a slmllar Instinctive or hereditary charac

it is hereditary/ writes David Pal|v:lillo in the Journal of Heredity, •’ig P beyond qnestion Injurious* "Doer. It produce protmdli.g teeth ant*, flattened thumbs, arch the root of the mouth, or arc these changes merely coincidental with the habit? This Is wbM Dr. Alexander Graham Bef. has to say about the thumhsucklng habit: “Tbe mere act of suction could produce no suth effect as protrusion oj the teetb. On tbe contrary, wltc a partial vacuum in the n.outh the atmospheric pressure from outside would tend to push the teeth in, no: out. Thtfltry would Indicate that the act of .ucllon should actually be beneficial to the plastic growin" mouth by bringing atmospheric pressure into play from outside, lending to consolidate the mouth and oppose anv tendency do the spreading of the

part*.

Any spreading action could only be due to pressure applied from within. A pill id, for example, might press his tongue against tbs roof of the moot*-, or against tne tack of the front teeth and thus produce a pressure wuich If constantly applied would result ir a rpresdlng action, but there Is no evidence that a child ever does this. “Sucking the thumb 1* such an in stlactive action with very young children that It la probable that mom labtes. if not all. Indulge In the habit dur.ng the first >eai of life. Some people hare protruding teeth in adult Hfe and if yon examine their past blstorj 11 » probable that most of them sucked thetr 'humbs n Infancy. Hence we are apt to Jump to the conriarion that the sucking of the thumb was the cause ©C the profusion of the teeth. In spite of the f,.ct that will be at once perceived by those wlio know onythlng about atmospheric pressure that the act of suction couH net possibly produce any such effect. “The inea tfcst auction could produce a spicadinr action in the mouth Is as ridiculous as tbe very common notion that - n eking the thumb cause** a child to become cross-eyed/ Mr. Fairchild says fhat the Importance of being able to make or break * habit at will was so drilled' Into elm by one of bis friends th.it it ha.* come to seem one of the great

thing: In Rfc.

"I determined that xuy flrvt ba should have a Jutr starL-aad should not be allowed tn form any undo slrabf habit.” nays Mr. Fairchild "•'.Imobt Immediately, or certainly whet he was only a week or two old. be got his rhumb into bis month BmyhMy aasaiuod that this was thhnffiniilno of a bad habit. Some pre dieted that he would make his front tevth protrude and spoil the shape of bU n.outh. Uher* knea he would « uln . toe ItV'l.s of bU thumb, end others ‘ \ said tho action would be connected i

We out tiny mittens on his hau.ir and be either sucked them unm they were wet through or pulled them cfl We tied bis arms, but he always straggled loose. We bought those round aluminum handballs which arc supposed to be a real cure, but be bnmped his head with them tad got Into almost hysterical fits of temper. The weeks stretched lc"* months shd we did not give up the fight. As the months became years wc Igled bribery and corruption. We threatened and we punished. The sccoud baby followed In her brother's footsteps, with varia'Vjns. rnd tbe third haby embroidered the fhumt sucking habit by twisting htr nighdresa or sheet around her Uiini

finger.

"By this time we began to realLc that we were confronted by something which was not so simple nc ore of the habits of later life and «e finally gave up. There seemed to be something almost Instinctive In the wa* this habit resisted our treatment, am' wc began to suspect a hereditary cb i racier in In”

wa* willing to pay and he tried to withdraw from the trade without ad milting tbe real reason. nch tbe sale the /Irector remarked, “George, yon can't beat thii pony, hell travel twelve mllee without -KiWag.” “Then I can't use him.” answered ic cowboj. quite relieved. "Mi Kha Jt Is down Aie canyon, only eight ■lies from here." Eddy Polo, who la now working on the final episoueas of his sertel, “The Vanishing Dagger.' at Universal Cit? U thinking of spilling hi* cam# Ed-d4-e, hereafter. He recently saw an fcdvertbwment of an Eddy P^Sric. r ator. He doesn't want to be assocl.t ted will a refrigerator, be aayx, as his picture* are all hot staff. Henry McRae, who Just returni ^ from an eight months' tour of the Orient with a Universal company -headed by Marie Walcamp. filming a serial, was telling a group of .fallow directors about the trip and of the remarkable courte*- with which be had met In the far-off corners of thr

earth.

'Tbe attitude of everyoM wlih

being thoroughly on the level.' "Struck you as dishonest, eh?” put in one of the listeners. “Well." McRae replied, “He might have been straight, but Jie looked

crooked.

A snapshot of a street In a smal. town in Wyoming is being used at Universal City as a pattern for the construction of a Western street for n Harry Carey prod action, “Hi The moat pretentions bnlldlng in the picture Is u atory-and-a-ha'I wooden structure with a peculiar sr tna door, reading as follows: Dick’s (followed by a crude picture of a cow) A/ Toe entire routpury tried in vain to decblpbnr the sign which was finally explained by a cowboy who balls from the Wyoming range. The cow i* supposed to be a calf, and the sign I* Intended for “Dick's Calf A." “It’s pretty bad when yon have to pay $lg a quart for Bourbon/' remarked a certain film actor to Harry Frenkhn. the Universal director. “It's much worse when you pay ten." replied Franklin. '7 know. I've tried

Taffeta is in tho lead for summer

wcar.

Parisian styles are tauat adorable in frock* oi tafeta. black, bins, brown. ir*/. besides some of tbe brighter lines, with novel 111 tie bodice* and attractive flounced skirts, set off by large thru-over frilled collar* or white or organdie. If black «« becoming to yen. by all eans wear it this summer. Somme, sweaters and sport coat* are also in

black.

Leading designers are laying much sues* on tbe long-waiatei, bodice, wore with and without the narrow string belt, or an ornamental —a worn Oriental fashion. GAY COLORED SASHES Vividly colored sashes rre new' sold for wear with dark colored suit* or dresses. Some of the designs hr. silk ha* been printed. One cf the latest designs show* a pattern tn orange and black against a flame-

CANNING-HOUSE TOMATO SEED ARE DANGEROUS FOR PLANTING

TEMPERAMENTAL

Canning house run tomato seed should be avoided as it is usually made up of a mixture of strains and varieties and is likely to carry dl* ease germs and produce an Inferiui

yield and quality of fruit.

Whenever possible, seed should be bought from selected stock of the variety best adapted to the loc&Hty ia wh'eli the crop Is to be grown Few canning companlos have given sufficient uttenUon to this phase of the work to be able to supp y such seed. United States Department of Agri cult ore specialists say U'woaM be wise for the canners to moke a specially of the sating of high-grad*

seed.

FREDDY

(Continued from page S)

noon except a chambermaid, who rubbed some liniment on rue and told ms about her husband that had'left her when she was only sixteen years old Freddy Bell never showed up. It got da-ker nnd darker, and tbe rain run down the window-panes .;o sorrowful that It set me to sheddm’ tea.a In the pillow. My ankle hurt eomethlr' fierce, and my heart was hurlin', too. Nobody brought me any supper, and I was Just getting toned ap for e beautt-

The commercial production of high j ful ,ons ^vep when the door flew open grade seed requires the iuperv!»ioi of; “ n<1 ,I: CRn,e Freddy. It was pitcha man trained in the principles am! i d * rt - t,nl 5 coal<1 U ire* him by.fhe skilled In the methods of breeding °'-s | cigarette smoke and hair tonic smell of seed sa ving, careful work of when ho Sot Inside the door, as I wbi this kind Is done chiefly by repntabl.* nighty abased and ready *

fools, mister?

"TVr'i 1 crawled out nnd hopped xmnd on one foot, getting my

clothes into the grips, and we went

down to the station. Freddy tarryin

tbe begs and kind of draggin' me along, greenin' at every step. There wasn't nc cabs in the burg, and the way we went, slippin' through back streets and alleys—to get there quicker. Freddy sold—we wouldn't

have mn any if there had been thou The train was late »nfl we i

stood under a leaky'shed, waiting. Freddy fumin’ like I was to blame for the railroad nmnin* behind their schedule. When It come In, be threw ma on like 1 was a sack of mall, and

we left the town and cld Pat D*a:on 1 town for him. but th^y never found and the la Reur family behind. him either. I guess Freddy had seen "We had gone about flfty miles. 1 'em flr-t. OW R. M. kwroned up and guess, when I remembered about threw & 10-dollar bill on my bed when seeln' Freddy's father In the show ; he left, and I left town as soon os I and I told him about It. He clwificl could walk rad went with another up like thunder, and muttered some | medicine show. But I never saw my thing about the old Shyl-M* hanging: tompenunrntal husband again! A on to a dime until it turned green, long time after that, when I'd most but be didn't explain why we were forgot hire, there came t. noUce from lesV.n so sudden, or what this won-, * Uwyer. sayin' the mar -a» had bvevf derful chance was he bad tu ned ap. cunulled on account of Freddy being "Then we got off In a big town With ; under age. That was all electric lights and F. ddy put me In a “But when fhe wind Mows like it took me “> * .»»>« old hotel, doe* today, mister, and you can smell

wa* tbe way he'd berm employin' time since we'd been married,

dr* win' on me when be lost, and when

a out he’d took to tonchtn'

mi hD family tree Iter the balance. "Well, from the way old R. M. looked at me. » could aae he didn’t Include any martial incumbrances in

forgivln' offer. *n I never raM a

worn: only mid 'em that I didn't know where Freddy waa. Down In my heart there was s foolish idea <>»■> no matter what be might hare done, they couldn't tear Freddy Bell away from

That shown you how much of a

lool I was! ,

For Freddy never com-* back! OH R- M. and hla officer* searched the

aeedraen their seed is much better than that saved and offered for sale

At HOME A Department for Industnoui Htusewtvet

Miss Edith Sirs use, la charge of the K'omen*t> activities In t^e high con of living campaign of the Department of Justice, ha* formulated a set of ami Don't* which she wishes every woman to study, and insofar as each can, to adopt the Indivldua' ►hare of reducing expenses. Here are some of the Do's: Put aside part of your Income fer

future nse.

Moke every penny buy a penny'; worth of something really needed. Invest wisely. Use what money buys with care Do figure out what eaca Item of the family expenditures require; ren*. food, heat, lighting, clothing, school, charily, d<-ctor, pleasnry, etc. Pay as you buy. Pay bills monthly. Set your own standards Buy omy what vou have tbe monev

o pay for.

Put aside for a rainy day.

Mining'for Tree Sap The gum or rosin of the Kauri pine in New Zealand Is much sought In the manufacture of varnishes, paints, oils and turpentines, and Just as the visible supply seemed to be failing there has been discovered a great ‘.uanilty of tbls material under the ground and It h now being mined in much tbe same manner a* coal is except that it is iiG. neo-nsa-y to go so d rep. Tbe explanation Is that forest of these tries wa* over whelmed and hurled at oome remote ne, and while the tree structure * largely disappeared the gum re mained in the sol!. There are several plan’* now fn operation engaged in rveovert-vg the gum from the soil.

trf

The sharper isn’t very keen on meet-

Crosslng tbe tomatoes, such as naturally occurs In fields or plants grown from the mixed seed from canwerWs. brings out th? crop In many qualities that do not usually appear in the

parent varieties.

These are chiefly email and roucL fruit, pale flesh and pulp, thin wall* i and pa-tuion*. and !“w percentage of solids. Although not all those chi:' acters occur as a rule, in the same fruit, seme of them occur in so man; fruits that they reduce the yield an!

quality of the crop.

Land adjoining some renning houses where refuse from wilt nft-ted tomatoes has been damped has become so ."nil of the wilt-producing fungus that a crop of tomatoes cannot be grown on 1L Seed saved from such tomatoes woflld not only carry disease but It would also -nix xlih seed from

matoea. Moreover,

bearing paniciee from the wUMafecto* tomatoes would adhere to good seea. Btdh the diseased seed and the seed carrying disease germ* on its surface would carry disease Into the seed bed

and field

This method of distributing disease organism? to seed In the namslnq bouse is net limited to '.be wilt dis

STOP! LET THE FISK GO BY “My man" wh.-Ye ■ , !d "yon '.nome ruen an expert swimmer?" •'Why/' responded fhe Trero moJe*My. "1 med to be a' traffic cop ip

V enlee."

In Japan the sewage and retuw. ol every house Is collected nightly and carefully used In agriculture.

a big tantrum, but be didn't pay no attention to me. “■Get jour clothes par’ —quirk!' ht snaps at me. 'We're gt ag to leave ou this train!' I stopped anufi.3' quick —id set up la bed. 'WhalV I said, mad all over. *What's the mailer with you?' I says. 'Here I've bcvn layln* for half a day with a broken ankle, and yo“ never pay no attention I can't pack! I can't even

step!'

“He backet' off a llule when he sav that 1 wa* mad and began some of hi soft talk. He had been workm' on i big deal, he explained, and now he had got his chance. We were going to a city far away where uebody did know us. and there we would build that cottage and live 1 appy ever after That'S tbe kind of talk he handed me. mister—me sltlln' np In bed In the dark, with ny nose and eyes all swelled up and my foot reelin' like U had been run over by the Brooklyn trolley! And I fell for It! Ain't women

SAVES EYES At last! We lar* reading glasses for AVtfr and Far Sighted People You will hsve more eye romfort by the VESTA «Tsttn.. We examine eyes and personally fit the glasses Registered ojrtomctiLt in sltendance Otmcci-T CAMS A tTVCIAtTV The VESTA CO.

613 Market Street PHILADELPHIA.

where they gave us a Mttle back room ao narrow w C had to park the furni tore to get the door open. My nnklwa* swelled up like an elephant's too* by this time, and was thumpin' like seven roughneck* driving stakes s! once. 1 managed to g»l Into bod. and lay there full of misery and wonderin' what was going to nappes to n» •tt was nearly midnight, but Fradd, went out and left, aajing lhat he bed to meet a man. ! was so worn out I dropped asleep, and along about daylight somebody woke me poundin' on

to em to come in. thinkin' It might br been asleep

Freddy, but It wasn't. It was thrae

bis. rough-lookin’ men. and with them ' . ^ Knlt ,he ,,t0 ® plco ®

M A. M. R.vkln,: / l “" ,r l ”

"They filed Into the room, looking I i.ort of fonllsh, when they found out Freddy wasn't there. Old R, M. didn't aay anything. Lut one of thr; big men. who hadat rhaved In a week, explained to roe that they had a war- i

the ground sort of moist sr ' rowing Ilk*', it all comes beck to again. ' 1 can sec- them fool visions 1 used to bee—cottages with rosea over the .. doors, and little, yellow-haired chfl drtn swingin’ on the gales—and me fat, lonesome old woman, wrltli nothin' rnnnln' arounu the house but the circumference! It’a fierce. mu . >r! It's certainly fierce’" Mr*. McJimsey heaved a sigh tha*. shook her from her three chins to her swollen feet. The paperhan^er rose up slowly and

He had -

How About It?

First Scon; —Why do the ships use

knots instead of miles ?

notes and checks on his relations back ...

to Hawklnsrllle, but that his father.! *** ** 0<:e • ,1 ^ 1 **•

old R. M.. had generoualy offered to! to make the ahortege good if Freddy , would come br.rk home and gn to woik ! e livery suble. It seemed that

Freddy had spent moat of his life ahootln' crap* with stable-hand* and

H*» a e ouderfu! brilliancy. ‘Guaranteed everbxting. Kegulai 25.00 vsluefor ml* *1.25. No need to d*by. Send ttringor paper measur. we„t. Mail order, filled pro«H(>tly. Patu.4 Post 10c exira rn VBTA CO Dopurm**- "r xr-flncc. e>

“Easy On” Capper A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY Will Cap Anv

Sue Bottle

Cun*. Chill Is do; *|| Mi

We Sell Direct to Consumer Whv Per Middleman’s Piofit?

Taffeta Satin Organdie Trkotine Voile All Good* Gu*rar»ed a. Represented or Money Refunded Let Us Show You Percent On How to Save ■*— U -wt-J Each Purchase At tlw prerent high cot' of msteris! every woman should buy wnere her mousy •>>1 ( .'chare the hc»t to be had at a greai saving 1 '*« Mg* AM> rt'U IS; ORMATIOM AODttH OX»T. "A" ADELPHIA MANUFACTURING ( O. :3U6 Soudi 23d St., PHILADELPHIA, PA. MAIL OKD£XS FILLED PROMPTLY

What is CHIROPRACTIC

* re, efficient, and scientific, drugieu m< .r bionic diseare. instead ot treating tj

e effect.

any acute

The brain i» i are the purvey the purveyors

Thif is DIS-EASE This is HEALTH RHEUMATICS rt. ,

•dilr to Chiro-

ruhr.

. . ■ nuu.iM.c.cr cs: all \amirs rrtioiut —... piactic udjuMmentt. A1BO THF INC Ilk A m sc ^ ? J* 1

VOUS (risuhles, the va-j.'-u* Vi|,(1. of ■ - —....M -d b, A. MOST SIODERN SftKraSSiSt "* rf '-

For information call and rec me or erite for f.-e booklet j. E. RAUSCH. D. C., PI,, c.

, Chiropractor , il-U Clirshm; St.. Room. 30-32 PhiWd.d.U, Pa.