Cape May County Times, 27 January 1928 IIIF issue link — Page 19

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: News Of Interest To Our Women Readers

Wives Cart Use 'l Surplus Meat Supply JuScy Steak or Wholesome Roast on Few Minutes Notice

cootod ar parUilljr (aokrd. tor tb* i*X JUror it vbouM b* pn-jwrwl ft would be for Ira-

Household Problems

tiuit* "done” when pecked in tbr *•»». ~— - -

%ttt

te at

BroUic*. rxtMsact. etevtns. or fry-

ln< will *1 re &

■ will

three bonrs after U>e > alar bejtJnr U> boti. The allowed for the

boura: tt 10-U pound- U mwd how 1. aofleient. Cooked maaubaker. Mewed, broiled, roeted. utd »o«ip stock mast be proceMed toil., to the wash boiler; the ■an.* Urne to the steam ooker, 1 hour is (he pressure- cooker with 5-10 poqpds and three-qusrtrm of an hour with 10-U pounds.

The Housekeeping Adept SaysThe kUcbea u not the p tor old ill-nttin* b ho«B. n *kd In the ions cheaper to and wear wi Ing /hoes that are sensible and erxntortable. The sain in healtn •ad eMdency makes the practice

“BMclent housekeeplnc.” —. -

ore of the rxtenstou asenu of the C. S. Department of Asrlcuitre. •la not necranarlly K ood home makius. but usually the two are found In the same home. As better working equipment is

' ' homes, the houee-

What the home manasemeqt Seelaliaui in the Federal Extenlon Service are trytns to do U to help farm- women perform tfcelr great variety of duties with

iditure of energy and

tin

If

WFIDENCE By FLO Have Many Friends Advice About Boys That Hopeless Love fell greatly In love. Be also seemed to care for me for a while then I t'sau to notice a coolness in his i.etlocB toward me- until om he .<eema not to care for rr.-i all. I am awfully unhappy Ithout him. I-rn'i there a way • win him back? PATRICIA. * a e Your only chance la to leave him quite alone for a while. This may pique hia vanKy into trying to make you fall In lore with him again, -hut If h« is just tired of you. there is nothing you can do to revive his interest, and my advice to you would be to try to forget him and make other friends. For nothing is so hopeless as a dead love. Dear Mias Flo: — I am a hign school girt—sixfoot- yean old. There are two ad-i boys »ho !!* me and take me to parties. One of them wants me to keep steady company, but my mother says 1 am too young to give nil my time to any one boy. Dr. you agree with her?

ANN.

Your motner i» ntirely right, my dear. ‘ j -rung girl abouid have .uany frkhda—-girls and -ojw—and If you give all your time to on* boy you shut out other friends. It Is only by knowing many boys 'hat you will be able to choose, later, the right one. And you will miss a lot of

youthful fun If going out with

you agree to atop goinj other boys to please <

Lunch and Dinner

Sausage Dishes

Everyone likes savory aaiuaga and this la the time of year when It is rettahed most. Duck* hr at cakes and pork aauaagt*. what a breakfast for a snappy cold day: but breakfast Is not (he only meal whan a -usage is hailed with delight by the .nUre famliy. Try some of these sausage recipes for dinner or supper and see how mash the ttmlly. will enjoy them.

can be done In one hour Instead of two. and with leas physical effort, by the use of labor and time saving equipment. extension agents have triad to bring that fact to farm ■ *—

« and li

list

Here is at least a partial

of ike rtdpenslbUiUea of a (arm distinguish her from ‘ her city couMn. They include her housekeeping. her material care of her famity, and her rrspansIbiUty to herae't. her family and her friendv for mental and apirttnal growth. She is usually manager of a snail farm btudftea* such as poultry raising, the borne dairy, or the garden. Aa farming Is a tree partnership buslc vat. she is the farmer's bind Bros partnei. planning the work with him and dredoing with him when the money earned shall be plaoed io the grtsteal advantage. This." a student of relations in farm

homes remarks, "gives especial opportunity for

and for happiness, provided she can And time to think about It

constructively."

Cabbage heads the Hat of vita-min-rich fresh ve-.etablee available in the colder montha. need not be cooked t' e same way T time It is served: In fact It used not be cooked at aU. but be used U. slaw, or take the » of lettuce when that al-wayn-desirable green-leaf vegetable cannot be oblal'.ed. There are many good wr? of cabbage so the family will not tiro of It. Turnips and carrots __ily vitamins, and are among lb* stored too* crops on hand nearly all winter. When grated and used raw in salads they especially valuable. Spinach la in many markets during the winter and is an ixeellect source of vitamins. Onions, both raw and cooked, may be used. Potatoes too contain one or more vitamins but need to be supplemented by other vegetables and fruits.

Photo show.: broadcasting apparatus used to extend vision it is possible to see individuals and occurrences in distant . ires. Tbf apparatus In the above picture made the girl actually vialh>e to groups gathered about receiving arts In Schenectady homes, in ta*ta by the General Electric Company and the Radio Corporation of America.

Television Sets Soon For Homes

Recipe For Navy Pineapple Pie

Uncle Sam boast* the best fed Navy in the world and thur food bears little resemblance to the salt meat-ship's biscuit fare of earlier day* Several vegetable* and fruits are purchased la qtian-

lotalmg million* of pounds. i them canned pineapple, of: t' 1 "** Iw'ore the transmitting dcwhich 1.3*3.000 pounds **“ **g — || '* ||

Successful

of Apparatus Enabling Fans To See

As Well As Hear Artiste

Transmitting the picture Is declared to be almost as simple as receiving tt. so far as the principle Involved Is concerned. At the transmlutr; end light is converted Into electric impulses. Through a rotating disc. In which are a number ot small hole*, a brilliant light U projected. The light, passing through the routing disc, falls upon the face of the artist whose picture is being brad cast. At each rotation of the disc a complete picture is made, and this picture is imposed on photo-electric cells, converted into radio impulses, and broadcast to be picked up by the receiver. As the arils: whose picture I* being broadcast moves, each successive picture assumes a slightly different position. consequently, the I mag i in the receiving set appears to move the principle being the same as that used in producing motion pictures Some further simplification and a regulation of the cost of the apparatus is said to be all that stands In the way ot realisation of the radio fan'* dream of a Uomr receiving set that will brim, him both sight snd sound. David Karnoff. general manage the Kadfo Corporation of America, predicts that within five years television will be "an art and an industry in this country." Television, he says, will supplement the radio and the two will

develop together.

Television has been denionitrmt- iin- -t m. ..vr W before. Tests by the Amertcao . , .fandrL - Telephone and Telegraph Company ! 4 , X.^e you^ a year ago showed what might be! o,,. „ nk r!i 1 dldn *** rou

Ann* On. IVr • Ln . llnK

Written Specially fur this Paper By ROBERT FULLER Through AutocaMrr Service Radio fans the receiving and both anthe broadcasting studios. The feat of seeing and hearing a man moving ah' <it and talking in a darkened rc >m several mile;, away has beer accomplished during a televlsl. n demonstration at Schenectady. N. Y. staged by Dr. E. F. W. Airtanderson research engineer of the General Electric Company and consulting engineer of the Radio Corporation of

done.

demonstration of television furniabes th- first abeolut-. proof that homes throughout the world connected by sigjit as they have been by sound. It is predicted that within five years television receiving sets will be manufactured and sold on a

large scale.

In the Schenectady tests r. roan stood talking and smoking a cigarette before the transmuting iti vice in the General Electric Con radio laboratories. In three

' ‘ borne* other <ut receiving

heard the voice of the man In the darkened room several mtlea away. ,w the smoke curl up from hi* cigarette, and watched him wink silly aa be talked about the experiment, Then othrrs took their

Sausage Wrtii Cabbage

bought by the Navy last year. Generally it Is senred aa a sauce, but also In way popular ashore. Navy Pineapple Pie.—Mix- onehalf cup of sugar with one tahlc-

o by the n

a double boll .

ring frequently until It thickens. Continue cooking for fifteen minutes. add one tablespoon of butter and pour over the heater yolks

Shred a medtum-aUcd bead of of four eggs. Return to the cooker ’ihage. Add one teaspoon of j for a few minutes and stir until It and one-quarter cop of egg thicken Cool and pour water. Simmer alowly until ten! i „ p* <<inT wltA a der. Fry one pound of hulk mertngu* made from four t-gg tonawce gently, tossing constant- - ~ —

ly with a fork so that It will

not become too brown. Mix the >*i usage thoroughly with the cabbage Heap on a shallow baking dish and brown la a golden brown lo a hot over..

Serve with baked sweet potatoe*

Creole

t put Into a saucepan with *-ha!f can of tomatoes, a indod clove ot garlic and aali 1 pepper to 'aate. Cover and inter gently tor thirty minis. If deal led. (be saasage tr.*> browned flr-t In their owo Thicken the liquid with ^1 Ip fiour rubbed smooth in butand blended w.ih a little cold ter. Serve with a garnish of

Htseapple Tapioca Cusmrd.— Scald one pint of milk in a doable boiled. Add one-half cup of agar and one-third cup of granulated tapioca. Season with one-halt toa*l*voo of salt and cook until tranaparent Pour mixture over outwell bca'en egg and cook two. minute*, purring constantly. Re-: move from the Ore and atlr ioi onv-half can of crushed pineapple/ Chill and serve with

of tart red jelly.

vice and were

the homes. I^HI The receiving set Is of simple construction. Its inventors say. and 1* contained In a cabinet closely rerembliag that of the ordinary pbom *■ ~

televl

the same aa that of the radio .. celvimr set except that the ordinary radio set translates electric impulses Into sound while the television receiver concert electrlc Impulses into light.

Wax Is Most Satisfactory and Exquisite Floor Finish

Also Most Practical and Incxpenstvi

Scratches—is Not Slippery—Requires No Scrubbing

Interior decorators agree the beauty ot any room depends the floor. Tbe Boor

stbie is wax--tbe finish which ha.* yHhstood the wear and tear of renturte* !■ old European castles and which mellow* and improve*

with agr.

W axed floors are also the most practical. They do not a

tches or beM-marka. They

slippery'. They never require

And they never need

expensive or troublesome reflnisfaIng. You ran touch up a waxed Boor at any ttmd. and any where, without going over the entire floor. WHITE MARKS ON WAX KlNISH—If water la allowed to remain on waxed surfaces any length of Utre It wVI cause them

white. Manufacturers

’CONTINUED FROM UNCLE BILL’S PAGE

I Dear lamer R.:

I Isn't It One to have « grxndCL_^, mother to read to you. Send in uoet PfOl j now . il0rf „ rtorrt pictures.

Dear Dorri* R.:

Glad you like to go to Sunday Your drawing didn't quite prite. - jf..

Dear Jack 8.:

! certainly unrj to b»ar j j sick and mighty glad to k

j are gening belter.

Dear George l*.: Glad you Ilk

Page And that you school. You’ll nev« when you become a i

the Children*

that arc. from hour to hour. 1 stuffed with ibe-n. Mil rid. ? know of no better word to em

Ploy.

Our advertising pages. »

roagaxinro and

flaming with colored Hiuetrstiooof saturated, strip, d and colored defiers of digestion. New recipes arc almost dally aiide.i, that seem Irresistible—as If plain, wholesome food were not tnouimably , bettey for sound sleep and good health! Our people consume tor and tons of sugar in myriad forms each year. Commercialism I knows that the easieet route to ' the pocketbook is by way of th.

appetite.

There is no argument ngain*: that for long, healthy, comfort-

able life. Every octogenarian.

tennrtan. I? a living con- ;

»*» „„ vlnclng witness for plain food. ' ,

cauUmTua against ^toT^wtS'‘‘Tl'S 5St 1CWlSwiS Page Interesting. And on tbe wax as a wsx finish U itot.^T.^^" dl .t» ** “V 3 /®** «hnt you .-onUn*ve la the OoMr

made to stand against water. Ball* ,”?? Coiltf * t -

”,i ctosbu. » rnbWn. -U.ISo

clou* to be frittered away by dls- cannot afford to own ns good a rtpatlon. I car m she drive*."

Dear Roger G.:

I like to read the many letters from my young friends very much. They are always Interesting to me.

Rear Raymond H.: Wet!, yon tried n

didst you? Now you must try

Dear Ellsworth R.:

a soft cloth moistened with prnttne. after which rub on t little wax (either our home-mad' recipe or a commercial product). They say this will premam nt remove the white apot. This work ust be done carefully and quick-

TO MAKE WAX: ’4 lb B'swwnx

Si lb. Hardwax (parowax or par-

affine)

1 pt. turpentine. Shave wax Into a pint jar. Set ir in a pan of water. Heat unI wax is soft. Remove from fire and stir Into this Jar only what turpentine it will hold. Stir til like thick batter, then se cool place. TO CLEAN SOILED WAXED FIDOR: Spots removed with soft woolen cloth moistened with

penttne.

About Your Health ■v John Joseph Ox ins*. M. D.

Committing Suicide

Any one who suddenly end* t life voluntarily, by hi* own t. Is a suicide. I believe th 11 one who end* or shorten* hi. *- j 1st cnee slow ly—pet hap* uncou-j sclously—commut* the same un-1

wholesome deed.

I retd somewhere that clrUiza-i 3n ha* added seven «-

"I wasn’t 1 cleaned (inf tides of food to OUI u. «* somv-t.- .

the furnao- sod my profar'tv |* d l e |* r,r * Thl ? k , of . th '' . f *f‘!

now practically perfect." u , c ' ,\ hxt \ bt r j need* actually only a half-dozen!

It’s up to a man to sit down! 1 fa*! sure that the .seven hm.

rot.template a standing of-f ‘

WANTED! Two hundred American-born citizens, at leas* 16 years of age, to enroll as charter members of Camp No. 213, Patriotic Order Sons of America, now forming in Port Norris. Come to the open meeting in K. of P. Hall TUESDAY EVENING. JANUARY Slit, at eight o'clock, and hear abont it The P. 0. S. of A. vaa founded in 18A7. has a fine past history. inspiring initiatory ceremony, soup 1 principles and liberal beneficial features. Special low admission fee, $3.00, for charter members. See CHESTER MILLS, of Corson A Mills Garage, or HARRY NEWCOMB for farther information.

Satisfactory Portraits

Fine Picture Framing

t^WAKoJmEic

dred aro only modification*, mix tun* and adulteration* of thlew food-unit* required. In pla< ol plain bread and butler, fruit:, and meat*, we are eating diet 11 late*, fermentation'-, haehps and coBnlomcrmtion*. sugared pyramid*. and highly dynamized temptations to depraved appetite . which wreak destruction by

Xo. Laurel Street. Brtdgctog I but cerlato stag-.-* on the hodi-

Guaranteed Marcel. Permanent Spedki e $8.00 V snd' , $8.00 Beauty Culture In ah It* form* Miller Beauty Parlor K PINE ST.. » ILLVILLE. N. J PHONE SW-J

Cement Work Sidewalks. Gutters. Curbs Foundation Work H. C TRIBBETT Dividing Creek, N. J.

1928

Special anwtioB girrn to Bair Cutting by Miss Edith D. Bollock

Smith Ru, Work* Inc. us e fe. HMtiu,. a. i.

A NEW YEAR A good time to change Wash Dsys to WASH HOURS with A Maytag Aluminum Gyrafoam

Washer

Th* Soft Roll Wringer Sam Button*. J. R. PRICHARD 169 PORT NORRIS

I Wooden Tub Maytag Electric Washer I Wooden Tub 1900 Electric Washer

New Jersey People Did Mdiyy Thuv^y Better Las-t Yectr There is no way to arrange business and social affairs with people in other pdaces so quickly, easily and inexpensively as by telephoning right from your office or home. Last year New Jersey people realized this *fact more than ever. They now talk to people in other places 400,000 times daily, an incrcr.^c of 90,000 toll or long distance calls a day within the year. / When you telephone, you get X ^ things done—without watt, » waste o: wcai—N umber please: f

r

-i

February Furniture Sale

IS NOW ON

For months past we have been visiting the factories direct, making solid carload purchases. Here and there we have bought sample suites, show room samples, etc. We have, of course, included all of our stocks on our Boors. Savings will average 20 per cent, to 50 per cent, throughout. Never have we had such tremendous stocks for you to choofle from. Never we believe have we had such values. Quality furniture, at prices that you would ordsi narily have to pay for inferior kinds elsewhere. This, the largest store of its kind in South Jersey, is now ready for you. Will you join the many and save here? We guarantee satisfaction. We treat I you with the utmost courtesy whether you buy or

not.

$350.00 Three Piece Mohair Suite $ 225.Q0

Thro* bandju-mr* pl -ces as sboarn above, guaranteed Nachman spring unit conMruction, filled with new muai and felt, ro* verolUle cushion* hi Italian Friexr. Beautiful shaded walnut finish on birch hardrood frame help* beautify the suite. Webb bottom*, well m_d.-. FREE with etery Living Room Suil.—-A beautiful Bridge Lamp. BHk Shade, End Table and

All Living 1

« up t

to <0%.

FREE DELIVERY AIL OVER SOUTH JERSEY Our prior* are band on cash but arrangements caa be made to purchase under our extended payment plan if desired, by paying the small tarrying charge. STORE HOURS: 7.30 to 8 P. K- Daily.. aturday* until 11 P. M. Established Thirty-one Yean Estimate* on Entire Home* Furnished Cheerfully Given

- $30.0C $15.00