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Show " BEAVER CITY PRESS - , The KITCHEN CABINET" for Himself" By ALEXANDER LEGGE, President International Harvester Co. U an age of specialization in aimoat everything. Why, then, cpon the firmer to do practical; the opposite and diversify? The answer is simple. Only by diversified agriculture can the average farm be made to produce something that will keep on adding to the farmer's wealth, The farmer's returns, all through the year. ay v THIS ' W ng Z one-ha- e of pineapple and one-thir- d of nut meats. Mix with a rich mayonnaise or a cream dressing and serve on a bed of lettuce. Stewed Chicken With Onions- - Re-uta. , jfscopd m$A the,, breajtt. from two chickens. Cook In wate to' cover with a dozen small onions, until tender. Remove the chicken, reduce the stock to one and one-ha- lf cupfuls. drain the onions from the stock MeK throe tablesDoonfula of butter, add four tablespoonfula of flour and the stock. Bring to the boiling point, add, one-hacupful of heavy cream, season with salt, pepper and lemon Juice. Add the onions and chicken and bring to the boiling point Mock Sweetbreada. Chop one pound of veal, add two ounces of chopped salt pork and mix until well blended; s then add of a cupful of soft d bread crumbs, .two eggs, of one-half of flour, cupful cupful of milk, one-hateaspoonful of salt and of teaspoonful of pepper. Form Into eight pieces, dot with but ter, using one and one-hatablespoonof fula, and pour around three-fourtcupful of chicken stock. Cover and bake one hour, basting every ten minServe with tomato or white utes. sauce. Ruuian Salad Dressing Take one- balf teaspoonful each of mustard and salt, teaspoonful each of paprika and white pepper, add to these one tablespoonful each of vinegar and lemon Juice, one teaspoonful of grated onion, one tablespoonful of chill sance,' one teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce and one tablespoonful of minced green pepper, two teaspoonful s of minced parsley. Best all Into one-hacupful of salad oil, put Into a glass Jar and shake well to emulsify. Chill before using. This dressing will also keep for some time If kept cold. Shake well before using. using o T.D thoughts are like old habits they are had tty change. We would not care to change all old fcughtt nor 'all oH habits, but what a stirring of there is in. the brain when a fine, brand new sap thought blows In! Perhaps itV a very simple thought, about a different way to do something quite ordinary; Jnrt just that tiny jolt is enough to put new J affair. fnergy and interest into the i Don't be forever thinking along monotonous lines; nobody in the f rather obese; a voluptuous beauty with a bad breath, Chicago ' Of the medley of sounds in Chicago the cne that lingers ia the grinding of brakes on Michigan boulevard. If Chicago had aa much faith in Ood as it haa in brakes, heaven would be overcrowded, ' . The wheat pit ia in Chicago. The wheat pit fluctuates; it fluctuates greatly at times. . Lately they have had to brae the walla with steel girders and constantly watch the levels. Chicago says that it wasn't the wheat, fluctuations that threw the building off its base, but a subsidence of earth. But yon ask Kansas! He even f VOjii man actually told ma that Chicago was prosperous. But he waa a dull wit Why stress so obvioua quoted figures to fact? The general attitude: "Well, what do you think of Chicago? that wa care a d n what you think; we're aatlsfied with iV" Chicago if t'sauaage city, mad from the mixture of many jneats, ground fine. Fat and muscle, flesh and blood, have gone to ita njaking. . Soma are floating in rich gravy; others are fried in oil. There are two extreme Chicagoe, but in between is lot that is just plain "hot dog." T .. Chicago wanta to be a world port It probably will be. If Chicago Vanta to be a thing, it doesn't hesitate to try. I ehouldn't be surprised if some day fashions change and it ia more desirable to be considered a South 8ea island. Then Chicago will lay a pipe line to the Pacific .. ocean and build itself a coral reef. . , lf ha Mion about traveling one-eigh- th cheerily about it; even if you never get there, it airs out your brain and prevents other discouraging suggestions" from lf creeping in. Nobody ever got anywhere, made any success, material or otherwise, without dream tag about it first f The engine wiD grind and pound and be thoroughly disagreeable unless oiled regularly. Don't be stiff and rusty! Get into gear right ... oil your cylinders with daring thoughts. Who owns this old world, anyway Habit or YOU? away Trouble With College Athletics: Too Much " Athletics and Too Few Athletes v 11 tori. A t MARTHA B. THOMAS WTn Ntmcnper Unenr-- . By WALTER CAMP, in World's Work. The trouble with college athletics is that there is too much athletics and too few athletes. Hundreds of thousands of dollars are spent, and the product is a few score athletea trained to the last notch. The other unnumbered thousands of college students are satisfied with the secondhand glory in the skill of "our team," and for the most part do not realize their own failure to secure a share in the general athletic benefit After all, it is not the amount of money taken in at these sports, it is how that money is expended that "Counts. We may have gone too far in the erection of huge bowls, and stadiums, but time alone can these structures yield the necessary funds to support not only the major but the minor sporU, and to defray the general athletic ntime upkeep. The great problem to be attacked is extravagance in the expenditure of these receipts and the almost universal tendency toward centering too much of the outlay upon a too limited few, as well as failure through lack of careful scrutiny to make these sums go as far as they might in tangible results of benefit to all the men inlbe university. "Among Us Are People Ignorant or Heedless of Fundamental Principles" j By JUSTICE FLOYD E. THOMPSON, fllinoii Supreme Court Among us there are people, ignorant or heedless of fundamental whole principles, who seek to force their private views of conduct upon the of principles people and to push their program through to the destruction which constitute the very fabric of the American system. These intol-eranpreach that the individual has ne rights save those which society confers on him and that the majority may do with the individual as ta it oTeMes. ' a - centuries It has been the custom, at least among northern nations, "to see the old year out and the new year In, with the highest of merri demonstrations ment and conviviality. To but a few does It seem to occur that the day la a memorandum of the subtraction of another year from the little sum of life." This old writer here quoted, goes on to say: "With the multitude, the top feeling Is a desire to express good wUhes for the next twelve months' experience of their friends, and be the subject of similar benevolence on the part of others, and to see this Interchange of cordial feeling take place, as far as possible In festive TOR Time's Up II BE close of a year makes ui think of tbe passing of time. The following max lms, old and new, should make us think of the value of time: Any time means no time most times. A man who does nothing never has time to do anything. He who haa most time has none to lose. In poetry, as flowa along;, sld nowhert by aid with worda aklllfully used, a current that carrlea us beyond tha Intrinsic value of aenae. Contributor!' Club. Nothing-- Is more precious than time and nothing less valued. No reward can recover lost time, Be always In time; too lute is crime. iae , co-ex- ist u Tbe superiority ef North American wTiuiauon 10 mat or South America haa been thus accounted for: The Pilgrim came to America In search of Oodj the Spaniards came in search of fold; tho sllfference between spiritual and material foundations In the state. The best Ktw Tear.wiah for our Dt spiritual wlih. a. Usurd, Utoi k. '"Tn"M-faaiattte--WhpirwtoTB- r away In the buckboard to rled have descendants now the boat to Paris to get a get mu. who tali divorce. Those Americans who have Just beea awarded $3,000,000 in war dais against Germany probably might It Induced to take slightly less for cast Marconi says that Europe win toot be talking to America over the telephone, which meaife a perpetual "af signal on tbe United States imtvj line. It la an Interesting coincidence Out every time there Is talk about lending billions to Germany nobody outside f Berlin ever seems to have heart anything about It 'ROUND THE FESTIVE c Eddie Rlckenbacker prophesies tJat all travelers to Europe ten yean ben will make the trip by air. Ia eue tf accident however, the ocean will tH be In Its accustomed place. Movies of gland operations tart n cently been taken. Since Doctor lb declares all gland transplantation! be "humorous" perhaps tbe new fi comics. l are Intended for one-ree- An airplane manufacturer tare But to fly twice una planes can t aa those now used, but Inst there l no way to get the.n back to earl of M again. Wouldn't running out have some effect? on the Maryl4 a Gunners wbea they proached the miraculous a & weighing sent a projectile target s of the bullseye through American miles distant make the records. L an old couple Is the don were wedded at and alnetj agea of eighty-eigh- t while a that the opinion prompta la made be riagee may., not some of them are contracted The fact that BOARD In using citrus fruits for salads, scald the fruit in boiling water for five minutes, then the rind may be easithe lypeeled, white skin coming oft with It Fruit Saladv A very attractive and yet simple, salad may be pre pared from a grape fruit an orange and a bright apple. Peel the orange and grape fruit and sep arate Into sections; removing all the tough stringy fiber of the fruit Cut the apple without peeling into eighths, removing the-- section of core. Arrange section of grape fruit then pieces of the red apple, a section of orange, another piece of grape fruit and apple. Place making a small hemisphere. this on lettuce and serve with a spoonful of rich mayonnaise at the side of ' the salad. Ox Joints en Casseroles-Hav- e the oxtails cut at the Joints, cover with Ixdling water and cook six minutes. Drain, dredge with flour and saute lb butter, with one sliced onion. Pot Into a casserole, sprinkle with of a cupful of flour, one teaof a spoonful of salt, and teaspoonful of pepjref. Pour over two and one-hucupfuls of wnter and canned tomatoes and cook three hours. Remove oxtnlls and strain sauce; re e turn both to the dish. Add of a cupful of carrot and turnip rut Into cubes. Thaoe vegetables may be cMked with the meat making a bet ter flavored sauce. Chestnut Croquettes Take one cup ful of mashed French chestnuts, two tshloarMxinfuls of thick cream, ,the yolks of two egKS, one teaspoonful of "iisnr. Mix well, shape Into balls, dip into egg and crumbs, fry In deep fa"t Jind drnln. Nice aa a garnish for turkey or any fowl, , If the conserve shelf la. getting low try this tasfy combination: Molded Salad. Add selatln to tomatoes that have been put through a sieve, seasoned and molded In small egg cups. Serve on lettuce with small spoonfuls bf pineapple heaped around the tomato. ""Add mayonnaise, a spoonful at the side, and serve. one-four- th The time that bears no fruit de- serves no name. wre is nut time; waste the latter ana you reduce the former. You may have time again, but nev The poet Longfellow, In one of his er me time. prose works, has given advice as to time wnen Ume la, for time the attitude to take respecting the win away. flight of time of which all are so forTime present is the only time you cibly reminded by New Tear's day. van urn sure or. ' He writes: can be provident of time wh "Look not mournfully Into the past. Is not In the choice of hU prudent It comes not back again. .Wisely Im- company. prove the present It Is thine. And go forth to meet the shadowy future BEST NEW YEAR WISH without fear sod with a manly heart" To them I reply whenever a centralized government, and not the made the source and repository of all power the Constitution citizen,r ia "' of tha United States is scrapped. However concealed, despotism ia the CANDY BONBONS invasion of rights and privileges which are inherent and inalienable and which art enjoyed by the trace of God Into the white of, one egg, beaten The line of proper restraint ia and always will be undefined, but it lightly, mix powdered sugar antO stiff. coffW to flavor can be aaid generally that when the right of a citizen to do an act which Add very strong black and slightly color. Drop In a few ean with tha freedom of action of every otk.tr citizen ia prohibited. halve or tjoartere f walnut meets . at a time. Drop from a fork cote .individual liberty la invaded. ftper. Leave t try wnt aught w Somehow, cle, there d THE FLIGHT I OF TIME - I One advantage the duk season ha over the deer season la that thert practically no excuse for' shooting man by mistake for a du.-- lf keep thinking Jot lf one-eigh- th somewhere it ,a4 one-thir- having "parties in your head' If you have a crazy but beautiful By "NELLIE MARGARET SCANLAN, in New York Time two-thlrd- two-third- world can prevent you from ia , It r? -- 1,11 man te syff "Chicago Is Rather Obese; a Voluptuous Beauty , With a Bad Breath f. tell-mea- The . less w- eerned ahont- tho ,,,.,.t,. . u i ii i if r Qf room, u his house than will hold two cars. omato and pineapple. When the fresh frulta are unbb-Xtalnable the "l eanned may be, The Parte tailor who wants to m.v used, varying the knickers the correct dress I '? for serv VO t of method , wear undoubtedly has been bribK For fresh a bunch of golfers. ing. use the tomatoes following: Isn't it possible that pm-tn- . Tomatoe With mother herself knew, something ripe to-- , vamping! Otherwise bow did ibt Pineapple Peel medium-size- d matces removing a slice from the top of each, and take out the seeds and pulp. Sprinkle the inside with salt and. Maybe they permitted the form lf hour. FtU crown prince to go back to Germm Invert, let stand the tomatoes with fresh pineapple cut Just to demonstrate to hlm how Utt) into fine bits, or shredded, with nuts; figure he cuts these days. one-cro- pi-ov- easily get around that. ' ,- " It haa been found thai th. the college girl are s.eadll, lncT in alze. but anr efflciom .1. Tr-- " A most delightful salatl combination - 1 thsthasK GOOD THINGS FOR OCCASIONS The fanner as, for eiample, the man in spring wheat territory who raises wheat alone --ia not productively employed and his land is also idle for a considerable part of the year.. And all the time the fiied charges against his farm keep on piling up. There ia nd idle period for taxes, interest, insurance, Or any of the fixed charges of upkeep. They are working all the time. How long do you suppose any kind of business could survive condip tions like those of farming, .running only part of the year? There is plenty of risk in farming at the best Every farmer ia com pelled to gamble against the weather, against various kinds of pests, and against fluctuations of market demands and prices. Diversified farming is the best insurance I know of against these risks the insurance of the feed lot, the dairy barn, the hog pen, the hen bouse and the garden. If you want to know how the facta fit witbTthese theories, ask the credit man who deals with customers in any agricultural community ; ask the banker who does business with botbjeinds of farmers. Experience has clearly proved that in any locality where the farmers bare gone in for live stock, dairying, poultry raising, gardening, or other forma of divmlfied" farming ih credit standpoint. The credit man or the banker will tell, you that p exactly the reverse is true in a community that is devoted to fanning, of wheat, or cotton, or corn, or any other single product. Aa far as I can read the signs of the future, I see no indication that the fixed .charges for farming are going to be materially reduced. And since the farmer cannot expect much, if any, reduction in his fixed charges, his hope of betterment most lie in improvement of his returns. For this improvement he may derive some help from marketing and from other economic measures that farmers can bring into play by pulling together. But, for the mos part, the farmer, like the rest of ns, must find his own cure for his own troubles. I firmly believe that through diversified farming, individually studied and Individually applied, the farmer will do much more for himself than anybody "will ever do for him. crop-destroyi- In eommon fairness to ih. i.. suggest that, any hen egga ought to have a n ,or self in the straw,, la thera aay harmony of tint that has such stirring of dsllsbt as the twaet modulations '"of woman'! voice. O. Eliot t one-cro- p one-cro- A man with hm. TM K. - . ' mi guilty the other day. A h. the flrst 85 years ago. it U eviT u never wilt learn. i'. - "Through Diversified Farming the Farmer Will Do More ' ; , ,-- rpti d" a &JWJ College students, says better are professor, with tbe actual conditions of people. any other class should be inclined to extent to waw w capacity by tbe do not agree with hhu aJJ ut -Europe au. uu.i affsirs that net -out b, a tighteningthst of s critical position At.Is -- rather pathiier, emout most eow - aD The . wnen members or -- i. a clans. 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