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Show Popularity of Motor Camping Is Very Easy to Understand The Immense J. C and. JOHN By 'OST D. LONG, in "Motor Camping." are possessed of the desire to of u M I CThe Kitchen Cabinet- - "I j ttfci US. Wwura SmmsMgmt UaloU Since the dawn of history hordes of men have pressed into "How many million friend tberf new countries. Sometimes the expeditions have " sre whoa lot been in i Keeps them outside nf path from search of food and plunder, but mixed in with these motive day to Sy! But through the atttane and th has been the human passion for something better, the hope for sunnier dark 1 smile. y Fur I can love them, though I M nxncs lving over the horizon, them tot" Hemmed in by the restrictions of modem business life, people no onper, even ia this Western World, move by tribes or companies into DESIRABLE GOOD THINGS new homelands. But the restlessness remains. In the United States a new and increasing way of A dainty tasty way of serving veal satisfying this desire for recreation and adventure has swept over the country. Motor for a tiinull family Is as follows: Veal Birds Have camping has become a leading national pastime. Thousands play golf rather thin slice of, veal every year, tens of thousands play tennis, hundreds of thousands engage cut from the leg. Pound but in the past few years millions have grne in for motor until thin, cut Into strips in and place on each a ten are over There million in cars this country. camping. of seasoned spoonful Tlie immense popularity of motor camping is very easy to under-etan- d bread crumbs, using Just when one realizes that this pastime is romantic, healthful, educatsuch seasoning as the family 'Ikes. It Way be same time economical. the at Father and can take the whole family ive with a little paprika for a two weeks' or a month's trip in his car at virtually the same cost onion, parsley or sage or as staying at home. The room rent he will have to pay on his trip will poultry dressing and a of lemon peel. Hull up the grating cents to or a dollar from a fifty nothing day for the family. There range strips, dip Into sensoned flour after are many thousands of acres of free camping grounds in the national and Bkewerinx well with toothpicks or with twine, liaee In a hot frying slate public playgrounds. pan with a little butter and brown well all over. Now add a cupful or - 18 ty-I- nc Europe Cannot Be Saved by Diplomacy; She Must Go Back to Hard Work more of thin cream or rich milk. Cover and stmmer for hutf an hour. "Serve with mushed potatoes and the gravy from the pun. Frosted Ginger Cookies. Cream of a cupful of butter, with one-hn- lf of a cupful of sugar and the ls beaten yolks of two eggs, two one-quart- er By HENRY J. ALLEN, Former Governor f Kansas. Europe cannot be saved by diplomacy. She must go back to hard It is impossible to place all Europe in one category. Some parts are very bad, and there are also several bright spots. But I brought away t gloomy picture of the stirring of new ambitions and the forming of new table-spoonfu- of strong coffee Infusion, cupful of pastry flour, one and f tenspoonfuls of baking powd of a teaioonful of salt der, s and of a cupful of ententes. chopped candied ginger. Combine and It is euggestive of the old system of alliances. It is evident in the blend well and drop from a spoon onto Near East and the Balkans. It is noticeable in the French courting of baking sheets. I5nke In a moderate-oveand when cool frost with marsh-malloPoland and Czechoslovakia and the British advances toward Icing. Italy. There is the suggestion that trouble may impend again Tomato Nests. Hollow out tomafrom the same reactions that brought on the late war. The powers are toes and fill each with the following mixture: Drop a raw egg into the toplaying for position. Southern Russia has improved because the peasants have returned to mato, season with salt, pepper, and cover with two slices of bacon. Add a work on the land. Great Britain is giving Palestine a government prob- bit of Worcestershire sauce to each. sbly better than that it enjoyed under Solomon or David. I found skewer tlie slices of bacon with tooth- Egypt the most prosperous spot abroad. Greece is reviving admirably from i),( ks nn(1 1,Hke twenty minutes, Rhubarb Pie. Take one and one-ha- lf the Near East debacle, and France is forcing Germany to make a reasoncupfuls of sliced rhubarb, one cupable reparations offer and carry it out. ful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of America cannot do much now to help Europe. We should join The (lour, one egg, mix well the egg, flour and sugnr, add to the rhubarb. Line a Hague court, but the time has not yet arrived to join the league of pie tin with rich paste, fill with the nations. I agree with President Harding regarding our attitude toward mixture and cover with a top crust. Europe. We should seek to be helpful when European questions arise Bake slowly In a moderate oven. work. one-hal- f one-hal- one-thir- three-fourth- which affect us, or which threaten world civilization, but we must not get miied up in European politics. A (rood cook can vary the flavors of food as a composer varies the orchestral colors and harmon-Ic- b, getting genuine artistic tronomic pleasure therefrom. Finch. When the Timber Supply of This Country Is " Gone Where Will We Turn? By COL. W. B. GREELEY, U. S. Forester. Starting with the great forests of New England, we have seen the lumber industry pushed westward and southward as the forests of the Eat were exhausted of merchantable saw timber. Pennsylvania, which but a generation states in g ago, was one of the large the union, now pays a freight bill of $20,000,000 on the forest products needed to supply the demands of its people. When the merchantable timber supply of this country is gone, where will we turn? To Europe? Most emphatically no! Europe has no more than she herself needs. Her forests were exhausted generations ago. Shall we turn to Siberia? Yes, but in a very limited degree, since most of the Siberian softwood foresta are inaccessible. Shall we turn to the tropics? Yes, for hardwood, which cannot be classed as structural and woods; first, because of high costs, and second, because of the nature timber-eiportin- se of the wood. Then where will the United States get its timber when its own are no longer able to supply the demands? The answer is nowhere! Nowhere in the world are there enough softwood forests to upply the needs of the United Statea and the other countries with which we will come in contact as active competitors bidding for the world's forests ' timber supply. No, the importing bubble has been burst by a careful analysis of the The practical thing to do ia to use wisely the remaining forests we shall not of tlie United States, and to grow a new timber crop, so that be forced to seek need to carry on our beyond our shores the timber we agriculture, to build our homes, to print our newspapers and periodicals, of to run our factories, and to give employment to more than 1,000,000 our citizens. facts. gas- Human Mind and Heart the Greatest Fact in Government J. BRYAN, Address at Railroad Valuation Conference. The bias of the human mind and heart is the greatest fact we have to consider in government Biaa may be a matter of education, inheritance, that conw environment But biaa, conscious or unconscious, ia the thing Ry W. trols. In my Journeying! np and down the world I have discovered a way of findinK out a man! biaa. I take him off to one aide and tell him the story of U.arus and Dives. .Then I wait for the reaction. If he is a democrat h will More tables say: "It's too bad anybody had to live on crumbs. k- oui'tit v.ro aont tt table." If he is t ..,. j nu aristocrat he will say: "What ft lovely thing it was for Lazarus that there a? a Dives near from ? hose table he could get the crumbs." One line la drawn through society, ft line separating the man who democrat t heart democrat and the man who U an aristocrat The Sieves government comes fiWthe bottom; the aristocrat believes society nl government should' be suspended from the top. The democrat n the masses and says make them prosperous first; the aristocrat leak! o and then wait until prosperity legislate for the through to the marsea. t be-i- well-to-d- Say "Bayer" and Insist! 1 t, It LONG RECORD OF GOOD WORK WANTED THAT FARM BUREAU Swede's Complaint to the Department of Agriculture Put on File for Future Action. American 8unday Sjhool Union Has Completed Its 106th Year of Serv-Ic- e It Activities. The American Sunday School union. oldest Sunday-schoorganisation In the country, has Just completed Its 106th year of service. Since Its founding, the Christian Work (undenominational) tells us, the union has onran- iaed 138,000 Sunday schools, Into which It has gathered W0,000 pupils During tlie laat year It either organ ized or reorganized 1,800 schools, la Trloffl-cals- , toed a dozen Sundny-scftoO- l with a circulation of some 2,000,-00and published 200,000 books, booklets and other Sunday-schoo- l requisites. Further, "More than five thousand persons, young and old, have professed conversion In connection with Its work during the past year, and fortv-sevechurches of various denominations have grown out of Its schools, its work covers the whole United States and Is thou supported by some twenty-flvsand givers people who believe that union, evangelical work of this sort 1 the salvation of our outlying rural dis In an tricts." Literary Digest Tlie Estelllne (S. D.) Journal prints the following: "A Swede In Minnesota took out a membership In the Farm bureau. About three months afterwards the Department of Agriculture at Washington received a letter from htm: ban sign up for a farm bureau. Not received It as yet. School teacher she ban going to board "at our hpuse. My wife she vitant bureau for spare bedroom. Let me know how soon you will send It.' "He received the following letter, "'Dear Sir : Replying to yours of secent date. We have no bureaus In Washington that we can send out at the present time. However, Sidney Anderson of Minnesota is at work on an A No. 1 farm blot-- , and as soon as he finishes It we will have It sawed up, made Into farm bureaus, and send one to you.' " "I Unleea you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not get " ting aha genuine Bayer product pre scribed by physicians over twenty-tw- o years and proved safe by millions for " Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism Earache Neuralgia Pain, Pain of 'Aspirin Tablets Accept Bayer only. Each unbroken package contain proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. .. Drug gists also sell bottles of 24 and 1XX Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of . Sallcyllcacld. Advertisement BURDEN FOR ANY STOMACH No Wonder Dear Old Lady Was rifled blnatlon for Lunch. n e Aunt Pauline Is a dear old soul, but she doesn't mderstand a thing about fot. The other day her nephew re turned from the local course, after a partloeilarly rotten exhibition of golf. "Dla you hare a good game?" asked Aunt Pauline, who always professes a kindly Interest In what she terms her nephew's "eccentricity." "No," was the reply- - The seventh tee was sloppy and all the greens were) In a terrible state." , Aunt Pauline shuddered. "You mustn't lunch there any mores Gilbert. What a weird combination t And you know bow easily yon get Indigestion." She shrugged her shoulders; thereby relieving herself of all responsibility. "I can understand bow enjoyable a cup of tea and a sandwich must be after a game; but seven cups of tea and greens ."Chicago Dally News. Yes-Hus- . C 1 II SUMMER HINTS To keen sandwiches fresh another day place them on a plate and cover with another; now wrap In a cloth wrung out of cold water. In this way there are no parts of the sandwiches softened by the wet cloth as It does not touch them, though tt keeps them moist. Make a layer cake of three layers. If the family Is small ; cut one layer In half and use for filling a half cupful of whipped cream sweetened and flavored. Put the other two layers together, using a boiled fronting with chopped nuts and raisins. This will keep and be moist for several days and two cakes will be had at the expense of time and material for one. The odds and ends of pastry may be made Into a turnover, using any filling at hand, or may be baked over patty pans and used as tlmhale cases, or may he rolled out, sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon cut Into strips and baked, making little cakes to serve with tea. Raisin Chocolate. Take one cupful of raisins, one cupful of dates stoned, one teaspoonful of orange rind, of a teaspoonful of cinnamon and vanilla. Mix well and form Into balls. Melt the chocolate In a double a holler. Dip the balls Into It one time, using a hatpin or loop of wire If a chocolate dipper Is not at hand. Place on waxed paper to cool and harden. Melon CocktalL Use a good-siremusk-melo- n potato cutter and cut either If balls. Into watermelon or muskmelon Is used a mint or lemon sauce Is delicious; If watermelon, any fruit sauce like pineapple or orange and lemon la good. Use tall sherbet cups which have been dipped after moistening the Inside of the rim In powdered sugar, then fill with the chilled balli and the sauce. Garnish with a sprig of mint on top of each when using mint sauce. Escalloped Onions and Tomatoes Take two cupfuls of sliced onions, two cupfuls of stewed tomatoes, one-hal-f cut fut of bread crumbs, salt and pepper to season, three tablespoonfuls of butter. Cook the onions in toning water for fifteen minutes, then drain and salt them. Put a layer of tomatoes In a greased baking dish, add a layer of onions, sprinkle with salt and Repepper, cover with more tomatoes. need. are all the until Ingredients peat Spread erurubs on top, dot with butter and bake In a moderate oven. Hon at Nephew' Peculiar Com. O Boston! Urging that tlie candidates BtniBirle mpendlng local nolltlcal make a study of terse English, the Th Literal Husband. Boston Herald drives Its argument Wife Where's the chicken I told home by quoting this conversation beyou to bring home? tween two young women who met at Husband Nothing doing. party: Wife Why not? "Say, usen't you work to Smlth'sr Husband You told me there'd be a "Sure. I seen you there," slie re lot of them, and for me not to take the "Usen't your first one they showed me plied with cordiality. feet to ache you T" Youth's Compan band Wife ion. Well, you told me to pick one for myself. And there wasn't one Slow Getting Acquainted. there that hadn't already been picked Tom In regard to my Drooosal thoroughly. Alice says she doesn't know her own A Slave of Habit mind. Alice "Do you get any pleasure out Many a man becomes a Jailbird Ida Huh! It's not because she through too strenuous efforts to feather of smoklngr Virginia "Oh, yea; It hasn't lived with It long enough. his nest. worries my husband." 101 Recipes or suggestions for new WE willofbuy not less thanpaying $50.00 for each one accepted. Grape-Nut- s, Ami in addition-Go- od Housekeeping Institute, conducted by Good House keeping Magazine, will decide an award of $2500.00 for the best four of the 101 new Grape-Nut- s Recipes, so purchased i $1,000.00 for the 1st selection $75aOO for the 2nd selection $500.00 for the 3rd selection $250.00 for the 4th selection one-quart- er The conditions of this remarkable offer are so simple and fair that every housewife in the United States has an opportunity to share in its benefits. There Is No Other Food like d Bias of the O A spine CASTORIA" n w O SWAMP-ROO- T Thousands of have kidney a&d bladder trouble and never eacpeot it. Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else bat kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. It the kidney are not in a healthy conPrepared Especially for Infants dition, tkey may cease the other organs to become diseased. and Children of All Ages Pain ia the back, headache, loss of ambition, Berrottsness, are often times sympMother Pletcher'a Castoria baa toms of kidney trouble. Dr. been In use for over 80 years as a Don't delay starting treatment. a physician's prepleasant, harmless substitute for Cas- Kilmer' 8wmp-Rootor OIL Paregoric, Teething Drops and scription, obtained at any drug store, may be Just the remedy needed to overcome Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcot- such conditions, ics. Proven directions are on each Oct a medium or large site bottle impackage. Physicians recommend mediately from any drug store. The genuine bears signature of However, if yen wish first to test this great preparation send ten 'cents to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton. N. Y., for sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this peper. Advertisement. FOR ooocxxxxxxxxxxjoooooocojcoo be somewhere WOMEN NEED BABIES CRY Grape-Nut- Practically everybody knows m delicious, nourish-i- n breakfast food. And while it is common knowledge that Gripe-Na- ts with milk or cream it com pUtifad, msny bouse wives do not know of the tppctizinj end economical dishes that can be prepared with Grape-Nu- t. CraPt-Nut- t Unit itulf, tt bill, to mon um than any ttktr crtoL Thousand of women are finding" in their varied uses for Grape-Nu- ts home cookinl; and thousands of others would b glad to learn that Grepe-Nut- s s s adds distinctive flavor and nutritive qualities to a freat variety of dishes. So the thought back of our offer of over $7500.00 for Grape-Nut- s Recipes is to brinj out the new ways in which this wonderful food is adding to the health and pleasurt of people everywhere. ' ' ' Ask your grocer, or write to Dept. B, Postum Cereal Co., Inc., Battle Creek, Mich., for details of the offer of over $7500.00 for New Grape-Nut- s Recipes, which must be mailed by August 31, 1923. Grape-Nut- Sold by Grocers everywhere 1 1 |