The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, January 13, 1922, Image 4

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    For Rent—Furnished rooms strictly
modern, steam heat. On car line. Good
location. Webster 3247.—tf.
FOR RENT—Strictly modern fur
nished rooms 174)8 X. 26th St Web.
4769.—Mrs. W. 1*. Erwin.
FOR. RENT—Furnished rooms. Har
ney 6926.
Holst Pharmacy for drugs 2702
Cuming street. Harney 6*1.—Adv.
FOR RENT—Neatly furnished
rooms. Webster 1529,
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in a
first class rooming house, steam heat,
hath, electric lights, on Dodge and
Twenty-fourth street care line. rs.
Anna Banks, 924 North Twentieth.
Douglas 4379.
A P. Scruggs. Lawyer, 220 R. 13th
St. Douglas 7812, Colfax 3881.—Adv.
Get acquainted with the Episcopal
Church by attending services Sunday
morning at 11 o’clock at St. Philip’s
Church, 1121 North Twenty-first
street.—Adv.
FOR RENT—Modern furnished
rooms, men only. 1208 North 24th
St. Web- 4686.
FOR SALE—One hard coal burner
heating stove, one heavy iron bed and
:■ prings. 1204 N. 27th St.
FOR RENT—Comfortably furnish-.
cd rooms, block from car line. Board
if desired. Web. 5372. 4t
E. F. Morearty, Lawyer, 704) Peters
Trust Bldg, Jackson 3*41 or Harney
Jenkln's Barber Shop—All work
strictly first-class 2122 No. 21th St.
W ebster 2095.
For Rent—Nicely furnished rooms
2713 N. 26th St., Web. 03f;0. 4t
FOR RE NT—Furnished rooms fo
light housekeeping. Reference re
quired. Web. 1198.
-
Boys’ All-Leather School
Shoes
All Sizes
$1.45 and $2.45
BOYSEN SHOE CO.
412 N. 16th St.
Opposite Jefferson Square
COAL I
Moderately Priced
FOR CASH
Due to the mild weather we
>, offer the following HIGH
GRADE Goals at these low
prices.
REMEMI3ER, we screen all
Coal at the yard before delivery.
SPECIALTY Nut QQ ~ i k
per ton.$0* DU
SPECIALTY Egg mQ / k/ k
per ton.$D.UU
SPECIALTY Large l*Q r/V
Lump, per ton .... (jP^/iDU
ILLINOIS, all sizes
goo<Tquality.A ~ / t
per ton .pPJ-U«DU
COLORADO Smokeless
and Soot less (ft 1 H *•' /A
per ton. tJp_lU. DU
RADIANT, the best from
Franklin Co., <J> T O AA
111., per ton .... flZ.UU
genuine,, C AA
per ton ...tjPU.UU
SPADRA Hard Coal from Ar
kansas, the best coal for fur
nace and hot water plants;
holds fire 24 Q /A/A
hours, per ton., tjj) J-• VAvJ
PETROLEITR, Carbon Coke, no
ash, all beat -<*£OA AA
ner ton .t)))^U.UU
Consumers Coal & Supply Co.
“Dealers In Rood Coal”
Done. 0580 1228 Nicholas St.
Mme. C. Whitley
. Sooth & Johnson System
Appointments at your home If
deaired. [
Web. 3807 2810 N. 28th St.
£ / ■ / . I
h» ...
NORTH OMAHA
DENTISTS
Cor. 24th and Cuming Sts.
RELIABLE DENTISTRY
st
REASONABLE PRICES
Phone—AT lantic 4564
Open Evening* until 7 P. M.
V . : , a T - - ■ ■ ■ r - - .f
PLUMBING NEEDS
DAILY GLEANING
Ounce of Prevention Is Worth
More Than Pound of Cure
With Plumbers’ Bills.
HOW TO CARE FOR FIXTURES
Waite Pipes Should Be Flushed Thor
oughly to Carry Off Hardened
Grease and Accumulation of
Miscellaneous Dirt.
(■Prepared by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
Many plumbers' bills would he avoid
ed. the health of the family better
safeguarded, and the appearance of
the plumbing Improved If the following
suggestions, made by the home eco
nomies office of the United Stales Ite
psrtment of Agriculture, were followed
by the housewife:
Stoppage in pipes Is often due to
hardened grease or to nn accumula
tion of hair and llnf. The waste pipes
should be flushed thoroughly after us
ing, so that the waste Is carried out
of the house pipes and the trap left
full of clean water. A trap in a
waste pipe Is a curved section so ar
ranged that water remains In It and
prevents the passage of sewer gas Into
the house. If the water left in the
trap is not clean, decomposition may
take place and odors and gases may
come from the Impurities in the water
Itself. Precautions should*be taken to
prevent oil and grease from going
down the waste pipe from the kitchen
sink, because being lighter than water
they rend to remain floating on the
surface of the water In the trap.
Use of Cleansing Mixtures.
Occasionally more than cold, or even
hot, wafer Is necessary to clear out
the accumulated grease, lint, miscel
laneous dirt, and hits of refuse. Wash
Ing soda Is ordinarily strong enough
for bathroom pipes, and may be used
In the proportion of one part ‘‘liquid”
soda (made by boiling one pound of
washing soda and one quart of water
In an old kettle) to twelve parts hot
water, or one pound of dry soda thor
oughly dissolved in three gallons of
boiling water. The drain pipe from
the kitchen sink may sometimes need
a stronger cleanser, even If it Is thor
oughly cleaned and flushed, after each
dishwashing, and for this purpose
caustic potash is efficacious, but must
be used carefully—the hands must be
protected and the potash must not be
allowed to touch porcelain or porce
lain-lined sinks, because it may de- !
sfroy the glaze. One pound of crystals
dissolved in two quarts of water
should be poured down the drain.
About half an hour later the pipe
should be flushed with clear water.
Caustic soda, although sometimes rec
ommended. is not desirable, because tt
Is likely to unite with the grease and ;
form a hard soap, that Is difficult to
remove from the pipes.
•Tine scourers may be used on all
fixtures. For porcelain ami enameled
Iron fixtures kerosene and whiting are
especially good; the kerosene cuts the j
grease and the whiting supplies the
abrasion. Some of the commercial '
cleaning preparations used for enam
eled and porcelain fixtures contain
scourers so gritty that they scratch ,
the surface, and thus make the work
of cleaning gradually harder. Nothing
coarser than whiting should he al
lowed.
Should Be Cleaned Daily.
Bathroom fixtures should be cleaned
dally. Tubs and bowls should be
scrubbed with a fine scourer or with
water containing a little kerosene,
rinsed with clear hot water and wiped
dry. The stains made by water con
taining an excess of Iron may 1)e re
moved from porcelain or porcelain- j
lined tubs and bowls with oxalic-add
solution, which Is* a poison and must
be entirely washed off. The overflow
pipes should be flushed occasionally
with hot water, for dirt and grease are
likely to collect and decompose there.
The water-closet should he kept
scrupulously clean. A dally cleaning |
Is necessary with hot soapsuds or soda
solution, and a long-haired brush, and
flushed agRln. Then the seat, the
coyer, the chain, and the handle j
should be washed and wiped. All
cloths and utensils used In cleaning
the bathroom should be scalded and
dried, preferably In the open air.
The crust of lime which is some
times deposited by hard water can be
removed from porcelain and porcelain
lined fixtures with hydrochloric add.
This acid la very potaonous and la ala*
injurious to the akin and to many
materials. Including the metalP used la
plumbing. It must, therefore, be han
dled with extreme care. Gloves should
be worn when using It. To clean th*
bowl of a closet, ball out ns much wa
ter as possible, pour In about a pint
of commercial hydrochloric acid (aonae
tlmes called muriatic acid), and lot
this stand for several horn's, or until
the crust crumbles when poked with ■
stick. Then flq^Jj^.wltfe ji larje^sjusn
tlty of water. The water in me tank
i Is not enough; more must be poured
In by hand In order to dilute the add
and curry It away rapidly. In a
porcelaln-llned sink or bathtub the
acid must not be allowed to stand on
the soiled earthenware, because It ro.-iy
get through to the metal underneath
and eat that away. It must, therefore,
be applied drop by drop to the lime
and flushed out with plenty of water
as soon as the crust begins to crumble
i when pressed.
SUBSTITUTE FLOURS
FOR MAKING BREADS
People Tire of Wheat Served
Three Times Daily.
Corn Meal, Pecan, Hickory or English
Walnuts Cut Into Small Pieces and
Other Cereals Are Useful
to Break Monotony.
(Prepared by the United Statee Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
Wheat broad served three times a
day is apt to grow tiresome If not
varied by bread made from other
cereals. The following recipes are
recommended by the home economics
kitchen of the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture :
Brown Bread.
I cupfuls corn meal 1 teaspoonful salt.
1 cupful flour. 2 cupfuls water.
I teaspoonfuls bak- 1 cupful molasses.
Ing powder.
Mix the dry ingredients and add the
molasses and the water. Pour the
mixture into a greased coffee can or
steaming tin, steam It for two hours,
and then bake in a moderate oven for
one-half hour.
Nut Bread.
3 cupfuls flour. 1 cupful English
3 teaspoonfuls bak- walnut or pecan
Ing powder. or hickory nut
1 teaspoonful salt. meats, cut Into
14 cupful sugar. small pieces.
1 cupful milk. 1 egg
Sift together the flour, the baking
powder, the salt, and the sugar, and
add the milk, the egg, well beaten, and
the nut meats. Place the mixture In
a well-huttered pan and let rise for
one hour. Bake for three-fourths hour
in a moderate oven.
Rolled Oats and Wheat Bread.
1% cupfuls liquid cake yeast
(milk, water, pota- 1 tablespoonful of
to water or a mix-. sugar or corn
ture of these). sirup
cupful freshly 2 teaspjonfuls salt
mashed potato 1H cupfuls ground
3H cupfuls wheat rolled oats
flour.
Make a sponge of all the Ingredients
except the rolled oats, and let It rise
In a warm place until very light. Add j
the rolled oats, which have been
ground fine in the food chopper and j
measured after grinding. Let the dough j
rise until it doubles in hulk, then :
knead and mold It into a loaf, brush
with melted fat after It has been j
placed In a pun, and allow It to double
In bulk agqin. Bake In a hot oven
for 1 Vi hours.
IRONING DRUDGERY REDUCED
Use Clean, Smooth Irons and Have
Well-Padded Board or Table at
Comfortable Height.
Have a clean, well-padded hoard or
table set at comfortable height.
Use clean, smooth Irons. Rubbing
them occasionally with wax or paraffin
will keep them In good condition, j
Rusty or dirty Irons should be scoured j
with sand soap or bath brick, ^
washed, wiped dry, heated, waxed and
rubbed smooth.
Have clothes evenly dampened and
smoothly and tightly rolled.
Iron fabrics with the lengthwise
thread, If possible, and Iron as large 1
a space at one time as possible. Most
materials look best if Ironed thorough
ly dry.
Iron first the parts that dry ont
quickly and that will hang off the
board when finished.
For silks, woolens and colored mate
rials use medium-hot Irons. Iron all.
these materials on the wrong side, ex
cept aprons and children’s dresses
thnt need a smooth surface to keep
clean longer. Silks and woolens may
be Ironed on the right side If covered
with dampened cheesecloth, say house
hold specialists of the United States
Department of Agriculture.
---
Pineapples aid direction and should
be eaten after meals.
*00
f
Try using a long-bandied oiled mop
for cleaning your car.
• • •
Never add sugar to waffle batter.
Serve with sugar or sirup.
0 0 0
In making a white cake, substitute
two egg whites for a yolk.
• • •
When washing keep a stiff vege
table brush handy to use on dirty
Deckhands, wristbands.
FISH WITHOUT MOUTH CAUGHT
Peculiar Specimen Found in Miseourl
Aleo Noseless, but Weighed
Five Pounds.
Kennett, Mo.—Going through life
Without a mouth or rather with your
mouth grown shut would be a sad
experience for anybody of the human
race, but E. D. Poe, a blacksmith of
this city, has Just caught urflsh that
waa thusly afflicted. Poe got the ;
unusual specimen of the flnny tribe,
while on an outing at what is known j
aa“Tear Blanket,” on the Varneys
river. It was a ‘five-pound buffalo
that had no sign of a mouth.
The fin bad the appearance of hav
ing had its mouth and nose bitten
off up to and Just below the eyes, and
In the process of healing the wound
grew entirely shut With this excep
tion the flsh was a fine specimen ;
and apparently waa not handicapped
by Its strange deformity or affliction. I
Poe put the flsh in a tank of water
and it swam around Just like any
other flsh. It seemed to have worked
out a scheme of letting water through ,
one set of gills and out the other. I
VEGETABLES ABE
CHEAP FOR FOOD
Particularly Valuable Are Those
Available During Spring and
Summer Seasons.
SMALL PLOT IS SUFFICIENT
Garden Truck ae Source of Mineral
Matter and Proteina la Much
More Important Than Many
People Fully Realize.
(Prepared by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
The old adage, ''an apple a day
keeps the doctor away,” might quite
as well have read "a carrot or an
onion a day,” and probably the result
would be about the same as regards
reducing the doctor's bill. Vegetables
of all kinds are necessary In the diet, !
hot particularly valuable are those
available in the spring and summer,
say specialists of the United States
Department of Agriculture.
Value of Vegetables In Diet.
Without going Into definite figures
It may be stated that the food value
of vegetables, sueh as beans, peas, po
tatoes, sweet corn, beats and carrots,
la very high. When considered from
the standpoint of the food value of
the crop that may be produced on a
given area of land, beaus, beets and
carrots are ahead of almost any oth
er garden crop. One tenth acre plant
ed entirely to carrots will yield about
u ton, and In energy this would be
equal to about 370 pounds of average
beef. One-tenth acre of beets would
also yield about a ton and be equal to ;
380 pounds of average beef. One-tentb
acre of lima beans would yield about
120 pounds of dry beans, equal to
about 220 pounds of beef.
As sources of mineral matter and
proteins needed by the body, vege
tables are much more valuable than !
J
Vegetables Furnish Considerable Por
tion of Needed Mineral Subatances
and Vitaminea in Diet, Beside Bulk.
many people realize. Also they sup
ply roughage, which is believed to
keep the body In good working order.
In the course of nature, human beings
as well us some unlmuls seem to have
so developed thut they need a certain
amount of roughuge, which is best
supplied by the coarser vegetable
foods. During recent years there has
been a growing tendency to reduce
the roughuge In cereals and some oth
er foods, and, In order to offset this,
un extra effort stiouhl he made to sup
ply plenty of vegetables and fruits. In
addition, fresh vegetables are among
the best sources of what, for lack of
a better name, have been called vita
mines.
Nobody has ever been able to stand
a vltamlne up by Itself, or a groujj of
them by themselves, so that we could
look at them, hilt It Is known that
they are present Just the same, be
cause of the action that they have up
on the human body.
Eat More Vegetables.
Too much cannot be said In favor
of a larger proportion of vegetables
In the diet of the American people.
The English are considered a nation
of meat eaters, hut It has been shown 1
thut Americans eat more meat per ;
capita than do »he English. A cer
tain amount of meat in the diet is ;
highly desirable but this should al
ways he balanced by a sufficient sup- ,
ply of vegetable
One of the reasons that many peo- j
pie have to a great extent cut vege- |
tables from their diet Is that they
have been unable to get fresh vege- ;
tables and do not relish stale ones. ]
The Individual home vegetable garden
planted either In the back yard, or a
convenient piece of land, not only
solves the problem of supplying the
family with vegetables at low cost
and In abundance, bnt guarantees
their freshness.
CARE OF HEATER IN SUMMER
Avoid Danger of Ifeiet by Cleaning In
•prlng and Storing in Thoroughly
Dry Place.
There Is danger of rust when a
■tore or furnace stands unused for
some time. Smokeplpes should be
taken down In the spring, cleaned and
Stored In a dry place. The doors
should be left open to keep the In
terior dry. A lump of unslaked lime
on the grate will collect the moisture
and thus prevent rust, home economic
specialists In the United States De- |
pertinent of Agriculture say. Leave
the boiler of a steam or hot-water
beater filled with water up to the
safety valve, during the summer.
Machine Gun Back in 1775?
A controversy as to who first in
vented machine guns is one of the
war’s aftermaths in France.
Lyon puts forth the claim of a
M. du Perron, who, in 1775, is said
to have submitted to the young King
Louis XVI, a military '“orgue" which
worked on a crank system and could
fire twenty-four bullets “almost simul
taneously, and consequently eoul-' an
nihilate a whole regiment in a few
minutes,’’ according to a contemporary
record.
t
THE MONITOR CLASSIFIED COLDMN I
ATTORNEYS
PIATTI & WEAR
ATTORNEYS AND
COUNSELLORS AT LAW
Phone Douglas 4508
1017-20 City Nat'l Rank Bldg.
*
. ..
Lambert, Shotwell &
Shotw'ell
ATTORNEYS
Omaha National Bank Bldg.
Phone AT lantic 5104
Notary Public In Office
and Counsellor
N. W. WARF
Attorney at Law
Practicing In Both State and Fed
eral Court6
111 South 14th St. Omaha, Neb.
~~ SEED STORES
.....»—.
We Have a Complete Line of
FLOWER,GRASS
AND GARDEN vJCCUS
Bulbs, Hardy Perennials, Poaitry
Supplies
Freah cut flowers always on hand
Stewart’s Seed Store
119 N. 16th St. Opp. Post Office
Phone Douglas 977
... * *
CLOTHING
DRUG STORES
Liberty Drug Company
B. Robinson, Mgr.
Webster 0886.
1904 > 24til SL
FREE DELIVERY
?llllltllDMHIIIMDtllHllliUtllMIIHMlDnmiMttllMIIHUIM(limiilimMIMMItimiHlir
iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini iiiiiiiiiiiiiim
s Best Drugs, Sodas and Sundries =
E in City =
| PEOPLES DRUG STORE f
“j Prompt Service —
E 111 So. 14th St. Jack. 1446 E
Phone AT lantlc 5104
S. W. Meigs & Co.
REAL ESTATE. RENTALS
AND INSURANCE
111 South 14th St. Omaha, Neb.
f .....
! MELCHOR-Druggist
The Old Reliable
Tel. South 807 4826 So. 24th St.
.£ Phones—Office Web. 5036— Res. V
£ Web. 5406 £
A From Early Morn Until Late at *i*
% Night
“Taxi at Your Service” ^
| NORTH END EXPRESS CO. I
A' A. F. ALLEN, Prop.
x y
■{• Trucks lor Either Light or 11
f Heavy Hauling £ |
X We Haul Anything. Anywhere •{•
O 2010 N. 24th St. Omaha, Neb. !•! |
-----1
New and Second Hand ♦
FURNITURE
We Kent and Sell Real Estate
Notary Public J i
S. W. Mills Furniture Co. j j
421 No .'4 St. We Think Yon Web. 014H I
............ ........ ....
FURNITURE. STOVES,
FITXURES
Second hand or New
Repairing Hauling
Everything Needed in Home
WEST'ENI) FURNITURE CO.
IU B. RHODES. Prop.
2522 Lake St.
F. WILBKKG’S BAKERY
24th & Parker Sts.
Fakes, Cookies, Bread and Pies
M. L. Hunter
Distributor ot
De-Lite Coffee, Teas
and other household necessities
Special Pre in I u ms Laundry
Tablets
2201 Grant St Web. 0*81
GROCERIES AND MEAT MAR
KETS
The
j Burdette Grocery
T. G. KELLOGG, Prop.
Full line of Groceries and
Meats
Quick Sales and Small
Profits Our Method
221 fi No. 24th St. Web. 0515
we seii Skinner's
the highest grade Macaroni,
Spaghetti, Egg Noodles and
~ ~- Mi»<*Arnnlv Prnrtiicta.
———————————————————— j
HARDWARE
Petersen & Michelsen
Hardware Co,
GOOD HARDWARE
2408 N St. Tel. South 162 J
...
LAUNDRIES
Standard Laundry
24tli, Near Lake Street
PHONE WEBSTER 0130
I EMERSON’S LAUNDRY
f The Laundry That Suits All |
! 1301 No. 24th St. Web. 0820 |
l—-11
I
O. U. O. OF O. F.. MlMo-irl‘’Valley
Lodge No. 9915. Meets every second and
fourth Thursday nights each month a<
24th and Charles Sts
J. D. CRUM. N. G.
M. L. HUNTER. P N. F.
W B. TURNER. P. S.
E. A. NIELSEN
Upholstering Co.
Furniture Repairing.
Mattress Renovating l
“We handle a complete line
of Redsprings and Mattres
ses at reasonable prices."
> 1913-15 Cuming Str. ■
Jackson 0861
RIGHT NOW' is the lime to pay you
subscription to the Monitor.
I
I ,__
PAINTS, ETC.
A. F. PEOPLES
PAINTING
PAPERHANGING AND
DECOR AUNG
Estimates Furnished "re*
All Work Guaranteed.
Full Line of Wall Paper and
Sherwin-W'illiams Paints and
Varnishes
2419 Lake St. W'ebster 6366
I PRINTERS
ESTAURAI.
SBBasiasauKBisesaagBWSsasgJSSissiK
| Eagle Cafe j
Lake and 27th Street
| SPECIAL CHICKEN DIN
I NER SUNDAYS AND
THURSDAYS
§ : n
Phone Webster 3247
Chas. Hemphill Prop.
3 1
UNDERTAKERS
•—iminiiMMiiiiniiimmnHitntHmt'.tHiiMMHiiiiiiiiHitiiiiiiHiiiiiiMHim
Allen Jones, Rea. Phone W. 294
JONES & CO.
FUNERAL PARLOR
| 2314 North 24th St. Web. UM j
Lad? Attendant
RtMitHiii'intimmiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiiimiiiiitniiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiniHMiumti
iV.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.W.VVA
4 The Western Funeral Home 5
4 Pleases 5
". And will wrve you night and day ?
.■ 251» Lake St. Phone Web. 02« 4
4 SILAS JOHNSON, Prop. 5
3» FUNERAL DIRECTORS 4
.V.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.vrt
Good Things for
The Table
FRUIT CAKE
40c per pound
Pumpkin and
Mince Pies
Rolls
Petersen’s
Bakeries
Lake Bakery, 24th X Lake Sts.
MLS1C.
| Records Exchanged, 15 cents Lav*
* est Mamie Smith records alwa>®
Ion hand.
SHLAES PHONOGRAPH CO.
H. DOLGOFF
i FURNITURE and HARDWARE
b 1911-16-18 N. 21th St. 1847 N. 24th St.
f Web. 1607 Web. 4825
;l* Full line of— p
| OILS—PAINTS—VARNISHES—BRUSHES !'
\{ . STOVES, RUGS. LINOLEUM ^
Better Goods for Less Money. Credit if You Wish. m
| OPEN EVENINGS
I--:—:--:--:—:--:--:—:--:--:--:—:--:--:--:-.;.
W/ANV.V.V.V.VV.V.VV.V.V.V.'.’.V.V.V/.V.V.V,
A USE
IDENTEO
■
■I The Pyorrhea-Preventive Tooth-Paste
< J None Better
■
MANUFACTURED BY THE
j: Kaffir Chemical Laboratories NEBRASKA
PATRONIZE THE STATE FIRIITIRE Cfc
14TH ST. CORNER DODGE ST. Douglas 1317
Headquarters D Dll VQMIIA V Phonographs
Foe BlfUHOfllwIl and Recorda
It Pays to Advertise in the Monitor