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About The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1918)
THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. CABfllNKHK?- We have no Intellectual right to be Ignorant when Information lies at our hand, and wo have no spiritual right to be weary when great moral Issues are at stake. Agnes Rcppller. APPLE WAYS. To serve 'nn apple plo de luxe make tho pie nfter nny wcll-lltced recipe. Ifnve reiidy n cup- I f u I of whipped creum, add u few grains of suit nnd : put this mixture through n pustry tubejn any pattern on top of the pie. Serve as n dessert. Date and Apple Pie. Lino a pie plato with rich paBtc, till with a mixture of ilntes and apples, sprinkle with a half cupful of sugar, a teaspoonful of cinnamon, two tahlespoonfuls of water, then cover with a crust and hake an hour In a moderate oven. Kentucky Pie. Steam six large ap ples and put them through a colnnder; ntlr In while hot, one spoonful of but ier and when cool add the yolks of three eggs, the rind and Juice of a lemon and a cupful of nugar all Willi Mixed and beaten together. Cover a leep plate with good prust and All with the mixture. Bake 40 minutes, cover with a meringue and brown. Apple sauce when prepared of good 7'avored tart apples Is delicious. Slice ihe peeled apples thin and place In a ftone covered dish and bake for sev eral hours In the oven, adding sugur sifter they are partly cooked. Cider may be added to the apples while cook ing If liked, making the old-fashioned cider apple sauce which Is often canned nnd used when the apples and cider are out of season. New Apple Salad. Beat one-half cupful of double cream until stiff, ndd a tnblcapoonful of lemon juice nnd a fourth of a teaspoonful of salt. Cook three apples that have been cored and pared In a sirup of equal measures of sugar nnd water with two or three cloves and an Inch thick of cinnamon, then let them stand until cool. Chop fine four candled cherries. Cut out the center of head lettuce and place nn apple In ench head. Mix the four cher ries chopped with ten pecans and ndd to the cream. Pour over the qpples. Baked Apple Salad. Bake rosy ap ples until tender, remove the skin and etuff tho centers with celery and nuts well mixed. Serve with mayonnaise on head lettuce or In nests of shredded lettuce. Do not daro to be so absorbed la your own life, so wrapped up In l's-. tenlng to tho sound of your own hur raing wheels, that all this vast pathetic music, mado up of mingled Joy and sorrow of your fellow men, shall not find out your heart and claim it and make you rejoice to give yourself for them. Phillips Brooks. GOOD THINGS WORTH TRYING. Peanut butter is such nn nppetlzlng food and combines with many dishes, affording a variety. Apple Peanut Salad. Pare, core and chop slightly acid apples and mix thorn with half as much chojiped celery. Mix a dressing of peanut b u 1 1 er using one tnblespoonful of lemon juice to Ave of pennut butter, season well with salt and cayenne nnd servo with lettuce garnished with peanuts. Apple Chicken Salad. Scoop out the centers of six fine npples, till them with cooked minced chicken seasoned with green pepper finely chopped, salt to tnste and cream to moisten. Plnce tho apples In a steamer and cook until al most tender. Place on Ice and servo with mayonnnlse. Quaker Oats Sweetblts. Take a cupful of sugnr, two well-beaten eggs, a tablespoonful of butter, a teaspoon ful of vanilla, two teaspoonfuls of bak ing powder, two and a half cupfuls of Quaker oats ground- fine and a half cupful of nuts. Mix nnd drop on but tered tins by teaspoonfuls. Cream Salad Dresslnjj. Cook a third of a cupful of cream, two slightly beaten egg yolks, two tahlespoonfuls of sugnr nnd tho same of lemon juice tu o double holler until thick as n soft custard. Add salt and cayenne and strain. Poached Egos In Soup. Butter n deep pie plate of pyrex, then sprlnklo over tho bottom n half cupful of line bread crumbs. To a can of mock turtle foup, add tltrep tahlespoonfuls of wn ier, boiling hot, mix well nnd pour carefully over the crumbs. Set the dish 1k tfAi oven and when bubbling hot, take It out and break Into It as many eggs as there nre persons to serve, being careful to keep tho yolks from breaking. Sift over the eggs n layer of buttered crumbs and put Into the oven to )nke until tho eggs nre set. Serve this from the dish In which It was baked, Mexican ftsbblt Melt n tnblespoon ful of butter and cook In It n green pepper cut In bits. When softened ndd n pound of good cheese, cut tine, and ftlr until melted. Add two-thirds of a cupful of canned corn pulp, a half tea spoonful of paprika, the same of salt. two eggs beaten light, two-thirds of n Cupful of clumped tonmto, stir nhd cook until well blended. Servo ou crackers. Lnugh at nil things, Great and small things; Sick or well, at sen or shore; While we're quaffing. Let's have laughing Who cares for uv'teT Ixinl llyron. t HELPFUL SUGGESTIONS. Almost any kind of nuts will bo Improved by soaking them before they nre cracked. Cover with warm water for an hour. This freshens them, and the meats are more eas ily removed from tho shells. Flour sacks, the ilfty, or hundred-pound size, when hemmed make lino dish towels. To remuvo the letters and paint, boll In water with soap and a tablespoonful or two of kero sene. Cold cereal, oatmeal, rice or any other cooked food may he added ti' hnmburg steak, making a little meat go a long way. When stewing all fruits add a lit-? tie salt while cooking. This will Im-j prove the llnvor and saves sugar. A can of shrimps cut up with a fork and added to hot corn mush, ithen, molded, and when cool made lntoj small cakes and fried, makes a most tasty luncheon dish. If clothespins are treated by put ting them Into the boiling suds after the clothes are boiled, they will not split. Wash hairbrushes by putting them In warm water In which a tablespoon ful of borax to a quart of water has been ndded. JUnse In cold water and. drain by putting them bristle sltlo down In the sun. When using n colander or sieve for tomatoes or other foods a small hov or jelly glass, to he used In place of a spoori, will force tlfe food through more quickly. Yolks of eggs may be kept several days If placed In a bowl and covered with cold water. v A bunch of parsley will keep fresh for three or four weeks If dipped In cold water, then placed In a glass jar with the top screwed on to keep In the moisture. To take the shine off nny wool goodH rub It lightly with a small piece of lino sandpaper. The material in fathers' shirts aft; er they are past further wear, will make nice little dresses for baby or smnll aprons for mother or sister. The whole great problem of winning the war restB primarily on one thing, the loyalty and sacrifice of the Ameri can people in the matter of food. If we are selfish or riven" careless, wo nro disloyal; we are the enemy at home. Now is the hour of our testing. NUTS A GOOD MEAT SUBSTITUTE. Nuts, nre a vnluablo food and with tho different klndw one need not fear using them too often. Nuts like legumes nra rich In protein and fat. Peanut Loaf. Take a, cupful of soft bread crumbs toasted, three fourths of a cupful of peanut butter, half n cupful of cooked rice, a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, a tea spoonful of poultry, dressing nnd a tablespoonful of chopped parsley. Combine tho In gredients, mold Into a loaf and bake thirty minutes. "Unmold, nnd servo with tomato sauce or catsup. Nut and Cheese Loaf. Take a cup ful of rich grated cheese, ono cupful of English walnut or hickory nut ments, a cupful of dry bread crumbs, two tahlespoonfuls of water, n tea spoonful of salt, a few dashes of pep per, two tahlespoonfuls of chopped onion and a tablespoonful of oil. Cook the onion In tho oil and water until tender. Add crumbs, nuts nnd cheeso with seasonings. Bake In a loaf till brown. Garnish with lemon points. Nut Croquettes. Take one cupful of any kind of nut ments at hand, add a half cupful each of bread crumbs and cooked rice, soak tho crumbs In half a cupful of milk, add an egg slightly beaten,, a teaspoon of salt and u dash of pepper. Mold, dip in egg and crumbs and fry In deep fat, us ing corn or other vegetable oil. Nut, Cheese Date Salad Stuff dates with cream cheese after remov ing the pits from the dates. Roll In ground nuts nnd pile on n snlad plate with a mound or mayonnaise In the' center. Nut Muffins. Take ono and n half cupfuls of barley flour, add n half teaspoonful of soda to a half cupful of sour milk, a half teaspoonful of salt. Mix with n half cupfMl of mo lasses, one egg and n hnlf cupful of hickory nuts. Add a teaspoonful of baking powder to the barley Hour. Mix as usual, cvlng the butter a good beating, pour Into greased muffin pans and bake thirty minutes In n moder ate oven. Fear God By REV. J. H. RALSTON, D. D. Secretary of Corropondenco Department, juooay uioie institute, unlcago With a Loud VoVlce. "Money tnlks." "And Just now It Is shouting the hat tie cry of freedom." TEXT J'ear him which after he hath filled hath power to east into hell; yea, say unto you, fear him. Luke 12:5. Quite a notable book was written by former President Roosevelt enti tled, "Fear God and Take Your Own Part" A part of the Influ ence of the hook has been to In crease respect for Q o d, whntevcr may have been lta Influence as to man's fellowmen. It brings beforo men the motlvo that has not had emphasis In recent years. As we study this history of motlvo to right action, wo Hud that sometimes It Is gratitude, sometimes love, sometimes duty, some times prudence, sometimes recogni tion of man's sonahtp to God; but hero comes the motive of fear, and In theso days when men's hearts are fall ing them for fear, It Is a motlvo that should receive some consideration without Impntlence. Some of tho mo tives referred to above, and which seem to have made the motive of fear for a long time almost obsolete, have nccordlng to the judgment of many gone Into tho discard. As wo And certain theories ns to mankind In Its closer brotherhood and assumed son ship to God being great delusions, w may ask whether, after all, the motive of fear may yet have nn occasion for use. In many American communities vice today Is rampant, unchecked, and snich communities are living In terror. Why? because the vicious element have no fear of being punished, the action of tho courts and juries In the past show ing that there Is little likelihood that n person, If he assumes a proper nttl tudo during trlnl or appeals to tho sym pathy of the public and the jury,vwlll have to suffer. It la simply a matter of record that where there is this lack of fear vice flourishes. 1 Should We Fear God? Let It be fully considered at once that the fear of the Lord as presented In tho Scriptures Is not chiefly nn emotion produced by threatened evils, but rnthcr reverence of God nnd as n motive It should operate along the HneH of respect for God because he Is holy and reverent. The fear of pain connected with losing the favor pr friendship of God is In place, too, but the moment that Is admitted there is admission of fear of another kind fear ns It Is defined, "nn emotion ex cited by threatening evil or Impending pain, accompanied by fl desire to avoid or escape It." There Is a place for this kind of fear of God In connection with religious experience, nnd that motive should have more recognition than In tho past. Why Is this so? First, because God Is back of every law, the violation of which brings suf fering or pain. Law does not operate automatically. No evil resulting from violated law Is n blind thing; It Is the result of Infinite wisdom and Intelli gent provision. God Is behind every law. Secondly, there nro the clearest teachings in the Word of God that evil will bo punished by Go?l. From the moment It wns said : "In tho day thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die," to tho present moment, sin has been punished. It Is specifically said : "Tho Lord shail reward tho doer of evil according to his wickedness." "The faco of tho Lord Is against them who do evil, to cut off tho remem brance of them from tho earth." God says, "I will punish the world for their evil nud the wicked for their Iniqui ties." "I myself will light against theo with an outstretched hand, and with a strong arm, even In anger and In great wrath." Several of the pnrahles of tho New Testament teach tho retrib utive wrath of God. It Is God the judgo who will say In tho grent judg ment day: "Depart from me yo that work In Iniquity." And, thirdly, tho thought should he cnrrled to the hereafter. Men are facing the hereufter these days as not before. More people have died In tho Inst three years than any three years preceding, possibly excepting some periods In the history of. the world In a tlmo of pestilence. Millions are slain on the battlefield, other millions die In war-stricken countries by starv ation, and other hundreds of thou sands suffer violent death. What of tho future world as we contemplate tho multitudes sweeping I:, to It? No Apology for "Hell." When Jesus wns speaking to his dis ciples he did not muko any apology when he said "hell." lie meant the nbodo of the wicked In the other world. The disciples were to fear thq God who could cast both body and soul Into hell, but they were not to fear man, who could only kill tho body. The burning city of destruction was a good plnce to leave, and Bunynn's pilgrim left It as rapidly as he could. Wo might ask, "Who In these days fears the pain nnd hopelessness of hell?" But the great fact Is, hell re mains, nnd tho Word of God Is plain as to those who will fall Into i TVmH day is smile day If yoi uo Red Cross Ball Blue, American made, therefore the best made. Adv. Only for Fun. Mrs. Smith Of course, you play brldgo whist only for fun? Mrs. Swift Of course. But It Isn't nny fun unless you nro playing for money. Research. "In the early days tobacco was used instead of money," "It was then, I suppose, that Ameri can opulence Invented tho phrnso 'money to burn.'" Kill the Filet Now and Prevent disease. A DAISY FLY KILLER will do It. Kills thousand J. Laiti all season . All denier, or six br express, prepaid for $1. II. 80MEKS, ISO DeKalb Art., Brooklyn, N. Y. A1t. Weak on Military Parlance. If nt nny tlmo wc have spoken of offi cers ftclng "on furlough" they will plcnso nttrlbute It to tho defects of enrly nnd nonmllltury education. A sapient contemporary states that only privates nnd noncoms hnve furloughs, whllo officers havo leave. "English as She Is Spoke." "This ain't where wo wnnt off at." It wns a well-dressed, attractive looking young woman who spoke. She was accompanied by another attractive-looking young womnn, and they were In a street car which was about to como to a stop. "This ain't where Wo want off at." -Dayton (Ohio) News. USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE The antiseptic powder to be shaken Into the hoes and sprinkled in the foot-bath. It relieves palatal, swollen, smarting feet and takes the sting out of corns nnd bunions. The American, DrltlBh, ami French troops use Allen's Foot Eae. The preatest comforter known for all footaches. Bold ererywhere, S5c Adr. , From Bad to Worso. "I hnd to get rid of that nurse girl." "Why?" "She Insisted on frightening tho children. I warned her when she came that she was not to tell them stories about boglo men, ghosts or nny un real horrible persons." "Well?" "Sho promised not to. But now ev ery night sho tells them If they don't go to sleep the Iluns will come and get them." Red Cross Ball Blue, made in Anurias, therefore the beat, delights tno nousewue. All cod grocers. Adr. Just Like Shaw. . Georgo Bernard Shaw, the celebrat ed satirist, once wrote to tho editor of a magazine that made a fcaturo of the portraits of beautiful women: "Why don't you do an original thing and print tho portrait of beautiful men? Here's mlno." In reply to the editor's Inquiry as to whether he might not count on re ceiving n Shavian contribution by n certain date, Shaw wroto: "I never engage to do anything that must be done by a certain date. The things I simply had to do four years ago I'll not bo able to take up until next spring." Dr. Pierce's Pellets nro best for liver, bowels and stomach. Ono little Pellet for a laxative, three for a cathartic. Ad. i Little Sunshine. One noble woman's way of making mealtime the plcasantest period of tho day, as our eminent experts on diges tion tell us It should be, Is to remind her husband with some asperity that those Malaga grapes cost 35 cents a pound when w looks ns If ho wore go ing to take some more. Ohio Stato Journal. The man who wants to prove every thing he says advertises the fact that his word Is not to bo credited. Nrt Contents lSriuid Draoti t rrnTTor.-fl T1CR QKN1V J AVcsJclahlclVcpmrioftifAi-J slmilatIn$UM!Woa tinfiuScStomaMdBJ Sit mm M n.vrfifmMMidR2StGafttat ndUcrOplam,MerpMncnfj Mineral. NoNlc Ahc1)fiilRcmcdyfoc ConstipaUonmvJDlarrhoei nnd Fevcrlshncss esa. LOSS OF SLEEP M resulting crerrom-inwi' W iBSCEIIABnuunrn.- , CASTORIA or Xnfants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the 4 Signature, of 4.W Exact Copy of Wrapper.' Well Matched. "Tho pretty little brldo over tho way is Hko Juno; she's ox-cyed." "Then sho's got her mntch In her husband, for ho's bull-hendcd." A Puzzle. "Don't electric vlrcs huvo to bo mnde of .well-tempered ractnl?" "I don't know about thnL They seem to be very easily crossed." In Use For OvBr Thirty Years CASTORIA TMl OIHTAUtt MMHY, NCW YORK 6 ITT. LetCuticuraBe Your Beauty Doctor W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 19-1918. i Tells How ATONIC Makes Sick Stomach Well If you lufTer from utomach trouble, read below and leam what Wm. A. Santelmann. Cant, of U. S. Navr I i r - - . i. ... ,., i? . . t t r - i .i .1 fears about tho wonderful stomach relief. The splendid ' results thli noted Land leader secured from the una of rEATONIO should bo your sulde, and you should lUrt using EATONIO today. Estonia Rennsdr Co., Clilcsgo, 111. Wuhtnston, D. C. U.u,"V 0ntlem!nt!2ATf1Nm fa an lnvlnM mmmW tar riviMmla . wdTndljrntion. I bsTs utd It with szcoUant mult. very truly yours, Osst. U. B. Msry ud Lu4r lUrins Bsod, At All Drug- FATO N I C gists fcfcfirQRYbuR STOMACH'S SAKE) Quickly Removes All Stomach Misery Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Flatulence, Heartburn, Sour, Acid and Gassy Stomach Here's tho secret! EATONIC Drives tho Gas out of tho body and tho Bloat Goes With III Guaranteed to bring rollof or money back. Got a box today. Costs only a cent or two a day to use it. m m f . j v If vou wantaulck rcllaf. vou shoold set the Dusrsnteed 1 mnl SIP r itntllP 1- WAfik rBtmentfrcimvaiiFdrufririattadav. If vuu boohl rather tr .lias Ul bJUIUUv c. v. K'n)Niannitiwlluulla,ndyoaboiwUhfnlldlre( lions, us ma surely want ery reader to know of the wonderful curetlto rower of IIATONIO. Your name ud sdilraaa on a poatal eanl will brintr you, trial bos t rr with full directions for use by return mail. AddreM U. h. Kramer. IWdaat. Estonia Remedy Company, lUSBouth Wsbaab Arenas, Chicago, 111. I full ATTENTION! Sick. Women To do your duty during these trying times your health should be your rirst consideration. These two women tell how they found health. Hollam, Pa. "I took Lydla E. Plnkham's Veg etable Compound for fomalo troubles and a dis placement. I felt all run do-n and was very weak, I had boen treated by a physician without results, bo decided to give Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and folt better right away. I am keeping houso since last April and doing all my housework, whero beforo I was unable to do any work. Lydla E. Pinkham's Vege table Confound is certainly tho best medicine a woman can take when in this condition. I give you permission to publish this letter. " ilrs.E. It. CnxnrLiNa, It. No. 1, Hollam, Pa. Loweii Mich. "I suffered from cramps and dragging down palm, was irregular and bad fomalo weakness and displacement. I began to tako Lydla E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound which gavo mo relief at onco and restored my health. I should Hko to recommend Lydla E. Pinkham's remedies to all suffering women who are troubled in a simi lar wav." ilrfl.ELiSEllKiJi.Il.No.O, Box83,Lowoll,21ich. Why Not Try LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S U VEGETABLE COMPOUND LYDIA E.PiHKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASS. I -iirza 4 era Q1