The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, November 12, 1920, Image 3

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    I
TUB NORTH PLATTE SEMl-WEKKLY TRIBUNE.
THE
TCMf
VERY SIMPLE BUT
DISTINCTIVE FROCKS'
TTPirtf r TALKED
yJbUKLb ABOUT
Id CABINET!
rwrrn
Kentucky in Forced Home Still
Salllo McOrath of sneinyvillc, made to her own and her husband's relatives
In Kentucky. The "personal notes" of one of the local papers announced
that Mrs, Foree of "Washington,' was. a visitor. Whereupon Mr. Foreo wroto
the editor as follows:
"Dear Sir: Your Item was Incorrect. -It should have read that Mrs.
Foree had returned to her homo from Washington."
Father of "The
Dr. Edward Benes, foreign minis
ter of Czccho-Slovnkla, has been the
leader in the organization of what is
known as the "little entente" a league
of Cze'cho-Slovakla, Jugo-Slavla and
Roumanla, designed to guarantee their
Integrity and to prevent the return of
the Hapsburgs to the throne of Hun
gary. Asked why tills new cntento was
necessary, In view of the cxlstenco of
the League of Nations, Doctor Benes'
said: "It Is because the League of
Nations is not able yet to give com
plete security to us and because It
does not yet have the necessary In
fluence in central European affairs
which It may have some day. It Is
because it baB become Impossible for
democratic and liberty-loving nations'
such as Czecho-Slovakla to continue
to exist peacefully and build a pros
perous future that I have formed an
other league of nntlons which already
has had the effect "bt pacifying the people, dispelling War clouds, end raising
the national morale."
Doctor Benes admitted freely that his league had tnado provisions for a
military force in case of necessity, but added : "Our union is ono of defense,
pure and simple. Our treaty with Jugo-Slavla calls fo nld In case of attack.
With Roumanla no written ueaty exists, but' an alliance has been formed
through tho exchange of notes for the same purpose. Ours Is a defensive
union. Besides the military clauses in our treaties thero are. provisions for
the settlement of border disputes, and there are commercial agreements which
will be of the utmost Importance to Industry In all nations."
Zinovieff Ousted
terable opposition to the policy of "destruction and terrorism" on which so
vletlsm proceeds.
After listening to an Impassioned speech by Zlnoyleff, the left majority
under the leadership of Daumlg, Hoffman, nnd Otto Bass, tho young leader of
Rhlneland labor, conferred on the question of executing an agreement with
Moscow for a world revolution, and directed the district leaders to prepare
for a strike.
Frederick P. KeppeFs New Work
Frederick T. Keppel, director of
foreign operations of the American
Red Cross and formerly an assistant
secretary of war, has been chosen by
the chamber of, commerce of tho Uni
ted States to be the American admin
istrative commissioner at the head
quarters of tho newly formed Interna
tional chamber of commerce at Paris.
Mr. Keppel will leuve for Franco
to take up his new duties as soon ns
he can do bo without prejudice to tho
work upon which he Is now engaged.
As director of foreign operations,
Mr. Keppel was responsible for the ex
penditure of $51,000,000 In relief work
in foreign lands In the last year.
Born on Staten Island in 1875, Mr.
Keppel ha8 had a successful and dis
tinguished career since his graduation
from Columbia university in 1888. He
started in as a member of the faculty
of his alma mater, being successively
assistant secretary, secretary and dean
of tho college. For ten years he was secretary and editor ot the American
Association for International Conciliation, and In 1017 he was made assistant
to the secretary of war, becoming assistant secretary In tho next year. He
has been given honorary degrees by the universities of Pittsburgh and Michi
gan, and Is a chevalier of the Legion of Honor of France.
Clinrlea Marshall Force, assistant
controller af the treasury, tins some
Job. The man who will recall IiIb
agonies and distresses In making out
Itls Income tax returns; In auditing
his accounts so as to 'determine Just
how much he owed Uncle Sum. will
admit this when ho realizes that Mr.
Foree's Job Includes the auditing of
all the accounts of the United -Slates
government. The task carries a huge
responsibility and requires n thorough
knowledge of bookkeeping and consid
erable legal talent.
Mr. Foreo Is a natlvo of Kentupky,
but has been long expatriated. Twenty-two
years' residence In Washington,
however, has not lessened In any de
grco Mr. Foree's allegiance to Ken
tucky, nor lma It Induced him to re
gard any other placo than Shelby
county, Kentucky, as his home. In
proof of this, Mr. Foreo tells of a visit
which Mb wife, who formerly was Miss
Little Entente"
From Germany
M. Zinovieff, chairman of the
Third Internationale and ono of tho
four powers of tho Russian soviet gov
ernment, has been, ordered by the Ger
man government to leave Germany.
Ho and M. Losowsky..were tho Russian
soviet delegates to the conference of
the Independent Socialists at Halle,
and at their behest the meeting voted
to adhero to the Third Internationale,
the vote being .237 to 150. This action
disrupted the party, for the minority,
headed by Vice Chalrmun Crlsplen,
left tho conference hall. Under the
Joint presidency of Crlsplen and
George Ledebour these seceders open
ed a separate convention nnd laid
plans to communicate with the revo
lutionary forces in all countries op
posed to Moscow and prepare an or
ganized campaign against Bolshevist
methods. They adopted Ilerr Lede
bours' resolution of sympathy with
Bolshevist alms, but expressing unal
i(cX 1110, W.mtern Nwpqpnr Utuon.)
Tliero Is no Hue limit. Many people
do not lenrn liow lo live until they
era pnat ilfty. Oluilstone, at eighty
six, was brilliant. Goethe, at eighty
four, found life full of Interest.' YoQ
are never old until you think you are.
CARROT8 IN VARIOUS ,WAY3
'arrts contain Iron uud other mln
oral matters especially good for the
blood, uiyl be
cause of thiamin
ernl content arcu
vegetable which
should be served
often, especially
In families with
growing children
The common way
of serving them Is creumed or cooked
und served In a white suuee. WeJIro
of having any food served In the same
way time after time, so tho following
recipes tuny be suggestive of different,
ways of serving this wholesome vege
table: w-
Carrot Qlace, With Cream. Scrape
tho carrots, cut In halves or quarters,
according to size, then cut In short
pieces an Inch nnd a quarter In length.
Cover with cold water and cook 15
minutes, then drain nnd rinse und udd
boiling wntcr; (or each pint of wnter
add a half teasfwanful of salt, a table
spoonful of- sugar and two tablespoon
fuls of butter; cook until tho carrots
ure tender and tho water Is reduced to
a sirup. Stir the carrots In this sirup
until well glazed, then add hot cream
to cover; let simmer for a moment nnd
serve at once.
Cream of Carrot Soup. Cook until
tender u pint of diced currots-"drnIn
and mash; put through n rlcer, Scnlil
n "quart of milk with n slice of onion
and a pinch of nutmeg; remove the
onion after 15 minutes, add tho carrot
pulp, suit, sugar nnd u fow dashes of
cayenne. Melt a tablespoonful of but
ter Jn u saucepan, udd a tablespoonful
of flour and cook until smooth; add by
thinning with a little of the milk to the
hot so tin. Cook until well blended,
stirring occasionally. Servo hot with
croutons.
Browned Carrots. Take uniform
sized carrots, scrape and cut In halves.
Parboil for 15 minutes," then arrange
around a roast of mutton and baste
with the fut to brown. Serve nround
the roust when It Is served on the
platter.
There are many meat Bauces and
soups which would lack In .flavor If It
were not for 'carrot, eveir In small
quantities, which gives a most appetiz
ing flavor.
When .evry soldier ' In- the ranks
fears that his loss mcanB the fall ot
the'' cause an army la resistless; when
each mason lays' hla stone as though
the' walla cannot a'.and except through
his skill; when every woman bleeds
at the wall of grief and the moan ot
hunger, convinced that her hand atone
can ease and her loaf alone succor,
then and only then Bliall our mastery
endure. Herbert Kaufman.-
A CHAPTEn ON POTATOE8.
One of tho best practical substitutes
for a slice of bread Is a potato. The
salts of a potato
arc valuable In
building body tls
sues. W h e n
baked It Is one
of the. most eas
ily digested tpg
etablcs. Potato Puffs.
Add one-half cupful of milk to two
cupfuls of mashed potato and beat
until thoroughly blended. Add two
beaten eggs, n tenspoonful of suit, and
gradually one cupful of grated cheese.
Bake lu a buttered baking dish In a
slow oven.
Shepherd's Pie. Put flnfced fish In"
a baking dish. Add a sauce made of
a tablespoonful ench of flour and fat,
one-half tenspoonful of sail, a dash of
pepper and a cupful of broth. Cover
with two cupfuls of mnslled potato,
brush with cream or fat and brown In
a hot oven.
Potato O'Brien. Miikc a suuee of
(me tablespoonful ench of fnt and
flour, one-half cupful of skimmed
milk, ono ienspoonful of salt and a
dnsh of pepper.. Mix two cupfuls of
diced cooked potato with ono green
pepper cooked nnd chopped nnd one
half cupful of grated cheese. Mix
with the white sauce and put Into n
baking dish und brown In n hot oven.
Canned red pepper mny bo used In
place of the green when that cannot
be obtained.
Potato and Lima Bean Loaf, Take
one and ono-thlrd cupfuls of limn
benns cooked and put lliroug'i a sieve;
ndd two tablespnonfuls" of fat, one
fourth of n cupful of milk ono ten
spoonful of salt, one-third teaspoon
ful of sage, two cupfuls of riced pota
to. Add to It one-fourth -f u cupful
of milk, snlt nnd butter to senRon,
Put tho first five Ingrcdlentu Into a
buttered baking dish, cover with the
potato blended with the milk lind sen-
snnlngn. Bake In n quick oven. Serve
with tomato sauce.
Potato Peanut Loaf. Toko one pint
of mnshed potato, one cupful of
ground peanuts, or one-half cupful of
peanut butter, two teuspoonfuls of
salt, one-half tenspoonfnf of pnprlkn,
one-hnlf cupful o milk, (wo table
spoonfuls of melted fnt nnd two well
henten eggs, Rent the cnllre mlxturo
together and place In n grenned linking
dish: set In n second pnn containing
lint water and bnke In n hot oven up
H firm. Serve with tomato sauce.
MARY GRAHAM. BONNER.
nilTTERFLIES' FAREWELL.
"Oood'by." said the golden butterfly.
'lt Is late for me to bo out and I .must
leave now. I huvo. como nround bo
Vituse- It Is what they cull Indian sum
"juier. "Thnt Is when another week of sum
mer tomes In the autumn when people
have almost beccmu used to cold
Heather.
"Hut they tiro glad to have tho week
of summer come Just the samel
"Still, I must say good-by now, for
there will be no more weeks of sum
mer or of Indian summer."
"Uood-by. too." said the black buttcr
lly with the two golden spots on his
wings, "for I also must be going."
He had golden spots on each fore
wing nnd two luvender-yellow ones on
the iwo back wings. Ho had black
feelers.
Ono could seo his spots right
through his wings they showed on
either side, on top and underneath.
There were two tittle orange spots
on each of his legs and at the right
side there were black feelers.
"Good-hy said the IlltV bumble bee,
who wus st;ll gathering honey fp-iu tho
flowers. "1 must go. away from the
out-of-doors, world, where 1 cannot
stand the cold which will be here so
soon now.
"Do you remember how hot It wns
during the summer? 1 remember one
day when the sen wns hczy and misty
with the heat nnd when the sun
seemed so hot nnd as ihongh he didn't
oven like It himself I I felt us though
he hnd kept getting hotter and hotter
anil then hardly knew how to stop him-
"self.
"And everything was aglow with tho
heat nnd with the grnyness of mist and
the red of the sun's rays as ho went to
(od with tho promise of another hot
flay.
"And then tho moon came out
dressed lu his fancy dress suit which
makes him a half moon.
"And the tide seemed lazy In the
bent. And the breakers of the ocifen
could hardly move, they felt so hot.
"It does seem so funny when the cool
days come to think of those hot days,
for they seem so far away.
"Yes, and In the summer when It Is
hot we cannot think of what It Is like
when It la really cool. Woll, I must
gather more honey nnd be off to tho
hive. We have work to do. you know.
Work All tho Time.
Wo've stored up a great deal for the
winter, but wo still can find plenty to
do."
"You never rest, do you?" asked tho
golden butterfly.
"Never," said the bumble bee. "Wo
mustn't rest, for you know we must al
ways llvo up to tho old saying."
"What old snylng?" nsked the black
butterfly.
"It Iiiik been said of us," the bumble
bee answered, "thnt we Improved ench
shining hour.
" "So wo must nlwnys he busy, you
see, and not make that old saying
chnnge.
"Wo work all the time, all tho
time."
"Hut," said the golden butterfly,
"how do you know you're Improving
each shining hour?' Aren't tho hours
all right us they are?"
"Yes," said the bumble bee, "thnt
may be so, and they may be nil right
spent Idly by some people. I don't sup
pose the hours care so very much,
though I have hoard they huted to bo
wasted."
"But they like to give pleasure and
to have people take rests and enjoy
-themselves, too," suld the black but
terfly. "How do you think you can Im
prove each hour when ench hour Is tho
way It Is, one wuy to tho butterfly nnd
another to the bumble bee?"
"And how do you know that tho
hours arc shining?" the golden butter
fly asked.
"Ah." said the bumblo bee, "we don't
stop to puzzle qut what each word
means, for words to us aren't Impor
tant like honey and work nnd such
things.
"But we know that tho buying means
that bumble bees never waste any
time. We know It menus that It has
alwuys been said of bumble bees that
they work, work, work all the time.
"And so wo keep that saying true by
working all the time. I must be off
now ; "good-by."
"Good-hy," the butterflies said, anil
turning to each other they added :
"Those bumble bees overdo things
They work so hard that they've for
gotten how to pluyl And (hut Is tho
saddest thing about their lives."
THE senmstress who Is equal to
making simple frocks for herself
or her daughters, Is able to touch up
even the simplest of them with distinc
tive details In their construction or
In embellishments. Dress thnt tins
both simplicity nnd originality simply
compels ndmlrntlon from those who
know the best when they seo It, and
these are the elements that gentle
women love In nil apparel, from lints
to shoes. Above all they are the ex
cellences thnt the business woman
should (ook for, nnd look until slje
finds- them. In cont, frock, hnt nnd all
accessories of her outfitting,
It often happens that n good peatn
stress hns no talent for designing and
It Is much hotter to ho n good copytat
than a bungling originator. Depend
ing on patterns for tho foundation of
her frocks she can follow her own
Idens in color combinations, In hand
needle-work, embroidery nnd other do
tnlls of constructlon.-
Brief Story of
T1II0 story of hats that are worn
by. school girls Is brief this sea
son and Its inuln points mny be gath
ered very quickly from the group of
hats shown here. Tliero sprung up be
fore school bells begun touring a de
mand for tarns, that Included those
for school girls but wns not by uuy
means contlnod to them. In-answer
to thltKcnll came tarns nnd more tarns.
Ono would not believe so great" a vari
ety In ono kind of hnt could bo made,
and the school girl found In them ex
actly the things she liked. These tnnis
are made of various kinds of cloth
having n shaggy, velvety or suede
like surface, and nro llnlsjied off with
yarn pompons, yarn or silk tassels
or uro without any" ornament. There
nro somo velvet models among (hem.
Two pretty tarns shown lu the pic
ture bring out the differences that
appear In tho construction of the tain.
The hut nt the left hs a crown made
of sections of shaggy cloth sewed to
fhe two practical and graceful mod
els shown hero arc commended to tho
homo dressmaker. They are made of
wool Jersey thnt handsome and un
tnussnblc fabric thnt Is so strongly In
trenched In tho esteem of women. Tho
onc-pleco frock nt tho left hns cuffs
and rollbr, uIho facings of the' plulta
nt tho side, mndo of duvetyn In a con
trasting color. The collar and cuffs
nro ornamented with needle-work In
heavy silk floss. In color combina
tion and In nccdle-work design thero.
nro opportunities for use of Individual
taste. The other frock has a plain -skirt
and overblouso with yarn em
broldory In two colors used for dec
oration. The girdle In made of yarn
also and may ho braided or crocheted.
Blouses of this kind are prettily trim
med with flowers crocheted of yam
and sowed on, their follnge nnd s.enm
slnnilnted In simple stitches In yarn
on the blouse.
School Hats
gether and topped by a wool potifpon.
It Is mounted to a straight headband.
The tarn ut tho right hns n crown
mnde of only two pieces, one of them
so nrrnnged thnt the tain flnres nir tho
fnco nnd fnlls tp the right side.
Tho hntu In tho center of the group
and nt tho lower left hand corner
are popular felt shnpos finished with
bonds of grosgrnln ribbon. I'l-ey uro
mndo In n variety of good colors, nro
very durable and "classy." The re
maining hat Is less simple, having u
draped crown of dnvetyn nnd a turned
up brim of angora cloth. Two yum
bnls suspended on a crocheted cord
that hangs from tw- ioops complete
this ambitious affair for the young
miss.
COmiOHT W VBTSW NtVlMK UNIOH
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