Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 13, 1918, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 17, Image 17

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    17
Adelaide Konnerly
TrA jTV
55ES52SSCSiSSESE
Ella Fleishman,
ASS'T EDITOR.
THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, APRIL 13. 1918.
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ZofoW Isha H Gross
household arts vep-t cejttral high school
The One-Dish Dinner v
The one-dish dinner, or, as I have
heard it humorously called, the one
piece" dinner, is not a new idea at
all, but rather a return to the simpler
meals of our grandmothers. What
ever else the war may bring, it does
give one a sense of values and the
right viewpoint about spending time
and energy on the preparation of
every-day meals.
Women, who are working devoted
ly with the Red Cross must simplify
their meal preparation, or their energy
will not last. Women who are prac
ticing conservation have welcomed
the one-dish dinner, because fuel is
saved and even food material is saved.
It is a truth that one's appetite is a
better guide to quantity of food
needed if the number of dishes is
few than if there is a variety of foods
on the table. The reason is that, with
a variety of foods, we are very apt
to eat for the sake of flavor and
not for the sake of our bodily needs.
Hence a family will only eat what
they really need if there is but one
main dish at dinner.
Eoundation of a one-dish dinner to
satisfy all the needs of the body, a
meal must furnish body-building ma
terial, called protein; energy-giving
food, such as starch, sugar and fat;
and body-regulating food, such as
vegetables or fruits. In addition there
should be some raw food; hence a
simple salad or fresh fruit dessert
should be added to the one-dish din
ner. The desire for sweets may be
met in a simple dessert though a
"desire" is not a "need." Strictly
speaking, even bread is unnecessary,
for it is good only as a source of
energy and some protein, and those
foods are supplied in the main dish.
The body-building material may be
supplied by fish, meat, eggs, cheese,
nuts, peas, beans or lentils. The typi
cal energy foods in 0ne-dish dinners
are the starches, such as potatoes,
rice, hominy, macaroni or dumplings,
and the fats v.hich are generally add
ed. All one-dish dinners include
vegetables, which supply the body
regulating material.
The recipes given below do not pre
tend to be new they are merely a
collection of good one-dish dinners.
Jungle Stew.
1 nt. beans, 1 c. macaroni,
2 T. fat, broken Into pieces;
3 chopped onions. Salt and pepper.
1 r- tomatoes,
Soak" the beans over night, cook
until tender. Brown the onions in
the fat, add to beans with tomatoes
and macaroni. Simmer till macaroni
is tender and season with salt and
pepper.
Vegetarian Toad-In-a-Hole.
potatoes,
2 onions,
4 T. fat.
Salt, pepper and
herbs,
1 c. white flour,
1 e. substitute flour,
1 t. baking powder,
2 T. oatmeal,
1 t. salt.
2 eggs,
1 c. milk.
Fry onions and potatoes in the fat,
season with salt, pepper and herbs;
then turn into a greased baking dish.
Mix dry ingredients, add yolks of
eggs and milk; then fold in stiffly
beaten egg whites. Bake in a mod
erate oven SO minutes. Serve with
gravy."
Pearlo.
' J lb. round steak. 1 o. tomatoes,
out Into pieces; 1 o. rice, washed;
: t. fat, . hot water,
1 onion, siloed; Salt and pepper.
Brown the steak and onions in the
fat, add other ingredients and simmer
till rice is tender. Season with salt
and pepper.
ToTkington Meat Pie.
a c. cooked meat. Bait and pepper,
cot 1-ln. pieces; 4 onions, parboiled;
2 hard boiled esss. 4 potatoes, parboiled;
sliced; water or gravy.
Mix ingredients (the potatoes and
onions should be cut) and place m a
Barley Recipes Which
Are Absolutely Wheatless
' VJhn fia been askine for'a steamed
brown bread which is both wheatless
and ryeless? Who was it wantea a
mnbi? Whn wanted a dessert
which should be a real pudding, but
made without any wneat nourr ncrc
is just what you want: ,
Steamed Brown Bread.
1V4 c. cornmeal. t. ginger.
114c barley flour. 1 t soda. 1
2 t. baking powder. 2 c. sour milk.
14 t. salt molasses.
' Sift, cornmeal, barley flour, baking
powder, salt and ginger. Dissolve soda
in a little cold water add the sour
milk and molasses. Combine the
liquid with the dry ingredients, beat
well, and steam in we1 greased brown
-bread tin or baking powder cans from
five to six hours, depending upon the
size of the tin.
Hermits.
i: c fat 5 t. baking powder.
i c' sugar. l- chopped raisins.
1 egj. hi c. chopped nuts.
2 T milk. H t. cinnamon.
2 c. barley flour. t. cloves.
Combine the ingredients as for cake,
add enough barley flour to make a
dough stiff enough to be rolled. Roll
thin, shape with small cookie cutter
and bke on tin sheet.
Steamed Barley Pudding. -
t egg. i c. cornmeal.
1 c. molasses. c. barley flour.
1 c. sour milk. hi t salt
1 t. soda. 1 c chopped raisins.
Beat egg, add molasses, milk and
soda dissolved in a little cold water.
Sift cornmeal and barley flour and
salt together and combine with first
mixture. Add chopped raisins and
pour into well greased baking powder
tins or popover cups. If the latter are
used, cover each cup with a well
greased paper. Steam two hours.
Barley Waffles.
2 c. barley flour. 1 c. milk,
hi t. salt. 1 eggs.
3 t. baking powder. 3 T. melted fat
Sift dry ingredients together and
add slowly the milk, beaten egg yolks'
and melted fat. Fold in stiffly beaten
whites. Beat thoroughly for a minute
and cook in hot well greased waffle
irons.
SATURDAY SPECIALS AT EMPRESS MARKET
Pit: Pork Loins, per pound 22c
Purt Cone Leaf Lard, per pound 25c
Steer Shoulder Steak, per pound 19V,e
Steer Pot Roast, per pound , 19'tC
Young Veal Roast, per pound 1 8 Vj
Your.gr Veal Stew, per pound , 13 'jc
Extra Lean Pork Butts, per pound .24VjC ..
Swift's Premium Regular Hams, per pound 31c
Extra Lean Regular Hams, per pound 27Vc
Sugar Cured Hams, per pound 22Vjc
Extra Lean Bacon, per pound 43V,c
1 Sugar Cured Bacon, per pound 36'tC
Co-Opfcration
Miss Gross will be very glad to
receive suggestions for the home
economics column or to answer, as
far as she is able, any questions
that her readers may ask.
baking dish
as follows:
Cover with crust, made
1 0. cornmeal,
1 t salt,
i t. baking powder,
1 T. fat,
hi c. water.
Mix to a smooth dough and spread
over the pie. Smooth with a wet
knife and sprinkle with grated cheese.
Bake in a hot oven 40 minutes.
t. Teaspoon.
T. Tablespoon.
c. Cup. x
Advice to Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
The Last Word.
Dear Miss Fairfax,' Omaha Bee: The
"Bachelor Man" has answered, but a woman
must have the last word, so here Is mine:
Thank you, Mr. Bachelor Man, for your
smiling suggestion. I'm doing It right now.
In fact (bo those who love me say) I do
It happily. I do hope so for I hate a
coward. I liked your way of working that
conductor business, and I fully Intend to
stay on the train and only frown If he shuts
another window by the one I want left
open so that he'll keep away from mine.
But as to that "chat" well, I believe I'll
smile at two, then, you see, I could chat
with both long enough to find out which
I'd rather really talk with until the end
of the trip. 1 believe I'd like one of them
to go all the way to make up for that lost
uview that was seen through glass dimly.
fHere's to a speedy end to the war and a
proof that 'a woman will have the last
word when she can. JEHSY.
A woman writes the last word to the
Lonely Bachelor.
The Old Prejudices.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 20; employed
as 6 stenographer. For some time I have
been going out with a young man who holds
a reliable position with the same firm.
He lives with an old mother, being the
main support of that household. He has a
well-balanced character and compassion for
weaknesses In his fellows Is very strong.
Taking all In all, I would class him as "A
perfect man." I have acquired a great deal
of knowledge through our little discussions
such as topics of the day and occasional
business matters. -Jle has helped me above
all to be broad-minded.
To make a long story short, he Is a Prot
estant while I am an American of Hebrew
descent. My parents object to my going out
with him, and have told blm so.
' PEGGY H.
If this man Is the fine, splendid, loyal and
general Individual your letter describes, and
you have tha gift of appreciating all he Is
and stands for, I think It Is a real tragedy
that the old prejudices should separate you.
Once upon a time we all laid too much
stress on the fact that tne Jewish religion
marked an actual racial distinction, and that
Jew and Gentile was separated not merely
by creed, but by differences In environment,
training, Ideals and by all the contrasting
conditions of their family lives. Recently
on the stage of one theater the war drive
of the Knights of Columbus was held. And
on the stage sat together In friendly unity
an Episcopalian minister, a Jewish rabbi,
and a cardinal. Tour parents have not quite
caught' up yet with the broader and more
generous views, which are actually part of
our life today. I wish they would think
over the situation carefully and see whether
In this man's respect for the old, compassion
for the weak, consideration for others and
fine admiration for their own daughter they
do not recognize their own best Ideals.
She Needs Friends.
Dear Miss Fairfax. Omaha Bee: I have
been going about with a girl, therefore mak
ing it impossible for other boys to court
her. She has given up all her friends and is
very much attached to me. I am In the
draft, and whenever the thought comes to
me, "What will my girl do when I am
away?" I am troubled. She has no one
to turn to, and I fear my absence will de
press her. Time and time again I have
told her not to worry, but it is useless. In
what manner would you advise me to oora
fort her? GEORGE T.
I do not believe In young' people giving
up all friendship for the sake of love. This
is very narrowing In Ita Influence and ev.en
when the love culminates In marriage It
doesn't mean happiness. Married couples
need outside interests, stimulating friend
ships in order to keep their Uvea from be
coming dull and narrow. Set about making
a group of friends. Take your sweetheart
to social affairs where there will be people
you know. Introduce her to them and try
to get her Interested In them. Then let her
find war relief work to do. Her world
mustn't be narrow and selfish and composed
of Just you twe. If It Is of course there
will be ugly emptiness In It when you are
away.. But if she cultivates friendship and
helpful'lnterests she will find herself ready
to bear separation when separation comes
with a splendid courage the rest of our
women show.
Hold to Your Ideals.
Dear Miss Fairfax, Omaha Bee: We are
two young girls, members of a club, and,
although, tly? girls seem to be very nice, still
they allow privilege which we do not ap
prove, such as kissing the boyi good night,
etc.
We feet as though we have no right to
Judge them, so we are asking your advice.
"PUZZLED TWO."
No, you have no right to alt In judgment
on your girl friends. Perhaps their home
training has not been as good at yours.
Perhaps they have not as much strength
of character or dignity In ttjelr very natures.
Don't Judge them, but don't copy them.
What Is cheaply acquired la never highly
valued. Girls who let their boy friends
kiss and caress them make those boys feel
that a kiss It nothing much, and that a girl
who bandies her kisses about lightly It noth
ing much, either. Not only this, but cheap
love-making dulls the capacity for tender
feeling. Tou know perfectly well that beau
tiful scenery startles and enthralls Jou the
first few times you see ft and that after
awhile you takp " for granted. That la
life and human nature. Save your love
making for love Itself. Don't cheapen your
capacity for sacred and fine feelings. If
your girl friends are too undignified and
bold In their manners eventually association
with them may lower your standards or
give you unpleasant reputations.
Suppose you show the girls my letter to
you, talk the thing over with then and try
to Influence them toward finer Ideals.
One of the most responsible posi
tions in the general offices of the
Atchison. Topeka & Santa Fe Rail
way compari is filled by a -woman.
Bean Curd a Staple
Chinese Food
The most characteristic article of
diet in China is bean curd, which en
ablcs every Chinese to be a real food
conservationist. Bean curd is one of
a number of products derived from
soy beans; among these are bean
meal, a kind of spaghetti, bean cheese
been sauce, bean milk and bean oil
all of which are used by the Chinese
as food.
The nutritive value of bean curd is
equal to that of meat and its cost is
much less; when properly cooked its
flavor compares favorably with meat
It is an ideal food from a scientific
point of view. Yellow beans form the
chief raw material for bean curd,
When ground they yield a milky
fluid, which is coagulated by adding
certain chemicals, lo form the curd
of commerce the coagulated mass is
subjected to pressure to, remove the
excess of water. It can then be
sliced with a knife.
In an article in the Yale-in-China
Student, John E. S. Han states that
improvements in the native processes
should be made. i he serious draw
back in native factories," says Mr.
Han, "is the enormous amount of
manual labor that is required for such
a small output. In the bean-curd fac
tories in Paris many scientific lm
provements already have been put into
practical use. The use of hydrome
ters for the native manufacturers is
suggested.
Repatriating French
Women and Children
Three hundred and fifty thousand
helpless French women and children,
taken from their homes in the occu
pied provinces, have been returned to
France through Evian, in Switzerland,
according to Dr. Esther Lovejoy, of
the Red Cross commission, who has
just returned from a survey of condi
tions among people from the invaded
territory.
In a report to the woman's com
mittee of the Council of National De
fense, Dr. Lovejoy tells of the repatri
ation of these unfortunates. "About
50 per cent of these convoys are made
up of children between 3 and 14 years
of age. Sometimes whole orphanges
are emptied and trainloads of children
sent alone. Some of these children
have been lost by their mothers in the
confusion that attended the invasion
three and a half years ago. They have
suffered the war blight. They are
undersized, ill-nourished and afflicted.
"In November, at the request of the
French government, the Red Cross es
tablished a hospital and inspection
service at Evian.. In two months
13,708 children had been examined to
prevent the spread of communicable
diseases. Before the inspection serv
ice was instituted, one child infected
with diphtheria passed through Evian
to Lyon, and an epidemic followed
which had not been checked when I
left France. Of the children inspected,
248 were found to have contagious
diseases. 11 any 01 tnese cniiaren naa
been allowed to pass into the popu
lous districts of France, an equally
bad epidemic might have followed,
"The French government and the
refugee department of the American
Red Cross are co-operating in caring
tor these people. In A) places in
France there are delegates to receive
convoys and help them in every pos
sible way to begin life in a new place.
Lord Kitchener's sister is one of these
delegates at Cote du Nord."
Acre Day
A state-wide "Acre day" is being
suggested as a means of increasing
Nebraska's food supply this summer.
Under the plan the men in the small
towns in the state would each rent an
acre of ground and agree to care for
it during the summer. One day every
week would be observed as "Acre
day," when the stores and business
houses would close and every man
spend the day working on his acre.
It is believed that during most of ti e
summer business is not pressing
enough but . that the business week
could be shortened one day. Besides
helping out the food supply of the
nation, each man would derive a nice
income from his summer's work. The
agricultural extension service sug
gests that some of the extra labor
of the towns might be made available
to the farmers, either by offering
workers part time during rush seasons
or arranging town work so that a
portion of town workers could move
to the farm.
.1
Pennsylvania has nearly 500 women
physicians.
Saturday Specials at Hew Public Market
Everything Strictly Cash Daliteriea on Ordr of $5.00 and Ovr.
PAY CASH CARRY YOUR BUNDLES AND HELP WIN THE WAR
Just received a carload of extra fancy, jufcy Oranges. The largest grown
in California; regularly 10c each, special Saturday only, each. . .5c
We Buy Our Fruits and Vegetables Direct From the Growers. No Mid
dle Men's Profits. Come Early and Take Advantage of This Special.
Strictly Fresh Eggs, guaranteed, per dosen 29c
Full Cream Brick Cheese, per pound . 27c
Troco, the Best Nut Butter Made, special Saturday only, per pound 32c
Large Cans of Sawtay, per can. 25c
Fancy Creamery Butter, in cartons, per pound 41c
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Pi Pork Loins, lb 22 e
Pur Leaf Lard, tb .2S'4c
Steer Pot Roast, tb 9Vte
Steer Rib Roast, lb
Young Veal Roast, lt ...18',c
Young Veal Stew, lb 13'c
Extra Lean Pig Pork Butts. Ib . . . .24',e
Swift's Premium Regular Hams, lb.. 31c
No. 1 Extra Lean Hams, Ib 284c
Sugar Cured Hams, lb 22V,e
Extra Lean Bacon, Tt 43 Vic
Sugar Cured Bacon, Ib 38 'ic
COFFEE DEPARTMENT
Fancy Santos, per pound 23c
Public Market Special, per pound 25c
SEED DEPARTMENT
Strong, Well Rooted Plants of Hydrangea and Spiraea, each 10c
THE.
D0UG.2793J
KOI
0
wa -massr
Green Vegetables From
South Appear in Omaha
Wax and green beans from Texas
and all other kinds of green vegetables
from Louisiana make an attractive
showing on the market tables of the
Omaha stores. The beans are selling
for 20 cents a quart, while fresh peas
are two for 25 cents, and rhubarb 7i
cents a pound. Asparagus has taken
a slump in price and is selling at 15
cents a pound and it is fine for this
season of the year, when the Omaha
beds are just beginning to yield their
sprouts.
Cauliflower and head lettuce are
fine arid are selling for 7li cents a
head.
When Housewives
Coming
Women have often bemoaned the
fact that men build houses and women
have to live and work in them. From
palace to tenement the plaint is the
same: "We have no say in the build
ing of our homes; if we had, do you
suppose we would allow for one
moment the awful waste of work
that goes on as, things are now?"
Writes Stella Wolf-Murrav in the
London Chronicle.
So it is welcome news that women
are to have a chance at least of ad
vising on building schemes after the
war. The ministry of reconstruction
has invited their co-operation in con
nection with its advisory council, and
wnn one 01 11s 0 committees appoint
ed to deal with postwar problems.
The housing (building construction)
committee, which hereto has con
sisted only of men, is now to have
the advice of a number of well-known
women, who, with Lady Emmott at
their head, will visit model tenements,
artisans' dwellings, both urban and
rural, all over the country. They will
study the question purely from the
housewives' point of view, report fully
on it, and make recommendations for
building after the war.
The Housewife's Future Home.
If their plans are practical and
profitable froma the building stand
point, the working class wife of the
future will no longer weep from sheer
weariness at the end of washing day
the suburban wife will be saved many
a weary walk along needless passages,
laden with a heavy tray on which is
poised the family dinner, and domes
tic service will be less shunned. One
and all will spend less time sweeping
or doing dusting, which the daughter
of the housi finds so detestable, and
there will be more time to serve the
state outside the home.
The Kennington estates, in the
Duchy of Cornwall, of which the
prince of Wales is the landlord, were
the first to be visited by Lady Em
mott and her sub-committee, whose
work is, of course, in connection with
the government housing scheme, re
cently announced, In which it is pro
posed to build about 300,000 dwellings
in England ana Wales and SU.UUU in
Scotland directly demobilization
starts.
Some of the proposals for London
are almost Utopian in character. The
suggestion is that big families should
have preferential treatment, consump
tive families should live in specially
designed blocks set apart from the
rest; the houses unfit for human habi
tation should be closed, if necessary
Tips from the Chef
Excellent biscuits are made with
barley flour.
Be sure to give the children whole
milk.
Lemon jelly
sliced bananas.
is good served with
A little olive oil taken at meals re
places bacon.
Rice boiled in milk makes a good
breakfast cereal.
Prunes are more wholesome if
stewed without sugar.
Good bread pudding is made with
apples and brown bread.
Vegetables are necessary for keep
ing the body in health. ,
Try potatoes in some new way two
or three times a week.
Pickled cabbage, white or red, is
wholesome and appetizing.
Steer Shoulder Steak, Ib 9V,c
Fancy Spinach, per peck 2Se
Large Fancy Celery, bunch 5c
Young Onions, Radishes, Turnips or
Leaf Lettuce, per bunch 5c
Extra Fancy Strawberries
Pancake flour (Nomia Brand), pkg..lOc
Fancy Peas, per ean 10c
Large California Prunes, Ib 13V,c
4 -Crown Museatell Raisins, lb...,13V1c
Sugar Corn, per can 12Vjc
Mallo, per can 10c and 28c
310-12 5.I65t
From Louisiana come fresh beets,
carrots, turnips, radishes and sha
lots, all for 5 cents a bunch.
Potatoes arc 25 cents a peck and
oranges 0 cents a dozen for the 80
size.
Fresh vegetables are the only
commodity on sale in the stores where
you buy for the table, which are just
as cheap as last year. In these war
days, when the consumer is expecting
everything to soar in price, conies the
bright fresh vegetables from southern
climes and sells for just the same price
as last year. Potatoes cost about one
fourth what they did last year.
Plan Houses;
of Woman Architect
pulled down; that the slum areas
should be sweetened and the turncd
out tenants rehoused; and that dwell
ings should be buil. wherever there is
a shortage. The government is pre
pared to make large grants of the
necessary funds to the local Author
ities, who are encouraged to prepare
eir plans in order that building may
begin the moment the war ends.
Now that the reconstruction min
istry has enlisted the help of "house
wives" the day of the woman archi
tect is dawning. At present there
are only three who are fully qualified
by examination and who have prac
tised on their own account the two
Miss Charles, each associates of the
Royal Institute of British Architects,
and Miss Annie Hall, member of the
Society of Architects, who works in
Gloucestershire. Ireland bemsts one
woman licentiate ?f the R. I. B. A.
(not corporate membership), and
there are a few others not connected
with the professional societies.
Rooms Without Corners.
If women designed houses they
would make all their rooms with
rounded corners, like the hospitals.
Even an inch or so would do the trick
and prevent the dust collecting in that
tiresome way it has. -They would have
washable walls and built-in furniture,
stained so as to save cleaning paint or
wasting elbow Kreaf in rubbinp- and
polishing. The bedrooms would have
their basins fitted with hot water taps,
tne pipes tor which would form the
towel rail. Bathrooms would be big
ger, and oiler every encouragement to
oe clean.
Central heating, I think, is apt to be
stuffy, and there is no doubt that
nothing will kill our cheerful English
open fire, except lack of coal. It will
die hard, in spite of the dirt it makes.
But if we must have fires, whv not
have our fireplaces as they do in Can
ada, where you just poke your ashes
into a hole in the grate, where they
drop down into the ashpit below stairs
from which they are collected once
or twice a year?
They have all these labor-saving
contrivances in Canada and the states,
and many more besides, yet in Eng
land we go on ounaing in tne same
silly old way. Who does not know
that tall and narrow town house,
with rooms on each floor, 2x2, like
animals- in the ark? I have known
maids to give notice at sight of such,
and others who refuse the situation
when they see the stairs.
It should not be beyond the brains
now concentrating on housing
schemes to allow rich and poor alike
to profit by practical house-planning.
The artisans' dwellings 'of the future,
and those of the well-to-do, will de
pend on the success of the new na
tional kitchens; if so, the thousands
of fires in the thousands of homes,
with thousands of cooks possibly
spoiling the broth, could be done
away with, and the cost to the com
munity curtailed 1
Salad Dressing and Table Sauces
Piquant and Pure Oval Label Quality
We now offer to the American, housewife our
VtuSol line of Condiments, bearing the famous Oval Label, our
pledge of highest grade.
The prime purpose of a condiment is to flavor other
foods. Good flavor can only come from good
ingredients. In Armour's yjiiSed Condi
ments you get the highest grade spices,
oils, vinegar, etc., that can be produced.
You can select over 300
other food products under the
Oval Label meat, fish, vege
tables, fruits, beverages, etc.
each the topmost quality of
its kind. Ask your dealer.
' fc z li SA. I To add seat and appetite to
.jjTSX I i, your meala try Armourt
s&i M" l53lk mZsffiS&l pzt fcSa issaar "TMSmm 'l
7 li (iM ttetW VSSSSSZ' ajar Tab..,s..
H ARMOURCOMPANV
i-T X ?Tt , "ZSZ&ZZ? I ROBT. BUDATZ, Mer.
K'Irmntlf'Jb """" J l3th Jones Sts., Omaha. Douglas 1055.
teS lsjgMaMI H- -eert. 29th and Q Sts., South 1740.
S&yflr S a Better Table-Read JdLljflT
iSpl "He Bnsbest of Being a Housewife" W wrnOifrS
2 ii-lsl k) This book will pay lor Itaelf several times flSSfltjj T ft j a II In .bw
v& ovtt in the preparation of a single dish I M t If VJ J
J;VrLr many times Inn day's meals. It will be sent ""fc V .(
5&iiiMiii$tiilfr to you on receipt of 10 cents (coin or sumps) DDftnt fmTe
to pay postage and packing charges. Address ST"'' J 1 S' '
Domestic Science Department, Desk 303,
Armour arid fmnanw rhimim ,j 1 "'Zn' -
Clean Plate Patriots!
Easiest thing in the world when Ice Cream
is served. It's ONE food that's never wasted.
Tiy serving our Sunday Special
PI
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Chocolat Ic Craam with attortao! French
Fruit and Nuts
for Sunday Dessert and
Nearly every city block contains
a Harding dealer.
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Howard
(CEMTRAL
Does Your House Cleaning Time
Call For a-
NEW BED ROOM SUITE?
Look Over Our
New Spring
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SUITES LIKE THIS ILLUSTRATION
IN IVORY ENAMEL i
The Dresser , !.$34.50
The Chiffonier (not shown) $29.50
The Dressing Table, triple mirror ..$33.50
The Bed, full size $29.75
A three-piece Walnut Finished Suite, similar
in design ,$56.00
Bee Want Ads Are
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see how much is refused.
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H. R. BOWEN, Preeldent.
Business Boosters.
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THE EMPRESS MARKET
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113 South 16th Street.