Mower County news (Austin, Minn.) 1920-1947
January 17, 1921 · Page 5 of 8
OCR Text
distribution of the "holes, on the other SUPERIOR QUALITIES NOT DIFFICULT TASK little trouble and cost and with none About the *s Blouses hand, and the thickness of the walls TO-DAY'S FASHION NOTES of the possible dangers attending the can best be examined by cutting a use of hydrocyanic-acid gas, another OF HOME-MADE BREAD TO DESTROY ROACHES very thin slice and holding it up to efficient means of control. With the the light. use of some dust gun or blower tha The flavor of the bread should be, as sodium fluorid can be thoroughly dusted *ost Appetizing of Foods When nearly as possible, the flavor of wheat Use of Sodium Fluorid Is Simple over the shelves, tables, flows sad of developed or brought otit by the use the runways and hiding places the One Is Hungry. and Effective Plan. of salt. This flavor Is not easy to describe, roaches. but is familiar to those who The Immediate effect of tha powder have tasted the wheat kernel. Is to cause these Insects to come out «tiLaaf Should Be Light In Weight Considering Obnoxious Insects Can Be Completely of their retreats and rush about more Its Size, of Symmetrical Exterminated With Little Trouble or less blindly, showing evidence of Form, With an Unbroken, Golden-Brown and Expense by Dusting With KITCHEN IS WORKSHOP discomfort, to be followed In the coarse Crust. This Substance. of few hours by their death. The 4 dead or paralysed roaches can be The kitchen is the workshop One of the most effective and simple swept up and burned, and complete extermination Good home-made bread is about the in most farm homes. In it the means of ridding premises of roaches Is effected within 24 s- most appetizing of foods when one is housekeeper and her helpers 1s dusting with commercial sodium hours. It Is not definitely known .hungry, but there are many kinds of prepare the food for the family, fluorid, either pure or diluted one-half whether the sodium acts through tha fteiue-made bread. Some is good, some and from it as a center carry with some inert substance such as breathing pores or as a stomach pertson. ft bad, and some indifferent. Which on most of the other housework. powdered gypsum or flour. This Probably, however, It acts in both Had do you make? If you don't know, remedy Is one recommended by the ways. Inasmuch as It has been found Jttdge it by the following description More and better work can be United States Department of Agriculture. to kill caterpillars fed on foliage dusted a good loaf given by the home eco•joomies done in a well-lighted shop arranged with it. kitchen of the United States for tlie comfort aud convenience Numerous practical tests conducted department of Agriculture: of the workers and In lunchrooms, bakeries, milk-bottle •Stood bread is porous and contains News items from all sections of this equipped with good tools than in exchanges, etc., have shown that with territory are wanted By The News. large number of holes or cells, all a dark shop where much time the use of this substance roaches can Send them to us by mail, tell us personally, jflg which are of about the same size must be spent in unnecessary be completely exterminated with very or call Main 450. 'MUSI shape. It is better for some reasons steps and energy wasted with to think of it as a mass of tiny scattered equipment. Business Wfeftbies made of flour and water and men have found this a sound hardened or fixed in shape by means principle, an£ it should be applied «f &eat. This calls attention not only to the farm kitchen so $s the size of holes or cells, but also that the housekeeper can do her Too Much Sex Stuff in the Movies to the character of walls of the cells, work more quickly and with the t^hlcb in good bread are always very least fatigue. Otto. Whose Fault Is It? A loaf of bread should be light in tmOgbt, considering its size, and shouid J. ilttve a symmetrical form and an untlvoken, HOUSEHOLD NOTES golden-brown crust. The crust Something is certainly wrong with many -aheaki be smooth on top and should of the movies* What that something is, is have a certain luster, to which the Jem "bloom" has been given. fearlessly revealed by Benjamin B. Hampton, A small sink with a rubber stopper EXCEPT jThe loaf as a whole, the crust and Joins forces with plaited georgette to for iruicfl some re for its escape pipe may be used as a President of four big motion-picture rtfee erumb, should be elastic. The decorated and sometime* startling make this Ingenious model, the georgette A trip little tailleur that may be dishpan. ,'Soaf, if pressed out of shape, as it developed in tricotine, gaardine, models, which might be classed as "exhibition forming the upper portion of the companies. Some of the conditions ho serge or satin. The jacket is out eften when slice* are cut from it, blouse and sleeves. It ends in points blouses." the fall season has With roast pork serve apple sauce, lined with braid in self-tone, while describes are nothing short of appalling* -aiMukl regain Its form when the pres- ot brought iu many designs that can from which are suspended loops of the mashed potatoes and greeu vegetable the skirt shows a sliphtly increased MBe is removed. Bits of the crust, material fasteued to the points with iay claim to originality in these very His article bristles with astounding information —peas, beans or spinach. fulness and length. Medium size requires bent a little between the fingers, popular garments. But why should small, satin ornaments. The crepe de 3% yards 54-inch material, that has never been published Aocrid show the same power to reftmmd, chine falls over the plaited georgette designers strive for new ideas while with 3 yards inch-wide braid. Celery, lettuce and other salad as should also the cut surface. we are well satisfied with those we which forms the lower part of the Pictorial Review Jacket No. 7800. before. You'll find Mr. Hampton's article plants, because eaten raw, must be 0t the loaf if pressed. have and continue to buy them? blouse and the peplum. A belt of the Sizes, 34 to 42 inches bust. Price, 25 washed with the greatest care. The crumb should be creamy whiteEm. on page 11 of The search for something new does crepe slips through the suspended cents. Skirt No. 8295. Sizes, 24 to color and should have a "sheen,", 36 inches waist. Price 20 cents. not go entirely unrewarded even when loops and confines the blouse at the Sal soda In hot soap suds is splendid afiich may be compared with the' the too-elaborate models are not counted waist line. The frills that finish the for removing grease from a gas Pictorial cR^view Early Fireworks. Moom of the crust. This sheen can: in the finds. Among the tailored sleeves are wide and the sleeves themselves range. See that it is thoroughly dried the In Rome, at the creation of test be seen by looking across a slice, blouses there are some in which crepe rather large and slightly flaring. afterwards. popes. Illuminated "band grenades'* after than directly down Into it. The de chine is used for long-sleeved models The new neck line appears in this were thrown from the tops of castles, that have turned back cults of model and, altogether. It is about the for February and the about the commencement of pique and collars of this material that most promising in style and attractiveness WELL-LOCATED SINK REDUCES had hecome Fourteenth century fireworks roll high at the back and open in a that has come up for judgment an art in which Inventors displayed HOUSEWIFE'S KITCHEN WORK On Sale Now long "V" at the front. This combination thus far. the great ability in combining of materials is new and the collar and powers of architecture, sculpture unusually becoming and modest nalntloff. looking. Plaits and points are outstanding Meelem Rellgleue Intolerance. features of the handsome new blouse Nothing Is mors hatsfal to a Moslem R. R. MURPHY pictured. A soft figured crepe! de chine. £}. Western Newspaper Union.) than to sse the Koraa la tht hands of aa unbeliever. it-*-:. 1! Be tliat as it may, certainly the *4 Lwijijn wonders of advertising were fully r! proven by the Advertising Exhibition EVE THE FIRST ADVERTISER itself, which is the first of its kind fiver held in England. The Joy TRY A WANT AD London, (By Mail to United Press) —Eve was the world's first advertiser. SERVICE STORAGE] It was bccause she pointed out the [STATION BATTERY excellent qualities of fruit that Adam WINTER STORAGE and she found themselves outside the Garden of Eden. If Eve had'nt When you are ready to put "boosted" the apple, Adam would BaJiirvg never have partaken. your car away for the winter, These facts were pointed out by call the Pierce Battery Co., to Sir Robert Horne in a speech at the Day take care of your battery, 112 opening of the Advertising Exhibition fR a Well-Planned Kitchen Like This a Good Sink Is of First Importance. here. The serpent, he said, was the E. Maple street. Phone Bridge One of the biggest savers of time, gather in the depressions when vegetables advertising agent who knew his job The results obtained are due to wise selection of flour. 301. «toength, and labor in the kitchen is are cleaned, dishes washed, well. He advertised his goods thru Ihe sink. Tet many women are struggling etc. Like Iron, they do not show HORMEL'S QUALITY FLOUR brings only Eve because he knew she had a "pull" along with none at all or, at whether they are clean or not. with the public he was trying to &est, a poor and badly placed one. Enameled-iron sinks are smooth, The Best Results reach, or in other words, poor old The following suggestions in regard DELCO-LIGHT last well with careful use, and" may Adam. to sinks are given by household specialists be easily kept clean, but they are Tht Electric Light of the United States Department Sir Robert failed to point out more expensive than iron. Porcelain CORAPICM MM! Power Plant of Agriculture: sinks are similar to the enameled whether Adam ever repented of his Ask us for a demonstration in The size of the family and of the ones, but their price is almost prohibitive. response to the lure of advertisement Per 49 lb. Cotton sack $3.20 Per 24}£ lb- Cotton sack $1.65 our own home. See for yourself, &ttchen must determine the size of the Perhaps the ideal plan, if cost —but he pointed out nevertheless that obligation. «aink, but a short sink with ample Is not to be considered, would be to advertised articles are bound to be 4&tbl£ and shelf room near It may be have an enameled or porcelain sink good, or no amount of advertising- will HORMEL MILLING CO. .more convenient than a long sink. for the tableware in the kitchen or the sell them a second time. It is assumed Two smaller sinks, one for the table pantry near the dining room and an 'dishes near the dining room and the that the advertised apple lived up to iron or soapstone sink for the heavier otfier for general use in the kitchen, the reputation Eva had claimed for it kitchen ware. ape very convenient. Austin, Minn. The double sinks, with one basin for and that Adam thereafter became an No Cracks or Square Corners. Austin Electric Supply Co. washing and another for draining habitual apple-eater. The material should be the best dishes, are very convenient, but unfortunately 121 N. Main St. Phone Main 39 ^available, nonabsorbent of grease as they are relatively expensive. as of moisture, and there should small sink with a rubber A ho cracks or square corners to In•fisease stopper for its escape pipe may be the work of keeping it clean. used as a dishpan. Greg's Cafe .A wooden sink, even when it receives The plumbing should be easy of access, .am annual coat of paint, will absorb and therefore it is better tha* -sooisture and grease which attract insects, 408 North Main Street there should be no closet under the and is likely to be swarming sink. Hooks or shelves under the sink with bacteria and to "sour" and have or near it will accommodate everything REGULAR MEALS AT asm unpleasant odor. Even drainboards usually kept in the dark, often ALL HOURS oC wood are not recommended unless musty, "sink closet" of older kitchens. itS&ey have a waterproof finish of varasfsh, Open Until Midnight' A "sink closet" can be kept sweet and oil, or paint. If a wooden sink clean but it means extra work to do It. Good Coffee, Chops And Sa necessary, it is better to have it Location of Drain Boards. Steaks A Specialty nsetal lined, provided the sheets of metal, which is usually tin, zinc, gal•3/aiilzed If possible, there should he a wide PRICES REASONABLE iron, copper or lead, are shelf or drain board on each side of -aoldered where they are joined and the sink on the level with the rim of «il parts of the sink, including ,the the latter, one to receive soiled dishes 4ops of the sides, are covered with the and the other clean ones. Some housekeepers unetal, so that there Is no chance for have these covered with "zinc. J. F. FAIRBANKS ifee wood to absorb moisture. Another As in all other places where It Is used, Shoes, Overshoes, Traveling Bags, plan Is to have a cement sink built the metal must be neatly fitted and Soto a wooden frame and lined with closely fastened down so as not to Suit Cases, Trunks, •sEieet copper or tin. leave any chance for loose, rough Rubber Boots, Iron sinks of good quality are sugperior Dealer In edges, or to provide breeding places Harness and to wooden ones, since they do for insects or a lodging place for COAL, WOOD, LIME ewt absorb grease or moisture and are grease and dirt. If there Is no place Blankets, Wool Leather Goods •durable. They are easily kept clean for permanent drain boards, sliding CEMENT, SEWER PIPE, •if. smooth (and they will soon wear or hinged shelves may be used. A BRICK AND WALL *1\4 samooth), but they have the disadvantage Socks, Gloves, etc. right-handed person usually holds the of all kinds of neither showing dirt nor proclaiming PLASTER. dish in the left hand while washing their cleanliness. Unless or wiping it, and the dishcloth, dish front Is protected by a strip of mop, or towel in the right hand. It Jensen & Ph iffer •wood, the dresses and aprons of the is convenient, therefore, to luive the a iH?" •worker are likely to become stained dishes move from right to left as they with Iron rust. pass from dishpan to rinsing pan, and Office 301 East Bridge St. I I A soapstone or a slate sink is durssble, from rinsing pan to drainer and tray. ?.. Phone: Main 32 but sometimes becomes uneven This should be kept In mind, and provision ty -with wear, and if this happens much made for soiled dishes at the Austin, Minn. -•s"v ... Thrashing and scrubbing are required right and for a drain board at the l*.V Remove the sand and grease that left of the sink. .1