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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 09 Jan. 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1913-01-09/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• • Woman and the Home Sphere Robespierre Blouse This pretty blouse Of blue charmeuse satin and lace is one of the popular llobespierre models. The low neck, wide collar and Jabot frills at the side are 'character - 1,0c of the popular directolre fashions. A note of green is intro - 'aced in the piping and the satin covered button'. GRAPEFRUIT RECIPES. 1 •-•-.. -•-•-•-•-s-•-•-• ......0 - 'Sall a ring mold with bits of grape- rruit and grapefruit pep. Pour on to ithis some melted lemon jelly that is rather tart. Turn out when firm on a few white leaves of lettuce anti till the Inside of the circle with cream cheese balls made with French dressing In this way: Mash a whole creep cheese with a rusk, adding enough French dressing to make the whole smooth, then roll into small bails. Pass French dressing besides with the salad. To prepare grapefruit bnskets cut through the fruit all around the center and sides except where the handles phould be. Take out the sections, re- move all the white skin and lay the pulp in a bowl. Add to it the pulp of an orange, a cup of brandied cherries, one banana cut up very small. n few seeded white grapes, two tablespoon- fuls of sugar and one of maraschino. Fill the shells, heaping tell lit the Middle. and serve on seraped tee. Cut the grapefruit into thitniest pfis- Bible slices with a very sharp knife. removing the seeds and thick part of the core. Put in a jar overnight or in Very cold weather from 1 p. tu. tin. til next morning, allowing a quart of cold Water to 1.11ell large gra [Wit -tilt. Then boil the fruit in the same water in which it has soaked until it is re- duced one-half in quantity and the rind is tender; add healed sugar. al- lowing a little less few a pint of an for each pint of the iamhed ft -tilt. THE MAKING OF PIGEON PIE. A Little information on How to Make This Delicious Dish. Pluek and dress at pigoins, spilt thew in halves down the breast and back. Put _some small dleks of salt pork in a large saueepan over the lire. When fried crisp remove the pork and put in a large onion, cut in thin slices. and let them fry a nice brown in the fat. Then put in the pigeons and let them brown on both sides. Add a little hatter. After the birds are well lirowned pour in enough water to cev- er them to half their depth. season well with salt and pepper and let theta simmer gently till quite tender; then add half a pint of eream, and when it bubbles add two tablespoonfuls of flour well dissolved in half a pint of cream. Stir it briskly to keep from lumping. Next take out the pigeons, lay them nicely in a deep baking dish, pour the gravy over them; make a rich pie crust, roll it out, lay it over the birds, moisten the edge of the dish so the ernst adheres, cut a few little gashes in the cn.st, stand the dish In a mod- erate oven :hid let the pie bake three- quarters of :in hour. Cover the hip with buttered iiaper to keel, it from hurtling too fast. That Grayish Hue on Black. A subjeet whi , •11 Ferideses many vk , men in renovatinL: wardrobes is how to resture g• - ;otis and hats which have lahen on a forlorn grayish line of age. The sehtlion is a al wide o n e an t i ,onsists in sp.oiging the article or garment tle.ronehly with al...dell. This pro , e , s. v.ill Iltd injure Cook until the rind is ire/mho-eel and delicate fabric. and it will emerge the juice tele, f rl):11 the bath looking like new. _ - Not Yet, but Some Day? rflougHT I'D TIDY UP A BIT, PkESIDENT - Chicago News. FEEDING GROWING CHILDREN. How to Deal With Individual Whims and Supply Nourishing Dishes. It in the English mother's enstotia to give her growing ehildren plenty of good nourishing food, the simple foods that are easily digested. yet rich in nu- triment. She gives them plenty of two or three different dishes at one peal. never more, for - Implieity is her key- note of success in child training and feeding. %Viten a child has an aversion Lu meat this can lie supplied the system by giving it delicate broths made from fresh meat or small pleees of bread soaked in the \dial •• gravy of roast. Bread cut in fancy shapes, toasted and then soaked in hot bacon fat is exceed- ingly nourishing and often much ap- preetated as iv breakfast dish. Children Who do not apparently eat enough at meals should be given ROW' 12 , 111Illellt every two hours --a small glass of milk. whieli should he taken very slowly: a lithe beef tea, u bar of choc- olate or a piece of sponge cake. At meals vegetables and fresh stewed fruit should piny all Militia/Int part. Milk and rich meat soups are good and the homely mill; Puddings valuable as- sets to the general diet. Puddings made of rice or other cere- als should be cooked slowly, allowing plenty of time for the therough cook- ing of the grain. and Shall Id he served hi as attraetive at flla 11 1101* as possible. in its ninny different ways as possible. A light breakfast. a hearty. dinner in the middle of the day, with a very light tea about 4 o'eloek. and then supper at 6, consisting of some epurishing broth. a sandwich or two and a little sweet. is the proper klad SIMI division of food for the growing child.--Philudelphia North American. •IllIllIlhI 1111111 1 1-1-1-1-1-'. r . TO SHRINK WOOLEN GOODS. — — :r. J. 1: Wet a sheet and spread it out on a table. Then place one thick- ness of the goods lengthwise of the sheet. Begin at one end and roll sheet and goods together. Lay the roll of goods away on a platter or waiter until morning. After unrolling the goods press on the wrong side with a hot Iron. If then' should be any doubt about the right side of the goods before shrinking it would he better sifter determining the right side to mnrli It by sewing o bit of cloth near at corner so there Will lie ao trimlile in ascer- taining (Ile right side after , Itrinking. Peanut Butter. Take freshly roasted pennuts. bulled and thoroughly winnowed, put them through a meat grinder several times until they look smooth and buttery, then add salt and cayenne pepper to taste. Sometimes a lump of sweet melted country butter is added. Beat till the whole is light and creamy. ashionable Browns. One sees browns in cheviots, diago- nals, worsteds, serges, whipcords, bed - ford cords, cordtiroys and the two toned velveteens and velvets. There air,' many brown hats- of all shapes anal sizes Brown fors are popular. DESCENT OF THE DOG. Science Traces the Canine Back to the Wolf or Jackal. It seems to he generally accepted by naturalists and the world at large that Ike domestic dog is in some sense keol- lateral descendant of the wolf or jackal. A professor in the Natural History museum in Paris has comomnIcated re - /ions of his study of various canine skilds to the Academy of Selences. IL appears to have notieed certain fie- cub:lithe? , of crowill which hate lath - 441\ es , 11ped zoologists. lie state.s that the ...hell of almost every species of welt anti differs from the skull (if thi• shepherd dog to an extent t ha t 'mikes it impossible that this dog ...Mould belong in the satue elassitlea• The sktill ef the Indian wolf, on the contrary, show'( some points of re- somblatice. This indeed is the only savage canine the top of whose head projects likt• that of our dog. There are. unload - et% says Harper's Weekly. other charneteristies whle.li the Indian wolf Ilah In comnion witlt the dog uuuci whieh the ordinary wolf does not share with them, although his origin and that of the dog have long been supposed to be a eotumon one. The conclusion of this scientist is that the Indian wolf is the progenitor of the shetilierd dog and the blood- hound. There were two primitive races of dogs auillogous to these which were first doniestieated in ventral Asia, llenee tIn•y passed to Europe, feud there seems no reason to doubt that the bloodhound of today is the direct tleseendant of the dog spoken of by the ancient as \the dog of the age of brallZe.\ OUR FIRST FREE SCHOOL. It Was Established In 'Massachusetts In the Year 1641. The first free school established in the United States was In the province of Massachusetts Bay in the year 11;41 by order of the general colonial court. In 1 6 / 7 the same authority - declared that free sebools should be established within every town having fifty house- holders under penalty of a tine of £5. This tine Was doubled by a declaration made in 1671 and again doubled in 1683. Connecticut established free schools in 1644 anti levied a tax for their sup- port. Maryland established free schools In 14394 and levied a tax on negroes, pelts, furs and beef and pork for their support. Governor Berkeley declared in 1049 the hope that free schools would never be established in Virginia, but the towns of Charleston and Eliza- beth did establish them in that year, and Elizabeth set aside 200 acres of lqnd and eight cows, the increase from which was applied to support the schools. Four years later the number of cows had increased to forty. Penn- sylvania wee settled by Penn on the Delaware river In 1681. and the same year a free school, conducted under the auspices of the Friends, or Quakers, was established in Philadelphia Candor and Manners. Pitt was once canvassing for himself when he came to a blacksmith's shop. \Sir said he to the blacksmith, \will you favor me with your vote?\ \Mr. Pitt.\ said the eon of Vulcan, \I ad- mire your bead, lint hang your heart.\ \Mr. Illaeksmith.\ said Pitt, \I admire your candor, but hang your nianners.\ Our Illustrated Story The Operator at Sandsville By ELEANOR RICHARDS j W HEN .11In Lee, the village car- penter and a widower, died people weindered how his daughter. Molly, would get along. A number of them so Interested themselves that she was made tele-1 phone operator at Sundsville. Molly Lee was twenty, and if she hadn't married before her father's death it was not because of the lack of an opportuolty. Why she didn't was her own affair. Why . she attended strictly to business afterward and had no beaus was also her own affair, hut folks winked and nodded and said it would come around by and by. At Stapleton, twenty-eight miles away. James Williams opened a store about the time Mr. Lee died. He had much telephoning to do in various di- rections, and he called up Sandsville at least once a day. When he heard the new voice over the telephone he liked the sound of it. The more he heard of it the better he liked it. As he was a bachelor and as he was charged with having an eye open for a wife, it would not have been strange had he written to a friend at Sands - rifle to introduce him to that girl with a sweet voice in the telephone °dice, but lie did nothing of the kind, ile could have stepped aboard the train any day and gone and seen for himself, but lie did not do that. Bachelors have their romances as well as young men and maidens. He built up a romance around the \Hello!\ voice, and after a few weeks he would have wanted to knock down the man wbo destroyed it for him. When there was no business on the Sandsville line to call for his opening the telephone he made excuses to do so. He felt he must hear that voice at least once a day, and when be found his romance growing he smiled to himself. By and by the messages over the wire were not strictly confined to busi- ness, according to regulations. He never asked her name, but he be- trayed an interest that brought a blush to her cheek as she carelessly respond- ed: \Yes.\ \I see.\ \I guess so.\ \In- deed!\ Sometimes he left the speaking piece uncovered and hummed a sentimental song. The girl at the other end of the wire knew that the words were meant for her. At first, when addressing her, he had called her after the name of her town. One day he glided away from that and called her Girlie. She was going to rebuke him, but he was In a hurry, and she put it off. For a year the bachelor bugged his roulance to his soul; then he made up his mind to look for something more material. He put on his best suit one day and went down to Sandsville. Any one on the street would have told him that Miss Molly Lee was in charge of the telephone office and would proba- bly have added that she was the hest looking girl in town, but he asked no questions, not even where the office was. He strolled around until he found it for himself, and he kept saying as he strolled: \Jimmy Williams, you are making an idiot of yourself. Of course Girlie Is an old maid and homely as a hedge For Our Boy and Girl Readers A CASE OF IMAGINATION. A Great E3ig Mart Who Thought a Shark Had Bitten Off His Leg. When Sir Joseph Fayter was with his ship in the Italtatnas he landed on an island, left the heat au oho's. nod %tem inland exploring. Presently. to his dismay. he saw the boat drifting out to sea, fie rushed down to the water's edge. divested himself of all but some cotton mitierelothiug anti plunged In. As he swain something appeared to seize his leg. anti lie re• menthered in an Institut that the sea ...warmed with sharks. lie nearly sank with horror, fully persuaded t1t;t1 his leg Was gine.. But. mastering Ilk fear. SIWZII11 011 1,1 the boat. Thell he , 1 . 011 1111 that his alarm had been rallSed I.'. at lap. with wide!' his undecelotn. ine %vas tied below thes 1:11ee. II 1111(1 come unfastened. :111d the sepposed shark bite Wa8 011ly a %vet tape wind- ing and unwinding about ids leg. Lots...of children are frightewed for i no real reason. Remember the cidicu- leus fear of Sir Joseph. In Slumberiand, Where is the road to Slumberlan47 Just rest 3.our cheek upon your hand And press your pillow hard and say 110nd night to all the world or day. Breathe deep. and. presto, \ on , 4111 stand l'oon the shores of 811111ther lariat - All sounds are songs In 5hunb.. , 1Ar..1 - The rInle of waves upon the sand. The whIsp'rir. 6 boughs, th.• .training breeze - And dreams ire blossoming on the trees. They only watt your gathering hard Wee visitor to Slumberland A T A a ll you !mot in Shunt.. rl.in3 1 ,hedient and expeetant stan.1 The birds and beasts, the g.::.?• and elves. The Pan and moon and stars All wall to heed your least carnmarot. While you are king in Slumberland -nary- \Tabby Cat.\ — rabby eat\ Is all mice', i-iis that her name is derived from a (R- 111°1114 street in Itegdad. b y • the manufneturers of the stnffs called atabl, the wavy inarkiic.:- ifle watered silk resembling plls'Y.; rent. A Future King and His Family Photo by American Press Association, When Xing Oscar of Sweden died several years ago his son. Gustavus Adolphus, beenne. ruler of that country. If he should die the present crown prince would reign in his place, but as his name is the same as his father's it would not he bard for the Swedish people to get used to calling him King Gustavus Adolphee. The crown prinee le seen here with his family. The princess before her marriage o - as the daughter of the Duke of Connaught of England. The Wasp's Paper Mill. The wasp has a paper mill in her mouth and jaws. She tiles about until she finds an old rail whitened and weather beaten by the winds and rain. Then she peels from it that thin, flaky substance. which you sometimes see on old fences in the country. This she chews and mumbles over into a kInd of paste until it be.adues quite plastic, and In this condition she files with it to the place where she inteuds to build her hive. In buildhig she clings with per last two pair of legs, anti with the first pair. aided by bet. Jaws. she fixes the woody pulp to the bough she has selected, kneading it into form. The Way to Read. About reading Lord Macaulay says: \When a boy I began to read very earnestly, but at the foot of every page I read I stopped and obliged myself to give an account of what 1 had read on that page. \At first I had to read it three or four times before I got my mind firmly fix- ed. But I compelled mpailf to comply with the plan until non., after I have read a book through once. I can almost recite it from the beginning to the end. \It Is a very simple habit to form early in life and is valuable as a means of making reading serve the best pur- pose.\ fence, and you will get snapped tfp In great shape for your cheek.\ He entered the telephone office, and the first glance at the woman behind the desk sent his heart down into' his, boots. A man who stuttered 'badly) had just left L. office after vainly seeking to send a message, and she did not like the way the man from Sta- pleton looked at her. \Well?\ she blurted out as he stood there looking around in a helpless Way. \Name is Williams ,of Stapleton,\ he answered. \Name is Williams of Stapleton,\ he answered. \Well what of that?\ \I—I have done considerable tele-, phoning to this office during the' past year.\ \And have you got any complaints. to make?\ \ No. . \Then what\— \I thought-- That is, I—I\— \Have you been drinking, sir?\ de- manded the operator in a voice full of carpet tacks and pounded glass. \N -n -n-n -o!\ stuttered Mr. Williams after a great effort. \Then you are going to have parebta and had best consult a doctor!\ Mr. Williams withdrew - end went over and sat down In the shade of the grocery steps. A bobtailed dog came along and tried to make friends with him, but he would not respond. One of the hogs sauntering about the village streets approached and grunted amia- bly, but was kicked at in response, The groceryman came out and, rub- bing his hands together, observed that he had just laid In a new stock of crackers and herring, but the bachelor never even thanked him for calling his. attention to the fact By and by, when the cold chill of., disappointment had passed away, be got up and walked to the depot and took the train for home. His romance had been shattered and buried, and he felt small and mean over 'it. There was only one thing left to wonder over. How on earth could that op- erator have disguised her voice as she had when talking with him? Re thought over the matter for two or three days and then dismissed it. During the next two weeks the mer- chant had considerable telephoning to do, but none of it was in the direction of Sandsville. Not once was that office called up. and there was a saving of at least $3 on tolls. Then there came a day that the office had to be call- ed up. \Yea this is Bandsville,\ came the answer in a voice that made him jump. It was the clear, sweet voice he had been accustomed to, \I want\— he began and then stop- ped. \Yes?\ \I want Jackson's dry goods store after awhile, but just now I want something else.\ \What is it?\ \Have—have you got two voices?\ \Why of course not. What a funny question!\ \Are there two of you, then?\ \No; I'm all alone here.\ \Well I'll be jiggered!\ he exclaim- ed, He heard a giggle, and the voice he liked to hear said: \Shall I call up the store now?\ \Not yet. Say, I was down at Sandsville the other day\ \Yee?\ \I called at the telephone office.\ \Did you?\ \And you wanted to know if I hail been drinking.\ \Oh. Mr. Williams!\ \And when I said no you advised me to consult a doctor for paresis.\ \Did he say that? I'm sorry. I was ill for a week and had to get Miss Pickleton to take my place, and she is pretty sharp with people.\ \And It wasn't you In the office that day?\ \Of course not.\ \Then—then\— \Then you want the store?\ \Not by a jug - full I want you, and A shall be down on the afternoon train!l \But Mr. Williams\— But Mr. Williams was hurrying to the depot to catch the train and an, hour later was in Sendsville. Everysi body says it was a good match, ••