The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 40, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 1, 1929 Page: 3 of 8
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THE CASS COUNTY SUN
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KITCHEN
r&RIMET
<(c). IU<4If Wi'fi•-'i ii Ncwhidi u«t Union.)
"So few people have learned the
an ot collecting memories. They
oollecf oli ehina and prints and
hooks—oil nood and pleasant, but
fragile and perinhnhle. Happy
memories nre Indestructible po^nes-
tilon* whf<*h nothing can taiio from
us but disease or death."
SEASONABLE HINTS
Cauliflower; so well 11 Uucl iih u vege-
table. ranks more highly used in pickle
combinations or pickled
alone. Tiie dainty little
flowerets should he care-
fully separated, washed
and drained. To avoid
insects turn the head
upside down ici a pan of
salted water—a n y In-
sects hidden will cotne
out to the surface of
the water.
Pickled Cauliflower. — Break Into
small flowerets after removing leuves
and stalks. Cook In boiling salted
water for ten minutes. Itinse in cold
water to which a bit of lemon Juice
has been added. Pack the pieces in
sterilized jars, dropping a long chili
pepper in each Jar for added attrac-
tiveness as well as flavor. Fill the
Jars with hot spiced vinegar nn<& seal
while hot. Prepare the vinegar us fol-
lows :
To each quart of- vinegar add one-
half cupful of sugur, one teaspoontyil
each of whole cloves and broken sties
cinnamon, blades of mace, whole all-
spice, celery seed, peppercorns and
two small sliced onions; boil l.r> min-
utes, strain and use ut ouce. One
large cauliflower for each quart Jar
nnd one quart of vinegar will he sutli-
clent for three-quart Jars If well
pucked.
Apple Butter.—Tills makes a de-
licious spread which the children will
enjoy as long as it lasts. Take good
flavored early apples, pare, core, and
put through the meat chopper togeth-
er with a lemon, orange, nnd two
ounces of green ginger root. Measure
the fruit pulp und add an equal
amount of sugar and a pint of water.
Cook gently, stirring frequently until
clear and thick. Can in pint jars.
Seal while hot.
Wild grape Jam Is delicious to serve
with meats. Use the half ripe grapes
(remove seeds) and add three-quarters
of their weight In sugar. Place in a
kettle with two tablespoonfuls of vin-
egar and orange or lemon Juice to
start the steain. Bring slowly to the
boiling point nnd cook a half-hour aft
er boiling commences.
Apple Relish.
Take eight linn tart apples, four
medium-sized onions, one cupful of
raisins and one sweet
red pepper. Peel and
chop the upples as well
as the raisins and other
vegetables, mix thor-
oughly. Boll one quurt
of vinegar, two and one-
half cupfuls of brown
sugar, three teaspoon-
ftils of salt, four table-
spoonfuls ot whole mixed spices tied
in a muslin bag. When the sirup Is
formed stir in the other Ingredients
and cook for one hour slowly. The
sauce will lie very thick when fin-
ished. Seal hot.
Ripe Cucumber Pickles.—Many pre-
fer these to the watermelon pickles,
•which are such favorite sweet pickles.
Pare ripe cucumbers and cut into long
strips, removing the seeds. Cover
with a quart of water in which three
tablespoonfuls 'of snlt have been dis-
solved, adding more water and salt
to cover the cucumbers. Let stand
several hours then drain nnd place in
cold water. Make a sirup of one and
one-half pints of vinegar, one pound
of granulated sugar, one-half ounce
each of stick cinnamon and whole
cloves. Boll live minutes. Drop in
the cucumber nnd cook until It
is transparent. Tuck In small pieces
of red pepper here and there
and place In Jars. Boil down the
sirup und pour over boiling hot; seal
at once.
Horseradish Relish. — Take three
large grated roots of horseradish, udd
one tablespoonful of turmeric, a ta-
blespoonful of celery seed, two table-
spoonfuls of mustard, one-half cupful
of sugar nnd enough boiling vlnegur to
mnko a pint and a half. Mix well
and bottle. Serve after standing two
weeks. This Is a sauce which goes
well with cold meats nnd chops. It
Is bltlngly appetizing.
Chocolate Malted Milk.—Melt two
squnres of bitter chocolate, udd four
tablespoonfuls of malted milk dis-
solved nnd mixed with a little cold
water then brought to at boil, add a
quart of scalding hot milk, a pinch
of salt and ns much sugar as Is need-
ed to sweeten. Serve hot or chilled,
iwlth Ice.
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Looking Down on Constantinople.
(Prepared by the National OeuKraphlc
Society, Washington, D. C.)
THERE are few opportunities
anywhere in the world to see
so many historic sites in half a
dozen hours as during the brief
airplane trip from Constantinople to
Athens.
The route is paved with geography;
with history, which Is geography in-
teracting with mankind; nnd with
mythology, in which elemental geo-
graphic forces are given childishly hu-
man characteristics.
Poets und historians, ladies and their
Leunders, Argonauts and Anzacs, have
so mosaicked with meaning this age-
old route that the air traveler, com-
pleting it between breakfast nnd
luncheon, would need thnt last-rain-
nte-before-drowning clairvoyance to
take In even the broad outlines of the
picture on the rift between West and
East, Europe and Asia, sailor and
nomad. Greek and barbarian, between
what was known and what was off the
mop.
The plane Is fitted with pontoons
nnd rises from the Bosporus. Behind,
the Genoese castle of Anatoli Kavak,
only a moment ngo outlined against
the Black sea, has flattened out
ngainst a northern tip of Asia Minor.
As n point Is rounded, with the pal-
aces and embassy gardens of Therapla
below, the view extends to the Golden
Horn.
By the time the strait between Ru-
mell nnd Anatoli Hlssar Is reached the
plane Is so high above Mohammed the
Conqueror's "Cutthroat Castle" that
the ground plnn, said to be a chiro-
graph of his Arabic name, is just a
comfortable eyeful.
The ground plan of Robert College
takes on rare symmetry. In its center
a football game is being played by
two tribes of vari-colored ants. Now
the Constantinople Woman's college
is reached, its buildings aligned Into
one Imposing facade.
Looking Down on Stamboul.
There is u slight haze above Stam-
boul, the Seraglio palaces are visibly
isolated from the teeming city; and
the cornucopia curve of the Golden
Horn—(Respite Its fame, a mere nick
in the eastern edge of Europe, is clear-
ly cut between Close-rooted slopes,
pock-marked by fire and mournful
with cypresses rising above marble-
skeletoned cemeteries. The fabled
seven hills unite Into one main ridge.
Now the plane is almost over fat-
domed Sancta Sophia; and the six
minarets of the Sultan Ahmed mosque,
so needlelike from the ground, seem
squat towers. The obelisks in the Hip-
podrome, Byznntlum's antique pleas-
ure center, huve no height, but their
shadows stretch wide across a park
the perfection of which was never be-
fore so evident. One wonders when
architects will begin to design struc-
tures to be beautiful from the air, as
landscape gardening already is.
Outside the left windows the Princes
Islands bathe in sun-spread quick-
silver and the Gulf of Ismld loses It-
self beyond.
Off the right wing the landward wall
of Byzantium, starting imposingly
with the Seven Towers, dwindles uwuy
until its battlements are lost behind
a hill overlooking the Sweet Wuters of
Europe.
Now one looks strnlglit down on the
islund of Marmora, unexpectedly large
and full of vnlleys. Around a tiny bay
In the north edge, marble cliffs or sing
dumps, white as chalk, describe a
horseshoe curve.
Now Europe edges In from the right,
with the ridge of Tekir Dugh, empha-
sized by cumuli, stretching down to
give backbone to Qallipoli. What a
place to study geography! The two
most famous straits of olden times,
where Helle drowned nnd Io, Hera's
rival, forded the Bosporus.
Now the upper entrance to the
Hellespont has been reached, with
Gnlllpoll on the opposite shore. Just
under the hull 1b a level hill where
there at one time, was a Turkish fort.
A little farther on Lapsakl comes
into view, it used to be Lutnpsacus
and was famous for its wine and Pri-
apic worship. The town, being made of
mud and stone, may have moved about
a bit, but the name has hovered right
there since the days when Themig-
tocles was Its monarchos and the idea
of hereditary monarchy was new.
Lapsakl has its own little marina,
but the main town stands back from
the water, its reddish-brown roofs ar-
ranged in seemingly perfect squares.
The junction of land and water here
is of extreme beauty, the shoreline
edged with a greenish blue breaking
away to the royal purple of the deep-
er water.
The ship seemingly Increases Its
speed over the narrows where Leander
swam to see Hero and set an example
for Lord Byron and others. On a
bridge of bouts Xerxes crossed here
to invade Europe. A century and a
half later Alexander returned the
compliment.
Beyond the Gallipoli peninsula one
can see Suvla Buy and below is the
old tower of Chanak Kaiessi, until re-
cently ringed with modern forts.
Across the narrow neck of water is
the trefoil fort of Kllid Bahr, a stalk-
less ace of clubs spiked down with a
tail central tower.
And here is Troy, immortalized by
Homer and Vergil, described by Stra-
bo, a rain soaked, soggy plain, cut by
mere brooks and utterly without dra-
matic quality.
The whole outline of Tenedos may
be seen as one flies along, Its central
portion cultivated. Its shoreline
notched by ways to which the Greeks
withdrew, leaving the wooden horse
outside the Trojan walls.
The Isles of Greece.
There are pitch-black clouds ahead,
their lower sides festooned with wav-
ing wisps of ruin like Spanish moss.
The plane swoops down to 2,000 feet.
The long line of Lemnos tills the
horizon at the right, and through the
opposite window Lesbos (Mytilene)
detaches Itself from the flank of Asia
Minor. Only indistinct suggestions of
land lie ahead.
Skyros shoulders her blood-red,
craggy cliffs toward the ship's path.
When the flight has lasted three hours
an Acropolislike plateau on Euboea
shows Itself. For the first time the
plane dives directly toward the land
to find a low, narrow pass above cul-
tivated fields, salmon pink amid gray
rock and lush green and dotted with
circular stone threshing floors near
the Gulf of Petal!.
Then comes the supreme thrill; for
there, sweeping round in a perfect
curve like a gold-edged scimitar laid
against the blue. Is the Plain of Mar-
athon. Hoary-headed Parnes looms be-
yond, and Pentellcus, neighbor of
Athens and mother of her marbles,
suggests how short a flight remains;
yet how long that run for Phidippides,
bringing news thnt th<? Medes nnd
Perslnns were in flight and that Miltl-
ades had wonl
Now the Saronlc Gulf Is below,
opalescent tints showing on an oyster-
shell-shaped bench. What seems to be
the mainland to the left is really the
island of Salntnis. From Mnrathan to
Saiamis, a ten-year struggle for the
Persians, and the flyer can cover it
in the sweep of an eye!
A brightly tinted new town, its
landscape gardening reduced to the
proportions ot a painting, grows be-
low as the plutie descends. Little Lyka-
bettos spears up to the right, and the
Acropolis begins to assume a fraction
of its wonted dignity, as the very
heart and center of Greek life.
There Is n bus terminus, nnd down
the plane comes, flashing past new
villas and deserted piers. One final
glance for the flyers at thnt historic
plain between Parnes nnd Hymettos,
und down their ship splashes life a
duck, in Phaleron Bay, to the east of
Piraeus.
FOft rA ./P package
© 1929. P. Co.. Inc.
Much Wood Swallowed
Up by Printing Press
Any lorge daily and Sunday news-
paper with its many sections and sup-
plements is one of the chief consumers
of the forest resources of the nation,
according ito a survey of reforestation
needs by Farm and Fireside.
One week's publication uses enough
paper to represent the pulp from 400
acres of trees, or 20,000 acres of for-
est in a year. At least 10 square
miles of forest go to the pulp mills
every day in the year to keep the
presses of the country running.
The United States uses more wood
per capita than any nation in the
world. More than two-thlrris of the
822,000,000 acres contained in the
country's original forests have been
culled, cut over or destroyed by fire.
About 20,000,000,000 cubic feet of ma-
terial are taken out of the forests
every year for all purposes, while only
about 0,000,000,000 feet are growing
anew In them. All kinds of trees are
being consumed faster than they are
being grown.
Since 1900 the United States has
used more wood pulp than it has pro-
duced. Two-tliirds of the present
supply is being imported from Canada.
Better to Keep Mum
"My wife never listens to me," com-
plained a newly married man.
"Don't let that, worry you, son," said
the old married one. "Mine did once,
and It got me in a peck of trouble."
"How was that?"
"I was talking in my sleep."
Safety Move
After n while a man stops hoping
that people will pay what they owe
him and concentrates on praying for
strength not to lend them any more.
—Ohio State Journal.
La Raza S the first Spanish lan-
guage newspaper in Chicago, where
there are 1S5.000 Mexicans and Span-
ish.
I From all over the
Southwest
Those who will
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Service come to
our optometrist
I Dr. David L. Wortsman
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JOIN TREASURE HUNT. Interesting prop
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Mexico City, Merloo.
Equal Obligations
He who bids us leave the gift on
the altar and be reconciled to our
brother would have us go back and
be reconciled to any duty with which
we may have quarreled.—Mark Guy
Pearse.
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 40, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 1, 1929, newspaper, October 1, 1929; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth340869/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Atlanta Public Library.