anaheim-gazette 1921-07-07
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SOUR MILK IS USEFUL
FOOD FOR FAMILY
Evvery Drop Can Be Used Palatably and Economically—Don't Give it to the Pigs
"Accidents will happen in the best-regulated families." In spite of the most careful protection from dust, files, or exposure to the sun, milk occasionally turns sour in the refrigerator during the hottest months. It may be that there is more left-over milk than usual, or that the ice supply is low or that heat or thunder have affected the milk. Sour milk, nevertheless, has the same food value as it had originally, specialists in the United States department of agriculture say, because it is still a source of lime for bone building, of protein for tissue repair.
Lactic Acid Considered Healthful
The bacteria which have caused souring are not necessarily harmful, if the milk was properly cared for, and the effect of those which caused the development of the lactic acid in the milk is thought by some to be bone ficial. Many who can not get buttermilk to drink like to churn thick, freshly sourced milk with an egg beater till the curds are broken up into fine particles, and use it in the same way.
Clabber—the coagulated, semi-liquid state of fresh sour milk—is relied on refreshing and wholesome by many people, especially if served with sugar and sweet cream. The addition of maple syrup, honey, orange marmalade or other preserves to clabbered cream makes a delicious dessert. An excellent cake filling can be made of thick, sour cream, whipped and sweetened, with nuts added. Whipped sour cream is often added to mayonnaise salad dressing for fruit salads.
No house wife needs to be told that good gingerbread can be made with sour milk, as well as corn breads of
BRITISH COTTON WORKERS HAVE THEIR GRIEVANCE
"With the addition of 600,000 striking cotton operatives, Great Britain's roll of unemployed has reached the record mark of 5,000,000, or over ten per cent of the insular population," says the Republican Publicity association, through its president, Hon. Jonathan Bourne, Jr. "Reports from London state that the unemployment which has followed in the train of the gigantic coal stoppage has bankrupted the state employment fund, and the reserve of $100,000,000 which the treasury had accumulated for this purpose has been exhausted, the fund continuing to operate by virtue of $10,000,000 paid out weekly in the way of special treasury grants. The government has announced that it must reduce the unemployment dole, which has been supporting over a million miners in their strike against the state.
"It is rather difficult to sympathize with the coal operatives in the fight which they are waging for nationalization of the mines, except as one may sympathize with a group which seems to be fundamentally and almost perversely in error. It would appear that the British government has done everything short of socializing the mines in order to meet the demands of the workers and on that issue Lloyd George is still standing pat.
"But with the demands of the cotton operatives there is more reason to sympathize in this country. They are refusing to accept a 25 per cent reduction in wages, although it is understood that they are willing to compromise on a 12 1-2 per cent reduction.
"The nationalization of industry is so foreign to the concept of the vast majority of Americans, who have not yet recovered from the bitter experience of government operation of the railroads, that they can see no merit in it and are free of the conspiracy explanation. The life, one conjecture of the people and breaking loose for things of the same other arts; nightmares knownism, cubism and the same insaneness vers libre. The jazz is passing.
Jazz was done on no orderly basis strous that it cooled "Smear" was then by jazz performer method of work possible possibilities nothing left but harmony. Are adequate to craving all music but the doomed.
CELERY SHOP TO PR
Celery plants: Bordeaux mixtu two weeks to pr which often sell for market purp occur generally triets in the Un moist weather composed of 4 per sulphate) and to 50 gallons and best fungi. The spraying on the plants are and continued The sprayings frequent during morable to the d spots and farther lods. Apply tha with a pump w fine misty spr
No house wife needs to be told that good gingerbread can be made with sour milk, as well as corn breads of various kinds. In most recipes where sour milk is used as a leaven with soda, fewer eggs are called for. Very good pancakes and cornbread can be made with sour milk, omitting eggs entirely. Farmers' Bulletin 525, Corn Meal as a Fad and Ways of Using it, gives no less than nine recipes calling for sour milk. Among them is this easy way of making Boston brown bread:
1 cup corn meal.
1 cup rye meal.
1 cup graham flour.
2 1-2 teaspoons soda.
1 teaspoon salt.
3-4 cup molasses.
2 cups sour milk or
1 3-4 cups sweet milk.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients and add the molasses and milk. Beat thoroughly and steam 3 1-2 hours in well buttered, covered molds. One-pound baking powder tins are satisfactory. Remove the covers and bake the bread long enough to dry the top.
This may be made also with 1 1-2 cups corn meal and rye meal and no graham flour. A cup of seeded and shredded raisins or prunes or a cup of currents may be added.
This serves eight people.
If there is only a very little sour milk on hand, why not make some cookies? They may be made with corn meal. Oatmeal cookies are also excellent.
1-2 cup fat.
1-2 cup corn syrup.
1-2 cup molasses.
1 egg.
2 cups corn meal.
1-2 teaspoon soda.
1 cup flour.
1 teaspoon cinnamon.
6 tablespoons sour milk.
Combine the melted fat, syrup, molasses, beaten egg, and sour milk. Sift together the corn meal, soda, and flour. Add the liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients. Drop from a teaspoon into a greased pan and bake 15 minutes sympathize in this country. They are refusing to accept a 25 per cent reduction in wages, although it is understood that they are willing to compromise on a 12 1-2 per cent reduction.
"The nationalization of industry is so foreign to the concept of the vast majority of Americans, who have not yet recovered from the bitter experience of government operation of the railroads, that they can see no merit in it, and are firm of the conviction that it has for its purpose the mulcting of the taxpayers to keep up the wages of a particular group, which, if successful in their demands, would soon become extortionate—their example to be followed by yothers, eventuating in a complete program of socialization and all the evils which have been so vividly portrayed under the Lenine regime in Russia.
"But, on the other hand, it has been a fundamental principle of the American people that the laborer is worthy of his hire, and the cardinal Republican tenet of protection to American industries has been based on our desire to give our workman the best possible wages, to insure which it has been necessary to protect labor and industry from the competition of products derived from the pittance wages of Europe. There seems to be no good reason why the living standards of a cotton operative in Great Britain should not be quite as good as those of one in this country, and if they are not it must be because the employing class are either taking unconscionable profits or are laying on the shoulders of their laborers the burden of the fight to dominate foreign markets.
"It has been frequently stated on good Republican authority that those importers who base their argument on philanthropy could find a far better field for their activities and do much more to prove their sincerity if they would devote their propagandizing energies to Europe in an endeavor to ameliorate the conditions of the underpaid laborers of those countries; rather than to attempt to force the American wage scale to the European level. But the importer in this country who butters his argument with brotherly love is generally the same fellow who is in on the deal to exploit the Europeans workman. He is playing both ends against the middle—purchasing the products of starvation wages, marketing them in this country to the detriment of domestic labor and capital,
McFadden in of the house saires that are money in tax-fund get as much per cent tax-fund tion. There are standing secure empt from tax by the wealthy thus escape tion. The "little taxable bond, live in the tax burdens."
Mr. McFadden
"Public taxation of taxation that have protested securities into their wealth a
1-2 cup molasses.
1 egg.
2 cups corn meal.
1-2 teaspoon soda.
1 cup flour.
1 teaspoon cinnamon.
6 tablespoons sour milk.
Combine the melted fat, syrup, molasses, beaten egg, and sour milk. Sift together the corn meal, soda, and flour. Add the liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients. Drop from a teaspoon into a greased pan and bake 15 minutes in a moderate oven. This recipe makes 55 to 60 cookies 2 inches in diameter.
Sour milk or buttermilk and baking soda may frequently be substituted where the recipe calls for sweet milk. In place of one teaspoon of baking powder a scant half teaspoon of soda is used to each cup of sour milk. Chocolate cake is particularly good when this substitute is made. In griddle cakes and muffins the same plan may be followed.
Bran Muffins.
1 cup flour.
1 teaspoon salt.
1 teaspoon soda.
2 cups clean bran.
1-4 to 1-2 cup sweetening.
1 tablespoon shortening (melted).
1 1/2 to 2 cups sour milk.
3-4 cup seeded raisins or chopped nuts.
Sift together the flour, salt, and soda and mix with this the bran. Add together the sweetening, melted shortening, and part of the milk; then mix with dry materials. Add the raisins, dusted with flour, and enough more sour milk to form a batter of such consistency that it will drop but not pour from the spoon, but be as wet as possible otherwise. Bak in greased muffin pans about 1-2 hour.
Nobody loves a self-styled spirit.
Jazz has had its popularity and its sway will soon be at an end. This is the good news that comes from the convention of the Sheet Music Dealers' association in Chicago. The old melodies, stirring military marches and a few sentimental lyrics are the best sellers in America today, the dealers report.
It was a foregone conclusion that jazz would not last. It lacked the foundation necessary for stability. To call it music was a misnomer. It could be described only as rhythmic noise, comparable in some respects to the sounds produced by savages at their dances and religious ceremonies, but lacking the dignity which may be found even in the beating of tom toms.
The craze which Americaus suddenly developed for dancing and singing to the noise of cow bells, sandpaper, police whistles, automobile horns and the other instruments—which played so important a part in the jazz orchestra is one of the mysteries of modern civilization which must ever remain inexplicable to the music lover, although psychologists may be able to offer an
Public taxation of taxation that have protested securities into their wealth at taxation, thus from their just burdens on that part of the wealthy owner thus escapes.
"It is a matter that the diverse wealthy estate real estate bonds has served entire building of the country tion is acute, largely because."
"What is the enterprise that investor when return from a bond as from paying over 17."
"Mr. Otto H amount of tax been issued, and total of $14,428."
"If we accept are already issu over $10,000,000ly exempt, we possibility that $100,000 per annum may be rendered taxation."
"At the pres
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
EXPLANATION. The tenseness of modlife, one conjectures, got on the nerves
of the people and they sought relief by
breaking loose from restraint. Something of the same sort has occurred in
the other arts; in painting we find the
nightmares known as neo-impressionism,
cubism and futurism; in poetry
the same insane ravings put out as
vers libre. They, too, will pass, as
jazz is passing.
Jazz was doomed because it rested
on no orderly basis. It was so monstrous that it could not be written.
"Smear" was the technical term used
by jazz performers to describe their
method of working. Jazz exhausted
the possibilities of noise, and there is
nothing left but to return to melody
and harmony. They are eternal, and
are adequate to supply the music
craving of all normal minds. Syncopation will continue to have a place in
music, but the distortion called jazz is
doomed.
CELERY SHOULD BE SPRAYED
TO PREVENT LEAF SPOTS
Celery plants should be sprayed with Bordeaux mixture every ten days to two weeks to prevent leaf diseases,
which often seriously injure the crop for market purposes. These leaf spots occur generally in celery-growing districts in the United States during cool-mist weather. Home-made Bordeaux, composed of 4 pounds bluestone (copper sulphate) and 4 pounds stone lime to 50 gallons water, is the cheapest and best fungicide for the purpose. The spraying should be begun while the plants are still in the seed bed and continued throughout the season. The sprayings should be more frequent during moist, cool weather favorable to the development of the leaf spots and farther apart in dry, hot periods. Apply the mixture thoroughly with a pump which will give a very fine misty spray that will cover the plants but not run down the stalks and citizens of every community are rendering themselves free of state, county and municipal taxation on their personal wealth by investing in securities like the federal farm loan bonds, and government bonds which are rendered immune from taxation by federal legislation, and over which these states and local governments can have no control unless they accept the principle of the proposed amendment.
"The aggregate of tax-exempt "instrumentality" securities, made possible under the recent decision of the supreme court in the "farm loan case," has been estimated by one statistician at enough billions to absorb the entire taxable investment fund of the country.
"The actual fact is that tax-exemption has not so much the effect of broadening the market for and reducing the interest paid on tax-exempt securities as it has of segregating tax-exemptions in the hands of the wealthy individual investor, and of segregating taxable securities in the hands of non-taxpaying institutional investors and small individual holder who cannot get any great advantage from tax-exemption. In other words, tax exemption does not build up a large market for securities or make for a lower rate, for the investment fund remains the same.
"Tax exemption simply tends to divide the investing public into two classes, one class being the wealthy individuals who buy tax-exempt bonds, and the other class being those to whom tax-exemption means little or nothing, and who therefore buy taxable bonds."
HEAVY FEEDING RESULTS
IN GOOD MILK YIELDS
During the last two years a number of the purebred Holstein at the government farm at Beltsville, Md., have been run on official test. In order to
HEAVY FEEDING RESULTS IN GOOD MILK YIELDS
During the last two years a number of the purebred Holsteins at the government farm at Beltsville, Md., have been run on official test. In order to increase their milk yield their rations were made decidedly more liberal than those called for by any of the feeding standards. During the milking period they received daily about 12 pounds of alfalfa hay, 20 pounds of corn silage, and as much grain as they could clean up without getting sick; they usually ate 18 to 20 pounds a day of grain mixture F. They were fed heavily also before their calves were born; for 60 days or more before calving they usually received about 15 pounds of grain mixture F. 12 pounds of alfalfa hay, and 25 pounds of corn silage, a ration containing approximately four times as much protein and two and one-half times as much total nutriment as the routine ration fed to the dry cows of the general herd.
The cows on test gave from 15,000 to 20,000 pounds of milk in the year; that is, three to four times as much as most of the cows in the general herd. A part of this larger yield is due to the fact that the test cows were better bred, but a part also is due to the larger quantity of feed they consumed, say specialists of the United States department of agriculture in charge of the tests. How much of the increased milk yield to attribute to each of these factors is a question of great practical interest.
SAY SLEUTH WAS NOT A FEDERAL OFFICER
A report from Fullerton states that two detectives who worked in that city recently and caused the arrest of several Fullerton citizens, including two physicians, on charges of violating the prohibition laws, may be prosecuted on charges of impersonating federal officers.
Locally, this phase of the situation is of particular interest for the reason that one of the detectives involved in the Fullerton cases worked in Santa Ana two or three weeks ago and brought about a number of prosecu-
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