During this special holy yeat him on all state occasions, canopy that Is carried nhove Lights of New By WALTER TRUMBULL York Recently, Harvard and Hell's Kitch- en had an encounter, wil Hell's Kitchen coming out & poor second. ‘As may be remembered, Thomas E. ‘Armstrong, a Dallas (Texas) young men who was captain of the 1932 Har ward varsity crew, was steered into a Hell's Kitchen clip Joint. After a somewhat unpleasant experience, he Jed a police escort back. The escorl wus in charge of Capt Patrick Mo Veigh, whose son is light heavyweight champion of the Harvard campus Spectators, including a newspaper man who has a son In Harvard, said It was a grand battle. It ended with four racketeers cringing in a corner freely confessing their part in mis treating Captain Armstrong and beg ging that there be no more hostilities After that, the police wrecked the joint and, as this Is being written, three badly battered gentlemen are in jall awaiting trial, the fourth having been turned loose for lack of evidence A clip Joint 1s a speakeasy where a visitor loses all his possessions. In mond pin and $750 in cash were miss ing. * * » One evening about a week later, the clip Joint proprietor, moving about among the patrons, caught one pouring a drink on the floor. He was just about to make some remurk when hit him back of the ear, At that same Instant, four patrons, seated at separate tables, went into action while another admitted « small dark man. When the proprietor came to, he found that of a foint, he had only a ruin, that a dia mond ring had been stripped from his finger, a diamond pin from his tie and something like £3000 removed from his pockets. And standing over him was a small dark man who srinned when he whispered a few words, something instead clip quiet * . * Those few words were to the effect that svhen a friend of so and so and New York, he's to be treated right and not to be so of Chicago comes (oO »~ at least one known Instance, the vis ftor also lost his life. » * » All this is merely leading up to a somewhat similar incident, which is pot a part of police records. A taxi cab driver, who picked up a fare bound for the Pennsylvania station, mentioned that he knew of 8 nearby spenkeasy where the liquor was ex. cellent and the entertainment even better. The stranger, who had a cow ple of hours to kill before train time, fell in with the suggestion and was driven to an addreas in the West For ties. The liquor was good and the en tertainers young, pretty and talented The stranger, small, dark and quiet. bought several rounds. In each in stance, the check was exactly right. Nevertheless, at four o'clock in the morning, he awakened on a doorstep in the Seventies and a hurried search revealed that a diamond ring, a dia ABSOLUTELY { “1 really couldn't resist Fred when he proposed. The dear fellow. put his arm around me and-—" “1 gee, dear, you yielded to pres sure” 3 | Now LET ME Sef, RY 1 WHAT SIZE POSE TO ADMINISTER. | Mb taken like a common sucker, The clip Joint gentleman agreed with the small dark man, and since then hasn't been seen about his usual haunts * » . City residents who spend their week- ends on trout streams are not doing well. That statement 1s based on an assertion of a doctor friend whose shack is on the Deaverkill, When the genson opened the first of the month, the trout didn't seem to be interested in fies. So some low-born fishermen tried worms, and the trout are stil mighty wary. Once in awhile, 1 see —— HERE'S CHAPTER ON FRIED PIES Which Prompts Some Sugges- tions About Doughnuts, By EDITH M. BARBER Fried ples! Do you know them? They caused a lot of discussion on the editorial puges a while ago, and here comes a recipe from Louisville, Ky. which sounds luscious. Don't you think so? “Make pastry as for or dinary ples—however, not quite so short. Roli thin and cut out by an In verted saucer, “Have already stewed and sweet ened to taste either dried or evaporat- ed peaches or apples. (We always preferred peaches.) Spread the fruit on cut out pastry—fold to shape of half moon——pinch edges firmly togeth er—and fry in smoking hot country lard, first on one side and then other, until a golden brown. a platter and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon while hot. Not much cinnamon, however." At our house we never ples but we did have fried dough. was being made, my mother would pull off some of the very light dough in long slender pleces and fry it in deep fat. It was then rolled in pow- dered sugar and served hot luncheon dessert, It was a little like the raised dough. nuts which we ha during Lent, Raised doughnuts at our house ac cording to tradition were either made into balls or twists which we called “birds.” ‘To this day 1 cannot enjoy a raised doughnut with a hole in it! Plain doughnuts or fried cakes, on the contrary, must have holes, of course. Crullers mean something still differ ent. They are made of a rich dough and are cut in threefinger shapes. | § 4 you don't know what 1 mean by that, consult the recipe given below, Then there are french crullers, which are made from a very soft dough—almost a batter and which must be put through a pastry bag di- into the hot fat, There is another Important point In regard to making all these fried cakes successfully besides having prop er recipe. That Is the matter of fry- ing them. A hard vegetable fat or lard or a cooking oll may be used, but the temperature of whatever fat use is important. When lard Is used. we fry in it when it just begins but other fats should be the smoking point too bread- rectly the used below but you can get along without this If you try the fat by cook. a ecnbe of bread In it. It should get golden brown in sixty seconds, when the thermometer should register 175 degrees F. Because the doughnut is not enoked, it needs cooler fat than some other food. ing mixture Doughnuts, shortening teaspoons baking powder 4 teaspoon cin 14, teaspoon grated nutmeg 1 teaspoon sait Flou Cream the shortening with the sugar 1 add the beaten egg. Add two cup Asur mized and sifted with bak powder, salt and spices, alternate {315 to 4 cups) ing a trout fisherman In Trout are Bronx. the subway said to be caught in the . . ® A sweet-faced little girl was making her way toilsomely across Broadway on a palr of crutches, evidently a vic tim of infantile paralysis, As she was passing a big car, the rat-faced driver grinned and suddenly sounded his horn. The child collapsed In a pa thetic heap. As pitying hands picked her up, a well-dressed, wasp -walsted young man shot his fist through the open window of the car. it smacked the grinning driver's face so hard his hat flew up as if spring. propelled. The driver yelled to high heaven. But the traffic cop went deaf, dumb and blind. A salute to him and to the quick-fisted gentleman. And the Bronx cheer for the rat-faced driver, © 1931 Bell Syndicate «WNT Bervioa He To Or ery iy with the milk; to make stiff enough to roll cll to rth thickness Shape with a doughnut cutier, fry in deep fat, 375 degrees F., and drain on brown paper, dough one-fou inch Raised Doughnuts 1 cup milk 3, yeast cake 4 cup lukewarm walter 1 teaspobn salt Flour 1 cup sugar 2 egas 1 teaspoon 1 teaspoon Cit n feald and warm amon milk: when luke cake wo cupfuls flour cool yeast dissolved In fer, 3d about to make a stiff batter and let rise over pight or one yeas! cake and ied rise three hours. Add hort ening, sugar, egx well beaten, spices and flour to make a stiff dough. Let rise again, and if too soft to add flour. Knead slightly and roll to three-fourths inch thickness Shape into balls Place on foured board. let rise one hour, turn, and let rise again; fry in deep fat. 365 de grees F., and drain on brown paper Cool, and roll in powdered sugar, nse melted more Crullers. 1, cup shortening 1 cup sugar Yolks 2 eggs Whites 2 egzgs 4 cups flour 1; teaspoon grated nutmeg 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 cup milk Powdered sugar and cinnamon Cream the butter, add sugar grad ———— A i ——— Graduated yg Capt. A. F. Hegenberger, “blind landing” instructor, and the six pilots who constitute the first class of blind landing pilots ever to be graduated. All are army fiyers and are shown at Wright eld, Dayton, Ohlo, with the blind .anding airplane, equipped with covered cockpit, which they used in learning to take off, fly around, and land suc cessfully with all vision of outside surrolthdings cut off. Left to right: Lieut. G. V. Holloman, Lieut. 8. B. Prudhom- me, Captain Hegenberger, Lieut, L. F. Harman, Maj. F, B. Coleman, Lieut, R. J. Minty, and Lieut. CG. D. McAllister. ually, yolks of eggs well beaten and add al mixture. X powder; first pleces and baking with milk to Roll thin, and cut In inches long by two inches wide; n crosswise three or four cuts, and nutmeg three in deep fat the same as doughnuts, ©. 1932. Del) My Neighbo SAYS: ia Syndicate —WNU Service the center each a can of either fru open it just before ad, and arrange ind it pack galt and ice : ing gery the sal: the other aros . 11 ce 01 Strawberry makes a nl bread sandwiches, jam ing for fancy white the sandwiches with various ghaped cutters and arrange them on a tray. » - » 5 To remove wax from floors wash them with benzine and rub with fine steel wool. This treatment will not injure the fAoors, (D. 193%. by the Assneinted Newspapers) WN Service How It Started By Jean Newilon A “Good Turn” EFERRING to a kind act as a good turn is a popular idiom with which we are all familiar. “Doing good turn” is used not so much to de scribe 8 mere sci of abstract kind some effort or act that is done, more or less deliberately. interests of a friend. At analysis, that Is the way in"our daily speech. least, it is ity, the modern. as 1472, of the "aston Letters, © 1933 Bell Syndicate. «= WNU Service NOT A CHANCE GAME “Never mind, 1 still hope to have the luck to win you" : “It'l} take more than luck to win me. I'm no taffle doit ™ MAY BE ANTIDOTE FOR DEADLY GAS Dyestuff Employed to Fight Carbon Monoxide. A San Francisco man who at tempted suicide by the inhalation of carbon monoxide gas from the ex- haust of his automobile in a closed garage and was for half an hour “out of this doctors solemnly asserted, was almost lt erally snatched from the grave by injections of methylene blue, admin istered by his physician in an exper mental test of the of tk that chemical. life,” us the efficacy It had been conjectured by chem ists that methylene blue { antidote for its common rics, thetic dyestuff as =a was scoffed at by but In the San worked out, and is regarded as sometl} tifie wonder might be an POISONOUS Kas use is for coloring The idea of employing a medical some physic Fran the effect isco « rs produ od Carbon produced frig fuel ing fuels mMonoxia by burning there Is a deficiency erts its extremely dangero on the body by thus nation with haemog content, removing combi I forms the solid coloring o orpuscles, and des Formerly the noxide poisoning respisation, the and But person has been of the gas f« utes’ treatment TT WJ Xue. pure oxygen circulation. 18 Tr has been However, cases of One swal nor one Cu [mes Holds Fear of Snakes to Be Inherited Idea 0 y of the New York pthority on rept Pers rie sorithors SONDOUs it warm IY WER I whenever he ture t “1 wouldn't had been,’ tain a very things” "ARE YOU NERVOUS? V THEN you have periodic pains, backache--nerves on edge — catarrhal drains (“whites”), it's time to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Mrs. A, Stephens of 112 N. 24th St, Camden, SH save: "1 was on the verge of 3 nNETVOUS breakdown, 1 could not eat a thing, did got rest well 82 night and finally became so weak 1 was right down in bed Had dizzy spells and specks blurred my vision 1 used only two botties of Dir. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip. tion and it improved my appetite, rid me of the nervous condition and also the dizzy spells. 1 felt like a mew person after 1 used iL” Sold by druggists everywhere Write Dr. Pleree’s Clinte, Buffalo, N. ¥, for (ree medical advice. mito Ta ALE DAISY FLY KILLER . Pesry’s Vermifoge "Dead Shot ™ kifle and expels worms in a very few hours. One dose sufoes. It works quickly and od ALE $6 PROFIT. Lite policy. No ef ittance. Benefits to $1,000. Kvery- foe FL Web lhe a La Do: CA. 2-33