The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, March 07, 1916, Page 6, Image 6
o
SCOIS JB1GGIS Vot
Men in Trenches to Live on Food
of Warriors.
Whei
British War Office Gives Official Recognition
to the National Dish of a
Scots?Famed in Song MEA
and Story.
London.?Scotchmen all over the YV/p
world should thrill with delight at
the news that the war office at last
has given its official recognition to
their national dish the haggis. With VIC
the laudable object of malting the
trenches as homelike as possible to
the Scottish troops. Mrs. Porter Brown
of No. 1G Holland road, Kensington, is
raising a fund to provide for them U&
real Scotch haggis in bulk. If this
does not bring to them the scent of *
the heather and the music of the burn
nothing will. Ek
The haggis is one of the few uational
dishes which has retained its
splendid isolation. Except maybe on gHBnjfl
Burns nights or at private gatherings
of exiles from north of the Tweed it jraHR
is seldom seen in England. To Scotch
whisky and shortbread, especially the
former, the Southron has taken very
kindly, but to him tho haggis is still
an alien, probably because it is still ^
too strong for his more delicate stom- ? , '
ach.
For the "great chieftain o' the
puddin' race," as Burns calls it, is to
the Sassenach a fearful and wonderful
wild fowl. It is made of a sheep's
heart, liver and lungs, with some of
the smaller intestines. These are seasoned
with pepper, salt and onions,
and the whole is chopped up fine, with
suet and oatmeal. Then the mixture
is rammed into the membiane of a
sheep's stomach and boiled. And this
it is which has helped to make Scotland
wlmt she is today. Says Burns, ' : *
addressing tho' haggis:
, *
But mark the rustic, haggis fed, <
The trembling earth resounds Ida tread.
Clap In his walie jilc.Vf ? blade, .
He'll muk' It whlaalej
An' legs an* arms, ur h^ads will sned
Like taps o" tlirlssles. * 1
. Evidently riot'-bud 'stuff-to -fight- on.
And m>w M^., Brown's fund is to be W'-recognized
by the War' offlte. '.Her
rich and rate puddings are to go to
the front with ,tho. .sanction of the Miss
powers 'that be; and "Jock" and four sis
"Tam"' once again will* "sit* around South fi
their well beloved dish all hot from of one <
the pot. And when they have eaten sive fan
of it, woe betide the "boche" that arrest ?
comes within striking distance of their police vi
"walie nieves." There will be dirty breakdo
work. For, as a Scotchman will tell relief w
you, there is all Scotland in the liagfis.
There is Rannockburn and Flod- GLASS
den Field and the Forty-Five. There
Is the wind in the heather and the Countrr
plunge of the salmon stream. App
With a bit of haggis on his dirk the
8cot can see in its stream the banks
and braes o' Ronnie Doon and the Oklah
bonnie, bonnle banks o* Ix>ch Lomond, here is <
He will feel his foot once more on to l>e th
his native heath, and there will be jar co,iri
sparks. But, as a brither Scot would a lonR f
add, their "nieves" would be all the The
more "walie" if Mrs. Brown would true" b
only see to it that a proportionate "dollars
quantity of mellow "Old Orkney" were waa ^|V
sent to stir into the haggises. 1 jca
rests is
CAT ARTIST GOES BLIND the dan
Mrs. E. M. Gardner of New Jersey Had BALKY
Painted Portraits of 1,000
Tabbie8' Holds B
<
Pitman, N. J.?The world's endurance
record for cat painting doubtless
goeu to Mrs. E. M. Gardner of Sacra;
this place, who has just completed |niKJ;V '
her thousandth cat and has been bridgo
stricken with blindness, her sight hav- P(jRO ,,f
ing given out under the strain of fa|j,.n
many years of painting. sti(Tenet
Mrs. Gardner 1s a native of Col- illf; a|a;
Chester, Mass, and a relative of Asa Henry
Packer, who founded Lehigh univer- cr08stnf
sity. She began painting thirty years (? bjS ^
ago. In all that time she lias painted ipa(i?r,e
only cats. to the b
Cats of all types and degrees?aria- ce,
tocratic cats and just plain tabbies? kicked
have been the subjects for her brush tL
She has selected her models from all Hu Idenl
quarters from the hack fence as well
aB frcm the hearthstone, and her work inR 8U(
has found its way to far comers of killed
the globe. Probably the most famous pbe
cat she ever painted was Tlx, a beau- gtaadln
tiful Angora, which for years has orna- lT1
mented the office of Green's hotel,
Philadelphia. _ _ . ,
I EA
Military Cross. NC
The new British decoration known
as the .Military Cross was designed by
Henry Faraham Burke. It is of silver
and Is one and live eighths inches |
square. In the center are the letters MM
G. R. I., and on each arm the Imperial
crown. The ribbon is of three equal
?ini?es, me cenier uarK purple, the
others white. Captains, commissioned
officers or warrant officers are ell- .
gible for the decoration. The cross ' No Moi
does not confer any individual prece Stomj
deuce or entitle the holder to any Afti
udditlon after his name as a part of If yt
his description or title. pation
JUSTi
War Dog Uaea Telephone. !t!? \d
According to the Gazette de France KTJT,. 1
a certain French regiment pessesses a 1 he
dog which is sent out from advanced suits a
sentry posts at night, with a telephone ler-I-ka
strapped over its mouth and a wire " ,i:
connecting the instrument, with the ^
' \>nat. If the dog hears the Germans ,j0|j "B
approaching it barks into the tele- INST A
THE LANCASTER NKW!
* # * Don't Burn the Stalk and Straw
11* It* Slllfl Many times we have called at
^ OAtJiAiO tention to the lolly of burnini
stalks and straw, and we expec
'Y* to do so many times in the fu
011 1 llilts ture; for we believe the fact can
? ????? not be too strongly impresfte
that these materials are ruch ii
r* wc PROMISE WORK humus and plant food, and tha
.... .. to burn them is equivalent t
a certain 1 e e burning barn yard manures o
N WHAT WE SAY . even commercial fertilizers.
It is idle to say that the hafc
. . n i. it. of burning trash, straw an
Print Everything stalks on cultivated land i* nn
??common; we know better. Tak
" a trip between now and the firs
TIM OF WAR STRAIN of April anywhere through th
South Atlantic and Gulf State:
and almost every other farm a
the bright February and Marc
days come on, will be marke
by columns of blue smoke thr.
yij denote the ^cl^aning up"^of th
^ Let's figure a little on wha
we lose by such practices. Chen
. y jMj ists have found by analysis th.i
where 300 pounds of lint cotto
* -~*?3h. 11 is produced the leaves, bur
' f Si roots anfl stems contain aboi
Jl B 23 pounds of nitrogen, worth fl
current retail prices $1.60. N
trogen is by far the most e>
...
^Bq^EBHBB to
element of value that is lo:
when the material is burne<
i Again, take the case of con
\ stalks. Where 40 bushels <
corn has been grown there wi
be about 10 pounds of nitroge
in the stalks and fodder. Th
y ....... too, worth $3.20 is lost when tf
stalks are burned.
v.y yf. ; I Summarizing a bit. let us sc
. y how much the two-horse farn
j0 I er, for instance* the man wit
. / | 20 acres each of cotton and cor
w ! " loses when he burns the stall
and trash off .his entire 40 acre
J&F . . ,* We Will assume that he rpak<
?? ?~? ( 200 pounds of lint cotton ar
Etblyn La Lande. one of the corn to the acre?a fine ave
iters famous throughput the ajJre for the stalk-burning tyj
sr thfclr beauty 'and members of farmer. Burping his COttf
of the oldest a^d most exc^u- sfaiks ]eaVes and burs, he wou
stiles o( New Orleans, whose , fraction more than $(
md detention by the Ixjndon . nr. ... ? T
'hen suffering frOn, a nervob. from.''be 20 acres; while fro
?n due to her strenuous war his _0 acres of corn, huminft 11
ork has jiw?t been reported. stalks and fodder, the loss, wou
i amount to $32. To this $92 lo
GIVES "$1" TRUE RING of nitrogen must be added tl
I loss of vegetable matter?h
feit Dollar Is Detected by New mus?SO much needed, ai
earance and Twenty-Year- which, if plowed Under, WOU
Old Date. . be as valuable in increasir
yields of the nitrogen destroy^
onia City. Okla ? Everyone j jn Gfher words, such a farm
:>n tne iockoui ror wnat is saia , i ? (OAa ? ??
e most deceptive of silver dot- loSeS, .aImos.- $20? 8 ^ by SU<
iterfoits that has appeared for Practices; but, to be conscrv
irrip tive, let us cut it in two, and si
counterfeit is said to "ring $100.
ut examination of one of the \Ve don't know how mai
disclosed that this quality Progressive Farmer readers th
on to it hv the use of glass, ^its?no^ many, we hope. B
.K . the fact remains that we are u
the new appearance desplto ... , , , .
} Of 20 vears ago. ,nK fire to? carelessly and ge
erally on our farms. A far be
PfiW SAVFS nWNFR ter Practice is to plow under ea
ly everything smaller than a
uggy Back When Horse Falls , , . .
Dver the Edge of High When our lands are crying f
Bridge. humus and plant food, wh
shall we call the man who bur
mento, < ai.?Seated in his the equivalent of several tons
perilously near the edge of a cottonseed meal? Surely not
the horse hanging below the farmer.?Progressive Farmer.
the bridge, over which it had
stubborn cow with legs firmly Mir 4
I. holding the buggy from go- GHESTfcR i f LL
>, was the situation in which \J1SS? *!
Seivers found himself when DIAMOND 3RAND
t Sweeney creek. Solvers was ^ ^
ray to the ranch of a neighbor ^
a cow, the a; > : al being tied f L- J
ack of the buggy. As he neared O0 $/
iter of the bridge ihe cow LaI>ih% 1 "
up a commotion and fright- .*f,< T'*l ,[<>T?F,T}J'ri^vS' THR *1 A
' TJl ... -u i ;*NT> PlhlrA it, Xxn ind/A
ic h >rse, which, in its plunge. Cor.. lacaliie a. with Di.ie<4?!
v feLl fiver tlie r-'!i?e f?f the RiI*l>on, a >* j; i>o C'liiru. 111*7 af ixupX ,
y uu 01 or me .gc or ine s(ld n?u f? 4riiM Ui?s.TKii *. V
and unit of its harness, suffer- an mox o n u\y n t?ti.ie*. lor tw fy-fl
v. i.,ia...' .1 . t 'k.i ?, Marsiwirdn) is Brit, Safest, Always tteUab!
mi rf,., th.,f SOLO BY ALL DRUGGIST
e?'?wb > ' "'Vci. 4"" t>y Suku EVERYWHERE JEJ55
g pat saved the driver and bug
1 going rtver also. .
| Pleasure-Loving Italians.
T ALL I WANT In Italy there are more theaters
l\i7 \ Mrs CCCI CIKiri proportion t6 the population tliun
1W AND r LLL rlNcJ I ftUy other country.
I
Method of Awaxing the Deaf.
jjHp/ An alarm clock for the deaf th
awakens a sleeper by udrr'nisterii
light blows w 11h a paddle has been i
z - vented In England.
re Gas on the Stomach or Sour
Iancing Iirdgr
ich! No More Heavy Feeling " w>w>v?wv?
sr Meals or Constipation)
m have sour stomach, const!- (jtlV S> DeCia.lt If
or gas on the stomach try ^ *
ONE SPOONFUL, simple buck- - ? ? -?
bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed Are you planning a dance I
ler-l-ka, the MOST POWER^ ?/ , fiwe* ns uciuc
towel cleanser ever sold. V Want f IRL UAINUNli
VERY FIRST dose shows re- ADTlFBC Tk.t'. ,UL.,.
nd a short treatment with Ad- tlKllli?Ko? 1 at s where W
i will surprise you. live. ?B & &
alns such astonishing amounts
matter from the system that ^ ;
Sf.E.'Xra: VISIT IS AND BE CONVINCE
NTLY. A dose twice a week
a<ralnst appendicitis.
*s?<?f _ 1 ^ ^
- * " r
5 MARCH 7. 1916.
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m i|x lates in adjoining
Lancaster is tl
of a Big Trade Di
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ff what our merch
h VT
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lis
2lfj
!:|I Some Live Wire
or || ready
?H DON'T YOU?
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