SOMETHING NEW AND DIFFERENT. (See Recipes Below) New Recipes for Your File “Something old and something new” is Just as important in menus as it is in a bride's costume. It’s a good idea, when you plan to experiment with something en ureiy new, 10 in clude in that meal one dish you know the family is really keen about. For instance, if the dessert is some- ^ thing very new and different, be sure that the main dish of your meal is one mai s familiar and well-liked. And, it's an excellent idea, when most of a meal is composed of fam ily favorites, to include one new dish for a touch of variety. It may be a cut of meat that you haven’t used before, prepared in an unusual manner; or perhaps it will be a vegetable that’s new and strange to you; or it might be just an out-of the-ordinary conserve or relish to supplement last summer's supply, which, by this time is probably run ning very low. You’ll find, here, an assortment of recipes for foods that are unusual and delicious. There’s a new way of preparing shoulder of beef—in one of those easy casserole dishes you like to serve, where you don’t want to spend too much time in the kitchen; serve the Baked Shoulder Steak with baked or scalloped pota toes, buttered green beans and rhu barb pie, and watch your family beaml ‘‘Pork chop treat” served with a crisp, chilled salad of lettuce, ap ples, and dates, needs only a bev erage, bread and a favorite dessert to make a completely satisfying meal and if you want to please the man of the family in any kind of weather, serve “pork chops deli cious” with cheese biscuits, a sim ple green salad, lemon meringue pie and coffee. Pork Chops Delicious. (Serves 4) 5 pork chops (rib or loin) 2 medium size onions % cup rice (uncooked) 1 teaspoon salt V« teaspoon pepper 1 cup hot water 1 cup tomato puree 1 green pepper (minced) 1 clove garlic (grated) Brown chops and on each chop place one slice of onion, then a ta biespoon oi rice (uncooked). Sea son with salt and ^ pepper. Add wa y ter, cover and steam for % hour. Then top with tomato pu : ree, mixed with the green pepper ana game. tteturn to steamer ana cook until rice is tender (about 30 minutes longer). Baked Shoulder Steak With Apricots and Mushrooms. (Serves 0) 1V4 inch slice shoulder of beef (about 4 pounds) 4 tablespoons flour 2 teaspoons salt Vt teaspoon curry powder Vi cup tomato pulp 1 small 4-oz. can button mush rooms. or, % pound fresh mushrooms, cut in quarters 1 tablespoon butter 12 halves canned apricots, (about half of a No. 2Vfc can) Wipe meat with damp cloth and sprinkle with mixture of flour, salt and curry powder. Brown one side in a well-greased frying pan and place brown side up in a 2-quart glass casserole. Sift remaining flour mixture over the top of the meat. Spread the top of the meat with tomato pulp. Cover the dish. Bake in a moderate oven, allowing about 30 minutes to each pound. Slightly brown mushrooms in butter over low heat. Place on top of roast when it is removed from the oven. Gasnish with canned apricots and serve from the baking dish, which keeps the meat hot throughout the meal. Cherry Roll. Biscuit dough (2 cups flour recipe) 1 No. 2 can cherries 44 cup light brown sugar 44 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1 teaspoon lemon rind (grated) Roll baking powder biscuit dough 44 inch thick. Drain cherries. Cov er dough with cherries and sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon. Roll like a jelly roll and place in buttered loaf baking pan. Bake ap proximately 30 minutes in a moder ately hot oven (375 degrees). Baste with cherry juice while baking. Serve with whipped cream or with hard sauce. Pork Chop Treat. Place seasoned pork chops, 1 inch thick, at one end of a large roasting pan. In the center, place a mound of good bread dressing seasoned with sage or poultry seasoning. At the other end put thinly sliced po tatoes and thinly sliced onions, sea soned with salt and pepper. Dot with butter. Bake for 15 minutes in a hot oven (450 degrees) and then reduce heat to a moderate oven (350 degrees) and bake about 45 minutes longer. Rhubarb Conserve. (Makes 12 glasses) 144 quarts rhubarb (diced) 8 cups sugar 44 cup seeded raisins 44 cup cold water 44 cup orange juice 44 cup orange rind (ground) 1 cup pecans (cut fine) Place rhubarb, sugar, raisins, wa ter and orange juice in kettle. Re move wnue mem brane from the orange peel, and put peel through the food chopper, using the fine blade. Add to conserve, and % bring mixture to f" a boil. Boil gently for 20 minutes. Add nut meats and cook 5 minutes longer. Pour Into sterilized glasses and seal. Lemon Meringue Pie. 1 cup sugar Vi cup cornstarch y< teaspoon salt % cup cold water % cup boiling water 3 egg yolks 1 tablespoon butter Vi cup lemon juice 1 teaspoon lemon rind (grated) Combine sugar, cornstarch and salt. Add cold water; stir until smooth. Add boiling water and cook, stirring constantly, until mix ture is clear and thick. Cook 3 minutes longer. Beat egg yolks; stir cooked mixture into them. Add remaining ingredients, return to flame and cook 1 minute. Pour im mediately into baked pie shell. Top with meringue. Meringue. 3 egg whites 6 tablespoons sugar Va teaspoon salt Beat egg whites partially; then add sugar slowly, beating until mix ture is stiff. Bake in slow oven, (300 degrees) for 18 minutes. Have You Ordered Your Copy of ‘Household Hints'? Eleanor Howe’s booklet ‘‘House hold Hints" is one you can’t afford to be without—especially now that house cleaning time is here. It's a handy reference book that supplies the answers to so many puzzling tout's nuns—uuw renew wurn iinu leum; what to do to keep wool from shrinking when it’s washed; how to remove stains from porcelain sinks and tubs; and how to clean rugs with dry soap suds. You’ll And hints on cooking and sewing, too—over 300 practical, tested household hints —for 10 cents! To get your copy of this booklet now, send 10 cents in coin to "Household Hints," care El eanor Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON (Consolidated Features—WNU Service.) NEW YORK.—It Just happens that a specialist in bankruptcy law is the co-partner of General Trujillo of the Dominican Republic c • . c, . ^ installing Specialist Shades the flrst 0f From Precision the European Into Fantasy ™fugees , ' their island haven under the Trujillo plan. But, this specialist, John N. Rosenberg, New York lawyer, has, since the World war, been occupied with the large-scale human-race bankruptcy of war and famine in Europe, so he is entering no new field. He is president of the Dominican Resettle ment association, which is co operating with General Trujillo in what appears to be an absolutely unique experiment in giving 500 refugees a new start in the western world, with houses, roads, land, cat tle and farm implements ready for them. Mr. Rosenberg has helped liquidate and rebuild all rorts of financial and social wreckage, Including Ivar Kreuger’s Inter national Match company. He is the author of “Corporate Re organization and the Federal Courts,” but he Is also the author of another book called “Punchinello.” Fantasy, or at any rate, a play of the imagination, has occupied quite as much of his time as law and bankruptcy. He has painted hundreds of pictures, many of which are hung in good galleries, includ ing the F6gg museum of Harvard. He is an etcher, lithographer and playwright, and Broadway has pro duced his plays. For six years he was associated with Kenneth Mac Gowan and Stark Young in backing the Provincetown theater. His short stories have appeared in many magazines. All this with time out to be counsel for the Irving Trust company. The foregoing might suggest the activities of a trap-drum mer. But he is, instead, leisure ly and meditative, an easy going pipe-smoker who always Bcems to have a lot of time on his hands. Another of his books is “Pastel Expression.” He is busy In communal, civic and philanthropic enterprises and in the immediate post-war years was head of the American Joint Distribution Commission for Europe. This took him to Rus sia, and he wrote a book about that, too—“On the Steppes.” If there is to be a general European receivership—financial and cul tural—he might as well take over. He is a native of Al legheny, Pa., educated at Colum bia university. THIS decade, it appears, will fea ture flaming youth among col lege presidents. The recalcitrant and unorthodox, and comparatively v p, , young, May Young Educators nardHutchins Score Outworn of Chicago College Methods fna ^mgxei low Barr of St. John’s college are shelling the academic ramparts in their drive against what they consider outworn educational technics. President James B. Conant of Harvard scores an assist in his observation that many college graduates can't read and write fluently, and Dr. Mary Ellen Chase, of Smith, finds under graduates who don’t know their ABCs. She says they And it difficult to use the dictionary because they : don’t know’the alphabetical sequence of letters. Messrs. Hutchins and Barr woulS scrap much of the present school curriculum and start rubbing in the great books of the ages, in which they And strong support by Mortimer J. Adler, with his challenging new book, “How to Read a Book.” In 1937, Mr. Barr burned his bridges behind him, when he and young Scott Buchanan, dean of St. John’s, started their revolution. A native of Suffolk, Va., Mr. Barr at tended the University of Virginia, was a Rhodes scholar and pursued post-graduate studies in Paris and at the University of Ghent, Belgium. He was in the ambulance service in the World war and taught at the Universities of Virginia and Chicago before becoming president of St John’s. IN THE earlier days of the Nazi * movement, young Josef Terbo ven cf Essen was up against stiff competition in intemperate lan r. ti j • guage. but ht German Head in was gifted in Norway Tops in that line, was Invective, Threat advanced rap idly and is now rewarded by the post of com missioner of German-held areas in Norway. For several years ht headed the department of throwing a scare into small countries. H was governor of the Rhine Province UncU Phili liatji: %A Cause to Rejoice We doubt if those with “Ph. D.” after their names are as happy as we are when we see "Pd.” before the names of our creditors. Time heals all wounds. But our time on earth is limited. That’s the trouble. Back in the forties, boys also found it hard to get a start in life. They had to be rail splitters, plowmen and canal hostlers. With every maybe, there is a maybe not. It Is Vulgar There is always a coarseness about sin, no matter how well con cealed. That alone is an indict ment. A “Sunny Jim’’ who is sunny only from policy isn’t very satis factory. The poor man’s greatest friends are economy and a milch cow. What is home without one room entirely to yourself when you want it? A SIMPLE wraparound style, ** with belt fastened in the back, this apron dress is the practical, easy-to-get-into kind that you need for morning every day of your life. No. 8673 has a comfortable, easy waistline and, as you see from the diagram, it consists of just a few pieces to sew together, with long, straight seams, so that you can finish it in a few hours. And to make matters even easier, the pattern includes a step-by-step sew chart. The braid edging, which bright ens it up and accents the length of line by running down the front seam, is repeated on the sleeve edges and around the pocket. Half a dozen comfortable, good-looking dresses like this, in gingham, chambray or percale, will see you through the spring and summer, so send for your pattern right now and get them speedily made. They’ll be much prettier, and fit much better, than any routine morning dresses you buy. Pattern No. 8673 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material without nap; 4% yards braid. Send order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. Room 1324 211 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago Enclose 15 cents In coins for Pattern No. Size. Name . Address .... —. . ■ ." ■■■ ■■■ ■" ■ .1 - ] ASK ME O ^QuizWith Answer, F. n I on Various Subjects i I. ■ ■ —... ■ ■■■■■■A I. I- ■ ■ ■— I . —-1 The Questions 1. Who designed the Stars and Stripes? 2. Is propaganda spread among the enemy a new idea? 3. What salary did George Washington receive during his terms as President? 4. At what degree of latitude is the equator? 5. How many gallons of fresh water must a large liner carry in crossing the Atlantic? 6. Is a peruke worn on the head, neck or foot? 7. Has the Nazi salute, the up raised hand, been used by other people? 8. What is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States, Yale university, Harvard, or the College of William and Mary? Final Age? “I wonder if I’ll live to be a hundred?” ‘‘Not if you remain thirty-seven much longer, my dear.” Weighted Down “You’re looking downcast, old man. What’s on your mind?" "A piece of my wife’s." You can trust a fat man. He finds it difficult to stoop to any thing low. They ‘Noed’ Him ‘‘There are an awful lot of girls who don’t want to get married.” ‘‘How do you now?” ‘‘I’ve asked them.” Passing the Time Waiting at the station for a train were a smart modern miss and a stern lady of uncounted years. “Have a cigarette?” said the girl, politely offering her case. “Me!” snapped the other. “Why, I’d just as soon kiss the first man who passed!” “So would I,” agreed the girl blithely; “but have one while you’re waiting.” Only Way Conceited Actor—Last night 1 had the audience glued to their seats. Candid Critic—That’s one way of keeping them there. 9. What is meant by the caliber of a gun? 10. How often does a deer shed its antlers? The Answers 1. Francis Hopkinson, a signer of the Declaration of Independ ence, designed the Stars and Stripes. 2. In old-time wars, messages were written on paper and tied to arrows to be shot to the enemy. 3. Washington received no sal ary during his terms as President. 4. Zero. 5. Large liners require more than a million gallons of fresh wa ter, for one trip across. 6. Head (it’s a wig). 7. It was formerly used as a sign of serfdom among slaves in Ancient Rome. 8. Harvard, founded in 1636. 9. Gun caliber is the diameter of the gun’s bore, expressed either in inches or hundredths of an inch. Thus, a .45 caliber gun has a bore measuring 45/100ths of an inch in diameter. 10. Every year. THE CHEERFUL CHERUB . ■■ ■!—■— r ■ ———» A Nfcvijo blanket I happily own. I spread it ov/t Ftat in my room And b^the in its glorious colors until riy soul simply bursts into bloom. Wise and Otherwise T'HE average film star, says *■ a statistician, only stays popular five years. After that her relatives go back to work. Some people only give good ad vice because they’re too old to set a bad example. Economy, says Rueful Ru pert, is spending as little as possible and getting no fun out of it. Men’s heads are getting larger, says a hat expert. On an average, hats are now two sizes larger than 20 years ago. I wonder what there’s been in these 20 years for anyone to have swelled head about. Penguins Like Peace We all know that penguins can’t fly, but few people are aware that baby penguins, who can swim al most as soon as they are born, take pebbles with them as ballast. If penguins are disturbed they will promptly desert their nesting grounds. A few years ago this was proved when fishermen at Marcus island, off the southwest coast of Africa, caught penguins and used them as bait. The sur viving birds left the island and have never returned, so the profit able trade in penguin eggs and guano was finished on Marcus. On Dassen, another island near by, more than half a million eggs and enormous quantities of guano are collected every season. Egg-collecting starts in Janu ary. When the mother bird is robbed of an egg she will lay another and keep on doing it until she has laid 20 or so, instead of the customary couple. Although Dassen is usually fog shrouded, no ship steaming by sounds a foghorn—because the penguins would not take kindly to the noise. KNOWN FROM COAST TO COAST-NEXT TIME BUT KENT’SLSlBLADESIOc CUPPLCS COMPANY, ST. LOUIS. MISSOUM Zeal First Rather have zeal without knowl edge than knowledge without zeal. —Moody. There’s a Good Reason Yon’re Constipated! When there’s something wrong with you, the first rule is: get at the cause. If you are constipated, don’t endure it first and “cure" It afterward. Find out what’s giving you the trouble. Chances are it’s simple if you eat the super-refined foods most people do: meat, white bread, potatoes. It’s likely you don’t get enough “bulk." And “bulk”doesn’t mean a lot of food. It’s a kind of food that isn’t consumed in the body, but leaves a soft "bulky” mass in the Intestines and helps a bowel movement. If this is your trouble, you should eat a natural "bulk” pro ducing food-such a one as the crunchy, toasted, ready-to-eat cereal, Kellogg’s All-Bran. Eat it often, drink plenty of water, and "Join the Regulars.” All-Bran is made by Kellogg’s in Battle Creek. If your condition is chronic, it is ^wlse to consult a physician. > ^ Perfect Originality A good imitation is the most perfect originality.—Voltaire. fif&TitETt/NtNfyllEDSMOKES/ J S/iyS TOM My T/VMMEK.... J He’s out on a spring tree-spraying Job_J THE EASIEST ROLLIN’ AND HANDLIN’ TOBACCO ^ -IT'S THAT ^ CRIMP CUT/ MELLOWER,TASTIER —AND/WILDER.TOO/ CopyrUht. 1»4». a J. Beynol di Tobacco Co. W union-Salcre. K C. In recent laboratory "smoking bowl' tests, Prince Albert burned UXrUJW»r\ than the average of the 30 other of the largest-*eU5ag brands tested — coolest of all I Rollin' Along With P.A.l That’s Tommy Trimmer (left), knock ing off for a P.A. “makin’s” cigarette with Jack Campbell (center). Irv Thompson (right) will be with them shortly for some real smoking joy. Irv, too, has been praising Prince Albert — for 10 years. He says: “P.A. stays put for perfect round, plump cigarettes that are a joy to smoke—rich-tasting and no harshness! Besides, I save on Prince Albert—there’s no waste from spilling. Prince Albert smokes stay lit, tool" (Pipe fans, too —please note!) ^(1116 roll-your-own ciga rettes in every handy pocket tin of Prince Albert