The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 08, 1940, Image 2

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    Household News
FROSTY FOODS FOR SUMMER
(Recipes Below)
When you’re "eating out," and
you wonder what to order for the
grand finale of your meal, how often
do you decide on a delicious sound
ing parfait? There’s something very
special about this tall, imposing and
delectable dessert. And there real
ly is no reason at all why having
parfaits for dessert should be con
fined to our "eating out” days, A
parfait may be a culinary creation,
but with modern ice cream freez
ers, improved freezing in mechani
cal refrigerators
and commercial
mixes to help
produce smooth,
creamy, frozen
desserts, there’s
no reason why you
shouldn’t serve
them often at
home!
Make a variety of ice creams and
sherbets too, and serve them with
cookies or dainty cakes. You’ll
find a grand assortment of cookie
and cake recipes in my cookbook,
"Better Baking,” — crisp cookies,
chewy cookies, and light feathery
cakes that are just the right accom
paniment for foods and drinks that
are cold and frosty.
Ice Cream Freezer Ice Cream.
(Makes 1 quart)
2 cups milk
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons flour
Vi teaspoon salt
2 egg yolks
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup whipping cream
Scald milk, reserving Vi cup. Mix
and blend the sugar, flour and salt
and mix to a smooth paste with the
cold milk which was reserved. Add
this mixture to the scalded milk and
cook, stirring constantly until thick,
in a double boiler for 15 minutes.
Add egg yolks (well beaten) and
cook, stirring constantly, three min
utes longer. Add vanilla and chill.
Fold in whipping cream (whipped),
place in ice cream freezer and
freeze, using three parts ice to one
part rock salt. This is a good stand
ard recipe to use as a "pattern” for
many tasty variations.
Chocolate Angel Parfait.
2 egg whites (beaten stiff)
Vi cup sugar
Vi cup water
1 square unsweetened chocolate
(melted and slightly cooled)
1 cup cream (whipped)
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
Vi cup candied cherries (quar
tered)
Vi cup blanched almonds
(chopped)
Beat egg whites stiff. Cook the
sugar and water to the soft ball
stage (234 degrees). Pour syrup in
fine stream over egg whites, beat
ing constantly. Continue beating un
til mixture is cool. Fold in melted
chocolate, whipped cream, extract,
nuts and cherries. Pour into trays
and place in freezing section of me
chanical refrigerator. Freeze. No
stirring is necessary. Nuts and cher
ries may be omitted, if desired.
Mocha Freeze.
Make strong coffee in the usual
manner, and pour
over crushed ice
to chill. Pour into
tall glasses and
add a generous
spoonful of vanil
la ice cream to
each glass. Top
with whipped cream.
Chocolate Miut Parfait.
1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon cornstarch
Va teaspoon salt
2 cups milk (scalded)
3 eggs (beaten)
2 squares unsweetened chocolate
(melted)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup whipping cream (whipped)
Blend sugar, cornstarch and salt.
Add scalded milk slowly, stirring
well, and place in saucepan or dou
ble boiler. Cook, stirring constantly,
until thick. Remove from heat; add
beaten eggs; then cook, stirring con
stantly, until thickened. Blend in
k
melted chocolate. Cool. Then add
vanilla extract and fold in whipped
cream. Place in freezing container
of modern ice cream freezer, and
freeze, using 2 parts ice to 1 part
rock salt. Serve in tall parfait
glasses, alternating with layers of
peppermint sauce. Top with
whipped cream and a cherry. Pep
permint sauce:
Vi cup sugar
4 teaspoons cornstarch
Vi teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Vi cup cold water
Vi cup boiling water
Vi teaspoon peppermint extract
Few drops green coloring
Vi cup whipping cream (whipped)
Combine sugar, cornstarch, salt,
and lemon juice. Mix with cold wa
ter to form a paste. Add hot wa
ter and cook, stirring constantly un
til thick and clear. Add flavoring
and coloring, and chill. Just be
fore serving, fold in whipped cream.
Lemon Sherbet.
(Serves 8)
lVi cups granulated sugar
1 quart water
1 tablespoon gelatin
2 tablespoons cold water
Vi cup lemon juice
Yellow food coloring
2 egg whites
2 tablespoons powdered sugar
Combine granulated sugar and
water and boil for 5 minutes. Soak
gelatin in cold water and dissolve
in the hot syrup. Cool. Add lemon
juice and a few drops of yellow food
coloring. Pour mixture into freez
ing container of ice cream freezer.
Cover and surround with a mixture
of chipped ice and salt (3 parts ice
to 1 part salt, by volume). Freeze.
Lemon Iceberg.
To each glass of lemonade, add
a scoop of lemon sherbet. Garnish
with mint and a fresh strawberry or
raspberry. Slip a lemon slice over
the edge of each glass.
Iced Chocolate.
(Makes 4 large glasses)
4 tablespoons sugar
4 tablespoons cocoa
V4 teaspoon salt
V4 cup boiling water
2 cups milk (scalded)
Vi teaspoon vanilla
Crushed ice
Whipped cream
Combine sugar, cocoa and salt.
Add boiling water and cook for two
minutes. Remove
from fire, and
combine with the
scalded milk.
Pour into glasses
filled with crushed
ice, and serve
with a snonnful
of whipped cream garnishing each
glass.
Summer Salads.
Next week Eleanor Howe will g^ve
you some of her choicest tested reci
pes for cool, refreshing summer, sal
ads and things to serve with them.
There’ll be recipes for jellied salads,
vegetable salads, party salads and
"leftover” salads, too. Be sure to
watch for Eleanor Howe’s column
next week!
Easy Entertaining.
Right now—the whole world needs
friendship and good cheer. Right
now—perhaps as never before—we
as homemakers must keep the latch
string out. We must lend a helping
hand by extending a warm abiding
welcome to both neighbors and
friends.
With this in mind, therefore, we
are offering you a special 48-page
illustrated book entitled, "Easy En
tertaining.” This book costs only 10
cents—yet it is designed to save you
both time and money—to solve for
you the problem of entertaining
easily, simply, and inexpensively.
This book has been accepted by
thousands of homemakers as a help
ful guide to easy entertaining.
To get your copy now, send 10
cents in coin to “Easy Entertaining”
care of Eleanor 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.—J. B. Priestly and
the U. S. A. got along nicely
together until his play "Time and the
Conways.” began to make trouble
•Voice of England’
Takes Jab at Our Priestly went
RadioCommenters metaphysi
cal and con
jured time into fourth dimentional
unreality. Perhaps because they had
long felt the urgency and reality of
a newspaper deadline, the AmerL
can dramatic critics didn't quite gff
It and scored the play as just so-so
and "maybe not even that. Mr.
Priestly said they were rude and
boorish about it and challenged not
only their time sense, but their sense
of propriety and their fitness for
their Jobs.
That must have gone deeply
under Mr. Priestly's skin, since,
as the "Voice of England” at a
moment when time, at any rate
seems to be real, he takes a
short-wave, short Jab at radio
commentators in this country.
He thinks that "people who are
not prepared to fight anything,
anywhere” should mind their
manners and not belittle others
who can and will fight. While
that may not necessarily make
"Time and the Conways” a good
play, it reveals Mr. Priestly,
and no doubt England, as ready
to meet all comers, and that
seems all to the good.
This reporter, having once talked
with Mr. Priestly, can testify that
he has a nice smile. While his esti
mate of our present or potential
belligerency may have been some
what tactless, in his novels and
magazine articles he has shown
much more sound discernment of
the American scene than the writ
ings of certain other visiting Brit
ons, who kiss and run and there
after engage in long-distance smear
ing. He, at any rate, said his say
while he was here.
Mr. Priestly, 46 years old, took
honors in literature and history at
Cambridge, went to London from his
native Yorkshire and found the lit
erary ladder just an escalator.
His novel, "The Good Companions,”
was his first big success. This read
er thought there was deep insight
in his "Midnight in the Desert,”
written after his stay in Arizona,
with his family. In his routine
short-wave address, he stresses the
common cultural ties of England
and America, without being oily
about it and has seemed to this hear
er an effective special pleader. But
he does seem to look on our critics
as alien parachute-jumpers, or even
something less admirable.
THE professor who pieces out the
dinosaur from a single bone has
a distinct advantage over interpret
ers of world events. Nobody can
dispute him.
Jap War Minister This writer
Bears a Feather has just fln
On His Shoulder ished readin«
a magazine
article of 1934 about Lieut. Gen. Eiki
Tojo of Japan, in which it is made
clear that he is typical of the head
strong army caste, sure to destroy
itself, and that quickly.
But here today is General Tojo
named war minister in the new army
cabinet which seems bent on de
stroying anybody or anything rather
than itself. In the short view, at
least, the dinosaurs of totalitarian
ism are subject to laboratory obsen
vation—but only in the short view,
close to a deadline.
Little is known about General
Tojo in this country, but avail
able data indicate that his rise
to power will not be reassuring
to those who look for peaceful,
pleasant solutions of world dis
cord. His betes noir are the
U. 8. A. and Russia.
Like Pericles of Greece, he ad
vanced himself by kicking up war
scares. He agrees with the doc
trine of Adolf Hitler, expounded in
“Mein Kampf," that all alliances
are push-overs and that the only
tough and durable nation is the one
that stands alone. He is smart,
hard-boiled, resourceful and con
temptuous of theories, sentiments,
and negotiations. He is of an un
reconstructed feudal family, and has
been in the army since his early
youth.
Stubby, bespectacled little Yo
suke Matsuoka, Japan's new
foreign minister, is cut out of
the same cloth. At the Univer
sity of Oregon, he was an easy
conformist In superficial mat
ters, picking up sports-page idi
om and playing poker cleverly—
never caught bluffing. After he
led Japan's contemptuous walk
out from the League of Nations
in 1933 he male no further ges
tures toward Occidentalism.
They call him Jaoan's Clive of
India. sirnaMzing hfs long indus
trial out-each on the mainland.
NATIONAL
AFFAIRS
Reviewed fey
CARTER FIELD
—
Carter Field says W illkie
must carry New York and
Illinois, or break the Solid
South... Unknown quanti
ties may decide the presi
dential battle.
(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.)
WASHINGTON.—This campaign
will further twist the already ragged
party lines in this country. “Cotton
Ed” Smith and Edward R. Burke of
Nebraska have already followed A1
Smith, John W. Davis and Jim Reed
who "walked” in 1936 and haven’t
come back. But it will take a pow
erful lot of walking to cut Roosevelt
down to “size” when one remembers
that 46 to 2 margin in 1936.
To have a chance to win, Willkie
must carry New York and Illinois,
E. R. Burke
or else oreax me
Solid South. Even
with New York and
Illinois he must car
ry every other state
north of the Mason
and Dixon line and
east of the Mississip
pi. And this includes
Wisconsin.
The Solid South
and border states
have 149 electoral
votes. If Roosevelt
carries them, and
also carries Illinois, West Virginia,
New York, California, plus the three
little states of Arizona, Nevada and
New Mexico, and Washington, he
will have 272 electoral votes, six
more than enough to elect! On
form, all the states mentioned are
heavily Democratic. All went heavi
ly Democratic in 1938, a year of
sharp Republican gains. Note that
this leaves out Montana, Minnesota,
the Dakotas, Utah, Colorado, Ne
braska, Kansas, Iowa, Wyoming,
Oregon and Idaho!
Willkie can carry every one of
this last list, plus all New England
apd all the states from the Missis
sippi to the Atlantic north of Mary
land and Kentucky, with the excep
tion of Illinois and New York, and
still lose!
SOUTH MUTTERS
The South is muttering against
Roosevelt. There is no doubt ol
that. But it is not sound judgment
to figure on any electoral votes
there. So it boils down to this, that
Willkie must carjy New York or be
defeated.
Meanwhile Roosevelt and the ad
ministration, with the strategic ad
vantage so clearly with them, may
be counted on to play as safely as
possible. This means that from now
until November, for example, no ac
tion by the government may be ex
pected to upset the continued im
provement in business due to huge
armament orders—and expected or
ders. Roosevelt found this policy
highly successful in 1936, when busi
ness was improving. There is no
reason to vary it.
Both parties will continue to make
war medicine—for ballots, not guns
—in congress. The Republicans
plan to keep it dragging along.
They want to ride herd on the Pres
ident, to create the impression that
only their restraining influence will
keep him from some overt act which
would plunge us into war. But also
they want to put the administration
on record as resisting any changes
in the various bureaus and agencies,
notably the NLRB, which they insist
are hampering business.
FEARED THIRD PARTY
President Roosevelt’s scrapping—
before the ink was dry—of the war
issue plank in the Democratic plat
form he himself had dictated, clears
the way for a campaign on purely
domestic issues. The purpose of the
weasel words—to prevent Burt
Wheeler and Champ Clark from
starting a third party—had been ac
complished. Now the President
stands on his record, just a little
bit more belligerent toward Ger
many and Japan than Willkie, agree
ing with him precisely on all pos
sible legal aid to Britain, and four
square with the Republican nominee
on increasing our national defense
to the utmost.
ON DOMESTIC ISSUES
The lines of the campaign on do
mestic issues will be fairly simple.
Willkie will insist that the present
administration has demonstrated its
inefficiency and extravagance, and
hence cannot be trusted to produce
the taxpayers’ money’s worth in
spending billions on the army and
navy. He will NOT attack the “so
cial advances” and New Deal objec
tives for the benefit of the underdogs
but insist that their administration
should be intelligent, and particular
ly that there should not be barn
burnings to get rid of rats.
Roosevelt and the New Dealers
will harp on their accomplishments
in social reform, and insist that to
turn the government over to the “in
terests” would mean to wreck them.
They will say that whatever Willkie’s
personal views, he will be as help
less as Harding and Hoover to pre
vent sordid Wall street-controlled
throttling of the little business man,
the consumers, and all the rest of it.
And they will ring the changes on
the notion of a W’all street utility
holding company executives in the
White House.
OTERN[Wrvr
UEPARTH ENT
p\ECIDEDLY young, and just as
fresh-looking as a spray of ap
ple blossoms, this frock (8680) will
be lovely in silk print or flat crepe,
with airy white frills. Notice how
cleverly the frills are used to ac
centuate the torso which is not
only the newest news in silhou
ettes, but potent to give you the
long, limber look for which we’re
all striving. The full skirt, little
pairs of buttons down the front
and sash bow add to the youthful
charm of this frock.
With your big hat and patent
shoes, it will make you look as if
you had stepped from the pages
of the latest fashion book—and it
Strange Facts
I Unstable Pound f
Odd Chicken Coops
* All Suborn In •
C. In some parts of China, weight
instead of price of food fluctuates
with market conditions. For ex
ample, a housewife always pays
the same price for rice, but she
gets a “big pound” when it is
plentiful and “a little pound” when
it is scarce.
=—sSSi/— -
C. Such places as old city ware
houses, factories, breweries, ho
tels and churches provide housing
for more than 40,000,000 egg-lay
ing chickens in tiers of individual
cages equipped with feed, water
and egg-transportation troughs.
For instance, a $1,000,000 Florida
hotel that failed a short time ago
is now a “chicken coop” with 60,
000 caged hens.
=5Kr=
C. Horses have been known to die
from seasickness, female apes
have grieved themselves to death
over the loss of a baby and human
beings have developed such in
tense melancholia from homesick
ness that it has proved fatal.
C. When witnesses are sworn in
the law courts of Germany, all
other persons in the room, includ
ing the judges, likewise rise and
raise their right hand.—Collier’s.
proves once more that to get real
individuality as well as newness,
you’ll be wise to make your own.
A step-by-step sew chart makes
the easy pattern even easier.
Pattern No. 8680 is designed for
sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14
requires 3^ yards of 39-inch ma
terial without nap and 2% yards
of ruffling. Send order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1324
211 W. Walker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 15 cents In coins lor
Pattern No. Size.
Name .....
Address ...
Cathedral on Tour
The oddest cathedral in the
world is probably a movable af
fair planned by the Rt. Rev. Hen
ry Wise Hobson, youngest Prot
estant Episcopal bishop in Ameri
ca. It bears the name of St. Paul’s
Wayside cathedral, and contains a
bishop’s chair, altar, library and
cinema equipment. The “cathe
dral” stands on a trailer and
tours the country.
Though only 24 can sit inside
and listen to the sermon, a loud
speaker makes it possible for thou
sands of holiday-makers to listen
to and take part in outdoor serv
ices.
$10.00 REWARD
for recovery
of two large pottery urn* stolen.
PLATNER LBR. CO., OMAHA, NEBR.
CREMATION
FOREST LAWN CEMETERY
• OMAHA •
CREMATION
of the most modem type
Write to ui for booklet
SCHOOL
[j=VAN SANT=ii
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
In Its Fiftieth Year
Co • Educational
DAY OR EVENING—ALL YEAR
Standard Courses
207 S. 19th— OMAHA-JA SS90
STOCK LISTINGS
Do You Have Oil or Gas Stocks
We specialize in locating markets and out
lets for defaulted Oil and Gas stocks, also
dormant Mineral leases. The petroleum
business is rapidly advancing. Now is the |
time to move these holdings or re-arrange
them. We invite your listings. No charges.
It. R. PIERCE CO.. Inc.
111S Sharp Bldg. Lincoln. Nebraska
A Bad, Start
“Why isn’t Bill Jones at work
this morning?’’ asked the foreman
one Monday.
“He met with an accident at
his wedding on Saturday,” said
one of his mates.
“Accident?”
“Yes. As he and his missus left
the church, some of the lads made
an archway of picks for them to
pass under. Somebody blew a
whistle, and the whole lot downed
tools.”
Light housekeeping is said to be
one canned thing after another.
Nicely Said and Honest
“George, tell me the truth. Am I
the first girl you’ve ever loved?”
“N-no, but I’m a lot harder to please
than I used to be.”
Just the Reverse
At a reception the woman chatted for
some time with the distinguished guest.
One of the listeners complimented her.
“Oh, really ," she said with a smile,
“I’ve just been concealing my ignor
ance."
The distinguished guest smiled gal
lantly,
“Not at all, not at all, my dear lady.
Quite the contrary, l assure you."
After Taste?
“Do you think you could learn
to love me?”
“Possibly; but wouldn’t you hate
to think you were an acquired
taste?”
Night as Day
“Don’t you find that a new baby
brightens up a home?”
“I do. We have the lights on all
night now.”
Approved by Good Housekeeping In
stitute and Household Searchlight.
If your dealer cannot supply you,
send 201 with your dealer’s name
for a Trial Package of 48 genuine
Pe-Kojar Rings; sent prepaid.
giTs™*!?!)
you SEAL )
PE-KO EP6E)
RIN&Sl-JA
Father of Waste
Gambling is the child of ava
rice, but the parent of prodigali
ty.—C. C. Colton.
Revenge of the Weak
Revenge is always the pleasur*
of a little, weak and narrow mind*
—Juvenal.
NO FAST-BURNING SMOKES
FOR ME. I SMOKE SLOW
BURNING CAMELS FOR
EXTRA MILDNESS
l EXTRA mildness r
I EXTRA coolness 1J
1 EXTRA flavor r
1 In recent la^rato^ ‘estsOm^ p
Seolthe 15 other o^e
I I«*e.t..eUingbr.nd^te«Thttt
1 slow er than any ot t I
I means, on the average, a stu .
1 ing plui «lual to
1 F“ extra smokes 1
l 3 per packi \
IT'S THE EXTRA
FLAVOR I LIKE
ASOUT CAMELS.
AND CAMELS
SMOKE SO MUCH
COOLER
GET THE “EXTRAS" WITH SLOWER-BURNING
CAMELS
THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS