The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 19, 1940, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    'Household News
SUNDAY NIGHT SUPPERS
(See Recipes Below)
Have you ever juggled a cup of
coffee in one hand, a salad plate
in the other, and at the same time
attempted to eat the appetizing food
the hostess has
served you? It is
a feat that even
the most experi
enced cannot of
ten manage.
To save a guest,
the embarrass-'
ment of having
his suit ruined by
a cup of coffee
tippihg over, or
salad dressing
trickling over the
•ide of the plate which is being pre
cariously balanced on the knees,
serve your supper on individual
trays.
Simplicity is the keynote of the
Sunday night supper. That is why
the "meal-on-the-tray” has become
so popular.
Plan your Sunday supper around
one central dish. It may be a salad,
a creamed dish served on toast, or
even a casserole dish.
Here is a favorite supper menu
for warm fall evenings which easily
adapts itself to buffet style of serv
ing, or a tray supper.
Cranberry Molded Salad
Cottage Cheese with Chives
Olives Relishes
Potato Chips
Hot Rolls Butter
Coffee
As you glance through the menu
you can see that nothing in the
meal, with the exception of the hot
rolls, requires last minute prepara
tion In the kitchen.
The buffet should be as inviting as
it is possible to make it. The cran
berry molded salad with a mound of
cottage cheese and chives in the
» center of the ring mold makes an
especially attractive center piece for
the serving table. The rolls may be
placed in a cunning bread basket,
covered with a napkin to keep them j
hot. The serving
table must also
have the neces
sary silverware,
dishes, napkins
I and trays on it.
I When the meal
is ready each
guest helps him
self. and delights
In the informality of the occasion.
Instead of using the buffet style
of serving, you may want to pre
pare the trays in the kitchen. Then
with the aid of the members of the
family, the trays are served to the
guests.
The following menu is an excel
lent one to serve when fall evenings
are a little nippy, and a warm dish
is appealing.
Welsh Rabbit on Toast
Cole Slaw
Baked Apple
Coffee Tea
Molded Cranberry Salad.
(Serves 8)
1 package lemon flavored
gelatin dessert
1*4 cups boiling water
1 cup cranberry sauce
Vi cup pineapple (diced)
y« cup nuts (chopped fine)
Pour boiling water over gelatin
and stir until dissolved. Crush cran
berry sauce with a fork and add to
the gelatin mixture. Pour into a
ring mold and let stand until par
tially set. Fold in pineapple and
nuts. Chill until firm. Unmold on
crisp lettuce. Fill ring with chilled
cottage cheese to which finely
chopped chives have been added; or
use any other salad mixture which
may be desirable.
Stuffed Tomato Salad.
(Serves 5)
5 medium sized tomatoes
Dash celery, onion or garlic salt
1 cup canned kidney beans
2 tablespoons celery (chopped)
2 tablespoons green onion (minced)
2 tablespoons ripe olives (chopped
fine)
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
1 hard cooked egg (grated)
Select firm, medium sized toma
toes and peel. Hollow out the inte
riors and sprinkle with celery, gar
lic or onion salt. Mix together the
kidney beans, celery, onion, olives
and mayonnaise, and stuff the to
matoes with this mixture. Chill, and
serve on lettuce leaves. Garnish
with hard cooked egg, which has
been put through potato rlcer or
coarse strainer.
Eggs a la King.
(Serves 4-8)
6 eggs
V« cup mushroom caps
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour
1% cups milk
V4 cup cream
cup green peas (drained)
Mi cup green pepper (chopped flne)
1 tablespoon pimiento (chopped flne)
1 tablespoon parsley (chopped flne)
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
Dash paprika
V4 teaspoon lemon juice
Hard cook the eggs, peel and
slice. Saute the mushroom caps in
the butter, over low heat, in the top
part of double boiler (directly over
flame). Add flour, and blend well,
cooking over hot water. Add milk
and cream, stirring constantly until
mixture thickens and is smooth. Add
peas, green pepper, pimiento, pars
ley and sliced eggs, and stir gently
to avoid breaking the egg slices.
Season with salt, pepper, paprika
and lemon juice. Serve hot on but
tered toast
Devonshire Buns.
(Makes 2Vfc dozen small buns)
1 cup milk
2 cakes yeast
Mi cup butter (softened)
% cup sugar
Dash of salt
3V« cups flour (sifted)
Heat milk to lukewarm. Ada
crumbled yeast and stir until dis
solved. Add but
ter and sugar.
Blend. Add salt
When liquid is
cool, add flour
and beat until
) smooth. Knead 4
minutes, or until
satiny to the
touch. Cut across
each way with a
knife, rub with
fat and cover with
a cloth. Let rise 1
hour, or until doubled in bulk. Form
Into small narrow rolls, about 3
Inches long. Brush with melted fat
and let rise 1 hour, or until doubled
in bulk. Bake in a hot oven (400
degrees) for about 18 minutes.
When cold split and spread with
raspberry jam and clotted cream.
Replace tops and serve.
Hot Muffins.
(Makes 10 medium sized muffins)
2 cups flour
% teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 tablespoons sugar
y« cup shortening
1 egg (beaten)
% cup milk
Mix and sift together the flour,
salt, baking powder and sugar. Cut
in the shortening. Combine beaten
egg and milk, and add to mixture.
Mix lightly, blending only until the
dry ingredients are moistened. Place
in greased muffin pans and bake
in a hot oven (400 degrees) approx
imately 25 minutes.
Cole Slaw.
(Serves 6-8)
1 Vi quarts cabbage (sliced finely)
1 cup green peppers (cut in thin
slices)
y* cup stuffed olives (sliced thin)
5 or 6 small green onions (cut line)
Toss cabbage, pepper, olives and
green onions lightly together. Serve
cold with french dressing.
Tomato French Dressing.
(Makes 2 cups)
% can condensed tomato soup
(% cup)
% cup vinegar
y< cup oil
2 tablespoons sugar
1% tablespoons lemon juice
Mi teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
% teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon dry mustard
Vt teaspoon paprika
Place all of the ingredients in a
mixing bowl and beat until blended.
Store in refrigerator in a quart jar.
Household Hints.
Miss Howe, in her book, "House
hold Hints,” gives you some short
cuts to sewing which will prove ben
eflcial when you start giving the
children’s clothes the once-over. You
may obtain your copy by sending 10
cents, in coin, to Eleanor Howe. 9101
North Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111 |
(Released by Western Nfwioaper Unirv- |
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
(Consolidated Features—WNU Service.)
NEW YORK.—Whether Benedict
Crowell is a good prophet or
not may yet be revealed. Mr. Crow
ell, assistant secretary of war In
- . - the World
Experiences of war> has been
CrowellGrooved named spe
Into Present Job cial consult
ant on de
i fense, by Secretary Stimson. Ad
dressing the Institute of Public Af
fairs at the University of Virginia,
July 11, 1931, Mr. Crowell said:
"Should a great war ever
again engulf our country, Amer
ican manufacturers, including
the new industrialism of the
South, as well as the older in
dustrlalisms of the North and
East, without waste of time, ma
terial or priceless human lives,
will perform their essential func
tion of munitions supply . , . our
national security Is on a sound
foundation."
Mr. Crowell, who was a consult
ing engineer before he became a
Cleveland banker and industrialist,
is a brigadier general in the ord
nance reserve. His specialty, as as
sistant secretary of war, was in or
ganizing our munitions industries
for the war effort.
He was widely praised for his
efficiency in this and gained
fame as the most ruthless cutter
of red-tape in the army high
command. This may have some
thing to do with his selection as
defense consultant at this mo
ment. Yale university, his alma
mater, recognized the above
service by giving him an hono
rary master of arts degree in
1918.
A native of Cleveland, 71 years
old, Mr. Crowell began his business
career as a chemist with the Otis
Steel company. He rose in execu
tive positions and at the same time
gained technical qualifications which
made him a metallurgist and com
suiting engineer.
He is the author of several
books, Including a six-volume se
ries called “America Went to
War," of which Robert Forrest
Wilson was co-author. One of
these volumes is entitled "The
Armies of Industry," singularly
pertinent to problems and back
grounds of our present national
endeavor.
Reporters, interviewing Mr. Crow
ell in the old days, frequently used
to note his resemblance to ruby Bob
Fitzsimmons, and deduce, from this
his capacity for hitting and staying
power.
¥N HIS novel, ‘‘Le Couple," pub
* lished in 1925, Victor Marguer
ritte, the French writer, foresaw
the disaster which was to overtake
French Prophet ££* £
Of Doom Accepts debacle quite
Conquest Foret oldac c ur3‘e 1 y.
but put the
date at 1943 instead of 1940. Today,
the author accepts the conquest,
which he tragically described and
makes common cause wit! t' o con
querors. He denounces G* al De
Gaulle and his followers as the hire
lings of England.
In present and future clinical re
search into the fall of France and
its causes, M. Marguerritte’s lament
and prophecy, as of 1925, will be
interesting. After describing the al
liance of French politicians with
"Prussian and Bavarian junkers,”
and the subsequent collapse and
conquest, he says:
"And then we shall be reap
ing what we have sown. It will
be the result of our policy of at
tempting the semblance of gran
deur—stupid because it is not
warranted by our power, nor by
our national wealth, nor by our
trickling birth-rate, nor by our |
exhausted finances.”
Years of self-indulgence, mad
pleasure-seeking, the softening
of moral fiber and the ebbing of
national vitality, he said, would
precede the final destruction of
the French nation. The League
of Nations, he predicted, would
be a ghastly failure.
M. Marguerritte is the son of a
famous French general of the :
Franco-Prussian war. In his study
were medals and memorials of his
father’s war service. He is a stal
wart man, tall and straight with
abundant pompadoured hair and a
Van Dyke beard.
He was a member of the Legion
of Honor and honorary president of
the French Society of Men of Let
ters. Poincare, no defeatist, had
urged his Legion of Honor decora- '
i tion. This and all his other honors
were stripped from him when he
! published an offending book, “La j
Garconne.”
He had been for 10 years an offi
cer in the French army. In his
books, which he continued to write
during his army service, he cham
pioned virile French nationalism.
I Now, at 73, he watched France
| “reaD what she has sown,”
H0JP° SEW
4*'" Ruth Wyeth Spears cJ^
'T'HERE were two of these old
bent-wood chairs — both with
cane seats gone and a t badly
scarred varnish finish. “Get them
out cf my sight!’’ their owner
said, “I can’t stand the thought of
wood bent and forced into unnat
ural curves.” In the end she did
get them out of sight and used
them too. The trick was done
with slip covers made, as shown
here.
The one you see in the sketch
became a side chair for the living
room dressed in richly colored
cretonne in soft red and blue
green tones with deep wine bind
ings. The legs of the chair were
sandpapered and stained mahoga
ny to tone in with the cover. The
cane seat was inexpensively re
paired with a ready made seat of
plywood reshaped to fit by first
cutting a paper pattern to fit the
seat of the chair and then using
the pattern as a guide as indi
Strange Facts
1 Sun, Moon Eclipses 1
Luminous Frog
* Foreign Invasion
C. Although there are fewer lunar
than solar eclipses, more people
have observed the former, for an
eclipse of the sun lasts only a
few minutes and is visible from
only a narrow path on the earth's
surface. An eclipse of the moon
is longer in duration and may be
observed from more than half the
world.
--
C. A certain species of frog, after
a heavy meal of fireflies, may be
seen in the dark by the light of
these insects shining through the
walls of its stomach.
C. In England no stage play may
be presented until its dialogue has
been read and approved by the
lord chamberlain and no public
address may be made by the king
until it has been read and ap
proved by the British home office.
C. Custom officers on the Ameri
can-Canadian border insist upon
cattle staying on their own side of
the frontier, even when their own
er’s pasture lies in both countries.
When cattle are suspected of hav
ing strayed into the “foreign” part
of the farm, their tails are doused
in a solution of washing soda. If
they are Canadian animals, the
tails, having been treated with a
chemical, turn a bright red.—Col
lier’s.
cated here. Next week I will show
you how the other one of these
old chairs was used.
* * •
NOTE: As a service to our readers. 160
of these articles have been printed In five
separate booklets. No. 5 contains 30 illus
trations with directions, also a description
of the other booklets. To get your copy
of Book S, send order to:
MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS
Drawer 10
Bedford Hills New York
Enclose 10 cents for Book 5.
Name .
Address .
Uncle Phil
To Be Cut by Strangers
After a while friends get tired of
handling temperamental persons
“with gloves,” and leave them to
their “cruel” fate.
Men who like to hold office are
particularly susceptible to swelled
head. It is their affliction.
The age of discretion is when
you don’t want anything that
might get you into trouble.
Are We Not Easy-Going?
Here in America men can waste
millions of other people’s money
without going to jail.
Make yourself like people and
you won’t say rude and bitter
things to them.
ASK ME O A Quiz With Answers
_ _rrvn r Offering Information
ANOTHER I on Various Subjects
- - - A ---
The Questions
1. What city is thought to be
the oldest in the world that is still
inhabited?
2. What American statesman
was known as “the Great Pacifi
cator”?
3. Buonarotti is the surname of
what great Italian artist?
4. What is meant by the French
phrase “Je suis pret”?
5. With what is the science of
metrology concerned — weather,
rocks and their formation, or
weights and measures?
6. What is an eon?
7. What is meant by the Penta
teuch?
8. Which of these colors has
the highest light-reflecting quality:
canary yellow, silver gray or
white?
9. Who were Aramis, Porthos
and Athos?
10. In speaking of a woman in
charge of a post office, which is
the correct title to use, “postmis
tress” or “postmaster”?
The Answers
1. Damascus.
2. Henry Clay was known as the
Great Pacificator.”
3. Michelangelo.
4. I am ready.
5. Weights and measures.
Type-Slips
“The bride was accompanied
by tight bridesmaids.”
“The motor-car in which they
were escaping collided with an
other car two blocks away.”
“Lost, a fountain-pen by a
man half full of ink.”
“Boy wanted to deliver parcels that
can ride a bicycle and help in shop."
“The game warden’s office
has given orders to pick up all
dog-owners if they are caught
running at large without muz
zles.”
“He had been under the doctor's
car for two years, suffering from a
nervous breakdown."
6. An immeasurable period of
time.
7. The first five books of the Old
Testament.
8. White.
9. The Three Musketeers in Du
mas’ novel “The Three Musket
eers.”
10. Either is correct, but “post
mistress” is not official. The post
office department recognizes only
one title—postmaster.
Maybe So!
Hokum—Why is it that the eagle, the
bison and the Indian are shown on our
coins, although they are all practically
extinct?
Jokum—l suppose it it to carry out
the idea of scarcity.
Histories Is Right
Brown (after night out)—When
I arrived home last night my wife
was awake and promptly went off
into histories.
Jones—You mean hysterics.
“No, histories. She dug up my
past.”
Links and Links
Dzudi — Dinocan calls his girl the
"Queen of the Links.”
Palmetto—Ah; so she’s a golfer, 1
presume.
Dzudi—No—far from it. She sells
hotdogs at a roadside stand.
Lovers never understand each
other. That’s why they get mar
ried.
The Low-Down
Sting—I fell off a 32-foot ladder
yesterday.
Bingo—How did it happen that
you were not killed?
Stingo—I only fell off the third
step.
The Movies
“Why have you broken your en
gagement with Jack?”
“He told me he \vas connected
with the movies.”
“Well, and wasn’t he?”
“The next day I saw him driv
ing a furniture van.”
BEAUTY SCHOOL
Enroll Now. Nebraska's Oldest School.
Individual instruction, graduates placed in
good paying positions. Write Kathryn Wil
son, manager, for FREE BOOKLET. Call*
fornia Beauty School, Omaha, Nebr.
Live Stock Commission
BYERS BROS & CO.
A Real Live Stock Com. Firm
At the Omaha Market
FEED GRINDERS
FEED GRINDERS—Big capacity. Low
price. Pays for itself in just a few hours.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
MILLER MFG. CO., Stratton, Nebraika.
Cost of War
America’s generosity toward its
veterans may be gauged by a re
cent analysis of the costs of the
Revolution, War of 1812, Mexican,
Civil and Spanish-American wars.
It shows that for every $100 spent
during these wars, $160 was later
expended for pensions and medi
cal care. The study excludes the
World war, the final cost of which
cannot be estimated for years.—
Collier’s.
Mom I Keep
O-Cedar Polish handy . . . for
dusting, cleaning, polishing
Keep genuine O-Cedar Polish handy .. „
then when sudden guests come, when the
dub meets, or when it’s the usual time to
dean and polish, you can do both easily,
speedily (with O-Cedar Polish and the
mop) and you leave behind a soft, silken
O-Cedar lustre that’s lovelier. Ask always
for O-Cedar Polish (AND the O-Cedar
MOP... it is big and thick and fluffy).
0'€dap
POLISH
MOPS, WAX, DUSTERS, CLEANERS ANO
PLY AND MOTH SPRAY
Force of Habit
Great is the force of habit; it
teaches us to bear labor and to
scorn injury and pain.—Cicero.
OUTSTANDING BLADE VALUr
10 for 10 Cents
COP PLUS CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.
Suspicion’s Tongue
See what a ready tongue suspi
cion hath!—Shakespeare.
{**Sfl* J
Copyright. 1940,R.J Reynold!lob.Cog
Wlniton-Belem. N. C.
fin* roll-your-own ciga
rettes In every handy
pocket tin of Prince Albert
"SCORES EYERy T/ME FOR
/tm
m/mm
ROU-yOOR-OHWSMOKES/"
Carl Rinker and Tracy Powell talk
Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco
Rollin' along with P. A. I Juanita Sikes
knows what the boys are talking about—
she, too, has a nose for good tobacco—the
kind the boys are smoking and praising.
“Prince Albert’s goodness,' says Carl
Rinker (right), “comes through without
harshness. It’s prime, fully aged tobacco.”
“Yes, sir, there’s no other tobacco like
Prince Albert,” adds Tracy Powell (cen
ter). “ It’s the National Joy Smokel” (So
say pipe-smokers, too!)
In recent laboratory “smoking
bowl” tests, Prince Albert burned
60 C00ZER
than the average of the 30 other of the
largest-selling brands tested...coolest of all I