The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 16, 1941, Image 6

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    =04} Chamb&iA^z.
NEW DESIGNS FOR YOUR COOKIE JAR
(See Recipes Below.)
COOKIE SURPRISES
All crisp, crunchy, and some
slightly nutty, all of today's recipes
are so iasmonea
as to send you on
a real cookie-bak
ing spree. Fill
that lovely cookie
Jar of yours until
the sides are fair
k ly bulging with
goodies so you
can have cookies a-plenty to put in
the children's lunch boxes, to serve
as afternoon snacks, and as a pick
up for mealtime.
If you’re doing some baking for a
bazaar, there’s nothing quite like
plates of yummy cookies to put over
the sales. Remember, you can sell
a lot more, if you give out some
samples. These can be set on plates
with white paper doilies, for sam
pling, and those to be sold put in
boxes already fixed. Cookies can
be sold by the dozen if they’re fancy
and somewhat elaborate, by the
pound if they’re small drop cookies
or squares.
Here's an interesting variation of
the filled cookie, both dainty and de
lectable:
Corn Flake Filled Cookies.
(Makes 36 medium-sized cookies)
1 cup shortening
1 cup brown sugar
3% cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
V« teaspoon salt
Vi cup water
V4 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups cornflakes
Blend shortening and sugar thor
oughly. Sift flour, baking powder
and salt together and add alternate
ly with water and flavoring to first
mixture. Stir in coarsely rolled com
flakes. Chill. Roll dough to Vi inch
thickness. Cut with cookie cutter.
Spread one round with filling, put on
> a second round and press edges to
gether with a fork. Bake on a
greased baking sheet in a hot (425
degrees) oven about 12 minutes.
Filling.
lVi cups chopped dates
Vi cup sugar
2 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons orange juice
1 tablespoon orange rind
Combine all ingredients together
and cook until soft paste is formed.
Cool before filling cookies.
These little butter balls make good
nibbling and smart additions to your
teatime table. Made with butter,
their flavor will be something you’ll
long cherish and remember.
'Butter Balls.
(Makes 7 dozen small cookies)
Vi cup butter
1 cup brown sugar
1 egg
2 cups sifted flour
Vi teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
Vi cup granulated sugar
Vi cup finely chopped -iuts
Cream brown sugar and shorten
ing. Add beaten eggs and vanilla.
Add Hour and
baking powder.
Roll into balls the
size of marbles.
Mix the granulat
ed sugar and nuts
and roll the balls I
in the mixture.
Place on a
greased baking sheet and bake in a
hot (400 degrees) oven 10 minutes.
These cookies will flatten slightly.
LYNN SAYS:
An assortment of cookies,
freshly baked and packed in tins
with waxed paper between layers
makes a delightful present for
•r* youngsters away at school and
for friends you seldom see. When
your own cookie jar has been
filled to bulging, pack a few boxes
from what you have and spread
cheer to others, too.
Careful packing in tins with
waxed paper will keep even small
dainty cookies fresh for a long
time. Some flavors like choco
late improve after they stand for
some time. Chewy, nutty cookies
are the more chewy and deli
cious after several days. Spicy
cookies become moist and well
flavored after standing.
THIS WEEK’S MENU
•Meat-Macaroni Casserole
Jellied Cole Slaw Salad
Watermelon Pickles
Hot Rolls Spiced Pears
Baked Apple ’Butter Balls
Beverage
•Recipe Given
Your cookie Jar problem can be
solved very neatly with toothsome
oatmeal cookies with flecks of choco
late in them:
Oatmeal Cookies.
(Makes 4 dozen)
% cup butter or shortening
1 cup brown sugar
Grated rind of 1 orange
1 egg, unbeaten
1 teaspoon vanilla
Y« teaspoon salt
% cup sifted flour
1V4 cups fine rolled oats
7 ounces chocolate pieces
Cream butter and sugar. Add or
ange rind, egg, vanilla and beat
well. Add salt and flour which has
been mixed with the oats. Add
chocolate pieces and work into bat
ter. Drop by spoonfuls on greased
cookie sheet. Bake 15 to 20 minutes
in a moderate (375 degrees) oven.
Recommendations are in for the
old favorites of which you never
tire. If you want
to make a pretty
and at the same
time, a very suc
cessful platter,
you might try al
ternate rows of
both these Gin
ger Cookies and
Brownies:
Soft Ginger Cookies.
(Makes 5 dozen)
1 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
1 egg
% cup molasses
% cup evaporated milk
3 cups flour
2 teaspoons soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon each, ginger, cinnamon
Cream sugar and shortening, add
egg and molasses. Beat well, add
milk and blend well. Mix dry ingre
dients and add to batter. Last add
soda, dissolved in 2 tablespoons
warm water. Drop by spoonfuls on
greased baking sheet. Bake 15 min
utes in a hot (375 degrees) oven.
Brownies.
(Makes 2 dozen)
% cup butter or shortening
1 cup sugar
2 eggs, well beaten
2 squares unsweetened chocolate,
melted
% cup flour
hb teaspoon baking powder
V4 cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon vanilla
Beat eggs and sugar together. Add
to this melted butter and chocolate
and blend. Add flour, baking pow
der, nuts, and beat well. Pour into
a greased pan and bake 30 minutes
in a 350-degree oven. Cool and cut
in squares.
For a delicious variation of the
brownie recipe, you’ll like the addi
tion of % cups of bran cereal in
place of the chopped nutmeats.
They’ll give you a slightly different
flavored cookie, but guaranteed to
please you, just as welL
•Meat-Macaroni Casserole.
1 package macaroni
V» cup salad oil
1 pound hamburger
1 dry onion, minced
1 green pepper, minced
1 clove garlic, if desired *
1 can tomato soup
2 cups peas
2 cups com
Salt and pepper
Cook the macaroni in plenty of
boiling salted water and when ten
der, put in a sieve and rinse with
cold water. Meanwhile fry the ham
burger in the heated oil, stirring it
occasionally to separate it Skim
out the meat and in the same fat
cook onion, pepper and garlic till
tender, but not browned. Garlic
may be omitted entirely, and it is
usually removed after the onion and
pepper are cooked. Combine all in
gredients and simmer 20 to 30 min
utes to heat thoroughly and blend
flavors, then serve.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
(Consolidated Features—WNU Service.)
NEW YORK.—It has been only in
the last year or two that this
country began to realize that the
Germans had done a vast amount
. . «s/ ot research
Blueprinting Wayt and organi.
And Meant of the zationwork,
u • it over many
Dictatort Hit Job yearii ln
preparing for their world aggres
sion. Devising ways and means to
meet it on many fronts, military and
political, our government belatedly
discovers Dr. Calvin Bryce Hoover,
dean of Duke university, who was
away out in front in studying dicta
torships, trying to understand them
and find out what to do about them.
Dr. Hoover is an important mem
ber of Col. William J. ("Wild BUI”)
Donovan’s new diplomatic brain
trust, which recruits men of spe
cialized knowledge who have dis
closed a timely awareness of the
more or less declared war against
civilization.
Colonel Donovan’s title of co
ordinator of Information does
not reveal the exciting charac
ter of his bureau which is In
reality a somewhat mysterious
Ideological and political Scot
land Yard, studying the origins
and techniques of Nasi power,
evolving plans to meet It in Its
under-surface penetration every
where In the world, recruiting
against the dictators some of the
same psychological forces which
they employed.
So far as the public record shows.
Dr. Hoover scored a clean beat on
our lavishly staffed state depart
ment in trying to understand dicta
torships and to make an accurate
appraisal of their intentions and pos
sible outreach. It was in 1931 that
he wrote “The Economic Life of
Soviet Russia”; in 1933, “Germany
Enters the Third Reich”; and in
1937, “Dictators and Democracies.”
Through the pre-war years of plan
etary complacency, he was writing,
In his books and articles, an out
line of Adolf Hitler as “genius and
fanatic.”
These studies were not phillipics
against Naziism. They were search
ing and studious inquiries into the
origins and inducements of dictator
ships. They now provide invaluable
analyses of the Nazi cultural, eco
nomic, military formula for world
conquest.
Dr. Hoover, born in Berwick,
111., in 1897, was conditioned to
patient, methodical work by
working on farms and railroads
in his youth. He attended Mon
mouth college and received his
Ph.D. degree at Wisconsin uni
versity in 1925. When he was an
undergraduate at the former
school, he Joined the National
Guard and served two years
in France in the World war, tak
ing part In two battles. He
joined the Duke university facul
ty in 1925, becoming a full pro
fessor of economics in 1930.
In the above clinical studies, Dr.
Hoover does not find dictatorships
blue-printed in any patterns of so
cietal evolution. They can be fended
off if we're “up and at ’em” without
losing too much time—but, above
all, they must first be understood.
CALEB S. BRAGG, manufacturer
of the new plastics-and-mahog
any airplane, which meets success
ful tests at Roosevelt field, was the
_ _ _ . matinee idol
Once Cut Recotd$ early-day
In Airplanes, Now auto racing
Cuts Cost of 'Em aUonndAahVnad:
some chap, rich, venturesome and a
Yale man. In 1912, he won the Fourth
International Grand Prix automo
bile race, and was awarded the Van
derbilt cup, by covering 409 miles at
69.3 miles per hour. In that day, a
mile a minute had been put down as
the limit of safety for automobiles.
Newspapers threw a fit over
Mr. Bragg passing this dead
line and living to tell the tale.
Time flivvers on. In 1918 he left
the country breathless by flying
from Dayton to Washington, 430
miles, in 2 hours and 50 minutes.
In 1919 he set a new altitude
record of 20,000 feet for sea
planes.
He was born in Cincinnati in 1886,
the son of a manufacturer and busi
nessman, and was graduated from
Yale in 1908.
He is a former head of the Early
I Birds, an organization of aviators
j who flew before 1916. At one time he
; beat Barney Oldfield in a race in
! California. He had the crowds
whooping for him whenever he en
tered a race. In 1920 he helped
finance the Glenn L. Martin com
pany and moved into less exciting
but no less exacting details of sci
entific plane-building He and many
engineers think he has pioneered
new strength and economy ill air
plane construction with his soybean
job—or whatever it is.
I
SWEET POTATO
HARVEST TIME
Growers Cheat ‘Jack Frost’
By Digging Quickly.
« ~
By LEWIS F. WATSON
(Extension Horticulturist.
N. C. State College.)
Shortening days and cooler nights
herald the arrival of fall and har
vest time for sweet potatoes, one
staple in the diet of many farm
people.
Potatoes keep best when they are
allowed to mature before harvesting
and before frost kills the vines. If
the vines are killed by frost, they
should be removed immediately
and the potatoes dug soon.
Use a vine cutter, attached to the
beam of the plow, when vines are
not removed before harvest. This
attachment should be constructed so
as to prevent the blade which cuts
the vine from going deep enough to
injure the potato.
One of the most important rules
at harvest time is not to bruise the
potatoes. They should not be
thrown from one row to another.
Three rows can easily be placed
together without throwing the pota
toes. Bruised yams rot easily
in storage, and dark spots caused
by rough handling lower the market
value of the crop.
As the potatoes are removed from
the soil and piled in the heap row,
they should be graded carefully. All
cut or broken yams should be piled
separately from the No. Is and fed
to stock as soon as possible.
For curing and storing, a regular
storage crate has many advantages
over the bushel tub. Besides con
serving room, the crate allows a bet
ter circulation of air.
Potatoes should be stored and
cured in a thoroughly cleaned and
dry house immediately after har
vesting. Proper temperature and
moisture conditions are essential
factors in keeping the crop.
I AGRICULTURE |
IN INDUSTRY |
By Florence C. Weed
(This is one of a series of articles show
fng how farm products are Boding an im
portant market in industry.)
CASTOR BEANS
To make American industry less
dependent upon foreign products,
castor bean growing is being revived
to supply a fast-drying oil for paints
and enamels. It is found to be
a good substitute for tung oil, a
product of China which has been
extensively used in the paint indus
try. Since the Japanese invasion,
this foreign oil is both costly and
difficult to get and the domestic sup
ply is not being produced in large
quantities.
Castor bean growing is not new
to this country for it thrived in a
half dozen states around 1850 when
23 oil mills were operating, most of
them located around St. Louis.
After the Civil war, production in
creased until Kansas glutted the
market with a boom crop of 766,113
bushels in 1879. Prices fell and in
terest in the castor bean declined.
Last year test plots were grown
in 33 states from coast to coast, in
the South and as far north as New
York. New seed was imported from
Java, Brazil and India by the Na
tional Farm Chemurgic council in
an efTort to find a new market for
the farmer. It included shatter
resistant varieties which do not re
quire a prohibitive amount of hand
labor, since they are less likely to
eject their seeds as they start to
ripen, and can be harvested in two
or three operations.
One of the first commercial uses
of castor oil is in lacquer for lining
cans in which food is preserved.
By treating it with sulphuric acid,
an oil is obtained which is used for
softening textiles. It is also used
In the manufacture of soap, aniline
inks, and non-brittle tire cement.
—
Milk cows on farms in the U. S.
increased nearly three per cent be
tween 1940 and 1941.
• • •
One hen normally will eat about
80 pounds of feed a year, of which
approximately one-half should be
mash and one-half grain, in order
to obtain best results.
• * •
An inexpensive and efficient ho
mogenizing machine for small dai
ries, operated by a quarter-horse
power motor and weighing only 137
pounds, is now on the market.
• • •
The 1041 United States lamb crop
probably is the largest on record.
• * •
The 1941 U. S. hay crop of 9C,
000,000 tons is expected to be the
largest harvested since 1927 and the
third largest produced in the last
30 years.
• * *
July 1 estimates on corn in the
United States indicate a harvest of
2,548,709,000 bushels, which will be
4 per cent more than the 1940 crop
and 10 per cent above the average
crop in the period 1930-39.
'T'HE seasons’ fruit, crocheted in
* gay shades of gimp, will add
that attractive note to your kitchen
as shade pulls, tie-backs and
other decorations. Grand for ba
zaars!
Pattern 2921 contains directions for mak
ing accessories; illustrations of them and
stitches: materials required. Send your
order to:
Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept.
82 Eighth Ave. New York
Enclose 13 cents In coins for Pat
tern No.
Name...
Address...
Rather Far-Fetched
Was This Relationship
“You say, madam,” said the
barrister to the woman in the wit
ness box, “that the defendant is a
sort of relation of yours. Will you
explain what you mean by that—
just how you are related to the
defendant?”
“Well, it’s like this. His first
wife’s cousin and my second hus
band’s first wife’s aunt married
brothers named Jones, and they
were own cousins to my mother’s
own aunt. Then, again, his grand
father’s on my mother’s side, were
second cousins, and his step
mother married my husband’s
■tepfather, and his brother Joe
and my husband’s brother, Henry,
married twin sisters. I’ve al
ways looked on him as a sort of
cousin.”
BEAUTY SCHOOL
Enroll Now. Nebraska's Oldest School.
Individual instruction, graduates placed In
good paying positions. Write Kathryn Wil
son, manager, for FREE BOOKLET. Cali
fornia Beauty School, Omaha, Nebr,
Live Stock Commission
BYERS BROS & CO.
A Real Live Stock Com. Firm
At the Omaha Market
Worst Sorrows
The worst sorrows in life are
not in its losses and misfortunes,
but its fears.—A. C. Benson.
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
Creomulsion relieves promptly be
cause It goes right to the seat at the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in
flamed bronchial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
For Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
(-;-n
Got a razor for me...silverware
Iformywife...withthefreeB&W |
coupons on Raleigh cigarettes I
A FEW OF THE MANY LUXURY PREMIUMS
RALEIGH SMOKERS GET
Dart Game. Double faced.
Cork composition. 5
darts.150 coupons.
Glassware. Platinum
bands. Shaker: 150. Pitch
er: 100. Ice bovrl: lOOcoup.
Oneida Community Par
Plate Silverware. Pitcher:
000.17V4'Tray: 475 coup. I
Cigarette Cases. English
tan, or black pinseal grain
leather. . . 125 coupons.
Walnut Serving Tray with
colorful inlay. 13«' x 19*.
Beverage-proof. 225 cps.
Fro* catalog. Brown A
Williamson Tobacco Corp,,
Box 599, Louisville, Ky.
B & W coupons good in U. S. A. only. Also pacicea witn
KGDL Cigarettes and Big Ben Smoking Tobacco |
PLAIN OR CORK TIPS
tOHUH” College Humor” every Tues
day night, over NBC Red Network.
HERE'S WHAT YOU DO
It’s simple. It’s fun. Just think up
alast lino to this jingle. Make sure
it rhymes with tho word “puff."
Write your last lino of the
jingle on the reverse side cf a
Raleigh paekago wrapper (or a
facsimile thereof), sign it with
your full name and address, and
mail it to Brown & Williamson
Tobacco Corp., P. O. Box 180,
Louisville, Kentucky, post
marked not later than midnight,
October 20,1941.
You may enter as many last
lines as you wish, if they are all
written on separate Raleigh pack
age wrappers (or facsimiles).
Prises will be awarded on the
originality and aptness of the line you write.
Judges' decisions must be accepted as final.
In caso of ties, duplicate prises will bo
•warded. Winners will be notified by mail.
Anyone may enter (except employees of
Brown & Williamson Tobacoo Corp., their
advertising agents, or their families). All
entries and ideas therein become the prop
erty of Brown & Williamson Tobacco
Corporation.
HERE'S WHAT YOU WIN
You have 133 chances to win. If
you send in more than one entry,
your chances of winning will be
that much better. Don’t delay.
Start thinking right now.
First prize . . . $100.90 cash
Second prize . . . 50.C0 cash
Third prize. . . . 25.00 cash
5 prizes of $10.00 . 50.09 cash
25 prizes of $5.00 . 125.00 cash
100 prizes of a carton
of Raleighs . . . 150.00
133 PRIZES $500.00