^--—lu+ Jdytui. GhamLeM -- Welcome at a Housewarming—Honey Twist Rolls (See Recipes Below) Housewarming Time Soft, sweet, crusty rolls, a fruity coffee cake, a plate of cookies. tempting sand wiches in cres cent, diamond, circle or heart shapes, coffee, tea or cider from which to choose your drink—these form the basis of the refreshments for a housewarming. The event isn't lavish, it's simple, sincere and warm with friendliness for you’ve gathered to greet your friends in their new home. Whether you’ve planned the housewarming as a surprise to the family in their new home, or wheth er you’re inviting friends to an "at home” in your own home, keep ev erything as simple as possible. If you have many coming, ask some earlier and others later so the house THIS WEEK’S MENU •Assorted Sandwiches •Sweet Bow Knot Rolls •Honey Twists Frosted Cup Cakes •Fruited Coffee Cake Cookies Coffee Cider Tea will never be too crowded. No en tertainment need be planned for ev eryone will want to inspect the house or apartment and have a light snack before leaving perhaps. Clever invitations can be sent out by using a miniature plan of the house, a rough drawing or silhou ette of the house and writing the in vitation inside or out as it best fits. All refreshments can be placed on a table set simply with a plain cloth and attractive flowers. Teen age girls will enjoy helping at the table pouring coffee or tea and help ing fill the trays of rolls and sand wiches as they’re used. Hot rolls with the smell of the oven still on them will spell a grand welcome, especially when your guests come in from frost nipped outdoors: •Sweet Bow Knot Rolls. (Makes 2Vi dozen) 1 cup milk V* cup butter Vi cup sugar 1 teaspoon salt 2 cakes compressed yeast Vi cup lukewarm water 2 eggs 4Vi cups sifted flour (about) Scald milk and pour over butter, sugar and salt. Crumble yeast into water to soften. Cool milk to luke warm, add yeast, beaten eggs and 2 cups flour. Beat well. Add enough flour to make a soft dough. Turn out on a floured board and knead until smooth. Form into a ball and place in a greased bowl. Cover and let rise until double in bulk. When light, knead down and shape into long strands. 6 inches long. Vi inch in diameter. Tie these strands into a single looped knot. Place on greased baking sheet and let rise until doubled. Bake in a moderate WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON (Consolidated Feature*—WNU Service.! KJEW YORK.—People who send ^ questions to radio quiz pro grams have been missing a chance to collect on “Who is the president China’s President China?” The usual Revered as Fount answer, as Of Ancient Wisdom "V'qu^ tion, is Chiang Kai-shek—the gen eralissimo and not the president Lin Sen, serene and venerated pa triarch, has been president of China for 10 years. He could be called doctor, and he has many honorary titles, but he likes to be called Mr. Lin Sen. Just now, he is casually and obscurely In the news, with word of powerful generals making pilgrimages to his peaceful retreat, not to talk war, but to visit him as they might a priest or physician. He is a benign old gentleman, bespectacled, with a snow-white goatee, a scholar and an artist, wise and humorous and, above all, serene. He Is one of the most famous chlrographcrs of China and, so that he may quiet ly practice his art, he made a studio in a ruined garrison, with walls 10 feet thick. There, on bamboo paper, faced with silk, he copies the classics in swift, beautiful brush strokes, school ing himself in their wisdom. Sun Fo, president of the executive yuan, takes care of the merely temporal and practical details of the presidency. Mr. Lin Sen Is free to practice wisdom and virtue and impart It to his peo ple In beautiful characters. Mr. Lin Sen was a missionary stu dent in San Francisco’s Chinatown, studied western civilization diligent ly and, returning to China, preached a careful distinction between a civi lization and a culture. He said Chi nn must be modernized, and Joined Dr. Sun Yat Sen, to that end, but Insisted that China would lose its soul if it took only guns and ma chines from the west—that force alone always failed, even when it seemed to be triumphant. He main tained that true morality would in the end prevail even over bombs and bullets. But the latter, he be lieved, were all right in their place and In 1931 he became president, as the advocate of vigorous resistance against the Japanese aggression. His gods have generously answered for him an ancient Chinese prayer: “May your writing wrist be as lim ber as a willow-wythe.” JOSEPH B. EASTMAN used to be a social settlement worker in his young days. It has been apparent that in this he experienced a cer JoeB. Eastman a tain diaillu’ sionment as *Natural’ as New to the grand . D solution, for Transport Boss in his later years he has been a pragmatic lib eral and it is as such that he tackles one of the most important jobs of the war, as chairman of the new office of defense transportation. All he will have to do will be to gear all transport into a working unit, to keep things moving on railroads, air lines, truck lines, inland water ways, coastwise and inter-coastwise shipping lines and pipelines. It was a much simpler job when William G. McAdoo took it over in the first World war, with plane and motor transport negligible. Mr. ! Eastman, through his long service as chairman of the Interstate Com merce commission and as former co-ordinator of the railroads, has grown into it. Socially minded from his Am herst and Phi Beta Kappa days, he became a hard - working "good neighbor” at the South End house of Boston, then coun sel for the Boston Street Rail way employees and later a member of the Massachusetts Public Service commission. When W'oodrow Wilson named him to the ICC, he wrote a re gretful letter saying he would like to serve, but there was a bar sinister In his career—he was a Republican. Mr. Wilson laughed that off and Mr. East man has served under five Pres idents. Supreme Court Justice Brandels had recommended his original appointment. Railroad moguls like him personally and denounce his ideas. He threw a switch on the first Van Sweringen merger proposal in 1927, later on on L. F Loree’s proposed merger of the Katy and the Cotton Belt with his own Kansas City Southern, and in valuation, rate rise cases, receive.-hips, recaptures, mergers and the like he has been sharply at odds with the rail barons and definitely aligned with the drive toward firmer governmental control. Senate Progressives got themselves into a great lather in 1929, prepar ing to fight and die for their demand that he be reappointed But Presi dent Hoover fooled them by doing just ihat. NATIONAL AFFAIRS RtvitweJ fey CARTER FIELD Russia’s Attitude Toward Japan Has Strong Influence on War’s Trend . . . Navy Long Expected to Fight Japs. (Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) WASHINGTON —If there were a ! unified high command over the forces of the democracy right now there is little doubt what would be the first step. Russian bombers would be rushed to attack Japan, where they would seek out her oil stores—all above ground since the 1923 earthquake — her munition plants, her harbors and, later on, j her warships, transports, supply ships and tankers. This would be done because Rus sia has enough air power in east ern Siberia, in the opinion of mili tary experts here, to crush Japan. This would stop the Nipponese in their tracks not only in Malaya, the Philippines and the Netherlands In dies, but also in China. The Russians still have that great air force in the Far East for the simple reason that, badly as they have needed it, especially in the early stages of the German invasion of European Russia, the Soviet did not trust Japan. They feared an attack in the back despite their fairly recent treaty of amity with the little brown brothers, for the lit tle brown brothers have no more re gard for the sanctity of treaties than Adolf Hitler has. No one, of course, knew Just where Japan was going to strike. For Japan is known, and has been known for years, to aspire to domi nation of Asia, all the way to Suez, and of all the Pacific islands, includ ing Australia. In fact the Japanese have rather flaunted their aspira tions. They have not concealed their desire to take over control of terri tory which now is vested in the So viet, China, Britain, France, the United States, Holland, and various independent or partially independ ent states. Moreover, despite Japan’s all-out attack on the British and the United States forces and holdings in the Far East, she did not withdraw her large armies from the Siberian bor der. On the contrary she kept them poised there, ready for an instant blow the moment Russia was so hard pressed in the West that she would be compelled to weaken her forces in the Far East. —Buy Defense Bonds— Russia and Britain Play Same Came Russia, however, played the game which the British played in Septem ber, 1940, and thereby probably pre vented a complete German victory at that time. Britain took it in bombing, but never risked ALL of her air force at one time. So Goer ing never achieved the complete knockout of the British air force, which would have made the island of Britain another Flanders. Russia similarly took the pound ing in the West, which seemed to the world to be threatening Lenin grad, Moscow and Sevastopol, but never risked eastern Siberia! When the hour arrived for the Japanese attack, the Japs thought Hitler had won complete victory in European Russia. They had been told that Moscow would fall in a few days. That is what the rest of the world expected up to a short time before the news of the Jap attack on Pearl Harbor, the Philippines, and Hong Kong. It is what every one, including the Japanese, thought when the attacking forces left Ja pan. But the attack did not include Si beria! Why? Because the Japanese knew through their own intelligence service that Russians had NOT weakened their forces in eastern Si beria. They knew an attack on Si beria would mean an air attack by the Russians on Japan. And they knew they could not take it. Stalin knows it too. He couldn’t help but know it. So it will be in teresting to watch developments. —Buy Defense Bonds— Navy Long Expected War With Japs Ever since 1904, or since the Russo-Japanese war, most of our own naval officers, and officers of the British navy as well, have fig I ured that sooner or later the United States and Japan would have a war. Since the Washington arms confer ence, in the winter of 1921-1922, our own and the British naval officers have been unanimous in their con viction that sooner or later this war between Nippon and Uncle Sam would come. The writer was at Pearl Harbor in 1925, and was attacked, along with correspondents of the Now York Times and the Chicago Trib i une. for not informing the Ameri can public about the spying which the Japanese had done on our na val maneuvers, just then completed. The attack was made by Admiral Coontz, referee in the war game, in the presence of some 20 junior of ficers I Your 1942 Income Tax Guide deductions YES ■ TAXES ON FARM PROPERTY z INSURANCE ON FARM AND FARM NUILOINSS NO 1 COST Of CROPS RAISED AND USED FOR FEED 2 COST Of AUTOMOBILE OR TRUCK IJ OW much income tax will you -* pay for 1941? For everyone, new and long-accustomed taxpay ers, that’s a question to answer now—long before March 15, filing date. If you are single and mak ing $15 a week you will have to file a return, and you may pay a tax. You must file and you may pay, Greatest Sabotage The most gigantic sacrificial sabotage in world history was the destruction of Russia’s Dnieper river dam by the Red army last August, says Collier’s. This great hydroelectric project, which was completed in 1932, required five years to build and cost $500, 000,000. too, if you are married and mak ing over $1,500 a year. • • • How much should you rightfully pay? Our 32-page booklet clearly explains the Ins and outs of Income tax payments for single, married, business men. farmers, tells what you may and may not deduct. Has simplified Income tax table. Send your order to: READER-HOME SERVICE 635 Sixth Avenue New York City Enclose 10 cents in coin for your copy of YOUR 1942 INCOME TAX GUIDE. Name... Address.%. Wftl tV ABU FRIDAY JANUARY 16 COMING STAG! 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