The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 02, 1942, Image 2

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

    Uuf Jlyut CUamlt&M
Toasted Bunnies Parade for This Easter Dinner!
(See Recipes Below)
Easter Time
Aa gay aa red tulipa with food as
fresh and appealing as spring itself
la the Easter dinner menu I have
planned for you
today. It’s aimple
and economical
as is in keeping
with the times,
but with spring
like accents that
lurk in the fra
grant mint leaves,
spring lamb, green peas, crisp,
bright salad and in the distinctive
ice cream.
With Easter on the wing, winter
is definitely on the way out, and
our thoughts naturally turn to light
er foods and delicate, pastel table
settings. For Easter brings out your
loveliest white cloths or pastel yel
lows. As flowers jonquils make an
inexpensive but effective center
piece. Or, for something more dra
matic, try red tulips in the center of
the bowl banked on all sides by white
snapdragons.
•Leg of Lamb Roast.
The paper thin covering or "fell”
on your leg of lamb does not affect
the flavoring of the cut and need not
be removed until just before serv
ing. In fact, when left on, it keeps
the roast in better shape, cooks more
quickly and keeps the juices well
within the meat.
Mix V4 teaspoon salt, V« teaspoon
pepper, 1 tablespoon dry mustard.
3 tablespoons flour with tfe cup cold
water. Spread this over the leg of
lamb. Roast uncovered in a mod
erately slow (325-degree) oven 30 to
35 minutes to the pound. Spread
with currant jelly the last 20 min
utes. Baste m%at every 15 minutes.
Apricot Garnish.
Use canned halves of apricots
or stewed halves, well chilled. Place
a nugget of mint Jelly in the center
and serve around the leg of lamb
roast.
A touch of red is a hard color to
resist especially if it's in a crispy,
zestful salad as this one:
•Cranberry Apple Salad.
(Serves 6)
1 package lemon gelatin
1 enp boiling water
M of a pound can of cranberry
sauce
1 apple
H orange
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
Dissolve the gelatin in boiling wa
ter and chill until thickened. Crush
cranberry sauce.
Lynn Says:
The Easter dinner 1 planned for
you is economical but doubly so
because you can make good use
of the leftovers.
Cut the remainder of the roast
off the bone, grind it with a fine
grinder, H onion, the potatoes and
green peas. Place in a buttered
dish, bake until heated. During
the last seven minutes of baking
break eggs whole on top of lamb
mixture and serve as soon as
eggs have cooked.
If you have just a little of the
cranberry apple salad left, cut it
into small cubes and serve as a
relish. For salad, use leftover
apricots from the roast garnish
and fill the center with cream
cheese and nuts and serve in let
tuce cups with your favorite
dressing.
If you have a few leftover green
peas from dinner toss them to
gether with a few carrots, shred
ded for a change. You can cream
these, or mix them with a few
bits of crumbled bacon. For va
riation you might try a few tiny
boiled onions with the leftover
peas to make enough for a vege
table dish.
Rolls though leftover go over
well even the next day. You can
slice, toast and butter them. If
you like them whole, simply put
in a covered casserole with a few
drops of water and allow a few
minutes to heat through.
Dessert? This is easy Spoon
the ice cream on vanilla wafers,
top with another wafer, more ice
cream until all is used. Chill for
an hour or so and serve sliced
with a dab of whipped cream if
desired.
Easter Dinner
Fruit Cup with Mint Leaves
•Leg of Lamb Roast with
Apricot Garnish
•Creamed Potatoes Green Peas
•Cranberry Apple Salad
•Honey Rolls
•Almond Ice Cream with
Easter Bunnies
•Recipes Given
Grind apple and
orange, leaving
skins on. Com
bine cranberry
sauce with fruits
and lemon juice.
Add to gelatin.
Pour into molds
and chill until
Arm, or pour into a refrigerator
tray and cut in squares when ready
to serve. Serve on crisp lettuce
with creamy mayonnaise.
Crusty, fragrant honey rolls are
a gracious addition to your Easter
dinner. No need to worry about
food shortages when excellent rolls
such as this are minus sugar and
only a small amount of fat and one
egg. Rolled and cut to look like a
swirl, these Honey rolls may be
baked in buttered muffin tins, or
may be shaped into cloverleafs.
Have them hot or cold as you pre
fer, they’re good both ways.
*lloney Rolls,
1 cup milk
H cup honey
Vt cup fat
1 cake compressed yeast softened
in % cup lukewarm water
1H teaspoons salt
1 c**
4 cups flour
Scald milk, add fat and honey.
Add yeast, salt and 2 cups flour.
Then add beaten
egg and remain
der of flour to
form a soft dough.
Knead lightly un
til smooth. Let
rise twice, then
form into rolls.
Let rise until
light Bake in a hot (400-degree)
oven about 20 minutes.
•Creamed Potatoes.
Method I. Peel new potatoes and
wash thoroughly Cook them in boil
ing water for 10 minutes. Add
enough rich milk not quite enough
to cover, and finish cooking potatoes.
Be careful not to burn potatoes,
stirring often, or cook in double boil
er. Add salt, pepper and butter to
taste.
Method II. Boil new potatoes in
their jackets. Cool and peel. Melt
2 tablespoons butter, blend in 2 ta
blespoons flour, and add 1 cup of
milk. Cook slowly, stirring constant
ly. until thick. Add potatoes to this,
season, and heat through.
Easter dinner with the traditional
leg o' lamb, peas and mint jelly
touches demands a distinctive and
at the same time a harmoniously
flavored dessert. Almond flavoring
is perfect foil, guaranteed to please,
in this creamy, quickly prepared ice
cream No sugar required!
•Almond Ice Cream.
(Serve* 6)
H cup sweetened condensed milk
4 cup water
14 teaspoons almond extract
I cup whipping cream
H cup finely shredded almonds
Mix sweetened condensed milk,
water and almond flavoring Chill.
Whip cream to custard-like consist
1 ency and fold into chilled mixture.
Freeze in a freezing unit until half
J frozen. Scrape from tray and beat
until smooth but not melted. Add al
monds Replace in freezing unit un
til frozen.
For the Easter bunnies you may
use day-old sliced white bread. Cut
the bread with a bunny-shaped cook
ie cutter. Spread all sides of the
cutouts with sweetened condensed
milk, then roll in dry, shredded co
conut, broken fine. Brown under
broiler at low heat, watching very
carefully, or toast over coals if you
prefer by placing the bunnies on a
fork. These taste like coconut frost
ed angel food.
If you would like expert advice on
your cooking and household problems,
write to l.ynn Chambers. Western News
paper Union, 210 South Desplaines St.,
Chicago, III. Clease enclose a stamped,
self-addressed envelope for your reply.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union. 1
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
(Consolidated Features—WNU Service.I
VJEW YORK.—We have mislaid
the name of the philosopher
who said adult nations were "time
binders"—that they had an alert
sense of his
General Fought 4 toricity,
Wars ; Commanded looking stu
ffy 5 Presidents diotusly'
not pensive
ly, backward as well as forward.
Brig. Gen. William H. Bisbee, tak
ing a bow this day as the oldest
man in the new Who’s Who in Amer
ica, suggests this salutary exercise.
He was 102 last January 28. He
fought in four wars, and the story
of what he and his country have
been through gives a hint that per
haps somebody smuggled a rabbit’s
foot into that arcanum of the nation
al archives at Washington.
"Filthy days of war,” the genera)
once wrote, "walking through creeks
barelegged to save our tattered
clothes."
He enlisted In the Civil war
after Bull Run, when Washing
ton was somewhat less orderly
and rational than a squirrel
cage. He knew not only mud,
rags and tatters, but the stark
horrors of blood and hunger,
weariness and desperation, and
the maddening disorder of bu
reaucracy and graft in Washing
ton.
For 25 years, after 1865, he fought
Indians, along the trails out from
Leavenworth and pulled 100 arrows
from the body of his fallen friend
99 for torture and one for a vital
spot—an old Indian custom. In the
Pangasinian province in the Philip
pines, he trailed guerrillas through
jungle slime, and caught and hanged
30 of them. That rounded out his
four wars—Civil, Indian, Spanish
American and Philippine Insurrec
tion.
, In 1900 President Theodore Roose
velt made him a brigadier general,
and he retired the next year, to
coast along through serene and sun
ny years in his native New England,
at Brookline, Mass. He is a hand
some, white-bearded, soldierly old
gentleman, honored on each birth
day by a representation from the
war department at his party.
He was born and reared in
Woonsocket, R. I., and was a
young merchant of Delaware,
Ohio, when he answered Lin
coln's call. In addition to Lin
coln, his army commissions
were signed by Presidents John
son, Cleveland, McKinley and
Theodore Roosevelt.
LJUGO GROTIUS, the Dutchman
* * who laid the foundation for
what is now somewhat apologetical
ly known as international law,
Like Grotiua, Who
Never Quit Trying,
Dutch'll Carry On!
backed
down a lot
on hard and
fast prin
ciples, in
his later books, but he never quit
trying. That was early in the Sev
enteenth century. The Dutch car
ried on from where he left off and
pretty much put their trade mark
on international law.
Premier Peter Gerbrandy of the
Netherland government in exile, ex
pounded and amplified Grotius, as
professor of international law at the
University of Amsterdam. He now
says the Dutch not only will keep
on writing law but will keep on
fighting the lawless, in their low
lands home or in the Pacific island
jungles. He is a devout Christian
who professes an unshakeable be
lief that the word, bravely defended,
becomes flesh.
The professor was never con
spicuous in affairs of state until
a year or two before the Nazis
came. He sounded many warn
ings of trouble ahead and when
it came, disclosed amazing ca
pacity for quick and effective ac
tion, always a jump ahead of
the supposedly practical men.
He pulled together the all
inclusive coalition • government
and became the head of ten min
istries, representing five closely
knit parties. He was the big
surprise which bad times so
often bring forth.
He is no ascetic, but, instead
drinks good Holland gin and smokes
good cigars, being a connoisseur of
such commodities and a foe of sump
tuary legislation. He is a plump,
agile, rosy, roly-poly little man,
who likes to argue and philoso
phize and have a good time at one
and the same time.
A pipe addict was reproved by a
critic. "Smoking a pipe will de
stroy your memory, turn you to
mediation rather than action, and
make you altogether useless," he said.
"Can you imagine Adolf Hitler
smoking a pipe, fading the house
in a crap game, or fetching a long
swipe in the German equivalent of
Sweet Adeline?" asked the pipe
smoker. "No, you can’t. No sea
soned pipe-smoker ever started a
war and none ever will. Grim,
sadistic ascetics like Hitler start
wars because they never had a good
time and want to get even."
i
NATIONAL
AFFAIRS
Rtvitwtd by
CARTER FIELD
Roosevelt's Attitude on
‘Unified Command' . ..
Sea Otters for Light
Shipping Not Yet in
Production . . .
(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.)
WASHINGTON. — The President
takes seriously the fact that under
the Constitution he is commander-in
chief of the army and navy. It may
be for that reason that he does not
take kindly to the notion of a de
partment of national defense, to
include army, navy and air force,
as advocated by Senator Bennett
Champ Clark of Missouri and oth
ers.
The President’s theory is that
there is a '‘unified command” al
Senator Clark
ready, which is
himself. Natural
ly he is fairly
well satisfied with
that, and consid
ers the insertion
of another execu
tive between the
present organiza
tions and himself
just the addition
of that much un
necessary organi
zation, with no re
sulting advan
tages to be had for the U. S.
There is much to be said for his 1
position. But there is also some- !
thing to be said against it, though
there is nothing new on either side
of the argument.
The sharpest objection lies in our
own form of government. Conceiv
ably a man might make a fine Presi
dent in all other respects, but not
be a military genius. It is not
fashionable to belittle Abraham Lin
coln, or even to hint that he was
not the essence of perfection in ev
ery respect. However, the fact re
mains that as commander-in-chief of
the armed forces of the Union he
blundered around for practically
the first three years of the war, try
ing one general after another until
in Grant, Sherman and Sheridan he
found the right prescription.
President: Military Strategist
But the President of the United
States is elected tor a fixed term.
Nothing can be done no matter how
inept he may prove himself as a di
rector of military strategy. In
deed, it is most unlikely that his
ABILITY as a strategist would be
the issue even when he goes to the
country, at the end of a four-year
term, in the midst of a war.
Thus when Abraham Lincoln faced
George B. McClellan in the 1864
election the main issue was not that
McClellan, as a soldier, would make
a better war President than Lin
coln, as would have been a logical
enough campaign talking-point, but
whether the war should be continued
at all.
The Pacifists of that day wanted
to stop the war and have peace.
As they proposed that McClellan, if
elected, should make peace, natur
ally they did not bother much to
stress his qualifications as a mili
tary leader for continuing the war.
On the President’s side in the
present controversy, it is unthink
able to have a war President who
would not have the right to appoint
whom he pleased as head of the
“unified command" should there be
one, just as he has the right and
power now to name the secretaries
of war and the navy and the gen
erals and admirals who shall direct
the high strategy. So the President
would not be divested of responsi
bility.
Realizing which, the President
prefers to operate without the added
office of Unified Command.
Small Ships Would Release
Larger Ones for War Work
Information as to what has hap
pened to the Sea Otter is an experi
ence as human as a man’s liking to
wear old clothes, or a woman want
ing a new hat. It is the same type
of thing which leads a city man,
who has kept a few chickens in his
back yard, to quit his job and start
trying to make his living with a
chicken farm.
Here was a very good idea for
small craft, to supply a crying
need for coastwise and short
distance water transportation,
and which would Release regular
ships now in that sort of service
for more important war work.
So the naval designers get hold
of it, and immediately begin to
improve it. They saw how' they
could make the sea otters big
ger, make them carry more.
They began to think about using
them in the transatlantic war
supplies ferry service.
As a result the idea, very good for
; its original purposes, has gotten no- !
; where. Naturally, with the enlarge-1
ment of the proposed ships, they I
drew more water. That made them, |
as the President pointed out, un
available for the sort of ports for j
which they had originally been de
signed. Also, with the added notion
of their crossing the Atlantic, or
making similar long voyages, came
the question of danger if sufficient
supplies of gasoline were taken.
So we have no sea otters 1
Talk of the Quilting Bee
la 71911
Pattern 7191.
CPEND your leisure moments
^ with worthwhile handiwork.
And what could possibly be better
than this lovely quilt, Flower of
Spring?
* • •
Pattern 7191 contains the Block Chart;
Carefully drawn pattern pieces; color
scheme*; directions for quilt; yardage
chart; illustration of quilt. Send your or*
der to:
Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept.
82 Eighth Ave. New York
Enclose 15 cent* (plus one cent to
cover cost of mailing) tor Pattern
No.
Name....
Address.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
PORTRAIT
nmullfal FORTH AIT «f URN. OOl til AS
MAC' AR Till R suitable for framing Send
only 10c, your name and address to M.
HUNTER, *18 Rest Adams SI., t hirst*.
DIG DEEP FOR VICTORY
Dig Into Your Pocket and
Buy U. S. Defense Bonds
REMEMBER, DAUGHTER, IF YOU
BAKE AT HOME, THE ONLY YEAST
WITH ALL THESE*VITAMIN5
15 FLEISCHMANN'5
O&O&.LOV' .Im
* Per Cake: Vitamin A-2000 Units (Ifit.) Vitamin 8,-150 Units
Vitamin D—400 Units (In/.) Vitamin 0 - 40-50 Units (Si. Bout.)
All of these vitamins go right into your bread; they are not appreciably
lost in the oven. Ask for Fleischmann's Fresh Yeast—with the yellow label.
SAVE A DIME A CARTON!
^UNION MADE • PLAIN OR CORN TIPS
THE BEST BUY in popular-priced ciga
rettes today is a carton of Raleighs. You
get a valuable coupon on every pack,
good in the U. S. A. for in cash, or
even more in luxury premiums of every
sort. Get Raleighs by the carton and you
get ten coupons—plus the two extra in
each carton of Raleighs cork-tipped, or
four extra with Raleighs plain. That
makes a total coupon saving of 9i or
101# a carton! Try Raleighs today—a
better-tasting smoke plus... a dividend!
Raleigh coupons
give you cash
or luxury gifts
like these...
Coffee Table with inlaid top
of beautifully matched wal
nut and mahogany.
Remington Double-Header for
non-irritating ahavea. 115-v.
AC. De luxe leather caae.
hrmu n*» ^|R
I TED STATES f
maaaaam
INC S BONDS 9
*1— Defense Savings Stamps
may now be obtained through
Brown & Williamson. Send 1J3
Raleigh coupons for each dollar
stamp. Defense Stamp Album,
shown above, free on request.
Kitchen Ensemble. Attrac
tively decorated set of eight
kitchen containers.
Walnut Serving Tray with col
orful inlay. 13>$" x 19*. Bever
age-proof. Very practical.
B & W coupons also packed with Kool Cigarettes. Write for premium catalog.
EiMsBSiClaiianaHlffl
HERE’S WHAT YOU 00
It'a simple. It's fun. Just think up
alast line to this jingle. Make sure
it rhymes with the word “one.”
Write your last line of the
jingle on the reverse side of a
Raleigh package wrapper (or a
facsimile thereof), sign it with
your full name and address, and
mail it to Brown & Williamson
Tobacco Corp., P. O. Box 1799,
Louisville, Kentucky, post
marked not later than midnight,
April, 11, 1942.
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
'W"
“Sailor Smith and Private Barton
Always buy the Raleigh carton.
Extra coupons in each one
ff
originality and aptness of the line you write.
Judges’ decisions must be accepted as final.
In case of ties, duplicate prizes will be
awarded. Winners will be notified by mail.
Anyone may enter (except employees of
Brown & Williamson Tobacco 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 . . . $100.00 cash
Second prize . . . 50.00 cash
Third prize. . . . 25.00 cash
5 prizes of $10.00 . 50.00 cash
25 prizes of $5.00 . 125.00 cash
100 prizes of a carton
of Raleighs . . . 150.00
133 PRIZES $500.00
Next time get the pack with the coupon on the back...
TUMI in RED SKELTON AND OZZ1E NELSON EVERY TUESDAY NMKT, NBC RED NETWONK