The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 27, 1942, Image 6

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Fresh-From-the-Vine Grapes Make Clear, Bright Jelly!
<See Recipes Below.)
Meals—With Zest
Does meal after meal slip by un
noticed, eaten only because it does
away with hun
ger? Do your
, meals pull their
^ punches so to
jl speak—look good,
1/ have proper bal
[ ance, contrast in
I texture, etc., but
“still seem to lack
someinmg vuaiY
A dinner, lunch or breakfast that
lacks a sense of completeness is
like a ham sandwich without mus
tard, meat without seasoning, fish
without a tart sauce, a pie without
a flaky crust. The small things that
do big things for menus are the rel
ishes, pickles, jams and jellies,
which brings me to today's topic.
Relishes such as pickles, jellies,
conserves and preserves can supply
that sense of completeness to a meal
if you use them with a thought to
flavor affinity.
For chicken try strawberry or
plum jam. Goose calls for spiced
peach jam or apple jelly. Orange
and cherry jam or relish are tops
with bland duck. Spiced grape Jam
or gooseberry jams are "musts”
with beef just as mint or crabapple
Jelly are musts with lamb. Pair off
that golden brown ham with plum
jelly or horseradish mixed with
grape jelly. Veal needs currant or
blackberry Jam.
If you can’t get quince jelly, try
cranberry Jelly with pork. Liver will
be extra good with tomato relish.
Think of all the plate lunches and
sandwiches you are going to serve
the year ’round for lunches, snacks
and pack-up boxes. You’ll need
these:
*Bread and Butter Pickles.
(Makes 8 pints)
12 Urge cucumbers
4 onions, sliced
4 cups sugar
1 quart vinegar
5 cups water
4 teaspoons celery seed
4 teaspoons mustard seed
2 teaspoons tumeric
Cut cucumbers in y« inch slices.
Soak with onions in strong salt wa
ier ior » nours.
Combine remain
ing ingredients
and bring to a
boil. Add strained
cucumber and on
ion slices. Bring
to a boil again *
and boil 5 minutes. Pack into hot,
sterilized jars.
Concord grapes are plentiful in the
fall and make delicious jelly. You
can substitute corn syrup in this
one:
*Concord Grape Jelly.
(Makes 11 medium glasses)
4 cups Juice
1V4 cups sugar
K bottle fruit pectin
You will need about 3 pounds of
grapes for four cups of Juice. Wash
and stem grapes and crush grapes.
Add Just enough water to keep from
scorching, bring to a boil and sim
Lynn Says:
The Score Card: Cantaloupe sup
plies for this year will be lighter
because of curtailed production,
but watch your markets for the
'“peaks” of the season as supplies
come in from California, Arizona.
Georgia and South Carolina.
Recently a group of prepared
cereals have had their whole
grain nutritive values restored or
are now made from whole grains
so watch labels when doing your
buying.
The peach crop this year will
be like last year—one of the
best, according to present indica
tions. Heavy shipments have al
ready started coming in and pro
duction will climb up to about 50
million bushels—a new high.
Broilers and fryers will be
abundant during these next few
months, so don’t miss out on good
fried chicken or crisply browned
and broiled chicken. Young
chickens are abundant now be
cause of increased war poultry
production.
Canned foods will come in few
er sizes this fall and winter in
the effort to cut down on use of
tin.
Your Canning Shelf
•Concord Grape Jelly
•Quince Honey
•Peach-Plum Butter
•Bread and Butter Pickles
•Pickled Peaches
•Chili Sauce
•Recipes Given
mer 5 minutes. Strain juice through
cheesecloth. Measure out 4 cups.
Measure sugar and mix with juice.
Bring to a boil over hottest Are,
stirring constantly. Bring to a full,
rolling boil and boil hard 14 min
ute. Remove from fire, skim, and
pour into hot, sterilized jelly glasses.
Paraffin at once.
Note: 2 cups of light corn syrup
may be substituted in this recipe
for two cups of sugar. Use 5% cups
of sugar and 2 cups light corn syrup
in the recipe for Concord Grape
jelly.
•Peach and Plum Jam.
(Makes 8 small glasses)
1 pound blue plums
1% pounds peaches
1 box powdered fruit pectin
414 cups sugar
Or
2 cups light corn syrup
214 cups sugar
Peel and pit peaches. Chop fine
ly. Pit plums and chop until fine.
Add powdered pectin (or pectin,
sugar and corn syrup.) Mix well
and bring to a boil, stirring con
stantly. Bring to a full rolling boil,
and boll hard 1 minute. Remove
from heat and skim. Pour into hot,
sterilized glasses and seal.
Quinces come into their own in the
fall and if you’re fond of them, plan
to put up some:
•Quince Honey.
(Makes 6 small glasses)
114 pounds quinces
214 cups water
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
3 cups sugar
Wash, pare and core quinces.
Add water to peelings and cook 30
minutes. urate
quinces very thin, (
or slice thinly.
Weigh pulp and
use 1 pound. Add
lemon juice and
strained liquid
from peelings. ^
Cook until tender.
add sugar, and * •
cook until two drops fall from spoon
at same time, or when a drop jells
easily on a saucer. Pour into sterile
glasses and seal.
Nothing compares to the sweet,
spicy, home-like smell of the mak
ing of chili sauce:
•Chili Sauce.
(Makes 5 quarts)
1 gallon chopped, peeled tomatoes
1 cup chopped onions
1H cups chopped green peppers
1 cup vinegar
1 cup sugar
3 tablespoons salt
1H teaspoons ground allspice
2 tablespoons cinnamon
IH teaspoons cloves
Tie spices loosely in cheesecloth.
Boil with vegetables until mixture
is reduced to half its original quan
tity, stirring all the while to prevent
scorching. Add vinegar, salt, sugar
and boil rapidly for 5 minutes. Pour
into hot sterilized jars and seal ini
mediately.
•Pickled Peaches.
(Makes 8 pints)
3 cups honey
3 cups vinegar
2 cups water
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon whole cloves
2 sticks cinnamon
5 quarts peaches
Heat honey, vinegar, water and
salt. Scald peaches, remove skins
and insert cloves. Place a few in
the boiling syrup, add cinnamon and
cook until peaches are tender, and
acquire a slightly transparent look.
Pack in sterilized jars, cover with
boiling syrup and seal.
If hat are your food problems? Cake
making? Bread making? Pickles, jams,
jellies? Children's lunches? Miss Lynn
Chambers will be glad to gice you ex
pert advice on your particular prob
lem, if you write her explaining ukat
you want to know, at If estern Sews
palter Union, 210 South Desplaines
Street, Chicago, III. Please enclose a
stumped, addressed envelope for your
reply.
heleased by Western Newspaper Union.
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
Consolidated Features—WNU Release.
NEW YORK.—It might be a good
idea to turn Glenn L. Martin
loose on this cargo plane job and let
him see what he can do. We once
, .. saw him pull
Clumsy Looking through a
Kite' Opened Eyes doubtful en
Of Public in 1912
which wasn t
nearly so good a short-end bet as
making cargo planes in a hurry.
It was at Avalon Bay, Los Ange
les, in 1912, when aviation was fasci
nating outdoor vaudeville, with its
hall mark of world destiny still hid
den. Bleriot, the French flier, had
out-stunted our lads by a flight over
the English channel.
On this golden day in 1912
there appeared at the water's
edge a clumsy looking kite, pre
cariously poised on a single
wooden pontoon. Word got
around that this Martin, who
ever he might be, was actually
going to fly this thing over to
Catalina island, 20 miles away.
Young Martin had been ramming
around with barnstorming troops,
with home-made planes, known to
fliers as a daring innovator, but
with the public in general not quite
sure of even his first name. Lin
coln Beachey, Art Smith, Si Christof
ferson, Bob Fowler and others had
found in the California skies a clear
field of operations and Martin was
one among many there, having a
good time in what seemed then a j
sport, rather than a business. At
any rate, bankers of the day so re
garded it.
He had built his Catalina Clipper
in an abandoned church, with such
material as he might come by, with
out benefit of bankers. We recall
that it had a quaint, homespun look.
It seemed that it might do almost
anything except fly. Getting ready
for the take-off, young Mai tin wasn’t
paying any attention to the skeptical
crowd. He tightened up some bolts,
put an inflated rubber tube around
his neck, and strapped a compass
around his leg. Then, to state it
precisely, he flew to Catalina.
Just in passing, when he reached
the financial, as apart from the tech
nical, stage of his operations, he
wore most elegantly tailored black
flying suits, and no more messing
around in dungarees. His flying
mates called him "Dude Martin,’’
but this get-up achieved an effect
of safe and sane conservatism and
it was not surprising that he got
backing from the bankers.
THE last time we saw Waldo
Frank was in the summer of
1939, on our terrace in the country.
It was a month or two before the
s’ America Chief ed and Mr
Interest of This Frank was
Prolific Writer Jf*flyfitrou*
bled. It was
a dead-end conversation, every way :
we turned. War was coming—of
that Mr. Frank felt sure. We would
be pulled in, and we wouldn't be
ready, either with arms or under
standing.
The mood of the conversation is
more clearly recalled than just what
Mr. Frank said. However, we do
remember that he was sad because
continental America had not shaken
loose from a dying Mediterranean
civilization and built a proud and
safe and cohesive civilization of its
own.
A short, stocky man, with a loose
tweed suit and a neat black mous
tache, he moved down a trail in
tiie dusk to a dark cave of inter
locking forest trees. The dark trail
led to Buenos Aires where he lies
today, a casualty of a war of ideas
which he has been waging for more
than 20 years.
Six Fascist thugs beat him
with the butt of a revolver, after
the Axis - inclined Argentinian
government had found him per
sona non grata.
His book, “Our America,” pub
lished in 1919, was both an exalted
declaration of faith and a disquiet
ing appraisal of our complacent and
slovenly failure to realize what the
gods had bestowed on us, and to
measure up to this endowment. In
this and many later books and mag
azine articles, he preached a some
what mystic philosophy of "The
Whole,” with such earnest faith and
plodding persistence that it is not
surprising that he carried his chal
lenge to the dangerous political front
of Argentina.
During the decades in which he
wrote nearly 40 books—he is one of
the most prolific of American writ
ers—Mr. Frank was profoundly in
terested in South America, in his
conviction that North and South
were interdependent, in their cul
tural and economic destiny. When
he first was in Argentina in 1929,
the president provided him an air
plane for his tour of the country. It
was in that year that he visited
the principal cities of South Amer
ica, on a lecture tour, appealing for
continental solidarity.
I _—
TIT" ASHINGTON.—Praise is never
* » as interesting as blame, but
: if we examine only what has hap
pened since December 7 the air
service, from top to bottom, has
dene a pretty good job. Up to De
cember 7 there may be many opin
ions. The defense of the air serv
ices, both army and navy, was that
they could not do much planning
without knowing WHAT they were
going to be called on to do until this
country became actually involved,
and the White House told them what
was wanted.
So the thing divides into three
chapters: Before Pearl Harbor, the
events of December 7 themselves,
and since December 7.
We can dismiss the period BE
FORE December 7 by admitting that
up to that time the admirals and gen
erals, as a whole, underestimated
woefully the striking power of air
planes. Up until then there was
considerable skepticism, for exam
ple, among not only our admirals
but the British, as to whether a
battleship could be sunk by air
planes. They know better now.
But the admirals and generals do
not deserve ALL the blame for what
happened before Pearl Harbor.
There was no such planning for war
as should have been done, in view
of the fact that we were so surely
drifting into it.
The success of the Japanese sur
prise attack in destroying planes on
the ground both in Hawaii and in
the Philippines is a separate chap
ter which has been fully discussed.
Mass Production Promised
But SINCE December 7 the air
services have really given a good
account of themselves. It is not
permitted to give figures, but the
number of pilots, bombardiers, gun
ners and navigators trained is ex
traordinary, and the fighting which
has been done by our planes all
over the world, including participa
tion in some of the bombing raids
over continental Europe, is some
thing of which we can be proud.
Similarly the production of
planes has more than come up
even to President Roosevelt’s
expectations. There are troubles
and bottlenecks galore, but the
plain truth is that these bottle
necks, in many instances, are
caused not by failures in those
weak links in the chain, so to
speak, but in the surprising pro
duction in OTHER links, thus
outstripping the weak links, and
turning them into bottlenecks.
When one reads of shortages ol
critical materials, one must remem
ber that there would be no shortages
if production had not exceeded ex
pectations.
Obviously, if the expectancy is 100,
and the production is 150, of any
given article, be it a ship or a plane
or a tank, some essential will be
found short. Provision had been
made for 100, not 150.
* • •
In Ten Months’ Time
A Masterful Achievement!
Production of those cargo-carry
ing airplanes, designed to overcome
the submarine menace by delivering
war supplies by air, is promised by
Henry Kaiser within ten months aft
er he gets the contract. This is
a much earlier delivery date—as
suming the contract is made—than
anyone has even speculated upon.
Before any formal proposal,
Kaiser has said to officials, he wants
to know several things, the most
important of which is—does the
government want this effort started,
and, if it does, how many planes
does it want?
There is no doubt that Kaiser
is a disturbing figure in Wash
ington. He was regarded for a
long time practically as a crank.
He had to work pretty hard to
get a hearing. The best evi
dence of the change of attitude
that has occurred is the fact
that recently, when it was an
nounced that he would speak at
a luncheon of the National Press
club, it was necessary to hang
out the SRO signs well in ad
vance.
“What we are interested in,’'
Douglass is fond of saying, "is not
how much a ship weighs, or how
much water she displaces, or any
one of half a dozen other details. |
But we are enormously interested
in how much freight she will carry,
and how long it will take her to get
from one port to another.”
He then always hastens to point
out that the arm chair strategists
must not assume that a ship which
makes 20 knots is twice as good, for
cargo delivering purposes, as one
which makes 10 knots. There are
two complications to such simple
arithmetic.
One is that the ship capable of
making 20 knots is apt to take just
as long to load, and just as long to
; unload, as the ship which can make
only 10 knots. The other is that the
[ faster a ship is the more fuel she
| consumes per mile.
Patterns
SEWBNG CDIRCLE ~
8206
r)0 YOU want an apron which
will give maximum coverage
and years of long service? Here’s
one which is practical through and
through—yet cheerfully styled so
you’ll always enjoy wearing it! It
fits well too, due to the darts at
the waist with the apron strings
to hold the line firm! Make it in
chambray, gingham, seersucker or
calico—you’ll prize this apron
above all that you own!
• • •
Pattern No. 8210 is designed for sizes 14
to 20; 40 and 42. Size 16 takes 2% yards
32 or 35-inch material, 5 yards ric rac
to trim.
ASK MS
ANOTHER m
A General Quiz
. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. rv. fv. (v. (V. (v. (v. fv. <
The Questions
1. Is sterling silver the same as
solid silver?
2. Who said genius is 2 per cent
inspiration, 98 per cent hard work?
3. Do trees die of old age?
4. What city is built on seven
hills?
5. What king of England couldn’t
speak English?
6. What is meant by “eminent
domain”?
7. Did Washington wear a wig?
8. What civilized country, about
40,000 square miles in area, has
no railroads?
9. In what state may one pass
through the settlement of Pneu
monia, enter Hell’s Gate into Pur
gatory and pass on to Paradise?
10. What was the “Flying Dutch
man” and what did it portend?
The Answers
1. No, sterling is but 92.5 per
cent silver and 7.5 per cent copper.
2. Thomas A. Edison.
3. Almost never. Invariably, if
not cut down, they are blown over
by the wind or struck by lightning.
4. Rome.
5. George I.
6. The right which the govern
ment reserves to take private
property for public use.
7. Washington powdered his
hair and tied it up in a queue, but
he never wore a wig.
8. Iceland.
9. Virginia.
10. A spectre ship reported seen
in bad weather about the Cape of
Good Hope, supposed to presage
bad luck.
8189
School Frocks
HpHRIFTY mothers who make
their children’s school clothes
will find today’s patterns very
timely! At top is a panel front
style with a flat front guaranteed
by sashes to tie in back. Below
is a style featuring a raised skirt
line—flattering as can be to young
figures.
Both patterns are for 6, 8, 10,
12 and 14 years.
* * •
Pattern No. 8206, size 8 takes 2*,4 yards
35-tnch material, 5 yards ric rac. Pattern
No. 8189 size 8 takes 2 yards, 2',4 yards
ric rac.
Send your order to:
SEWINO CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1116
211 West Wacker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 20 cents in coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No.Size.
Name..
Address.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
HONEY WANTED
HIGHEST PRICES paid—cans furnished—*
any quantity—large or small. Write for
further details. SIOUX BOSET ASSOC..
Sioux City, Iowa. - Lima, Ohio.
Trailers—Cars For Sale
SCHULT—the World’s finest trailer $695
up. Streamlite. Indian, Moon, Glider & oth
ers $395 up—new and used cars $250 up.
Cash paid for used cars and trailers.
A. C. NELSEN AUTO SALES, INC.
2212 Harney St., Omaha. Nebr.
2215 West Second St., Grand Island, Nebr.
% Red Wing Lodge, North Platte. Nebr.
CABINS FOR RENT
Visit Price’s Camp in Spearfish Canyoi^—
9 miles from Deadwood, S. D., on highway
85. Cool, quiet, fine fishing. Address
F. L. WILHOYTE, Lead, South Dakota.
VARIETY FOR SALE
VARIETY STORE, good Nebraska town,
established 16 years, stock and flxturea
$3,000. Write REALTY BROKER, 815 No.
Weber, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Spiritual Power
The vision of spiritual power,
even as we see it in the imperfect
manifestations of human life, is
ennobling and uplifting. The rush
of courage along the perilous path
of duty is finer than the foaming
leap of the torrent from the crag.
Integrity resisting temptation
overtops the mountains in gran
deur. Love, giving and blessing
without stint, has a beauty and a
potency of which the sunlight is
but a faint and feeble image.
When we see these things they
thrill us with joy; they enlarge
and enrich our souls.—Henry Van
Dyke.
f What Causes
Your Constipation ?
The super-reflned foods we eat
these days too often do not give
us enough “bulk food.” And
medical science tells us that
lack of sufficient "bulk” Is one
of the commonest causes of con
stipation !
If that Is your trouble, harsh
cathartics and violent purges
are, at best, only temporary
remedies. How much better to
get at the cause and correct ltl
Why not make sure that you
are getting the “bulk” you need
by eating Kellogg’s All-Bran?
All-Bran Is a delicious, crispy
cereal that millions of folks rely
on. Eat All-Bran yourself—eat It
daily—and drink plenty of water
—not only to get regular but to
keep regular. All-Bran Is made
by Kellogg's In Battle Creek. If
your condition Is not helped by
this simple treatment, It’s wise
^to see a doctor. ^
HOUSEWIVES: ★ ★ ★
Your Waste Kitchen Fate
Are Needed for Explosivee
TURN ’EM IN! ★ ★ ★
• From mother to daughter, for
three generations, the secret of
fine baking has been handed
down... Clabber Girl... a baking
day favorite in millions of homes
for years and years. Be sure of
results with Clabber Girl.
HULMAN & CO. - TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Founded in 1848
*
/—J CAMELS ARE
the big favorite with
THE /MARINES. THEY HAVE <
WHAT IT TAKES — EXTRA
MILDNESS AND SWELL <
\ FLAVOR
With men in the Marines, Army, Navy, and
Coast Guard, the favorite cigarette is Camel.
(Based on actual sales records in Post Ex
changes and Canteens.)
IMPORTANT TO STEADY SMOKERS: _
7te ss^e of S*j4MELS
s/otv-6vr/r//?p’ \^wWwwm
cort/a/rts LESS /V/C077ALE
than that of the 4 other largest-selling brands tested - less than any
of them — according to independent scientific tests of the smoke HseWI