Bacon Sandwiches Make Grand Outdoor Eating (See Recipes Below) Picnic Tips » - .. - ; There's nothing like the great out of-doors to produce great appetites. And there s notn * ing that tastes so good as food eat en in the great wide spaces in sand, under the pines amid the smoke or a fire. Our recipes and suggestions today •re designed to fit those who want ta da pert of their cooking at home, •ad finish when they arrive at the please. It is easy to lay out a swell iapreed when everything is well or ganized ond planned ahead. Y«aH Kke the recipes because they're not fancy. They do make for some downright good eating, though, and will give you a grand experience in outdoors eating. Food is best packed in hampers or tied in cloth. It’s easiest to carry that way. If you have anything breakable, use a metal container. Best Type of Fire, j For those of you who want to cook outdoors, use the trapper type of Are. Never start cooking until the •rood has burned and is a bed of glowing red coals. To make thia type of fire, place 2 medium sized logs (green) 6 to S inches apart. Be tween these set < ap dry twigs and if ■havings. CarryU ■•mething that! ‘will make the fire ■tart easily, a bit ot tissue paper ' with a few dry twigs. The logs can Me adjusted to fit the cooking utensil. , . Our recipe round-up starts with the favorite hamburgers. If you ;anuggle in the extra cheese, you'll [like the flavor: All-American Hamburgers, t (Serves 6) ltt pounds hamburger i H cup milk 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper K pound American cheese 4 tablespoons butter t 4 battered buns Mix meat with milk, salt and pep per. Form 12 thin patties of the meat about 3 Inches in diameter. ■Cut f slices of cheese slightly small er than meat patties an0 place the cheese in between the meat patties, sandwich-fashion. Seal edges well. Melt hotter in a skillet and fry the patties slowly for 10 to 15 minutes. Serve on toasted buns. Hat Cheese Frankfurters. (Serves 10) tl frankfurters 24 slices of bacon 94 pound sharp cheese SpHI frankfurters lengthwise and •II with long strips of cheese. Wind • strip of bacon, spirally, around •ach frankfurter and fasten at ends with toothpicks. Toast on forks or long-handled toasters over firs until Macon is browned and cheese is malted. Place in a hot toasted roll and serve with relish. Creamy Scrambled Eggs. (Serves 6) 4 eco V4 cup milk Lynn Soya Campfire Cosy: Make sure the drinking water is safe on your I camping trip. Boiled water al ways is, sparkling water isn't nec ussarfiy. A hole dug in the earth in the shade of the tree, lined with small stones makes a nice outdoor re frigerator. Moist caves, shallow underground streams, small drops or falls are all good “re frigerators.” Be sure to put your campfire out Water is the best thing, soil next best. A canoe paddle makes an ex cellent bread board or a checker board) Paint squares as for checkers and play with cookies or candies. Lynn Chambers' Picnic Mens •Bacon Sandwich •Roasted Corn Cherry Tomatoes Cocoa •Rocks Fresh Fruit •Recipes Given H teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butter % cup diced American cheese, if desired Beat the eggs well. Add salt and pepper, if desired. Melt butter in heavy skillet and pour eggs into pan, stirring well as the mixture begins to thicken. When eggs are partially cooked, add cheese. Serve on toast when thick. Do not overcook. Bacon is a grand outdoor appetite tempter. It is also an important concentrated source of food energy that you’ll need after working hard outdoors. If you are frying bacon at the pic nic, then this is the best method to follow: Place the strips in a cold skillet over a low fire. Turn fre quently until all parts of bacon are evenly crisp but not brittle. Do not let fat smoke. For extra crispi ness, drain off the fat as the bacoa cooks. *Bacoo Sandwich. To make delectable sandwiches, fry the bacon as directed above with thick slices of fried onion and to matoes served on toasted bun. Have you caught some flsh? Noth ing will taste better than a chowder made in a chowder kettle over a bed of coals: Fish Chowder. (Serves 6) 5 alicea bacon, diced X medium oniona, diced X pounda fresh flsh, boned X teaspoons salt I 1 teaspoon pepper S to 6 medium potatoes, sliced or diced 1 quart milk 4 tablespoons butter X tablespoons flour Fry bacon and onion together un til onion is light brown. Cut flsh into small pieces and rub with salt and pepper. Add potatoes to chowder kettle. Cover with boiling water and cook 30 minutes. Blend flour with H cup milk. Add remaining milk to flsh and stir in flour mixture. Add butter, simmering constantly. When mixture thickens, serve in soup bowls with crackers. Like vegetables cooked outdoors? Then, here is one: *Roast Corn. Use fresh sweet corn. Remove com silk but leave husks on. Dip the ear, husk and all into a pail of water and lay on a grate over a hot bed of coals. The water turns Into steam within the husk coating and thus cooks the com, making it steamy and juicy Instead of dry and tasteless. Com may also be roasted by burying in tire ashes. Cookies and fruit make the ideal campfire dessert. Take cookies easy to carry such as: •Rocks. (Makes 5 dosen) 1 cup shortening 1H cups brown sugar S eggs 1 teaspoon cinnamon Vi teaspoon cloves 3 oups sifted flour 1 teaspoon soda lVi cups walnuts 2 cups raisins Cream shortening and sugar. Add eggs and beat well. Add silted dry ingredients, chopped nuts and rai sins. Drop from spoon onto greased cookie sheet and bake in a mod erate (350-degree) oven. If you wish additional instruction for canning fruit or berries, write to Mis* Lynn Chambers, 210 South Desplaine* Street, Chicago 6, Illinois. Please en close stamped, self-addressed envelope for your reply. lleleased by Western Newspaper Union. GOD IS MY «, CO-PILOT •» Col. Robert L.Scott W.NU RELEASE The story thus far: Robert Scott, a •elf-made Weft Point graduate, wln« hit wlngt at Kelly Held, Texas, and marries a girl from Georgia. Prom Mltchel Field, N. Y.. he Is sent to Panama where his real pursuit training Is begun in a P-125. He Is given a job constructing flying Helds which would some day protect the Canal. He begins to train other pilots. The war Is getting closer and he Is un happy because he realizes he Is getting farther and farther from actual combat duty. As director of training In a twin engine school In Callfortila he writes to General after General asking for a chance to light. When that chance comes he realizes that hit wife and child meant America for him. CT1APTER VI Doug was an ideal flying officer, and it was to him that I first turned for advice on how I should make myself acquainted with this big air plane. Doug had learned to fly at the period when I had been instruct ing. I had taught his class to fly; now the tables were turned and he would have to be the instructor for a while. Don’t forget that as yet I hadn’t flown a B-17E. Introducing myself to my co-pilot, I said, "How about showing me how to fly this ship—I want to see how to work these turbos and such." He merely grinned at me in disbelief. "Aw, Colonel," he said, "you can fly the thing—why, you taught me to fly." I Anally got him to give me some cockpit instruction by explain ing that though I had many thou sand hours in PT’s, BT’s, and other trainers, and knew lots about single seaters and fast twin-engine medi um bombers, I knew nothing about such planes as this big devil. He showed me the approved meth od of starting the four engines, when to use the booster switches, how to set the turbos, how to lock the tail wheel—and generally how to pick up that fifty-seven thousand pounds of flying dynamite and take it around the field. I flew it for two landings that afternoon, and that night I climbed all over the Fortress, read the entire maintenance manual, and learned from scratch what made the big ship go. Next day I soloed it for over four hours, and after the twentieth landing I felt as if I was ready to start for war. Then we tested everything—fired all guns at targets in the everglades, and the cordite from all those roar ing fifty calibres gave even the swampy "glades" a sweet aroma. My gunners were eager to be on the way, and I soon found that they knew exactly what they were doing. Private Motley was my tail gun ner. During the entire trip I think he stayed in the tail ninety per cent of the time. Just to get used to the way to handle the tail turret. I used to say of Motley that he Just didn’t care where he was going—he want ed to see where he had been. Sergeant Aaltonen, the engineer, was charged with keeping the en gines functioning properly, and in general the entire enlisted personnel was under him. He was a diligent Finn and one of the bravest men I have ever seen. I can see Aalto nen now, standing there behind my ■eat and the co-pilot’s scat, unper turbed in the roughest of storms, from the violent currents of the equatorial front of the Hamadans to the Shimals of Africa and Ara bia. Eternally watching the many instruments, waiting to correct the ■lightest trouble even before it hap pened. When we were lost over trackless seas he was never ruffled, but ready at all times with informa tion as to fuel consumption and the best RPM’s for cruising. Once when he was told that we would probably have to land in the Atlantic there was no change in the expression on his face; he simply began to move the provisions to a point where they could be quickly placed in the rub ber boats. His job in case of attack was to man the top turret with its twin Fifties. Sergeant Baldbridge was the head radioman. His secondary duty was to handle one of the waist guns back aft of midships. Corporal Cobb was second radioman; he would leave that to enter the lower turret. The other waist gun on this flight was to be handled by a radio officer, Lieutenant Hershey. The navigator was a Lieutenant whom I’ll call Jack. He was a nervy kid who liked his job. I know that after our mission he made many raids as navigator to bomb the Japs in Rangoon. We tested the bombardier and the bombsight, too, before we started the flight. Lean, lanky, six-foot three Bombardier George—I never did see how he managed to wiggle into the nose of the Fortress. I can see him there now, tense over his sight, waiting for the bombs to go—ever with the cross-hairs on the target. George had a couple of fifty calibre guns up there in the nose with him, too. He was just the op posite of the tail gunner—he never did know where he had been but always got there first. And so the eight of them made up my crew—eight good soldiers who had volunteered and who want ed to hurt the enemy. None of them worried about whether or not he'd get home—for he knew of big ger things that had to be done. We had to test everything, for it was over sixteen thousand miles to Japan the way we were having to go; there couldn’t be a slip-up on this mission, and so we didn't take a chance. When finally all was set I was about nervous enough to bite my nails off, for my ship was to be last to leave the States. I had worried every minute of the time we had been waiting for fear that some brass hat would get my orders changed before I could get on my way. The other twelve ships had gone, with Colonel Haynes leading in his B-24. They all made their way to the East separately, with instructions to meebin Karachi, In dia, for Anal order^ And Karachi was 12,000 miles away. As soon as we could leave the West coast of Florida, we loaded up and crossed the State. Going on East over West Palm Beach, I rang the alarm bell, putting all men on the alert, and we dropped down, with the crew firing at the white caps out over the Gulf Stream. The guns were working fine but we couldn't take a chance. I had to learn right now whether the crew could work as a team, for once we started it would be too late. As we came back towards the last field we were to land on in the U. S. A., something strange met my sight, something that made the blood pound a little harder in my temples. There, along the entire beach of Florida, was a jagged black line—the clean sand of Flor ida’s beaches had been made black and terrible-looking by the oil from many tankers sunk by the Axis sub marine war. It gave me a queer feeling, for along the beaches there — Col. Scott’s superior officers, Gen. Joseph Stllwell, left, and Gen. Claire Chennanlt. was also the beached wreckage of several ships. This war was mean ing more and more to us as we pre pared to shove off for the first stop out of America. Now we were poised for our flight to Puerto Rico. In our two-day wait for technical changes on the engines I worried more than ever, for the other twelve ships were gone and I was getting frantic lest some thing might change the orders. Fi nally, after having to wait during days of perfect weather, we took off in heavy rain for Borinquen Field, P. R. The take-off and first two hours of the flight were ’’instrument,” as we were flying through a moderate tropical front. We finally broke into clearing weather over Long Island Key, British West Indies. This was on March 31. 1942. Just after noon we sighted His paniola at the point of Cape Frances Viejo. Sergeant Aaltonen passed out some hot coffee from the thermos jugs. Our spirits were high, for now that we had passed the bad weather this was like a picnic. The big ship was handling like a single seater. We turned from the dark, mysterious Hispaniola, crossed Mo na Passage, and landed at Borin quen Field at 15:07, just three min utes off our E.T.A. (Estimated Time of Arrival). Two of our flight s Fortresses were waiting in Puerto Rico for minor re pairs, so we felt a little less lone some. Just in case the authorities in Washington decided to stop the last ship or the last two ships in our mission, I got my crew up long before daylight next morning, and we socn were heading South for Trinidad, ahead of the other two. A real night take-off from Trini dad—we were airborne in the dark ness at 5:20 a. m. As the wheels left the ground I realized very quick ly how great a load we were lifting. This was the first time we had tak en off with full load of fuel, and it seemed to me that I almost had to break my arms to keep the tail from going all the way back to the jungle—for all practical purposes the Fortress tried a loop. (It must have been that case of Scotch, add ed suddenly to the other sixty thou sand pounds.) Finally we got the ship rigged properly and climbed on top of the clouds at eight thou sand feet. Later we had to go high er to keep from going through the heavy tropical thunderheads; with our overload, neither Doug nor I wanted to risk the turbulence that we knew was there. As the sun came up we could look down through holes at intervals and see the dark Atlantic near the Gui anas. Over Devil’s Island at 9:20, I saw by our chart that we were only five degrees North of the equator. Com ing down lower to look at the French penal colony, we found that although the temperature was comfortable on top of the haze at six thousand feet, down in the soup near the water we had difficulty breathing. Pass ing on over another river identified as the Rio Oyapok, we went out over the Guianas into Brazil at 9:55 a. m. Cruising low at eight hundred feet, we got some unforgetable views of the steaming Brazilian jun gle. Looking out to sea, we noticed that the blue color already was changing to the murkiness of the Amazon, though we were about a hundred miles from its mouth. Fly ing low, I noted that the hump of Brazil near the coast was flat and green and hot as hell—temperature ninety-six and humidity about nine ty-nine per cent at 10:55 a. m. We reached the mouth of the greatest river in the world at 11:35 E.W.T. Here the width of the Amazon is about one hundred and fifty miles. Boys will have their fun too, no matter if you are flying low over the greatest of rivers. As we crossed the equator—old Zero Degrees Lat. at 11:56 a. m., at West Longitude 49 degrees 32 minutes—I saw those of my crew who had been in the South latitudes before take paper cups of water and drop them on the heads of those who were unini tiated, thus making them subjects of the sacred realm of Jupiter Rex as identified from the realm of Neptune Rex on the sea. We crossed the Ama zon, from just West of Point Grossa over Bahia Santa Rosa to Mixiana Is land, thence to Isla da Marajo. This last island in the mouth of the river is one hundred miles wide and reputedly has more cattle on the single ranch than any other ranch in the world. Soon we came to Rio Para, crossed it in a thunderstorm, and were over Belem, where we landed in the blackness of a tropical rain at 12:40 E.W.T. On April 4, we left Belem for Na tal at 6:55 a. m., and climbed to ten thousand feet in order to top as much of the cumulus as possible. We had to skirt one great anvil-head reaching up into the sub-strato sphere near Bahia San Luis. This storm covered about fifty miles, but we got around it without going into its turbulence. As we went on South of the equator the haze di minished gradually and the country became dry, making us think we were over western Texas. We land ed at Natal, our jump-off point for the South Atlantic crossing, at 12:25 ! E.W.T. This was to be a real day’s flight. For we were not to be able to spend the night at Natal. Our run from Belem to Natal of nine hundred miles, then the crossing of nineteen hundred miles to Liberia, plus the run down the hump of Africa to a Pan-American base on the Gold Coast—this last almost nine hun dred miles—had to be made with out stops, except short ones for fuel. For all practical purposes, then, we had thirty-seven hundred miles to make in one day. We got the big ship serviced and ready for the trip, then went to the Ferry Command Hotel. There we found two more crews of our thir teen heavy bombers. One group of these had turned back the night before with one engine out. The other, piloted by Col. Gerry Mason, bad nearly come to grief on the way in from Belem. The rubber life-rafts in the Forts are carried in two compartments where the wing of the B-17 joins the big fuselage. This is to facilitate their automatic release upon contact with the wa ter should the ship have to land at sea. They are of course tied to the airplane with strong manila rope, and it is on this hemp that the present tale hangs. In the flight down the coast some malfunction had caused one of these compart ments to spring open—and out came the heavy, five-man boat. At the speed of two hundred miles an hour with which it struck the tail section as it went back on its rope in the slipstream of two engines, it nearly took the entire horizontal stabilizer off. Only by very skillful piloting had Gerry Mason managed to get the Fort and his crew of ten to Na tal. Just the same, in my attempted nap that afternoon, I grinned at the thought that we in old ‘‘Hades Ab Altar” were passing ahead of two more ships of the flight. Boy, I dreamed, they’ll have a hell of a job getting me back there into the training center now! It’s four thou sand miles back to Florida and in the morning I’ll be across the At lantic. We climbed out of the Fortress and stepped upon Africa at 11:05 G.M.T. Our crossing from Natal had been made in thirteen hours. Leaving the natives at work under Royal Air Force bosses, we hurried on to Operations, where we ar ranged for clearance down the coast. Then we were led into a thatch-roofed dining hall for good hot food. If I hadn’t been so hungfy and tired from the extra tension I had been subjected to, I think Td have “gawked” at those wild-look ing tribesmen who were serving us. In one night we’d left the hotels of South America, and here we were, having our plates brought by jet black bush Negroes with rings in their ears and noses, jabbering away in a West Coast dialect To them we were "Bwana,” the food was “chop,” and dessert was “sweet.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Vanity Table Can Be Made From Old Mirror and Odds and Ends By Ruth Wyeth Spears FRAME OF /'CURTAIN LUMBER VR0D» .. SCREWED N (1X3 TO » ; * 0 s y • I Iks / s / s i °<2> SKIRT THUMBTACKED TO SIDES ' OF BOXES AND HINGED ARMS - LJ AVE you a mirror from an old * dresser? It doesn’t make any difference about the size or shape or how “queer” the frame may be, because you may hang the mirror any old way you want to and cover three sides with cur tains to make the adorable frilly vanity shown here. Two orange crates or a pair of boxes; some odds and ends of lumber; a curtain rod; hooks and a little wire for hanging the mir ror; a pair of cup hooks to hold the curtain tie-backs; a pair of hinges for the arms to which the swing - back skirt is fastened; screws and nails—that is all you need. You probably have it all around the house right now. The sketch gives all the details, and it won’t make any difference how crude your carpentry may be. The curtains and skirt wfll cever e multitude of uneven edges and hammer dents. • • • NOTE: This dressing table idea ie from BOOK 5 of the series of homemaking book lets offered with these articles. This book also shows how the dresser to match the mirror was combined with a fish bowl, aa old portiere and a chromo from the at tie to make an important piece of furniture for the living room. Copy of BOOK g will be mailed for 15 cents. Send your order to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills New York Drawer 10 Enclose 15 cents for Book No. t. Name_. Address.____ To fasten something to angle iron posts, cotter pins will prove much better than short tie wires. Spread and slip the keys over the fence wires, then insert them in the holes in the iron post, after which they are clinched tightly. —•— Hang a good-sized bag in the sewing room to receive scraps from sewing to be used for weekly mending. Try cutting the outside leaves of cauliflower into inch-long pieces, and, when done, creaming with white sauce. ■—•— If you have a dog, cook him some cornmeal in the water in which vegetables have been cooked. Divide the dog’s daily ration into three meals, instead of two. He does not get so hungry then and does not eat so fast. —•— Here’s a tip to facilitate mend ing large holes in sweaters. Place a piece of netting under the hole, then darn with matching wool. The netting serves as backing and makes a better darning job pos sible. Mediterranean Sea, Known As Being Tideless, Is Not The Mediterranean is often known as the tideless sea, and it is true that in its western half tides are only a matter of a few inches. But farther east tides are obvious enough. At Leghorn, on the Italian coast, there is a foot of tide; at Venice (Adriatic) there is as much as three feet. The strange thing is that in the Gulf of Syrtis, on the Tunisian coast, quite large tides occur. The rise and fall amounts to six and a half feet, while on the shores of the island of Djerba, off Tunisia, there is actually a dif ference of nearly ten feet between high and low water. Actually, the Baltic is far more tideless than the Mediterranean. Though it is 900 miles long and from 45 to 145 miles wide, there Is nowhere a tide of much more than a foot. The whirlpools of Scylla and Charybdis, in the Straits of Mes sina, which were so dreaded by the ancients, still exist, and are deep eddies dangerous to small boats but not to modern ships. Most light bulbs have a life of from 1,000 to 3,000 hours. You will save bulbs and electricity by turn ing them off when not needed. Use good quality bulbs of the right size for your needs. A 100-watt bulb gives more light, eosts less to buy and less to operate than two 60-watt bulbs. Buy lights with the proper voltage rating for your current. i —•— Pack all apples individually in newspapers before putting in a barrel. They keep better this way. — Quartered lemons add the "something sour” that baked beans need and make a good look ing garnish as well. - -* i. 1 Cottager Decided He'd Be True to His Troth The carpet sweeper salesman came upon a remote cottage, at the door of which stood an ex tremely rough-looking man. When he began his usual line of sales talk, the cottager interrupt ed him. "Don’t waste your breath,” ho said; "I’ve got a carpet sweeper already.” ' "Good! Then I can make you a splendid allowance for your old sweeper in part payment for this splendid new model.” The cottager thought for a few moments; then he said: "Nd, I won’t do a deal. After all. I tookyer for better or wuss, didn’t i?” V •SSTSS ** that *»««*• TOOTH r.M.0* >'um a Crispness you can hear/9 ,wVy^ l RICE KRIS PIES **Tb« Oraias ara Craat Foods”— • Kellogg's Rice Krispies equal the //M whole ripe grain in nearly all the O i A%, protective food elements declared / // 1 / * £ fSfQj essential to human nutrition. / Jr*/ 4# F IMS