t The Frontier Woman — Planning Kitchen Does Save Steps; Peases Build According to Means By BLANCHE SPANN PEASE School bells will soon be ring-< ing again. Another task is at hand for country moms—that of sending school lunches again. If you haven’t another plan of seeing that your school fry have a hot dish at school, you can try sending canned soups now and then. Two children can split one can of warmed up canned soup and use with crackers. It makes a change when you haven’t a hot dish to send in the vacuum bot tle or there has been no hot dish lunch idea worked out at your country school. Here is a recipe that makes 15 to 20 sandwiches. If your t family is large, fix this, and keep half the sandwiches at home for those who have lunch at home, and send the rest to school. If not, cut the recipe in half. You can use either bologna or wieners as the meat for sand wiches. WIENER AND EGG FILLING One pound bologna or wieners, Yz cup chopped pickles or relish, 1 cup mayonnaise, 1 tablespoon minced onion, dash of tabasco sauce, y4 cup pickle juice, 3 hard cooked eggs, % teaspoon salt, 1 cup ground raw carrots, Yz cup chopped celery. Grind bol ogna or wieners, mix with pick les or relish, mayonnaise, onion, tabasco sauce, pickle juice. Di vide in half and to one part add Chopped hard cooked eggs and salt. To the other half add ground raw carrots and chopped celery. Makes 2 2/3 cups of each mix ture. Makes 15 to 20 sandwiches. Half the recipe at a time is suffi cient for ordinary family. MOCK CHICKEN SANDWICH FILLING One cup coarsely ground cook 1 ed pork or veal, Yz cup chopped or shredded raw carrots, % cup , chopped celery, 2 tablespoons chow chow, 3 tablespoons may onnaise, salt to taste. Combine all ingredients and mix thoroughly. Spread between buttered slices of enriched white or whole wheat bread. Makes 5 sandwiches. For a change, a dried fruit and nut sandwich filling will delight ^he youngsters. DRIED FRUIT AND NUT SANDWICH You’ll need Yz cup finely chop ped raisins, figs, dates or chop ped prunes, y4 cup chopped nut 1 meats, % teaspoon salt, 5 tea spoons mayonnaise, few drops lemon juice. Combine all ingredients well and store in a covered jar in the refrigerator. Serve on buttered whole wheat bread. Makes 4 sandwiches. Plans Kitchen Work Right-to-Left— Mrs. John Storjohann. of O’ Neill, wins our 3 - months’ sub scription today. Dear Blanche: After reading your article a bout kitchen arrangements I could not hold my pen longer. When we built our new home in O’Neill, one of the business men who had built was a help to me. He said, let me show you how we take food from the re frigetaor, on to work table then sink, then stove and last the ta ble. It does save steps and no matter how many are helping it seems things go more order ly and not in each other's way. We work the natural way, from right-to-left. After meals dishes ana food go back to right of sink again and when washed to the left. I felt disappointed in Thurs day’s Frontier. Nothing was said about right-to-left. This has been a big help to me and I hope it can be a big help to you. I’d love to show you my kit chen some time when you are in O’Neill. Always enjoy your writ ings. Congratulations in winning a car. MRS. JOHN STORJOHANN Mrs. Storjohann, stop worry ing! Grin. My kitchen has been carefully planned for working from right-to-left, and the stove, table, refrigerator and sink are so placed as to save me steps. I will have the separate working centers for mixing, cooking, cleaning, etc. I know one might think sometimes from reading “Lines from a Little House” that Mrs. Pease is not too bright. That column is written to entertain, not to educate my readers. Later on when the house is done. I’ll describe my kitchen so that my readers can rest assured that if we didn’t think of every thing (and I doubt anybody does perfect planning), at least it was as well planned as our means will allow. SANDHILL SAL Bachelor Bill says that after seeing some folks, he would rath er be descended from monkeys. The newspapers say that the new generation will see a new dawn. In that case they had bet ter start going to bed a little ear lier in hopes that they can get up to see the dawn. It’s not a good idea to sing your own praises because you’re apt to get the tune too high. EWING NEWS At a meeting of American Le gion, Sanders post, 214, on Thurs day, August 9, the following offi cers were elected for the ensuing year: Commander, Duane Fudge; vice-commander, Ralph Munn; adjutant, Willis Rockey; service officer, H. R. Harris; finance offi cer, (M. B. Huffman; chaplain, Alvin Gibson. The retiring offi cers are Jay Butler, commander, R. H. Shain, vice commander, and Herbert Kirschmier, adjutant. Harris, Huffman and Gibson were reelected. Mrs. R. G. Rockey accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Buford Carlson, of Orchard, left Wedpes day, August 8, for Camp Camp bell, Ky.r where she will visit her daughter and son-in-law, Lt. and Mrs. Frank MacNeil. Roy Wright purchased the George Adrian residential prop erty last week and moved in on Aug. 10. Geo. Adrian and family have moved to Wichita, Kans., where George is employed in the Boeing aircraft works. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sanders and family left Friday, Aug. 10, for a vacation trip and will visit relatives in Colorado. R. G. Rockey drove to Clar inda, la., on Aug. 10 and returned with a new combine. Ralph Ciyde traded his pickup truck to Ernie Norwood last week and will quit the trucking and draying business on account of his health. The YM Pinochle club held the annual picnic .at the city park in Plainview Thursday, August 9. They were joined by 2 former members for the occasion, Mrs. Clyde Allen, of Plainview, and Mrs. Victor Marquardt. Aubrey Woods, of Lincoln, has been a guest the past week at the home of his aunt, Miss Vine Woods. He and H. R. Porter have been enjoying the fishing. On Sat urday, Mrs. Audrey Woods and her mother, Mrs. J. L. Tanck, of Norfolk, came to spend a few days at the Woods home. Mrs. Wilda Carr and children left August '11 for their home at Holdrege after spending a few weeks at the home of her father, M. H. Dierks. Mr. and Mrs. John Wunner went to Stanton August 12 where they will spend the next 3 weeks at her sister’s hotme while they are gone on vacation. iMr. and Mrs. Elmer Bergstrom and Kay visited at the home of her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Hoffman, and fanriily at Neligh on Friday, August 10. Mrs. Robert Dunaway and daughter, Bonnie Beth, of Hast ings, arrived August 11 to spend the next 2 weeks visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Billings. Mr. Dunaway will take training in the national guard in Wisconsin during this time. Mrs. J. C. Kay, who has been in California since last Septem ber, returned to her home in Ew ing on Wednesday, August 8. Mr. and Mrs. Sis Ebbengaard met her at Columbus. Raymond Saiser of Omaha spent August 12 with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Saiser. Frontier for printing. FINAL WEEK I i f summer picnics and outings. This is a two-layer marble cake made with CINCH W ite Cake Mix and CINCH Oevil's Fudge Mix, topped v ith a white and chocolate icing. It's a cinch to make; jut^ add water, mix and bake. THE EASIEST CONTEST YOU EVER ENTEREDI CONTEST Ll U L E S Jt Write tl\e name you have chosen for Martha Bohlsen's CINCH Cake, and your name and address, on the back of any CINCH box fop, or a reasonable fascimile. Send it to Martha Bohlsen, WOW-TV, Omaha, Nebr. You may I send in as many entries as you wish, but write each entry on a separate box top. 2, The contest closes midnight Friday, August 31, 1951. All entries become the property of Martha Bohlsen, WOW-TV. The desicion of the judges will be final. ^ here are the prizes FIRST PRIZE a $269.95 General Electric 8-cu. ft. Refrigerator, Model NCS-8H. SECOND PRIZE a $44.95 ^ ‘ General Electric Automatic .v / Roaster, Model C-24. Temper _— ature is thermostat controlled. THIRD PRIZE a $39.95 General Electric Triple-Whip Mixer, Model M-9, with speed selector, three beaters and juicer. f See Martha’s special CINCH Cake, and prizes, every Monday at 3P.M. on WOW-TV. CLOSE-OUT THE LAND ON WHICH I have been farming and ranching having been sold, and having planned to move to Oregon, I will offer at public close-out auction the following described personal property at the place, located 5 miles south of O’Neill on U.S. Highway 281 (C Bar M Ranchi comer), 1 mile west and Vi mile south, on — FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1951 SALE STARTS AT 1 O’CLOCK 8( 1 - Head of Cattle - 8( 1 12—Yearling Hereford HEIFERS 4—Milk COWS 34—Hereford COWS and 3-year-old HEIFERS 30—Whiteface CALVES (6 of These Are Purebred 3-year-old ★ Bulk of this fine herd are Herefords but there are Hereford Heifers) a few Shorthorns — all are in excellent condition. I Farm & Haying Machinery I 1—Allis-Chalmers WD 1—Allis-Chalmers, 2-Bottom 16- 1—McCormick Endgate I TRACTOR, used only 1 sea- In. Mounted PLOW, good. SEEDER. | son, like new. 2 4-Section HARROWS. 1—McCormick 8-Ft. DISC. 1 1—Allis-Chalmers Power 1—Hay STACKER. 2—McCormick WAGON 1 MOWER, never been used. 1-Allis-Chalmers 2-Row CUL- GEARS, 1 Box. 1 1—McCormick Com PLANTER. TIVATOR, used 1 season. 1—Double Hay RAKE. 1 2—Sets of Harness. 1 —New Pump Jack. I 40—New Line Posts, m 1—Electric Motor, 1—Briggs & Stratton 4—Spools Barbed Wire. C 1/3 hp. Engine. 4—Fuel Barrels. I MANY OTHER ITEMS - - r I Household Goods, Etc. j ■ (Most of this household goods is relatively new. It’s all clean and well cared for.) ■ f 1—Coronado Elec. Re- 1—Kitchen Stool. 2—Wool Rugs, 9x12. 1—Oak Dresser. f 1 frigerator (3 - mo. - 1-Oak Dinette Set, Ta- i _Walnut Knee Hoie 1-Electric Washer ( 1 old, large size.) ble, 4 Chairs. Desk. , Maytag. I ■ 1—Porcelain Top Cabi- 2—Chests of Drawers. o v il d i o j B ( net SINK. 1-Library Table. ? Youth Bunk Beds. 1-Stainless Steel ( ( 1—Chrome Dinette Set. 1—Platform Rocker. 1—Norge Oil Burner. De LeVal Cream £ I 1-Magic Chef Combin- 1-Daveno. 1-High Chair. Separator, No. 518. | £ ation Gas, Coal or 1—Mahogany Bedroom 1 Coal or Wood 1—National Pressure £ f Wood Range. Suite. Heater. Canner, 7-qt. f I TERMS CASH or Make Arrangements with Your Banker. 1 DON HILL, Owner | I COL. WALLACE O’CONNELL, O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK, f I Auctioneer . Clerk 1