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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1952)
The Frontier Woman — Deviled Tuna and Macaroni a Suggestion for Lenten Meal-in-One Casserole • Br BLANCHE SPANN PEASE Now that the time comes for you to serve Lenten meals, 1 think many of our readers might enjoy deviled tuna and macaroni. It s a colorful meal-in-o n e casserole that will please your guests as well as your own family. If you wish, you can use another canned seafood in place of the tuna, for example, try crab meat or salmon. Lettuce salad and hot rolls served with this are an excellent accom paniment. Nor need this be a Lenten dish alone, it’s good served any day of the year. DEVILED TUNA AND MACARONI Four ounces shell macaroni, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 tablespon enriched flour, 1 teaspoon salt, % teaspoon paprika, 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce, 1 Vi cups s,milk, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 cup flaked tuna (7 ounce can), 2 hard boiled eggs, 1 tablespoon chopped pimiento, sliced stuffed olives. Cook macaroni in boiling salted water until tender (8 min utes). Drain and rinse While macaroni is cooking, melt butter or margarine in sauce pan. Stir in flour, salt and paprika and Worcestershire sauce. Gradually add milk, stiring constantly until slightly thickened. Add lemon juice and tuna. Dice hard cooked eggs, reserving 1 yolk for garnish. Fold eggs and macaroni into deviled sauce. Mix thoroughly. 1 Pour into 4 greased individual baking dishes. Bake in moderate oven of 350 F. for 20 minutes. Garnish with sieved egg yolk, pimiento and olives. Makes 4 j servings Emmel Reader Wins buuscripuon Today — bmmet, Nebr. Dear Blanche: l am going to share my recipe for golden brown sugar cake with your readers. GOLDEN BROWN bUOAti CAKE Two cups brown sugar, Vi cup shortening, 2 whole eggs, 1 tea spoon soua, dissolved in 1 table spoon bulling/ water, 2 cups flour, ‘■2 teaspoon salt, 1 cup buttermilk or sour milk. Mix together with hands the sugar, flour, snortemng ana salt. After mixing reserve % cup of the mixture. Add to the remaining mixture the eggs, but termilk and soda which has been dissolved in boiling water. Beat weil and pour into a greased floured, loaf pan. Now sprinkle the % cup of the reserved mix ture over the top of the batter and bake in oven for 35 minutes at 350 F. OATMEAL CAKE One cup sugar, 2 eggs, beaten, 1/3 cup chopped dates, 1/3 cup shrecided cocoanut, 1 Vi cups flour, Vi teaspoon baking powder, Vi teaspoon salt, Vi cup shortening, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1/3 cup chopped black walnuts, Vi cup oatmeal, 1 teaspoon soda, Vi teaspoon cinna mon, 1 cup sour milk. Cream . ugar and shortening, Ad eggs and beat well. Stir in vanilla, dates, nuts and cocoanut and oatmeal. Sift the remaining dry ingredients and add alternately with sour milk. Mix well and pour into a i 6- by 10-inch pan. Bake in I moderate oven of 350 F. for one hour. I'm also enclosing some of my favorite hints. If you pul powdered sugar in meringue in stead of granulated sugar, it will keep the meringue from ga thering water. Rice will take the too strong taste from lard. Melt the lard and add V4 cup uncooked rice to each gallon. Heat until the rice is a golden brown. Cool and strain. A can of cream of chicken soup mixed with vegetables and heated and then poured over toast is very delicious. You can keep nuts and raisins from sinking to the bottom of a cake by sprinkling theim on top of the batter when it is in pans. MRS. ERNEST WEDIGE SAYS SANDHILL SAL One of the hard points in an adolescents life is learning to dance. Blessings on the gal who treats the young guy nicely, even though he doesn’t dance well. Possibly Mr Truman will be remembered as the poison pen president. Politicians are reluctant to ac cept political appointments any more. Sooner or later they are bound to be investigated. No parent could possibly be as stupid as their children some times grow to think. Visitor Her*— Mrs. Sam Kelley, of Fairbury, was a guest Saturday, March 1, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert Moore. Venetian blinds, prompt deliv ery. made to measure, metal or wood, all colon.—J. M. McDon ald Co.. O'Neill. Frontier for printing 1_ Spends New Year’s on Korean Front LYNCH—S/Sgt. Charles J. Ko lar’s holiday experiences in the Far Fast theater have varied. Thanksgiving he went to Japan by air for a furlough. Christmas was spent in Korea. Dinners on both occasions “were real ban quets,” he wrote. New Year's day, however, was different: He was slugging it out with the reus on the front lines. Kolar is a son of Mr. and (Mrs. Joe Kolar of Monowi. He entered the service November 21, 1950, and took his basic training at Ft. Filey, Kans., with company C., 86th regiment, Tenth infantry envision. After basic training he spent 2 weeks furlough at home and on March 30, 1951, left for Ft. Lawton, wash, on April 14, 1951, i_ym Sergeant Kolar . . . holiday conditions vary in the Far East. he embarked for Camp Fuji, Ja pan, and was advanced to Pfc. He went to Seoul, Korea, in Au gust. Korea’s average winter tem perature this year has been 10 de grees below zero with 3 to 6 inches of snow. The men wear sufficient clothing to keep com fortable at all times. Sergeant Kolar is now serving with the 25th infantry division on the fighting front in Korea. Ke is a section leader in the 14th infantry regiment. He spends 5 days on the front lines and then is sent for a 5-day rest period be hind the lines. During these rest periods they make their shelter by digging a hole and covering it first with poles which they tnen cover with a mound of dirt. In these dugouts they keep warm by a stove made from 81 mm. mortar cans with artillery shell casings for stove pipes. They are com fortable in these rudely built dug outs. Sergeant Kolar writes that he is able to attend church services quite regularly. Sergeant Kolar wears the com bat infantryman badge and his division is a veteran unit of the war in Korea. T reasurer Quits During an Audit State Auditor Ray C. Johnson i Saturday confirmed that Keya Paha County Treasurer Dale Sheppard has resigned after Mr Johnson’s staff started an audit of the treasurer’s books. Sunday Sheppard was quoted as saying he quit “because of the supposition of a deficiency of funds.” Asked if his decision to quit * came suddenly, Mr. Sheppard said ‘not too sudden.’’ He ha been the Keya Paha county treasurer for 8 years. An audit of the books will be completed this week. ATKINSON—A new Wurlitzer organ was used Sunday for the first time in St. Joseph’s Catholic church, Atkinson. SYMPHONIC CONCERT By the 90-Piece Touring UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA ROTC BAND Under the Direction of Donald Lentz O’Neill Public School Auditorium WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12-8 P.M. Sponsored by O’Neill Lions Club A dm.: Adults 75c; Students 35c • This will be a program by Nebraska University’s famous band, one of the six foremost collegiate bands in the Mid west. The concert will appeal to a wide range of musical tastes, including Tschai kowsky’s “March Slav,” “The Roman Carnival” oveture by Berloiz, and “Death and Transfiguration” by Richard Strauss. • Among the band members are 3 from the O Neill area: John Berigan, Paul Moseman, both of O’Neill, and John Elule, of Ainsworth. NO OTHER PLANS PROVIDE SO MUCH FOR SO LITTLE! $&te$kieM loin MouaJ recommended by ' HOSPITALS AND DOCTORS *» INDIVIDUAL ENROLLMENT IN O’NEILL „ UNTIL MARCH $ You are eligible to apply for membership if you are under 65 years of age and work where there are fewer than five employees. Prsons working where there are five or more employees should join through goups formed! at their place of em ployment. After the close of this special enrollment period, member ship on this basis will not be available again in this area for six months. ENROLLMENT HEADQUARTERS: Sullivan’s Cleaners, Telephone 388 SPONSORED BY: O’Neill Hospital and Physicians » •: • ■ Mutual Insurance 200tb Jhwiversaiy-1952 SAVE - Be a part owner of this Mutual Insurance Company! All insurance isn’t Mutual Insurance. Only Mutual Insurance, pioneered by Benjamin Franklin, permits you, as a part owner, to share in sav ings made by your Mutual Insurance Company. These savings result from the selec tion of policyholders who are sincerely willing to exercise care and precaution to avoid losses. Savings made when these losses are avoided are "money in your pocket." Check us for full information and rates. 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