The Frontier Woman . . . Offers Salad Recipes By BLANCHE SPANN PEASE, Homemaking Editor Last week I promised to give you some salad recipes. So today that is what we’re going to have. BANANA SALMON SALAD One cup diced ripe bananas (one to two bananas), % cup diced pineapple (canned or fresh), 1 Vz cups flaked salmon, % cup diced celery, two tablespoons finely chopped pickles, 1% tea spons salt, one tablespoon pre pared mustard, one tablespoon mayonnasie, salad greens. Combine the bananas and pine apple. Add salmon, celery, pickles and salt. Add mustard and mayon naise and mix lightly. Serve on a crisp lettuce cup or with any oth er salad greens. FIESTA SALAD Oranges, Bermuda onion, stuff ed olives, salad greens. Cut peeled oranges in %-inch slices. Arrange sandwich fashion with a thin slice of onion between each two orange slices. Garnish with stuffed olives and serve on crisp salad greens with lemon French dressing. LEMON FRENCH DRESSING One-half cup lemon juice, Vz cup salad oil, one teaspoon each salt and paprika, two tablespoons sugar or honey. Shake well before serving. Makes about a cup. If you like sweet dressing, add half a cup of red jelly. WALDORF SALAD LOAF One package lemon flavored gelatin, two cups hot water, one teaspoon salt, V\ cup chopped wal nuts, one tablespoon lemon juice, one red apple (diced), one cup cottage cheese. Dissolve gelatin in hot water, add salt and lemon juice. Cool. Add diced apple to half the gela tin mixture. Pour into a small loaf pan. Chill until almost set. Add cottage cheese to remaining gelatin mixture, beat with rotary beater until well blended. Stir in nuts. Pour over apple-gelatin mixture. Chill until set. Unmold on bed of chicory. Serve with sour cream dressing, if desired. Four to six servings. CAROTENE SALAD Toss lightly together with two forks: IV2 cups orange pieces, \Vz cups finely cut carrot, % cup rai sins. Add desired salad dressing to moisten. Serve on lettuce or shredded cabbage and garnish ■with Vz cup chopped peanuts. This will serve six. — tfw — Coffee Get-Togethers Are Frequent— Mrs. G. W. Pierson, 2325 New ark street, Aurora 8, Colo., wins cur three - months’ subscription today. Dear Frontier Woman: I have been reading your inter esting column for quite a few years. I enjoy it very much. I have tried quite a few recipes from your column. Now I have one some of your readers may en joy. I call them mulberry muffins. I know mulberries grow quite abundantly down your way. I came upon this quite by chance. I live in town and my neigh borhood has quite a few get-to-< gethers for coffee and talk. I wanted to serve something a little different, so did some experiment ing. These muffins are favorites with my family, too. I have three small boys so you can imagine how long a batch would last. Here is my recipe for— MULBERRY MUFFINS Two cups sifted cake flour, 2% teaspoons baking powder, Y4 tea spoon salt, Va teaspoon shortening, one cup sugar, one egg, one tea spoon vanilla, % cup milk. Sift dry ingredients together. Cream shortening with sugar un til fluffy. Add egg and vanilla and beat thoroughly. Add sifted dry ingredients and milk alternately in small amounts, beating well after each addition. Mix in about a cup of fresh or fresh frozen mulber ries. Pour into greased muffin pans or papier cup cake pans. Bake in 350 F. oven about 25 min utes or until done. Makes about two dozen muffins. If your readers like muffins, I am sure they will like these. My first grader just came home for lunch so I must bring this to a close. MRS. G. W. PIERSON Applebys Entertain Grade Players— INMAN— Mr. and Mrs. Harry Appleby entertained at a supper in honor of the sixth, seventh and eighth grade basketball boys on Wednesday, March 16. Coach Jesse Hughes and his wife were also guests. The table was decorated with blue and gold crepe paper. There was an arch over the table with a star in the center. Lettering w:»s in gold—“The Basketball Stars of Tomorrow.” Angel food cakes and ice cream were served as dessert. Mr. and Mrs..Robert Ruther of Inman were also'present. Mrs. Ruther helped decorate the table and serve the supper. The boys played indoor games and cards. Favorite Irish , Song Named— The Sandhill Billies 4-H club meeting was called to order by the president, Dean Garwood. It was held at the Hank Whitcomb home Saturday, March 19. For roll call we named an Irish song we liked. Secretary Karen Garwood read the minutes of the last meeting. For new business we took in a new member— Galyen Worden. The contest was won by Billie Whitcomb, first place; Jo Ann Dunkel, second place; and Karen Garwood third place. Mrs. Blaine Garwood, leader, handed out the yearbooks. The meeting adjourned to meet at the home of George Dunkel April 16 —By Kathleen Dunkel, news re porter. Sobotka to Enroll at Morningside— Joseph Sobotka, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sobotka of O’Neill, is planning to attend Morningside college, the admissions office at the college announced recently. Now a senior in O’Neill, Joseph will begm his college career next September, and is interested in so ciology as his course of study. Mr. and Mrs. Ira H. Moss and Mrs. H. J. Hammond spent Mon day in Sioux City. 2 Enlistees Going Directly to Germany The army recruiting office at O’Neill has announced the follow ing recent enlistments from this area: Ronald D. Conarro of O’Neill, for airborne; Sidney R. Greene of Lynch, for engineers; Richard L. Truax of Redbird, for artillery; Jesse W. Garner of Eli, for artil lery; Robert V. Garner, for air plane mechanic school. Richard D. Gamer of Merriman, for airplane mechanic school; Dale V. Greenamyre of Gordon, for helicopter repair school; Donald R. Gamer of Crawford, for Tenth division (to Germany); Melvin A. Cole of Atkinson, for Tenth di vision (to Germany); Edward J. Schemm of Valentine, regular ar my, uhassigned. Theodore M. Schubauer of Val entine, regular army, unassigned; David R. Clopton of Springview, regular army, unassigned; Robert S. Bartak of Ewing, regular army, unassigned. , These men went to Camp Chaf fee, Ark., for further processing training, except Garner and Cole, who went to Ft. Riley, Kans. From Ft. Riley they will go directly to Germany to join up with the Tenth division. Mr. and Mrs. John Donohoe visited Sunday in Omaha with their daughter, Dorothy, who is a student at St. Catherine’s school of nursing. r gives your budget a lift with greater than-ever . . . Easter Savings! Sport Coats Dress up in comfort in our all wool sport coats. Lapels, fronts interfaced with goat hair canvas for lasting shape retention. 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