The Greater Omaha Guide's ! HOME-MAKER’S CORNER Heap Salad Bowls With Vitamins For Summer Help Yourself to Vitamins: This pretty as a picture salad bowl is made simply by alternating rows of lettuce wedges and mounds of po tato salad, garnished with slices of hard-cooked eggs. It’s hearty enough for a main dish, even with out meat. Summer is the time to heap high the salad bowl and bring generous portions of nature's bounty of vita mins and minerals to the table. Active summer play and strenu ous work calls for big servings of health and energy producing foods. That's why the salad bowls play a major role in the menu parade. There’s another reason, too, why salads are going to be important this season. When the butcher has no meat and the cupboard yields nothing of inter est to the home maker, she can always go to her refrigerator and bring out lovely greens, juicy fruits and berries, toss them together and serve an eye-appealing salad. If more substantial salads are desired, especially for main dishes, they can be flecked with the white and gold of protein-rich eggs, unrationed, lus cious bits of chicken or well chilled and subtly seasoned fish. Vary the trimmings and change the dressing, and no salad can ever become monotonous. If oils and fats for salad dressings are scarce, put them together with sour cream, fruit juices, vinegar or cooked dressings that require little fat. Here are two main dish salads that Will go over big with the family. One stars eggs and the other chick en: Star Deviled Eggs. (12 Eggs) 12 hard-cooked eggs 2 tablespoons salad dressing 1 tablespoon lemon juice IK teaspoons mustard IK teaspoons Worcestershire sauce % teaspoon salt K teaspoon pepper Remove shells from eggs Cut a •lice from both ends, cutting the slice at the round end deep enough to expose the yolk. Cut deep gashes into the egg white around the round ed end to give a saw tooth edge. Pressing gently at the bottom, force out the yolk. Press yolk and egg white that was cut off through the sieve. Add remaining ingredients and beat until smooth. Refill shells. Garnish tops if desired. To serve as a salad, lay on top of sprigs of watercress or other greens. Or, use as a garnish for other salad platters. *BufTet Chicken Salad. (Serves 8) 2 cups cubed, cooked chicken K cup french dressing 4 cups boiled rice, chilled Lynn Says Different Salad Dressings: If fruits and vegetables do not give enough variety to make salads in teresting, season the dressing it self for flavor plus. Club Dressing: To 1 cup of mayonnaise, add 1 tablespoon chopped currants, 1 tablespoon chopped raisins, 1 tablespoon chopped nuts. Indian Dressing: V« cup of chow-chow to 1 cup mayonnaise. Tartar Dressing is excellent on flsh salads. To 1 cup mayonnaise, add 2 tablespoons chopped sweet gherkins, 1 tablespoon capers, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley and 2 tablespoons chopped olives. Thousand Island Dressing is easily tossed together. For a cup of mayonnaise, use cup chili sauce, 1 tablespoon green pepper and chopped stuffed olives. Egg Dressing is lovely to look at when made by adding 1 chopped hard-cooked egg, 1 tablespoon chopped pimiento and 1 table spoon India relish to 1 cup may onnaise. A bit of leftover meat? Add it to the eggs. Especially good are diced ham, tongue or dried beef. 4 Lynn Chambers’ Point-Easy Menus •Buffet Chicken Salad Sliced Tomatoes and Cucumbers Potato Chips Pickles and Olives Orange Rolis or Biscuits Fresh Berries with Cream Refrigerator Cookies Beverage •Recipe given. Salt and pepper to taste Boiled dressing or mayonnaise Lettuce or greens Jellied cranberry sauce Devilrd eggs Combine chicken and french dress ing. Chill about 1 hour. Meanwhile cook rice until fluffy and season well according to taste. Just before serv ing combine chicken, chilled rice and enough salad dressing to moist en. Season. Arrange in individual lettuce cups on platter or salad bowl. Garnish with thick slices of cran berry sauce and deviled eggs. Top with additional dressing, if desired. There’s nothing so cooling on a warm summer night than a jellied tomato salad Although this recipe provides for a simple salad, it may be varied by adding leftover or chopped, fresh vegetables to it. Jellied Tomato Salad. (Serves 10) 1 quart hot, stewed tomatoes 1 teaspoon salt 2 packages of lemon flavored gelatin Vi cup sliced, pickled onions or 1 teaspoon onion juice 14 cup sliced stuffed olives 14 cup diced green pepper 1 cup diced celery Dissolve gelatin in hot tomatoes. Add salt and cool. When gelatin begins to congeal, add the remain ing ingredients. Place in a large mold, rinsed with cold water, or in individual molds. Chill until firm. Serve on salad greens with either french dressing or mayonnaise. A fruity salad doubles for the des sert, if so desired. This one is espe cially good when served with tiny cakes or finger cookies: Ocean Breeze Salad. (Serves 6) 3 tablespoons lemon juice 2 cups diced honeydew melon 1 cup watermelon balls or slices % cup white grapes, split and seeded l.cup grapefruit sections 3 tablespoons preserved ginger 1% tablespoons gelatin Vi cup cold water Vi cup sugar 3 tablespoons chopped maraschia* cherries Mix gelatin and water and let stand 5 minutes. Dissolve over hot water. Combine fruits, lemon juice, sugar and ginger. Chill thor oughly. Add gela tin and pour into a mold. Chill un ui nrm. 11 it is oDtainaDie, Vi pint whipped cream may be added to fruits before they are mixed with the gelatin. Green, White and Gold: As pic turesque as a garden in full bloom is this simple salad made by plac ing chilled deviled eggs on crisp sprigs of watercress. Use extra dressing if desired, and serve for luncheon or side dish at garden sup per. Your salad can be better than just “passing" if your dressings are smooth and well seasoned so they can complement the other ingredi ents of the salad bowl. Here are several good basic suggestions: Cooked Dressing. $4 cup sugar 54 cup vinegar 54 cup evaporated milk 54 teaspoon salt Dissolve sugar in vinegar and stir until it dissolves. Beat in milk un til mixture thickens. Pour over cab bage or other greens. Sour Cream Dressing. 54 cup sour cream 54 cup vinegar 54 cup sugar 54 teaspoon salt Mix ingredients in order g: r Chill. Thousand Island Dressing. 1 cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons chili sauce 2 tablespoons chopped green peppe; 2 tablespoons pimiento 2 tablespoons chopped sweet prckle Mix all ingredients in order given Serve over vegetable salads. Released bv Western Newspaper Union Farm Employment Total farm employment in th« United States in 1944 was about 7 per cent less than the average of the period 1935-39, according to esti mates of the Bureau of Agricul tural Economics. During 1943 the farms of the nation were operated with a total farm employment 5 per cent below the five prewar years. This means, therefore, that the total employment was reduced in 1944 about 2 per cent below the average employed during 1943. In the 1935 39 period about 10,700,000 people were engaged in farm employment on the average. Roughly three fourths of these were family work ers, and about one-fourth was hired labor. In Illinois, Indiana, Michi gan, Ohio and Wisconsin about 1,475,000 were employed on the aver age during the same period, of whom 77 per cent were family la borers. For 1944 the proportion of family labor W'as unchanged for' the nation, but for the foregoing \ states the proportion represented by' family labor had increased to 83 per cent CLIMAX HAT TAILOR & CLEANING SHOP • 1837 North 24th St. J- H. ANRDEWS, Prop. _ —Phone JA. 4117— Buy your Poultry at the Nebraska Poultry 2204 North 24th Street Get the Bent In Quality nt the Nebraska Produce—Lowest Price We’ll show you HOW to get it eas ily, in your spare or full time! NO more bossesm NO depression wor ries Our sure-fire plans tell you HOW to start your own paying business NOW for post-war secur ity Send for our NEIV "8-WAJ OPPORTUNITY" Offer today; it's' FREE. RAYCO SPECIALITIES •liSO-B Blair Ave. Newport News. Vn. Black Eagle Herb Medicine For Weak Folks McGILL’S — BAR & BLUE ROOM E. McGill, Prop. t423-25 NORTH 24th St. WINE, LIQUORS, and CIGARS Bine Room Open 8 p. n. to I l • Open tor Private Parties from 2 to 7 p. m. —No Charges— WE SPECIALIZE IN MIXED DRINKS. t ree Delivery from 8 a. m to 1 a. m. JA. 9411 WE CARRY A FULL LINE l)F BONDED LIQUORS "Time and Tide Wait on No Man' NOW JS THE TIME TO GE: YOUR SHOES REBUILT Quality Material and Guaranteea Quality Work" LAKE SHOE SERVICE 2407 Lake Street Acid Indigestion Relieved in 5 minutes or donble your money back When excess stomach acid causes painful. sufTocat ing gas. sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for symptomatic relief—medicines like those in Bell-ans Tablets. No laxative. Bell-ans hrings comfort in a Jiffy or double your money back on return of bottle to us. 25c at all druggists. Tortured man gets help! Lemon Juice Mixed at Home Relieved RHEUMATIC PAIN says Sufferer! I have used ALLENRU for several months. I could hardly walk on account of my knees. But now those pains are relieved. I can go like a race horse now,” Mort Shepard of Ohio. Don't be a victim of the pains and aches caused by rheumatism, lumbago or neuritis without trying this simple, inexpensive recipe you can mix at home. Two tablespoons of ALLENRU, I plus the juice of Vi lemon in a glass of water. Try a bottle TODAY! Be en j tirely satisfied with it — or money bade. 85#. Drug stores. • • Use The Omaha Guide i As A— Medium of Advertising Federal Security Agency ^ PlJ. S. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE " \ Division of Nurse Education A— A member of the Cadet Nurse Corps of the U. S. Public Health Service enjoys the pleasant task of feeding a hungry young patient . . . part of the training that will qualify her for a professional nursing career in the postwar world. B—Junior Cadet performing Benedict test in the clinical chemistry laboratory at Freedmen’s Hospital, Washington, D. C. . . . one of the 50 hospitals in 22 n States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, which offer opportunities f F for Negro Cadet Nurses. C—Cadet Nurses relaxing in the game room after classes. To qualify for a l scholarship in the Corps, an applicant must be in good health, between 17 4 l or 18 and 35 years old, and a high school or college graduate with a high ’ F scholastic record. D Cadet Nurse studies a model of the human eye . . . one phase of her basic experience. As a Senior Cadet she may choose to complete her education 1 in one of the Federal service hospitals. E Cadet Nurse works with a young orthopedic patient in the pediatric ward. She is one of the more than 2,000 Negro student nurses helping maintain ‘ 'V health on the home front during the war. ' -—---i FOR STAY-AT-HOME PICNICS gUg Serve outdoors for informal summer sociability/ Dainty sandwiches—Orangeade Cake, as luscious and refreshing^STts name—frosty pitcher of iced lemonade—here are the “makings” of a feast for family and friends out in your own shady back yard! Travel ing for fun is out this summer, so plan fun at home this easy way! A recipe for cherishing is Orangeade Cake, so moist and tender, with the real flavor of fresh oranges—so packable in picnic basket, fish ing hamper or lunchbox. Clip now for keeps! _.> .. One-Bowl ORANGEADE CAKE Dry Ingndientt J cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon soda 'I 1 Vi cups sugar 1 teaspoon salt ■1^ 1V4 teaspoons baking powder J? V4 cup Spry — (with a tartrate powder. 3v 1 tablespoon gra ^.use 2Vi teaspoons) orange rind y Liquid Ingndientt a cup sour milk V4 cup orange juice ~ . . T 2 eggs, unbeaten 1 cup nuts, very finely cut -. i v zC Sift flour, sugar, baking powder, soda, and salt into mixing bowl. ... Drop in Spry and grated orange rind.... Add sour milk and beat 150 strokes.... Scrape bowl and spoon often throughout entire mixing.... Add eggs and beat 250 strokes. ... Add orange juice and beat 150, strokes. ... Add nuts and blend—25 strokes.... Bake in Spry-coated 10 x 10 x 2-inch pan in moderately hot oven (375° F.) 35-45 minutes. TOPPING: Place V4 cup sugar, V4 cup orange juice. 1 tablespoon grated orange rind and 2 tablespoons lemon juice in a bowl and warm over oven while cake is Pour over cake as soon as removed from oven. Serve in squares. .i^ara wan izn) • Rural Population Better Meals About four-fifths of the population Better meals the year round can of Bulgaria live by agriculture or be achieved by home preservation fishing. of fruits and vegetables. IN CONFERENCE If you suffer with weak back, Kidney, Bladder Gas, Constipation, Indigestion, Billiousness, Rundown Nerves, Cramps, Rheumatism, Loss of Womanhood, and Manhood, try this medicine. Send J2.00 for an 8 ounce bottle. We also ship C.O.D., postage and money order fee extra. THE SPIRITUAL HEALTH GEXIRE 121 N. 11th St. Phila.? Pa. Pull Out Tractor When a steel-wheel tractor mires down, fasten a couple of steel ca bles to lugs at one end. With the other end of each cable fixed to a post a few rods back of the tractor, the tractor can be brought out with out danger. The wheels back track on the cables, which wind up on the wheels between the lugs. Iron Sources Good sources of iron are lima beans, peas, navy beans, broccoli, brussels sprouts and dried fruits. In clude liberal quantities of these foods in your menus; this is the modern way of maintaining proper iron balance for the members of your family. Presidential Resignation The president of the United States can resign only by sending a written statement of resignation to the de partment of state. No president has thus far taken this action. Only one vice president has resigned—John C. Calhoun. Refinishing Furniture Give your furniture a lift by re newing its finish, recovering its up holstery or making new and in teresting slip covers. Proper use of paints, waxes and fabrics will make the furniture more attractive. Endowed Chairs The first endowed chairs at Har vard college—the Hollis Professor ship of Divinity and the Hollis Pro fessorship of Mathematics and Nat ural Philosophy—were established in 1721 and 1727, respectively. Memorial Buoy A red, white and blue buoy stands in Chesapeake bay off Fort McHen ry, and marks the approximate spot where the Star Spangled Banner was written. Clear Air To remove smoke from a room, dip a towel in equal parts of vinega.4j and water. Wring out and whirl? gently over your head about the? room. - 1 Green Peppers i Try using green peppers as a dish by themselves. Slice them, season with salt and pepper, dredge with flour and saute until tender. Washing Glassware When washing glassware, add a little laundry blue to the water and see how it makes the glassware sparkle. Saves Leather An improved method of cattle branding results in great saving of leather and creates greater leather supply. Home Gardeners Home gardeners produced more than 40 per cent of the fresh vege table supply of the nation last year. Citrus Rind When using both the rind and the juice of lemons or oranges, grate the rind before squeezing the fruit. First Western Telegraph Post The first Western telegraph sta tion was located on San Francisco’s Telegraph HilL Industrial State Switzerland is one of the most highly industrialized states of Eu rope. Cleaning Rugs When cleaning rugs, be sure to remove every particle of soap, since the residue will turn rancid and cause disintegration of backing. RUMMAGE (SALE St. Benedict’s DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY & MONDAY HOURS: A. M. 9:00—12:00 P. M. 1:00—5:00 2423 Grant St. Palmer’s “SKIN SUCCESS” Soap is a tpecial soap containing the same costly medication as 104 year proved Palmer’s “SKIN SUCCESS” Ointment Whip up the rich cleansing FOAMY MEDICATION with finger tips, wash cloth or brush and allow to remain on 3 minutes. Amazingly quick results come to many skins afflicted with pimples, blackheads, itching of eczema and rashes externally caused that need the scientific hygiene action of Palmer’s “SKIN SUCCESS” Soap. For your youth-clear, soft lovelir.^f*. givti >our skin this luxurious 3 minute foamy medication-treatment 25(. Ahte use Palmer’s “SKIN SUCCESS” Ointment 25( at toilet counters everywhere or from. E. T. Browne Drug Company, Inc.^l27JVater Street, New York 5, N. Y. ✓ Military Sanitation Known as “the father of military sanitation,” Sir John Pringle was the first man to make an exhaustive study of the special health problems of military personnel, and to urge preventive measures. He published his findings in 1752 in a book he called “Observations on the Dis eases of the Army.” In it he traced the causes of military health haz ards to faulty diet, lack of cleanli ness, exposure to heat and cold, as wrell as to other conditions rising | from combat life. His proposed ] remedy for reducing the "calamities of war,” as he called them, was a program of sanitation, which in- j eluded large and clean quarters for the men, hygienic provisions for food preparation, and sanitary toilet facilities on the march as well as in barracks life. He laid down, l for the first time, the true principles of military sanitation which have been expanded through the years until we now have the outstanding provisions that guard the health and welfare of the American men fight- , ing the battles of the Second World war. I 1 Remote Sinkiang Called Asia’s Center of Gravity Sinkiang, where civil war is re ported raging between rebel Mos lems and Chinese troops, has been called Asia’s ‘‘center of gravity.” In the heart of the world's largest land mass, this westernmost Chinese province is nearly a thousand air miles over deserts and high moun tains, from the nearest open water at the Bay of Bengal, points out the National Geographic society. It has no railways. Its roads are more or less modernized versions of ancient caravan trails that men knew be fore Marco Polo. It is remote, iso lated from its neighbors by natural barriers, and little traveled. Yet, because of its location, Sin kiang is also, paradoxically a pas sageway for traffic and a signifi cant buffer land where Russian, Chinese, and British - Indian in fluences meet. When China was all but isolated from the outside world by Japanese blockade, it was through Sinkiang that much of the Russian supplies continued to come. This remote inner region has long been the object of scientific investi gation and exploration.