The Odem-Edroy Times (Odem, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 16, 1949 Page: 7 of 8
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Wednesday, November 16, 1949
THE ODEM-EDROY TIMES
m
Housewives Can Inspire
Meals With Novel Salads
Made of Fresh Foodstuff
i/r NEVER have trouble thinking
■I* of salads to serve during hot
[weather when there’s so much
I available of salad ingredients,”
says a homemaker. “But salad
[Inspiration during winter is a big
problem!”
It needn’t be so, especially if jyou
check over these inspiration—pack-
ed tips I’m giv-
ing in today’s
column. All
foods used are
av a i 1 a b 1 e dur-
ing cool weath-
er, and you’ll be
surprised at
what salads can be whipped to-
gether without mental fatigue.
Badly needed vitamins and min-
erals are found in fresh fruits and
vegetables to a much greater ex-
tent than in cooked foods where
water, steam and air have ren-
dered many of them useless. The
best way to get their full benefit,
therefore, is to serve raw foods.
What better way to do this than in
salads?
9 • •
^■RUIT SALADS, when made
* large and beautiful enough, will
double as salad and dessert or sal-
ad and appetizer. They may be
garnished with a scoop of sherbet
or dressed wrth a piquant dressing.
• Fruit Salad Combinations
1. Alternate wedges of grape-
fruit, oranges, apples, pears and
calavo. Serve with honey or lime-
flavored French dressing.
2. Fill canned peach halves with
cream cheese and chopped nut
mixture and garnish with unpeeled
raw apples.
3. Put three cups fresh cranber-
ries through food chopper with two
apples and one large orange. Add
two cups sugar. Serve, mounded,
on a pineapple slice on a bed of
lettuce.
4. Serve pear halves filled with a
cream cheese and crumbled ginger-
snap center on lettuce leaf.
5. Sliced bananas marinated in
lemon juice, then mixed with
orange sections and thin, unpeeled
apple slices look pretty, taste well.
C a r e f u 1 ly
cooked or
drained canned
vegetables may
be used in
vegetable sal-
ads with raw
ingredients for
contrast and
texture inter-
est. Here are
some sugges-
tions:
Vegetable Salads
1. Arrange 4-6 asparagus tips
(cooked or canned) on lettuce, en-
circling them with a green pepper
ring. Serve with French dressing
to which chopped chives or stuffed
olives have been added.
2. Mix shredded red cabbage
with fried and crumbled bacon.
Toss together with tart mayon-
naise.
3. Serve cooked chilled broccoli
with a French dressing into which
is placed crumbled, hard-cooked
egg and crumbled blue cheese.
4. Cooked lima beans mixed with
diced pickled beets, chopped^ pars-
ley and onion are excellent on a
bed of lettuce.
A combination of citrus fruits
makes an excellent salad for
cool weather eating. Dress it
dowA by having simply the
fruit on a crisp bed of greens.
Dress it up by topping with a
scoop of colorful sherbet.
When you’re having hot soup
for lunch, team it with a hearty
salad and make the meal out
of it. Macaroni with celery,
cheese, hard- - cooked eggs,
green pepper, bacon curls, ol-
ives and banana strips rolled in
chopped nuts makes a generous
plate that takes care of main
dish and dessert.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Hot Tomato Juice
Baked Halibut
Oven-Fried Potatoes
Creamed Broccoli
Cinnamon Bread
•Fruit Salad
Peanut Butter Cookies
Beverage
•Recipe Given
LYNN SAYS:
Try New Food Combinations
For Flavor Possibilities
Baked, smoked ham butts take
on delicious flavor as well as glaze
if you brush them with orange mar-
malade just before serving.
Don’t bother icing cupcakes after
they’ve cooled. Simply swirl them
in corn syrup and top with chopped
nuts or coconut.
Add onions and celery to potatoes
\ when you’re making soup if you
Want to sharpen the flavor of the
soup in a subtle fashion.
(OP®
mmm
■Bn
BY INEZ GERHARD
JT IS QUITE POSSIBLE that “The
Heiress” will bring Paramount
another Academy Award; if it
does, most of the credit should go
to William Wyler, who directed and
produced it. Olivia de Havilland
and Ralph Richardson, seen as an
awkward, shy, unattractive daugh-
ter and her bully of a father, give
Hat Freshener
Black felts and derbies that
lave become dull looking or rain
spattered can be freshened by
lolding them over the spout of a
Reaming kettle and then buffing
:hem with a soft brush or piece of
felt to bring up the nap.
Limp Veils
A limp veil can be cured by put-
ting it between two pieces of
j waxed paper and running a mod-
erately warm iron over it. Or dip
it in beer, shake it briskly, and
lay it out on a towel to dry.
Trouser Cuffs
You can brush out the cuffs of
men’s trousers easily if you take
out the stitches holding the cuff
fV. (V, (V. (V. (V. (V. (Vi
? ASK
Golden Gate Salad Bowl
(Serves 8)
1 clove garlic
1 cup spinach leaves
1 small head chicory
1 small head lettuce
1 cucumber, sliced
1 head cauliflower, uncooked,
broken into flowerets
1 head watercress, separated
10 radishes, sliced
1 bunch parsley, chopped
4 tomatoes, sliced
1 green pepper, cut in rings
2 carrots, shredded
1 cup chopped celery
% cup slivered onions
French dressing
Cut garlic clove and rub salad
bowl with it. Wash all vegetables
and dry thoroughly between towels.
Tear spinach, chicory and lettuce
leaves. Add remaining ingredients
and toss together’. Add enough
dressing to coat vegetables but not
to soak them. Serve from salad
bowl.
New England Coleslaw
(Serves 4-6)
3 cups finely shredded cabbage
% cup soured cream
2 tablespoons vinegar
2 tablespoons sugar
• * *
Mix vinegar and sugar with
soured cream and add slowly, stir-
ring constantly to shredded cab-
bage. Dust with paprika and serve
from large bowl.
Southern Chicken Salad
(Serves 8)
1 orange
15 large grapes
15 salted almonds
1 banana
1 apple, diced
3 cups diced, cooked
white meat of chicken
1 cup mayonnaise
Remove seeds and membrane
from orange sections and cut in
half. Cut grapes
^in half, removing
seeds. Split al-
monds; slice ba-
nana. Mix all in-
gredients lightly
but thoroughly.
Serve chilled on
lettuce.
Macaroni Salad
(Serves 8)
2 cups cooked macaroni
1 cup diced celery or
cucumber
1 cup diced American cheese,
if desired
•4 cup chopped pimiento
2 diced, hard-cooked eggs
Salt and pepper to taste
Mayonnaise
Bacon curls
Banana strips with
chopped nuts
Olives, carrot strips, radishes
Mix together^ macaroni, celery,
cheese and chopped pimiento. Add
salt and pepper, then just enough
mayonnaise to taste. Arrange on
platter, and garnish with eggs,
bacon curls, banana strips sprin-
kled with the chopped nuts, olives,
carrot strips and radishes.
OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND
superb performance. As a suitor
anxious to marry the girl for her
money, Montgomery Clift is less
satisfactory. Mirim Hopkins is ex-
cellent as the 'girl’s aunt; in fact,
the entire supporting cast deserves
praise. “The Heiress” is even better
as a picture than it was as a suc-
cessful play—and William Wyler is
largely responsible.
The Farfa concentration camp
sequences of “Stromboli,” which
Producer-Director Rossellini had
been holding personally, have fi-
nally been turned over to the Tech-
nostampa Laboratory in Rome.
This makes the entire footage of
the film available to RKO—so it
won’t be too long now till we see
Ingrid Bergman in what she says
will be her last picture.
After playing golf left-handed for
10 years and reaching a two handi-
cap, Ken Carson, of the Garry
Moore show, has turned right-
handed, on the advice of Pro Har-
ry Cooper. Cooper says Ben Hogan
did it—why not Carson?
^ A General Quiz ?
(V.fu(^(v.(v.(v>o-fu(v*0-(v-<v*
The Questions
1. What is a cameo?
2. Where was the decisive battle
of the Spanish American War
fought?
3. What is the length of a hand
in measuring a horse?
4. Who was Edith Cavell?
5. Give the name of the book
written by Colonel T. E. Lawrence
which cannot be published until
1950.
The Answers
1. A term applied to gems of
different colors sculptured in re-
lief.
2. Santiago de Cuba, July 3,
1898.
3. Four inches.
4. English nurse shot by the
Germans in World War I, for help-
ing British, French and Belgian
soldiers escape.
5. “The Mint.”
Wearing a black wig, Bette
Davis sneers and snarls her
way through “Beyond the For-
est,” the rather tiresome story
of a small-toxvn girl who was
willing to commit murder to
get to Chicago. Miss Davis
likes to play wicked women,
but she should not have chosen
this one. Joseph Cotton and
David Brian do what they can
to improve matters, but the
picture is not good.
Rudd Weatherwax, owner and
trainer of Lassie, has had to hire
a new secretary just to handle the
fan mail sent to the collie by fans
of her NBC Saturday radio series.
Much of it comes from children,
and it comes by the bushel.
To extend quick-frozen strawber-
ries for desserts, mix them with
drained, crushed pineapple. The
combination is exciting for quickly
made jam, ice cream or pudding
toppings and shortcake mixtures.
Meat loaf will be more interest-
ing and colorful if you serve it with
tart, bright red cranberry sauce,
fresh or canned .
Sliced oranges with halved and
seeded Tokay grapes are an ex-
cellent idea for a colorful, flavor-
ful salad to serve with a heavy
dinner
Ed “Archie” Gardner is a dis-
appointment to his son, Ed. Jr.
The five-year-old, who has the
handsomest cowboy outfit in New
York’s Central Park, wishes his
father had become somebody dash-
ing, like the Lone Ranger.
Jack Benny has been signed for
an engagement at the Palladium
Theatre in London next summer,
ellowed by a tour of the provinces.
Last year he broke the record there
during a two-week stint, with Mary
Livingstone and Phil Harris.
Johnny Sands, featured in Al-
lied Artists’ “Massacre River,”
the Guy Maxison-Iiory Calhoun
starrer, won second p’ace in
Photoplay Magazine’s annual
“Choose Your Star” contest
which named the 20 young
players voted most likely to
achieve stardom in 1950. First
place among actors was won by
John Derek; Allene Roberts
and Cyd Charisse won first and
second for actresses.
Ruth Hussey had to leave hei
starring role in a Broadway hit
show when duty called in the shape
of a summons to Hollywood to take
the female lead in “Mr. Music,
opposite Bing Crosby. Her last
picture was “The Great Gatsby
Both Mike Romanoff and his
famous Beverly Hills restaurant
have been signed for top roles in
“A Lovely Place,” which Humph
rey Bogart will make for Columbia
This is the first time' the well
known tavern has been shown in a
picture in great detail. Since much
of the film’s action takes place
there it was decided to use the
restaurant itself rather than build
a replica.
ANOTHER
and replace them with metal
snaps. From then on, unsnap the
snaps, brush, then resnap the
snaps.
SUFFERING FROM
RHEUMATISM?
HERE’S GOOD NEWS!
For Your Future Buy
U. S. Savings Bonds
BIG JAR I0t
f DOUBLE FILTERED
r FOR EXTRA QUALITY - PU RITY
MSHHHi
FLEISCHMANN^S DRV YEAST
IS SO HANPy— NEVES.
NEEPS REFSISEPATION
Crazy Water Crystals give
almost miraculous benefits /jfjffi
to sufferers from rheuma- typ/
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caused or aggravated by
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druggist doesn’t stock,
send SI.25 for 1-lb. box.
Crazy Water Company.
Mineral Wells, Texas. ^_
CRAZY^^cr\^tals
contains magical TORINOL
Finer • Quicker • Better *101 and 20*
Relieve Stuffy
Nose FAST!
Quick. Put a fc
iSt i vinbe Va-t.ro-n
few
Vicks Va-tro-nol
Nose Drops in each
nostril. Va-tro-nol
works right where
trouble is. Relieves
head cold stuffiness
almost instantly1
I*
W VICKS
VATRO-NOL
NOSE DROPS
Helps keep me
on my feet/
^say many old folks
about good tasting
SCOTT’S EMULSION
Thousands of happy
folks know this! Good-
tasting Scott’s Emulsion
helps you ward off colds—helps you
get well faster—and helps you keep
going strong when your diet needs
more natural A&D Vitamins! Scott’s is
s HIGH ENERGY FOOD TONIC -
rich in natural A&D Vitamins
and energy-building natural
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feel. Easy to take and digest.
Economical. Buy today at your
drug store I
MORE than just a tonic —
it’s powerful nourishment!
SC0TIS EMULSION
High Bhergy tonic
(too bake at home)
ONLY
Wiat makes women happy
ISEAPY TO USE
AT A MOMENTS
NOTICE
RISES FAST ANP
BAKES USHTTOO
HEY—in any weather,
it stays fast acting. Buy
3 packages at a time.
3 times as many
women prefer
Flf ISCHMAKIfS YEAST
Start V'Mr’Sqnature’StaM Service
yfieaspomr&fi)^
and end with White Star from
t/metyPciGteqe
Old Company Plate made and guaranteed
Rogers Mfg. Co., Meriden, Connecticut.
• Beautiful Styling. Stunning Value.
• Feel the Weight. Price Includes_____. __
Your Initial. __—-C
OUR 0\NN
iNVhW- .
on e*‘'usWe
pattern
HUSH
COUPON
TODAY l
A" All made by Kellogg’s,
all Kellogg-fresh
^ 10-box choice of 7
cereal favorites
A1 Nothing like Kellogg's
VARIETY for real variety
A’ Delicious for breakfast,
lunch or supper
Illustrated folder with order describes complete line of
"Signature”jsattern silverware.
KELLOGG'S, DEPT. I), Meriden, Connecticut
Enclosed find_£ in cash (no stamps, please) and
( ) ends with White Star from Kellogg’s variety
package. Please send me, postpaid,-- “Signa-
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initial circled on this coupon.
NOTE: For each unit set of 4 spoons,enclose lendwith White
Star from Kellogg’s variety package and 75t in coin.
MY NAME..;,
MY ADDRESS.
(Please Print)
CITY..............................ZONE... STATE..;;
Offer good only in United States; subiect to ell state and local regulations.
LUSCIOUS Secduw
Siylow/DKlFTis Emulsorized i
§||
r
V
r&!
k
NO CREAMING! NO EGG-BEATING! _
ONLY AN EMULSORIZED SHORTENING
GIVES THESE FINER CAKESi, SO FAST!
fi
ODDS AND ENDS . . . Everett
Sloane, who has had his nose re-
modelled, has a key role in “The
Men” . . . There’s no telling what
“An American Tragedy” will turn
into on the screen; it was called
“A Place in the Sun” and the story
has been changed . . . Dorothy Kir-
sten, of the Metropolitan Opera and
the radio makes her screen debut
in “Mr. Music” . . . Gordon Mac-
Rae hasn’t missed a day’s work in
pictures in three months and sang
hrough the summer on the Rail-
;oad Hour as well.
"*---OTCH CANDY CAKE
butterscotch ^ Add
To make any favorite cake delicious, use creamy
Snowdrift. But to get everybody saying “This is
lighter, more luscious”—try Snowdrift’s 3-minute
cakes. Say goodbye to creaming and separate
egg-beating! You mix all your batter together in
the same bowl. Like magic—because Snowdrift is
emulsorized. Only an emulsorized shortening
blends so fast ’n’ easy! Get wonderful, wonderful
cakes—luscious as long as they last!
r~
t-her into a large bowl
Sift together cokeflour
2Va cup* siU doubie-action
2Vz Teaspoons .^31/4
baking P - gie.ac»ion)
teaspoons *'"9
^teaspoon soda
% teaspoon so»
V* cup *°9ar
i L-essr-
packed
XSL~ tlol
Beat l
Flaky pies
Tender biscuits
Mix
enough to d „ hand h Add L| top with crushed
Sc?sSS“S» -
chocolate
BeatfmWeSmnoSy;w^
count beating a1oW speed .
fc^Ch““{t;e.n„LcraP
ers after
2 minutes
| fefTffigrssggp I
B «o« .Ul.c OUICJOU. K
3-4 CAKE
||| PASTRY
|H BISCUITS
Lass »o« •*»'•*• Era)
/
Pure cdl-vegetable shortening—made by the Wesson Oil People
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mm
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Nolen, Mrs. O. W. The Odem-Edroy Times (Odem, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 16, 1949, newspaper, November 16, 1949; Odem, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1110847/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Odem Public Library.