The Wortham Journal (Wortham, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, February 19, 1943 Page: 3 of 4
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I Old Fashioned Charm
For Slips and Scarf
A LL the charm of a bygone day
** ia in this colonial girl motif—
, picture bonnet, bouffant skirt en-
hanced with a bit of embroidery
and scallops, puff sleeved blouse.
Gracefully she lends her charm to
aide and center vanities, to match-
ing dresser scarf and pillow slips.
AUNT MASTHA
■n iss-ar Imiui City, Mo.
Enclose U cants fur each pattern
desired. Pattern No.............
Mama ...............................
EASY TO BUY
I POUI ASPIRIN
1_
daw. Ton can't bap aspirin that cJB
man ter you. so why pay awn. World's
wwwisxias.
can do
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
CreoBtulslan (aliens promptly be-
eatwe It goes right to the sent of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
perm laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal aw. tender. In-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un-
derstanding you must like tha way It
aakhty allays the cough or you am
to ham your money book.
CREOMULSION
for Court*. CHest Colds. Bronchitis
srusaS sa4 isylas nlass £r the eoeelns year.
sassssssas
will pwt »______
ikwn ur vaHwtf jow «wa »1r»w
mU gw 4mUm h •kmt tUrn
SM ifmUwm TtW
I VALLEY mm, 12 T. Ql
it's
Goo*:,
TasMV
XT CMlirw tl>» Tilt iottof
Way Ta Taka Cad Llvar Oil/
Mothers I—children need the vital
elements in Scott's Emulsion to help
promote proper growth, strong
bones, sound teeth I So give them
I food-tasting Scott’s Emulsion daily
—they're sure to like It. Tones up
system. Contains natural A and D
Vitamins. Buy today-all druggists.
On the larger pieces, a rambler
rose fence continues the motifs to
the desired length.
a a e
Too will uae outline, lazy daisy. French
knots and buttonhole In doing these colo-
nial lady bedroom ensemble designs, snd
hot iron trsnslrr Z9334. IS cents, win
bring thorn to you. Bond your order to:
TERESA WEIGHT
version will bring the story up to
date; the hero, an American officer,
trill be blinded in fighting at Guadal-
canal. «_
Lum and Abner of radio fame
have done a great service for the
motion picture industry; RKO re-
porta that thousands of persons who
had never before seen the inside of
a movie theater now go to the pic-
tures made by these two radio fa-
vorites. They're now starring in
“Two Weeks to Live.”
Tim Holt was booed in public while
making bis last picture before en-
listing. “Hitler's Children.” He bad
to give the Nasi salute while work-
ing on location at tha Los Angeles
Orphans’ Homo, and a group of
school boys watching from the side-
walk cat loose when be made that
scone. A canvas screen had to bo
pat np before be could go on. Welt,
REO wants audiences to feel that
way when that scene is flashed on
the screen, but young Belt says that
it was the moot embarrassing mo-
ment of his Ufa.
Douglass Drake, Columbia con-
tract player, enlisted in the army
sin months ago, and thought his
screen career was done for, for the
duration. But he was given an hon-
orable discharge for injuries re-
ceived while in service, and returned
to be tested for a role in the Rita
Hayworth-Brian Donlevy comedy,
• My-aient Curley.”
Jean -Porter of Cisco, Texas, ar-
rived in Hollywood minus a Southern
accent—but got her first screen role,
in “The Youngest Profession,” be-
cause of her assumed Southern
drawl. Then she was cast in "Fac-
ulty Row,” as a co-ed with a South-
ern accent I
"Casablanca” baa seared sneh a
hit that there’ll be a sequel to It.
"Brassavtile”; Humphrey Bogart
and Sydney Greens treat will con-
tinue their characterisations from
the first film, and it’a likely that
Geraldine Fitsgeruld will have an
important role.
Barry Wood was voted the moat
popular male linger on the Columbia
Broadcasting System, In three ma-
jor radio editors’ polls—whereupon
he left that network to become an
NBC star, taking command of the
new "AU-Time Hit Parade,” the pro-
gram that now succeeds "Informa-
tion Please” on that Friday night
spot, and coming from Carnegie Hall
in New York.
—*—
Bandleader Woody Herman, who’ll
be featured in “Quota Girl" with
Sonja Henie, has proved that the
adage, “Like father, like son” la all
wrong, pointing out that following
dad’s footsteps would have made
him a vaudevillian, Sammy Kaye a
civil engineer, and Rudy Vallee a
village druggist. Kate Smith would
probably have been president of a
woman’s club. Mark Warnow'd be
a concert violinist.
ODt>S AND ENDS—Dinah Short wiU
probably appear in • Goldwyn picture,
'■With Flying Cotar,’ ...You should m
Anita, of thr “Tommy Niggi“ show, doing
" - shales... Dariat-
•f Me “Tool
bar marketing on roller
'.tiger Bergen’s gain.
Iron Johnton hat iutt received •
Metro contract . . . Edgar Bergen’s going
to co-iiar with Key Kyser in • film muss
cal, tantativaly railed "Keep 'Em Sing-
ing’’ . . . Gory Cooper and Ingrid Berg-
will turn into one of thota popular
movie Seems, first thing they pM
have the loads in Warners’ “Saratoga
Trunk* . . . Harriet HiUierft sided /or
a loading role in “Tha Falcon Comet
Bark.-
• .. And Cookies, Too!
You may not serve tea, and you
may not even have coffee, but
you Still like that
pause in the aft-
ernoon with a few
good friends, to
mull over the
happenings of the
day, to get philo-
sophical over the
events that touch all of us. But have
that pause whenever possible, even
if you have just fruit juice and a
few cookies or cakes. It's as im-
portant as the bigger things you do.
Have a hot or cold drink as the
climate dictates, flavor them with,
honey if the sugar supply is low.
Some supplies of tea are still ob-
tainable for the hot or iced bever-
age, if you use the coffee ration at
breakfast.
Chocolate and cocoa are obtain-
able now and then and make excel-
lent hot beverages. Made with milk,
they’re nourishing, too. And if you
make them with canned milk they're
delightful. Somehow, the canned
milks have an affinity with chocolate
beverages.
Fruit juices have been a summer
standby, but you should discover
their winter uses, too! Hot lemon-
ade is delightful as are combina-
tions of lemon, orange, grapefruit
and pineapple juice.
Those of you who like spending
cold afternoons in front of the open
fire will enjoy a small gldss of a
coo! drink with a few tasty cookies.
For this purpose, try mixing equal
quantities of cranberry and orange
juice or apricot and pineapple juice
served in pretty glasses with cook-
ies.
Small cakes and cookies are an
attractive accompaniment with re-
freshing drinks. Our first one to-
day is a sugar-saver, butter-saver,
quickly and easily made:
Cranberry Fingers.
(Makes fit fingers)
4 tablespoons batter er substitute
5 cups sifted sli-parpose flour
3 tablespoons sugar
1 egg
Milk
1 1-pound can Jellied cranberry
sauce
Grated rind of W orange
Work shortening and sugar Into
flour, and mix to a light dough with
beaten egg and
milk, using only
enough milk to
moisten. The mix-
ture should be
dry rather than
wet. Divide into
two portions. Roll
one portion to an
eighth of an inch
thickness, place on a greased cookie
sheet, and spread with crushed cran-
berry juice. Sprinkle with grated
orange rind. Wet edges and cover
with remaining dough, rolled to fit,
pressing edges firmly together.
Brush with milk, sprinkle with sug-
ar and bake in a moderately hot
(375-degree) oven about 30 minutes.
When cool, cut, into finger strip size
for serving.
Oranges enter the picture again,
this time combined with maple syr-
Lynn Says:
Handy Hints: When a recipe
calls for sifted sugar or flour sift
the ingredient before you meas-
ure it, ao you’ll get an accurate
measurement.
In mixing cakes, add flour mix-
ture to creamed sugar, shorten-
ing and egg before adding the
moist Ingredients, then alternate
and add dry Ingredients last.
You’ll get a better grained cake.
Muffins are beaten just enough
to blend ingredients together.
Don’t overheat.
Greasing cookie, cake and muf-
fin tins with a mixture of pan-
coat, made by blending V4 cup
ning^ with % cup flour pre-
shortening with 14 pup
vents
This Week’s Mena
Pork Kidneys with
Scrambled Eggs
Mashed Potatoes Diced Beets
Lettuce with French Dressing
Whole Wheat Muffins
, Apple-Cheese Crisp
Beverage
up to make a drop cookie:
Orange Drop Cookies.
(Makes 60 cookies)
t tablespoons grated orange rind
14 enp batter or substitute
1 cup maple syrup
2 eggs, beaten
t cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
Cream together orange rind,
shortening, maple syrup. Add beat-
en eggs, then flour sifted together
with baking powder and salt. Drop
the batter by spoonfuls onto a
greased baking sheet and bake in
a moderately hot (375-400-degree)
oven and bake about 10 minutes or
until lightly browned.
Molasses ’n apple butter were fa-
vorite ingredients of cookies in
grandmother's time, and now they
come in for a grand encore:
Old-Fashioned Molasses Cookies.
344 caps sifted all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
H teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ginger
Vi cap batter or substitute
% cap sugar
1 Uf
14 cop apple butter
I cap molasses
Sift together dry ingredients.
Cream together butter and sugar,
add egg and beat together until light
and fluffy. Add apple butter and
molasses and blend together thor-
oughly, then mix in sifted dry ingre-
dients. Chill for 2
hours or more.
Roll as thinly as
possible and cut
into large cook-
im 1>- ies. Place on a
lightly greased
cookie sheet and bake in a moderate
(375-degree) oven for 10 minutea.
These cookies are crisp when baked,
get soft if stored in tin for a day or
so.
Honey and sour cream are an un-
beatable combination in a cupcake,
and here they are lined up with
spices for an extra deliciousness:
Honey Spice Cupcakes.
H cap batter or sabstitote
1 cap brown sugar
1 cup honey
• 5 egg yolks
fl caps flour
(4'teaspoon salt
s 2 teaspoons ground cloves
2 teaspoons allspice
2 teaspoons einnamon
1 teaspoon soda
1 enp thick, soar cream
3 agg whites
Cream butter, add sugar and hon-
ey, creaming well. Add egg yolks,
one at a time and beat well. Sift
dry ingredients and add alternately
with sour cream, beating after each
edition. Fold in stiffly beaten
white* of eggs. Bake In greased
muffin tins in a moderate oven (350
degrees) 30 minutes or in two
greased cake tins.
Your icing for the cupcakes should
be a halo of white swirls of honey
icing which, will not crack—and cai
be whipped up in a hurry: ^
Royal Honey Icing.
1 egg white, stiOji beaten
V4 enp honey
H teaspoon vanilla
To the stiffly beaten egg white,
add honey slowly, beating continu-
ally until icing will stand in peaks.
Fold in flavoring.
What problem i or racipot are matt on
your mind theta winter days? Write to
f.yim Chambern lor export advice on your
particular problem, at W astern Newt paper
Union, tIO South Datplainet Street, Chi-
cago, 111. Plaate bo tura to enclose a
stamped, talf-addrcssed envelope far your
reply.
Ileleeeed by Western Newspaper Union.
AAARGUERITE CHAP-
1”1 MAN’S glad to join in the
share-a-ride movement (she gets
just enough gas to drive to and
from work at Columbia studios
every day), but on the first day
that she worked in her new pic-
ture, “Destroyer,” she worked
out a new stunt. Attached to her
car door ia a small box with a Red
Cross painted on it, and an opening
for coins. Her passengers are glad
to drop in the bus fares that they
aave by riding to work with a movie
atari
—*—
l Remember "The Dark Angel”?
Samuel Goldwyn will make it again,
starring Teresa Wright. This third
mm
8299
14*44
Plain New Aprons
\X7HEN January fabric sales
W bring all sorts of serviceable,
pretty cottons down in price, plan
to rebuild your apron supply! You
can turn out all you need rapidly
with this simple apron pattern
which is cut with just a few easy-
to-put-together pieces. It is pretty,
too, with its curved shoulder
straps and gay pockets.
Pattern No. 8299 ta in sizes 14. M. IS.
SO; 40. 42, 44. Size IS requires 3)6 yards
32 inch material, 9 yards bias fold, 2
yards ric rac.
School Outfit
UERE'S the answer to the
* A school outfit or every-day out-
fit you want to make your little
girl. You can expect long wear
from the gracefully shaped jump-
er—if you make it in rayon gabar-
dine, corduroy, flannel or wool
crepe. You’ll have variety, too, if
you make several blouses in white
and colored broadcloth, flannel or
pique.
A- (A- (V. (V. p. A* A* h* A* A- f'* <v- A*
\ ASK ME O \
l ANOTHER ■ ?
j A General Quiz |
(L p. p. p. p. p. P- p. P* P* P* P- P- P- P* P* P- P* (L
The Quegtiont
1. When did congress fix the
number of stripes in our flag at 13?
2. What name is given to the
green coloring matter of plants?
3. How many states were there
in the Confederacy?
4. What state is known as the
“Mother of Presidents”?
5. What is the only New England
state having no coastal area?
6. For every American and Brit-
on who can read and write Japa-
nese, how many Japanese can
read and write English?
7. The poinsettia was named aft-
er whom?
8. How many states touch the
border of Oklahoma?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
8.
7.
later
The Answers
The year 1818.
Chlorophyll.
Eleven.
Virginia.
Vermont.
At least 10,000 Japanese.
Joel Poinsett, American mln-
to Mexico in 1825, who
brought the first plants back to
the United States.
8. Six.
Noble Nature
A noble nature can atone at-
tract the noble and retain them.
Yes, GROVE'S economy
price now enables ritamin
A Bi D protection for roar
entire fsailyl Reteler rise
—o»er two weeks’ supply
—only 20. Morn than ten
weeks’ supply—last one
dollar. Potency — quality
suareatecdl Give your
family tha protective bene-
fits of GROVFS Vitamins
A end D pine famont Bi to
help maintain body resist-
ance, strong bones and
teeth, healthy appetite,
steady serves, visor, vk»T-
itr.Gef GROVE'S Vitamin*
A end D plus Bi today!
GROVES
IT’lVi'tiif
§51
—Bay War Savings Bonds—
• SOOTHES QUICKLY
Right on the ehelf, handy, you
should have cooling, soothing Men-
tholntum to help you rare lor:
1. Head-cold stuffiness. 2. Chapped
•kin. 8. Clogged nostrils. 4. Neurel-
gie headache. 5. Nasal Irritation
due to colds. 6. Cracked lips. 7. Cute
and scratches. 8. Minor burns.
3. Dry nostrils. 10. Sore musclss,
due to exposure. 11. Insect bites.
12. Minor bruises. Jan 804,
M E NTH 0 LATUM
PRUVCE ALBERT HAS
2 616 FEATURES—MILD
YET TASTY-FAST, EASY-
ROLLIN' FOR SMOOTH.
FIRM SMOKES. NO SIFTIN'
OUT EITHER—NO
_ WASTE!
70
ftas ralt-yser-o*
ai(a sttsela every
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Satterwhite, Ed. The Wortham Journal (Wortham, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, February 19, 1943, newspaper, February 19, 1943; Wortham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1111129/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.