The Wortham Journal (Wortham, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1942 Page: 3 of 4
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iSSIFIED
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT,
tiaa mi
*11 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 15 cents In coins (or
Pattern No.............Size.........
MfeSi
~ SHUCKS, WHO OOULDnY OXI few ”
FAST AMO EAST WITH PRINCE ALBERTI
THAT CRIMP CUT SNUOS DOWN IN
INI MPIR WITHOUT B LOWIN' feOUNO OR
MESSIN' UP. NO WONDER THERE'S SO MAN?
SMOKES IN A P.A. POCKET TIN-AND EVERY
ONE FEATURES MILDNESS WITH 6000
.__ TASTE— IN PIPES, 700!
tot tin
y i V >1
TERNS
SEWING: CIRCLE
Serve One-Dish Meals as Smart Budget-Stretchers
(See Recipes Below)
N.‘.r£3'.
COUOH MOM
nor. often i
"•«a%L
DOANS PILLS
_ Dents to the budget? Appetites
wilted after the rich Todds si a re-
sult of the double
holidays? ‘ Well,
you can smooth
out those dents
sod at the same
time perk up the
jaded appetites
by smart, simple,
easy - to • manage one • dish meals.
Here’s a parade of palate-thrilling
recipes with which you can sprint
right along even with the slimmest
at budgets.
To stretch that food dollar, you
can use leftover meats and vegeta-
bles that are called for to these
casseroles. Yes, and what’s espe-
cially nice about them is that
they're tops to vitamins and min-
erals because they’re fortified with
those perfect foods, milk and butter.
As you're pouring out the milk from
the bottle, remember it's just brim-
ming and bursting with health-giv-
in| qualities.
Here’s a meal-ln-a-diah which has
a luscious butter and bread crumb
topping to recommend it:
•One-Dlsb-Meal.
(Serves •)
I cups diced carrots (t medium
carrots)
1% cups diced celery
i medium potatoes, pared and
sliced
1 tablespoons butter
S tablespoons flour
2 cups milk
1 cup meat stock or 1 bouillon
cube in
1 cup hot water
1 teaspoon salt
3 to 8 tablespoons grated onion
1 cup peas (canned or fresh)
3 cups diced leftover meat
cup sifted bread crumbs
3 tablespoons melted butter
Cook carrots, celery and potatoes
separately to boiling salted water
until tender. Melt butter, blend to
flour, add milk and meat stock.
Cook over direct heat, stirring con-
stantly until sauce boils and thick-
ens. Add salt. Combine sauce with
remaining ingredients, except
crumbs and melted butter, and turn
into a buttered casserole or baking
dish. Combine crumbs and melted
butter, sprinkle over surface. Bake
to a moderate (390 degrees) oven
39 to 40 minutes.
Cabbage, one of winter’s best
vegetables, la featured to this cas-
serole of tuna or salmon:
Scalloped Tama sad Cabbage.
, (Serves S)
3 cups boiling water
3 quarto chopped cabbage
3 cups rich milk
Mi pound American cheese
Mi' cup flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 can tuna or Salmon, flaked
3 cups buttered .-bread crumbs
Pour boiling water over cabbage,
heat to boiling, add 1 cup milk and
chees4, cut to pieces. Cook over
hot water until cheese is malted.
Blend flour, salt and remaining milk
and add to cabbage. Add tuna or
.LYNN 8AYS:
-A:
Can you name the one food
that doaa moat for your body’s
health, most cheapIyT Milk, of
course I Why? Because milk does
sll of the following:
1. Promotes growth and main-
tains the body’s resistance to in-
fection through vitamin A.
3. Stimulates appetites and
keeps the nerves to top-notch con-
dition through vitamin Bl; pro-
motes growth and keeps the skin
healthy through vitamin B3(Q).
3. Holpa calcium and vitamin
C to develop teeth and bones
properly if fortified with vita-
min D.
4. Aa an excellent source of
phosphorus. It also works to keep
the teeth and bones to class A.
9. Milk’s proteins come to the
tor* in repairing worn-down tis-
sues and muscles and boosting
growth, t / •
1,1 ......i-
THIS WEEK’S MENU
Cream of Mushroom Soup
•One Dish Meal
Green Bean Salad Bran Muffins
Apple Betty with Foamy Sauce
Milk Tea Coffee
•Recipe Ghreh.
POR SALE
l. a. snoot. o«u, Tc».*
OT. Gall. Tiua. v .
Jltuut QkamAe/U
Hoarded Currency
Although the treasury depart-
ment began to retire the old,
large-sized paper currency on July
10, 1929, there were 1180,783,817, or
48,098,847 pieces, still outstanding
on August 31, 1941, which means
that these bills had not been han-
dled by a bank during these 13
years.
GAS ON STOMACH
Do not grieve upon your own
troubles: you would not have them
U you*did not need them; Do not
grievd over the troubles at “oth-
er*” ; There are no others —Bolton
He*
NO 1
Beware Coughs
ThLtH^Ton
OUumatoiai relieves promptly be-
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
Appetite Appeal Plua
and heal raw, tender, to-
onchlal mucous mem-
the u£-
you must like the way It
* the cough or you am
8075
CR^OMULSION
It la Just aa easy to form a good
habit as it id to form a bad cos.
And it I* just aa hard to break a
good habit aa a bad one. So get
tba good ones and heap them.
, ’ ■ rsjug
wff ■'
on apron, pretty enough to be any-
one’s gift, is also included.
• • •
Pattern Mo. SOTS !< In elzee 14 to 10; 40.
42 and 44. Size 16 pinafore apron re-
quires 1% yards 32-inch material, 6 yard*
rlc rac. Tle-on apron, lit yinfc. plus %
yard contrast, and 3 yards binding. For
these attractive patterns send your or-
der to;
Hearts and Understanding
Men, as well as women, are
oftener led by their hearts than
their understandings. The way to
the heart is through the senses;
please their eyes and ears, and
the work is half done.—Chester-
field.
salmon and put to buttered casse-
role. Top with crumbs and bake to
moderate (390-degree) oven 20 min-
utes. V,e
Beef Pie.
(Serves 8)
1 pound ground beef
1 onion, shopped
Salt and pepper t
2VM cups fr4en beans, cooked
or canned
1 can tomato soup
4 large potatoes, cooked
tt cup wanned milk
1 beaten egg
Salt and pepper
Brown onion to hot fat, add meat
and seasonings. Brown and add
green beans and soup. Pour in
greased casserole. Mash potatoes,
add egg, milk and seasonings. Scoop
over meat and bake to a moderate
oven.
Baked potatoes and salmon are a
favorite 'cold weather combination,
but have you
ever thought of
blending the two
together as one
dish? No? Then
you have a real
treat coining if you try:
Salman Stuffed Potatoes.
(Serves 6)
6 potatoes, baked
% cup hot milk
1 beaten egg
Salt and pepper
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 cups flaked salmon
Mi cup minced onion, sauteed
2 tablespoons butter
Buttered crumbs * ------
Split baked potatoes and scoop
out. Mash the potatoes, add milk,
egg, salt. Fold to salmon, lemon
juice and onions. Refill shells and
sprinkle with buttered crumbs. Bake
to a moderate oven 20 minutes.
Whisk away your problems with
leftover chicken or turkey by serv-
ing the meat creamed with vege-
tables to the center of a rice ring,
adding mushrooms, sauteed, if de-
sired. Serve it also cut up to cro-
quettes. to chicken tamale pie, cur-
ried with rice, scalloped with noo-
dles, to chop suey, or as a pie like
this one here:
Chicken Fie.
(Serves 6 to 8)
3 cups diced, cooked chicken
1 cup diced, cooked carrots
6 cooked, small white onions
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 cup milk
1 cup chicken stock
3 tablespoons flour
Salt and pepper
Arrange chicken and vegetables
to layers4n casserole. Combine milk
and chicken stock, add flour, blend-
ing to slowly. Cook until thick, stir-
ring constantly, then season. Pour
over chicken and vegetables. Cover
with a sweet potato crust and bake
to a moderate oven 4J minutes.
Sweet Potato Crust.
This crust ia the distinctive part
of the chicken pie and a wonderful
AN APRON which pleases for
its efficiency as well as for
its bright gay appearance, easily
achieved with a few rows of ric
rac, is presented here to a pat-
tern which is no trouble at all to
follow. The picture shows you
how this apron extends in back—
an all-covering skirt and straps
which stay firmly in place. A tie-
Philippine Islands
way to use up
those few pota-
toes that are left
over from the
holiday dinner
along with the
chicken. It’s a
crust de luxe, a
crisp, golden
brown topping
well worthy of
chicken pie:
1 cup sifted flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
Vfc teaspoon salt
1 cup cold mashed sweet potato
V4 cup fat, melted
1 beaten ei
Bift dry
mashed potato, milk and egg.
M inch thick, cover pie and
The Philippines, settled to 1921,
were ceded to the United States
by the Treaty of Paris in 1898. The
area is 114,400 square miles
and the population is 16,003,303, 60
per cent of whom are illiterate.
The capital and largest city is
Manila (population 623,362).
Its government is administered
through three separate and co-
ordinate departments; executive,
legislative and judicial. Legisla-
ture consists of a senate of 24
members and a house of repre-
sentatives of not more than 120
members. Manuel L. Quezon is
president. The term is four years.
Represented in U. S. congress by
Resident Commissioner Joaquin
Elizalde, who is without vote.
' The products ar£ ried, corn,
hemp, tobacco, copra, coconut oil,
rubber, sugar, meats, gold, silver,
lead, me, copper, iron, coal oil,
etc.
IsVburD&uqhter*
s&tfvfcatss Popular?
out ber charm. She *
Mat be amattlrs if ehe’e pale, underweight
ao4 err away. Snraura ge her appetite with
Vitamin Bl and Iron. InVlNOU Your dm*,
slat haa thia plemant tnrting tonic.
........VINOL........
Needed Solitude
Solitude is as needful to the
imagination as society is whole-
some for the character.—James
Russell Lowell.
N-(4.(W(V,Ra(le(4,(h,^e|h.(l.(4efVe(W(V.^.(V, (V. (V.
| ASK MS
ANOTHER t ;
l A General Quiz * |
NO*(V-(U(Uo.fv.(h.(v.(U(WA,AT(v.A,(ViA.A.A,
The Questions
1. What is the mile-high city in
the United States?
2. Why do air travelers have
trouble with their fountain pens in
higher altitudes?
3. What country is called Miz-
raim in the Bible?
4. During the war with Spain
who was commander-in-chief of
our forces? ____„
5. The core of the earth is be-
lieved to be composed of'what?
6. What is perique? *
7. When did Benjamin Franklin
receive his first airmail letter?
8. “Aye, tear her tattered en-
sign down!” is a line from a poem
about an American warship
named what? —»-
9. What mythological youth was
beloved by Venus?
10. Did the American Indians
ever erect a monument to com-
memorate an event in their his-
tory?
The Answers
1. Denver, Colo.
2. The air in the pen (if pen is
but partially full) expands, caus-
ing a leakage of ink.
3. Egypt.
4. William McKinley.
5. Nickel and iron.
6. A strong flavored tobacco.
7. In 1785, when to France. It
was sent from England by bal-
loon.
8. The Constitution (“Old Iron-
sides”).
9. Adonis.
10. Yes, but only one, which
stands at the foot of the Bear Paw
mountains, 15 miles south of Chi-
nook, Mont. It was constructed in
1928 as a memorial to the Nez
Perce war of 1877.
• In NR (Nature*! Remedy) Tsb-
lets, there are no chemicals, no
minerals, no phenol derivatives.
NR Tablets are different—act dif-
ferent Purely vetetablt—a combi-
nation of 10 vegetable ingredient*
formulatod over SO years ago.
Uncoated or candy coated, their
action is dependable, thorough, yet
as millions of NR’t nave
. Get a 104 Convinccr Boot
gentle, t
proved.<
Larger economy sizes, too.
k A| CAMPY
COATIP
or REGULAR I
Better Product
Anybody can cut prices, but it
takes brains to make a better ar»
tide.—Philip D. Armour.
A
1
LMentheiaMna
■Mlh 11 tha trrtta-
q luck-
ing, red. swollen parts.
quickly cools ana soot
tlon. assisting Nature to more qi
It heal the injury. Menthols turn ts
also a most soothing and effective
application for other minor Skin
Irritations. Jars or tubas. 30a. •
MENTHDLATti
Charm of Life
Illusion and wisdom combined
are the charm of life and art.—
Joseph Joubert.
i
AND, JANE, REMEMBER, IE YOU BAKE AT HOME, THE 0HIY
YEAST WITH AU THESE* VITAMINS IS FLEISCHMANN’S
*Pw Cake; vitamin A-3100 Units (lot.) vitamin 8,-130 Units (for.)
Vitamin D-400 Units (lot.) Vitamin 0- 40-30 Units (33. Boor.)
Vitamins Bp D and G are not appreciably to it in the oven;
they go fight into the bread.
Working to Forget
I do not value fortune. The love
of labor is my sheet anchor. I
work that I may forget, and for-
getting, I am happy.—Stephen Gi-
rard.
SAYS
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Satterwhite, Ed. The Wortham Journal (Wortham, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1942, newspaper, January 9, 1942; Wortham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1112314/m1/3/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.