The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1947 Page: 3 of 8
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LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
- Veal Roast with
Sour Cream Gravy
Buttered Noodles
Fried Tomatoes
Green Beans with Mushrooms
Cinnamon Rolls
•Graham Cracker Torts
Beverage
•Recipe given.
LYNN SAYS:
Help Yourself and Solve
Your Kitchen Problems
If potatoes don't seem as white as
they should be when you are mash-
ing them, beat a small amount of
baking powder into them.
Use a hot blade for slicing fresh
bread, a wet blade for cutting
fresh cake, and a very thin, sharp
blade for slicing cookie dough.
Keep the inside of your coffee pot
elean by boiling a solution of soda
and water in it at least once a week.
This removes stains.
This luscious combination of
pumpkin and pastry with a prune
and whipped cream topping
makes a good combination that
has plenty of sales appeal.
Perhaps many of you who are of-
fers of clubs already have planned
your programs
for the whole
year. Undoubted-
ly they include a
number of fund
raising schemes
which are de-
signed to take
care of worthy
souses.
One of the most successful cam-
paigns of many groups includes sales
of goods baked by members. In
this, of course, cakes, cookies, et
cetera are donated by the women
■nd purchased by the club mem-
bers, so all profit is clear.
Now that sugar, fats and flour
are back again on a prewar basis in
supply, at least, it’s possible to plan
a bakery goods sale of this type.
In case there’s a problem about
what to include, I've lined up sev-
eral sure-fire recipes which can
serve as the nucleus of the sale.
Pass them out to those who don't
know just "what to make.”
Prune Spice Cake.
(Using oblong pen)
2K cups sifted eake flour
% teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon soda
K teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cloves
1 teaspoon allspice
1 teaspoon cinnamon
K cup shortening
IK caps sugar
S eggs, well beaten
1 cup cooked prunes, seeded and
chopped
1 cup sour cream
Sift dry ingredients together
twice. Cream shortening, add sugar
gradually, and beat until light and
fluffy. Fold in eggs and prunes. Add
dry ingredients alternately with
sour cream and beat well after each
addition. Bake in a greased oblong
pan in a moderate oven for 45 min-
utes. Let cool and frost with:
iftocha Frosting.
4 cups sifted powdered sugar
K cup cocoa
K teaspoon salt
K cup butter or substitute
K cup strong coffee
IK teaspoons vanilla
Sift dry ingredients together and
cream with butter. Add coffee and
vanilla to make of a smoothly
spreading consistency.
•Graham Cracker Torte.
and
Fold in coconut
egg whites. L_".
K cup butter
1 cup sugar
3 eggs, separated
1 teaspoon vanilla
Grated rind of an orange
K cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
K pound graham crackers, rolled
1 cup milk
K cup shredded coconut
Cream butter and sugar. Add well
beaten yolks.
vanilla and orange
rind. Add sifted
dry ingredients
and cracker
/ crumbs alternate-
ly with the milk.
___1 and stiffly beaten
......... Bake in two layers in
a moderate (375 degree) oven for
» minutes. Let cool, th* place
custard filling between layers
frost with orange icing.
Custard Filling.
K cup sugar
1 tablespoon cornstarch
K teaspoon salt
2 egg yolks
EAGLE MAND
PATTI CLAYTON
GIRLS! WOMEN!
NERVOUS
Doftmalsn
Send your order to:
-Sire.
Lnu f.nuumsssi
HIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATES)
cU-|»r
BUBBLE CHAMPS CHEW BUR
BUB Bubble Gum.
un-
during the wartime cigarette shortage? That's
To elean soiled wallpaper quick-
ly, dip a clean cloth into dry pow-
dered borax and rub it all over
the soiled parts.
John Cleves Symmes, in hun-
dreds of lectures between 1918 and
1829, attracted world-wide atten-
tion with his claim that the earth
was a hollow sphere whose in-
terior was inhabited and could be
reached through a large opening
at the North Pole, since known
as Symme?’ Hole, says Collier’s.
Of several globes made to illus-
trate his theory, one is preserved
in the Academy of Natural Sci-
ences in Philadelphia.
1660
34-44
Plans for Your Club
Early in the Season
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
S3* South Wells st. CMcaga 1, IB.
Hollow Earth Theory Had
An Entrance at North Pole
magic word, '‘sponsored"! The half-
hour show was dropped, plane tick-
ets were bought, on Sunday she flew
to Hollywood, on Monday she and
Bob Crosby warbled together on
the air.
Remove the wrapper from a bar
of soap and let the bar dry and
harden before you use it. Hard
soap lasts longer than does soft,
moist soap.
If a sewing machine is left idle
for a considerable time, oil it oc-
casionally to prevent the old oil in
the machine from drying and be-
coming gummy.
pattern desired.
Pattern Mo----
Name_______
Address_______
Have as much variety as pos-
sible when you plan such money-
raising activities as a sale of
baked goods. A plan of some kind
made up ahead of time will elim-
inate too much duplication.
eAtore people,
amsmoking’
K teaspoon vanilla
Mix dry ingredients, add egg
yolks, slightly beaten. Pour in milk
gradually. Cook in double boiler un-
til smooth and thick, stirring con-
stantly. Cool and fold in flavor.
Ofange Icing.
2 eups powdered sugar
4 tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons milk or orange
Juice
IK teaspoons orange flavoring
Grated rind of an orange
Cream sugar and butter, add re-
maining ingredients.
Peanut Butter Cookies.
(Makes 3 dosen)
K cup shortening
K cup peanut butter
K cup granulated sugar
K cup brown sugar
1 egg
IK cups flour
K teaspoon salt
K teaspoon soda
Cream peanut butter with shorten- .
ing. Add remaining ingredients
in order given. Shape chilled dough
into small balls and place on a bak-
ing sheet. Flatten with a fork
dipped in flour, making a criss-cross
design on the cookie. Bake in a
quick, moderate (375-degree) oven
for 10 to 12 minutes. Let cool slight-
ly before removing from tin.
Prune Pumpkin Pudding Pie.
2K cups cooked or canned
pumpkin
IK cups milk
4 eggs
M cup granulated sugar
K cup light molasses
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cloves
3 teaspoons ginger
3 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon allspice
Matronly Frock
BEAUTIFULLY easy to wear—
*-* and such a joy to care for is
the flattering button front frock.
This one, created for the matron,
has a soft, face-framing sweet-
heart neckline, nicely shaped
sleeves and a perky bow tie.
Spread an old sheet over the
floor when small children are cut-
ting pictures from magazines or
making paper dolls. It will save
their clothes, keep cuttings off the
nig and can be rinsed out when
soiled.
—*—
ODDS AND ENDS—Soeiley Bomette
Moldy walnut finishes often can
be cleansed and restored to nor-
mal condition by rubbing very
lightly with fine steel wool dipped
in machine oil. Wipe dry and ap-
ply a wax base furniture polish.
Place paper or paper toweling on
table when paring vegetables and
fruits, breaking eggs and measur-
ing so that you can just fold it up
and have a clean working surface
when finished.
Keep seasoned flour in a bag al-
ready for seasoning chops, vegeta-
bles, chicken, et cetera.
Greased muffin cups are ideal
when baking tomatoes, apples,
green peppers and stuffed onions.
These cups may be set In a large
pan or cookie sheet to make them
•asv to move in oven.
—*—
If you encounter Johnny Olsen,
emcee of "Ladies Be Seated,” look!
out; he’s likely to ask to record your
voice for his collection. Making rec-
ords is his hobby, and he's waxed
conversations with all kinds of peo-
ple during his travels. His most
prized records are those made by
his mother, who died two years ago.
He's visited 42 states—and made
records in all of them.
—*-
Young mothers ought to listen to
the CBS “Doorway to Life,’’ radio’s
first series of authoritative drama-
tisations concerning the psycholog-
ical problems of childhood. The
writers get actual ease histories
-from a board of prominent child
psychologists, psychiatrists and edu-
cators, one of whom analyses eaeb
script before it goes on the air.
—*—
Four girls from a Los Angeles
typing bureau sat and typed just
anything that came into their heads
for several days and got well paid
for it recently—they were creating
the Evelyn Keyes-Glenn Ford “The
Mating of Millie." None of the mes-
senger girls around Columbia could
type, neither could any available
stock players. Asked why they
couldn’t, they said they’d heard of
elevator girls and waitresses who
got ahead in Hollywood, but no typ-
ists. Evidently they hadn't heard of
Jorja Curtwright.
--*--
Remember that "County Fair"
stunt, when a boy was weighed and
listeners were asked to send in pen-
nies equivalent to his weight? Well,
1,228 pounds of pennies poured in,
and as a result 72 boys were sent
off to camp. All over the'country—
notably in Birmingham, Ala.—local
radio stations are duplicating the
procedure, and pennies are pouring
in by the bucket-full.
—*—
One year ago Jan August was
playing piano in a cafe; now he has
his own show on Mutual, sponsored
by a man who loathes piano play-
ers!’ Last August his recording of
“Misirlou” gave him a boost; It sold
two million copies, and the sponsot
heard one. Now he’s booked to make
pictures, will play for eight weeks
at New York’s Hotel Astor, and
earns fifty times what he did last
Pastry
IK cups cooked prunes
K cup granulated sugar
K cup light corn syrup
1 teaspoon cinnamon
H teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons plain gelatin
2 tablespoons cold water
1 cup whipping cream
Combine pumpkin, milk and
beaten eggs: beat until well blend-
ed. Combine sug-
ar. molasses, salt
and spices; mix nh
well and stir into
pumpkin mix- ——-t|
turc. Pour into
pastry-lined pan /
and bake in a 'r
very hot (450-
degree) oven; re- KS 1
duce heat to mod-
erate and con-
tinue baking 45 to 50 minutes or un-
til custard is set. Cool.
Measure prunes, remove pits and
cut prunes into small pieces. Com-
bine with sugar, syrup, spice and
salt and heat to boiling. Remove
from heat, add gelatin moistened in
cold water and stir to dissolve. Cool.
Whip cream and fold into prune
mixture. Spread over baked pump-
kin pastry. Chill.
S,lHied by Western M*w*pap«r Union.
Split awnings often can be neat-
ly patched with a piece of match-
ing canvas and the rubber cement
commonly used to repair inner
tubes.
Pattern Mo. ISM come* In iize« 34. 36. |
38. *0. 42. 44. 46 and 48. Size 36. 4',* ;
yard* of 3$ or 39-inch. •
Trimmed in Raffles
I TITLE girls love this exciting
two-piece style—it gives them
such a grown-up feeling! Tiny ruf-
fling trims the neck and puffed
sleeves, and note the cute flared
peplum. Try a flower sprigged
fabric and gay novelty buttons.
—*—
Perry Como’s personal appear-
ance tour reminds him of the last
one—it's so different. Not so long
ago the NBC "Supper Club” bari-
tone, as vocalist with Ted Weems’
band, did a stretch when he slept
in buses, and ate when he could;
when Mrs. Como went along they
heated the baby’s formula over an
oil stove in the bus. This time the
best of everything is available.
—*—
Cary Grant and Alexander Korda
may team up to form a company
af their own ; they would travel from
sountry to country making pictures
that would help Americans under-
itand foreign culture and customs,
perhaps with Cary Grant playing
the lead.
If your feet are tired, you will
look tired. Soak your feet and
baby them.
-and parant* approve this laboratory-pure,
foil-wrapped, quality babble gum!
NURSING
IS A FROUU
PROFESSION!
nlvonio. . . . Peggy
fine cbooco to oct »■ Tbe S.go of tbe
Rom"—ploy t o neurotic cbiU wbo trte<
to kiU toueoboAy. . . . Denmi Doy colic,
off bit trip to IrelonJ: booAt for Memcn
on butinou initomi. ... Tommy Dortn t
recordeJ mlertteut for bu duh tockey
tbowt beginning io September. . . . CBS
■My tonne h onotber thou timtlor to
Arthur Godfrey't '"Tcleet Scoot" progrom
io tbe foil.... Moybe wbeo Eddie CaWer**
life ttory it tcreened it oiU bounce bem
into new popolority. »
IN THE radio businegfl
things can take forever to
happen, or can come through
with the speed of light. One
Thursday afternoon Patti
Clayton, CBS songstress, was
in a conference with a pro-»
gram producer, a director,
an orchestra leader and a
script writer; whipping into shape
a half-hour, non-sponsored musical
series starring her the following
Sunday. Came word from Hold-
wood by phone, asking if she would
consider singing with Bob Crosby on
"Club IS,” a sponsored show. That
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1947, newspaper, August 7, 1947; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1215479/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.