The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 25, 1952 Page: 3 of 20
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THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, NEW ULM, TEXAS, THURSDAY, DEC, 25, 1952.
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1. At an apiary you are in most danger of being which: (a)
gored, (b) bitten, (c) stung, id) clawed?
2. Yams are served more often with which of these meats: (a)
bam. (b> mutton, (c) chicken, (d) steak?
3. “Coming out party" is most suggestive of which: (a) debut,
(b) premiere, (c) recital, (d) anniversary?
4. Which Is an amphibian: (a) ant, (b) frog, (c) trout, (d)
grasshopper?
5. Which is older: (a) V. S. Constitution, (b) Magna Charta?
SAVE MONEY
Buy Direct from our Factory
Visit our Large Display
Write for free catalog
Open Sundays
ROBBINS MONUMENT CO.
2710 Washington Ave.
Houston, Texas
molded salad with
tin. If you use 1
salad green.
EGG CANDLER * . By wrapping a strip of paper around the end
of a flashlight you can make an emergency light for testing eggs.
Paper should extend an inch or more above end of light. Tape band
holds tube in place.
KODAK FILMS — Various
popular sizes, for sale at the
Enterprise Office. 11-23-tf.
tablespoon dry mustard and 2 to
4 tablespoons vinegar. Spread over
ham. Insert pimiento stars at inter-
vals.
1
I
3 cups cubed, cooked er canned
beets
Combine all ingredients except
beets; blend and heat. Pour over
beets. Heat through, simmering a
few minutes over low heat or in
oven
Grapefruit Juice
'Roast Ham
'Festive Sweet Potatoes
•DevUed Beets
•Molded Fruit Salad
•Buttered Cornmeal Rolls
Assorted Pickles and Relishes
•Swedish Custard Pudding
•Raspberry Sauce
or
Plum Pudding. Sauce
Beverage
'Recipes Given
Phone 2257
Dr. H. C. Moeller
DENTAL SURGEON
X-Ray Eqalpped Office
COLUMBUS STATE BANK BLDG
COLUMBUS. TEXAS
ABOVE THE
MfUMM.00
1
I
HAPPY DUO . . . Colleen Kay
Hutchins, Miss America of 1952,
and New York Knickerbocker
basketball star Ernie Vande-
weghe form a happy duo as they
watch a game in Madison Square
Garden recently. It has been re-
ported that the couple will be
married soon.
• THS.
STARS
*| 'O SAVE TIME in peeling pots-
* toes, peel only a thin strip
around the potato lengthwise When
/ these are cooked, the remaining
peel will come off easily.
Skins will come off much more
quickly from apples if you dip
them in hot water Just before peel-
ing. Peeled apples will not turn
brown if you sprinkle them with
lemon Juice or place them in cold
water to which a pinch of salt has
been added.
To peel sweet potatoes easily and
without fuss, grease the skins with
lard before you bake them.
Bothered with odor from cooking
turnips. Add one teaspoon of gran-
ulated sugar to the water in which
they're cooked.
Pineapple peels with little effort
if you slice the pineapple into rings
of fjpuit and then peel each one
separately A bit of lemon Juice
highlights the flavor of the fruit.
Chicken and other fowl are helped
to tenderness if you rub inside and
outside of the bird with lemon
Juice.
Deviled Beets
(Serves •)
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons prepared mustard
M teaspoon salt
H teaspoon paprika
1 tablespoon honey
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
All in the Game:
^INCE he quit the Philadelphia
J Eagles, Greasy Neale has
.nrned down eight coaching Jobs—
four of them have been with the
pros . . . Glenn Cunningham, track
star, says that. If he Is trained
right, he can still do the indoor
mile in «:M . . . His 4.04 in 1938
still is the fastest indoor mile ever
run by man • - - Umpire Larry
Goets calls the New York Yankees
"the cryingest team In the world”
... He may not get any more World
Series work when the Yankees are
involved, but he Just laughs at the
prospect • . • Ohio State’s Fred
Bruney Is the greatest defensive
back in the world . . . The Nebras-
ka football squad recently elected
End Bill Schabacker, Minden, Neb.,
and Tackle Jerry Minnick, Cam-
bridge, Neb., as co-captalns for
the next season . . . There la a
strong hint that the NCAA Is still
In favor of television restrictions
. . The major leagues drafted
only 11 players from the minor
leagues . . Birdie Tebbetts has
been signed to manage the In-
dianapolis American Assn. team.
V'7'i/a ’
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
Raisin Nut Stuffing
(For Chicken)
3 cups stale bread crumbs
i,4 cup butter, melted
H cup chopped seeded raisins
Vi cup broken walnut meats
1 teaspoon salt
H teaspbbn pepper
Mix all ingredients together
lightly with fork. Stuff lightly
into cavity of chicken, which
has been salted. Roast with
chicken.
11 1
■
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Let Pimiento Stars Decorate Holiday Ham
(See Recipet Below)
Christmas Feast
/CHRISTMAS DINNER is one of
the big feast days of the year,
and you’re bound to have a big
group around the table, whether
it’s just family or ctoee friends
Make it gay and festive, in mood
with the holiday.
Since the dinner is apt to be a
rich one, make the first course as
light as possible: grapefruit Juice
with a bit of vegetable coloring in
green or red is good.
I 4
ANSWERS
(S>—«
<s>—»
tss»a (•>—s
■■•n (•>—s
•<«»»< <•)—t
Former Price Director Mike Di-
Salle was called back to Washing-
ton to seek to brace what appears
to be a crumbling structure of
price and wage controls. Selection
o' the former price director as
special control consultant to Eco-
nomic Stabilizer Putnam was an-
nounced by Putnam as the climax
to a long series of events, most all
of which would indicate that the
end of OPS is not far off. Support-
ing this view was the action of
DiSalle himself. He was asked by
Putnam to take over the job for
a period of 60 days, but he accepted
to' a period not to exceed two
weeks
The former price chief was called
back to service to replace OPS chief
Tighe Woods, wbj suddenly sub-
mitted uis resignation to become
effective as soon as possible. Woods
told reporters he was quitting be-
cause of the “weak" price control
Irw. He is considered a strong ad-
vocate of firm controls over prices
and wages, and it was rather wide-
ly known that he fast was becom-
ing "fed up" with his job. He said.
“About all I have done since I
have been here has been to sign
orders for price increases. I have
not particularly enjoyed this." He
said he expects congress to pass a
direct controls law. and that he
hopes the "special interest amend-
ments" will be removed. He added,
however, that he will make no
recommendations to congress about
a revised price control law unless
asked to do so, but added ^hat it
is hif firm conviction that a strong-
er law is necessary.
Dr. D. R. Taylor
Optometrist
Eyes Examined
Glasses Fitted
Sduoeder BMg., Phone 353
LA GRANGE, TEXAS
Festive Sweet Potatoes
(Serves •)
6 medium-sized sweet potatoes
4 tablespoons butter, melted
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons pineapple juice
IM cups drained, crushed pine-
apple
% cup pecans, chopped
It marshmallows, quartered
Wash and dry potatoes. Bake 35
minutes at 400■ F.. a hot oven.
Scoop out pulp. Whip with butter,
salt and pineapple juice until fluffy.
Stir in crushed pineapple. Mix in
pecans. Pour into a greased shal-
low baking dish and arrange
marshmallows over top. Bake in a
hot (400 F.) oven until marshmal-
lows are melted and browned,
about 15 to 20 minutes.
FARM and cooperative leaders som.
* over the nation generally ex- Gran
pressed approval of the selection
by General Eisenhower of Ezra
Taft Benson of Salt Lake City to
be secretary of agriculture.
A native of Idaho, Benson has
been closely identified with agri-
cultural marketing. Including co-
operative marketing, tor a num-
ber of years. A former extension
economist and marketing special-
ist for ‘.he University of Idaho, be
also has served as secretary of
the Idaho Cooperative Council. He
was elected executive secretary of
the National Council of Farmer
Ci-iperr fives tn 1938. and served
tn Unt capacity until he resigned
tn 1943 when he was named a mem-
ber of ate Quorum if Twelve
Apostles of the Church of Jesus
Christ Latter Day Saints. He cur-
rently It chairman of the board of
trustees of the American Institute
of Cooperation
In a statement issued immediate-
ly following announcement of Ben-
son's selection. D. W. Brooks, pres-
ident of the National Council, de-
clared the appointment “is to be
commended by all of agriculture,
including farmer cooperatives.”
He added: "Mr. Benson has a
sound agricultural background and
training A man of wide vision and
thorough understanding of and ex-
perience with the problems of farm-
ers. he is willing at all times to
face up to the day-to-day develop-
ments which confront American
agriculture."
At Chicago. Allan B. Kline, presi-
dent of the American Farm Bureau
Federation, termed Benson's selec-
tion “a top-notch appointment." He
said: "Mr. Benson has an excel-
lent background in agricultural eco-
nomics. in farm marketing, and in
actual farming, coupled with ad-
ministrative ability of a high order
. I have every confidence that
Mr. Benson will prove thoroughly
capable of the exceedingly impor-
tant position of Secretary of Agri-
culture."
In a telegram of congratulations
to Mr. Benson, Herschel D. New-
cloth and knead
smooth. Place dough in greased
bowl, large enough for expansion.
Cover with a damp cloth and set
in a warm place until doubled in
bulk, or cover tightly and store in
refrigerator to use as needed. To
bake, mix cornmeal and 2 tea-
spoons salt on pastry cloth. Turn
dough onto to cornmeal mixture.
Coat well with cornmeal. Pinch
dough into balls the size of a wal-
nut and work some cornmeal into
each ball. Dip in melted butter.
Place two balls into 2*4 inch muffin
tins. Let rise until doubled in bulk.
Bake 15 to 20 minutes in a hot
<425“F.) oven.
Red and green are found abun-
dantly in foods, so it's not hard
to use foods in keeping with the
Christmas dinner color scheme.
If, for example you choose a
green vegetable, then make a
i red-colored gela-
bcCts. make the
master of the National
Grange, said: "President-elect Eis-
enhower is to be commended in his
choice of a man of your caliber,
integrity, capabilities, interests,
and experience for the* post of Sec-
retary of Agriculture."
Charles W Holman, secretary of
the National Milk Producers Fed-
eration seid: "Mr. Benson’s train-
ing and experience fit him to as-
sume the great responsibilities of
this post"
By LYTLE HULL
\17 HEN the Truman-Acheson ad-
’ ’ ministration turned its guns
loose on Senator Joe McCarthy
they certainly did a bang-up Job
AU their parasites in radio, press
and on public platform obeyed in-
structions and leaped into the mud
with both feet—and hands When
they got through the Senator was—
for the time being—"mudded-in. '
It is difficult for important news-
papers, magazines, commentators,
etc,, to have to admit they have
been wrong. Most of them won’t.
They either let the subject die or
they continue on down the path of
error.
Now that practically all those
fifty odd men .and women named
by McCarthy before the Tydinga
"whitewash." have "left” their
jobs, it is becoming apparent to
even his most venemous traducers
that the Senator didn't "besmirch"
so many innocent reputations after
all. Now that Owen Lattimore is
called before his peers, maybe we
will find that there was something
on McCarthy's mind beside hair
when he called this mysterious per-
son a Communist traitor.
As more and more disclosures
are made of Reds in practically
every department of our Govern-
ment. it becomes apparent that we
were in far greater danger from
within than from without "Powers
that be" were keeping from the
American people knowledge which
it was their duty to disclose. How
long would it have been before
good Americans in the Govern-
ment would have feared to raise
their voices in protest at the speed
with which we were drifting with
the Red tide? How long before the
powerful Red clique got complete
control of the governmental ma-
chine? How long before the United
Nation's Secretariat became an in-
strument of the Kremlin?
Senator McCarthy believed we
were on the edge of the precipice.
He
charged into the chinashop and
busted everything in sight. The
propagandized public thought be
had destroyed a lot of valuable old
porcelain, but most of it turned out
to be cracked-pots with dangerous
cutting edges.
sports wweK
R............. —---
Here are rolls which will go nice-
ly with the ham. and you can make
the dough ahead of time to use as
needed:
Buttered Cornmeal Rolls
1 cake or package yeast, com-
pressed or dry granular
*4 cup water, lukewarm
1*4 cups milk, scalded and coeled
to lukewarm
Si cup shortening, melted in milk
M cup sugar
154 teaspoons salt
1 cup warm, mashed potatoes
5-6 cups sifted Dour
54 cup yellow cornmeal
2 teaspoons salt
*4 cup melted butter or substi-
tute
Crumble or place yeast in bowl.
Add lukewarm water and let stand,
sugar, salt, luke-
warm milk and
melted shorten-
ing; mix with
yeast. Add
mashed potato
and half the
flour. Beat well.
Add remaining
flour—reserving
1 cup for knead-
ing dough — to
dough in bowL
Turn out on
pastry board or
I until elastic and
Dr. James L. Ashley
OPTOMETRIST
Syes Examined—Glasses Fitted
Frame Repairs
Lenses Duplicated
“Closed on Thursday”
Office:
Over La Grange Drug Co.
LA GRANGE, TEXAS
Telephone 380
Swedish Custard Pudding
(Serves !•>
1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin
54 eup water
5 egg yelks
54 cup sugar
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
1 teaspeea vanilla
Soften gelatin in cold water Beat
yolks until light. Add sugar grad-
ually. beating constantly until thick
and lemon colored. Bring dissolved
gelatin to a boil over medium heat.
Stir in egg yolk-sugar mixture.
Chill until mixture thickens. Fold
in whipped cream and" flavoring.
Pour into oiled molds. Chill until
firm. Serve with:
Raspberry Sauce
1 pint sweetened red raspber-
ries. frozen or canned
1 tablespoon cornstarch
2 tablespoons water
Thaw frozen raspberries and
place in covered saucepan. Bring
to a boil and cook for 5 minutes.
Strain. Blend cornstarch and water
and add to juice.
Molded Frail Salad
(Served <1
1 package lime-flavored gelatin
1 cup boiling water
H cup cold water
*4 cup seeded grapes
H cup diced canned pears
M cup maraschino cherries, cut
Add boiling water to gelatin and
stir until gelatin ia dissolved. Add
cold water. When gelatin is par-
tially set. add fruits and pour into
molds. Chill until firm. Unmold on
lettuce and serve with salad dress-
ing, thinned with cream.
By LYN CONNELLY
TTHERE PROBABLY aren't a
* great number of people these
days who will champion the cause
of radio vs. television, but for those
persons who think radio is terrific
and deserves a great deal of credit
as an overall entertainment me-
dium. radio star of the MBS
"Ladies' Fair" program, Tom
Moore, is your boy . . . Tom thinks
radio is wonderful and anyone who
thinks television is sending radio
to the showers, has a lot of Mr.
Moore's research to contend with
first . . . Tom, as MC of the au-
dience participation program
"Ladies Fair," conducts this week-
day carnival-thcmed series in an
easy-going casual manner.
"Now don't misquote me." he
said, eyes twinkling. "I think tele-
vision is one of the modem mira-
cles of our day. but it’s misap-
plied miserably . . . Thus far the
industry has a bear by the tail and
they’re afraid to let go. . . . Their
programming is Juvenile of neces-
sity due to the great limitation of
time and space • . On the other
hand, radio is the most perfect
mass entertainment medium ever
developed because radio has no
such restrictions and can create an
illusion in the mind's eye.”
"Televlalen will never be able
to do this tn the sa.ne amount of
time ... A stage play creates an
Illusion in approximately two and
a half to three hours ... A movie
usually takes 99 minutes to develop
a character and dissolve a logical
problem . . . Television tries to do
this In a half hour and falls." Tom
does not view TV with a Jaundiced
eye due to lack of knowledge.
He has waded tn the television
stream for the past seven or eight
years, even to conducting special
television series in certain
areas . . . "And TV today," he
claims, "just isn't worth it ... It
kills the performer five times as
fast as radio both materially and
literally."
—
gift
.....
''
di
Ham is one of the traditionaf
meats to serve, and it will come to
the table properly decorated if
garnished with stars cut from
pimiento.
Place ham. fat side up. on a
rack in an open roasting pan. Make
an incision and insert a meat |
thermometer so, that the bulb
reaches the center of the largest
muscle. Be sure the bulb does not
rest on fat or bone. Do not add
water; do not cover. Roast in a
slow oven (300 F.) until the meat
thermometer registers 150 F. For
a ham which has been tenderized,
allow 20 minutes per pound, roast-
ing time.
About an hour before the ham
is done, mix 1 cup brown sugar 1
Rolls Will Go
Nicely With Hom
'll j
Save the liquid from pickled or
Harvard beets It's good to use as
seasoning tor salads, spicing or
basting meat loaves or for stuffed
eggs.
Allow one half pound rcady-to-
cook weight for each serving of
roast turkey This does no* mean
per person You'U have to decide
how many servings each person
will eat.
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Whether you boil ham or roast
beef, a few whole cloves stuck into
the meat will enhance its flavor
greatly. It bam is boiled, leave it
in the liquid in which it was cooked,
until cool.
Add a pinch of baking powder
to the flour in which you roll
oysters before frying them. It
makes them puff delightfully, and
they’re very delicious.
Oranges as well as grapeteui.
will peel easily if you pou« hot
water over them and lei them stai-a
for five minutes. This makes the
white membrane come off easily
with the peeling.
Cook your green peas with dried
or fresh mint to improve their deli-
cate flavor.
so did man\ others!
T7-A-- -
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 25, 1952, newspaper, December 25, 1952; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1225765/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.