The Archer County News (Archer City, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 28, 1942 Page: 8 of 8
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THE ARCHER COUNT! NEWS
{
\
Gay Vanity Table
Is Easy to Make
HtlGHT OF
TABLE
Underneath It’s a Packing Box. !
'T'HIS is what your bedroom \
A needs—a Southern-belle van-
:\y’. Btttvcwi frothy ruffles of red- j
dotted white swiss you get taota- j
lizing glimpses ot red ribbon, run
through beading and tied in bows.
• • »
Darling, with pretty curtains and bed-
spread to match I Our 32-page booklet
tells details of making the vanity. Also
tella how to make Inexpensively a book-
rack side table, pillow tops, pot holders,
many other attractive Items tor yourself
or as gifts. Scad your order to:
READER-HOME SERVICE
US Sixth Avenue New York City
Enclose IS cents In coins tor your
copy of HAND-MADE GIFT NOV-
ELTIES.
Marne.......................
Address.....................
4 cups of *5^“*
GARFIELD TEA
war M saaps worn beck to “nrianopo ta-
am. Me—2)< at fnMom
FREE SAMPLE
far Uheeal trial maoU-eeeoeh tor 4 FULL
CUPS of GAJUmLD TIA. wots:
OANFItLD TEA CO„ lac.
•ml MS. m «t Ot am am. MstoaH
Experience to (toruter
Character is the spiritual body
of the person, and represents the
individualization of vital experi-
ence, the conversion of uncon-
scious things into self-conscious
man.—Whipple.
CAIL0U5ES TbnltoteVriaMadtoww,tem- lM or tondmomoa bottom of loot
u^*!!riIL£L<u^bio.to p«to.
Parent’s Prayer
No one has become immortal by
sloth; nor has any parent prayed
that his children should live for-
ever; but rather that they should
lead an honorable and upright life.
—Sallust.
TVYTHS
VYMTff
NERVOUS
on “certain days” of month
If functional monthly disturbances
make you nervous, restless, high-
strung. cranky, blue, at such times
-fry Lydia E Plnkham’s Vegetable
Compound - famous for ever 60
years-to help relieve such pain
and nervous feelings of women’s
"difficult days.”
Taken regularly - Plnkham’s
Compound helps build up resist-
ance against such annoying symp-
toms. Follow label directions. Well
worth tryingI
Personal Actions
I am for each individual doing
lust as he chooses in all matters
* -- h- jgyrnajy-
I VACATION IK SO. CALIFORNIA
W Ten Oasis Bask sail ifMNaOoaal
wslBtalBlac1701, U> AiifilM, Cnl.
WNU—L
20-41
When Your
Back Hurts
And Your Strength and
Energy la Below Par
It nsy ks earned by disorder of U4-
asy^fwectiea thet^peyaile pntoneeee
peapto>M*Umd. wmk^uto'iSoonbM
vkn the kldaeys fell to —
aside e ' '
“ri
r iron the
tioe with emattiac asd bamiat to a>-
ethe> aha that eeaieehlag to wteag with
the kidoers or bladder.
There eL>uJd be do doeDoans Pills
Keep on Your Toes With Enriched Bread1.
(See Recipes Below)
Bread ’n Butter
Bread is one of our oldest
best-liked foods. But bread,
many of our other foods,
changed considerably during
and
like
has
the
last two years. You haven’t no-
ticed? Well, it’s been enriched and
fortified with the B-vitamins, often
called morale builders because of
the fine things they do for your sys-
tem, digestion and disposition.
Iron, the magic helper that peps
up your system by making hard-
working red blood cells, has also
been added to bread along with vi-
tamin B.
But not just bread has these new,
essential elements. Flour that you
use for your own
ir fm
baking has been
fortified with the
B - vitamins and
?r—T| iron. There isn’t
jfcJ much difference
---1[. in enriched iour
jM Jj or bread and in
**• ordinary bread or
flour, except in some cases where
the color in slightly creamy. But
the nutritive value is so much great-
er that it’s to your advantage to
use it.
Although Saturday baking and the
resultant shelves and pantries filled
with crusty, sweet-smelling loaves
of bread are becoming things of the
past, perhaps you still feel the oc-
casional desire to turn out a silky
textured, moist, delicious loaf of
good bread.
Rhythmical kneading is the secret
of good bread. Rock the dough un-
der the palms of the hands in three-
quarter time until it gets the satin-
like sheen.
•Twisted Loaf.
(Makes 4 1-pound loaves)
2 cops milk
>4 eup sugar
4 teaspoons salt
2 tablespoons shortening
2 cups water
1 cake yeast
34 cup lukewarm water
12 cups sifted flour (about)
Scald milk. Add sugar, salt,
shortening and water. Cool to luke-
warm. Add yeast which has been
softened in % cup lukewarm water.
Add flour gradually, mixing it in
thoroughly. When dough is stiff,
turn out on a lightly floured board
and knead until satiny and smooth.
Shape into smooth ball and place in
a greased pan. Cover and let rise
in a warm place (80-85 degrees F.)
until doubled in bulk. When light, di-
vide into four equal portions. Roll
each portion into a smooth ball. Cov-
er well and let rise 10 to 15 minutes.
Mold into loaves. For a twisted
loaf, roll dough under hand to 2
rolls about 2 inches thick and longer
than the length of the pan. Twist
the 2 rolls around each other and
place in greased pans. Let rise un-
til doubled in bulk. Bake in a mod-
erately hot (400-425-degree) oven 40
to 45 minutes.
A nutritious coffee cake that is a
tried and true sugar slumper adds
AW UkiVVI A A LAS to * IMuhga I
This Week’s Menu
x ’Oven-Baked Chicken
Green Peas Parsleyed Potatoes
Grapefruit, Orange, Strawberry
Salad
•Twisted Loaf
Strawberry Sundae
Coffee Tea Milk
•Recipe Given.
Uic’ i-\. '
given here, it is delightful:
Sweet Yeast Dough.
(Makes 2 12-inch rings or
dozen rolls)
2 cakes yeast
Lynn Says:
Good things come in little pack-
ages. This little saying applies
perfectly to the concentrated
foods like dried fruits—prunes,
apricots, figs, apples, pears, rai-
sins and peaches.
Now more than ever before
you’ll want to use more of them
because they can solve your
sweet tooth problem, in addition
to acting as important blood
builders and keeping your body in
good working condition because
of their important vitamin and
mineral values.
You can appreciate why they
do all this for you when you real-
ize that to make one pound of
the dried fruit it. takes several
pounds of fresh fruit For ex-
ample, prunes require three
pounds of fresh fruit to make one
pound dried; raisins, four pounds
fresh trait, apples, six to nine
pounds fresh fruit, pears and figs
both require three pounds of fresh
fruit, while apricots and peaches
five and one-half pounds of the
fresh to make the dried product
Vt, cap lukewarm water
1 cup milk
34 eup butter or margarine
34 eup sugar
34 eup honey
1 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
5 eups lifted flour (about)
Soften yeast in lukewarm water.
Scald milk, add butter, sugar, honey
and salt. Cool to lukewarm. Add
flour to make a thick batter. Add
yeast and eggs; beat welL Add
enough flour to make a soft dough.
Turn out on a lightly floured board
and knead until satiny. Place in a
greased bowl, cover and let rise un-
til doubled in bulk. When light,
punch down. Shape into tea ring
rolls filling with fig or apricot filling.
Bake in a moderate (375-degree)
oven 25 to 30 minutes for coffee cake,
20 to 25 minutes for rolls.
Fig Filling.
(Makfs 2 eups)
1 eup chopped figs
34 cup orange Juice
2 teaspoons grated orange rind
34 eup sugar
34 teaspoon salt
34 eup ebopped nuts
Combine figs, orange juice and
rind, water, sugar and salt. Cook
until thick, stirring constantly. Re-
move from heat and cool. Add nuts.
Apricot or Prune Filling.
(Makes 2 cups)
134 eups stewed, chopped prunes
or apricots
2 tablespoons sugar or honey
34 teaspoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons lemon jnlee
Combine the fruit, honey, cinna-
mon and lemon juice. Mix well.
Do you have a yen for old-
fashioned, oven-baked chicken swim-
ming in a thick, creamy sauce?
Well, here’s a recipe for you that
you can fix early in the morning
and put in your refrigerator until
cooking time. You may use broil-
ers, frying hens, stewing hens or
roasters, but the cooking time va-
ries with the age of the chicken.
Broilers take about a half an hour
to cook while stewing hens taka
about two hours.
•Oven-Baked Chicken.
1 roasting ehicken cut up
Milk
Flour
Salt and pepper
34 eup butter or fat for frying
1 tablespoon onion, ebopped fine
34 pound mushrooms
2 eups hot, rich milk
Dip chicken in milk and seasoned
crumbs and flour and fry in skillet
until a golden brown. Fry mush-
rooms in butter until brown (about
2 or 3 minutes). Sprinkle chopped
" ““ : r, ...........
in casserole. Pour hot milk over
top and bake in a moderate (350-
degree) oven until chicken is tender.
Serve garnished with chopped pars-
ley and a dash of paprika.
Dramatise the Salad.
Salad greens and fresh fruits oc-
cupy an important place in our diets
in the spring, and a good salad is
a distinctive part of any menu.
Our salad today features citrus
fruits and strawberries which are a
spring symphony themselves tossed
on a bed of greens—watercress, ro-
maine and leaf lettuce are perfect.
A light french dressing will bring
out the hidden flavors in the greens
and fruits:
French Dressing.
3 tablespoons catsup
1 tablespoon vinegar
34 eup lemon juice
1 teaspoon salt
34 teaspoon white pepper
2 teaspoons sugar
1 eup salad oil
1 onion, sliced
34 teaspoon paprika
Combine ingredients in order giv-
en and shake well in jar before
serving.
Nm you a particular household or
raatias problem om which you would tike
expert edvicet Write to Him Lynn i
tors ot Western Newspaper Uniat
South Despleines Street,
explaining yout
flame sodom a
sot relope for your reply.
(Bateucd by Wostara ~
Newspaper Union, lit
Street, Chicago, Illinois,
problem fully to her.
Patterns
SEWDNG CmCLE
Washington, D. C.
RRs VS. SHIPS
It hasn’t made headlines, but a
battle royal has been raging be-
tween WPB Czar Donald Nelson and
Transportation Czar Joe Eastman
over the freezing of steel for the
construction of railroad cars.
With less and less shipping mov-
ing along the coast, and more and
more traffic by rail, the question is
one of the most important facing
the country.
What happened was that the War
Production board froze all construc-
tion materials already on band in
tailroad construction shops. The in-
tention was to transfer these materi-
als for use in building other types
of cars.
However, Joe Eastman claims
that these materials, chiefly steel,
already had been bought and cut out
for certain cars, in certain shapes,
so the order merely will make the
materials go unused, with car shops
closing down.
Already, Eastman argues, certain
plants of Pullman Standard are idle,
at a time when all plants should be
used to capacity.
Meanwhile railroads are groaning
with traffic. Sugar is now being
hauled by rail as much as possible
from Florida to avoid submarines.
Oil is clogged up in the producing
fields for lack of railroad transpor-
tation. And with the sjnkings of
several Chilean ore ships, more
iron ore has to be hauled from in-
terior U. S. iron mines.
In view of all this, Eastman com-
plains bitterly that Nelson won’t re-
lease the steel and let the car
foundries do the job.
• • •
INFLUENCING EUROPEAN
LABOR
Here is one inside reason why
Roosevelt leans toward labor.
Basically, the President Always has
been pro-labor, and continues to be,
even though he has become fed up
with some labor activities in the
past year.
But in addition, U. S. war strate-
gists are convinced that the chief
hope of revolution in Europe comes
from labor. And most of the psy-
chological warfare strategy being
devised here is aimed at influencing
labor in Germany, Czechoslovakia,
Austria and the occupied countries.
Although not generally known, the
nucleus of the old Social Democrat-
ic party which tried to create a real
republic in Germany is still intact.
When Hitler came into power, they
moved to Czechoslovakia. After the
Sudetenland seizure, they moved to
Paris. After the downfall of Paris,
they moved to the U. S. A.
Fifty Social Democrats from the
old Reichstag are now in this coun-
try co-operating with U. S. officials.
Furthermore, it is labor in the
European occupied countries which
is able to assemble or make radios.
German labor listens to the radio
far more than other classes. Some
labor groups even have published
very small “underground” newspa-
pers on hand presses and these are
distributed by hand.
German labor resents the long
hours in munitions factories, the
small pay and the lack of food, more
than any other group. Also labor
is about the only group which was
not taken over completely by Hitler.
The Communists, his chief oppo-
nents, now have long been under-
ground, but secretly active.
To European labor Roosevelt
always has been one of tbo
world’s greatest leaders. And
one thought in the minds of war
strategists is to show Europe
that the rights of labor here will
not he thrown eompletely over-
board daring war.
WALLACE'S FAVORITES
The men who came to Washington
with Henry Wallace in the early
days of the New Deal realize now
that they picked a winning horse.
emment.
Claude Wickard was head of the
corn-hog section in Wallace’s AAA.
Now he is secretary of agriculture.
Milo Perkins was a lowly assistant
to Wallace, holding down a desk in
the outer office. Today, he runs the
Board of Economic Warfare, as im-
portant as a cabinet post.
Paul Appleby was an assistant in
the inner office. Now he is under-
secretary of agriculture at $10,000 a
year.
Chester Davis was head of the
AAA. Now he is director of the
Federal Reserve bank in St Louis.
R, M. (“Spike”) Evans was an
aide to Wallace; now head of AAA.
Sam Bledsoe, Roy Hendrickson,
and Whitney Tharin were newsmen
covering agriculture. Bledsoe is
now an assistant to the secretary.
MERR Y -GO-ROUND
Secretary of War Stimson Is held
In the warmest personal esteem by
army commanders. Hard-working
and open-minded, be never meddles
in military operation* and hacks up
his subordinates lflfl per cent. Stim-
son Is always at his desk by S a. na.,
and rarely leaves natil evening,
when he always takes heme with
him a big handle of papers that he
works ever after dtasaer.
Good explanation of “Your Army”
and how the draft works, has been
written by George H. Jiler of the
Bridgeport Post
i
m
ill!
!§V:|
fill
lift
mu
1560B
' I 'HERE are few fashions which
do quite as much for the figure
as the dress which looks like
a suit, an appealing version of
which is presented in Pattern No.
1560-B. In this style you get a
smooth fitting top which whittles
the waist, trimly outlines the fem-
inine curves of the bosom and con-
trols a slim effect through the
hips. You will like the neat de-
tailing too, in the low cool neck-
line edged with ric-rac, the row
of tiny buttons for the front clos-
ing and the prettily shaped pocket
flaps. The skirt has panels, for
slender fitting through Die hip*
and across the back.
If a touch of white nef r your
face is especially flattering you
can finish the top with a round
white collar—it would be most ef-
fective if the frock were dotted
swiss—or gingham of a tiny check.
• • •
Barbara Bell Pattern No. MSS-B to de-
signed for sixes 10, 12. H, IS, U aad 20.
Corresponding bust measurement* 2S, to,
32, 34, 38 and 38 Size 12 (38). with abort
sleeve* requires 3% yards 35-inch materi-
al. Contrast collar and cuffs. % yard.
2 yards rle-rac tor trim.
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN ©EFT.
airu,.^
Enclose 20 cents in coins
pattern desired.
Pattern No.....Stz
Name..............
Address.........
Preserving Freedom
If we wish to be free; if w*
wish to preserve inviolate those in-
estimable privileges for which vs
have been so long contending; if
we mean not basely to abandon
the noble struggle in which w«
have been so long engaged, and
which we have pledged ourselves
never to abandon until the glortoua
object of our contest shall be ob-
tained—we must fight! An appeal
to arms, and to the God of hoots if
all that is left us.—Patrick Henry,
CLABBER GIRL
• tnfoy honor kosuttk wim.
you uso Clabber Girl for quick
broads, biscuits and othor nour-
ishing foods... Enjoy Botfor
Valuo when you buy Clabbor
Girl.
THdtk&L
SHE KNOWS
SAVE WASTE PAPER ★
>
i Uncle Sam Needs Your Waste Paper
Save It for the Loeal Collector
7
I ^ A
Hltf
•Si***
ft it- u. & js’
jm
m
~ifr^
I
iA •
■ ft
^ With me* in the Army, Navy, Marines,
and the Coast Guard, dm favorite cigarette
is Camel. (Based on actual sales records in
Poet Exchanges, Sates Commissaries, Ship’s
Service Stores, Stub’s Stores, end Canteens.)
Special Service Carton
— Ready to Mail
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Martin, Charles. The Archer County News (Archer City, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 28, 1942, newspaper, May 28, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth708917/m1/8/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Archer Public Library.