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About Gold Hill news. (Gold Hill, Jackson County, Or.) 1897-19?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1939)
The Gold H ill News, Gold H ill, Oregon Thursday, September 2 1, 193 9 D ust » ★ Public l)cb l\u. I ★ Garfield Linger» On ★ Golden Hoy llolden New Look Is Given to Autumn Styles by Bustle Silhouette By CHERIE NICHOLAS -----My V ir g in ia V a le — A R L E S LAUGHTON proved himself a hero re C H cently, and the cam eras weren’t à MAYBE FATHER WIE I. I.IKE THESE? I K n l p e l t l. lo w i Household Neure bj Foods Men Like to Eat i > « Whut are the foods that Father likes best— the fine, old-fashioned dishes—tasty, full of flavor, and per fectly cooked! He likes a meal to be composed of only a few foods; he wants to know what he is eating, and he does not want foods swathed in a blanket of whipped cream. In a word, fancy cooking is apt to be wasted on Futher but he’ll appreci ate good cooking to the lim it. Left to his own devices, many a man would choose a diet of meat, potatoes, and pie. They’re not par ticularly fond of vegetables— these men of ours— and when it comes to salads, it's a sheer waste of energy to serve them anything fancy. So a little judicious planning is neces sary on our part in order to give Father his favor ite foods and pro vide a whole some, well-bal anced meal in the bargain. Each of these recipes, tested in my own kitchen, I ’ve found to be prim e favorites with men. Well pre pared and attractively served, they’ll go a long way toward es tablishing your reputation as a good cook. Vegetable Soup. (Serves 6) 2 pounds soup bone 2 tablespoons fat 2 quarts cold water 1 tablespoon salt '/« teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons barley 1 cup canned tomatoes 1 onion *4 cup carrots (cut in cubes) Mi cup celery (cut in small pieces) *4 cup potatoes (cut in cubes) *4 cup peas Remove a portion of meat from cracked soup bone and cut into pieces. Brown in hot fat. Place browned meat, soup bone, season ings, and barley in kettle and add cold water. Cover and cook until boiling point is reached. Then sim m er about 2<4 hours or until meat is tender. Cool and skim off excess fat. Add vegetables and continue cooking until vegetables are tender. D evil’s Food Cake. (Makes one two-layer cake) 1(4 cups granulated sugar 2 ounces chocolate I >4 cups m ilk 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Mi cup butter 2 eggs 2 cups cake flour >4 teaspoon salt 3 teaspoons baking powder Place Mi cup sugar, chocolate and 1 cup m ilk in saucepan and cook, stirring constant ly, until thick. Add vanilla ex tract and cool. Cream butter and add remaining sugar. Separate eggs, beat egg yolks and add slowly. Then add the cooled chocolate mixture. Mix and sift all dry ingredients and add alternately with the remaining milk. Bake in 2 well-greased layer-cake pans in a moderate oven (375 de grees) for approximately 25-30 min utes. Ice with boiled icing. Apple Pie. (Makes 1 pie) Cheese pastry 6 cooking apples Flour Mi teaspoon salt % cup granulated sugar Cinnamon Nutmeg 1 teaspoon lemon juice Line a pie tin with pie crust. Peel the apples and cut in slices. Sprin kle the bottom of the pastry with flour, salt and granulated sugar. Pile in the apples, filling very full. Dot with butter and sprinkle with cinnamon, nutmeg, sugar and lemon juice. Cover with the top crust, crimp the edges together and score grinding either. "The Hunch back of Notre Dame” company was on location, and hundreds of extras were milling about, staging festival scenes in Fif teenth century Paris. P a rt of the atmosphere was a trained bear in a cage, who was placid ly eating ice cream. Somebody bumped Into the cage, as the mob pushed and shoved about, and it was overturned. The bear, ice c re a m d rip p in g fro m h is jaws, got out — and the panic would have been on, with W ORTH K N O W IN G Split hard rolls. Butter and then stuff them with chicken or fish salad. Chopped ham may be added to waffle batter and served with pine apple-orange sauce. T ry combining two or more kinds of soup. The resulting m ixture may be served in the regular way or used as a sauce for other dishes. I F Y O U take a large size, then * you'll find 1808 one of the most becoming dresses you ever put on! The long, slim lines of the paneled skirt m ake your hips look much narrow er, and the bodice gathers give correct ease over the 1 bust. With its touch of lace, this w ill be very sm art for bridge par ties, luncheons and club affairs. M ake it of flat crepe, thin wool and, later on, sheer velvet. Coat Style Dress. The "something different” about this practical dress is the way the closing is cut sharply over at the people convinced that the bear was frothing at the mouth, if Laughton hadn’t stepped in. O ver the public address system he reassured the crowd, telling them that it was ice cream on the b ear’s mouth, and that, if they would stand the top to allow the steam to escape. Bake in a hot oven (425 degrees) for about 40 minutes. , Pigs-ln-Taters. (Serves 8) 6 large baking potatoes 6 tablespoons m argarine 4 to 5 teaspoons m ilk 114 teaspoons salt Paprika 14 pound small sausages (cooked) Wash and dry potatoes. Place on rack in hot oven (500 degrees), and bake for about 45 minutes, or until the potatoes are done. Cut a slice from one side of each and scoop out the inside. Mash thoroughly, add m argarine, salt and paprika Refill the potato shells. Make a depres CHARLES L A U G H TO N sion in the center of each, and a r range in it 2 or 3 sausages. Bake in still, the trainer would tie the bear a moderate oven (350 degrees) for ju p . about 10 minutes, or until brown. A ll in the day's work for Laughton Harvest Moon Doughnuts. I —but can't you see the newspaper (Makes 24 doughnuts) headlines if he hadn't kept his head? V« cup butter — * ----- 1 cup sugar Linda Darnell becomes a star In 2 eggs “ Public Deb No. 1,’’ with the top 4 cups flour men at Twentieth Century-Fox all 4 teaspoons baking powder set to send her straight to the top. 1 teaspoon salt She was booked for “ Drum s Along 1 teaspoon nutmeg , the Mohawk,” but they felt that the *4 teaspoon cinnamon I role assigned her wasn’t im portant 1 cup m ilk enough. 1 teaspoon vanilla F a t for deep fat frying Cream butter and sugar. Beat in I t ’s fa John Garfield’s contract eggs. Sift together dry ingredients that he may return to the stage and add alter each season. And it was in his own nately with m ilk. mind a while ago that he wouldn’t Add vanilla. Roll m ake any more prison pictures. dough 14 - inch Consequently people were surprised thick and cut with when, after finishing “ Four Daugh doughnut cutter. ters," he didn’t rush hack to Broad F ry in deep fat at way, and he surprised them again, 385 degrees until more recently, when he agreed to d o u g h n u ts a re do “ 20,000 Years in Sing Sing" golden brown on (which w ill be screened as “ The both sides. Drain on absorbent paper. Sugar lightly, City of Lost M e n " ). In the first case he was persuaded if desired. to stay on in Hollywood In order to Hot Water Cheese Pastry. get his screen career off to a good (Makes 1 2-crust pie) start. In the second, a nice, fat *4 cup shortening bonus check was used as persuasion. 6 tablespoons boiling water 2 cups general purpose flour -----* ----- 1 teaspoon salt In “ Golden Boy” you’ll meet a *4 teaspoon baking powder new movie hero, W illiam H o ld e n - 1 cup American cheese (grated) Place snortening in w arm bowl, six feet tall, possessed of brown pour boiling water over it, and hair, blue eyes, a pleasant person cream thoroughly with a fork. Place ality, and so much ability as an ac flour, salt and baking powder in tor that he was picked from 4,500 flour sieve and sift gradually into candidates for the leading role in And some of those the creamed m ixture. Add cheese. j the picture. M ix thoroughly. Make up into other candidates were experienced doughball, then chill in refrigerator. actors. When ready to bake remove from Holden wasn’t. H e’d gone to col- refrigerator, divide dough and roll j lege, and been a m em ber of P ara- out. Line pastry tin with one por i mount’s stock company. I t was tion of the pastry and proceed with when he took part in a college play desired pie recipe. in Pasadena that a talent scout spot ted him , and he was signed to a Need Help Feeding Father? f seven-year contract. A fter that he I f you would plan and serve meals didn’t do anything but report at the to please the man of the house, send studio and exercise in the gymna for a copy of Eleanor Howe’s book, sium, until he made a screen test “ Feeding F ath er’’ ; in it she tells with a g irl who was being consid- what men like to eat and gives you ' ered for a role in “ Golden Boy.” recipes for father's favorite foods— Director Mam oulian saw the test, luscious apple pie, pot roast, oyster spotted Holden, Columbia bought a stew, and a m an’s rich chocolate ' half-interest in him— and you’ll see cake, and 125 other delicious dishes. i him in "Golden Boy." Send 10 cents in coin to ’’ Feeding -----* ----- F ath er,” care of Eleanor Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, F a m ily notes: Paul M uni’s wife Illinois, and get your copy of this took a screen test not long ago. clever book now. Charles Laughton’s wife (known to stage and screen fans as Elsa Lan- chester) w ill appear on the Bing Next week Eleanor Howe will Crosby program September 21. On give you in this column some of Thursday nights, when he’s part of her own favorite recipes collect that same program, Bob Bums al ed from good cooks the country ways telephones his daughter, B ar over, tested in her own kitchen, bara Ann, to say good-night. and used successfully over a long -----* ----- period of years. Be sure to watch for “ My Favorite Recipes" by O D D S A N D ENDS— Somebody in At- Eleanor Howe. [ lanta wants to market a Scarlett O ’Hara (R elea sed by W estern N ew sp ap er U nion.) Upcoming Designs Smartly individual cocktail, and Metro’s trying to ¡top it , . , Universal's ¡paring no effort to make Gloria Jean as popular a» Deanna Durbin . . . Since her return to radio Jessica Dragonelte it tinging better than ever be fore — and she’s practically the only ¡tar of the air wavet who could ¡toy away for two yean and return Io find that ¡he was fust as popular at ever, according to what's happened to others who tried il . . . Benny Goodman’s chartered a plane Io rush him from one one-night .«land Io the next; thinks it’s too warm on trains. tR aluaad by W aitsrn N e w i p « » , Union.) waistline. The design (1681) gives you plenty of lap-over, so that you needn’t sew buttons and m ake \ \ Z H A T ’S in a name? Well, plen- buttonholes all the way down. And ’ ty. judging from the conster of course you don’t need to be nation and furore the mention of told how easy the coat style is to ’’bustle” in connection with the new m ake, to get into, and to iron. fashions for fa ll and winter has. The Patterns. caused. Im m ediately, at the mere spectator sports dress centered in No. 1806 is designed for sizes 36, suggestion of bustles being revived the group, of lightweight woolen, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. in modern styling, came visions of modifies its peplum fullness to a Size 38 requires 414 yards of 39- the amusing monstrosities we of this conservative degree. The sheer black afternoon dress inch m aterial, with short sleeves; day have come to associate with the "has been” fashions of the long ago. to the right has a wide sash tech 4% yards with long s’eeves; 1 As a m atter of fact the bustle nique which arrives at back-fullness yard for vestee. No. 1681 is designed for sizes 34, motif that has succeeded in giving in most pleasing fashion. The hat, to contemporary fashions such a de designed to complement the bustle 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size cidedly new look is fa r and away silhouette of the dress, has its own 36 requires 4% yards of 35-inch from the antiquated bustle of our bustle, which goes to show that m ate ria l without nap; % yard con ancestresses. A more accurate m illiners are also subscribing to the trasting; 2% yards edging. way of expressing the bustle theme, bustle theme. Send your order to The Sewing as is today, is to speak of it as In the inset a pretty evening for Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New back-fullness, to achieve which de m al again illustrates the prevailing Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, signers are most ingeniously intro idea of bustle effects. The bustle is Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) ducing clever drapes, bows, and detachable, to be worn at w ill. Stiff, each. (Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) peplum effects done in a conserva crisp silk taffeta yields beautifully. tive manner. This m atter of back-fullness is not The emphasis given to back-full confined to dress design. The new ness in current styling has opened coats have had to be timed to the avenues of thought to designers, in bustle-like fullness of the gowns Fee la à lg a a H o a a r COWSTIFATION consequence of which the dresses over which they must be worn. In CLEANM M TU N A U .Y «he «ea w p « a y . and coats and jackets shown in the consequence many of the smartest QoritaM Taa act* p ra a ^M y , ptaasaaWy, season’s collections have taken on coats of the season are styled with an entirely different and refreshing that thought in mind. Some take on note of interest. With the new back- fullness at the waistline; others are d ra p -s ta ra i— fullr.ess the simple black dress that made with lines that flare from as* «ad 10 c. is heralded as a perfect autumn neckline to hem at the back. Un- i “ first” becomes a model of high- FREE SAMPLE furred dressmaker coats of this type, style distinction. Write ta i made of fine broadcloth or velvety The various treatments of the surfaced woolens, rank at the height CarfiaM Tea Ce. Dwt.44 back-fullness theme as demonstrat of fashion. With them a separate Brooklyn. K.Y. ed in the illustration conveys the fur piece is inevitable which is m et message that there are back- in the revival of long fur boas and fullnesses and back-fullnesses being stoles that recall quaint fashions interpreted throughout the mode, such as our revered grandmothers with not necessarily any two being wore. alike. Reaction to the new bustle vogue Without Modes See the afternoon dress of voguish is seen in the revival of stiff, hand Architecture aims at eternity; velveteen shown to the left in the some silks as they so successfully and therefore is the only thing in picture. I t shows clever m anip yield to bouffant drapes and bows. capable of modes and fashions in ulation via the peplum method. The (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) its principles. — Sir Christopher Wren. INSIDE INFORMATION" G A R F IE L D T E A Amber in Fashion Satin-Top Jacket Dress for Autumn H ow W o m en in T h e ir 4 0 ’s C an A t t r a c t M e n For a neat practical dress of ac credited style, a dress that w ill serve adm irably for immediate wear, and that w ill start the season Here’s good advice for a woman during her c h a n g e (usually from 38 to 62), who fears off in the right direction, choose one •he’ll loee her appeal to men, who worries of the very sm art daytim e jacket about hot flashes, loee of pep, dizzy cpelle, upeet nerves and moody spells. dresses, preferably of black, either Get more fresh air. 8 hrs. sleep end If you silk crepe or lightweight wool. need a good general system tonic take Lydia E. Pinkhanvs Vegetable Compound, made These are shown with either the sep MjnciaUy for women. It helps Nature build arate black satin blouse or the satin up physical resistance, thus help« give more vivacity to enjoy life and assist calming is worked into the dress itself in a jittery nerves and disturbing symptoms that blouse top. With this comes a cun- often accompany change of life. WELL WORTH TRYINGI ning bolero of the identical m aterial that fashions the dress. Sometimes there is an applique of the satin on I Done in Silence the bolero. The advantage of the A good word is an easy obli separate satin blouse and skirt is that it gives opportunity for inter gation; but not to speak ill re quires only our silence, which changeable blouses. The combining of satin with other I costs us nothing.—Tillotson. m aterials is significant fashion! news. Topcoats as well as dresses are trim m ed with satin this year. Featured colors this season in clude a series that ranges from lightest beige and cinnamon tones to vibrant copper tones, with spe cial emphasis on browns from light to dark. Paris plays up these colorn both in fabrics and in furs, and then to c arry out the color scheme in perfect harmony adds amber jew el ry. The revival of am ber w ill prove welcome news to women who dress with distinction. Note the attrac tive bracelet, necklace and clip of amber as worn by the fashion-wise young woman pictured. For Slim Lines To give slim lines to your dressy fur coat, long-haired and bulky furs are being combined with bands of a ll types of m aterial. Sweater Collars In Great Variety 666 LIQ U ID -T A B LE T S SALVE-NOSE DROPS Bengaline and faille are fall fa vorites for neckwear There is a little satin and there are taffeta ruf-l W N U — 13__________________ 38—39 fled collars and full three-quarter1 Bishop sleeves with wrist frills that are to put on over a sleeve or with short sleeves to give a new juvenile look to a plain dress. There are deep cuffs with double rows of box-plaited ruffling, deep < — that w ill save you many a ' ¡ Dutch collars with the same finish. ; dollar w ill escape you i f ; ¡ you fail to read carefully and ; ¡ Bibs are still shown and sweater collars are im perative both for the i ¡ regularly the advertising o f ;[ » » » < ’ school g irl and the older wom an.1 :; local merchant« This fashion gives a clean, fresh,! laundered look to our woolly outer knits that m ake them seem feminine and less casual. I baroains ] IN T H IS P A P E R