PACK « H it S AgtttAÑB B A ttt TIDINGS stantly boiling and steam er close ly covered. Cranberry P ie Fill a pastry-lined pan with cold cooked cranberries. Place strips of pastry across the top, lattice fashion, then ad ju st a rim of pastry around the edge; bake in a hot oven. Serve cold either plain or with whipped cream. Mond*»* i November 2Ö, add the juice of one lemon. Boil cne q u art of w ater and three cup­ fuls of sugar about tw enty m in­ utes. Add cranberries and strain all through a cheesecloth. Cool thoroughly, then freeze, using three parts of finely crushed ice to one p art rock salt. When the sherbet is half frozen add the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Serve in sherbet cups with the roast. Deep Dish P ie Fill large or individual glass dishes with strained cranberry sauce; cover top with flaky pastry and bake in a hot oven. Serve warm with table cream poured over each service. Cranberry R oly P o ly Make a biscuit dough of one west coast sawmills, for week ending Nov. 17, m anufactured 112,273,511 ft. of lum ber; sold 106,030,134 ft., and shipped 101,- 926,366 ft. Production was 26 per cent above norm al and new business 6 per cent below produc­ tion. Candy for Thanksgiving Delicious Boxed Candies of your own selection or in assorted combinations, made fresh especially for Thanksgiving. As a gift for anyone you wish to make happier on Thanksgiving Day this Candy is ideal. Electrical ENDERS CONFECTIONER ) G ifts fo r THANKSGIVING only half full. J u st before dinner is served unmold. The jelly m ust be thoroughly chilled or it will not be firm , so it should be made at least tw enty-four hours before serving unless it is chilled on ice. Cranberry P ie C olonial S tyle C ranberry Pie Colonial Style is a combination of raisins and cran ­ berries. Use two cupfuls of cran ­ berries, one cupful of seeded or seedless raisins, one cupful of sugar and three tablespoonsful of flour. Mix all these ingredients and pour into a pan lined with pastry. Cover with a top crust and place in a hot oven, reducing heat to m oderate after the first ten minutes. It will take about th irty m inutes for this pie to bake. If this combination is preferred in an open pie, omit flour, add two cupfuls of w ater to fru it and sugar and cook slowly until mix­ ture thickens. Cool thoroughly be­ fore pouring into a baked pastry shell. Make a m eringue of the whites of two eggs, spread over top of fru it and brown slightly in a very m oderate oven. Roast Ì our Thanksgiving Tnrl o O IN ONE OF Goods Best Quality Best Service Cranberries in Many Ways Mrs. Belle DeGraf There are so many uses for cranberries in addition to the reg­ ulation cranberry sauce. Of course the cranberry sauce or jelly served as a relish with turkey or chicken is the popular favorite, but no means is it necessary to confine the use of this delicious fruit to sauce. There are pud­ dings, steamed or baked, pies and cobblers, all p articu larly p a lat­ able due to the peculiar acid fla­ vor of these berries. C ranberry jelly can be made and stored in sterilized glasses, ju st as any jelly or jam. If made before the holidays there will be th a t much out of the way for the busy housewife who plans and cooks the holiday feast. If you wish the jelly to be firm enough to unmold, do not use much w ater when cooking the berries. For each quart of berries allow one pint of w ater; cook berries ten m inutes after boiling has begun, then add one pint of w ater; cook berrier ten min­ utes after boiling has begun, then add one pint (two m easuring cup­ fuls) of granulated sugar and cook six m inutes. Turn into wet moulds or sterilized jelly glasses and set aside to cool. This gives a clear jelly in which the berries are imbedded. If the sauce is de­ sired strained, rub through a coarse sieve after the ten m inutes cooking; retu rn to fire, bring again to the boiling point, add .sugar and cook six m inutes. Both these jellies will retain their shape when unmolded. For indi­ vidual service which is most a t­ tractive, use small tim bale molds or custard cups, filling either one Cranberry Puffs One egg, one-half cup sugar, one cup sifted flour, two' tea­ spoons baking powder, one-puar- te r cup milk, one teaspoon vanilla two tablespoon melted shortening, one cup cranberries. Mix dry in ­ gredients, reserving some flour to dredge fruit. Beat egg, add milk, combine m ixtures, add flav­ oring and cranberries. P our into buttered iu sta rd cups and bake in a m oderate oven about th irty m inutes. Serve hot with a vanilla sauce. Cranl>erry C abinet P u d din g Fill a buttered pudding dish with altern ate layers of soft bread or stale xake crumbs, having top and bottom layers of ' crumbs. Beat one egg, add one-third cup of sugar, one cupful of hot milk and bake until custard is firm. Serve hot or cold. Steamed Cranberry Pudding Use the recipe for cranberry, puffs. B utter a pudding mold or custard cups. Fill tw o-thirds full of b atter and steam over hot w ater until firm in the center, keeping w ater underneath con- Freshly Dressed for Thanksgiving The choicest Fowls that the market affords, you will find here freshly dressed and awaiting your choosing for Thanksgiving. Take your pick of Turkeys, Ducks, Geese or Chickens from this display and you will have a good Thanksgiving Fowl. Brown’s Cash Market Thanksgiving One w a y to h e l p mother that will win her instant ap­ preciation is to g iv e h e r a T hanksgiving Gift that will make the prep- a r a tio n of meals easier. CIGARS The crowning event of the V/ A T hanksgiving Dinner is passing to your guests a box of ( ’¡gars from Nininger & W arner that have been kept in perfect condition by their new tobacco humidor. No m atter what their Cigar Taste you can choose Heie are the best Gifts you could select for that purpose. a blend that will please and satisfy them. ASHLAND ELECTRIC SUPPLY shape and blend you prefer. Phone your order and we will save a box of the NININGER & WARNER Sporting Goods Eastern C ran b e rries..............20c lb., 2 lbs. 35c Heinzes M ince-m eat................................... 25c lb. Best Bulk Cocoa .......................................7c lb. Raisins, large parckage....................... .2 for 25c Bulk R a is in s ..................................... 3 lbs for 35c Pettite Prunes, the best that ever grew 31bs 25c No. 1 California W alnuts. .30c lb., 3 * lbs $1.00 Home grown W a ln u ts ............................. 20c lb. New Almonds, soft shell.. 25c lb., 4 1* lbs $1.00 Filberts .......................................................20c lb. S p e c ia l F o r T h a n k s g i v i n g Apples—Spitzenbnrg, Baldwin and N ew tons... ..................................... $1.10 a box, 5 boxes $5.00 <>nr dinner will be incomplete without one o f our delicious Ice (Team Cake’s to finish on. (hi telephone orders up to Wednesday evening Regular 50 cent cakes 40 cents. Whipped ( ’ream Pumpkin Pies 40 cents. Home Made Mince Pies 35 cents. Pop Coni that pops, Van Camp’s Oyster Cock­ tail sauce; Fresh Lettuce; Celery, Cabbage and everything you will be wanting for the holiday festivities. Turkeys, Chickens, Ducks and Geese. Fresh and cured Meats of all kinds WE W ILL BE OPEN UNTIL 12:30 and in the evening from 5:00 to 0:00. PLAZA M ARK ET cupful ^ f flour, two teaspoons of baking powder, one-fourth te a ­ spoon of salt, one tablespoonful of shortening, and about one-third cup of milk. Roll into a rectangu­ lar shape about one-fourth inch thick. Sifread w ith cranberry sauce; then roll up like a jelly roll, join edges firm ly and bake in a hot oven. Serve with a hard cranberry sauce. FRANKLIN BAKERY Laundered Ihe “ Home-Way SB y H ? H ard C ranberry Sauee One-third cup butter, one cup- powdered sugar, one egg white, one-half cup strained cranberry sauce. Cream butter, gradually add sugar, beat well, add cran­ berry sauce slowly to prevent curdling, then fold in stiffly beat­ en egg white. I I l i g i 2 ^ \ p A If you possess an ice cream freezer, a cranberry sherbet may be served with the roast turkey. It offers a change in a very a t­ tractive form. The berries for the sherbet may be prepared a day in advance, so th a t freezing would be the only operation on the holi­ day. Cook one quarte of cranber­ ries in one cupful of boiling w ater until berries are soft and broken; ru b through a coarse sieve and ALL THAT IS NECESSARY •V PH O N E 165 W E ’LL GET IT