Illinois Valley News, Thursday, April 17, 1941
Page Three
Resolved to T.Ive
PA
TTERNS
SEWING CIRCLE J
(Hf.
Cltam&eM,
nial but ever varied smartness.
Here's a new design (No. 1338-B)
that gives you a new slant on an
all-important styje — specifically,
the rakish angle of the buttoned
pockets, stressed by rows of stitch
ing. The notched collar is made
with the new longer points. Easy
to make, to put on and to wear.
This classic style makes up
smartly in practically every run
about fabric—flat crepe, thin wool,
spun rayon and silk print. Pattern
provides for short sleeves, or long
sleeves in the popular bishop
style,
Detailed sew chart
eluded.
Private Papers
Of a Cub Reporter:
SOUPS FOR EVERY OCCASION . .
(See Recipes Below)
THIS WEEK’S MENU
Soups may be a substantial addi
tion to a rather lean menu, or a
distinctive touch to a dinner de luxe,
for they vary all the way from the
thin, clear, delicate consommes and
bouillons to the hearty chowders and
satisfying cream soups.
Economical, tasty, nutritious—
what more could you ask of a dish
•o versatile? Make soup the main
stay of a family lunch or supper or
the perfect beginning for a “com
pany” dinner.
A little “dressing up” can play
fairy godmother to the plainest dish
-yes, even soup.
Most people eat
with their eyes,
first of all. So.
if you wish your
soups to take on
a party air, gar
nish them entic
ingly. Try sprin
kling with but-
tered croutons, chopped parsley,
a few grains of popcorn, toasted
puffed cereals, minced chives, a
dash of paprika, or a few tiny round
crackers; or place a spoonful of
whipped cream in the center.
For extra goodness, why not try
cheese in soup? It will draw a big
stamp of approval, as you will see
if you try Potato Cheese Soup.
Here's the recipe:
•Potato Cheese Soup.
(See picture at top of column)
3 medium sized potatoes
2 cups boiling water
2 to 3 cups milk
3 tablespoons butter
14 small onion
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons flour
Pepper, cayenne
1 tablespoon parsley
1 cup cheese, grated
Cook potatoes in boiling salted wa
ter until tender.
Put through a
strainer. Measure the liquid and add
enough milk to make four cups.
Scald.
Melt the butter, add the
finely chopped onion and simmer
five minutes. Add the flour and sea
sonings and combine with the potato
mixture. Cook three minutes and
strain, if desired. Add cheese and
beat until smooth. Add chopped
parsley, top with buttered croutons.
Manhattan Clam Chowder.
14 cup diced salt pork
2 cups diced potatoes
1 dry onion, diced
1 cup water
2 cups milk
1 can minced clams (about 1 cup)
Salt and pepper
Cook the diced pork and onion,
stirring constantly 'til they are ten
der but not browned. Add the po
tatoes and water and simmer until
the potatoes are tender. If the one
cup of water is not sufficient to cov
er the potatoes, more should be add
ed. When the potatoes are tender,
add the milk and clams and season
ings and heat thoroughly. Serve with
crisp, salted crackers.
One Dish Supper Soup.
% cup rice
1 cup chopped celery
2 small onions
1 green pepper
1 pint tomatoes
6 eggs
14 cup cheese
3 cups water
Salt
Add chopped celery and onions to
a kettle of boiling water, Add
chopped green pepper. Cook slowly
15 minutes Add tomatoes. Just be
fore serving, break the eggs into the
hot soup.
Sprinkle with cheese.
Cover. Keep in warm place 5 min-
LYNN SAYS:
The water in which vegetables
have been cooked, and left-over
cooked vegetables may often be
utilized in making excellent
soups.
Minute tapioca, because of its
thickening quality and attractive
translucence, makes an excellent
thickener.
Once thickened to the desired
consistency, cream soups should
be kept warm over hot water
Evaporation caused by additional
cooking may make them thick
and pasty.
SUNDAY-NITE SUPPER
'Potato Cheese Soup
Apple-Celery Salad With Sour
Cream Dressing
Nut Bread
Apricot Jam
Beverage
•Recipe given.
utes. Pour over a mound of hot
boiled rice placed in individual soup
dishes. Yield: 6 servings.
Duchess Soup.
2 tablespoons minute tapioca
1 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon onion, finely chopped
4 cups milk
2 tablespoons butter
14 cup grated cheese
2 tablespoons parsley, chopped
Combine dry ingredients, onion,
and milk in top of double boiler.
Place over rapidly boiling water,
bring to scalding point (allow 5 to 7
minutes), cook 5 minutes, stirring
frequently. Add remaining ingredi-
ents; cook until cheese is melted.
Serves 6.
Old-Fashioned Vegetable Soup.
2 quarts soup stock (see directions)
114 cups potatoes, diced
% cup celery, cut
in strips
small onions,
sliced
14 cup peas
114 cups carrots,
cut in strips
1*4 cups canned
tomatoes
Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons parsley finely chopped
Heat stock, add vegetables and
seasonings, and cook gently until
vegetables are tender. Add chopped
parsley and serve. Makes 8 por
tions.
Cream of Onion Soup.
2 tablespoons rice
2 medium-sized onions
2 tablespoons butter
1 cup water
1 teaspoon meat extract or a bouil
lon cube
3 cups milk
Salt and pepper
Chop the onions and cook in the
fat until slightly yellow. Add the
water, rice and meat extract or
bouillon cube, and cook until the
rice and onions are tender. Add the
milk, reheat, and season with salt
and pepper. Yield: 4 cups.
Russian Borsch.
1 pound soup meat
6 cups water
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
114 cups potatoes, large cubes
14 cup grated raw beets
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 large onion
1 large carrot
1 tablespoon butter
2 cups medium-chopped cabbage
1 cup beets cut in 14-inch strips
6 tablespoons sour cream
His name is Capt. Jean Georges
D'Ary of the French air force dur
ing World War I and up to the
time France quit . . . He refused to
surrender and left France before the
Nazis came—escaping to Lisbon . . .
There he felt sure the British consu
late would help him return to Brit
ain so he could fly again for Eng
land
. But something went wrong
. . . The consulate was busy or
something, and he managed to get
to Martinique on a freighter . . .
When Captain D'Ary was tipped that
the Martinique regime was plan
ning to ship him back to France as
a fugitive, he escaped to a port in
the U. S. . . . “I am in a sympa
thetic country,” he mused, “I will
not live under shadows. I will tell
everything to the authorities" . . .
And he did, adding: “Please deport
me. but deport me to Canada, so I
can get to England and help fight
again" . . . The man in charge
said: “Why, this is against the law!”
And he was jailed . . . Some of us
read about it in the papers . . .
Some of us appealed to Washington
. . . “If he is deported to Marti
nique he will be shot!" we explained
. . . On the morning he was to
be returned to Martinique came a
telegram: “Deport D'Ary,” it said,
“to Canada."
Resolved, to live with all my
might while I do live. Resolved,
never to lose one moment of time,
to improve it in the most profit
able way I possibly can. Resolved,
never to do anything which I
should despise or think meanly
of in another. Resolved, never to
do anything out of revenge. Re
solved, never to do anything which
I should be afraid to do if it were
the last hour of my life.—Jonathan
Edwards.
Pattern No. 1338-B is designed for sizes
12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Corresponding bust
measurements 30, 32. 34. 36 and 38. Size
14 (32) requires, with short sleeves. 4
yards of 39-inch material; long sleeves. 4’a
yards. Send order to:
SEWING CIRCI.E PATTERN DEPT.
149 New Montgomery Ave.
San Francisco
Calif.
Enclose 15 cents in coins for
Pattern No,
Name .....
Address ...
Pledge of Duty
The Other Week-end The Second
Bomb Wing from Langley Field,
Va., flew 30 bombers to Miami un
der command of Gen. A. Krogstad
. On the way, one of the bomb-
ers lost its elevator and started hav-
ing other trouble . . . The general
ordered the men in the plane to bail
out . . . ‘‘You never saw six men
jump so quickly, In less than six
seconds!”
VOU must have a button-to-the-
The two pilots, however, decided * hem frock this season. This
not to jump, and with expert han- thoroughly
American
classic
dling brought the bomber down blooms in the spring with peren-
without mishap to it or themselves
. . . We found out why they refused
to jump . . . That morning both had
squandered $12 each on two silk
shirts which they were wearing . . .
“We realized.” said one of the boys,
“that if we bailed out—those shirts
were sure to get dirty.”
TIPS io
(jardeners
Notes of an
Innocent Bystander:
REGARDING HERBS
Every mission constitutes
pledge of duty. Every man
bound to consecrate his every fac
Deceiving Ourselves
ulty to its fulfillment. He will de
rive his rule of action from the
We deceive and flatter no one by
profound conviction of that duty. such delicate artifices as we do
—Mazzini.
our own selves.—Schopenhauer.
BIG 11-OUNCE
BOTTLE OF
HINDS
HONEY & ALMOND CREAM
Regular *1 size
limited time only
Man as a Fraction
Every man can be seen as a
fraction, whose numerator is his
actual qualities and its denomina
The Story Tellers: The Commy \ | ANY home gardeners may be
interested in growing herbs
Charlie McCarthys over here keep
this
year because of the war,
bragging there's no unemployment
in Stalin's kingdom. Freda Utley, and because they make everyday
flavor-
who had six years of the Soviet, dishes more appetizing and
tells why in the Atlantic Monthly: ful.
Herbs may be grown in a plot
"There is no unemployment pay or
poor relief; unemployment in the So about four by six feet to supply
viet Union has been liquidated by the average needs of a family.
the simple device of liquidating the They should have full sunlight and
unemployed, who must starve to be planted in good loamy soil.
Almost all popular herbs—bains,
death” . . . Joseph Harrington's
piece in Cosmopolitan begins: “I basil, borage, fennel, marjoram,
think newspaper people are crazy. rosemary, thyme, sage, anise, dill,
I mean goofy. The screwiest peo and caraway—may either be used
ple I ever met” ... In American when young, and fresh, or pre
Magazine E. Lehman and D. Brown pared for use dried.
Anise, basil, borage, dill and sa
collab on “Hack Writer,” which in
dicates the authors are hardly . . . vory are annuals; caraway, and
The new mag for men is dickering fennel are biennials, and balm,
with three titles: “Sir,” “Swank” marjoram, sage, rosemary, thyme
and “Beau Brummel,” when the and chives are perennials, al
last mentioned tells the story! . . . though balm and marjoram are
E. Hemingway, Look reports, is go best treated as annuals.
All the herbs mentioned here will
ing to give some of his "For Whom
the Bell Tolls" royalties to China. probably produce enough growth
The dough came out of the fight for for use the first year, however, if
Democracy, he figures, and some of seeds are planted early, and cli
mate is normally temperate.
it is going back in.
tor his opinion of himself. The
greater the denominator the less
is the absolute quantity of the
fraction.—Tolstoy.
keeps me on my
! "says ESTHER WILLIAMS
Star of Iho "Àquacodo" al
Iho Son Francisco fair
A big bowlful of Kellogg's Com
Flakes with some fruit and lots ot
milk and sugar.
FOOD ENERGY!
The Front Pages: Just what got
VITAMINS!
Heywood Broun fired from the World
MINERALS!
is cleared up in a book of his col
But acid indigestion, heartburn and
PROTEINS!
umns collected by the younger Hey
sour stomach) :an sure take the joy out
wood. It wasn't his Sacco-Vanzetti
famous flavor of
pieces, as most of us thought. It of a meal. If vou’re bothered this way
Kellogg's Corn Flakes that tasfoo
ack
your
druggist
for
ADLA
Tablets
so good it sharpens your appetite,
was a piece done a year later for
makes you n»ant to eat.
the Nation, which accused the World —Bismuth and Carbonates for quick
of lacking moxie . . . Ray Brock, a relief.
new by-line to these orbs, turned in
Copr 1941 Kellogg Company
exciting news from Belgrade to the
Showing Character
Times—when the uprising started
A man never shows his own
... It wasn’t so many weeks ago character so plainly as by his
probability of such: it is an acci-
Fame Not a Property
that Mussolini was quoted as boast manner of portraying another's.—
Fame, we may understand, is dent, not a property of a man.—
ing: “I am not a man—I am an Jean Paul Richter.
no sure test of merit, but only a Carlyle,
event!” . . . Tsk-tsk . . . Remem
Cover meat with water, add salt ber how the experts told us that
and pepper and boil for 10 minutes. March would be the month when
ir ’’
Cut onion and
Adolf went to town? Well, March
\H0MMTER. H0MML/0H/
carrot in strips
has done come and gawn, as the
THERE'S
and brown in but
saying goes down South . . . Boom
SMOKE,/00HT6ET
ter. Add to soup
erang Dep't: Al Williams, the mill
and boil for 1
tary ‘expert,” recently wrote a book
T/EED SMOK/Mr
/H THE SMOKE
hour,
replacing
in which he predicted that the Fas-
EMMELS. / T/KE
water as it boils
cist air force would knock the Brit-
OF CM MELS, TOO.
away, Add cab-
ish out of the Mediterranean.
s •
bage and beet
strips to soup and
Typewriter Ribbons: The Thom-
*
-
- -
cook until beets «re tender, about aston. Ga., Times’: Don't risk your
30 minutes. Add potatoes and cook eyesight by looking straight at the
y
until tender, or about 15 minutes. sun. or your illusions by looking
Just before serving, add grated raw straight at a friend
. . Olin Mil
beets and pour immediately into ler's: Uncle Sam is so busy watch
F 4
serving dishes. Place 1 spoon of ing the wolves in Europe he can't ■
sour cream in center of each serving see the rats at home . .
Balzac's: |
and sprinkle with parsley. Makes 6 A husband should always know what
servings.
is the matter with his wife, for she
always knows what is not.
Soup Stock.
3 pounds shin of beef
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU
The Wireless: Dorothy Thompson
3 quart« cold water
Cut meat in pieces free from fat. included a memo to Hitler the Hun.
and place in kettle.
Add water, A countryman of his, she warned,
partly cover, and heat si wly to boil who also made a hobby of slaugh
ing point. Simmer gently five hours, ter. lies buried in Jugoslavia. His
. . Jose Morand
removing scum as it forma. Keep name was Attila
than the average of the 4 other largest -selling cigarettes tested —less than
meat well covered with water. Then (if that's the spelling) comes at y»u
any of them —according to Independent scientific testa of the smoke Itself.
remove meat and set broth aside to with Latin • American musicking
cool. Skim fat from broth Strain these midnights. It’s soothing, which
liquor carefully through fine sieve or is the way it ought to be late at
cheesecloth. Chill.
This gives a night, when you're too tired to fight
clear broth, free from fat, to be used back at the brasses . . . You have
as basis for soups. Makes about 2 to be a frenzied baseball fan to get
much out of the broadcasts of the
quarts stock
'Released by Weft era Newspaper Union • exhibition games.
A Fellow’s Got To Eat!
I
XVZ?
TESS/V/O7//VE
F.
’
%
28% LESS NICOTINE
^*4
I
CAMEL
THE CIGARETTE
OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS