Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, June 21, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, lune 21, 1940
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 3
Son Kneti' Economieal Way
To Hr inn About Result
AITERNIt*
D epartment
STAGE SCREEN RADIO
tive buttons down the bodice in
the front. The plain v of the neck­
line invites all sorts of different
jewelry and necklaces.
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1971-
B is designed for sizes 34, 36, 38,
40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 36 requires
4*4 yards of 39-inch material with­
out nap. Send order to:
By VIRGINIA VALE
(RehrMMd by Western Ntwip.iptr Union.)
I^'ACH year Hollywood
-¿makes a "sleeper” —a
picture that, during the mak­
ing, created no excitement,
but during the preview show­
ing had all the earmarks of
being one of the best of the
year. "It Happened One
Night” und "Mr. Smith Goes
to Washington” are two of the
belter known sleepers. This
year’s, according to some of
the people who have seen it,
may be "Down Went Mc­
Ginty.”
A TEA IN THE TIME OF ROHEM
(See Recipes Below)
f I u J F fln
/ ;
SEWING CIRC I.E PATTERN l»EPT.
14» New Montgomery Awe.
Sas Pranrltee
-
Calif.
/
1
11 11 ’
a
Enclose 15 cents in coins for
Pattern No................ Size...................
1
0
Name
Little Swedish Tea Cakes.
1 cup butter
*4 cup sugar
1 egg
1 cups cake flour
V« teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Cream butter and add sugar slow­
ly. Cream well. Add well-beaten
egg and blend. Sift flour once be­
fore measuring and then sift again
with salt. Add and blend in flavor-
Ing. Place a rounded teaspoonful of
batter in very small greased muffin
Uns <1*4 Inches in diameter). Press
batter up sides and over bottom so
that there Is a hollow In the center.
Fill thls hollow with an almond fill-
Ing (about 1 teaspoonful).
Almond Filling.
2 eggs
H cup sugar
Mt teaspoon salt
14 pound finely ground almonds
Beat eggs until very light and add
sugar, salt, and ground almonds
which have been put through food
chopper twice. Bake 30 minutes in
a slow moderate oven <325 degrees),
Black Walnut Bread.
«Makes 1 loaf)
1 cup milk
1 cup sugar
1 cup black walnuts (rollad fine)
3 cups flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
Combine milk, sugar and wal­
nuts. Sift flour and baking powder
together, and blend with the first
mixture. Pour batter into small,
greased bread pan. Bake in a mod­
erate oven <350 degrees) for 60
70 minutes.
Dream Bars.
(Serves 6-8)
IV« cups flour
1*4 cups brown sugar
H cup butter
>4 teaspoon baking powder
2 eggs (well beaten)
teaspoon vanilla extract
% cup coconut
Mix 1 cup flour with 2 tablespoons
brown sugar. Cut in butter. Pat Into
square
greased
pan and bake 10
minutes in a mod­
erate oven (350
degrees).
Add
baking powder to
remaining V« cup
flour
and
Bift.
Beat eggs and
add the remain­
ing U4 cups brown sugar, beating
thoroughly. Then add the flour and
the vanilla extract. Spread this mix­
ture over the partially baked butter
and flour mixture. Sprinkle with co­
conut, return to oven, and continue
baking approximately 25 minutes
longer.
English Currant Bread.
2 cups bread flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
■4 teaspoon nutmeg
H teaspoon salt
*4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons butter
»4 cup currants
H cup pecans or other nut meats
(broken)
1 egg (well beaten)
>4 cup milk
1 teaspoon orange rind (grated)
1 teaspoon orange juice
Sift all dry Ingredients together.
Cut in shortening Add currants and
nut meats. Combine egg and milk
■nd add to first mixture. Add or­
ange juice and rind. Mix well. Place
in well-greased loaf pan. Bake in
moderately hot oven <400 degrees) 40
to 45 minutes.
Strawberry Jam Gems.
2 cups general purpose flour
H teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
y« cup shortening
cup milk
Strawberry preserves
Sift all dry ingredient* and blend
in shortening, Add liquid and knead
lightly for a few seconds. Form
small biscuits with Anger tips as for
yeast dough mixtures. Make small
indentation with spoon and put 1
teaspoon strawberry preserves in
each indentation.
Stretch dough
over opening and place In greased
muffin tins. Bake in hot oven (450
degrees) until brown. Serve hot
like biscuits.
to
On the Refreshment Committee?
Let Eleanor Howe's cook book,
“Easy Entertaining,” help you plan
your parties. In this practical, in­
expensive cook book you’ll find a
wealth of suggestions for making
your parties a suecess—tested reci­
pes that are unusual and delicious;
menus for almost every social oc­
casion, and general hints for the
hostess, too.
Get your copy of this cook book
now. Just send 10 cents In coin to
“Easy Entertaining,” care Eleanor
Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue,
Chicago, Illinois.
(Rslsassd by Wsstsrn Nswapaper Union.)
............................... ................ ..
Address ..........................................................
Kool-Aid 4
Origins of Cattle Brands
HOT?TIRED^
enrz
Probably most of the stories
about the origins of the 1,500,000
MAXES
cattle brands registered in the
10 BIG
Glditfil
West are legends. One such out­
EVWf
standing tale, still told and pub­
lished as a true story, is that
Future Ours
Burk Burnett adopted the famous
Remember this also, and be well
brand "8666” in 1900 because he
won his great Texas ranch in a persuaded of its truth: The future
poker game with a hand contain­ is not in the hands of Fate, but in
ours.—Jules Jusserand.
ing four sixes.—Collier’s.
Written and directed by Preston
Sturgis, with a cast including Muriel
Angelus. Brian Donlevy and Akim
Tamiroff, it is the "saga of a bum."
It may be the making of a new
star. Muriel Angelus. In England
she is one of the foremost musical
It’s the custom, in a great many
clubs, to draw the season to a grace­
ful close with a churmlng spring
tea. If you're chairman of the re­
freshment committee for that de­
lightful social function of your or­
ganization, why not plan to make
"In the Time of Roses" the theme
■ong for your tea?
Use roses here, there and every­
rose-pink damask
where . .
cloth with rose
pattern; rose-
sprigged china; a
great bowl of real
roses for the cen­
terpiece. and can­
died rose petals
to decorate the
tiny cakes.
When you plan
the refreshments, allow at least
three sandwiches and two little
cakes (or cookies) for each guest,
■nd ■ pound of mints or salted nuts
for each 25 guests. If the tea is •
large one, you'll need two platters
of sandwiches, two of cakes and one
dish each of mints and nuts, on the
table at one time, and make sure
that for each platter on the table
there's at least one full one in the
kitchen to take Its place
Choose an Interesting variety of
dainty sandwiches tor your tea.
Oblong brown bread sandwiches
with cream cheese and marmalade
are good, and combine effectively
with round white bread sandwiches,
with a biend of tuna fl<ih and may­
onnaise between them. Very thin,
dainty slices of an unusual bread
■ re excellent for plain bread ■nd
butter sandwiches.
An assortment of dark and light
cookies, and very small cakes pro­
vide the swret touch for your menu.
And tea you must have, of course.
Tea, when properly made, is one
of the most invigorating drinks you
can serve. It Is most important,
especially when making tea for a
group, to measure the amount of
tea used and to brew It just long
enough and not too long in order to
insure Its best fragrance and tang
(Three to five minutes Is generally
conceded to be just about right
brewing time )
Bishop's Bread.
(Makes 1 loaf)
3 eggs
1 cup sugar
1*4 cups flour
1*4 teaspoons baking powder
•>« teaspoon salt
2 cups nut meats (broken)
1 cup dates (sliced)
1 cup Maraschino cherries
Mi pound sweet or semi-sweet
chocolate
Beat eggs until light, and add the
sugar, beating just enough to mix.
Sift flour, baking
powder and salt
and add the nuts,
dates, cherries
and chocolnte
which has been
broken into pieces
about the size of
a flve-cent piece.
Add to the first mixture, and mix
just enough to blend the lngredi-
jnts. Grease a bread loaf pan thor­
oughly and line the bottom with
wax paper. Grease paper and pour
in the batter. Bake in a moderately
slow oven (325 degrees) for about
1H hours. Coo) and slice very thin.
Butter Ovals.
(Makes 30 small cookies)
>4 cup butter
3 tablespoons superfine powdered
sugar
1 cup flour
1 cup nut meats (broken)
Cream butter, add powdered
sugar and blend well. Add flour slow­
ly and mix thoroughly. Fold in nut
meats. Shape Into small crescent
shaped rolls about the size of a
small finger. Place on greased bak­
ing sheet and bake in a moderate
oven (350 degrees) for approximate­
ly 20 minutes. Roll in powdered
sugar while warm.
Father and son had gone togeth­
er to a bazaar where a pretty girl
was selling kisses in aid of local
charity.
“My boy,” said the father slyly,
"here’s a dollar bill, You go and
kiss her. When I was young, you
can bet I made ’em scream.”
The son left his father, and
shortly after returned in a high
state of satisfaction.
"Well, did you kiss her, Son?”
asked the father.
"Yes, you can bet I did. Dad,”
was the reply.
"And did you make her
scream?”
“Scream? I’ll say so! I kept
the dollar.”
I
MURIEL ANGELL’S
comedy stars; she played the lead
in “Balalaika” on the stage there—
you’ll recall that Nelson Eddy and
Ilona Massey did the picture ver­
sion. She has been in this country
for two years; last year, while sing­
ing on the New York stage in "The
Boys From Syracuse,” she was
signed up by Paramount, and “The
Light That Failed,” with Ronald
Colman, was her first picture. Then
she did “Safari” and “The Way of
All Flesh." followed them with
"Down Went McGinty.”
4
When John Barrymore seemed to
be unavailable for the role of John
Barrymore In "The Great Profile,”
at Twentieth Century-Fox, Adolphe
Menjou was engaged for It. Then
Barrymore's plans changed, he took
the part, and Menjou took his sal­
ary, as the studio had no other pic­
ture ready for him.
----- *----
Rod Cameron, a young, six-foot
Canadian, went to Los Angeles a
year ago to learn the dime store
business.
That didn't work out
very well, so he quit, took up little
theater work, and now finds himself
acting for Paramount.
Death brought him his first role,
that of “Corporal Underhill" in
Cecil B
DeMille's
"Northwest
Mounted Police.” Earl Askam. a
fotmer stage star and war hero, was
to have played it. but he died recent­
ly of a heart attack, and young
Cameron (whose real name is Rod
Cox) was summoned for it By a
grisly coincidence, the role includes
a death scene, but he's so elated
over getting the part that he can’t
afford to be superstitious.
Now that they need passports to
sail for a tour of South America, it
has been discovered that many of
Toscanini's NBC Symphony musi­
cians are men without a country.
It seems that there was a general
impression among them that1 all
they had to do to become American
citizens was to file their intentions
of doing so; now they're not Amer­
icans. and. as they renounced their
native lands, they don't legally be­
long anywhere.
----- *-----
George Brent, working in Warner
Brothers’ “The Sentence,” offers to
put up *10.000 at 10 to 1 odds that
he won’t marry for another three
years.
"That's no reflection on
Ann.” he says, meaning Ann Sheri­
dan, whom gossips have him wed­
ding soon. “It’s Just that I'm going
to wind up my picture contract
then, and I’m not making any mar-
riagc plans until I do.”
Miss Sheridan (working in "They
Drive by Night," same studio) is
equally vehement, “George and I
haven’t even discussed getting mar­
ried.” says she. But—it's the kiqd
of buildup that so often leads to an
elopement, in Hollywood!
----- *-----
Carl Hoff, on the CBS Al Pearce
show, drew an impressive crowd the
other day and wished he hadn't. He
parked his new coupe and then tried
to get out of it, and couldn’t. He
went through assorted acrobatic
convulsions, thrusting his feet and
arms out of the windows in all pos­
sible combinations, while the crowd
offered advice hilariously. The new
coupe has patent thief-locks on its
doors. Only after he had struggled
till he was limp did it occur to Hoff
to pass the key to one of the
amused bystanders.
T'HIS dress has a beautiful line
* -slim-hipped, high-busted, ex­
actly the silhouette in which wom­
en’s sizes look best. And it’s so
simply designed! The bodice is
fitted in with long darts above the
waistline, and gathered just be­
neath the shoulders, where nar­
row ruffles add a soft, dressy
touch, without any suggestion of
width or weight.
The paneled
skirt flows into graceful fullness at
the hem, accenting the narrow­
hipped look.
Make this design (No. 1971-B)
of small-figured print, flat crepe,
georgette or chiffon, with decora-
CORK
THE LEADER
FOR 34
YEARS!
U1U« «MW.*»*“’
imlii
SWITCH
TO SOMETHING
YOU’LL LIKE I
Strange Facts
To Religious Liberty
■
Rat Digests Steel
Sans Railway, Hotel
I
»
Dangerous Passions
them, and we ought to mistrust
The passions have an injustice them even when they appear
and an interest of their own, which most reasonable.—La Rochefou­
<L Standing in Fairmount park, renders it dangerous to obey cauld.
Philadelphia, is one of the few
statues in the United States that
symbolize and are dedicated to re­
ligious liberty.
It was given to
the American people in 1876 by
the B'nai B’rith, the famous inter­
national Jewish organization.
<L The powerful dissolving effect
of digestive juices has been dem­
onstrated by their action on vari­
THEN you must
ous kinds of metals fed to rodents.
In one case a steel ball bearing,
see OAKLAND!
while in the stomach of a rat for
15 days, was reduced 24 per cent
in weight.
Gdkfcvúa. bound
y *kac
wAnr? \ ■
this year?
•
To complete your
enjoyment stop
at Oakland’s
favorite/____
Hudson Bay, a mighty gulf whom
ley waters cover 500.000 square
miles, is the third largest landlocked
sea in the world.
2 PPINTT HQ
fdom each good / "y
NEGATIVE £ U
From your 8 exposure roll. Better
Prices than you hove ever had before.
Send coin.
"ALxfe Ay PortlatuTi
Largest Koddi Finishing Co.”
PORTLAND FILM CO.
Bex 4211
Portland
HOTEL LEAMINGTON
RATES FROM $2.50
Special rates for families . .
Education’s Aim
Home Happiness
Education has for its object the
To be happy at home is the ulti­
mate result of all ambition.—Sam­ formation of character.—Herbert
uel Johnson.
Spencer.
WITH SLOWER-BURNING
CAMELS
5 EXTRA
Wrife for information
smokes per packi