Friday, August 23, 1940 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Page 3 Suede Fashions Due for Big Vogue This Fall and Winter By CHERIE NICHOLAS feminine lines, however sailorfled its spirit, because the skirt has smart unpressed front fulness and the blouse is gathered to round out your bustline. Carry out the nautical idea by making it up in blue chambray with white braid, white linen with navy braid, or beige with scarlet. It’s a good style for checked ging­ ham and sharkskin, too. Send for the pattern right now. Be among the first to wear it! Pattern No. 8738 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19. Size 13 requires 444 yards of 35-inch ma­ terial without nap; 844 yards braid. Send order to: SEWING CIMC1.E PATTERN DEPT. 149 New Moatgomery Av«. Saa Fraaelree Calif. Enclose U cent» la coins tor Pattern No................ .. Siz«.......... Name ............................... Address ............. . ............ . ............... WHEN YOU FLAN A PICNIC FOR A CROW» (Recipea Below.) Community picnics are funl They offer an opportunity for a carefree day under the opcp sky—carefree for even the chairman tn charge of affaire, if she’s planned her program well and chosen her helpers wisely. If the crowd to be served is a lt*a a good idea to have one com­ mittee member responsible for each main dish such as meat, po­ tatoes. salad, des* cert, and bever­ age. and one re­ sponsible for extras such as buns, butter, relisnes, etc. There'll be a serving committer end a clean-up committee, as well. Picnics fur four or five families are usually co-operative affairs. Each family may supply its own lunch, but more often each one pro­ vides one Item in large enough quan­ tities to serve the crowd One fam­ ily might provide the salad, one the meat, and still another family the dessert, which might be watermel- on, a luscious chocolate cake, or a freezer full of old fashioned ice cream. With a little planning, the cost can be fairly equally distrib­ uted. When an outing is in the offing and it's up to you to plan the menu for a crowd, you'll find these picnic pointers helpful. 1. if lunch is being prepared at home, choose foods U»at permit be­ forehand preparation, and that are not too difficult to carry or to serve. 2. Provide a fairly simple meal, with plenty of everything but not so much variety that it will cause con­ tusion and lots of extra work. 3. Unless you are sure of a good water supply, it's better to carry the water from home. 4. Carry fruit juices, tomato juice or milk in thermos bottles. 5 The main dish for the picnic— which might be chili, baked beans, or escaUoped potatoes, can be cooked the day before, then in morning brought to the boiling point, and the dutch oven or casserole wrapped In several thicknesses of newspaper to retain the heat fl Don't overlook the possibilities in frozen foods for picnic use. Quick- frozen meats can be carried, with­ out Ice, even on a warm day. They thaw out on the way to the picnic ground and will be ready to use. You'll find other picnic pointers in my cook book, "Easy Entertain­ ing.** There are menus and tested recipes for beach parties, hikes and a "Colorado beefsteak fry.” When you write to me, won't you tell me aomething about the "com­ munity meals’* your group has served? Do you serve dinners for the church, for business men's organizations or for the farm bu­ reau. perhaps? How many peo­ ple do you serve at meals like this, and what are your favorite menus? 1'1! be waiting to hear from you! Eleanor Howe Is going to give you. next week, some of her fa­ vorite recipes for cool, refresh­ ing summer beverages, and dain­ ty cookies to serve with them. Watch for this column next week. Grandmother's Ginger Cookies. (Makes about 6 dozen) 144 cups shortening 2% cups sugar 3 eggs (separated) 144 cups molasses 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon ginger 1 teaspoon nutmeg 1 teaspoon cloves 1 teaspoon salt 3 teaspoons soda 44 cup cold water I cups flour Cream shortening and add sugar gradually, creaming until smooth. Beat egg yolks until light, and add to the creamed mixture, with the molasses, and spices, and salt. Dis­ solve soda tn cold water, and add to the first mixture; blend well. Beat egg whites until stiff, and fold into batter. Add flour, and mix until smooth. Roll out to 44-inch thick­ ness on a lightly floured board. Cut s s» There's something very social and heartwarming about enter­ taining friends in your own home. And entertaining needn't be ex­ pensive, nor does it necessarily mean a lot of work! Eleanor Howe's cook book, "Easy Entertaining.” will give you the secrets of doing just that —entertaining without fuss and bother, and to fit your budget You'll find in "Easy Entertain­ ing" plans for almost every kind of party. Send 10 cents in coin to "Easy Entertaining,” care of Eleanor Howe. 919 North Michi­ gan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Jlsk Me Jlnother F YOU have not already been con­ verted into a suede way of think­ ing. you will when you sec the fasci­ nating things designers are doing with handsome suede for the com­ ing fall and winter. In a wide range of colors, never so beautiful, never so exquisitely supple and/never be­ fore so versatile for all purposes, suede has reached the point where It is regarded as a staple medium for the making of smart apparel. No matter from what fashion an­ gle the approach is made, suede qualifies ay the perfect answer. with 3H-inch cookie cutter, and There's nothing smarter on the press a raisin iato the center of ! boa rdf for fall than a coat or a jack­ each. Sprinkle with sugar. Baks et, a suit or a one-piece dress made on a greased cookie sheet in a mod­ of suede. As to accessories of suede erately hot oven (400 degrees) for the rich colors of suede and its de­ lightsome yield to deft handling is about 10 minutes. revealed throughout a whole list of Barbecue Sandwiches. bags and hats, belts, gloves and (Filling for 3 to 4 dozen buns) footwear that add the swank touch 2 pounds beef to goodlooking costumes. 2 pounds pork Women of keen fashion-sense like 1 tablespoon chill powder suede because it not only has proved 1 teaspoon white pepper to be dependably wearable and prac­ 44 teaspoon red pepper tical, but when it comes to color 1 teaspoon dry mustard suede is positively glamorous and m tablespoons salt stands in a class all its own when V« cup flour it comes to interpreting a new high 1*4 cups tomato puree or condensed in fashion. tomato soup Destined to be adored is the little­ 144 quarts meat stock boy jacket done in suede as shown 3 large onions (sliced) Cook the meat until tender in to the left in the illustration. It is enough water to cover. Drain, and collarless with slightly padded shoul­ grind coarsely. ders. It boasts of three large patch Combine season­ pockets. Helen Wood, glamor girl ings and flour. of 1940 in filmland, chooses this Add tomato puree jacket in a gold nugget hue to wear and the meal over a moss green suede dress. Any school-faring girl will do well stock, and cook for 5 minutes. to Include in her wardrobe a suede Brown the onions ensemble after the manner of the lightly in butter or bacon fat. and model shown to the right Here you add to the sauce with the coarsely see Rosemary De Camp, dramatic ground meat Serve hot on large, cinema actress, in a one-piece dress made of porcelain blue suede. Soft­ round buns. ness is achieved by a fullness gath- Chocolate Fudge Cake. A Genera] Quia I The Queationa 1. How long was a round of box­ ing when John L. Sullivan ruled the ring? 2. How long was Abraham Lin­ coln President before the Civil war broke out? 3. What is the largest stadium ered In under the slash pockets on in America? the waist The only trimming de­ 4. What universities compete for tail is a thong lacing outlining the the Little Brown Jug on the grid­ neckline and the invisible slide fast­ D EMEMBER how nice you used iron each year? ener down the front. You will love to look and feel when you 5. What is a Pyrrhic victory? this dress in any of the new colors. tripped off to school in a fresh 6. Does each star in the Ameri­ Part of the glory and romance of white blouse with a sailor collar? can flag represent a particular the new suede costumes is thst i Well, if you’re in the junior size state? hats to match are ever available. range, you can take upon yourself You can get a sort of college girl that same naive, engaging charm, T/ie Answers mortar-board type such as crowns by making this frock with sailor the pretty head of the figure stand­ collar and rows and rows of braid. ing. or if you like the cunning match­ Design No. 8733 has very soft and 1. Until one of the fighters scored ing hat inspired by a bellhop cap as a knockdown over his opponent. you see pictured in the inset below, 2. Six weeks. shops and departments carry both Value of Gold Bar 3. Soldier field, located in Chica­ types. The 400-ounce bar is the one go, Illinois, takes this honor. Its Society has taken to vacationing most frequently used for mone- seating capacity will handle a in the far West where picturesque j tary gold. It is about 3?4 inches crowd of 125,000 persons. "dude" ranches offer fascinating 4. The University of Michigan at wide, 844 inches long and 144 sport and diversion. Part of the fun inches deep. At the federal price Ann Arbor, and the University of is "when you are in Rome do as of $35 an ounce, such a bar is Minnesota at Minneapolis. Romans do.” which is to say in this worth $14,000. Gold is always 5. One gained at too great a connection, adopt cowboy costumes. measured in troy ounces, not in cost. At least this is what fashion is do­ avoirdupois ounces. There are 480 6. No, the stars represent the ing. playing on the theme in a way grains to the troy ounce, and 43744 states collectively, not individu­ to dazzle the eye with the novelty ally. grains to the avoirdupois ounce. and chic of slacks and even dresses, : __________________________________ and blouses and jackets made of suede or other fanciful leather. And here's where suede comes into its own in all its glory, in just such attractive outfits as the white leath­ THAT'S WHAT I LIKE er Western riding habit centered in ABOUT CAMELS. THEY the picture. The fringed skirt is ac­ MV BUDGET UKES BUM SLOWER AND cented by studs of silver. The boots THE EXTRA SMOKING and fringed bolero are similarly HAVE A GRAND IN CAMELS.TOO treated. EXTRA FLAVOR (Released by Western Newspaper Union.I (Serves 25) 1 cup shortening 3 cups light brown sugar 3 eggs (slightly beaten) 344 cups cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 44 teaspoon salt 144 teaspoons soda 44 cup sour milk 4s cup cocoa 1 cup boiling water * 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream shortening and add sugar gradually, blending well after each addition. Add slightly beaten eggs and mix well. Sift together the flour, baking powder, salt, and soda. Add to the creamed mixture alternately with the milk. Blend cocoa and boiling water. Add to the cake bat­ ter with the vanilla, and mix just until the batter is smooth. Pour into 3 fl-inch square pans, which have been greased and lined with wax paper. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for about 30 miry utes. Red Corduroy Coming in are a series of toque and turban fashions that suggest the quaint bonnets worn in the six­ ties. You wear them back of the pompadour and the inspiring note about these little chapeaux are they are becoming to youth and to the not so young, as well. In fact for the matronly type these turbans and toques solve the pompadour hat problem perfectly. An older woman who could under no circumstances venture to wear a wide brim posed back on the head such as the teen age delights in. finds that the little draped toques are a triumphant so­ lution. Also there is comfort in the thought that milliners are designing smart hats that are intended to dip over the brow, that tune to the new style demands every whit as smart­ ly as do the excitingly new pompa­ dour effects. Meat Loaf. (Serves 25) 4*4 pounds beef (ground) 144 pounds pork (ground) 44 cup quick cooking tapioca 3 eggs (beaten) 44 cup onion (minced) 3 tablespoons salt 44 teaspoon pepper 44 teaspoon sage or poultry sea­ soning 1 No. 244 can tomatoes Combine Ingredients in the order given, reserving about half at tha tomatoes. Pack into 3 long, narrow loaf pans and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for about 144 hours. At the end of the first 45 minutes, pour the tomatoes which were reserved for this over the top of the meat loaf, and continue bak­ ing. Tomato French Dressing. (Makes 1 quart) 1 can condensed tomato soup 44 cup vinegar 144 cups oil 44 cup sugar 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 144 teaspoosis salt 3 teaspoons dry mustard 1 teaspoon paprika Place all of the ingredients in a mixing bowl and beat until blended. Store in refrigerator In a quart jar. (Reteased by Westers Newspaper Union.) Toque and Turban Fashions Arriving It’s time to give thought to the inevitable easy-to-slip-on jacket that is indispensable when cool breezes announce that autumn days are here. The pick of them all. in the estimation of fashion-wise college girls and their younger school-far­ ing sisters is the jacket that is made of bright red corduroy. A grand twosome for early fall days on the campus or for general wear when the tang of autumn calls for com­ fortable wraps is a jacket of stop­ light red corduroy such as is pic­ tured here, topped with a matching hat of the identical corduroy. Gold Jewelry Will Be Worn This Fall In spite of the fact that gold jew­ elry has been somewhat out of the picture for a brief spell comes re­ ports to the effect that it has again come to the fore in the style pic­ ture. However, the new gold jewel­ ry that will enliven smart black jersey dresses and those of sheer wools, is not of the garish spectacu­ lar type. There is exquisite refine­ ment expressed in subtle detail and workmanship in the incoming neck­ laces, bracelets, pins, clips and la­ pel ornaments. EXTRA MILDNESS EXTRA COOLNESS EXTRA FLAVOR Soft fringe and lacing are two decorative trims used together on a pretty pair of white linen shoes shown by a New York designer. The shoe is a very high-heeled pump laced up the toe and down the back of the shank. The throat of the pump is edged with a rim of nar­ row fringe repeated in a straight band below each crossed lacing oa the toe. 5 extra smokes PER PACK! •FT THE “EXTRAS” WITH SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS T Pompadour Styles Fix Hat Fashions Fringe and Lacing Decorative Trims The revival of the pompadour comes to some of us as a surprise, but here it la and no mistake, smug­ gled in under the guise of a group of flatter ig curls or some other softly arranged coiffure that is real­ ly very flattering. If there is one thing more than another that we are learning this season it is that the new hat fashions have to a certain extent been greatly Influenced by the return of the pompadour. In recent laboratory tests. Camels burned 25% flower than the aver­ age of the 15 other of the largest- selling brand» tested - »lower than of them. That means, on the average, a smoking pfas equal to The merchant who advertises must treat you better than the merchant who does sot. He must treat you as though you were the most influential person in town. As a matter of cold fact you are. You ARE AN IN FLUENTIAL p £ p g Q N hold the destiny of his business in your hands. He knowiit. He shows it And you benefitbygoodaervice.bycourteoustreat- ^nenO^>^oo<^^ilue—-«ncHijnowerprice^