Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, October 18, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, October 18, 1940
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Paq© 3
If So, Human Nutcracker
Wasn't Having Easy Time!
WHO’S
NEWS
back, and has link cuffs like the
boy friend’s. The skirt of design
No. 8768 is smartly flaring and
tailored, and you should wear a
narrow leather belt with it.
For the blouse, flat crepe, wash­
able flannel, spun rayon and linen
are smart; for the skirt, tweed,
flannel, serge or corduroy. You'll
be amazed to see how easily both
halves of this two-piecer tailor,
even if you’re no expert. Your
pattern includes a step-by-step sew
chart.
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
(Consolidated Fsalurss— WNU Ssrvlcs.)
YORK. — Virginia Gayda.
N EW
Italy's official writing wrist,
pens a solemn warning to the
U. S. A. In an editorial in his pa-
...
_
. . Prr. Giornale
Italy a Editonal D
he
Spohetman Suave, tells us not to
•
But Pen Ominous m * 1 ' 2
3
4
5
6 “ n d
AN APPLE A DA Y—MEItVEI) IN A DIFFERENT WAY
(See Recipe» Below)
Apple* hold ■ place of well- ered in a moderate oven (350 de­
dcacrvcd popularity today, for they grees) for 45 minutes or until apples
have been widely u»cd as food from are tender. Remove the cover. Ar­
the earliest lime». What other fruit range marshmallows over the top
haa auch a long aeuaon, taste» so and brown in the oven for 3 to S
good, keep» so well, can be served minutes. Serve with cream.
in so many different ways, and yet
Apple Fritters.
is relatively inexpensive?
(Makes about 12 fritters)
Do you want apples for cooking,
154 cups flour
or for baking? Or do you want them
154 teaspoons baking powder
for eating apples or dessert? Apples
5« teaspoon salt
should be selected according to the
*4 cup milk
purpose for which you are to use
1 egg (well beaten)
them.
2 apples (medium sixe) (1 cup,
A good cooking apple should be
sliced)
tart, or at least medium acid, with
Mix and sift dry ingredients. Com­
• juicy, fine-grained flesh. A good bine milk and egg. and add to dry
cooking apple, however, should have ingredients, gradually, stirring con­
a distinct apple flavor. You are. no stantly. Wipe, core, and pare ap­
doubt, familiar with such names as ples, and cut into eighths and then
Rome Beauty, Winesap. Black Twig, slice. Stir into the batter. Drop
Grimes Golden and McIntosh.
by spoonfuls into deep fat which
Have you ever had the sad expe­ has been heated to 380 degrees Fry
rience of baking apples only to And until golden brown (4 to 5 minutes).
that they have remained hard and Drain on brown paper and sprinkle
lack JBIciness? Or did you use a va­ with powdered sugar.
riety that became so watery upon
Applesauce Doughnuts.
baking that you couldn't quite tell
(Makes 2*4 dozen)
what it was? The Wealthy, McIn­
2 tablespoons butter
tosh, Grimes Golden, Jonathan,
154 cups brown sugar
Rhode Island Greening or North­
3 eggs
western Greening, the Rome Beau­
1 cup applesauce
ty. the Winesap and Black Twig are
4 cups all purpose flour
all varieties of apples which may be
*4 teaspoon salt
used for thia purpose.
1 teaspoon soda
A good dessert apple should have
54 teaspoon nutmeg
a prominent and distinct
H teaspoon cinnamon
vor, mildly acid,
4 teaspoons baking powder
and with a fine-
Cream butter and add sugar while
flesh texture.
beating constantly. Beat eggs and
Here again you
add. Add applesauce. Mix and sift
may select the
together the flour, salt, soda, nut­
McIntosh, the
meg. cinnamon, and baking pow­
Grimes Golden,
der. and add. Roll, cut with dough­
the Jonathan, the
nut cutter and fry In deep fat (heat­
Rome Beauty, the
ed to 385 degrees). Drain and roll
Black Twig, or the
in mixture of powdered sugar and
A bowl of shining apples will ap­ cinnamon.
peal to the children when they come
Dixie Apple Nance Cake.
home from school. There will be no
2 cups cake flour
need for them to say, "Mom. I'm
H teaspoon salt
hungry; what can I have to eat?”
1 teaspoon soda
The Wealthy, the Delicious, snd the
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Rome Beauty are all popular eat­
54 teaspoon cloves
ing apples.
54 teaspoon mace
There is nothing more delicious
54 cups shortening
than a baked apple, apple pie, or a
1 cup sugar
raw apple salad, but have you ever
1 egg (unbeaten)
tried apples in fritter batter, or com­
1 cup seedless raisins
bined them with green peppers for
1 cup thick apple sauce
a salad'*
Sift dry ingredients. Cream short­
Here are some such recipes from ening. add sugar gradually and beat
my own test kitchen which are not
well. Add unbeat­
only simple to prepare, but also in­ en egg and rai­
clude that much-longed for variety
sins and mix
in recipes when we have plenty of
well. Add dry in­
apples to use.
gredients alter­
Norwegian Apple Pudding.
nately with the
(Serves 8»
apple sauce.
«4 pound prunes (about 0)
When thoroughly
2 cups cold water
blended pour into
1 inch cinnamon stick
greased loaf pan. Bake in a mod-
114 cups boiling water
erate oven (350 degrees) for 40 to
% cup cornstarch
50 minutes.
1 cup sugar
Apple Torte.
14 teaspoon salt
(Serves 5 to 8)
i
1 tablesfxxin lemon juice
1 egg (beaten)
% pound apples (about 3) (quar­
*4 cup sugar
tered) (cooked in a syrup of H
*4 cup flour
cup water and 14 cup sugar)
1 teaspoon baking powder
Cover prunes with cold water,
54 teaspoon salt
bring to a boil, and stew until soft.
1 tart apple (about 1 cup, cut fine)
Remove stones
54 cup nut meats (cut fine)
and return the
Beat egg thoroughly and gradual­
prunes, stick cin­ ly add sugar, beating well after
namon and water each addition. Sift together the flour,
to kettle.
Add baking powder and salt, and fold
boiling water. into the first mixture. Add apple
Slowly stir in thin and nut meats cut fine. (If desired,
paste made of a dash of cinnamon may be added
cornstarch, sug­ here). Place mixture in a well-
ar, salt and a lit­ greased pie pan and bake in a mod­
tle cold water. erate oven (350 degrees) for about
Boil 20 minutes, 40 minutes.
stirring frequent­
ly. Remove cinnamon stick, and
FEEDING FATHER
add lemon juice and apples. Place
Has "Dad” asked you to bake
in greased molds and chill.
a Deep Dish Apple Pie, or to stir
Ncallopcd Apples de Luxe.
up his favorite Chocolate Cake
(Serves 8 to 8)
lately? Probably not, but he will.
2W cups graham crackers (about
Once he sees the nice, luscious
28) (crushed)
red apples on the market, and
■4 cup sugar
feels a slight tang of frost in the
54 teaspoon cinnamon
air, he will remember all of his
y« teaspoon nutmeg
old favorites. Why not be pre­
¥« teaspoon salt
pared by having reliable tested
4 tablespoons butter (melted)
recipes of the ones he likes the
1 quart apples (8 apples) (sliced)
best? Miss Howe's book, "Feed­
% cup pineapple juice
ing Father,” will give you just
54 cup marshmallows (quartered)
such recipes, and others, includ­
Combine graham cracker crumbs,
ing "Spareribs with Apple Stuff­
sugar, spices, salt and butter. Place
ing,” "Mulligan Stew" and “Eng­
half of the crumb mixture in a well-
lish
Currant Bread.” You may
greased 154 quart casserole. Add
secure your copy by writing to
half of the sliced apples, moistened
Eleanor Howe, 910 North Michi­
with part of the pineapple juice.
gan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, en­
Cover with the remaining qrumbs,
closing 10 cents, In coin.
and top with apple slices. Pour the
remaining juice over all. Bake cov­
(Ralcaard bv Western New»pup«r Union.)
stand the
Axis-Japan agreement and hints
that we're in for bad trouble if we
make a misstep.
Why Gayda should have been
chosen to do the tough talking, or
rather writing, for Italy al) these
years has been a puzzle to this on­
looker. Not that he doesn't do it
well, but it is so unlike him. I met
him once at a tea party in Rome,
in the studio of a British sculptor.
One would have thought he wouldn't
hurt a fly.
That was soon after
Mussolini took power. Tall, slen­
der. fair-haired, with a small, silken
mustache, impeccably dressed, Gay­
da seemed diffident and eager to
please. He was then editor of II
Messaggero, which had been a
strongly liberal paper, and he had
made his political start in the gen­
eral doctrinal zone of Mussolini's
Marxian teachings.
But with the March on Rome
hr had done an about-face with
Muxxollnl and was making his
paper daily louder and fiercer.
There was considerable embar­
rassment and shyness among
the guests, as ft wasn't safe for
foreigners to mention Musso­
lini's name, and they engaged
the suave Gayda in talk about
art, Roman ruins, the glories of
the Pltti and Ulfiai. and the like.
Noting the signor's facile speech,
I remarked to an old Scottish bank­
er. standing by. that the editor
seemed like a mighty smart chap.
"Too smart for his britches,”
growled the old Scot One never
would have thought that some day
he would be telling the U. S. A.
where it got off.
"Shucks, we're doing nil right,
and l*m sure that the quarter­
masters will catch up on their
outfitting noon. I drilled in my
civilian clothes when I joined
the army back In 1908, ns a pri­
vate after I graduated from col­
lege. I’m sure the young fel­
lows we have out here at Mitchel
field don’t mind it any more
than I did."
Colonel Netherwood was born in
Birmingham. England, and, inci­
dentally, the English are good im­
proviser^ and instinctive pregmat-
lsts. Their democracy came from
adjustment and improvisation, rath­
er than from the grand principles
of the encyclopedists.
However,
Colonel Netherwood is no apologist
for hit-or-miss preparedness.
In 1988 he entered the army,
after his graduation from Texas
Agricultural and Mechanical
college. He has studied tech­
niques of precision at the Army
War college, the Army Indus­
trial college and the Air Corps
Practical school—with diplomas
from all of them. He entered
the signal corps and got his
rating as a military aviator In
1917. In 1920 the aviation sec­
tion of the signal corps was des­
ignated sn the army air corps.
He became a lieutenant colonel
In 1938.
•
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
14» New Montgomery Ave.
San Francisco
Calif.
“IF MORE OLD PEOPLE
would use ADLERIKA they would
feel better. I’m 70 and have had it
on hand for 14 years.” (L. M.-So.
Dak.) For QUICK bowel action and
relief from bloating gas, try AD­
LERIKA today.
AT YOUR DRUG STORE
Enclose 15 cents in coins for
Pattern No.................... Size.................
Name ................ ............... ..
Address ............ ...................................
Neighbors Can’t Chat
TpIIS type of two-piecer will be
A much in evidence on every
campus this coming semester.
The tailored blouse has the new,
larger collar with long points that
fits correctly over your suit
revers.
It’s made with action
When one Norwegian meets an­
other they can’t always hold a
conversation.
Norway has two
separate languages, which are en­
tirely different. In Viking days
all Scandinavians spoke the same
language. But as the land split
up into different countries lan­
guages altered. Norway was a
Danish colony from 1397 to 1814,
and Danish was spoken. In 1814
Norway broke away and insisted
on a language of her own. Ivar
Aasen, a Norwegian scholar, com­
piled a language called Landsmal,
based on the old Scandinavian
tongue. The rival Norwegian lan­
guage based on Danish is called
Rimskal. The two languages have
equal status, and—up to now—a
citizen has been free to learn ei­
ther or both.
Lovely Doilies Dress Up Home
The Shame
Poverty is not a shame, but ths
being ashamed of it is.—Thomas
Fuller.
“What? WORMS in
ir.y child?.. Never!"
Don’t be so sure, Mother!
Yea. riqht now, crawling round worm» may
br> xrowinx and multipiylnx iswide you»
child tcUAouf your tm knowing HI
Thia nasty Infection may be "caught"
CMily. everywhere And the outward ngna
are very misleading For example Squirm­
ing and fidgeting Noee-pick Ing. and »era teb-
tng other parte. Uneasy »tomacb Finicky
appetite Biting nail»
If you even rurptd that vour ciOd haa
round worm», get J A Y N K’S V E ItM I FUOB
right away! JAYNE'S la the beat known
worm expectant in America. It 1» backed
by modern acienUfie study, and haa been
used by millions, for over a century.
JAYNE’S VERMIFUGE baa the abil­
ity to drive out large round worms, yet 1»
taste» good and acts gently It does no»
contain santonin. If no worms are there M
works merely as a mikl laxative. Ask for
JAYNE'S VER-MI-Ft «Eat any drug store.
FREE! Valuable medical book, "Worms
Living Inside You " Write to Dept M-8.
Dr. D. Jayne * Son. 2 Vine St.. Philadelphia.
Yet a Diamond
Better a diamond with a flaw
than a pebble without one.—Chi­
nese.
Pattern 2608 contain» direction» tor
making doilies; illustrations of them and
atitches;
der to:
A native of Rome, he began
his newspaper career as central
European correspondent for the
Htampa, of Tnrln. He was in
Russia when the World war
started, entered the diplomatic
service there and returned to
newspaper work as editor of II
Messaggero in 1921. It was In
1926 that Count Ciano, Musso­
lini's son-in-law, discovered his
penchant
for
ominous and
threatening prose and made him
the nation’s editorial spokes­
man, as editor of Giornale
D'ltalla.
\ VTHILE a talent for makeshift
V’ might not rate highly in a civ­
ilization assailed by deadly preci­
sion, it has certain advantages in
a democracy
Col. Netherwood as against the
Good Improviser, all-or-nothing
Yet No Apologist techniques of
absolutist
government The mechanics of the
latter are such that when it is
wrecked, it is an inert busted ma­
chine in a ditch, while a democracy
has an organic quality which makes
it sdaptive, allows improvisation,
and perhaps enables it to grow new
tissue and survive a deal of waste
and muddling.
Col. Douglas L. Netherwood, com­
manding officer of the northeast
anti-aircraft defense at Mitchel
field, indirectly touches off this idea.
Recruits for the anti-aircraft forces
are wearing odd assortments of uni­
forms, sleeping in garages because
of the lack of tents, and drilling
without sufficient rifles or other
equipment. To the worriers. Colonel
Netherwood says:
•
Pattern No 8188 is designed for sizes
12. 14, 18. 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 2
yards of 30-lnch material without nap for
short-sleeved blouse; 3*4 yards tor long-
sleeved; 1?» yards of M-Inch material
without nap for str light skirt; 2 yards for
bias. Send order to:
A party of men were out camp­
ing. The wife of one of them had
packed a large fruit cake, which
he produced and ate without as
much as offering a taste to any of
the others.
Time passed. Suddenly he be­
gan groaning and doubling him­
self up and then straightening out
again. When this had gone on for
some time, a friend asked him:
"What’s the matter, Jim?”
"That cake I ate,” groaned the
sufferer. "It had nuts in it, and
I think the missus forgot to shell
them.”
"Good heavens!” said his friend.
"And can you crack ’em just by
bending?”
material» required.
Send or­
Sewtag Circle Needlecratt Dept.
82 Eights Ast.
New York
% COLDS
quiekt^ scie
LIQUID
TABLETS
SALVE
NOSE OSOM
COUCH OBOES
Enclose 13 cents in coins for Pat­
tern No..................
Name ........................................ . ............
Address ............................................. ..
General’s Glory
The blood of the soldier makes
the glory of the general.
a/lsk Me ^Another
A General Quiz
£
The Questions
AS EASY to crochet as it is love-
** ly, this set of doilies in the
favorite pineapple design will be
your favorite, too.
You’ll find
them just the thing for luncheon
or buffet set.
Mount Fujiyama
1. What name is given to an
animal having no backbone?
2. In the Northern hemisphere
winds of a cyclone blow in which
direction?
3. At the deathbed of Lincoln
who said: "Now he belongs to the
ages”?
4. Who was the central charac­
ter in the story "The Man With­
out a Country”?
5. From where do we get qui­
nine?
6. What is a Falangista?
In Japanese legend, Mt. Fuji­
yama, recently renamed Huzi by
official decree, came into being
as a result of a quarrel between
the mountain goddess, Fuji-San,
and the other Nipponese deities.
The Answers
The goddess, in one night, set up
this mighty peak, 12,300 feet high,
1. Invertebrate.
where she could live in peace and
2. Counterclockwise.
solitude. Despite its regular erup­
3. Edwin M. Stanton.
tions, its height caused it to be­
4. Philip Nolan.
come a sacred symbol in Japa­
5. From bark of cinchona tree.
nese life of all that is lofty and
6. A member of the Falange Es­
beautiful. It is also regarded as a panola Tradicionalista, Spain’s
source of good luck.—Pathfinder. sole political party.
Delightful
Accommodations in
SAN FRANCISCO
$
2
.50
WITH BATH
SINGLE or DOUBLE
Distinguished in name and in
service, The Maurice is one of
San Francisco's finest hotels.
Quiet location on fringe of
busiest downtown area.
DRIVE-IN GARAGE
HOTEL
MAURICE
FOST STtitT AT JONCS
J CAMELS
ALWAYS TASTE
. SO GOOD-<
EXTRA MILD, .
, YET SO FULL 4
OF FLAVOR
EXTRA mildness
EXTRA coolness
EXTRA flavor
fin THE “EXTRAS” WITH SLOWER-BURNING
2594 douf thanbr>ods tested-
ocher of the large«
means,
I .lower than
to
K «(•» SBOKtS TH M®«
«»
CAM ELS
THE CIGARETTE OF
COSTLIER TOBACCOS