Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 03, 1941, Page 3, Image 3

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    SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Friday, Jan. 3, 1941
Page 3
Chic Silhouette Figure Depends
On Proper Foundation Garment
Everybody Likes
This Smart Apron
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
AFTER LIHTENING TO A EURO­
PEAN DICTATOR
"I." he said, "excuse my knife—
Am champion of the broader life;
I," he said, "excuse my gun—
Am just a little ray of sun."
"You." I said, and raised my hand,
"I find quite hard to understand;
How can you be my guiding light
While slugging me with left and
right?"
• • •
"I am," he said, “a leader kind—
Excuse my wallops from behind—
The things 1 do are for the best—
Excuse my fist; it's just a test!"
<JV COI'KSE YOU LIKE CANI>Y
(See Recipe» Below)
Making candy 1» really outside the
realm of general cooking, but with •
little guidnnce, even un umatcur can
work real magic with »ugar and wa­
ler. Simply by changing tempera­
ture and the method of handling, a
wide variety of fondants. fudge»,
and hard candle» cun be made
Utennlla for Making Candy,
Ham-epana should have broad bot­
toms. and should be large enough to
allow for "boiling
up.” The inalde
surface should be
smooth, because
rough spots may
cause candies to
stick and burn.
Measuring cup«
— use standard
measuring cups
for successful re­
sults; accurate measurements are
essential.
Spoon* and spatula* — wooden
spoons are desirable for candy mak­
ing because* they do not become un­
comfortably hot, nor docs the wooden
»¡ xkni handle cut into one's hand
during beating. Use standard table­
spoons and teaspoons for measuring.
A medium-sized spatula Is a help in
scraping candy from kettles, and
lifting candy from the pan
Baking «heels, platters and pans—
ordinary cookie sheets provide a
good surface for pouring hard can­
dies; large platters may be used for
taffy, which is to be taken out and
pulled. or for fondant which is to be
beaten A marble slab from an old-
fashioned marble-topped table or bu­
reau makes an excellent smooth,
level surface for pouring candies.
Candy thermometer—a thermom­
eter is essential In order to obtain
uniform and good results in making
candy.
Candles are classified as "creamy
candles," such as fondant or fudge,
and as "taffies” and "hard” candles,
like nut brittle and lollipops.
In making creamy candies two
rules must be observed: cook the
candy to a definite temperature, and
• cool to room temperature before you
begin to beat
Brasilian Molasse* Balls.
(Makes 24 small balls)
lVi cups sugar
Vs cup hot water
% cup light molasses
H teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon vinegar
¥« cup butter
3 pints popped corn
1 pint Brazil nuts (sliced)
Dissolve sugar in hot water Add
molasses, salt and vinegar and cook
to soft crack stage (270 degrees).
Remove from heat, and add butter.
Stir syrup slowly into popped corn
and Brazil nuts. Mix well, and shape
into balls.
l-olllpop*.
(Makes 1% dozen)
2 cups sugur
% eup light corn syrup
1 cup water
•
*4 teaspoon oil of cloves or oil of
cinnamon
Red or green coloring
Put sugar, syrup, and water in a
sauce pan. Cook, stirring just until
the sugar is dis­
solved. Continue
cooking over very
low heat, to 310
degrees on a can­
dy thermometer.
Wash down the
crystals that form
during
cooking,
using cheese cloth
which has been
wrapped around a fork or spoon.
When the candy reaches 310 de­
grees, remove from heat, add fla­
voring and coloring and mix very
quickly. Pour into small buttered
muffin pans, tilling them only ¥«-
inch deep. As soon as the lollipops
begin to set (which will take only a
few minutes) loosen them from
sides of pan and turn out on table
top. Insert the pointed end of a
small skewer into the side of each
lollipop, working it in carefully to
•void breaking the candy. It will
be necessary to work quickly.
Milk Chocolate Marshmallow Candy
Mi pound broken milk chocolate
1 1-ounce square bitter chocolate
M cup walnut meats (broken)
g marshmallows, (cut tn halves)
Mett milk chocolate and bitter
For Inexpensive Gifts.
Why not send copies of these 4
practical and attractive cook
books to your friends? Singly or
in sets they make charming and
useful gifts for a bride-to-be, or
for any of your home-keeping
friends. Recipes have been test­
ed and approved in Miss Howe's
own kitchen, and you'll And them
easy-to-use, reliable, and good.
Just send 10 cents in coin for
each book you order to Eleanor
Howe. 019 North Michigan Ave­
nue, Chicago, Illinois, and be sure
to specify which book you want!
Better Baking
Feeding Father
Easy Entertaining
Household Hints
chocolate together in the top of a
double boiler. Remove from flame
and add walnut meats and marsh­
mallows. Stir gently until thorough­
ly mixed. Drop by teaspoonfuls on
wax paper. Serve when cooL
Taffy Apple*.
Place a meat skewer in end of
each apple. Cook together 1 cup
sugar, 1 cup white corn syrup, V«
cup butter, and 1 cup coffee cream
until mixture reaches nrm ball stage
(240 degrees). Stir carefully to avoid
scorching. Remove from flame and
dip each apple into mixture and then
in cold water.
Butterscotch Nut Markhniallows.
1 cup light brown sugar
*4 cup cream
H teaspoon vanilla extract
¥« teaspoon salt
pound marshmallows
% cup nut meats (finely chopped)
Place brown sugar, cream, vanilla
extract, and salt in a saucepan.
Cook slowly, stir­
ring
frequently,
to the soft ball
stage
(230 de­
grees). Remove
from flame and
place sauce-pan
over hot water
to keep mixture
from cooling.
>at marshmallows
with the butterscotch mixture and
then roll Immediately in the finely
chopped nut meats. Place on a but­
tered platter until cold.
Bed and Green Popcorn Balls.
(Makes 10 balls)
2 cups sugar
2 tablespoons light com syrup
1H cups water
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Red or green liquid coloring
3 quarts popped com
Combine sugar, com syrup and
water, and cook in a saucepan, stir­
ring until the sugar is dissolved.
Continue cooking until the tempera­
ture 290 degrees is reached, or until
a few drops of the syrup becomes
brittle when dropped into cold wa­
ter. Add vanilla extract and a few
drops of red or green coloring. Stir
sufficiently to mix the coloring even­
ly. Pour the cooked syrup over the
popped corn, which has been sprin­
kled with salt; stir well, and form
Into balls with the hands, using lit­
tle pressure.
Chocolate Fudge.
(Makes 30 1 Mrinch squares)
2 tablespoons butter
3 cups sugar
1 cup milk
2 squares chocolate (2 ounces) (cut
In pieces)
¥« cup honey
1 teaspoon vinegar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Nutmeats if desired
Melt butter in a saucepan. Add
sugar and milk, and mix well. Bring
to a boil, then cover and cook with
the lid on for about 3 minutes. Re­
move lid, add chocolate and honey,
and cook to soft ball stage (230 de­
grees). Remove from heat, and add
vinegar and vanilla. Cool to room
temperature, and beat until the
fudge is thick and creamy. Add nut
meats if desired, and spread in well
buttered pan.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Tasty Sauce
A cup of grated cheese added to
the white sauce that la served with
cauliflower is very good.
"Your logic isn’t overclcar,"
I said (then landed on my ear);
"It's hard to think you such a lamb
When underneath your feet 1 am.”
• • •
"I am," he said, "a leader kind—
If you can't sec it you are blind;
I want this world a sweeter place—
Excuse it If I bash your face!"
"I somehow foil to follow you,"
I said, now very black and blue;
"How can I see you as my hope?
You're standing on my chin, you
dope."
"You are." he said, "so very dense.
It always gives me great offense;
If I but run you up a tree
You question if it's best for thee."
"It isn't very clear,” I said,
"When you have knocked me nearly
dead.
That every new atrocity
Is done to make it nice for me.”
"I am." he said, "the Voice of
Good—
Excuse my bomb! (I knew you
would);
I am all sunshine and all bliss . . .
Take that . . . and that! and this
. . . and this!”
• • •
HOW ABOUT it ?
Judging from what Mr. Knudsen
says, our national defense program
has developed into a lag show.
• • •
"Germany has nothing against the
American people. Germany has all
along recognized the Monroe Doc­
trine as a bar.ic principle.”—Berlin
newspaper.
Wanna bet?
• • •
IMPRESSIONS
General de Gaulle: Man Without
■ Country.
Tommy Harmon: The Michigan
Limited, with shoulder pads.
II. L. Mencken: Hermit dwelling
in a huge dictionary.
John Garfield: Pix bad boy.
—I. J. Fox.
• • •
Danger! Curves Ahead!
("The London Board of Trade re­
fused today to reconsider its order
cutting British corset production 50
per cent of last year's sales.”—News
item.)
The Ship of State for an even keel.
Needs tons and tons of corset steel.
The die is cast, the Fates have writ­
ten
That ladies now must bulge for
Britain!
—Louise Shaw.
• • •
Ex-Kaiser Wilhelm has rejected a
chance to return to Germany.
There's one man who has sense
enough not to make any move be­
fore the final score.
"Whitestone Bridge, New York
Sways at Times.”—headline, How
about calling it the Great White
Sway?
• • •
Mussolini is shuffling generals be­
cause he doesn't like the way tha
war is "running."
• • •
LO, THE POOR INDIAN!
On the Tonawanda Seneca reser­
vation in New York, the United
States government made its 140th
annual presentation of six yards of
calico to each Indian in the Iroquois
Confederation Saturday, keeping a
treaty of 1794. A speaker glowingly
reminded the Indians (and the as­
sembled newsreel men and camera
men) that the United States was
keeping a faith which was "unique
in a world of broken promises and
enslaved people."
Well, we get the idea, and It Is
okay with us. but the Red Man was
certainly entitled to a loud guffaw
and nine giggles.
It was old Peter Doctor, oldest of
the Senecas, who got his point over.
"The Indians were civilized with a
veneer of savagery,” he said, taking
his calico and wondering what to do
with the darned stuff. "Over there
white men have turned to savagery
with a veneer of civilization.”
• • •
SPEAKING OF DESTRUCTION
Neither Vandal,
Hun, or Goth
Holds a candle
To a moth.
—Richard Armour.
• • •
Add similes: as funny as the Vichy
government's branding General Da
Gaulle as "a man without honor.”
• • •
All those European small na­
tions must be singing It "PACT
all your troubles In your old kit
bag.”
OUR costume may be the very
pink of perfection, your accesso­
Y
ries nothing less than glamorous,
but no matter how smartly appar­
eled, unless you are correctly cor­
seted in the proper foundation gar­
ment to make your figure conform,
so far as is possible, to the slim
svelte lines that current fashion de­
mands, you will fail to qualify “up
to the mark" in genera! appearance.
Ladies, look to your corsetry!
Soon it will be time to take up the
matter of new clothes for spring.
Start the program right with a care­
fully selected foundation garment
wardrobe and see what a difference
it makes when you come to be fit­
ted in the new frocks and suits.
The long - stemmed American
beauty glorified by United States de­
signers in their first season of inde­
pendence from Paris influence calls
for intelligent corseting to underline
tha new styles with high, well-con­
toured bustline, straighter and
slightly longer wr.istline and sleek
hip and thighs, American corsetry
has made amazing progress in
achieving "ontrol without sacrificing
comfort in the foundation garment
What special type of foundation
you should wear depends upon your
Individual needs. Study your figure
in a mirror to get a clear picture
of faults to be corrected. Then go
“in conference” with your favorite
corsetiere. In analyzing your fig­
ure defects and virtues, remember
that the side and back views are
even more important than the front,
because they show your posture and
distribution of weight.
It is especially important this sea­
son that your bustline be properly
contoured. The tendency in current
costume design is to accent top in­
terest in moulded and draped and
swathed treatments. The new clas­
sic daytime wools with their suave
simply tailored blouse tops make
expert corsetry imperative. This is
especially true of brassieres which
must be meticulously selected. Re­
member that unless you wear some
type of pantie girdle and brassiere
under your slack suits, swimsuits,
tennis, golf or riding clothes, your
Loop Felt
Fetching little hats made of bright
loop felt are effective with tweed or
dark fur coats. Some of these jaunty
sprightly headpieces are so fash­
ioned they look like a single large
flower caught firmly to a fitted cap
made of ribbon velvet. They are
tied at the back in a big bow, the
flowerlike cluster of felt loops poses
piquantly over the forehead. The
hat of felt loops pictured is a pill­
box type in moss green with beige.
The long-sleeve muff is in green
velvet with a ruche bordering at
each end made of felt loops match­
ing the hat
New Trim for Shoes
Even your shoes have a dressed-
up air this season, with trimmings
of fur bows and beading. Tailored
bows are used to trim pumps made
of crocodile, and frilled bows and
beading add a smart look to suede
shoes for afternoon.
figure cannot look attractive.
It is also important that you have
two identical foundations for every­
day wear to keep your figure mould­
ed properly and comfortably. Two
foundations worn alternately and
kept fresh and in good repair may
be expected to hold their original
lines and do their job of figure con­
trol appreciably longer than two
purchased successively.
One foundation for formal wear
is a wardrobe necessity because the
figure needs extra help to look its
best under formal gowns, which are
more fitted in line than daytime
styles.
New foundations for evening bf-
fer several outstanding features.
Brassieres are cut to give more
accent to the bustline than for day­
light hours, and have many clever
tricks to suit the straps to the vari­
ous decollete lines. Corsets and all-
in-ones are cut longer in the skirt
to prevent thigh bulge and afford
a suave, gently curving line from
waist to knees without any hint of
stiffness in effect.
Shown in the illustration are two
examples of the sleekly moulded
evening silhouettes favored this sea­
son. Note the dress to the left with
perky wee bows tying in a one-
side fastening. It requires perfected
corsetry to achieve the youthful
fashion-right lines here delineated.
Jacket costumes as '“•»•tered in the
group are outstan—..® in the eve­
ning mode and exact expert founda­
tion garment fitting. A goodlooking
daytime black wool dress with which
to wear a single costume jewelry
piece (in this instance a stunning
bowknot pin at the waistline) has
become a staple in every wardrobe.
Shown here to the right is an over-
the-bust draped effect which requires
very special corsetry because of its
top interest
’T'HIS design was so extremely
* popular, when it first appeared,
that it is repeated now, for those
who might have missed it the first
time. Of course you can easily
see why everybody likes it. De­
sign No. 8824 slips on over the
head and ties in a jiffy—no but­
tons, no troublesome cross-straps.
It’s nice and slim at the waistline,
is guaranteed to stay put on the
shoulders, and covers your frock
thoroughly, above and belowl
Send for it right away, because
your home work will seem much
lighter and pleasanter when you’ve
half a dozen such aprons.
Choose cheery percale prints,
gay gingham checks, or colorful
polka dot calico, and trim the
edges with ric-rac braid. It’s so
easy—you can finish it in a few
hours.
•
Enclose 15 cents for each pattern.
Pattern No............ Size.•••••••••
Name ..........
Address
DON’T BE BOSSED
BY YOUR LAXATIVE—RELIEVE
CONSTIPATION THIS MODERN WAV
• When you feel gassy, headachy, logy
due to cloggcd-up bowels, do as mttiona
do —take Feen-A-Mint st bedtime. Next
morning — thorough, comfortable relief,
helping you start the day full of your
normal energy and pep, feeling like a
million! Feen-A-Mint doesn’t disturb
your night’s rest or interfere »nth work tho
next day. Try Feen-A-Mint, the chewing
gum laxative, yourtelf. It tastes good, it’s
handy and economical... a family supply
‘Twin Hats’ Copy
Headgear of Men
Red, White, Blue
Featured in South
Women vacationers spending their
winter in the southlands are wear­
ing dresses patriotically featuring
red, white and blue.
For daytime wear two or all three
of the brilliantly contrasting colors
are combined, and are often further
trimmed with gold braid insignia or
belt buckles that are red, white and
blue shields.
Evening clothes, whether dinner
dresses or formal gowns, nearly all
have full skirts. They are made of
sharkskin, crepe, organdy, lace, taf­
feta, and net, with black, white and
blue the reigning colors.
•
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
148 New Montgomery Av*.
San Francises
CaMf.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Probably the most important style
item this winter is the companionate
hat, known also as "he and she,”
"Mr. and Mrs.,” and "twin” hats.
These hats are merely hats that look
alike—one for men, one for women.
Actually the twin hats are a bless­
ing, both to men who have put up
with some pretty wacky looking
women's hats in the past, and to the
ladies who are always looking for
something new. The distaff twin hat
is. of course, out and out larceny.
It is styled to duplicate the sportier
men's styles. Manhattan has seen
them tn telescopes or pork-pies, der­
bies, felt caps and in the so-called
double brim safari felts. As a style
item they are excellent
American designers of women’s
hats have a knack for feminizing
these twin adaptations to the point
where they are, if anything, more
feminine than distinctly feminine
hats.
•
Pattern No. 8824 is designed for sizes
14. 16. 18. 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size IS re­
quires Ms yards of 35-inch material with­
out nap; 7 lb yards of braid. Send or­
der to:
FEEN-A-MINT 7o?
Nature Reflects
O nature! glorious mirror of di­
vinity ; what constant student*
were we of thy myriad forms and
mysteries all through the years of
our childhood.—Bulwer.
% COLDS
tyùckfy «le
I
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buys something more than
space and circulation in
the columns of this news­
paper. It buys space and
circulation plus the favor­
able consideration of our
readers for this newspaper
and its advertising patrons.
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