Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 10, 1941, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I ii'kiy, Jan. 10, 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Paqe 3
«BBBWRBMRRMHm
New Silk Lingerie Fascinates
With Its ‘Dressmaker Touch
Household News
Hl.Phillipr
Lovely Frock for I
School or Parlies
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
THE GARDEN IIOHE
AND THE FIRE
(As suggested by Mr. U<H»cvrll's
comparison <>( hit proposed aid to
England In which hr said that It
your neighbor's house were on lire
you would gladly Irnd him your
hoar and not charge tor II.)
Scene: Any community.
Characters: Jones und Smith.
Jones (knocking on Smith's door)
—Help! My house is on Are!
Smith Well, well, I feel I ought
to give you all aid short of . . .
Jones (alarmed) Now don’t tell
me you will give me all aid short of
a hose!
Smith No, I guess everybody's
tired of that gag
• •
A CHANGE IN' THE MEAT COURSE
(See Recipes Below)
"Meat makes the meal," especial­
ly when there are husky, hard-work­
ing men to feed. But for those be­
hind the scenes In the kitchen, think­
ing up a different and a flavorsome
meat dish for euch day out of the
seven Is no small task.
There are two ways to approach
First, investigate
the problem.
some of the less-
common cuts.
You'll find them
thrifty to buy be­
cause the demand
for them is less.
Most
of
them
fulrly abound In I good flavor and
need only to be pro|>er!y cooked to
be serious rtvuls to more expensive
cuts.
If you are buying pork, ask the
meat dealer to prepare you a hand­
some rolled sirloin roast. It's a
thrifty cut not so well known as the
pork loin roast but it has decided
advantages. Two sections of Uie
pork sirloin are boned and tied to­
gether into a solid roll of meat. The
roand, compact slices offer no ob­
structions to the knife, and are the
onswer to a carver's prayer. The
picnic shoulder of pork is another
cut of exceptional flavor. Have it
boned, stuff it with spinach and
roast it
W It's too soon for another leg of
lamb, buy a section of lamb breast
and have It rolled with a layer of
sausage. Slice off the meat as you
would a jelly-roll; you'll have the
neatest
pinwheels
imaginable.
Lamb shoulder and lumb shoulder
chops are two other not-so-wcll-
known possibilities.
The second way to coax some va­
riety into your meat dishes is to
try new ways of flavoring cuts that
you serve often. If much of your
moat supply comes from a frozen
foods locker, this is your best bet.
Huve pork chops cut double thick
and stuff them with a tart mix-
ture of sauerkraut and apple, Your
fumily will beam approval 1 when
you serve that combination! I Or
make your next ham loaf like an
upside-down cake so that when you
turn it out, there are rows of bright-
as-a-dollar apricots across the top.
Try canned gooseberries os a relish
with ham or beef, or canned Dam­
son plums with veal.
Fork Chops Stuffed With Sauerkraut
And Apple.
(Serves 0)
0 loin pork chops (cut 1-inch thick)
1 cup sauerkraut (drained)
1 cup tart, red cooking apple (diced)
tunpured)
to teaspoon salt
to teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons fat
to cup sauerkraut juice.
Huve a pocket made from the out­
side of each chop. Combine sauer­
kraut with finely
diced
unpceled
apple and stuff
the chops with
the mixture. Sea-
son them wilh
salt and pepper
and
brown
on
both sides in hot
fat in a heavy skillet, Add sauer-
kraut juice, cover, and finish the
cooking in a moderate oven (350
degrees). Bake for Ito hours, and
remove the cover during the lait
16 minutes of biiking to brown the
chops.
Round Ntrak, Western Style.
(Serves fl)
I pounds round steak
8 tablespoons butter
teaspoon salt
pepper
to teaspotA
teaspoi
3 medium onions (sliced)
to lemon (sliced)
1 No. 1 can condensed tomato soup
(1% cups)
1 cup water
Have round steak cut % Inch
thick. Spread with butter and sprin­
kle with salt and pepper. Arrange
slices of thinly cut onion and lemon
over steak. Dilute tomato soup with
water and pour over steak. Bake in
a moderate oven (350 degrees) for
3 hours uncovered.
Boneless Sirloin Pork Roast
With Stuffed Apples.
Have the meat retailer remove
the tenderloin and bones from two
sirloin sections, reverse the ends,
and tie the two boneless pieces to­
gether In a cumpuct rolled roast.
Season with salt arid pepper and
place with the fat side up In an
open roasting pan. Make an inci­
sion to Die center of the roast and
insert a meat thermometer so that
tiie center of the bulb reaches the
center of the (lesh’egt part of the
meat. Flace the roust tn a mod-
erate oven (350 degrees) and roast
until the thermometer registers 185
degrees Fahrenheit. Allow about 30
minutes per pound for roasting.
Serve with rice-stuffed apples.
Rier-Stuffed Apples,
0 medium-sized baking apples
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1 cup rice (cooked)
1 tablespoon butter
to cup water
Wash apples and cut a slice from
the top of each. Remove the cores
and seeds and sprinkle the cavities
with brown sugar. Mix cooked rice
with melted butter und stuff each
xppla. Arrange them in a baking
pan with the water in the bottom
and bake for Ito hours, or until ten­
der in a moderate oven <350 de-
grees).
Lamb Pinwheels.
(Serves 5)
Boned breast of lamb (about 3to
pounds)
*4 pound bulk pork sausage
2 tablespoons fut
I
1 teaspoon salt
*4 teaspoon pepper
1 small onion (sliced)
1 cup tomatoes (canned)
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
Have the lamb breast boned,
spread with bulk pork sausage,
rolled, and tied
or skewered into
shape at the mar­
ket.
Wipe
the
meat with a damp
cloth and dry.
Then brown on all
sides in hot fat
Pour off the fat
in the pan, leaving 2 tablespoons
only. Season the roll with salt and
pepper. Add sliced or ion, tomatoes
and Worcestershire sauce, Cover
tightly and cook very slowly until
done, about Ito hours. Slice into
pinwheels, using a very sharp knife.
Cushion Style Pork Shoulder With
Spinach Stuffing.
(Serves 10)'
Boned picnic shoulder (about 8
pounds)
1 teaspoon salt
Mi teaspoon pepper
Ito cups drained spinach (cooked or
canned)
3 tablespoons onion (minced)
4 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons lemon juice
3 cups fine, soft bread crumbs
1 teaspoon salt
Mi teaspoon pepper
Have the picnic shoulder boned
and sewed on two sides at the mar­
ket. This leaves one side open for
inserting the stuffing. Season the
surface of the pork shoulder with
salt and pepper. Combine the spin­
ach, onion, butter, lemon juice and
bread crumbs.
Season with salt
and pepper and use to All the cavity
of the roast. Sew or skewer the
edges together. Place the shoulder,
fat side up, on a rack in an open
roasting pan and roast in a mod­
erate oven (350 degrees) until done.
Allow about 40 minutes per pound
for the roasting.
BIRTHDAY PARTIES
The food makos the party, es­
pecially for a round-eyed young­
ster of six or eight. If you have
a January birthday coming up
you will And both menu and rec­
ipe help in Eleanor Howe’s Cook
Book "Easy Entertaining.” Party
food for all ages, from the three-
year-olds to the teen-age group is
but one of the sections in her
book.
If you need new suggestions for
your hostessing, send 10 cents in
coin to "Easy Entertaining" care
of Eleanor Howe, 910 North Mich­
igan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois,
for your copy.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.*
Jones (as the Are spreads)—
Please do something! Look at those
flames I
Smith Now, take it easy.
You
know my position in an emergency
such as this. I figure that this is
my fire as well as yours. My theory
has always been . . .
Jones- Never mind all that now.
Have you got a hose?
Smith—My good man, I may not
have the hose that is required for
a job like this, but I have studied
my hose situation very carefully. I
know what my hose requirements
arc, and in a situation such as
this , . .
Jones (urgently)—I'll need about
50 feet.
Smith—If you will bear with me a
moment, I should like to outline my
policy on . . .
Jones—Have you got 50 feet of
hose?
Smith—I am in a position to state
that by the end of next July I expect
to have 100 feet of , . .
Jones (as the flames reach the
second story)—This fire won't last
that Ion*!
Smith—One can never be sure
about a thing like that. It might
end very soon. On the other hand.
It might spread until my own prem­
ises are consumed. In that case . . .
Jones (desperately)—All I want to
know is have you got 50 feet of hose?
Smith—I have 50 feet of hose . . .
Jones—And don't tell me it is on
order!
• •
Smith (as the flames break
through the Jones roof)—My good­
ness! That's quite a fire you have
there, isn't it? It's almost a total
emergency.
Jones—That's what I’ve been try­
ing to make clear. Where's that
hose?
Smith—You mean completed hose,
actually on the premises?
Jones—Of course.
Smith—Well, that's different All
I have at the moment is a 35-foot
length. But by April . . .
Jones—May I have the 35 feet at
once?
Smith—Certainly. This is no time
to be legalistic.
Jones
(Grabbing the hose)—
Thanks very much.
Smith—By the end of six months
I can let you have 100 feet of
hose per week and . . .
Jones—This will be all I'll need.
Smith—Don't worry about any
charge for that 35 feet. I'm lending
it to you. It's a sort of mortgage plan.
Jones (as the roof falls in)—Never
mind the details. All I want now is
one assurance.
Smith—What's that?
Jones—That you’re not giving me
every aid SHORT OF WATER!
most alluring, the most all-prevail­
ing hobby among the fair sex is that
of acquiring a wardrobe of lovely
lacy soft and silken lingerie. Certain
it is that women’s enthusiasm for
pretty "undies," negligees and other
flattering boudoir apparel needs no
urge.
This is true of brides, debutantes,
teen-age lassies, career women—in
fact, everyone from girl to grand­
ma, no matter how tailored and
tweedy her exterior. When it comes
to comfort, relaxation and self ex­
pression of that innate love for the
beautiful, it is in the touch and the
wear of beguiling silken lingerie that
most women feel the desires of their
heart realized.
One of the most interesting ges­
tures in modern lingerie styling is
the dressmaker touch given to
gowns and negligees. Many of them
approach evening gowns in their
technique and style. In fact, eve­
ning gown tactics are known to have
been adopted to such an extent that
in some instances frilled and lace­
laden, ribboned “nighties" have ac­
tually gone dancing with onlookers
being none the wiser. If you have
ever visited an American silk in­
dustry exhibit, you would have not­
ed that the emphasis on beguiling
silken lingerie displayed in exquisite
boudoir environs is more than im­
pressive.
The fashion of giving dressmaker
detail to boudoir apparel is happily
stressed in the stunning twosome
shown to the left in the illustration.
Black I^ace Magic
• • '•
A LA MODE
There's one suburban fashion
That stops me in my tracks . . .
The sporty female wearing
A FUR COAT OVER SLACKS!
Fellows Donaldson.
CAN YOU REMEMBER
Away back when the rights of the
individual were thought worth pro­
tecting?
see
"Mussolini
Reported
Very
Nervous." — Headline.
But It
would be superfluous to send
him to a retreat, wouldn't it?
see
Reaction of the king of Italy to
Winston Churchill's suggestion that
he throw out Mussolini: "Who, me?"
• • •
A soap company formed a cor­
poration to make munitions.
We
hope it doesn't result in a combina­
tion bomb and shaving cream.
• • •
Knudsen, Stimson, Hillman and
Knox,
They’ll get the stuff from the plans
to the docks.
- • • •
"WANTED—Man experienced in
wrecking cars; R. P. Auto Wreckers
Co.”—New York Herald Tribune,
We know a lot of women who are
better at It than the men.
• • •
Our idea of an insomnia cure is to
try to sit through the credit lines
on a modern movie.
e e e
AMERICAN TWILIGHT
The towers of the city
Are glorious in the sun.
Then ripple into lines of light.
Just as the day is done.
Homeward across the river
The silver planes go by.
Oh, peaceful towers! Never
Show dark against the sky.
—May D. Hatch
By all means include a large and
lovely chiffon kerchief with a three-
inch lace border in your collection
of evening accessories. You will And
it effective in many ways. Trailing
gracefully from an embroidered
pocket it adds infinite grace to your
costume. Carry it in your hand
nonchalantly or tuck it under your
jeweled belt These lovely lace chif­
fons designed by Burmel will add
a decorative note to anyone's ap­
pearance if she is versed in ker­
chief technique. Worn as pictured,
over a prettily groomed evening
coiffure, you will take on the loveli­
ness of a modern madonna. You
can get these lace and chiffon whim­
sies in wicked black or angelic
white. One of each would tune to
every occasion.
Decorative Veils
Milliners are making a plaything
of veils.
They arrange them in
whimsical fashion to add a spright­
ly touch to the hat. It's new to tie
your veil under your chin In a but­
terfly bow. Then too, milliners de­
pend upon veils to give ■ gay color
touch.
It also answers to the call for black.
Garments of black silk sheers pro­
fusely trimmed with fine black lace
^re featured throughout all lingerie
collections of note. In this modish
ensemble of gown and boudoir coat,
the latter, as you will observe, is
styled with a side drape finished off
with a border of sheerest black lace.
The gown underneath is also lace­
trimmed. To add to this twosome,
designers suggest a third "black
beauty" (not illustrated) lace-lav­
ished costume slip to wear under
your newest black party dress of
net, silk chiffon or lace.
Centered in this group picture is
a white silk satin nightgown with
hand-sewn Alencon lace which yields
to deep V-treatment with flattering
shoulder bretelles of the same sump­
tuous lace. Its semi-princess lines
resemble the manner of a party
dress.
A new trend to modesty in silk
night robes is the adorable gown
shown in the inset This empire
nightgown of heaven blue silk crepe
reveals a marked tendency to ex­
ploit light blues in lingerie fashions.
This model has a pleated bosonan
oval neckline with a wide bordering
of handsome lace about the hem­
line. The same lace repeated on
the short waist achieves a quaint
empire silhouette.
Shades of the Gibson girl! Here
it is in modernized version as shown
in the camisole-and-pantie set to the
right in the group. This combina­
tion garment of pinkish mauve silk
satin is trimmed with Alencon lace
dyed to match. The camisole zips
up the front and would fill a Gibson
girl with envy.
You will enjoy a far happier, care­
free spring and summer if you as­
semble your lingerie wardrobe in
the "do it now” spirit that will leave
more time for the spring sewing pro­
gram just beyond.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Furs for Women
Vary in Durability
Probably no other article of wom­
en's apparel is surrounded by quite
the aura of mystery as are fur
coats. Only an expert can tell any­
thing about the quality of furs. The
best the average woman can do is
to learn something of their wearing
qualities and then select the type
best suited to her needs.
Among the most durable furs are
classed beaver, fisher, mink, otter,
and badger. Other pelts that wear
very well are Alaskan seal, kolin­
sky, krimmer, marten, muskrat,
Persian lamb, raccoon and skunk.
If you are selecting furs to stand
hard daily wear, you will find these
most satisfactory.
Less substantial, but not classed
as actually fragile, are caracul, er­
mine, fox, leopard, lynx, marmot,
nutria and opossum. These require
constant care and should be sent to
the furriers frequently for check­
ing. Fragile furs include sable, chin­
chilla, squirrel, mole, chipmunk and
kidskin.
Winter Skiing Costumes
Sold in Matching Colors
The mix-and-match movement has
invaded the Held of ski clothes. This
year, along with the regulation two-
piece costumes, you will find jack­
ets and trousers in contrasting and
matching colors.
The separate jackets are as trim­
ly tailored as are those of more con­
ventional suits and close with slide
fasteners all the way up the front.
They are reversible, with poplin,
treated to be wind resistant, on one
side and bright wool plaid on the
other.
Dress Has RuiHes
A frock to be worn by a young
girl at parties is one of pale _ pink
net made with seven full ruffles on
the skirt and tiny, very full, puffed
sleeves.
LJERE’S an unusually sweet
11 princess frock for junior girls
that you'll want two ways for Sun­
day and everyday! This is the
most becoming line in the world
for petite figures.
There are
adroit gathers at the sides of the
front panel to give a little round­
ness where roundness is needed,
and the waist scoops in to beguil­
ing tininess, above the piquant
flare of the skirt.
In velveteen or taffeta, with a
white silk pique collar, design No.
1269-B will be the prettiest kind
of party frock. In flannel, spun
rayon or corduroy it will be smart
for classroom, all in one color or,
as she wn in the small sketch, with
a wide splash of contrast down the
front.
...
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1269-B Is de­
signed for sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19. Cor­
responding bust measurements 29. 3i. 33.
35 and 37. Size 13 (31) requires 4','s yards
of 39-inch material without nap; % yard
contrast for collar. Send order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
149 New MonIsomery Ave.
Saa Francisco
CalU.
Enclose 15 cents for each pattern.
Pattern No.................
Size............ ..
Name .........
..........
Address
DON'T BE BOSS
BY YOUR LAXATIVE-RELIEVE
CONSTIPATION THIS MODERN WAY
• When you feel gassy, headachy, logy
due to clogged-up bowels, do as million*
do —take Feet>-A-Mint at bedtime. Next
morning — thorough, comfortable relief,
helping you start the day full of your
normal energy and pep, feeling like •
million! Feen-A-Mint doesn’t disturb
your night’s rest or interfere svith work the
next day. Try Feen-A-Mint, the chewing
gum laxative, younelC It tastes good, it's
handy and economical... a family supply
FEEN-A-MINT io<
Spark of Conscience
Labor to keep alive in your
breast that little spark of celestial
fire called conscience.—Washing­
ton.
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Creomulslon relieves promptly be­
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help 1 loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in­
flamed bronchial mucous mem­
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un­
derstanding you must like the way. it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
WNU—13
1-41
BEACONS cf
—SAFETY—
• Like a beacon light on
the height—the advertise­
ments in newspapers direct
you to newer, better and
easier ways of providing
the things needed or
desired. It shiner, this
beacon of newspaper
advertising—and it will be
to your advantage to fol­
low it whenever you
make a purchase.