Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 31, 1941, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, Ian. 31, 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Paa© 3
Fashion-Wise Women Take Up
Crocheting With Real Zest
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
shows you how simply made it is.
Merely straight, long seams, a few
darts and gathers—that’s ail. Any­
body can make it, quickly and
easily.
• • •
a item No. 1305-B is designed for size*
14. 14, 18, 20 and 40
Corresponding
/ bust
measurements 30, 32. 34, 38. 38 and
40. Size 14 (32) requires 5ft yards of 33-
lnch material; 1 yard trimming. Detailed
sew chart included. Send order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
14* New Montgomery Av*.
Sas Francisco
Calif.
Enclose 15 cents for each patter*.
Pattern No............ Size..........
Name .................................................
Address ............................................
Jlsk Me Jlnolher
A Generai Quiz
The Questions
1. What is the rule of nobless*
oblige?
2. What word has the opposite
meaning of prolix?
3. What workman used a cant
hook?
4. A horsepower is equal to how
many watts?
5. How many deadly sins are
listed?
6. What is the tallest living ani­
mal?
7. How much does a presidential
inauguration cost?
The Answers
FEItUUAHY HOSTENS? TREAT GIJEHTN TO A PATRIOTIC TEA
(See Recipes Below.)
FEBRUARY IH A PARTY MONTH
February Is a party month; ev­
ery hostess calendar should have
the twelfth, the
Ke aw yUBOABY
■» •> >» »• fourteenth,
and
1
the twenty-second
1 > 4 1 fi 1 • _____
ringed _
in red I
And this year.
16171« liDfl^l *•»»» 0» renewed
‘
i on pa*
r
trlotiim
trlotiim which
the world crisis has brought there's
every reason to make Washington's
and Lincoln's birthdays occasions
tor more patriotic partying than us­
ual.
No holiday in February lends IL
self to a tea quite like Washington's
birthday. But Instead of tea, serve
coffee with squares of hot. fragrant
gingerbread as you sec it in the pic­
ture above. The spicy squares are
much in keeping with the day, for
Washington's mother was said to
jtave been famous for her ginger­
bread. Make it by your own special
recipe or use one cf the packaged
gingerbread mixes. All that you
will need for decoration* is a bowl
of flowers and the silhouettes of
George and Martha Washington
mounted on white paper and hung to
form a background for the tea table.
As a part of the food for the oc­
casion. serve a minted pear salad
with small deviled hot breads. These
are tender, crunchy biscuit hearts
with the top section cut out to show
the deviled ham Alling. Let the bev­
erage be a deep red cranberry punch
and garnish each cup with a cube
of pineapple stuck on a pick. If you
wish to have a second course, small
cake* or Ice cream mold* will flniih
the menu in One style.
A sugar heart cake la a dessert
which any hostc** could serve with
pride when a few friend* come In
for Valentine's day evening. Fine
white cake Is put together with a
creamy chocolate Alling, and the
cake-top la decorated with confec­
tioners' sugar sifted through a lace
doily with a heart motif on it When
the doily is removed, the design re­
mains, etched neatly in sugar on
the cake.
Cranberry Punch.
(Makea 3 quarts)
2ft cup* su.tar
fl cups boiling water
3 17-ounce cans jellied cranberry
sauce
1 cup lemon juice
1 12-ounce can pineapple cube*
1 pint carbonated water
Cocktail sticks
Rub the jellied cranberry sauce
into sugar. Add hot water and heat
and stir until well
blended. Beat
with rotary beat­
er until smooth.
Add lemon juice.
Drain juice from
pineapple cube* and measure; there
should be ft cup. Add pineapple
juice to pnnch mixture and strain
through fine sieve or cheese cloth.
Chill thoroughly. When ready to
serve, place block of ice in punch
bowl (or use about 1 quart ice
cubes). Pour punch mixture and
carbonated water over ice. Insert
pineapple cubes onto cocktail sticks
and place one In each cup. Fill
cups with punch.
Sugar Heart Cake.
(Makes 2 B-inch layers)
4 cups cake flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
% teaspoon salt
% cup butter or other shortening
2 cupa sugar
2 eggs (unbeaten)
1ft cups milk
2 teaspoons vanilla
Sift cake flour once before meas­
uring, then add baking powder and
salt and sift 3 times. Cream but­
ter until soft, add augar gradually
and cream together until light and
fluffy. Add eggs and beat thorough­
ly. Add flour, alternately with milk,
a small amount at a time. Beat
until smooth after each addition.
Then add vanilla,.
Pour batter into 2 well-greased
fl-inch square pans (2 inches deep).
Bake in a moderate oven (350 de­
grees Fahrenheit) for 35 to 40 min­
utes. Put together a* layer cake,
spreading chocolate cream filling
between layer*.
Place lace doily
mode with heart motif over top of
cake.
Fasten securely to top of
cake with toothpicks. Sprinkle sur­
face generously and evenly with con­
fectioners' sugar. Brush off excess
with pastry brush, then remove
picks and carefully lift off pattern.
The design should be neatly etched
in confectioners' sugar.
Chocolate Cream Filling.
(Make* 2 cups)
3 square* unsweetened chocolate (3
ounces) (grated)
lfi> cup* milk
% cup sugar
4 tablespoon* cake flour
ft teaspoon salt
1 egg (slightly beaten)
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
Add chocolate to milk. Heat in
double boiler. When chocolate ia
melted, beat with rotary egg beater
to blend. Combine sugar, flour and
salt.
Add gradually to chocolate
mixture and cook until thickened
(about 5 minutes), stirring constant­
ly. Then cook 10 minute* longer,
stirring occasionally.
Pour small
amount of mixture over egg. stir­
ring vigorousl.”, return to double
boiler. Cook 2 minute* longer, stir­
ring constantly. Then add butter
and vanilla and cooL
Patriotic Sandwich Plate.
(25 star sandwiches;
40 rolled sandwiches)
2 1ft-pound loaves sandwich bread
Softened butter
2 17-ounce cans jellied cranberry
1 cup dried beef (ground)
4 3-ounce packages cream cheese
4 tablespoons milk
4 teaspoons lemon juice
ft teaspoon onion juice
Trim crusts from 1 loaf with sharp
knife. Slice, lengthwise into ft-inch
slice*.
If very
long knife is not
available, loaf
will be easier to
handle if cut in
half crosswise be­
fore slicing. Wrap
slices in damp
towel and place
in refrigerator
for 30 minutes to 1
second
Meanwhile
slice
lengthwise into ft-i h slice*.
out sandwiches with star-shaped
cutter, then spread with softened
butter. Slice jellied crunberry sauce
into thin slices and cut into stars
with same cutter. Plare each slice
of cranberry between two slices but­
tered bread.
Blend cream eheese with milk un­
til softened, then add lemon and
onion juice. Combine with ground
beef and chopped nuts.
Remove
sliced bread from refrigerator, un­
wrap, and spread with softened but­
ter, then with filling. Roll tightly
into long rolls. Wrap each roll in
waxed paper and place in refrigera­
tor, When ready to aerve, Insert a
small flag into end of each rolled
sandwich. Stand them up around
sides of a shallow bowl or basket so
that flags hang over edge. Fill cen­
ter of bowl or basket with star­
shaped sandwiches.
Deviled Biscuit Heart*.
(Makes 18)
2 cups flour (all-purpose)
3 teaspoons baking powder
Mi teaspoon salt
ftacup shortening
% cup milk (approximately)
2 2ft-ounce cans deviled ham
Sift flour once before measuring.
Add baking powder, salt, and sift
together. Cut in shortening, using a
pastry blender or two knives, or
rub it in with the fingers. Add milk,
stirring it in lightly with a fork,
until a soft dough forms. Turn onto
a lightly floured board and knead
for a few seconds. Roll out to about
ft inch in thickness. Cut with a
heart-shaped cutter. Remove the
centers from half the biscuits. To
do this, fold biscuit in half and *ut
out center with kitchan scissors,
leaving a narrow rim. Spread dev­
iled ham on whole biscuits, top with
rim* and bake in a hot oven (450
degrees Fahrenheit) for 12 to 15
minute*. Serve hot to accompany
salad.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
HEN you pick up your news­
paper these days, or flip
tijrough the pages of your favorite
magazine, more often than not
you'll see pictures of stage, radio
and motion picture stars, college
girls, club women and debutantes,
all busy at a new hobby—crochet­
ing!
A crocheting fad is sweeping the
country. Crochet hooks are being
wielded by busy finger* from Maine
to California, from the Canadian
border to the Gulf of Mexico. The
vogue ha* taken such hold that now­
aday* when a deb reaches into her
handbag. It's probably for a crochet
hook rather than a lipstick.
Mind you. it's not just the home
girls interested in housewifely arts
who are crocheting. This time lt'a
the college girls whose campus­
bound trunks, returning from mid­
winter homecomings, fairly bulged
with
unfinished
sweaters
and
blouse* and accessory items into
which, no doubt, they will be put­
ting the final stitches in the lecture
room, pacing busy hand* to busy
mind*. In the city thorough*"res
it's the debutantes who are crochet­
ing in taxicab* speeding to and fro
in their round of social engage­
ment*. Stage and radio star* are at
it too, while they wait their cues,
all of which mean* that crocheting
ha* definitely reached the glamour
stage.
That crochet ha* come “in” as
a style of high importance is big
new* from the fashion angle. The
famous designer Schiaparelli may
be back of it all, for when she ar­
rived some month* ago on the At­
lantic clipper she wore a crocheted
collar, crocheted gloves and listen
to this—crocheted stockings I The
latter were very smart looking and
created a sensation because of their
unusualncss.
W
I^pcl Gadgets
Jewel gadgets continue to flourish
on midseason jacket lapels. With
the discarding of burdensome win­
ter fur coats oomes evidence of the
importance attached to suits for
midseason and early spring wear.
With suits in the limelight, then it
1* that the gadgets so popularly
worn on jacket lapels will come into
their own with renewed emphasis.
While women are willing and eager
to discard their fur topcoats chiring
the interval that spans winter and
spring, they still cling to the touches
of flattering fur that so dramatized
their smart turbans. In the pic­
ture an enormous gold-and-topaz pin
1* worn on the lapel of a mossy
green wool long-coat. There will be
considerable topaz and amber jew­
elry in evidence during the midsea­
son months and early spring in line
with the trend toward yellow* and
beige* and sunburnt tone* that are
sponsored for spring.
Crocheted jewelry is another
unique item, especially the lei flow­
er necklace with bracelet to match.
The idea of stiffly-starched small
crochet wings worn in the hair has
spread like wildfire. Young girls
are especially like these wings be­
cause it takes only a jiffy to make
them and they are different and
much more interesting than the tra­
ditional ribbon bows they have been
wearing. A miniature crochet shawl
to complete a sweater and plaid­
skirt outfit is another favorite ac­
cessory.
At exciting style prevucs for
spring the emphasis on crochet fash­
ions is unmistakable.
Ideas are
such that clever women at home
will be quick to add crocheted items
to their own wardrobes. For ex­
ample, insets of crochet in trian­
gles, squares or circles, also yoke
tops, add style touches to the new
pastel wool frocks.
Pockets and
belts of crochet and jackets with
crocheted sleeves bespeak the high-
style significance of this new vogue
for handwork.
Milliners are on the alert, too.
They are making snug crochet tur­
bans with dramatic twist* and
drapes of crochet to give front
height. The white crochet hat at
the top of the left in the illustra­
tion has gone patriotic in that an
American eagle spreads its wings
in a gay crochet motif. To the right
(above) a casual wide-brimmed hat
ha* its crown embellished with an
applique of floral crochet done in
green cotton thread. The smart cro­
cheted pillbox hat shown below has
a close-fitting snood for anchorage
and "style.”
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Emblems Important
Trimming Feature
The new costumes and sweater*
are emblazoned with emblems.
Some are embroidered,
others
formed of jewels, beads and se­
quins.
The casual sports blouse
flourishes a nautical emblem on its
sleeve or perhaps on the pocket. Sai­
lor blouses with insignia on the
sleeve are "last word” fashion news
for spring.
Your best dress should have an
imposing emblem
nbroidered in
jewels and metal beads.'
Your hat looks patriotic with a
jeweled
or
embroidered
eagle
spreading its wings on crown or
brim. Your scarf should carry a
cunningly contrived emblem, and
your "hankies” too. The story goes
on and on throughout the spring
style program in endless and fasci­
nating ways.
Designers Match Hats
With Tailored Tweeds
Designers think so highly of
matching the tailored suit with a tai­
lored hat of identical material that
they are stressing the idea in ad­
vance spring fashion*. When you
buy your suit ask for a two-some
that includes the matching hat If
you are having your suit turned out
by your favorite tailor, buy an ex­
tra piece of the tweed or novelty
suiting to furnish your milliner who
will fashion smartest kind of head­
gear from soft brimmed hats to
jaunty sailors and pillbox types.
Perhaps a turban might interest you
most Tell your milliner and she
will turn out a most intricately knot­
ted affair or draped and will go
even to the point of creating a hand­
bag to match.
U ERE’S a pretty new home
i A A frock that looks well on every­
body from slim size 12’s to stately
size 40’s. Made up in bright per­
cale or calico prints, or in checked
gingham, with ric-rac outlining
the neckline and points of interest,
it looks fresh and gay as a morn­
ing-glory. And this is a thoroughly
comfortable dress, too. The sash
belt, tied in the back, enables you
to adjust the waistline to exactly
the snugness or slimness you like.
The armholes are easy. The skirt
has sufficient width for walking
comfort.
A glance at the little diagram
drawing, showing pattern No. 1305-
B cut out and ready to assemble,
Gems of Thought
I HAVE seldom seen much
1 ostentation and much learn­
ing met together. The sun, ris­
ing and declining, makes long
shadows; and mid-day, when he
is highest, none at all.—Bishop
Hall.
If you count up the tunny and
cloudy days in a complete year, you
will find that the fine day hat come
more often.—Ovid.
1. Rank imposes obligation.
2. Concise.
3. A lumberman (for turning
logs).
4. One horsepower: 746 watts.
5. Seven: Pride, covetousness,
lust, anger, gluttony, envy, sloth.
6. The giraffe (the males some­
times attain a height of 18 feet).
7. The cost has varied from
time to time. Congress appropri­
ated $35,000 for 1941 inaugural ex­
penses—about $7,000 less than was
expended in 1937.
FEMALE FAIN.
WITH UPSET
NERVOUS spells -
You won -n who suffer pain of Irreg­
ular per’jds with nervous, cranky
spells < ae to monthly functional
dlsturi inces should find Lydia E.
Plnkb .mi Vegetable Compound
marvelous to relieve such
Annoying symptoms.
> Pinkham’s Compound is made
especially tor women to help relieve
such distressing feelings and thus
help them go smiling thru such
•'difficult days.” Over 1.000,000women
have reported remarkable benefits.
WORTtfraTOiOIAny^^tora
Father of Virtues
A thankful heart is not only the
greatest virtue, but the parent of
all the other virtues.—Cicero.
He that swells in prosperity
will be sure to shrink in adver­
sity.—Colton.
The fewer our wants, (Xc nearer
we resemble the gods.—Socrates.
Look in thy heart and write.—
Sydney.
The saying that beauty is but
skin deep is but a skin deep
saying.—Herbert Spencer.
Under Two Presidents
temporary constipation to cousins h»dl*«o
Cion, headaches, Itotleeeneae. GarfleM Tea
will certainty "de wonders.” r ■ S* SAMPLSI
I*c —25c M drugstores
Only two men have been vice
presidents of the United States
under two different Presidents—
George Clinton, who served under
Jefferson and Madison, and John
C. Calhoun, who served under John
Quincy Adams and Jackson, says
Collier’s. Neither completed the
two full terms, however, as Clin­
ton died in office and Calhoun re­
Sorrows and Joy
signed, the only man to leave this
Sorrows remembered sweeten
position voluntarily in the history
present joy.—Pollok.
of this country.
Lost—a cough due to a cold —thanks to the
soothing action of Smith Bro*. Cough Drop*.
TWo kinds: Black or Menthol—54.
Smith Bros. Cough Drops are the
containing VITAMIN A
A (Carotene) raises the resistance of
mucous membranes of nose and throat to
cold
infections, when lack of resist­
ance is due so Vitamin A deficiency.
MARK