Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, March 07, 1941, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, March 7, 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Paqe 3
Silk Prints for Spring Feature
Polka Dots, Fruit Motifs, Color
Hi. Phillips
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
ANOTHER IJr;,.K FROM
PRIVATE PURKFY
THIS PUDDING FAIRLY HHOCTS TRY ME!*
(See Recipe« Below)
ADD ONE Cl)P OF IMAGINATION
blankets should be served piping
hot.
Once upon • time ■ friend told
me that to her the addition of “one
eup ut imagina­
tion'* wai the
moat important
Ingredient that
could be used In
any recipe. So
whole heartedly
do I agree with
her that today 1
want to give you
a number of recipea to which that
ingredient, imagination, haa been
added. In fact, go successfully haa
thia been done that each of these
recipes is different, yet each la de­
licious — each fairly shouts “Try
me I”
These recipes, moreover, have
been chosen as luncheon favorites
because, of all of the meals of the
day, the family luncheon some way
seems to be most neglected.
Take the baked apricot and tapi­
oca pudding for example; have you
ever before thought of serving a cof­
fee sauce with such a pudding? Yet
the blend of flavors which results
from combining this particular pud­
ding with this particular sauce is
really delicious—long to be remem­
bered.
My Style Spaghetti.
Sausage Htand-l'p.
(Serves 4 to •)
1 S-ounce package spaghetti (broken
small)
1 pound breakfast sausages
% cup minced onion
1 clove garlic (minced)
4 tablespoons parsley (finely
chopped)
1 can tomato paste id-ounce)
1 cup water
IV« teaspoons salt
Vs teaspoon pepper
H teaspoon sugar
% cup grated cheese
Cook broken spaghetti in boiling
water (6 cups) (1 teaspoon salt per
quart water) un­
til tender, about
20 minutes, then
drait Place sau­
sages in skillet,
add y« cup of wa­
ter and cook until nicely browned,
about 13 minutes. Saute onion, gar­
lic, and parsley in sausage fat for
5 minutes, until onions are yellow
and transparent. Remove from fat
and combine with tomato paste and
seasonings. Combine spaghetti with
tomato sauce and turn into buttered
casserole. Tuck sausages Into spa­
ghetti in upright position, so that
Just the end of each sausage shows.
Sprinkle grated cheese over top and
bake in moderate oven (350 degreca
Fahrenheit) for 20 minutes.
Baked Apricot and Tapioca Pudding
(Serves 8 to >)
H cup pearl tapioca
Vi cup evaporated apricots or
2 cups canned apricots
cup sugar
Vi teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons lemon juice
3 cups warm water
1 tablespoon butter
Soak pearl tapioca in cold water,
to cover, for one hour. Wash apri­
cots and place in a well-greased 1V4-
quart heat-resistant glass casserole.
Add sugar, salt, lemon juice and
warm water. Drain tapioca; stir it
into the fruit mixture in casserole
and cot with bits of butter. Cover
the dish and bake in a moderate
oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) for
1 hour or until the tapioca pearls
are translucent. Coo), top with
whipped cream, if desired, and
serve with coffee sauce.
Coffee Sauce.
Mi cup sugar
1V4 tablespoons cornstarch
H teaspoon salt
,
1 cup hot coffee, regular strength
2 tablespoons butter
Mi teaspoon nutmeg, If desired.
Blend sugar, cornstarch and salt
in the upper part of a 1-quart heat-
resistant glass double boiler. Add
coffee and cook until it thickens,
stirring constantly. Blend in butter
and nutmeg. Cool and aerve with
apricot and tapioca pudding.
Hot Dogs in Blanketa.
When baking fresh yeast rolls,
wrap strips of the dough around
wieners, allowing the ends to stick
out of their dough blanket. Give
the dough time to double in bulk and
bake as usual. These hot dogs in
(Serves 5 to 6)
V4 cup olive oil
1 small onion, chopped
1 green pepper, seeded and chopped
1 pound ground beef
1V4 teaspoons salt
1 cup tomato puree
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
Vi cup grated cheese
1 cup canned corn
Vi package spaghetti, cooked
Heat olive oil in frying pan and
add onion, green pepper and ground
beef. Fry until brown and then add
the salt, tomato puree, and Worces­
tershire sauce. Stir in the grated
cheev together with the com and
cooked spaghetti. Place in buttered
baking casserole and bake in a mod­
erate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit)
for approximately 40 minutes.
Honey All-Bran Hpice Ceekiea.
(Makes 2Vi dozen cookies)
Vi cup shortening
Mi cup boney
Vi cup sugar
1 egg
1 cup All-Bran
lVi cups flour
Vi teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
Vi teaspoon soda
Vi teaspoon cloves
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup seedless raisins
Blend shortening, sugar and honey
thoroughly. Add egg and beat un­
til creamy. Add
bran. Sift flour
once before mea s-
uring. Add salt,
baking
powder,
soda, cloves and
cinnamon. Com­
bine with raisins.
Add to first mix­
ture and
beat
well. Drop dough
by teaspoons on lightly greased bak­
ing sheet about 2*4 inches apart.
Bake In moderate oven (350 degrees
Fahrenheit) about 12 to 15 minutes.
Cheese Soup With Rice
(Serves 3)
1 cup cooked carrot (very finely
diced)
4 cups milk
1 tablespoon chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup grated cheese
2 tablespoons chopped plmiento
2 egg yolks
1 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon white pepper
Vi cup rice (cooked)
Add carrot and onion to milk and
scald. Melt butter In saucepan, add
flour and blend to a smooth pasta.
Add milk gradually to flour mix­
ture, stirring all the time. Add
cheese, salt and pepper, stirring un­
til cheese is melted.
Pour over
well-beaten egg yolks, stirring con­
stantly. Servo at once with spoon­
ful of hot cooked rice.
Mexican Spaghetti.
(Serves 8 to 10)
Vi pound spaghetti
1 can peas (No. 2)
Vi pound raw ham (ground)
Vi pound American cheese (grated)
1 can tomatoes (No. 2)
Mi cup green pepper (cut fine)
1 tablespoon pimiento (cut fine)
2 tablespoons butter (melted)
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon salt
Mi teaspoon pepper
Bacon strips
Cook the spaghetti in boiling, salt­
ed water. Drain. In a baking dish
arrange layers of spaghetti, peas,
ground ham and cheese and com­
bine tomatoes, green pepper, plmi­
ento, butter, and seasonings. Pour
over the spaghetti. Cover with grat­
ed cheese and top with bacon strips.
Bake in a moderate oven (350 de­
grees Fahrenheit) for one hour.
Refrigerator Hamburgers.
(Serves 3)
1 pound hamburger
2 tablespoons finely minced onion
Vi cup chopped green pepper
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon prepared mustard
1 tablespoon horseradish
Mix all ingredients together, and
shape into a roll 2 Vi inches in diam-
*er. Let stand in the refrigerator
several hours or over night. When
ready to use, cut in slices % Inches
thick and fry or broil aa for regu
lar hamburgers.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Dear Mom:
The cake and things you sent ar­
rived okay only I did not get none
on account of my buddies opened
them. The trouble with the army is
that you can't keep a separate mail­
ing address. Well, everything is go­
ing along good and life in the army
ain’t so bad once you make up your
mind it can't be any too good.
We have movies here but no
scrccno, so you would not like army
life, mom. We have hostesses here,
too. I thought a hostess was some­
body you found in airplanes, but tn
the camps a hostess is a lady who
has charge of the
entertainment
side of life and I
think we may
even get rumba
lessons in this
war. There are
quite a few host­
esses here, but do
not worry about me. Mom, as they
are all pretty old, some even as old
as 38 and 40 I don't know who is
picking them, but it ain’t Billy Rose.
At first I thought the Camp Fire
Giris were being drafted, too, but 1
found out the government wants the
soldiers to have as much amuse­
ment as they can get in the next
including double features,
war,
swing music and Mickey Mouse,
They even have cafeteria lunch-
rooms for visitors so if an outsider
gets poisoned they can't blame it
on the regular army cook.
More rifles are arriving and I
guess maybe by the time war comes
almost every soldier will have a
gun.
Do not keep sending me heavy
underwear as you have my tent full
of it already.
Love.
Oscar.
Dear Mom:
I am getting so I do not mind be­
ing here at al) and my morale would
be good except I didn't keep getting
newspapers and reading the news
from Washington. I have got around
to the point where I am used to tak­
ing orders and to facing a war if
there is no way out, but what is a!)
thia stuff about going to the aid of
China. Greece and all nations ev­
erywhere?
>
In one breath I am told I will
not be sent out of the United States
and in the next I
hear all countries
in trouble any­
where can depend
on help from me,
and if all this is
so, I keep asking
myself why I did­
n’t join the navy
to see the world, which I may have
to see anyhow.
What is all this lease-iend stuff.
and do I go with the lease? Also
could you send me some newspaper
article explaining what is being
tended. I hope no tanks are being
lended as we are still using ice wag­
ons here. If we must lend some­
thing let us lend first sergeants as
there are too many of 'em around
this camp.
The food here could be better. I
haven't had a good juicy steak yet.
Are they lending them to somebody,
too?
Well, do net worry, as I am get­
i
ting used to everything and am very
happy today because I learned Otto
Bixby, who was my boss at the
store, has been drafted, too. and will
be here, too, any day now.
Love.
Oscar.
• • •
Dear Mom:
Bixby, my old boss (who was such
n stinker), just arrived and is in
my company. I
am going to work
hard now to be a
sergeant, or at
least a corporal.
I
will
write
more later.
Love,
Oscar.
à
PaUern 6903
A4 AKE this your most colorful
embroidered panel! The love­
ly shaded roses are in single and
outline stitch and are effective in
wool or silk floss. Begin now I
• • •
Pattern TO03 contains a transfer pattern
of a picture 15 x 15 inches; color chart;
materials needed; illustrations of stitches.
Send order to:
8« wins Clrels Needlee raft Dept.
12 Eight* Ave.
New Terh
Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pat­
tern No.................
N THE springtime fancy turns ea­
gerly to "what's new” in silk
prints. This season the story is
more fascinating than ever with
tales of daring new colors and de­
signs that are writing romance and
drama in every chapter.
There'a a mad rush for red. a
play-up of fruit motifs in realistic
colorings on white background, a
new array of shantung silks, either
monotone or printed; a repeat on
polka dots with special emphasis on
twin prints; and a predominance ot
patriotic colors. You’ll see a rec­
ord-breaking number of prints that
key beige and brown to tangerine,
bittersweet and kindred colors, a
strong ‘accent on bizarre South
American colors, especially purples
and reds and Peruvian pink, a hand­
paint technique used for flowery par­
ty-dress prints—and here we "pause
for identification" of some of the
newest print fashions as shown in
the illustration herewith.
A sure way of being fashion-right
in selecting the new print frock for
spring is to think in terms of silk
shantung, which is exactly what the
designer did in creating the neat and
attractive dress to the right in the
picture. Styled the South American
way with its bolero silhouette and
general detail, this printed plaid
silk shantung dress is the very em­
bodiment of style at a new high.
One of the delights of shantung is
the lovely paste! monotones that are
favorites for dresses and suits, tai­
lored to a nicety for both sports and
daytime wear. The dress to the left
in the group is made of a pastel
blue shantung with gay dotted shan­
tung for the turban and bag. If you
look close, you will see the tip edge
of a matching polka dot parasol. The
dress under a monotone wool coat
I
Smart Simplicity
OVERLOAD
• • *
ALL SET
If the war ends, as almost every­
body expects, with every nation on
earth broke, busted and flat on its
uppers, the world has at least aju
appropriate post-war song for us all:
"Tramp, Tramp. Tramp, the Boys
Are Marching."
•
makes a perfect greeting for spring.
You'll be carrying the smart para­
sol ever so pridefully when sum­
mer comes.
Navy prints with navy wool top­
coats or long dramatic capes are
"tops” in fashion. Stylish accesso­
ries are a hat and bag of plaid silk
tn colors as mad and merry as you
please. You can either make, (pat­
terns are easily available) or buy
ready made, these enlivening two­
somes.
Two designers are sounding the
patriotic note by introducing wide
bands of red and white crepe silk
in the lining. You can do the same
thing with the vivid South American
colors—introduce them in linings, or
in the yoke of the dress.
Look about in the silk displays
and you will be impressed with the
number of prints that couple pink
with black or with navy. These
pretty ladylike prints invite gracious
styling, such as has been given to
the gown centered in the group pic­
tured. This dainty frock is made on
slim lines with novel petal pockets
made of self-print There is increas­
ing interest shown in pockets
throughout current costume design.
They contribute great charm to sim­
ple print daytime dresses. The pink
hat worn with the frock pictured
complements the dress. It has a
crochet bumper edge — crochet
touches are ever so chic—and what
is most apropos is that this hat
sports a knitting needle trim. Wear
pink or black suede gloves with this
outfit for proper accent
■Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Cape'. Suit Ensembles
In Spring Collections
Considerable emphasis is being
placed on cape costumes in the ad­
vance spring showings. The cape
formula is being worked out in ways
most fascinating. For example, a
charming costume turned out by a
noted designer plays up bright and
neutral colors in the latest approved
manner. The suit of soft gray wool
consists of an all-round box-pleated
skirt with a dressmaker-styled jack­
et that is hiplength and has two huge
patch pockets. Now comes the stun­
ning cape that tops this neat suit!
It is full length, made of red herring­
bone weave, lined with lime green
silk.
A good rule to follow might be "a
cape with every costume" so popu­
lar is the cape idea growing. One
of the newest outcomes of the cape
vogue is that many of the early
spring print silk frocks are worn
with long cloth capes lined with
the identical silk of the dress.
Modish ladies may expect
Curvature of spine and neck.
And toward moving turn quite pass­
ive
If costume Jools become more mas­
sive.
—J. H. Niles
• • •
Add Things for Which There Is
No Explanation Outside the Psycho­
pathic Wards: Miami, where more
naked women are visible on the
beaches than anywhere on earth, is
featuring Sally Rand in a night-club
disrobing actl And the people are
flocking to see her!
• • •
Seymour says that Italy is shaped
like a boot and that its generals are
shaped like heels.
• • •
The greatest understatement in
history: Sherman's verdict that war
is hell.
Name ....................... .......
Address ................. ...................................
DON'T BE BOSSED
BY YOUR l AXATIVK-RKUKVC
CONSTIPATION TNI» MODERN WAV
• When you feel gassy, headachy, logy
due o dogged-up bowels, do so miPione
do-take Feen-A-Mint at bedtime. Next
morning — thorough, comfortable relief,
helping you start the day full ai your
normal energy and pep, feeling like a
million! Feen-A-Mint doesn’t disturb
your night’s rest or interfere with work the
next day. Try Feen-A-Mint, the chairing
gum laxative, yoorse/£ It tastes good, it’s
handy and economical... a family supply
EEEK-A-MINTi'ol
Doty Toward Health
To do all in our power to win
health, and to keep it, is as much
our duty as to be honest.—T. F.
Seward.
GOOD
REASONS
WHY
QUINTUPLETS
CHEST CUIUS
use MUSTEROLE for
Mother—Give YOUR Child
This Same Export Care!
At the first sign of a chest "Id the
Quintuplets’ throats and ebesta are
rubbed with Children's Mild Musterole
—a product made to promptly relieve
the DISTRESS of children’s colds and
resulting bronchial and croupy coughs.
Relief usually comes quickly because
Musterole is MORE than an ordinary
“salve.’’ It helps break up local con­
gestion. As Musterole is used on the
Quints you may be sure you are using
just about the BEST product made.
Also in Regular and Extra Strength for
those preferring a stronger product.
CHIUIRIN'S
The Heart Knows
We know the truth, not only by
the reason, but also by the heart.
—Pascal.
Statistics show that there is an
Increase in yardage sales owing to
the fact that a growing number of
women are taking up home sewing.
This, they say, may be largely at­
tributed to the fact that almost ev­
ery community nowadays has a
sewing center where one can learn
at little or no expense the short-cuts
and tricks of the trade. The dress
pictured can be made up easily and
at minimum cost
The material
need not be expensive. Why not
learn to make your own clothes?
Some of the rayoh mixtures in
pastel colors would be practical for
a beginner to start with, and the
new jabardines are lovely and wear­
able. The pattern for this dress calls
for soft gathered detail and in a type
that can be easily made at home.
10—41
WNU—13
fl
IB
0p
Modern Handbags Gain
Slick Smooth Efficiency
What handbags have lost in the
absence of French models, (which
formerly inspired 90 per cent of our
handbag styles) they are gaining in
improved construction, better ma­
terials. and interesting tricks which
make them newly efficient. One
trick Is a slot which feeds a nickle
outside the bag. Another is a key
clip on a light for inside the hand­
bag—so that keys may be located
Instantly. Another is the gluv-gard.
which anchors one’s gloves to one's
handbag.
Handbag interiors are gaining a
great deal of attention. More and
better planned pockets are the rule.
And one important new detail in
interiors is a special pocket zipper.
When you slide your hand into a
pocket protected by this fastener,
there are no rough teeth to get past
—the zipper is kind to nail polish. It
slides like a streak and adds orna­
mentation, as well as safety to
American-made handbag interiors.
I*
'igtan Mite/
A SUPERB LOCATION
Only a few steps from every important
point In Seattle. Stores, offices, bus
and railroad terminals—all are Just
"next door". Car lines to all parts of
Seattle are only a block away. A fine
hotel, idtially situated, affording the
utmost in comfort and convenience.
SPLENDID ROOMS *]»T0*3
SPECIAL RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH
s