Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 09, 1942, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friay, îanuary 9, 1942
IGO
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Defense Uniforms Can Be as
Smart as They Are Practical
—--- Zy Jßqtwi CltcanJxeAA — -
........ ' ■;
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
Paqe 3
PATTERNS
SEWDNG C01RCLE
which stay firmly in place. A tie-
on apron, pretty enough to be any­
one's gift, is also included.
•
•
•
Pattern No. 8075 is in sizes 14 to 20; 40.
42 and 44. Sue 18 pinafore apron re­
quires 1?« yards 32-lnch material, 8 yards
nc rac Tle-on apron. Hi yards, plus 4»
yard contrast, and 3 yards binding
For
these attractive patterns send your or­
der to:
SEWING < IKCLB PATTERN tiEPT.
149 New Montgomery Street
Sas Francisco
Calif.
Enclose 13 cents In coins tor
Pattern No.................
Size.........
Name ..................................................... ..
Address ........ . ............ ................ ..
If innie Apparently Had
Been So Reproved Herself
‘‘Come upstairs and let m«
wash your hands,” said the moth­
er when she arrived with her little
daughter for a tea at grandmoth­
er’s.”
“I don’t want to go up,” wailed
Winnie, aged four.
‘‘Let her wash them in the kitch­
en,” called grandmother.
"She
can do it there just as well, I am
sure.”
“No,” her mother said, firmly.
“I insist that she come up with
__
_ »>
me.
Winnie went upstairs slowly.
Turning to her mother, she asked:
“Why don’t you obey your
mother!”
Serve One-Dish Meals as Smart Budget-Stretchers
(See Recipes Below)
Appetite Appeal Plus
Dents in the budget? Appetites
Wilted after the rich foods us u re-
.
suit of tiie double
holidays?
Well,
you can smooth
.
o out those dents
and at the same
time perk up the
jaded appetites
by smart, simple,
easy • to ■ manage one - dish meals.
Here’s a parade of palate-thrilling
recipes with which you can sprint
right along even with the slimmest
of budgets.
To stretch that food dollar, you
can use leftover meats and vegeta­
bles that are called for in these
casseroles. Yes, and what's espe­
cially nice about them is that
they're tops in vitamins and min­
erals because they’re fortified with
those perfect foods, milk and butter.
As you're pouring out the milk from
the bottle, remember It’s just brim­
ming and bursting with health-giv­
ing qualities.
Here's a meal-ln-a dlsh which has
a luscious butter and bread crumb
topping to recommend it:
•One-Dish-Meal.
(Serves 8l
2 cups diced carrots (6 medium
carrots)
•
lMi cups diced celery
8 medium potatoes, pared and
sliced
3 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
2 cups milk
1 cup meat stock or 1 bouillon
cube in
1 cup hot water
1 teaspoon salt
3 to 8 tablespoons grated onion
1 cup peas (canned or fresh)
2 cups diced leftover meat
H cup sifted bread crumbs
3 tablespoons melted butter
Cook carrots, celery and potatoes
separately in boiling salted waler
until tender. Melt butter, blend in
flour, add milk and meat stock.
Cook over direct heat, stirring con­
stantly until sauce boils and thick­
ens Add salt. Combine sauce with
remaining Ingredients, except
crumbs and melted butter, and turn
into a buttered casserole or baking
dish. Combine crumbs and melted
butter, sprinkle over surface. Bake
in a moderate (350 degrees) oven
33 to 40 minutes.
Cabbage, one of winter's best
vegetables, la featured in this cas­
serole of tuna or salmon:
Ncalloped Tuna and Cabbage.
(Serves 8)
2 cups boiling water
2 quarts chopped cabbage
2 cups rich milk
% pound American cheese
Vi cup flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 can tuna or salmon, flaked
2 cups buttered bread crumbs
Pour boiling water over cabbage,
heat to boiling, add 1 cup milk and
cheese, cut in pieces. Cook over
hot water until cheese Is melted.
Blend flour, salt and remaining milk
and add to enbbage. Add tuna or
LYNN NAYS:
Can you name the one food
that does most for your body’s
health, most cheaply? Milk, of
coursel Why? Because milk docs
all of the following:
1. Promotes growth and main­
tains the body's resistance to in­
fection through vitamin A.
2. Stimulates appetites and
keeps the nerves in top-notch con­
dition through vitamin Bl; pro­
motes growth and keeps the skin
henlthy through vitamin B2(G).
3. Helps calcium and vitamin
C to develop teeth and bones
properly if fortified with vita­
min D.
4. As an excellent source of
phosphorus, it also works to keep
the teeth and bones in class A.
5. Milk's proteins come to the
fore in repairing worn-down tis­
sues and muscles and boosting
growth.
THIN WEEK'N MENU
Cream of Mushroom Soup
•One Dish Meal
Green Bean Salad Bran Muffins
Apple Betty with Foamy Sauce
Milk
Tea
Coffee
•Recipe Given.
salmon and put in buttered casse­
role. Top with crumbs and bake in
moderate (350-degree) oven 20 min­ with a new challenge to create prac­
tical clothes that are primarily
utes.
functional but are also chic and be­
Beef Pie.
coming.
(Serves 3)
In this program of clothes that
1 pound ground beef
are able to resist wear and tear, the
1 onion, chopped
first problem to be considered is
Salt and pepper
necessarily that of finding materials
2H cups green beans, cooked
that will give satisfaction from the
or canned
standpoint of wearability plus laun­
1 can tomato soup
derability. Since sturdy cottons can
4 large potatoes, cooked
"take it,” they naturally are first in
H cup warmed milk
fabric choice. Denim holds forth at
1 beaten egg
the top of the list in either solid col­
Brown onion in hot fat. add meat ors or stripes (often combined for
and seasonings. Brown and add contrast). Then come coverts, man­
green beans and soup.
Pour in nish tweed cotton suitings and that
greased casserole. Mash potatoes, favorite of favorites—corduroy.
add egg. milk and seasonings. Scoop
White duck, which holds an en­
over meat and bake in a moderate viable record for perfect laundering,
oven.
is particularly smart for young girls
Baked potatoes and salmon are a who like snappy fashions and who
favorite cold weather combination, ' are stationed in surroundings that
demand they look immaculate. This
but
have
you
.
fabric is suitable not only for over­
ever thought of
•*,
alls, but also for overseas caps, to
blending the two
i
together as one
J
keep straying locks from the eyes.
To the left in the illustration above is
dish? No? Then
a costume especially designed for
you have a real °
---------
American women at work in de­
treat coming if you try:
fense industries, on farms, or in the
Salmon Stuffed Potatoes.
air. This "civilian defense suit” is
(Serves 6)
cut on a pattern of simplicity that
fl potatoes, baked
any woman can make for herself,
H cup hot milk
even if she is a novice at sewing.
1 beaten egg
Note that this suit of washable
Salt and pepper
white duck is one-piece. This gar­
1 tablespoon lemon juice
ment has convertible trousers which
2 cups flaked salmon
may be worn full or snugged in to
cup minced onion, sauteed
insure protection from possible en­
2 tablespoons butter
tanglement in machinery.
Buttered crumbs
Uniforms for women must have
Split baked potatoes and scoop
certain
basic protective details
out Mash the potatoes, add milk,
egg, salt. Fold in salmon, lemon such as those mentioned above, and
juice and onions. Refill shells and they must also be designed for free­
sprinkle with buttered crumbs. Bake
in a moderate oven 20 minutes.
Whisk away your problems with
leftover chicken or turkey by serv-!
ing the meat creamed with vege-'
tables in the center of a rice ring, [
adding mushrooms, sauteed, if de­
sired. Serve it also cut up in cro­
quettes, in chicken tamale pie, cur­
ried with rice, scalloped with noo­
dles. in chop suey, or as a pie like
this one here:
Chicken Pie.
(Serves 8 to 8)
3 cups diced, cooked chicken
1 cup diced, cooked carrots
6 cooked, small white onions
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 cup milk
1 cup chicken stock
2 tablespoons flour
Salt and pepper
Arrange chicken and vegetables
in layers in casserole. Combine milk
and chicken stock, add flour, blend­
ing in slowly. Cook until thick, stir­
ring constantly, then season. Pour
over chicken and vegetables. Cover
with a sweet potaio crust and bake
in a moderate oven 40 minutes.
Sweet Potato Cruat.
This crust is the distinctive part
chicken pie and a wonderful
way to use up1
those few pota-1
toes that are left
over from the
What with all the glitter of sequin
holiday dinner
and spangle, it is a relief to turn to
along with the
the lovely color-bright soft wool
chicken. It's a
classics that fashion elects for style
crust de luxe, a
supremacy this winter. Undoubted­
crisp, golden
ly these flattering little wools, fash­
brown topping
ioned as they are with studied sim­
well worthy of
plicity, will be "stealing the show"
chicken pie:
during the weeks to come. These
1 cup sifted flour
lovely classic wools make color
1 teaspoon baking powder
their theme, and worn under win­
Vi teaspoon salt
ter furs, they lead the flrst-in-
1 cup cold mashed sweet potato
fashion group. Pictured is a charm­
H cup fat, melted
ing model of Forstmann wool in a
1 beaten egg
subtle green that goes beautifully
Sift dry ingredients. Work in
with any fur. There is a restrained
mashed potato, milk and egg. Roll
accent of sparkling gilt on the belt
Vi inch thick, cover pie and flute and front closing. Wear a flaring
edges.
hat and carry a beaver muff.
6
Bright Wool
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
dom of movement. They must be
easy to take off and on, with straps
caught at the back so that overalls
will not slip off at the shoulders,
with snap fasteners at the ankles
for comfort and protection.
Corduroy mix-mates give oppor­
tunity for bright color, style and
service and all in one. They meet
the farm girl’s needs to perfection,
and they are equally as useful and
smart in the factory. Not only is
the never-wear-out quality of cordu­
roy a convincing argument in its
favor, but corduroy has that some­
thing attractive about it that meas­
ures up to any wear required of it
from work to play. It goes about
town or trudges along country roads
with equal adaptability.
The attractiveness of corduroy is
shown in the illustration above by
the culotte ensemble centered in
the group. In this instance, a bright
plaid cotton shirt is teamed with a
corduroy culotte and vest. Cordu­
roy shoes and cotton stockings com­
plete a perfect outfit for all sorts of
active wear. In this smart, good­
looking ensemble one can confident­
ly go about town on a shopping tour,
feeling suitably dressed for the oc­
casion.
Mixmate this vest of corduroy
with slacks, shown to the right in the
picture above, and you have a suit
that gives the answer to a gay young
farmerette as to "what to wear”
about home during busy hours.
Wear a corduroy beret with this suit
if you must go into town on an er­
rand, or whatever the call of duty
may happen to be.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Dutch Bonnets and Hoods
flare Peasant Embroidery
A charming new fashion that is
going the rounds this winter, to the
delight of high school and college
girls, is that of cunning little hoods
or bonnets cut in the manner of
Dutch bonnets or baby caps and
made of bright felt Or, if you pre­
fer, they can be gaily crocheted.
These are adorned with appliques of
felt flowers in peasant colorings or
trimmed in crocheted flowers. They
tie under the chin, and they lend a
most attractive dash of color to a
wintry landscape. They're perfect
with skating outfits, or to wear to
and from dances, or to school.
Here's the Latest Style:
Dresses If ith Apron Front
Here's the latest bit of fashion
gossip. It's all about the dresses
with cleverly designed apron fronts.
This new fashion calls for a pencil-
slim skirt, at the front of which
there is a tie-on apron effect. Some­
times it is achieved with a cascade
drape of material. Again it is a
pleated tie-on that makes the apron.
However, the cleverest of all, be­
cause it introduces the right print
accent, is the applique of cut out
floral prints. The effect is just about
as charming as fancy can picture,
especially if a corresponding touch
of the print appears on the sleeves.
1
A Long War
A N APRON which pleases for
** its efficiency as well as for
its bright gay appearance, easily
achieved with a few rows of ric
rac, is presented here in a pat­
tern which is no trouble at all to
follow.
The picture shows you
how this apron extends in back—
an all-covering skirt and straps
Toast water is simple to make
and appeals to those, especially
invalids, who like toast. Toast
stale bread and cut into squares.
Powder into crumbs and add a
pinch of salt and a cup of boiling
water. Let it stand an hour. Rub
through a sieve and serve hot or
cold with a little cream and pow­
dered sugar.
• • •
Don't sprinkle mustard loosely
into water when preparing a foot
• In NR (Nature’s Remedy) Tab­
bath for a patient. It will not dis­
lets, there are no chemicals, no
solve quickly and may adhere to
minerals, no phenol derivatives.
NR Tablets are different— act dif­
the skin and blister it. First mix
ferent Purely »eietable— a combi­
mustard to a paste. One table­
nation of 10 vegetable ingredients
spoon of mustard to a gallon of
formulated over 50 years ago.
Uncoated or candy coated, their
water is the proportion used.
• • •
action is dependable, thorough, yet
gentle, as millions of NR's have
One teaspoon of onion juice or
proved. Get a 104 Convincer Box.
Larger economy sizes, too.
half a sliced raw onion added to
mashed potatoes gives them a dif­
ferent flavor.
• • •
When setting the table for
CANDY
guests, allow from 24 to 30 inches
COATED
of space to a person. This makes
for comfortable seating and serv­
•r REGULAR!
ing. A crowded table is uncom­
fortable and somewhat confusing
to both hostess and guests.
• • •
Needed Solitude
'When grinding dry bread, tie a
Solitude is as needful to the
paper bag over the outlet of the imagination as society is whole­
grinder to prevent crumbs from some for the character.—James
going over the table and floor.
Russell Lowell.
Give YOUR child same expert care used when
QUINTUPLETS CATCH COW
At the first sign of a chest cold—the
Dionne Quintuplets’throats and chests
are rubbed with Musterole—a product
made especially to promptly relieve
DISTRESS of colds and
resulting bronchial and
croupy coughs.
Musterole gives such
wonderful results be­
cause it’s more than an
ordinary "Balve.’’ It
Reg-
helps break up local congestion. Sine«
Musterole is used on the Quintuplets
you may be sure you're using just
about the BEST product made!
IN 3 STRENGTHS
Children’s Mild Muster­
ole. Also Regular and
Extra Strength for
grown-ups who prefer a
stronger product. All
Og.
drugstores.
f---------------------
The merchant who advertises must treat
you better than the merchant who does
not. He must treat you as though you
were the most influential person in town.
Evening Capes Sparkle
With Beads and Sequins
Just as new as the coming New
Year are the new evening capes,
some long and some short, that
are made of bright colored woolens
handsomely and elaborately em­
broidered with sparkling stones or
sequins or vivid yarns. A favorite
color for these gay little capes is
magenta. Jet beading on black or
white wool also ranks high in chic.
The question arises, what is a
long war? A long war is regarded
as spanning a decade or more. Il
this war lasts 10 years, it will be
the longest war in the past three
centuries. The Thirty Years’ war
lasted from 1618 to 1648. Several
Greek and Roman wars extended
well over 20 years, and the Hun­
dred Years’ war, between Franca
and England, lasted from 1337 to
1453.
Wars in which America has en­
gaged since it became a nation
have lasted, on an average, less
than four years, although the Rev­
olution officially lasted eight
years.
ARE AN
INFLUENTIAL
PERSON
As a matter of cold fact you are. You
hold the destiny of his business in your
hands. He knows it. He shows it. And you
benef iIt by good service, by courteous treat-
ment, by good value—and by lower price«.