Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 30, 1942, 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.

    Friday, January 30, 1942
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 3
J ouy T ime
PATTERNS
•SfOLMHN
fxnu
TfWf«
SEWBNG CODKXE
Inconstant Solid
(KLEI) FOR AN AMERICAN
IN AN ALL-OUT WAIC
1 urn through with compromise.
Iialfwuy measures, crystal gazing
and the Idea that it's ull done by
mirrors.
•
I am finished with talk for talk's
suke and the ''that's under advise­
ment" and "in due time the matter
will be attended to" technic.
1 have canceled my subscription
to the theory that "it all comes out
in the wash," even if you haven't
thought to provide soap.
•
•
to make that you can finish it in a
Cryostase is a solid when hot and
few hours, here is an outfit to add a liquid when cold, and soluble
to your daughter’s collection of vincetoxin is cloudy when hot and
frocks. Plain or printed fabrics clear when cold.
may be used.
• • •
Pattern No 8080 la designed for sizes
2. 3, 4. 5 and 6 years. Size 3 ensemble
takes 2 yards M Inch material, 3l> yarda
rlc-rac. Fur thia attractive pattern, send
your order to:
SEWING < IK<T.K PATTERN DEPT.
149 New Montgomery Street
•
San Francisco
Enclose 15 cents In coins tor
Pattern No.
I believe in my country's capacity
to triumph, <ti-spite its tendency to
argue, muddle, procrastinate and
compromise
1 believe the "Never say die” spirit
of America will completely super­
sede the "What's In It for ME?”
motif, and that it's about time.
Luacioua to Look At imd Eat, tow . . , Orange Sponge Cake
(See Recipes Below)
Snack«, II
"What shall 1 serve to guests who
drop in for an evening of bridge
or for a chat?"
This is a ques­
tion I've heard
many hostesses
ask. especially
often during cold-
< er weather when
visiting time real­
ly comes into favor again. The an­
swer la simple, for u delectable cake
with steaming coffee or hot drink
turns the trick.
Your guests will have finished
their supper only a short time be­
fore. and since snacks do not come
late in the evening. It is best to
servo something not too heavy.
Light cukes, preferably those with
u touch of piquancy and tartness,
fill the bill perfectly. These cakes
may be baked in one of your not-
so-busy moments to have on hand
for just such an occasion.
Hot drinks are favorites in the
chilling weather If you like coffre,
be sure to have quantities of the
steaming beverage on hand, U
you're on the lookout tor new Ideas,
there are the hot fruit juice combi­
nations which hit the spot. Either
type of drink goes well with these
deasert-like cakes.
Here's the first cake on our list,
It's like spun gold in color with just
tho right tartness. You'll find that
the navel oranges which peel and
separate easily into sections will be
perfect for decorating the cake as
pictured above:
•Orange Nponge Cake.
3 egg yolks
1ft cups sugar
% cup orange juice
ft cup water
2 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
ft teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon gruted orange peel
5 egg whites
Beat egg yolks, sugar and orange
Add water and
juice until light,
beat 2 minutes,
Add flour sifted
with buking powder and salt Beat 1
minute or until thoroughly blended
into egg mixture, fold in grated or­
ange peel and egg whites beaten
stiff but not dry. Bake in 9-Inch
ungreased tube pan in a moderate
(350-degree) oven 70 minutes. In­
vert pan until cake is cold. Re­
move. Cut in three cross-wise layers.
Gold Topping.
¥4 cup cold water
1 tablespoon gelatin
4 egg yolks
Mi cup sugar
1 cup orange juice
1 teaspoon grated orange peel
4 egg whites
Mi cup sugar
Orange sections
Soften gelatin in water. Cook egg
yolks, sugar and orange juice in
top of double boiler until thick. Add
gel atin and stir until dissolved. Add
grated peel and cool mixture. Beat
egg whites stiff, adding ¥4 cup sugar
i)nd fold into cooked orange mix-
ure. Spread between layers and on
Lynn Haya:
Hot mulled fruit juices lend
tang to winter evening snacks
You can have hot mulled cider by
heating the cider and adding 1
teaspoon whole cloves and 1
stick of cinnamon (tied in a
bag) while the cider is heating
Here’s another mulled fruit
juice served piping hot: Tie in u
bag, 12 whole cloves, 1 3-lnch
stick of cinnamon, and 1 whole
nutmeg
Empty a large can of
apple juice and a 12-ounce can
of cherry juice in the saucepan
and add spices. Heat, remove
spices and serve. This recipe
takes care of eight people.
Hot spiced lemon tea has lots
of pick-up. Make It by pouring 5
cups boiling water over 6 tea­
spoons of black tea. Steep 5 min­
utes, then strain. Dissolve ¥4 cup
sugar in ¥4 cup boiling water.
Combine 6 tablespoons lemon
juice, 1 teaspoon grated lemon
peel. Mi teaspoon ground cinna­
mon and ft teaspoon ground
cloves, and add to hot tea. Serve
at once, garnished with lemon
slices. Serves 0.
Evening Snack Ideas
•Orange Sponge Cake
Mints
Coffee
•Gingerbread With Whipped
Cream
Hot Spiced Tea
Salted Nuts
•Orange Pumpkin Pie
Name ........
Address ...
Few More Years W ould
Have Toughened Uncle
1 believe the Spirit of '70 will sub­
merge the Spirit of Every Man for
Himself, Every Politician for the
Main Chance and Every American
tor Softer Upholstery
I believe in the American Way
and I now believe it Is the way up­
ward and forward and not just a
circular path around the artificial
rose beds.
1 believe the country is beginning
to understand that sacrifice is not
merely something done with a goat.
• • •
1 believe that patriotism Is some­
thing beginning to show in the deeds
Chocolate-Covered Nuts
of Americans and no longer some­
thing that was the main concern of
•Lemon Cake-Pie
orators during a five-minute inter­
•Mulled Fruit Juice
val at national conventions.
Mixed Hard Candy
1 believe that "The Star-Spangled
Recipe Given.
Banner" is now a song lo stir every
American to the depths, and no long­
top of cuke. Chill in refrigerator. er a number reserved in the main
Decorate with fresh orange ■ec- for special school exercises, army
and navy activities and for musical
tlons just before serving.
Gleaned from an excellent chef, comedy climaxes.
this Lemon Cake-Pie is a good com-
bination of a
I believe that this is a war in
cream pie and
which Americans see the issue more
cake. Because of
clearly than they have seen the is­
the delicate lem­
sue in any war since 1776.
on flavor it will
1 believe that the hopes of Wash­
prove interesting
ington and Jefferson and Abraham
to serve for those
Lincoln must triumph over the hopes
evenings when
of Hitler and Tojo and Mussolini.
friends just drop in for a bit Made
I believe that the Bible must and
just according to directions, it's shall triumph over Mein Kampf;
guaranteed to bring plenty of en- and that the kindly figure of the Man
cores!
of Galilee shall endure to guide the
way of mankind long after the chest­
•Lemon Cake-Pie.
thumping. plaza-strutting, dictato­
1 cup sugar
rial. microphone addicts and bullies
1 tablespoon butter
, have dwindled to the size of long-
2 ! tablespoons flour
' forgotten baccili.
2 ! eggs
1 cup milk
1 lemon
I believe there is more in the Con-
Blend the sugar and butter, add stitution of the United States, the
beaten egg yolks, milk, flour and the Declaration of Independence and
juice and rind of the lemon. Fold the American Bill of Rights worth
in the stiffly beaten egg whites and ' fighting for than in any goal or set
pour into an unbaked pie-crust. Bake of goals ever proclaimed by all the
in a slow (325 degree) oven 35 to 40 war lords of history.
minutes. The top will be like a
sponge cake and underneath there's
1 believe Uncle Sam is all the
a soft, flrm custard.
more inspiring and all the more in­
Pumpkin pie will never wear out destructible through his sudden
its welcome If you serve it this way. awakening to the valor of the Chi­
It has extra zest because of the ad­ nese, the incredible toughness of the
dition of orange juice:
Russians, the fortitude of the Brit­
ish and the fine qualities of all those
•Pumpkin Pie.
nations with which he is now linked
3 . eggs, slightly beaten
in one crusade
1 cup sugar
• • •
1 teaspoon salt
diluted evaporated milk
1 cup orange juice
Mix sugar, spices, salt Add slight­
ly beaten eggs, pumpkin, cream or
milk, and orange juice. Pour into
an unbaked 10-inch pie shell. Bake
at 450 degrees for 10 minutes, and
then in a moderate (350-degree)
oven for about 50 minutes or until
knife comes out clean when inserted
in Alling. Serve with whipped cream
garnished with grated orange peel.
Gingerbread is a favorite for
after-dinner bridge type of entertain­
ing. Gingerbread
made with boil­
ing water gives
the cake a special
kind of feathery
texture which is
certain to charm.
7
Most of the time
you like 4o serve
gingerbread with
whipped cream, but you can vary
this if you add crushed peppermints
to the cream before serving.
•Old-Fashioned Gingerbread.
ft cup boiling water
ft cup shortening
ft cup brown sugar
ft cup molasses
1 beaten egg
1H 1 cups flour
ft I teaspoon salt
% teaspoon baking powder
y« teaspoon soda
% teaspoon ginger
% teaspoon allspice
Mi I teaspoon cinnamon
Pour water over the shortening
and add sugar, molasses and egg.
Add sifted dry ingredients and beat
until smooth.
Bake in a waxed-
paper lined square pan in a mod-
erate (350-degree) oven for 35 min-
utes. Cool before turning out from
pan. For variation, 1 package of
semi-sweet chocolate pieces may be
added with the dry Ingredients if a
chocolate-flecked cake is desired.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
1 believe Americans can "take it
as well as dish it out"
I believe they are going to prove
it in a way that will win a new
respect all over the face of this
earth.
I believe there are reversals, hard
blows and great sufferings for Uncle
Sam ahead.
I believe he will toughen up and
show that he is the Uncle Sam of
Breeds Hill, "the rude bridge that
arched the flood,” Valley Forge.
Ticonderoga. Princeton, Gettysburg.
San Juan Hill, Manila Bay, Belleau
Wood and Soissons.
I believe in America!
JOE LOUIS ANI) THE ARMY
EXAM
Q —Have you done much fighting?
A.—No, but what I’ve done has
been effective.
Q.—Have you done any flying?
A.—Not since the first Schmcling
bout.
Q.—Any experience in tank work?
A —No, that was two other cham­
pions.
Energizing - Vitalizing
ers! A simple, princess jumper
topped with a gay bolero! Thus it
is a frock to wear any season,
any day—and a charming style too
for all little figures. For outdoor
play, in warmer seasons, the bo­
lero may be removed. So simple
Ç- (N. fV. JV.
JV. fV.
(N- (V. fV. (X. fk. gv. (X. (X. (X. (X. (X.
; ASK ME
?
ANOTHER
, A General Quiz
A robber entered an office at
Broadway and Forty-second street
at hiRh noon the other day and stole
$900. He was the only person in
that area working at such an early
hour.
Van (amp’s
PORK and BEANS
Revenge of the Weak
Mind’s Choice
Revenge is always the weak
God offers to every mind its
pleasure of a little and narrow choice between truth and repose.
mind.—Juvenal.
—Emerson.
The Questions
1. Are humming birds found in
the Old world?
2. Who ruled England longer—
Queen Victoria or George III?
3. What do the letters R.I.P.,
which are often found on tomb­
stones, mean?
4. Where does troy weight get
its name?
5. Gerrymandering is associated
with what—fishing, carnivals or
politics?
6. What is a student of cryptog­
raphy concerned with?
7. What is the only active vol­
cano in the United States?
8. Who gave the state of Florida
its name?
The Antwera
BYRON HOT SPRINGS
CALIFORNIA
HEALTH • REST • RECREATION • PLEASURE
B’ orldfamotu Minerai lUatert •
Miserai, Ho* Sett eed Het Mud B s H m
1. No. There are 500 species
known to science, and all are resi­
dents of the Western hemisphere.
2. Queen Victoria, 63 years.
STEAM HEATED—FIREPROOF HOTEL OR COTTAGES
George III ruled 59 years.
Byron Hot Springs Waters are medically recommended in treatment of
3. Requiescat in pace (rest in
Rheumatism, Arthritis, Neuritis, Kidney trouble and Liver, Stomach and
Nervous Disorders. The Hotel and surroundings offer facilities for
peace).
Quiet, Meditation, Rest and Comfort. Excellent Cuisine.
often found on tombstones, mean?
OPEN ALL THE YEAR— Under Entirely Nen> Management
5. Politics (To divide a state,
county, etc., into election districts
E 99 I ttfG9tU9ti 009 "•
Dr. L DOUGLAS GOTTSCHALU Dyre« Not Sprint». Byrwa. CaHMa
in an unfair way to give a political
party an advantage over its op­
ponent).
6. Secret codes and ciphers.
Reward of Search
Salty Wit
7. Mt. Lassen.
The dog that trots about finds a
Wit is the salt of conversation,
8. Ponce de Leon.
bone.—Barrow.
not the food.—Hazlitt.
J
ANO
what ' s so
IMPORTANT
TO ME IS
CAMEL'S
\
J
/
EXTRA MIUW é SS
-LESS NICOTINE
IN THE
SMOKE
There is a difference of opinion
in the dress industry over the re­
ported plan to shorten skirts by way
of saving fabrics Maurice Rcntner
of the Fashion Originators guild
says they can't be made shorter
without becoming police court mat­
ters.
But we think he is wrong.
Skirts got so short around the time
of the last wur now and then a
husband got mixed up and put one
on as a wristlet.
• • •
The splendid work of the Dutch in
the war brings back to mind an old
song Dr. Fred Beck used to sing at
the Grays' outings back home:
"Those Dutch, they say. they ain't
got no style—
They got style all the while, all the
while!**
COUKHRS
The oldest inhabitant had cele­
brated his hundredth birthday and
the reporter of a local paper
called on him for an interview.
“To what do you attribute your
longevity?” the reporter inquired.
The centenarian paused a mo­
ment and then, holding up his
hand and ticking off the items
on his fingers, began: "I never
drank alcoholic liquors, or over­
ate, and I always rise at six in
the morning.”
"But,” protested the reporter, “I
had an uncle who acted in that
By Results
way, yet he only lived to be eighty.
We judge others according to
How do you account for that?”
results; how else?—not knowing
"He didn’t keep it up long the process by which results are
enough,” was the calm reply.
arrived at.—George Eliot.
Hot Mulled Cid. r
ft 1 teaspoon cinnamon
ft 1 teaspoon nutmeg
ft 1 teaspoon ginger
ft 1 teaspoon cloves
I cups cooked canned pumpkin
1 cup cream, rich milk or un­
reoesr mommo us volume
■
I.
CONTAINS
2¿TÍ es T nico ’ tine
.4-
....
«« “r-- —•-
f* A MET I “THE CIGARETTE OF
VnlTItL. COSTLIER TOBACCOS