* * * * * * * * * * * * * * ílí HOUSíHOLO M í M OS - *>« vu C ake Bazaars, Cookie Sales Boost Funds Spice cake la hard to reslat when It has a fluffy seven minute or marshmallow Icing and Is sprin­ kled lightly with coconut. Church groups and women's clubs know that one of the best ways of raising funds for th e ir a c t iv it ie s and philanthropic purposes Is by having cake ba­ zaars or bakery sales. Few can resist th e a p p e a l of home-made cakes and coo kies at such sales, and It Is truly an Ideal way of meeting the year’s budget. It Is here where the good ladies bring their best wares, nnd finance committees really have their day. For displaying the goodies, a well set table is necessary. It ’s a good idea to have a good looking table cloth and flowers. The cakes and cookies will do the rest. You will find today’s recipes Just as delicious as they sound, and not too expensive to make. I ’m giving different types of recipes In cose you want to clip the sheet and pass the recipes among the members of your particular group. •Lady Baltimore Cake ‘i cup shortening 114 cups granulated sugar 2 cupa cake flour, sifted 214 teaspoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt . 1 teaspoon almond extract F4 cup milk S egg white* Cream shortening and sugar until light. Add sifted dry ingredients and milk alternately. Last fold in stiffly beaten egg whites and flavor­ ing. Bake in three eight-inch lay­ ers in a moderate (375-degree, oven for 25 minutes. Frosting 1H cups sugar H cup boiling water H cup hot maraschino cherry Juice H teaspoon light corn syrup 1 tablespoon lemon Juice 2 egg white* beaten stiff cup chopped blanched almonds, toasted 14 teaspoon grated orange rind 15-2« maraschino cherries, cut In eighth* Combine sugar, water, fruit Juices and syrup and bring to a boil quick­ ly, stirring only until sugar is dis­ solved. Boil rap­ idly without Stir­ ling until syrup spins a th re a d w hen d ro p p ed from spoon and forms soft ball in cold water (238 degrees). Pour s y r u p in t o a stream over egg whites, beating constantly. Continue beating until of a consistency to spread. Fold in remaining ingredients and spread in between and top of layers of Lady Baltimore Cake. •Red Devil’s Food 2 cup* pastry flour >4 cup cocoa % cup shortening 114 cups sugar What Makes It So? If cake batter runs out of the pan when baking, it may be due to too small a pan, too slow an oven, too much sugar or shortening, or too much leavening. If the cake has a moist sticky crust, it is due to too much sugar in the recipe. If the crust is thick and heavy, the recipe may have too much flour, too long baking, too hot an oven, or not enough sugar or shortening. If a cake humps or cracks on top it may be because it has too much flour or was baked In too hot an oven. Coarse texture is due to too much leavening, not enough liquid, Insufficient creaming of shortening and sugar or too slow an oven. High-Styled Wool-Knit Apparel SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Is Capturing Everyone’s Fancy Suit for the Matronly Woman Crisp, Practical House Dress By CHERIE NICHOLAS Cake Bazaar •Lady Baltimore Cake •Spice Cuke ‘ Red Devil's Food Ice Box Cookies •Popcorn Nuggets •Recipe* Given 2 eggs 1 teaspoon soda 14 eup buttermilk 1 teaspoon vanilla 14 eup boiling water Sift flour once, measure and re­ sift twice with cocoa. Cream short­ ening and sugar thoroughly. Add well beaten egg* und beat until light nnd fluffy. Add soda to buttermilk. Add dry Ingredient* alternately with buttermilk to creamed mixture, beating hard after each addition. Add vanilla, pour in boiling water and beat until smooth. Bake in two eight-inch greased tin* in a moderute (350-degree) oven for 30-35 minutes. Spread between layers and top with Seven Minute Icing. Of all the cake* that have been developed, the one which is always ready to go over with a bang is this Graham Cracker Cake with a deli­ cate orange topping: Graham Cracker Cake 14 cup butter or shortening 1 cup sugar 3 eggs li cup milk 14 cup coconut or chopped nuhneats 28 graham crackers, rolled fine 2 teaspoons baking powder Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add egg yolks which have been beaten until light and lemon colored. Add milk and rolled, sifted cracker* alternately, then fold in stiffly beaten egg whites and bak­ ing powder. Bake in two greased eight-inch pans in a moderate (350- degree) oven for 30 minutes. Orange Icing can be made in a flash for It’s uncooked. Cream two tablespoons of butter with 1% cups powdered sugar. Add the grated rind of one orange and enough or­ ange juice to make a spreading consistency. Place In between the layers and ice top and sides. Platters of assorted cookies are Just the thing tor your cake and cookie bazaar. You can expect lot* of requests for recipes at such events. For that melt-in-your-mouth qual­ ity, there’s a spice cake that will fill the bill and then some. But this is not an ordinary spice cake, by any means. In addition to fine spices, it has the subtle flavor of bananas: •Spice Cake 14 cup butter or substitute 2 cups brown sugar 4 eggs 3 bananas, mashed fine 1 cup m ilk 2 teaspoons cinnamon 1 teaspoon each, cloves, nutmeg and allspice 214 cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder Cream together sugar and butter, add beaten egg yolks and mashed bananas. Add al­ ternately the sift­ ed dry Ingredi­ ents and m ilk . F o ld in e g g whites. Bake in a large square pan which has been well greased, in a moderate (350-degree) oven 35 min­ utes. Ice with marshmallow icing. Popcorn nuggets are an interest­ ing addition to your money raising bazaar. They will go over with the ladies who don't like to be caught munching a big mouthful of pop­ corn: •Pop Corn Nuggets 2 cups sugar 14 cup water 14 teaspoon cream of tartar 2 tablespoons molasses 1 tablespoon butter Few grains of salt 5 quarts popcorn Place sugar, water and cream of tartar in a saucepan and bring to the boiling point and boil without stirring to 280 degrees or until syrup will crack when tried in cold water. Add molasses, butter and salt, and boil, stirring constantly until candy becomes brittle, being careful no* to let it burn. Have ready a pan of freshly popped , corn; pour candy over it, mixing thoroughly. Spread lightly on a buttered slab or platter and, when firm, cut into pieces or break up into little bunches of three to six kernels. D o you have recipes or entertaining suggestions which you’d like to pass on to other readers? Send them to M ist Lynn Chambers, Western Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplaines Street, Chicago 6, Illinois. Released by Western Newspaper Union. flowered percales or seersucker and trim it with three rows of bright ric-rac on the notched col­ lar and pocket top. POn greatest achievement In F superb styling, in versatile inter­ pretation, in chic and in charm, the fashion world should confer honors of high degree on the producers of knitted apparel. It ’s really amazing the way the knitted arts (both hand and loom) are entering into every phase of fashion from sports togs to formal evening clothes. Never losing a “trick" in way of following up every possible fashion trend, creators of knitted apparel are interpreting the mode in all such newsy items as the knitted wes- kita which are "last word” fashion this fall, also the very new and smart lumber-jacket styles, likewise classic suits that are so superbly styled one wonders that such things can be actually achieved in knitted wear. Here they are, however, right before our very eyes, so breathtak­ ing and so versatile that enthusiasm for wool-knits and things hand- knitted has mounted to a new high this season. The weskit theme is taking the fashion world by storm. Shown to the left in the picture is a weskit done in a lacy knit fabric of wool and rayon. This English weskit is chic to the ’nth degree, and because these weskits are so practical and smart looking they are going over big with college and career girls. Gray is the chosen color for this swank weskit, for gray is the fea­ tured neutral for suits and sports fashions this year. Worn with fuchsia-colored gabardine slacks as is the model pictured, is one way of doing it, but worn with a tailored suit the effect is equally smart. Centered in the illustration is a new lumber-jacket costume, a type of dress about which so much is be­ ing said and done this season. This two-piece is hand-loomed of 100 per cent wool yarn, which gives it an ex­ clusiveness all its own. The lumberjack top is in the fashionable gold color worked with a green monogram, for to give a smart ac­ Tailored Knit Suit Barbara Bell Pattern No 1205 is de­ signed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size 16, short sleeves, requires 3% yards of 39-inch material; 2‘,i yards ric- rac trim . Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, slightly more time is required in filling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: cent designers are monogramming most everything they can nowadays. The straight slim skirt is in a hand­ some dark brown. The knitted hat is in matching gold. The navy one-piece dress (also very smart in black or a lush fall color) as shown to the right is one of those love-at-first-sight fashions that will create an urge to become the owner of one “just like it.’’ Here is a glowing example of how fasci­ nating the new wool-and-rayon lacy knit fabrics are. A knit fabric dress as here styled makes a wonderful basic type for colorful accessories, such as the hand-crocheted wool snood and bag done in vivid Mexi­ can colors, which milady in the pic­ ture wears with it. Small wonder is it that college and career girls are going all out for knitted things. Scarcely a phase of fashion but what is being interpreted in knitted or fabric-knit ways. A per­ fect charmer in way of an around- the-clock dress is the slender one- piece done in black jersey with sleeves in gaily colorful striped jer­ sey. Perhaps the most outstanding tri? umph in this season's wool-knits is the suits that are so superbly styled, as are also the newest hand-knit suits. If there is one knitted fashion that will capture your fashion more than another it is a suit of the patrician type as shown in the pres­ ent fall collections. As produced these days a knitted suit refuses to wrinkle or lose its shape though you wear it day in and day out. Then you’ll be wanting knitted coordinates that team a pullover, cardigan and a weskit that will carry you through fall and winter in a blaze of color. And believe it or not, you won't be able’ to resist a plaid-knit weskit. They’re stunning! Released by Western Newspaper Union. Furs and Feathers Lend Swank to Mode Jumper Jacket Suit COR the older or more matroniy " woman who wants a neat jump­ er jacket suit which will be slimly flattering, comfortable to wear and can be made up in almost any sort of material. * * SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 149 New Montgomery St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No.........................Size.............. Name .. Address • Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1224 Is de­ signed tor sizes 34. 36. 38. 40. 42 . 44 , 46 and 48. Size 36, jumper, requires 314 yards of 38-lnch material; short-sleeved jacket, l ’ s yards. For this pattern, send 25 cents. In coins, your name, address, pattern num­ ber and size wanted. Ever a Favorite 'T 'H E sort of house dress which A is a perennial favorite—it’s so crisp looking, so easy to get into, so easy to launder! Make it of gay Starts INSTANTLY to relieve MUSCULAR ACHES-PAINS Soreness and Stiffness For blessed prompt relief — rub on powerfully soothing M usterole. It actually helps break up painful local congestion. So much easier to apply than a mustard plaster. “No fuss. No muss with Musterole!’’ Just rub it on. In 3 Strengths Some homemakers serve raw turnips in strips to be eaten with salt, like celery. A medium-sized gold fish bowl is excellent for use in whipping cream. Does away with splatter­ ing. —•— If the sound sleeper has diflfl- ' culty in hearing the alarm clock sound the awakening hour, place , the clock upon a china plate. — •— If ting and him him I MUSTEROLE Since 30 years ago. its- P A Z O i PILES Relieves pain and soreness For re lie f from Ike torture o f simple Piles. PA ZO ointment has been famous for more Ikon thirty years. H ere’s why: Plrst. P A ZO ointment soothes Inflamed areas, relieves pain and itehin*. Second. P A ZO ointment lubricates hardened, dried parts— helps prevent crack in f and soreness T h ird . PA ZO ointment leads to reduce swellln* and cheek bleedin*. Fourth, it’s easy to use. P A ZO oint­ ment’s perforated P ile Pipe makes ap­ plication simple, thorough. Your doctor can tell you about P A ZO ointment. G et PAZO N o w ' At Your D ru g g is ts ' you have difficulty in get­ sonny boy to wash his neck behind the ears, try giving an old shaving brush and let apply the soap. Gas on Stomach To reheat bread, place in a pa­ per sack, fasten tightly and "arm for five minutes in a moderate oven. „ ____«a stomach acid causes painful, suffocat- ng gas, sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually prescribe th e fastest-acting medicines know n fo r symptomatic re lie f — medicines like those in Be 11-ano Tablets. N o laxative. Bell-ana brings com fort i n a j if f y o r double le your money back on retu rn o f bottle . 26c a t ell druggists. — •— Elegance in every detail is the keynote of fall and winter fashions. You sense this in new luxury furs, in revival of the handsome qual­ ity-kind costume suit with its lavish- ment of fur. The return of rich os­ trich-trimmed hats is a sure sign of a new elegance. This year of gra­ cious fashion sees also the black jacket frock enriched with jet em­ bellishment on the jacket. Then too, even the* simple little afternoon wools and jersey gowns indulge in dash of glitter or nailhead trim, or an intriguing bit of embroidery. As to the formal evening and dinner blouse, it is a thing of beauty with glitter accent and rich fabric and lavishment of embroidery. Evening wraps also give evidence of a trend to a new elegance. The story of their intriguing glitter trims and fur em­ bellishments will unfold when the social season gets into full swing this winter. I f P eter P ain plugs y o u WITH RACKING H eadache .. R e m o v a l C o n tras t Sleeves Smart style calls for contrasting sleeves. The girl who can sew is re­ This promises to be a season of moving the sleeves of her last sea­ season* for woolknit apparel. The son's black frock, facing the arm­ handsome suit here pictured is an holes neatly so that the shouldertop outstanding “ reason why” enthusi­ extends out over. The idea is to asm is running highest ever over make several pairs of sleeves that the new knitted fashions. This can be snapped or basted in so as superbly styled tailored suit is just to be easily removable. Bright the sort that women of discriminat­ striped Jersey sleeves contrast a ing taste are regarding as the cos­ black gown stunningly. You can also tume-ideal to wear about town and tune your black frock to dine-and- during the round of activities a day dance occasion by sleeving it with brings forth. Chenille monotone knit colorful sheer that extends from fabric of wool and rayon blend, in shoulder to wrist. Embroider this flight gray, makes this patrician two- with sequins or metal threadwork in­ piece suit. Silver buttons accent the terspersed with bright-color stones jacket. or paillettes. d x 4 - f l/jv N G a Y - thf o r ig in a l a n a l g e s iq u e baume T )a ffJ I R H E U M A T IS M | » T H E R E 'S ALSO ¿ M U S C L E P A IN M IL D BEN GAYV. DUE TO L and c o ld s I for c h il d r e n