Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, November 13, 1947, Image 9

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    Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, November 13, 1947
SEW IN G CIRCLE PATTERNS
Woman's World
Idetty LJohecl (joum for lAJinfer
Protective Covers for Bedding
Save Cleaning Time and Wear popular rjCumber ffacL Outfit
1
£rlla ,J4a(e9
B ak ed Stuffed T o m a to es S ave M eat
(See Recipe below)
M eat S a v e r s
Every now and then when we are
called upon to save meat. It helps
to have dishes with meat-like tex-
appetites are sat­
isfied. Fortunate­
ly there are cer­
tain
c o m b in a ­
tions of vegeta­
bles which, when
served with some
cheese, are excel­
lent just for such
a purpose.
Tomatoes with a bit of bacon are
satisfying for hearty appetites; so
are squash and lima beans, with a
bit of sausage. Au gratin combina­
tions are interesting, too, from the
point of view of satisfying appetites
as well as the budget.
Use the recipes given today when
you want to save on meat; these
dishes are not meant to be used us
a vegetable side-dish for the aver­
age family as they are Just a bit too
much on the heurty side for such a
purpose.
4
•Baked Stuffed Tomatoes.
(Serves 5)
& tomatoes
S slices of bacon
2 curs bread crumbs
2 tabi.-spoons chopped onion
'4 teaspoon salt
•s teaspoon pepper
H cup grated cheese
Sprigs of parsley
Cut tops off tomutoes und remove
pulp. Cook bacon until crisp Break
into small pieces Make a stuffing
by mixing tomato pulp, bacon, bread
crumbs, onion, suit and pepper. Fill
cavities of tomatoes with the stuff­
ing. Sprinkle tops with grated
cheese. Place tomatoes in a heat-
resistnnt gloss dish Bake in a mod­
erately hot <400 degree) oven for
30 minutes. Serve garnished with
parsley.
Squash, Sausage and Lima Bean
Platter.
(Serves 4)
2!4 cups cooked, mashed squash
1>4 cups cooked lima beans
1 tablespoon butter
ft sausages
Arrange squash in four nests on
a heat resistant glass utility plat­
ter. Place lima beans in center of
each squash nest. Dot lima beans
with butter. Place sausages uround
squash nests. Bake in a moderate
oven <350 degrees) for 30 minutes
or until sausages are done.
Sausage Stuffed Eggplant.
(Serves 4)
1 medium eggplant
*« pound pork sausage
>i cup chopped onion
1 clove garlic, minced
1 green pepper, chopped
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
2 cups cooked brown rice
>4 teaspoon poultry seasoning
Salt and pepper
*4 cup grated cheese
LYN N CHAMBERS’ M EN U
Celery and Potato Soup
•Baked Stuffed Tomatoes
Hot Biscuits
•Baked String Beans with
Mushrooms
Molded Pear Salad
Relishes
Chocolate Cake
Beverage
•Recipes given.
T 'H E R E was a time when you
* thought that only the finicky
housekeepers made protective cov­
erings for their bedding, but that’s
not so any more. Any woman who
Is interested in saving on the clean­
ing as well as the budget, as far as
new bedding Is concerned, will
either buy or make the coverings for
bed blankets, mattresses and pil­
low*.
Why aren't sheets and pillow
cases enough? Because, not only
doe* a certain amount of soiling go
through this type of bedding, but
there is a steady accumulation of
dust which eventually will mean
that you have to try to clean the
bedding Itself — a difficult feat In­
deed.
There’s no doubt about the wear
and tear on the bedding, too, when
you don’t protect It, as it gets steady
use. There's apt to be more pulling
on pillow cases, for example, as you
change and use them, if they don’t
have covers, and the same Is true
of mattresses.
If you're interested in real clean
lines*, of course. It's much easier
to get it by frequent launderings of
the mattress cover, pillow covers,
mattress covers and blanket shields.
Protective measures such as I ’ve
just mentioned are absolute essen­
tials in dusty and sooty communi-
1 pound m u n h ro o m s
2 tablespoon* buffer
2 tablespoon* flour
2 cup* milk
14 cup buttered bread crumbs
Cook green beans in boiling salt­
ed water until tender. Drain well.
Peel, slice and saute mushrooms
in butter. Dredge mushrooms in
flour and add the milk. Cook until
thickened. Combine with beans and
pour into a buttered baking dish.
Over the top sprinkle the bread
crumbs. Bake just long enough to
heat through and brown the crumbs.
Onions with Potatoes.
ft berm uda onion*
3 cups diced cooked potatoes
Salt and pepper
f* cup milk
2 tablespoon* butter
14 cup cheese, grated
Paprika
Peel the onions and cut a slice
from the top of each. Parboil in
boiling salted wa­
ter for 15 min­
utes. Drain and
scoop out. leav­
ing just a shell.
Season potatoes
with salt and pep­
per. Place in an
iron skillet over
a low flame, cov­
er with milk and dot with butter.
When all the milk is absorbed, fill
the onion shells with the potato mix-
ture and cover with grated cheese.
Dust with paprika and run under
the broiler flame to melt the cheese
and heat thoroughly.
Corn and Bean Pudding.
(Serve« 6)
14 cup butter
2 eggs, separated
2 tablespoons flour
14 teaspoon sugar
14 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon white pepper
Paprika
1 cup soup stock
1 cup cream
1 quart cooked and shredded green
beans
2 cups corn
1 chopped green pepper
1 chopped pimiento
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
Sttme you r m u l i n a t i , . .
lies And for the woman with active
children who like to engage in pil­
low fights occasionally, they're a
must!
Blanket Covers. Cuffs
May be Decorative
During the last few years there
has been more of a tendency to
bring out the light-colored blankets
Naturally, these soil more readily
than the old dark-colored ones, but
they can be protected fairly well
by what are known as blanket cov­
ers.
Blanket covers are made as sheets
and used on the bed while it is in a
state of undress — early in the
morning, and when in use. Choose
a fabric that does not slip off during
the night — washable silk, cotton,
challis, rayon, crepe, sheer or mus­
lin.
Blanket covers do not take the
place of a daytime spread, although
some are lace trimmed or elab­
orately monogrammed, but they are
nice when the room is used in-
34-48
W arm and Comfortable
C O R cold w inter nights — this
1 pretty yoked nightdress will be
cozy and w arm m ade up in a flow­
er sprinkled flannelette. If you
like, it can have short sleeves and
be tied with a narrow belt.
•
•
•
at least save your blankets by mak­
ing cuffs for them. The cuff is in­
tended for protecting the binding,
Let W inter Come
which, as you know, usually wears A COMFORTABLE, well tai-
out before the blanket. These cuffs I* * lored lum ber jack et outfit
are made 12 to 24 inches wide; they that’s destined for a busy w inter.
are attached to the blanket, but
Armholes are deep, cuffs snug,
are easy to remove for frequent
laundering
You may want to use the cuffs if Roger Bacon Jailed for
the blanket binding is worn. Re­
Prophesying in His Day
move the binding at the bottom and
finish with a blanket stitch. For the
the top, use a cuff which matches
Poor Roger Bacon! The citizens
the color of the blanket and stitch of his tim e didn’t recognize him
on with the same yam as was as the father of scientific research
used at the bottom.
so he served term after term in
If you want to get fancy, make jail.
your cuffs of curtain material, and
And all because he preaehed of
have it match those which you used m iracles like airplanes, automo­
on the bedroom windows.
biles, steam ships, and “ the ever­
la stin g lam p ,’’ known now as elec­
skirt smooth and free. Choose a
soft grey woolen in solid tone oi
striped.
•
•
•
Pattern No 8109 comes in sizes 12, 14. 18
18. 20; 40 and 42. Size 14. 2?* yards of 54
inch.
Send an additional twenty-flve cents foi
your copy of the F a ll and W inter FASHIO N
—our complete pattern magazine. Free
g ift pattern printed inside the book.
Send your order to:
SE W IN G C IR C L E P A T T E R N D E P T .
828 Mission St., San Francisco, Calif.
Enclose 25 cent* In coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern Nn
Name_________________________
Address-
How To Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomulslon relieves promptly be­
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender. In­
flamed branchial m u c o u s m e m ­
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un­
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you a n
to have your money back.
Select Mattress Pads
tric lights. Som etim es the life of a
For Smooth Fit
genius is not pleasant, you can
You may make your own mattress see.
pads out of bleached or unbleached
muslin with a soft material inside
for the padding. The important
m o ther , m o th e r ,
BAKE THE CLABBER GIRL
thing about them is the sleeping
WHAT’S YOUR SECRET,
comfort they yield, as well as the
WAY. MV DEAR, WITH
soiling they keep off the mattress
WHAT MAKES ALL ?
CLABBER GIRL
itself.
YO UR CAKES SO
I
A
b a k in g p o w d e r .
Mattress pads should fit very
F IN E , TELL M E ,
smoothly over the bed, and should
W O N T y o u , HOW |
be quilted flat and even so they do
y o u DO IT., s o I. .
not roll up under the mattress. As
CAN BE PROUD 1
to size, they should cover the whole
bed and meet with the end of the
OF M IN E .
mattress. Most of those you buy
are about two inches smaller all
the way around. This works out all
right, provided the pad does not
A»k M o th e r, She k n o w * . . .
shrink too much in the washing.
Clabber Girl is the baking powder
Incidentally, discarded pads are
with the befancod double action . . .
nice to use for making a good foun­
Right, in the mixing bowl; Light, from
dation for the headboard of a bed.
the oven.
for valances or for foundations for
slip-covered wooden chairs which
have no upholstery
Old blankets are good to use for
the inside of a pad if you plan to
make them yourself. Cotton blank­
ets— three or four used in a layer
—make an excellent inside of a
pad when combined with a good
quality, durable muslin.
An easy way to do the quilting
is with an attachment for the sew­
ing machine
CREOMULSION
CLABBER GIRL
I
;
'
’
J
1
witb quilted pads.
formally, especially when you want
to use the bed for laying things on.
They are an excellent blanket pro­
tector.
If you do not want to go to the
expense of having blanket covers.
Be Smart!
Cut eggplant in half lengthwise.
Cook in boiling salted water for 10
minutes, or until
it is almost ten­
der. Cook sausage
meat slowly in
large skillet until
Melt butter; add yolks, then flour,
lightly browned,
sugar, salt, pepper and paprika. Add
stirring occasion­
soup stock and cream. Fold in egg
ally Add onion, £
whites and vegetables. Pour into a
per and parsley,
greased baking dish and bake in
vegetables are almost tender. Pour a moderate oven (350 degrees) for
off some sausage fat, leaving about 30 minutes.
■4 cup in pan. Add rice. Scoop egg-
Released by WNU Feature*.
LYN N 8AYS:
Patent leather is best cleaned with
a clean, lint-free cloth dipped in
Save Time Keeping Clean
vinegar.
With These Tips
To keep seldom-used kettles from
Warm soapsuds and water are the
best treatment for cleaning leather , acquiring a musty odor, store with­
out covers.
furniture.
An easy way to scour pots and
When you place a clean cover on
your ironing board, have it wet and pans is to use a cork dipped in
pull it tightly Tack It on and It will scouring powder.
dry wrinkle-free.
Iodine stains from a rug are best
When your china dishes become removed by sponging with denatured
rlightly discolored, use a little whit­ alcohol, followed by a wash with
ing to clean them. Rinse weU in mild soapsuds made in lukewarm
lukewarm water.
water.
Date bait or campus casual. It’s
all the same to the school-girl’*
favorite costume — cotton velvet­
een skirt plus a smartly tailored
blou*e. Hope
Skillman’s “ hot
house” cotton — satin striped
chambray — goes into the blouse
with fine tucking treatment. Pad­
ded hips give the coed the rounded
silhouette.
P a tte rn No. 8086 is for sizes 34. 36 . 38 . 40.
42, 44. 46 and 48. Size 36, long sleeves. S',«
yards of 35 or 39-inch; 1 yard purchased
ruffling.
plant pulp out o f p a r tly cooked
halves, leaving a half-inch shell.
Chop pulp and add to sausage m ix­
ture; add poultry seasoning and
salt arid pepper to taste. F ill egg­
plant shells with the mixture.
Sprinkle with cheese. Bake in a
moderate oven (350 degrees) until J
well browned.
•Baked String Bean* with Mush­
room*.
(Serve* 6)
I pound string beans, silvered
Campus Casual
Practical and prettier than ever
—that annual fall blossoming o(
fur-lined Jacket* and coats! Often
they’ll be accompanied by their
own headgear—part of their very
warp and
woof.
Other
new
touches: Three-quarter lengths,
much use of high colors, white
lamb a favorite fur, and the ap­
pearance of wide wale corduroy
with fur trims.
I f P eter . P a in hits you with
Mattress Covers, Pillow Cases
Of Muslin or Plastic
Pillow cases and mattresses are
difficult to clean, and for that reas­
on it’s important to take care of
both with removable covers. Then
these can be laundered several
times a year, or once a month if
your locality is a particularly sooty
one.
F it and durability are the prime
requisites for pillow covers and
mattresses. Use material which is
strong enough to withstand pulling
on and off the mattress or the pil­
low. A good grade of muslin is a
wise choice, some of the un­
bleached types being particularly
wear-resisting. Or, you may use
some strong sheets as these will
enable you to solve the problem of
fitting easily.
Sheeting also may be used for
covering the pillows, but it should
be durable as that used for the
mattress.
In cases where there is a definite
allergy to feathers or other mate­
rials used in the bedding, plastic is
a good choice. The plastic material
should be of the heavier grade as
it is important to have durability.
Whether you buy them or make
them, be sure that they fit well, as
they give better wear as well as
comfort
Zippers make the best closings for
both the pillows and mattresses, but
if they prove too expensive, try a
snap-on type of closing or even ties
placed at regular intervals.
• Rub in Ben-Gay for fast-acting, gently soothing
relief from neuralgic pain. Ben-Gay contains up to
2 Vi times more methyl salicylate and menthol—two
famous pain-relieving agents your doctor knows
about—than five other widely offered rub-ins. Insist
on genuine Ben-Gay, the original Baume Analgé­
sique. It acts fast!
Also fo r Fain due to RHEUMATISM, MUSCLE ACHE, and COLDS.
Ask for Mild Ben-Gay tor Children.