La Grange Journal (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fayette County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.
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Thursday, March 14,1946
I.A GRANGE JOURNAL
Serve a Salad . . . Save the Vitamins
(See Recipes Below)
Spring Salads
One of the best ways Of fulfilling
the vitamin and mineral require-
ment in the diet is to have a heap-
ing bowl of fresh salad at luncheon
or dinner. If tasty combinations of
fruit and vegetable are used, the
family will enjoy nibbling these
precious morsels of health.
Salad greens should be washed
thoroughly and examined carefully
to insure the re-
moval of all for-
eign substances.
Then they are
placed in a towel
or a vegetable
hydrator and
chilled before be-
lng folded to-
gether. The bowl in which the in-
gredients are mixed and the plates
on which the salad is served should
also be chilled.
When salad materials are cut in
pieces, they should be uniform and
well-defined enough so that they will
not lose their shape in the folding
process.
A marinade is often used to add
flavor to salad materials. This is
made by mixing oil, salt, lemon
juice or vinegar. Vegetables, fish or
meat may stand an hour or so in
the marinade before using. When
several vegetables are usedr each
one should be marinated separately.
I have chosen several crisp
spring salads which I know you will
enjoy using. They will be particu-
larly welcome with fish dinners or
meals made up of casseroles or
other hearty foods.
Jellied Vegetable Salad.
(Serves 4 to 6)
1 envelope (1 tablespoon) an-
flav<ped gelatin
6 tablespoons cold water
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
1 tablespoon lemon juice
% teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 cup boiling water
1 cnp diced, cooked carrots
Vi cup diced celery
1 cup shredded cabbage
Soften gelatin in cold water. Mix
the vinegar, lemon juice, .salt,
sugar and boil-
ing water to-
gether. Bring to
the boiling point,
and add softened
gelatin. Stir until
gelatin dis-
solves. Chill until
syrupy. Fold in
vegetables. Chill
until firm. Serve with mustard salad
dressing.
Garden Salad.
(Serves 6)
Lettuce
Romaine
Mustard greens
Tiny onions
Sliced radishes
Fluted carrot strips
Green pepper rings
Sliced tomatoes
Sliced cucumbers
LYNN 8AYS
Meat Cooking Hints: Grinding
less tender cuts of meat breaks
down tough connective tissue'and
makes them tender. Use ground
meat for patties, meat loaves and
meat pies.
- Canned meats and ready-to-eat
meats may be heated or served
with vegetables and a starchy
food. There is little waste in
them, making them economical.
In buying ham, it is best to buy
a whole ham rather than slices.
Center slices bought separately
are usually twice the price of
ham bought whole.
Steak continues to cook after
it is removed from the broiler.
Serve it at once, if you want it
medium or rare.
Stuff corned beef hash into
green pepper halves, top with
grated cheese for a quick supper
idea.
LYNN CHAMBERS' MENUS
Cheese Souffle
Carrots and Green Beans
Bran Muffins Apple Butter
Cabbage, Apple and Raisin Slaw
Fruit Fritters Lemon Sauce
Beverage
Arrange crisp greens in .salad
bowl. Add onions, radishes, carrot
strips and green pepper rings. Make
a border of alternating slices of to-
mato and cucumber. Just before
serving, toss with french dressing.
Cut paper-thin lengthwise slices of
carrot. Flute like ribbon candy. Se-
cure with toothpicks. Drop into ice
water. Remove toothpicks when
thoroughly chilled and crisp.
Vitamin Salad.
(Serves 6)
5 cups shredded raw spinach
1 cucumber t
3 tomatoes
12 radishes
Mustard salad dressing
Wash spinach thoroughly; break;
lepves into small pieces; measure
five cups. Peel
cucumber; score
lengthwise with
tines of fork;
slice. Peel and
slice tomatoes.
Slice radishes.
Combine; serve
with mustard
salad dressing.
Some fruits and vegetables such
as the calavo may be served just
sliced in half, without peeling, and
removing the seed with the sharp
point of a knife, and sprinkling with
lemon juice and salt.
If you are looking for molded fruit
salad, you will like the following:
Lime Fruit Salad.
(Serves 12)
1 package lime gelatin
1 cup boiling water
1 cup cold water
4 slices cadned pineapple
Yt cup canned white cherries
Y* cup red seeded grapes, cut
into fancy shapes
4 pears, halved.
Dissolve gelatin in boiling water
and add cold water. Set aside to
cool slightly. Add fruit and pour i to
mold. Chill until firm.
Garnish:
Head lettuce and endive
Pimiento cream cheese
1 No. ZYi can jrears
Cream cheese
Raisins .
Nuts
Preserved ginger
Sliced pineapple
Mix cream vheese with chopped
nuts, raisins and ginger, and stuff
pears. Use as garnish around lime
mold. Top with pimiento cream
cheese flower. Place slices of pine-
apple topped with pimiento cream
cheese between pears. Garnish with
endive. Serve with mayonnaise.
Frosen Pistachio Cheese Salad.
(Serves 8)
3 3-ounce packages eream cheee> j
1H ounces blue cheese
Green food coloring
Vi cup chopped pistachio nats
VI teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon lemon Jniee
V* cup light or heavy cream
Lettuce
Radish roses
Cucumber slices
French dressing I
Mix the cream cheese and UiR
blue cheese with a fork until soft.
Tint a delicate green with food col-
oring. Add the chopped nuts, eaU
and lemon juice. Add the cream.
Turn into a freezing tray of an auto-
matic refrigerator with tempera-
ture control at coldest setting and
spread smooth with a spatula to a
thickness of about % inch. Freeze
until firm. Cut into small squares
and serve on crisp lettuce in the
center of individual salad plates
with radish roses and cucumber
slices around it. Serve with french
dressing.
Rrlr>w4 b» Statorn Ntara^apai Uf&kao
Ratoutd by Waatarn Mnawn Union.
By VIRGINIA VALE
PAUL MUNI (starring in
I Charles R. Rogers* “Angel
on My Shoulder”) tells this
one. When he first reached
Hollywood, under contract to
a. film company, he was al-
ready famous as a Broadway
star. But for six months he
did nothing but collect his pay
check. Finally he protested to
his new boss, who told him not to
worry, just to amuse himself—go to
Honolulu if he wanted to, leaving
word where his check was to be
sent. Finally “Scarface" came
along, bringing him fame as a
movie star overnight. It made so
much money for the company that
those months when Muni didn’t
work meant nothing.
—*■—
Because it is said to be the most
infectious and contagious one in
Hollywood, social service students
at Loyola university are studying a
15-minute record of Joan Leslie’s
laughter as it’s heard in Warner
JOAN LESLIE
Bros. “Cinderella Jones.” The re-
cording was made at the request of
Rev. Gerald D. Flynn,* director of
sodalities (social service) for South-
ern California.
—*—
It’s a good thing Ray Milland isn’t
jittery; in “California” he gets
shaved while sitting in a barber
chair in which a man was scalped
and murdered. That was way back
in 1848, and the murder took place
during an Indian uprising, but the
blood stains are still visible on the
head rest. Later, the chair was used
in. General Fremont’s headquarters
in Monterey.
—*—
On the set of Metro’s “The Show-
Off,” they brought in a Great Dane
who plays an ^important role. Red
Skelton held out his hand, but the
dog didn’t extend a paw — he
knocked Skelton down. Skelton
looked up with dawning recognition
—It was the dog that was specially
trained for Metro's “Bathing
Beauty” two years before, trained
to knock Skelton down every time
he saw him!
The first postwar building project
at the Warner studio will be an
$11,000 addition to the studio school-
house; there’ll be larger classroom
facilities for young players, a wait-
ing room for mothers, and special
equipment for the care and feeding
of infant actors.
—*—
Madeleine Plbrce, radio’s baby
specialist who is three-year-old
“Jill” in “Young Dr. Malone,” in-
sists on being introduced to her
audience before performances.
Once as .she approached the mike
the audience, expecting adult
speech, burst into giggles when
Madeleine began; she was playing
a baby, and only a couple of gurgles
and a stream of goos came from
behind the pillow used as a prop.
—*—
Ann Sothern’s working in pic-
tures again for the first time since
the birth of her daughter, Patricia
Ann Sterling, in December of 1944.
She’s doing another “Maisie” film.
A recent Hooperating lists Bob
Hope as the leader of the first 15
evening radio programs, with Fib-
ber McGee and Molly, second, and
Fred Allen third; Jack Benny’s
fourth. Ten years ago the popular-
ity rating rah Major Bowes, Burns
and Allen, Rudy Vallee, Jack Ben-
ny. In those days Bing Crosby was
14th; he’s 6th on the list now,
though he’s been back on the air
so short a time.
—*—-
The new March of Time, “Report
on Greece," is a factual picture
story, photographed on the spot, re-
vealing the situation there from the
incredible inflation and paralysis of
transportation to the rise of new
political parties. /
ODDS AND F.ND$—Norm* Shearer may
follow loan Crawford along lho come-back
trail and make another pictura ... d re-
porter asked Patti Brady, 8, of “Two Guy
from Miltckukee,“ what • porta the lifted:
mid ike “Skating, riding, iwimming,
fencing and Dennis Morgan" . . . Toddy,
ike burro in “Escape Mo Novar," sits up,
grins, kicks gently, rolls over, never bites
and gets ISO a day ... In five yarns loan
Leslie has progressed from the short,
“Alice in MovietsuuT to her starring role
In “Cinderella fanesT . . The youngster
who got Bob Hutton’s private phone num-
ber mils it to her friends far IS cents.
Dainty Wardrobe
For the Tiny Tot
8971
% mo*.-3 yr*.
•4
Tot’s Ensemble
Vf OUR little tot will look like the
* angel she is in this dainty
square-necked drfess. Note the soft
lace or ruffle edging, the pert
puffed sleeves. Pattern includes an
ehsy-to-make sunsuit—why not run
up several in different colors for
warm weather. Slip and panties
complete a grand ensemble for the
younger set.
Pattern No. 8971 la designed (or ilzes
8 months, 1. 2 and 3 years. Size 1. dress,
1% yards of 35 or 39-inch; sunsuit, %
yard; slip and panties, 1*4 yards of 35-
lnph.
Due to an unusually large demand and
current conditions, slightly more time Is
required In filling orders for a few of the
most, popular pattern numbers.
Send your order to:
SEWINO CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
530 South Wells St. Chicago T, IU.
Enclose 25 cents In coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No.-Size—
Name ■ -■
Address
Oriental on U. S. Stamp
The only Oriental personage
whose portrait has appeared on a
U. S. postage stamp is Dr. Sun
Yat-sen, first president of the Chi-
nese republic, who was honored on
our China Commemorative stamp
Issued in 1942.
- MM
musterole
Ho b&i.
failures
BECAUSE YEAST GOT WEAK
New Fleischmann’s Fast Rising Dry Yeast keeps
for weeks on your pantry shelf
If you bake at home—you can always
depend on New Fleiachmann’a Fast Rising
Dry Yeaat to give you perfect risings
... delicious bread... every time you bake!
Ready for instant action—New Fleisch-
mann’a Fast Rising keeps freah and
potent for weeks—lets you bake at a
moment’s notice! Don’t risk baking fail-
ures with weak yeaat—get New Fleiach-
mann’a Fast Rising today. A t your grocer’s.
Ifjsrtmne
For Safety—Invest in Your Own Country
FOR QUICK RELIEF FROM
STIFF JOINTS and BRUISES
MUSCULAR ACHES AND PAINS • STIFF JOINTS • BRUISES
'U/kettfCuNEED ia
SLOAN’S LINIMENT,
G.„e finston*
GROUND GRIPS
* "CENTER BITE”
GROUND GRIPS
/T,ESTS conducted under a wide range of
* soil and weather conditions proved
conclusively that Firestone Ground Grip
' tires will give your tractors up to 16% more
pull on the drawbar. That’s because only
connected, triple-braced traction bars...with
their extra tread-bar length, in the center of
the pulling rone...take a “Center Bite.”
Besides giving Firestone Ground Grips a
"Center Bite,” connected traction bars also
insure better cleaning. There are no broken-
bar, trash-catching pockets such ar^tnx see
on ordinary tires. The connected bars are
stronger, too, because they are triple-braced.
This added strength increases tread life.
These money- and time-saving features
are responsible for today’s farm preference
for Firestone Ground Grips. And they are
the reasons why it will pay you to have
Firestone Ground Grips on your present
tractors and to specify Ground Grips when
you buy a new tractor.
*Area in white shows the "Center Bits’ traction
gone, not found in other tires become of Fires tone’t
eacltuM potent rightt.
Listen to the Voice of Firestone every Monday evening over NBC.
Oonrriau. 1141. Tk, ruwton. Til* A lubter Or.
40% 10HGH TRIADtlFE
14% STROHGERfcOiD'tOOrM
S16% MORE DRAWBAR PUU
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Priebe, Charles W. La Grange Journal (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946, newspaper, March 14, 1946; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1004365/m1/3/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.