The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1949 Page: 3 of 8
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THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, JANUARY «, 1W
Stymie Auhi
»»e
Jan*.
Baked Desserts
LYNN CHAMBERS* MENU
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pr PR's NEW
HUMIDORTOPIS GREAT.l
„ I FIND THAT CRIMP
CUT PA. STAYS FRESH <
AND TASTY, AND ROLLS UP
r FAST AND EASY INTO <
MILD CIGARETTES J
found. A No. 3
without even the rank of aa*
Baked Puddings Tempt on Cold Days
(Soo ftocipoi Bolow.)
LYNN SAYS:
Know Your Food
Facts and Fancies
For best results in baking, have
milk at room temperature before
mixing it with the other ingredienta.
This ia especially true when mix-
ing biscuits, muffins and cakes.
A teaspoon or two of lemon juice
brings out the full fruit flavor of
fruit piea. Add it when mixing th*
fruit in the sugar.
Leftover ham may be ground and
shaped into ball*. Serve with a
sweet-sour sauce I
Baked Orange Pudding
(Serves 6)
$
“You can’t beat P. A for ricb-taat-
ing tntoking comfort,** aaya John
Burks. "P.A. smoke, mild and cool
— right down to the bottom of the
bowl.'
ANNE BURR
did "The Hasty Heart,** the only
girl in an otherwise all-male cast
headed by Richard Baseheart and
John Lund. Rave notices brought
her an immediate offer—from the
network that had turned her downl
GO-POUND
00 iw pcmson
I
• V •
HERE'S A LOVELY cake-type
pudding with a delicious orange
sauce that is baked right with the
pudding:
S
fa
“Crimp cut F.A. ia great," says
Fred Einar. "P.A shapes up
fait into neat cigarettes that are
extra-tasty, extra-mild."
■
I FIND REAL
} SMOKING COMFORT IN
A PIPEFUL OF RA.-AND
THE NEW HUMIDOR, TOP
SURE KEEPS PA. MILD 1
AND RICH-TASTING f A
Matter ot Opinion
“Were you ever disappointed fas
love?**
“Yes, twice. The first jilted me,
and the second didn't."
If 'Petfr. Pain knots you up with
MUSCLE ACHE
M
Wk
MUSH
Check that Cough
front a ggiM
Before It Ms Wane
—•nd ®*t wed qafcfcar
with the MfW POUTS
ne mv rourrs honbt a tab
eon lain* aaa of She moot Uueoriaat Slops
*efuALi??*ilWs‘HxD’ RKCO “
lay. AMo inotkoo ikroos. dwdu rnush
■s- Atao amritwi. a,a aarowir *om *o«
SIMM OIMtoa Bos ooortImportoat. XtF
VoLrY’S Ma am ** MOwfcSw from
ornsfa *ea so oaMAs row dress**
Sauce:
1 cup sugar
IM cups boiling water
2M tablespoons cornstarch
3 tablespoons butter
1 orange, grated rind and juice
M teaspoon salt
M teaspoon grated nutmeg
Mix sugar, salt and cornstarch.
Add boiling water gradually, stir-
ring constantly, then boil five min-
utes. Remove from heat, add
orange juice and rind. Pour about
one-fourth of this mixture into a
deep greased pan (8”x8”). Cover
with cake mixture given below. Re-
serve remainder of sauce to pour
over pudding when served.
Cake mixture:
IM cups cake flour
2M teaspoons baking powder
M cup milk
M teaspoon salt
'M cup sugar
1 e<r
M teaspoon orange extract
M cup melted butter
Sift together all dry ingredients.
Add egg to milk, then the melted
butter. Beat slightly. Turn the wet
ingredients into the dry ingredients,
then beat until the mixture is
smooth. Stir in flavoring. Pour bat-
ter over orange sauce in the greased
deep pan, then bake in a moderate
(350-degree) oven for 45 minutes.
HERE'S A TORTE that's good
for wintertime eating. The delicate
flavor arises from <
the combination of
applesauce, spices, ^=='5
raisins and oats. Q"
Easy to make,
simple to serve J
right from the cas- »
serole, it’s a good H
dessert to have on J/
hand during the 0
entire cool weather season.
Spicy Applesauce Torte
(Serves 12)
1 cup sifted flour
M teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon
M teaspoon cloves
M cup shortening
1 cup brown sugar
1 ‘tt
1 cup thick, sweetened applesauce
1 cup rolled oats, quick or old-
fashioned, uncooked
M cup raisins
STAGESCREENvRADIO
Relaaaad by WMU Fealarm.
By INEZ GERHARD
ANNE BURR of “Big Si»-
/A ter” and many other ra-
dio shows came up the hard
way. After playing Indian
squaws in mob scenes in
"Cavalcade of America" ah* audi-
tioned for a network and was turned
down. Two mor* attempt* with th*
same network brought the same re-
sults. Then she turned to Broadway,
Philip N. Krasne, producer, has
established a new Hollywood for
western pictures—Pioneertown. On*
hundred and twenty mile* from
Hollywood, it has a studio, stage,
and $250,000 worth of sets purchased
from the defunct Enterprise studio*.
“The Daring Caballero," is being
made there, introduce* Kippee Va-
lez, starring with Duncan Renaldo
and Leo Carrillo.
—*—
As a navy pilot in Warners*
"Task F*ree,” Wayne Morris
wears his own medals and cam-
paign ribbons, 10 in all, includ-
ing the air medal and the dis-
tinguished flying cross. He was
a combat pilot for Carrier Air
Group Fifteen.
—*—
Gabriel Heatter has signed an ex-
clusive flve-year contract with Mu-
tual Broadcasting System. He still
holds the record for “the longest,
most dramatic and most inspired
ad-lib reporting in the history of
radio." It lasted 53 minutes, and
took place when he was broadcast-
ing an on-the-spot report of the
execution of the Lindbergh baby
kidnaper.
Physics
girls were being taken Ta*r**r—Wbot uM bofboo trboo
London, and a* • spe- utht tfribot tbo wotor ot » sf
•°m“Ba h-d arfU ** •*■
--*--
Gloria DeHaven has been
borrowed from MGM by Uni-
versal-International to play the
role of Donald O’Connor’s wife
in "And Baby Makes Three,”
her first picture since the birth
ot her first baby last spring.
—*—
The only listeners eligible to win
the prizes on “Hit the Jackpot” are
those who have mailed a postcard
to the program—which some one
million listeners have done since
“Jackpot" hit the air last June 29th.
—*— -
Horace Heidt’s "Youth Opportu-
nity" program was chosen by NBC
for the spot vacated by Jack Benny
because of its popularity with young
people as well as adults. In the
past year Heidt traveled 40,000 miles,
auditioning new talent for it. Mrs.
Heidt went along, as did Horace,
Jr., two. Their twins and 7-year-old
Hildegarde are in school.
—*—
Betsy Drake is the envy of all
movie aspirants because she makes
Her film debut playing opposite Cary
Grant, in “Every Girl Should Be
Married.” Betsy was bom in Paris,
received her education in this coun-
try, recently won acclaim in London
in “Deep Are the Roots," the play
in which Barbara Bel Geddes made
her first big hit.
Fish Chowder
Tomato-Calavo Salad
Cheese Dressing
Buttered Toast Beverage
•Cranberry Delight ,
•Recipe given
YOU'LL KNOW WHY the recipe
is called "Delight” when you try
this delectable combination of
jellied whole cranberries, chopped
apples and a topping of rolled oats,
brown sugar and nutmeats. This
dessert takes an hour to bake and
may be served warm with hard
sauce or cold with whipped cream.
•Cranberry Delight
(Serves 6)
IM eups chopped, unpeeled apples
. 1 cup jellied whole cranberry
sauce
1 cup rolled oats (quick or old-
fashioned, uncooked)
M cup brown sugar
M cup sifted flour
M teaspoon salt
M cup melted butter or substitute
M cup chopped nutmeats
Combine apples and cranberry
sauce; place in a greased 3-inch
square baking dish. Combine rolled
oats, sugar, flour and salt. Add but-
ter, mixing until crumbly. Sprinkle
over apple-cranberry mixture*. Top
with nutmeats. Bake in a moderate
(350-degree) oven for one hour.
8tra»ge Fruit
Two little ,......
away from 1
cial treat someone had given
them a couple of bananas — th*
first they had ever had.
As soon a* one child had taken
a bite of her banana the unlighted
train ran into a tunnel.
"Oo, Mary,” she said, "h*Y* you
eaten your* yet?"
"No," replied Mary.
“Wen, don’t,” added
"They make you blind.**
and delightfully.
Baked puddings are a wonderful
menu inspiration especially when
you’re using the oven for the main
dish, hot bread or vegetable because
they can be cooked right along with
the other things.
Then, too, since appetities are
sharper these frosty days, it’s a
good idea to have something sub-
stantial to fill the tummy. You can
combine fruits and cereals, eggs
and milk, all of these good foods,
so essential to good nutrition, right
into menus so readily when they’re
included in a dessert that no one
will skip.
-\l
tafttary Royall Disapprove*
IT ISN’T being advertised, but on*
* high official who frowned on th*
prosecution of Jap war lord* was
th* top man in the army depart-
ment—Secretary of the Army Ken-
neth Royall.
When Joaeph B. Keenan, patri-
otic attorney who spent two years
of hl* life ■■ war-crime* prose-
cutor in Tokyo, reported to Royall
th* other day, the secretary of th*
army stated flatly that he was dead
opposed to war-crimes prosecution.
“Suppose something should hap-
pen in Berlin to cause a war,” ar-
gued Royall. “The Russian* might
shoot General Clay a* a war crimi-
nal—if we set this precedent.”
“They probably would," replied
Keenan. "Those are the risks that
brave men take.
“But,” continued Keenan,
“when a boy of 2* is taken from
hi* home through no fault of his,
and put on a transport, and sail*
up to Okinawa and then is told
by his commander to take that
island, though he may not want
to go at all and though be know*
hl* chance* of coming out alive
are almost nil—then I say that
the war lord* who start such *
war must be punished.
“It was no fault of million* of
American boys that they had to
. leave their homes. It was the fault
of a little group of men sitting safe-
ly in Tokyo who decreed that Japan
was to rule the Pacific. And when
we make an example of them,”
concluded Keenan, “there will be
less chance of war in the future.”
NOTE: Secretary of the Army
Royall defended the Nazi saboteurs
in court when they were tried as
spies during the war. He also has
done hi* best to discourage the
war-crimes trials at Nuremburg.
However, this is the first time Roy-
all put himself on record so bluntly
regarding a policy which has been
officially adopted by the U. S. gov-
ernment.
U. S. Toys With Peace
Recently, a Latin American pres-
ident who had disbanded his army
and announced to the world that his
colonels now would become school
teachers, appealed to the Pan
American union for aid.
His country. Costa Rica, had just
signed the Pan-American mutual
defense pact, a history-making doc-
ument pledging all Pan-American
nations to come to each others' help
—a pact rightfully expected to
make the western hemisphere a
peaceful model in contrast with cha-
otic, wam-torn Europe.
And having trusted this pact, and
disbanded his army, President
Figueres of Costa Rica appealed to
the Pan-American union.
For six hours the union debat-
ed this emergency call. They
discussed, argued, orated. This
is not unusual. Pan-American
meetings always lean heavily on
forensics, and it always takes
strong leadership from the Unit-
ed States in consultation with
Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Mexi-
co and a few others to harness
the oratory and arrive at defl-
aite conclusions.
At this meeting, the U. S. A. was
represented by charming, ineffectu-
al Paul Daniels, chief of the Amer-
ican republics division. Everyone
likes Daniels, but Latin American
ambassadors aren't guided by hi*
judgment. He is considered a No.
3 man in a badly muddled state de-
partment.
Previous Peace Precedents
In contrast, here is how the Unit-
ed States handled earlier threats of
war.
1. WHEN war threatened between
Bolivia and Paraguay in 1928,
Charles Evans Hughes and Secre-
tary of State Frank B. Kellogg met I
*11 dav Hughes was an ex-secre- 1
tary of state, ex-presidential can-
didate—one of the biggest men in
the nation. So was Kellogg. The
fact that they dropped everything,
concentrated all their time on peace,
made a profound impression in Lat-
in America.
2. WHEN war threatened between
Russia and China in Manchuria in
193#, Secretary of State Stimson
staged a meeting of every ambas-
sador and minister at the White
House. He used not only the force
of his own dynamic personality, but
also the prestige of the White House
to demand that the two nations
cease belligerent moves. He suc-
ceeded.
3. WHEN various warlike moves
were made between Peru, Colom-
bia, Venezuela and Centra) Ameri-
can countries. Undersecretary of
State Sumner Welles, a man with
great prestige throughout Latin
America, acted in person. Peace
was too precious. He did not leave
matters to subordinates.
Yet when the vital test of the
Pan-American defense pact came
up this week. Secretary of State
Marshall issued no statement from
his sick bed. President Truman kept
silent, and Acting Secretary Lovett
was nowhere to be
man
sistant secretary represented th*
great and powerful U. S. A.
No wonder th* meeting adjourned
with no real result. No wonder
Latin America got the impression
that the U. S. wasn't much inter-
ested in the defense pact.
ODDS AND ENDS . . . Koborl Slotb
("Figblor Sgttoirow") awdi M go W
tag fa Alotbo ooxi your, tbiaki U wo»U
bo o ,«ao Uoo if Clorb Goblo sad Koborf
Toylor wouU go wilb bim . . . Btag
Crotby. Aho Blytb Borry FittgoroU
io oa »a/A«ri«ri< lri>b fig (a "Top o’
ibo Moratag" . . , Tbt Mooro twiiu, If
atoafbt oU. ceariat of Cotutoioco Mooro,
ooobo iboir itroow iobul ta “Dao Sutuioy
Aftoraoow" . . . Woifor Brooooo *Mdo
it tough for otbrr Hollywooi Jolbort
wboo bo goto eocb of bit tbroo otipriug
o aew tor boforo bo trout of Io too vM
too V. S. oovy for bit fooiuroi rolo io
Voroort’ “Toth Forto"
Cabinet Pudding
(Serves 6)
18 lady fingers or leftover, stale
cake
1 cup crushed pineapple
M cup cherries
3 eggs
M cup sugar
IM cups milk
1 cup peaches, sliced
Alternate layers of mixed fruit
and cake in a buttered casserole.
Beat eggs slightly, add milk and
sugar and pour this over fruit-cake
mixture. Bake uncovered in a mod-
erate (350-degree) oven for one
hour.
vp.
- ANY®™**
TH*®. jT.aCCO
THERE ARE FEW more festive
combinations than
candied or mar-
aschino cherries
[and pineapple,
j Here's an excel-
lent recipe for us-
all day. Hughes was an ex-secre- ' ing your leftover,
tnrv r\t etato ov.nrAeidantinl ron. Stale Cake. If yOU
■ lack that, you may
substitute lady
fingers.
ARE YOUR DESSERTS fragrant
and appetite-satisfying these cold
winter days? If
not, get busy, light
the oven, and bring
out your pans and
mixing bowls for
I* these recipes are
/ certain to inspire
you thoroughly
Sift together flour, soda, baking
powder, salt and spices. Add short-
ening, sugar, egg and one-half cup
of the applesauce. Beat until
smooth, about two minutes.
Fold in remaining applesauce,
rolled oats and raisins. Bake in a
greased 7xll-inch pan in a moder-
ate (350-degree) oven for 35 to 40
minutes. Serve warm with whipped
cream or hard sauce.
Hard Sauce
1 cup powdered sugar
M teaspoon vanilla
2 tablespoons butter
Cream butter, add sugar gradual-
ly, then vanilla. Shape in a mold
or in balls. Chill and serve.
Released by WNU Feature*.
--*--
Robert Douglas, the English actor,
couldn't stand the noise of Holly-
wood and environs, so he rented a
home in Newhall, far to the north.
Then oil was discovered on the
property next door, and drilling
went on 24 hours a day. Now Doug-
las is hunting for another home. Hi*
performance as a villain is a high
spot in “Adventures of Don Juan."
—*—
Mercedes McCambridge, long
known as one of radio's most tal-
ented actresses, is currently adding
to her reputation on the New York
stage in “The Young and Fair.”
But she has obtained permission
to leave the play long enough to
make her film debut in Columbia’s
"All the King's Men," in which she
will appear opposite Broderick
Crawford.
V
Roll biscuit dough into a large
circle, then cut into pie shaped
wedges. Spread with softened but-
ter, sprinkle with brown sugar and
nutmeg. Then roll into butterhoms,
starting at the wide end and bake.
Most attractive and delicious I
For breakfast* that delight on
cold mornings, serve spicy sausage
patties with french toast and
syrup. Start off with a colorful,
plump baked apple.
Ever try lima beans with chopped
cooked bacon for flavor? You'll lik*
them this way.
y -*^
.A
».
—Ms
r
t
a
1-
a
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1949, newspaper, January 6, 1949; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1216349/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.