The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1952 Page: 3 of 8
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■
THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW ULM, TEXAS THURSDAY, OCT. 16, 1952.
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All these courtesies you can expect—
FREE and with a smile — when you
drive in at the familiar Sinclair H-C
sign. And, of course, you get the finest
jO-
in power-packed gasoline, motor
oil, and lubrication
service, too.
Lynn Says:
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ALTMAN
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NEW ULM
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HM>ne 57
Dr. H. C. Moeller
We dean
.windshield
and wiper
blades
We check
tires and
tire pressure
including
We check
oil level,
fan belt,
battery and
air cleaner
rear (
window *
and license
plate
SAVE MONEY
Buy Direct from our Factory
Visit our Large Display
Write for free catalog
Open Sundays
ROBBINS MONUMENT CO.
2710 Washington Ave.
Houston, Texas
outh is responsible for
that can cause trou-
B
n
with
with
Easy Tlum Podding*
(Serve* •)
1 cup needed raisins
1
DENTAL SURGEON
X-Ray Equipped Office
O4MATMBIT8 STATE BANK BUJt
COLUMBUS. TEXAS
are a
A;
KODAK FILMS — Various
popular sizes, for sale at the
Enterprise Office. 11-23-tf.
7^-THC.
Mstars
V 7..see your
i Sinclair Dealer
LYNN CHAMBERS" MENU
Beef Pot Roast
Steamed Onions
Potatoes and Carrots
Cucumber and Watercress Salad
Rye Bread Butter
•Easy Plum Pudding
•Pudding S.-.uee
Beverage
•Recipe Given
Dark Fruit Cake
1 cup soft shortening
2 cups brown sugar
4 large eggs it cup)
3 cups sifted enriched Dour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
IK teaspoon cinnamon
14 teaspoon nutmeg
K teaspoon allspice
K teaspoon soda
K cup molasses
K cup grape juice or coffee
1 pound seeded raisins
1 K pound seedless raisins
K pound currants
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
American Ptssa Pie
(Serves 4)
I pound beef
1 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon pepper
1 cup canned tomatoes, drained
% cup shredded American
cheese
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
% teaspoon dried basil
2 tablespoons finely chopped
onion
v r •* v
Place pans in oven in a way
that will allow heated air to cir-
culate freely about them. Never
arrange pans so that they touch
each other, the side walls or the
back of the oven.
Canned vegetables
DOES
I
ff....
From Redwood Journal Press
Dispatch, Cklah, Calif.:
Americans are a forthright peo-
ple in most respects and usually
very impatient of unnecessary de-
lay. Perhaps before the nation's
next presidential election, they win
streamline campaign procedures,
eliminate the sadly outdated and in-
efficient “electoral college" and
begin the long needed task of de-
signing state primaries that will
give the electorate a direct and
unencumbered choice in selecting
our presidents.
The arrival of television, speedy
publishing methods and rapid com-
munications has done much to
make government more personal
for Americans. Perhaps elimina-
tion of unnecessary and expensive
time lags in our political proced-
ures will help us eliminate out-
moded complications and restore a
vigorous interest in government
where it really counts—at the voter
level.
program. The state show will be
held in Center, Texas, trum May
11-15 and the hatching dates
for all entries will be from
March 8-14. The growing period
was set at nine weeks.
The
conditio
ble for . stock producers un-
less cor < tive
taken. Ra ior.s
onld be
measures are
of pastured ani-
1 mals s onld be supplemented
I with vitamin A rich feeds to
prevent respiratory troubles and
i vitamins A, E and C to prevent
the condition known as ”white-
: muscle isease.”
rp«OM The Iron Ore, East Lan-
Islng, Mich.:
Too often many of our citizens
(including us) have criticized our
more public spirited men, who have
held and are now holding offices
in our city government.
The men we are writing about
are our aidermen. They were elect-
ed by the tree will of the people
and we know they strive to enact
means and ways whereby our eity
and theirs Is a better place In
which to live. But how often do we
praise them for some of the things
they have accomplished?
We know that all ot the people
can not be in harmony with their
way of thinking, it is not possible to
please all of the people all of the
time.
Our aidermen and public officials
do not gain any special favor or
means by holding office. AU of
them hold full time jobs or are en-
gaged in some business in this city.
Many are the evenings they would
like to spend with their family or
friends, but instead they attend
meetings pertaining to the opera-
tion of our city and weighing both
sides of this or that complaint.
We are quick to criticize and
slow to praise, but we know that
these men. ever though they do not
benefit in a material way. they
have an inner satisfaction in know-
ing they are serving their commu-
nity So let's give them a pat on
the back once in a while and give
them our whole hearted coopera-
tion. , . .
From The Fort Mill. 8.C. Times:
It us* to be said that “Light-
ning never strikes in the same
place twice." But it seems that this
to-
until
fluffy the short-
e n i n g and
brown sugar.
Beat in egg*.
Sift together
flour, baking
powder, salt,
soda and spice*.
Stir in dry in-
greo-eni* alternately with molasses
and grape juice or coffee. Blend
in candied fruits, nuts, raisin*
and dates. Fill prepared pans al-
most full. Bake, covered with
paper until the last hour, until
wooden pick thrust in comes out
clean, about 2H to 3 hours in a
slew (300° F.) oven. Wrap in
waxed paper.
Pratt Cake Glaze
K cup light earn syrup
K cup water
Combine syfup and water and
bring mixture just to a rolling
boil. Remove from heat. Cool to
lukewarm. Pour over cold cake
before or after storing. Fruit
cakes are usually decorated after
storing.
Schi order Bldg., Phone 353
LA GRANGE, TEXAS
minutes to reheat food.
A wide spatuly is an excellent
utensil for turning food, as a fork
which pierces the food tends to
release valuable juice*.
ir
Sweet po'atoes are a rich
source of vitamin A; worth-
while source of vitamin C and
| contain small amounts of the B
I vitamins and mirerals.
The S ate Chicken-of-Tomor- !
row Committee for Texas has |
announced plans for the 1953 j reward.
Fruit tres infested now with
San Jose Scale shoud be given a
temporary treatment and in the
winter be throughly sprayed
with a 3 per cent dormant oil
spray.
Dr. James L. Ashley
OPTOMETRIST
Eyes Examined—Glasitea Fitted
Frame Repairs
Lenses Duplicated
"Ckwed on Thursday”
. Office:
Over Iji Grange Drug Co.
LA GRANGE, TEXAS
Telephone 380
■L.
Dr. D. R. Taylor
Optometrist
Eyes Examined
Glasses Fitted
grains of salt and V, cup orange
marmalade, heated to boiling.
Pour into mugs and add a teas-
poon ot butter It's wonderful!
Here's a quick and lovely des-
sert for a children's party: place
canned cling peaches on a baking
tray and fill each peach half with
a marshmallow. Broil until marsh-
mallow melts.
Mix meat with salt and pepper.
Pat out into bottom and sides of a
9-Inch pie pan. Fill with tomatoes
and sprinkle with remaining in-
gredients. Bake in a moderately
hot (375' F.) oven for 20 minutes.
To serve, cut in wedges.
When next you have meat loaf,
do something slightly different.
Shape the meat mixture into in-
dividual loaves and baste with cat- '
sup or barbecue sauce before bak-
ing.
Chill powder added to pork
chops just before you brown them
gives them a tangy, appetizing
flavor. To finish cooking, cover
with tomato juice for a nice rosy
blush.
theory, like almost everything else,
has undergone a change. Now it
seems that lightning follows some
people around, t
Take George Baeot, for instance.
A couple of weeks ago, a few days
after he moved his family to Co-
lumbia from Fort Mill, lightning
struck the dwelling on Spratt,
which he had Just vacated, twice
during one thunderstorm and did
severe damage to the home. About
10 days later lightning struck the
home in Columbia which be and
his family had just occupied. It
knocked a chandelier from the ceil-
ing and sent it crashing to the
floor.
iT REALLY isn’t too long a time
1 until the holiday season will
be in full swing. Why not take a
few days off now to make those de-
‘ liciou* fruit
li OASTS AND CHOPS are excel-
Iv lent when accompanied by
prunes prepared like this: boll 3
cups prunes In J cups water for
10 minutes Add 2 unpeeled lemons,
cut in thin slices, 2 cups sugar, >4
cup sliced preserved ginger and
simmer an hour.
Potato soup, corn chowder or
boulllabaise take on an interesting
flavor and appearance when you
serve them with meaty wedges of
ripe olives afloat on the soup.
A good sandwich filling with
which to add variety to lunches
uses 2 large frankfurters ground
with K cup unblanched almonds
with M» teaspoon prepared mus-
tard. salt to taste and mayonnaise
to give a spreading consistency.
A good hot beverage for teen-
agers and their parties uses a can
of apricot whole fruit nectar, a
few sticks of cinnamon, a few
Blend Proper Amounts of Batter with Fruit
(See Recipei Below)
K pound citron
K pound candied orange and
lemon peel
K pound date*
% pound nut meat*
Cream
gether
should be
cooked in their own juices Bring
aluminum foil quickly to boiling point, then de- @
Keep In cool place until ready to create heat It require* about 10
use. “ “* * *
A delicious
kinds of hot puddings.
Hzrd Sauce
«■; cup butter nr substitute
% teaspoon nutmeg or ground
mace
1 cup confectioner** sugar
2 tablespoon* orange or lem-
on juice
Beat butter or substitute until
soft. Mix sugar and spice and add
___ a small amount at a time, beat-
nuts can be placed on top of batter Ing as you add. Add orange juice
before baking. Bake in slow •• needed to make sauce easy to
(275 F > oven until done, about 3 beat. Serve over puddings
hours for the small cakes, or about
2H hours for the larger cakes.
(When cakes are done, they are
lightly browned and tiny crack*
begin to appear in the top. These
cracks close when cakes cool. Cool
cakes in pans about 10 minutes,
then turn out on racks and place
right side up again to finish cod-
ing. When ready to store cakes to
ripen, remove waxed paper from
cakes and rewrap either in clean
waxed paper or
VZt.
SINCLAIR-iz* 'ERVICt STATION
DEALER fb SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
TEXAS
licious
cakes and pud-
dings which will
be so satisfying fl
within a short x
time?
____ Fruit -cake J
F’.. ‘ rtf* making is not
■L&KsBqUmI an arduous task /
if the work is
spread over two days, one to get
the candied fruits cut into jewel-
like bits, and the other to blend the
fruity mixture with the batter and
bake it.
■
Fruit Cake Is
Holiday Dessert
This recipe for light fruit cake
is a marvelous blend of fruits and
nuts with just the right amount of
rich batter.
Light Fruit Cake
(Makes 6 pounds fruit cake)
.1 pound candied cherries
K pound candied pineapple
H pound eitron
2 ounces candied lemon peel
2 ounces candied orange peel
I pound pecans or English
walnuts
2t4 cups sifted flour
1 cup butter or shortening
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
IK cups sugar
4 egg*, separated
1 cup evaporated milk
1 tablesnocn lemon juice
2 teas noons baking powder
K teaspoon salt
Cut cherries in quarters. Slice
pineapple thin. Cut citron and
peels very, very fine. Break or
coarsely chop nuts. Mix fruit and
nuts in a large bowl. Add 1 cup of
the flour, and mix until fruit and
nuts are well coated. Cream butter
until smooth and plastic. Add
grated lemon rind, then sugar
gradually, creaming until mixture
is light and fluffy. Beat in egg
yolks. Stir lemon juice into milk.
Add to egg mixture. Sift the re-
maining IK cups flour with the
baking powder and salt. Stir into
egg mixture. Fold in the egg
whites which have been beaten
stiff, but not dry. Add batter to
fruit mixture. Mix and stir until
thoroughly blended. Grease nans
lightly and line twice with heavy
_ _ _ _ waxed rarer.
This mixture
' * - a will make
—/ either four
cakes 7M x 3K
x 2K inches, or
two cakes 8K x 4K x 2K inches.
Divide mixture evenly and pres*
into pans, leveling tops. If desired,
decorations of candied fruit and
By LYNN CONNELLY
XT EARLY EVERY successful
I* person has a definite philoso-
phy—a credo for reaching a goal
, . . But until CBS radio introduced
the series “This J Believe." there
was no avenue through which they
could share their idea* by the sim-
ple mean* of calm conversation . . .
Edward R Marrow, noted CBS
radio new* broadcaster, is the host
of “This I Believe," and with hi*
fellow newsman. Edward P. Mor-
gan, the program's producer, he
ha* tapped a precious lode In the
mine of contemporary thought
People whose names represent
widely diverse line* of endeavor—
Helen Keller, Pearl Buck, James
Q. duPont, Eleanor Roosevelt, to
name a few of tha scores—have
spoken on the five-minute program
and revealed their rule* for hap-
py. successful living . . "This
I Believe" is not a church program
In the denominational sense, but
it doe* promote principles that
every church advocate* . . . The
broadcasts are republished in news-
papers, put on phonograph record*
and published In pamphlet form
. . . It is the kind of listening that
renew* an individual’s faith in him-
self and other*.
IDOL CHATTER
"Life With Luigi" made It* TV
debut recently and we predict It
will do better in this medium than
on radio, if that is possible , . .
J. Carroll Nalsh I* lovable as
Luigi snd. of course. Is extremely
visual Id his role ... All In all.
It was a much more triumphant
transition from rsdio to TV than
"Sly Friend Irma" experienced
. . . Alben W. Barkley has been
signed for s radlo-TV serie* to be
brosdeast next year when he's no
longer in office ... It will festnre
noted guests discussing current
affairs.
Bob Hope got back on the air-
lanes by the skin of his teeth this
season He was sponsorless for
some time and NBC balked at put-
ting the exper ve star on non-
commercially it appeared for
a while that h. aid be missing
from the lineup lor the first time in
1« years, but at the last minute he
signed a contract with a food com-
pany calling for a daily afternoon
show, which still leaves him in the
cold insofar as a weekly evening
show Is concerned.
1 cop sliced prunes
K cup sliced figs
H cup sliced dates
K teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
K teaspoon nutmeg
K teaspoon clove*
K teaspoon allspice
K enp nut meats
K enp grape juice < about)
Put prepared fruit through
meat grinder. Add salt, spice*
and nuts and blend in grape juice
to moisten. Form into small cone*
and roll in granulated sugar.
Serve garnished with candied
cherries and with flavored
whipped cream.
Pudding Sance*
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 cup boiling water
Pinch ground mace
Dash nutmeg
2 tablespoons bntter
1 tablespoon wine vlngear
Mix sugar and cornstarch.
Gradually stir in the boiling
water. Cook over low heat, stirr-
ing gently, until sauce becomes
clear and glossy which indicate*
that cornstarch is perfectly
cooked, add spice and simmer 1
minute. Add butter and wine vine-
gar. A delicious sauce for all
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1952, newspaper, October 16, 1952; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1225796/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.