The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 131, Ed. 1 Monday, August 7, 1939 Page: 3 of 4
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Household Naus
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for the bright red cherry follows
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Let’s Have a Picnic!
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NEAREST
YOUR
FIRESTONE
DEALER
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FIRESTONE
AUTO
SUPPLY
SERV
STORE
AND
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lat-
ter
ses.
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Design Luncheon Mat
And Napkin Yourself
HOUSEHOLD
QUESTIONS
•nd
i£m
ids
of
GUM-DIPPED CORO BODY GIVES
PROTECTION AGAINST BLOWOUTS
SCIENTIFIC SAFETY TREAD GIVES
LONG NON-SKID MILEAGE
ON HOME AND
AUTO SUPPLIES,
on-
s in
to
;av-
>t :y
By RUTH WYETH SPEARS
The luncheon mat and napkin
MOSQUITO
BITES
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It IB
see
d a
and
. Always a Doty
It to an everlasting duty—the
duty of being brave.—Carlyle.
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Soak t
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showing 30 authentic stitohes; or
the RAG RUG LEAFLET will be
included FREE with orders for
both books, for the present.
eryone should have copies of these
two books containing 9fl How to
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Man-Made Misery
-- A man to as miserable as he
thinks he to —Seneca.
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For Mosquito Bites.—A little
household ammonia added to the
water with which mosquito bites
are washed will remove the sting.
• • •
Whoa Making Blaeberry Pie.—
Mix one teaspoon of ground nut-
meg with two tablespoons of flour
and sprinkle the mixture on the
berries, then add sugar.
Frankfurters do Luxe.
12 frankfurters
American cheese (cut in strips H
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Tired of the same old sand-
wiches for lunch boxes, picnic
baskets and party meals? Then
be sure to see Eleanor Howe’s
column in next week's paper and
learn how to take the "same-
ness” out of sandwich making.
Come in
today end
equip your
< a r with
the value
sensation
of 1939
i'
firestone
FHOME and auto supplier
X4VE
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Lw.
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Get Year Copy of This New Book.
This clever, little book by Eleanor
Howe will give you 350 simple, easy-
to-use, practical, tried and true
helps for everyday housekeeping.
"How can I substitute sour milk for
sweet milk in my favorite chocolate
cake recipe?” "Hpw can I wash my
son’s wool sweaters without shrink-
ing them?” "What can I do to pre-
vent small rugs from slipping?” The
answers to these and other puzzling
questiors will be found in this new
book. Send 10 cents in coin to
"Household Hints,” Eleanor Howe,
919 North Michigan Avenue, Chica-
go, Ill., and get your copy of "House
hold Hints” now.
iRvtoaaed by Waatarn Nawspapar Uaicai.I
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
X* \
& \
W!4g
ND FEVER
/fert’s From
Malaria!
Don’t let Malaria torture you!
Don't shiver with chills and burn
--* aS-
wild ivvwTe
At first sign of Malaria, take
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. A
real Malaria medicine. Made espe-
cially for the purpose. Contains
tually combats Malaria infection in
the blood It relieves the freezing
chills, the burning fever. Helps you
feci better fant.
Thousands take Grove’s Tasteless
Chill Tonic for Malaria and sweat
by it Pleasant to take, too. Evan
children take it without a whimper.
Don't shiver and burn. At Ma-
laria’s first sign take Grove’s Taste-
less Chill Tonic. At all drugstores.
Buy the large size as it gives you
much more for your money.
PICNIC BASKET A PASSPORT TO FUN
(See Recipe Below)
Add cream and the crushed peaches,
which have been mixed with con-
fectioners’ sugar. Pour into con- ,
tainer of ice cream freezer and I
freeze, using 3 parts ice to 1 part
I
I
■ 1
■
I
[ shown here offer a suggestion
for a way to use your cut-out de-
signs for simple but effective
applique work.
The long sides of the mate are
hemmed and the ends faced with
one-inch bands of green, as at A.
The napkins are also hemmed on
two sides and faced with green
bands on the other two. The stem
I Miserable
with backache ?
Um PaMtro to tooth*
itchtaf. sttagtag szte*
•rv of Bioaqulto. non-
poiaoMKu tewet bHM.
by 4 inches)
12 strips bacon
With a sharp knife make a slit
along one side of each frankfurter.
In each slit place a strip of cheese.
Press together and wrap a strip of
bacon around each frankfurter.
Fasten with toothpicks. Roast on
a charcoal gnU, turning occasional-
ly, to cook the bacon evenly. Or
place on a toasting fork (or stick>»
and roast over an open fire for
about 5 minutes.
Cabbage Salad.
(Serves fl)
2 cups cabbage (shredded fine)
--1 stalk celery (cut flne)—-----—
3 apples (unpeeled, diced)
2 to 3 green onions (sliced)
*4 teaspoon salt
Mix all ingredients in order giv-
en. Add cream salad dressing and
garnish with paprika.
Cup Cakes.
(Makes 18 small cakes)
H cup water
114 cups sugar
2 eggs (separated)
2 cups cake flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
¥« teaspoon salt
% cup cold water
1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream the butter, and gradually
add about half of the sugar. Beat
the egg yolks un-
til very light, add
remaining sugar,
and beat well.
Combine with the
first mixture. Sift
together the flour,
baking powder
and salt, and add
to the batter al-
ternately with the
water. Beat egg whites until stiff,
but not dry, and fold into the bat-
ter. Add vanilla. Bake in well-
greased muffin pans in a moderate-
ly hot oven (375 degrees) for sbout
25 minutes. Cool and frost with
boiled icing sprinkled generously
with cocoanut.
‘’‘o'#
^2
OU Up!—Don’t forget to oil your
vacuum cleaner and electric
washer. Oiling keeps them in
good condition, and they wear
longer.
it's more likely to be an old-fash-
_____ __ __ _ ioned "family style” picnic for a
Sew "article8~'that "have not’ ap- J • hundred hungry
peared in the paper. This offer ! ‘ * * *“
will be withdrawn soon. Send or-
der with 25 cents immediately to
Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St.,
Chicago, IU., and both books will
be mailed postpaid.
Gigantic
™ft<DE SALE -
Tirestone 4
STANDARD TIRES Afl
_ _ When skies are blue and cloud-
secured their'copies'of my' two | L*?LroI * f‘?
Your' choice of the he a spur-of-the-moment pic-
Flwwin Tir« *a4< fte BrUM KmVm? •
UMUm BmIMm «• N«w r«* W»rU-. f.
• the Plr«Ma»« M lh» Gold
Umm t» Vote* of FIhmmw wMk RS
. Mortorot SpMfa ami «k> Flrowm
* OrcJwtra. wU*r Arnllon < Af/r«l
MaadiwaaMtaM NatapnaSdaNT*.C.
TWR I AMPA<44S JEARMU V ______________________________
A President’s Attendance Caused I
Flurry of Excitement in Church
"Young man. I must shave. You
run over to the church and
tell the sexton to ring the bell—
vigorously.”. At the church Jervis
found the old sexton opening the
door. He gave the minister’s mes-
sage. The sexton’s mouth stood
open for a minute. Then he said:
"Here, you ring that bell. It’s
just outside in a tree. 1 got to go
home and shave.”—Edith Bolling
Wilson in The Saturday Evening
Post.
If rear garden ia feeling gen, give
Il a lew dig* in return.
Femen can give everylibing with a
unih tmd ukt rvrryihint bwrlr ivtte
a Mor.
„ Every deg lia> bit day, any* the
preverb. And. judging by the rew in
my back garden, every cat has ber
kiilght.
“Pvtnti ere a/ten a Mndrance te
rAi/rfren in a career,** mv* a fudgi-
l'frhipi~bul <Ae chilarut eenid
hardly »tnrt a career wilAoul tAem.
A leaaidr werker telle me be gete
I2.5O e day far picking up litter. A
tidy turn?
Did the guy whe said “ho nr at y la
the beet policy’’ ever try telling the
boaa what he really thought of him?
Hank save bia wife’s new diet bae
fairly look her breadth away!
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■ ■ '
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"May I (ell you a story?” This
to the story:
Knowing our plans, Mr. Jervis
had reached the church at 9:30,
finding it closed and not a soul
about. At the nearest house he
inquired whether there was to be
a service. The man did not know,
but said that the preacher was
holding Sunday school at his own
home and that Jervto might in-
quire of him. At the minister’s
house Mr. Jervto found a young
man instructing a group of bare-
foot girls and boys. Jervis asked
the man whether there would be
a service at the church, because
the President had intended to
come. "The President of what?"
asked the clergyman. "Of the
United States,” replied Jervis.
The minister looked at his caller
sorrowfully. "Young man, are
you ill?" he asked.
Jervto showed his badge, adding
that the President and Mrs. Wil-
son were due in an hour. The
minister clapped his hands. "Chil-
dren, Sunday school is dismissed.
All of you run home and tell your
fathers and mothers the President
is coming to church and I want
a good congregation to welcome
him." Then he turned to Jervto.
for a family,
a Sunday school
class, or a lodge,
you’ll find these
foods prime fa-
vorites with the
guests. Recipes
* are given here
—in- quantities to
’ ' serve a family;
for a larger
number the dif-
ference to a simple process of mul-
tiplication. t
Cream Salad Dressing.
1 teaspoon mustard
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons flour
m teaspoons sugar
Dash cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon butter
1 effl yolk
(4 cup vinegar
H cup heavy cream
Mix all dry ingredients together
thoroughly. Add butter, egg yolk
and vinegar. Place in double boiler
and cook, stirring constantly, until
mixture thickens. Cool, fold in
cream (stiffly beaten) and serve
with cabbage salad.
Baked Beans
(Serves 8)
1 pound navy beans
t4 pound pork (from the shoulder)
3 cups water
% cup brown sugar
• tablespoons molasses
1 teaspoon salt;
in dry mustard
navy beans over night in
water to cover. In the morning cut
the meat into 2-inch pieces and
brown well. Add the' 3 cups water,
and cook slowly for about (4 hour.
Add beans and continue cooking for
2 hours, or until both meat and
beans are tender. Add remaining
ingredients. Place in a baking dish,
and bake in a moderately slow oven
(325 degrees) for about 1(4 hours.
” If necessary, add mere water to the
(
Witt and Otherwua
9
■B
.
sw« wsagase aw tuctij lunuwB
a circular line embroidered in
green outline stitch. The leaf is
of the green material.
Experiment with cutting the
cherry and leaf in paper. When
you have cut a design that pleases
you, make a pattern in lightweight
cardboard. Cut the fabric a little
larger than the pattern, clip the
edge as at B: then press it over
the pattern with a warm iron as
at C to make a flrm crease. Re-
move the pattern, and sew the
pieces in place with fine hemming
stitches.
NOTE: Readers who have not
tooks'should' send in their orders nlc basket to the passport to fun.
at once. Your choice of the n be a spur-of-the-moment pic-
CRAZYPATCH QUILT leaflet nic with a simple lunch prepared
from supplies on hand in pantry
and refrigerator; or it might be a
steak fry or barbecue with the food
Ev. cooked on the picnic grounds; but
beans while cooking.
Camp Coffee.
Early in the day measure the cof-
fee into a sugar bag, allowing 1 ta-
blespoon per cup. |
Place this in the
coffeepot with a
little cold water
and let it stand
all day. Then
when nearly time
to serve, pour
boiling water,
which has been
previously meas-
ured, into the pot. Boil 5 minutes,
remove the bag, and your coffee is
ready to serve. It will not harm it
to let H stand for a while. You will
And that this unusual way of mak-
ing coffee will give you a most de-
lightful, full-flavored beverage, and
at the same time saves considerable
measuring and pot-watching when
you want to be enjoying your picnic,
tool
Fresh Peach lee Cream.
1'4 cups granulated sugar
1 tablespoon flour
(4 teaspoon salt
1 egg (slightly beaten)
1 cups milk (scalded)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups coffee cream
2*4 cups crushed peaches
■4 cup confectioners' sugar
Mix sugar, flour and salt thor-
oughly. Add the beaten egg and
biend. Add the scalded milk and
cook as a custard in a double boiler
until the mixture will coat the
spoon. Add vanilla extract and cool.
guests with plenty of good-tasting
food of delicious variety.
Whether your picnic to planned
*
' ""1
One Sunday during the summer
of 1917 the President suggested
that we drive quietly over to Vir-
ginia and attend the service at the
Pohick church, which was the
place of worship of George Wash-
ington. When we arrived, the lit-
tle edifice was well filled. Mr.
Wilson, my brother Randolph and
I were escorted to the Washington
pew, given prayer books and left
to ourselves. The service over,
we were accompanied to the door
by a member of the vestry and
permitted to depart without any of
the crowding about which usually
attends the appearance of a Presi-
dent in public. Also I was im-
pressed by the large congregation,
for it was raining.
Afterwards Mr. Jervto. one of
the secret service men, asked:
fl .............. ■1 '
HA*
According to the United States
Naval Observatory 12 00 M is al-
most universally used to desig-
nate 12:00 o’clock noon. M m this
connection is an abbreviation of
"Meridiem." the accusative of the
Latin "meridies,” meaning mid-
day.
^^HEN lodn«y» r>mc^
with ditxin»«, burning, icrnty OT too
frequent urination SM qattmq up St
night; when voe feel ta»d, netvom,
•II epMt... ate Dom’i FHk
Dose’s ass etpectolly for poorly
working Iddneyi. Million* of boses
•re vied every year. They are recoer-
mrndtd the country over. A* your
neighbor!
•, --
I
Boil a little vinegar in the skillet
after having fried flsh. It will make
cteMlng outer.
Put a piece of wax paper under
the trays in the refrigerator and
they will come out easier.
Green bananas will ripen quickly
if they are placed in a paper bag
and stored in a dark place.
In making fancy sandwiches cut
a piece out. of top slice ..of bread
with thimble. In opening inaert slice
of olive.
After using the hot-water bottle
let it drain, blow it full of air and
put in the stopper. This will pre-
vent it from sticking.
...........
- ■
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 131, Ed. 1 Monday, August 7, 1939, newspaper, August 7, 1939; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1253807/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.