Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 6, 1947 Page: 6 of 12
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X
Thursday Food Section
frlUNKl
Ihurulay. Not 8, 1947
‘ ■
Me
...
Noodles
Have the butcher
f?
ibW.
\ J
as Industry, Intended
to
*WHOtf HfAO <
r
Quality Foods-Fruits-Vegetables-Meats
count farm construction.
TOMATO SOUP
4
Specials for Friday-Sat.-Monday
I
II
Crackers
Brooks,
Sunshine Krispy,
Two 303 Cans
GROCERIES
I Lb. Box
GROCERIES
JELLO
In Heavy Syrup.
Box
9c
ALASKA SALMON
... Tall Can
43c
Can
EAGLE BRAND MILK
Can 23c
FOLGER'S COFFEE .
Lb.
49c
Soap
SLICED PINEAPPLE No. 2 Con 26c
CANE SUGAR
.... 10 Lbs.
89c
WOLF BRAND CHILI
No. 2 Can 43c
OLEO <Parkoy>
Lb.
35c
POTTED MEAT
Can
5c
KLEENEX (200 Size*
Coca Cola
11c
Beans
VIENNA SAUSAGE
2 Cans 25c
Carton of Six
MIRACLE WHIP
Pint
29c
PINTOS
2 Lbs. 29c
JEWEL SHORTENING
3 Lbs.
89c
Salt
GRAPEFRUIT
8 Lb.Sack 31c
Nuts
HOMINY
No. 2 Can 7’/ic
CALUMET
Pound Can 15c
LUX POWDER
Small Size, ea.
9c
SUPER SUDS
I’ALKLD
Big Box 29c
GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
I
TEXSUN 46. oz.
can
FRUITS-VEGETABLES
MEAT DEPARTMENT
i
GRAPEFRUIT
Lb. 42c
TENDERLOIN STEAK
3c
$
ea.
FRUITS V VEGETABLES
LEAN PORK CHOPS
Lb. 57c
LEMONS
CHOICE MEAT CUTS
Doz. 15c
Butter Kernel
SHOP SLICED BACON
Lb. 59c
ORANGES
8 Lb. Sack 29c
CORN
T-Bone Steak
Lb. 39c
PAN SAUSAGE
GRAUEFRUIT
8 Lb. Sack 31c
Lb. 35c
SKINLESS WIENERS
Whole Grain
SQUASH
Lb.
3c
Golden Bantam
4 Lbs. 98c
lb.
APPLES
Box $2.50
NO. 2 CAN
7-Cut Roast
Lb. 35c
RUTABAGAS
Lb.
4c
Lb 39c
TEXAS DAISY CHEESE
Pork Chops
CABBAGE
Lb.
4c
Maryland Club
LETTUCE
Ground Beef
Big Size
10c
cow
YAMS
Coffee
Lb.
5c
Lb. 49c
Lb. Vacuum
Tin
Fresh Catfish
100 lb.
3-Minute
Lb. Can 49c
Demonst ration
Wieners
Bag
of This Coffee
t
In Store
$8.90
Saturday
L.- ■
I
Birdseye
FROSTED FOODS
Free Delivery Daily
Store Phone
113.1
Market Phone
1153
In Cann
£i.
1
x
*,
*Cr..,
■ALUMINwl
MARKET
PHONE
'/
/
PURE LARD
PIKE S PEAK ROAST
Morton’s,
Plain or Iodized,
2 Boxes
New Pack,
( amphell’s,
2 Cans ..
Whitson's Mexican
Style, in Rich Chili
Gravy, No. 2 Can
Brazil,
Large Washed,
1 I.li. Cello Bag
Pint
’/2 Pint
75c
45c
FLAKES. Trend.
A 65c Value,
2 Lg. Pkg.
Oats
Large Pkg.
29c
Imperial
sugar
SHANKLESS PICNICS,
Half or Whole
Rome Beauty
lb. Fancy
Fresh
Ground, lb..
Choice
Beef, lb.
Choice
Beef, lb.
CATTLE SLAUGHTERING
IN MEXICO CONTINUES
Table-Delight
lb....._........„
Sugar Cure Smoked
Bacon Squares
Dressed
lb.
drained
serving
Rutabaga
Turnips
fl
White Swan Elberta De l uxe Halves
Peaches
Brockles Special Dressing for
Salad
BES^
)
15'
5'
10'
65'
5'
55'
10'
15'
5'
17'
55'
33'
43'
Apples
Texas Marsh Seedless
Grapefruit
that a I""" ’
bushels still !
—
1. ' ~
25£
33£
15£
43
19£
15
29
HELPY - SELFY GROCERY
*7^ 2/4 tyiAAt May 91
J. M. GIBBON, Owner
1133 - STORE, 1153
49£
ONE FOR YOU IN EVERY MOTHER’S
OATS PREMIUM PACKAGE!
17£
| Fry gave us her own favorite:
I 2 cups sugar
1 cup cream
| Handful of chopped nuts (about
I 1-2 cup)
Handful of chopped raisins
Experts Predict
Stock Men Will
Save Most Grain
Ham Steak in Oronge Sauce
(Serve, 4)
One slice ham, 1 inch thick,
> kitchen bouquet,
broiled
I or fortified
Agriculture De- [ steamed ginger nudding,
sauce, coffee, milk
PARTY SUPPER
1
rr+S ■
■
19
&
x III
Sirloin Steak
the best cook there is ‘
Worked for Perfection
Asked how she came to invent
her own specialty, Mrs. Fry |
Just wait till you see the lovely dinnerware
Mother s Oats premium packages hold for you!
l ucky you, to be rewarded fiery way w hen you get
delicious Mother's Oats, the favorite cereal of
generations of Americans’ Named best-tasting . .
named best-for-you, too, in a nationwide poll' It’s
“topi’’ among natural cereals in 4 vital fatigue*
fighting and growth-promoting benefits!* Enjoy
it daily.
.Mother's Oats u ith Aluminum Wart \ou Available, Too!
Mother’s Oats
lira
If u
S3
R,‘
■
yer's Grocery-Wolff's Market
> INDUSTRIAL AVENUE — AC ROSS STREET FROM NALL PRODUCE
lJ. i
r;
!
■ffc'. j
■ jM
11
doubled broom straw stuck in the eggs ancj lt didn t suit me; I put
cake comes out clean,” Mrs Fry mug ln lt antj j didn t like that 1
j laughed, giving the old-lashloned was just experimenting tor the first
| halt dozen times '•
I Mrs. Fry recommended giving
these cakes as Christina., presents’
L ' Ope'*'-'- £ • ’ •
^0at heipy-selfy
15
By MARGARET HART
“My applesauce cake? Oh yes.
I’m always glad to give the recipe
to anyone.” And so Mrs Jep Fry,
1305 Austin, opened her kitchen to
the wandering reporters.
Alon* with orisp weather, gray
skies an dthoughts of Christmas
comes the special season for mak-
ing this rich fruity confection which
resembles a holiday fruitcake. “Its
a tot like fruitcake, but my family
likes my applesauce cake so much
better that this is what I usually
make,” Mrs. Fry explained, wel-
coming us into her cream and white
kitchen with a friendly gasture.
"Usually I start baking these
cakes in November and never
make any later than ten days be-1
fore Christmas.” she continued.
The longer they are allowed to
ripen and mellow the better the
flavor will be. she added.
Original Recipe
An original recipe. Mrs. Fry’s
Applesauce Cake formula has trav-
eled through most of the 48 states
and Into Canada in the custody of
friends and acquaintances Do you
have your spoons and mixing bowls
ready? Here it is, and it makes
About nine pounds:
- 1 cup butter
~2 cups sugar
(PMMIUM PACKACfl
*W'bolt-from oetoifol Iradf oil naforol itrroli tn Proitnt. Food-
Entriy, Vt to tn tn Bi ond Iron.
Kg*- -' *
CHRISTMAS GIFTS—Mrs. Jep Fry’s original Apple-
sauce Cake recipe has traveled far and wide, and she s
* * always glad to give it to anyone who wants it. Her cakes,
which she usually makes during November and early
December, replace the usual fruit cakes, and her friends
in Jacksboro and Denton look forward to one as a Christ-
mas gift.
Tu
n.,59'
California, Sno-White Heads
Cauliflower
DECKER'S I0WANA BACON,
6 to 8 Lb. Slabs Lb. 77c
era. engineers ahd industrial plan- j
ners. will be made bv the Texas '
A fi M College Engineering Ex- ’
perlment Station, it was announced
I today. |
f
57 '’ T. a yUlED HFRE
BABIES AIN 1 r.l» nnitt
PORTLAND, Me., Nov 8 — (A^—
Families With young babies make
the best tenants, says Gunder Ras-
mussen who advertised tor one to-
day on the bash of considerable ex-
perimenting.
“Preference gl v e n to families
with one or two babies,” Rasmul-
sen, a contractor, builder and real
estate broker said In his advertise-
ment about a five-room flat.
Until a year ago. Rasmussen
owned a six-apartment building in
which only mothers Just home
from the hospital with babies or
Nice and g
Lean, lb.
Bake one I shrugged her shoulders, expressive-
very alow oven, then 1 jy. -j Just didn't like any ot the
of re-
sources and potentialities of Tex-
as Industry, intended to furnish !
data long - needed by manuiactur-
No. 2>2
Porto Ricans Nice
1 dlllS Baking Size. lb.
I always soup. J»avc mr UU<A.»^I •«. -
drinking center slice, alxxit one inch thick. I
(J DENTON (T»x.) RECORD-CHRONICLE—
Half a Ham Can Be Economical
For Sunday Dinner, Left-Overs
»(
dish Bake, covered, in a moderate j
oven (350 degrees F.) for one hour. !
Serve Immediately
Hani Curry with
(Serves 4-8)
Four ounces medium noodles. 3
I tablespoons fat, 1 teaspoon minced
j onion, 3 tablespoons flour, 1 tea-
i spoon curry powder, 1 cup ham
i broth or chicken bouillon, 1 cup
milk, 1-16 teaspoon pepper. 1-2 cub
finely diced processed American |
cheese, 1-2 teaspoon salt. 2 cups
diced cooked ham. paprika
Cook noodles tn boiling salted
water until tender Meanwhile. !
met fat in saucepan add onion '
3
minutes. Combine flour and currv
powder and blend into fat and
onion. Add ham broth and milk I
Cook over moderate heat, stirring ■
constantly, until
Add
small
Ba
By W1I.M
Since the eai
leer folk ate t
uinn and wint
lave made tin
llianksglving a
■xclusively.
With the dev<
aiming method
.ersatile recipe
ively low pric,
d auiily need no
,s l.iys to enjoy
ast y steaks tri
Within lecen
uid tasty ways
■holce bird ha
or iiou.sewiles
lailv and wcel
ng iicll mth i
an now be in
is any other n;
,ocal meat in;
luce owners hi
ail price at ot
>ound litis is
irlii' per pori
ven ti anklui U
Manv W
Mr and Mrs
I me oi the larg
)enton countv
■i..a ol scriin
I ears <>t turkei
I t ai I’-.i ' oiii e
I ways find plent
I l up Mrs 1
I Turkey st eat
I ip wnii Ila- oln
I .ci witli dies.1
I e .icd ih.it mu
I o four pound
I inelv
I Alter dreg; a
I urkey. sir e it
I he bone nil!.
I he steaks Hl I
I i s Mi U ,1|
I urkey is aln;
I alad
I ' People i o w
I U I r. C ■ s I ,11 ],,
a walnut (1
■ X'ew England Brand
Mince " ~
9 oz. Pkg
Hominy
WASHINGTON. Nov 6
More animals have been
tercd in the effort to control foot j
and mouth disease in Mexico than ( cream mustard
„... in all outbreaks In this crtwitry but sweet potatoes. 8 - minute green
bread; it coui'dnTbe beat. She was I the camplagn ts still far from com-: cabbage, poppyseed rolls,
pletion 1 or fortified margarine.
By Oct. 11. an
partment official said today, 328.-
(XX) head of cattle and approximate- ,
■ ly 150,000 other Infected animals 1
had been killed in Mexico. | table salad.
; At the time Congress authorized “ ‘
the department to participate with j
the Mexican government in eradl-
> cation measures, it was estimated 1
A
Butter the size of
tablespoon i
Spread on cake after cake has
cooled thoroughly
Putting away her handwritten re-
cipe book. Mrs Fry professed a
belief in the idea that a Hair for
cooking comes as naturally as does
a talent for music. “Why every _
bride should be able to cook ex- . pttn Blend together and add
cellently with nil these recipe* on , rnaining ingredients. Cook <
every box, carton, jar. sack, and moderate heat, stirring constantly,
package," she exclaimed, “but ai until sauce thlckenn. / - * "
t lot of women I know can’t cook a ' rooms. Pour over ham in baking
bit better than they did when they {
were married! I guess ' you Just j
have to be born liking to cook be- j
fore you can do it well "
Coming from a long line of good j
cooks herself, Mrs. Fry recalled
With a far-away look m her eyes.
“Relatlvo and friends used to,
come to Clay county from every- i
where to eat Mother's Hot light I
California, U. S. No. 1
Lettuce SiM
WASHINGTON. Nov « — <Ti
Government grain exoerts predict-
ed today that licestovk farmers
will save at least 75.000.000 bushels
of wheat -or three - fourths of the
100,000,000 - bushel food conserva-
tion target
Brewers, distillers, bakers, and
public eating places have promised
the Citizens Food Committee to
cut down by 25,000,000 bushels or
more to help meet the administra-
tion's grain export goal
Six weeks ago Agriculture De-
partment authorities estimated
livestock farmers woud feed at
least 350.000.000 bushels of wheat
this crop year because of the short
corn crop Last year they fed
about 185.000,000 bushels of wheat
These department officials non
have revised their wheat feeding
estimate to around 275,000,0001
bushels
In an address to an outlook con-
ference of farm officials, Robert
E Post, Agriculture Department
wheat expert, said today this
country faces prosnec’s of a iwch
smaller wheat o<op next year be-
cause of dry weather in the great
plains.
He said, however, that a 1948
1000 000 000 bushels .still;
grapefruit Juice, fried sliced bolo- | appears possible although he did
t otter this figure as a fore- |
Swift’s CXCc
Premium, lb.
Creamed
diced hum on toast, molded vege-
1 rolls, butter or forti-
fied margarine, melon cup, tea
milk.
but sure-fire testing method
| Declaring tliat most cooks could
; tell by touching the cake with a
j finger when it was done Mrs Frv
confided, “I've made it so many ' ready,” and practices this herself !
1 times I can tell by the smell ot j They Frv family moved to Denton i
that cake in the hall whether or from Jacksboro, snd friends in'
not it's ready to take out of the both towns find this a Christmas
oven." I custom to look forward to [October scored a three per cent
’Gilded Lily’ Icing | Serving coffee wi t h the spicy ' gain over September although nor-
Plain confectioner's, icing may be slices was approved by Mrs. Frv. mally there is aseasonal decline
used, but to “gild the lily" Mrs. t but she added tliat such additions in October, the Commerce Depart- I
j really weren t necessary. ment reported today.
“It s a meal in itself, almost." The department estimated at
'she explained with a twinkle in her $500,000,000 the value of private res- [
1 eye. "and though the sen mgs don t identlal construction put in place
■ have to be large, guests usually j during October The figure does not
I prefer them to be” count farm construction. |
complains about teaspoon kitchen bouquet, 1 8
Hie oilier have ounce can broiled mushrooms. 2]
tablespoons cornstarch, 2/3 cup water until
orantZe Juice. 1-4 teaspoon salt. 1-2 mft fat (n
teaspoon dry mustard, 1-2 teaspoon an(j cook over low heat about
powdered ginger. 1 tablespoon
I brown sugar, 2 teaspoons grated
orange rind
| Brush ham with kitchen bou-
quet. Brown on both sides in a
well-greased frying pan over mod-
erate heat Place in a shallow
baking pan. Drain mushrooms
, Pour mushrooms liquid into frying
I re-
over
I
sauce thickens ’
pepper, and cheer.e cut in
pieces. 8tir until smooth
Season to taste with sal’,. Add ham
and heat thoroughly over moderate
heat. Arrange drained noodles
around edge of serving platter
Pour ham and sauce in center of
Add mush- | platter Sprinkle with paprika and
[ serve immediately.
SUNDAY'S MENU
BREAKFAST Tomato
Fresh, New Crop Honduras
Cocoanuts
APPLESAUCE CAKE FOR CHRISTMAS
Mrs. Jep Fry s Recipe Travels
Far in Custody of Her Friends
2 cups raisins
2 enups applesauce — fresh or
dried apples.
2 teaspoon* soda,
1 teaspoon each of cinnamon,
nutmeg, allspice and cloves
1 teaspoon vantlla or
black walnut flavoring
3 1-2 cups flour
2 large cups nutmeats
Mix in order listed.
hour in a very slow oven, then
open the oven door and if the cake Applesauce Cake recipes I tried. '
feels slightly firm, increase the , 1SO j kept working on this one until
heat Just a little "Bake it until a j perfected It, so to speak I tried
. . — ------- ... .i-- e s cation measures.
that the infected area contained 2.-
000.000 animals
Less than 400 000 animals, includ-
ing wild game, were destroyed in
the eight U. 8. outbreaks.
^>rSmfnv'? !ihosc wh.° ‘'hn.v,‘ ev"yt\‘n,{ “1 i NEW HOME BUILDINGF~
GAINS IN OCTOBER
WASHINGTON. Nov. 6 — (Ab —
New private home building during
By GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Staff Writer
Though the first cost is high,
a half of ham for Sunday Can be
used to the last scrap Therefore,
expectant mothers were eligible for, u fs actually a delicious form of
occupancy. He reached theae con- meat economy. Keep the bone
elusions. tat scraps for split pea and lentil
' The mothers are almost always ' soup. Have the butcher cut a
at home. There are no <
parties The young fathers are de-
voted and very responsible Hie!
rent money is always ready ” !
• And no one i
babise crying if
I babies." he added.
fee-
I
and 1 crop of
gna and eggr>. whole wheat toast, not
(/pi— butter of fortified margarine, mar- I cast
slaugh- | malade .coffee milk
dinner Fruit cup. baked ham. Classification Planned
sauce, candied j On Industry Resources
„ -1 I COLLEGE STATION, Tex . Nov.
butter 8 — CT) — Clai.slflcatlon
celery,
lemon
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 6, 1947, newspaper, November 6, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315816/m1/6/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.