The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1940 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Sealy News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.
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THE SEALY NEWS, SEALY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1940
THREE
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THE WOMAN’S PAGE
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Mother’s Day
1P
C. A. Lay Welding and Machine Shop
C. A. Lay, Prop.
Sealy
Telephone 125
7
Electric Welding — Bring Us the Broken Pieces
&
Summer Session
T
JUNE 4 to AUGUST 3
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9204
All Arround
the House
Recipes off
the Week
slightly crushed .
1 teaspoon vanilla
Beat egg whites well.
I
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I
!
!
No one is more deserving of considera-
tion and honor than your mother. None
of us will ever attain the ambitions our
mother’s had for us.. Her love and devo-
tion surpass every bond of. man even to
the door of death. As we honor mother
we dedicate ourselves again to the ideal
she painted for us years ago. In so doing
we will better serve our friends and
neighbors each day.
i
1
A Bit of
Wit
i
I
I
COUNTRY COOKIES
Combine
1 cup molasses and
1 cup sour milk, mixing well.
Stir' in
12 cup lard which has been
softened but not melted.
Add
3 cups sifted flour, sifted
with
1 teaspoon baking soda and
, I
ing and skill. Jane Withers puts
across a rollicking number call- .
I
Courses offered for the summer are Business, Chemistry,
English, Education, Government, History
and Mathematics.
By Mrs. Jesse Burttschell,
of Houston
$
*9
$
40
45
Indignant parents (6 a.m.):
“Young man, what do you mean
by bringing my daughter in at
this hour?”
Flaming youth: “Well, I got-
ta be at work by 7.”
I
I
Remember Mothers of All Ages
with
— KING’S CHOCOLATES —
for
“AMERICAN QUEENS”
The Sweetest of All Gifts
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28g
5′8
As,
Felcman’s Confectionery
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Blinn College
A fully accredited Class A Junior College |
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Customer: “I want to return
this washing machine.”
Salesman: “What is wrong
with it, madam?”
Customer: “Every time I get
into it the paddles knock me off
— FISH FRY —
at
Turner Hall
Cat Spring
on
SUN., MAY 12th
Dinner Served at 11:30 a.m.
Meal Tickets:
Adults, 35c; Children, 20c
AFTERNOON PROGRAM
1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.—Band
Concert by Lindy’s Brass
Band
2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.-Other
Various Entertainments
3:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.—Pub-
lic Speaking by L. J. Sulak
and Others .
Big Dance at Night
Music by
Raymond Baca’s Orchestra
Admission: Dancers, 40c;
Spectators, 15c; Ladies Free
—Committee
1 tablespoon ginger. Beat
Here is something new for
a Sunday night supper: Add a
cup of chopped cooked ham to
your regular waffle recipe, then
cook the waffles as usual. Serve
them topped with scrambled
eggs and accompany with plen-
ty of hot coffee.
When sending flowers that
will have to be out of water
for several hours, soak them
well, then snip the tips of the
stems and coat with sealing
wax. When they reach their
destination, cut off the wax and
plunge into water.
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STRAWBERRY
SHORTCAKE
12 cup shortening or butter
% cup sugar
1 egg
2 cups sifted flour
12 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon vanilla
% cup milk
Sift flour once, measure, add
baking powder and salt, and
sift together. Cream shortening
thoroughly. Add sugar grad-
ually and cream together until
light and fluffy. Add beaten
egg and mix. Add vanilla. Add
flour, alternately with milk, a
small amount at a time, beat-
ing after each addition until
smooth. Bake in two greased
9-inch layer pans in moderately
hot oven.
STRAWBERRY FILLING
12 pint whipping cream
2 tablespoons sugar
1 pint box strawberries
Combine sugar and cream
and whip. Spread between first
layer and add sliced strawber-
ries, then top layer and add
strawberry halves.
Note: Pineapple shortcake is
made the same way using
drained, crushed pineapple in-
stead of strawberries.
COCOANUT MACAROONS
2 egg whites beaten stiffly
1 cup sugar
112 cups corn flakes,
8itf e
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PRUNE CAKE
The prunes should be cooked
until very soft, but without
sweetening. Cook in very little
water, to keep the flavor. Mash
finely.
Cream
1 cup butter and
1 cup sugar and combine
with
1 cup mashed and stoned
prunes.
Sift
1 teaspoon allspice and
1 teaspoon cinnamon with
2 cups flour and add
12 cup prune juice and
12 cup milk. Beat
2 eggs and add
1 teaspoon soda dissolved in
1 tablespoon warm water.
Flavor with
12 teaspoon lemon extract.
Pour into layer cake pans
and bake in a moderate
oven 305 degrees F. until
done. Frost with powdered
sugar icing.
A
ed “On the Rancho with My
Pancho” with rare zest. Togeth-
er Jane and Gene sing “Shanty
of Dreams” and “Wanderers.”
This combination is tops in
ballad singing.
Gene plays the part of Will
Carson whose one ambition in
life is to clear the name of his
grandfather, Wild Bill Carson,
first United States Marshal of
Carson Corners, who was un-
justly accused of being a mem-
ber of a robber band. As daugh-
ter of the town banker, Jane
aids Gene not only in the fight
to vindicate his grandfather
but also in his efforts to cap-
ture the heart of Jane’s older
sister, .who is played by Mar-
jorie Weaver.
Students may get credit for nine semester hours, pro-
vided they take full-time work.
For further information write:
C. F. Schmidt, President
Brenham, Texas
box to chill. Serve with whip-
ped cream or meringue.
BARBECUED
SAUSAGE ROLLS
12 link sausages
1 recipe baking powder
biscuit dough
Fry sausages until about half
done. Roll out biscuit dough;
cut into twelve rectangular
pieces. Wrap each sausage link
in biscuit dough and bake in
hot oven until crust is brown.
Serve with following barbecue
sauce.
BARBECUE SAUCE
1 small onion, chopped fine
2 tablespoons drippings or
sausage fat
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
2/3 cup catsup .
1 tablespoon vinegar
2 to 3 tablespoons lemon
j uice
2 tablespoons prepared
mustard
1 cup beef broth or water
Fry onion in drippings until
soft and light yellow. Add re-
maining ingredients and sim-
mer slowly for 15 minutes or
until fairly thick. Serve hot on
sausage rolls.'
Note: This sauce may be
made up and kept in a covered
jar.
“What do you do?”
“I keep house, scrub, scour,
bake, wash dishes, cook, do the
laundry, iron, sew.”
And the census taker listed
her: “Housewife—no occupa-
tion.”
M t U
1 ■ I
Gene Autry,
Jane Withers In
“Shooting High”
• Sombrerors off to Jane With-
ers and Gene Autry and a 24-
gun salute with “six shooters”
to 20th Century-Fox for bring-
ing these incomparable stars
together in “Shooting High,”
which will be shown at the
Texas Theatre here Sunday and
Monday night, May 12 and 13.
Together Jane and Gene race
through the film shooting, rid-
ing, singing and getting laughs
to. score a new high in enter-
tainment. Jane uses all her
mischievous charm to turn in
the finest performance of her
career, while Gene never was
better. His voice is still tops
and he still knows how to get
everything that can be gotten
out of a song.
And, speaking of songs.
Gene has some really grand
numbers in “Shooting High,”
and he sings them as only he
can. In this picture Gene has
two solo numbers, “Only One
Love in a Lifetime” and “Little
Old Band of Gold.” He sings
both with his usual fine feel-
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The stout man accused Wil-
liam of stealing his handker-
chief. Then whe he found it in
another pocket he apologized
profusely.
“Ferget it,” advised William
tensely. “You though I was a
crook. I though you was a
gentleman. We were both,
wrong.”
This little table of polished chrome
and polished plate glass will fill a
versatile role in any home. The
leaves swing back vertically to form
a screen which is both ornamental
and useful to check the hang of a
skirt or a stocking seam. Open, it is
excellent for serving cold drinks as
wet glasses cannot mar its surface.
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When cereal loses its crisp-
ness, put it in the top of the
double boiler for a few min-
utes. It will crisp up more
quickly than if put in the oven.
Lemon juice added to cook-
ing water (2 tablespoons juice
to 1 quart water) will keep
cauliflower, corn, rice and po-
tatoes white.
Pan-broiled bacon: Lay the
j strips of bacon in a cold frying
“ pan. Cook slowly and turn the
bacon frequently. Pour off
dripping as it cooks out. When
nicely browned. lift the slice to
a piece of absorbent paper to
drain off the excess fat.
To remove mildew on leath-
er, rub a little vaseline into the
leather thoroughly, then polish
with a soft clean cloth that has
been moistened with a few
drops of glycerine.
Window boxes can change
the whole appearance of your
house. If you hang them below
/ the sills, they will make your
windows look longer than they
really are. If you set them
above the sill, they will shorten
your windows. Boxes set in
every window across the house
make a handsome horizontal
color band in contrast to the
vertical lines of the front door.
Bake corn breads and muffins
on the middle grate of the oven
for the most satisfactory re-
sults. Uniform heat at top and
bottom produces a delicious loaf
without a hard crust.
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CITIZENS
STATE BANK - - SEALY
moderately hot oven until done.
FRUIT CUSTARD
14 teaspoon salt
3 eggs
1 cup sugar
1 quart sweet milk
2 tablespoons flour or
cornstarch
2 cans No. 1 fruit salad,
drained
1 teaspoon vanilla
Mix sugar, flour and salt.
m Add scalded milk, stirring con-
stantly. Add egg, slightly beat-
en, and cook in double boiler
B until it thickens. Cool and flav-
or with vanilla. Then stir in
drained fruit salad, put in ice
sugar gradually. ’ Then mix in
carefully the other ingredients
as named. Bake in moderate
oven for 20 minutes. Makes
about 30 macaroons, dropped by
the spoonful on buttered tins.
HOW TO CAN
GREEN GRAPES
Pick while seeds are still
tender. Pick from stems and
wash, then fill in jars and pour
boiling water over them and
seal. Put sealed jars in pan of
warm water in the oven and let
grapes in jar come to boil about
ten minutes or until you see
tiny bubbles quickly rising to
the top of the jar. Then re-
move from oven.
DELICIOUS
GREEN GRAPE PIE
1 pint green grapes (canned)
1 cup raisins
1 cup sugar
4 tablespoons butter or
thick cream
4 tablespoons flour
2 pie shells (unbaked)
Drain water from one pint of
grapes and add 12 pint grapes
to each unbaked pie shell to
which 2 tablespoons of flour
each has been added. Then add
12 cup raisins to each pie and
sprinkle 12 cup sugar over each
pie and dot each pie with 2
tablespoons butter. Bake in
| Lemon Juice Recipe Checks
Rheumatic Pain Quickly
I or “neuritis spafat, frorm tzheumatis arthritis well and, chill until firm enough
I se hompackagpeorthatu-EEhoucndpounatdng. to handle. Turn in small
Mix it with a quart of water, add the amounts on a Well floured
and roll lightly % inch
dayrniph0ften thick. Cut into squares. Sprinkle
splendid results are obtained. If the pains lightly with brown sugar and
m betteruiku-Eeawu andt ifouonotdng "2 place on baking sheets. Bake in
an Rinder moderate oven (375 degrees F.)
Compound is for sale and recommended by 10 minutes. Makes 3 dozen
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109697,5"54
Doctor: “Congr a t u l a tions,
governor, you’re the father of
triplets.”
Governor: “I demand a re-
count.”
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Kendall, C. P. The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1940, newspaper, May 10, 1940; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1591101/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.