The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, June 25, 1943 Page: 3 of 8
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FIGHTING ABSENTEEISM
First Lady Of Texas
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Dutch Apple Cake
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Dutch Apple Cake
-Edgar Guest.
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replied the
PROGRESS
DAILY VACATION
BIBLE SCHOOL
I
Citizens State Bank
SEALY
^lllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW
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I
ALL AROUND
THE HOUSE
RECIPES OF
THE WEEK
I think, therefore I am.
Descartes.
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army doctor.
“Young man,”
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f
A BIT OF
WIT
She: “Now that we’re en-
gaged, dear, you’ll give me a
ring, won’t you?”
He: “Why, certainly, darling!
What’s your number?”
So many Gods, so many
creeds,
So many paths that wind and
wind.
When just the art of being
kind
Is all this sad world needs.
—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
s
CHICAGO, ILL.—Manufacturers of war goods are fighting absentee-
ism among their girl workers by urging them to learn to relax
through recreation in their spare time. An example of this program
is illustrated above by a group of girl workers of the Olson Rug Co.
The Olson Rug team recently rolled into first place in the American
Women’s Bowling Classic.
Bring pencil and note book
ALL CHILDREN, REGARDLESS OF DENOMI-
NATION, BETWEEN THE AGES OF 4 TO 16
YEARS, ARE WELCOME AND INVITED TO
ATTEND.
at
First Baptist Church
— Sealy —
REGISTRATION DAY - SATURDAY, JUNE 26
at 10 O’Clock
Sift flour with baking powder,
sugar, and salt. Cut in % cup
Spry fine. Combine egg and
milk and add to flour mix-
ture, mixing to a soft dough.
Combine remaining 3 table-
spoons Spry, butter, brown
sugar, corn sirup, and cinna-
mon and boil gently 5 min-
utes. Pour into Sprycoated
8-inch round pan. Arrange
apple slices on sirup mixture
in overlapping circles. Spread
dough over apples.
Bake in moderate oven
(350°F.) 50 to 60 minutes.
Serve upside down with top
milk.
BEGINS JUNE 28 - - CLOSES JULY 9
Hours 8:30 to 11:30 A.M.
dish, can be cut in squares, and
if placed in glass pie plate it can
be cut in wedge shape like pie.
Place in refrigerator of where
it can be kept cool.
— BUY WAR BONDS —
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2 cups sifted
flour
3 teaspoons
• baking
powder
2 tablespoons
sugar
% teaspoon salt
7 tablespoons
Spry
1 egg, beaten
7
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ngal
.Photo by Wynn Richards
Mrs. Coke Stevenson Jr., First Lady of the State of Texas, poses
with her daughters, Scottie Gayle, standing, and Linda Fay, in front
of the stately Governor's Mansion at Austin. An ardent supporter of
cotton, Mrs. Stevenson is wearing a tailored dress of white pique.
The little girls are wearing big and little sister dresses of striped
chambray, with eyelet ruffle pinafores. This portrait will be published
by the cotton industry in the July issue of Mademoiselle as the fifth
presentation of the industry’s “First Lady” series.
% cup milk
1 tablespoon
butter
% cup brown
sugar
% cup dark
corn sirup
1 teaspoon
, cinnamon
3 cups apples.
sliced in eighths
-"7m
I, cm
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VANILLA ICE CREAM
1 pint cream
1 cup sugar
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 quart milk
Beat eggs and sugar until
light and frothy, add cream and
vanilla, beat until thoroughly
mixed; add milk, place in re-
frigerator, turn controls to
freezing, do not stir. When
frozen remove and beat until
smooth, return to refrigerator,
turn down controls to about 4.
Chill bowl ice cream is to be
beat in, also dishes used for
serving. This prevents ice
cream melting. It makes a de-
licious healthful ice cream, since
it is not cooked. Full benefit of
I
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A
■
The nonbeliever is a man
Who lets the morning sun-
shine in,
And thinks by chance this
world began
As men throw dice and lose
or win.
He sees the violets bloom and
blow
But not the power which makes
them grow.
Chance gave to. man the faith-
ful horse
And made the swallow fleet
of wing!
How these things came he
doesn’t know;
He thinks they merely happen-
ed so.
Oh, what a jumble there would
be
If chance were shaping beasts
and men.
Could blind chance once repeat
a tree,
Or bring the June rose back
again ?
The simplest truth we’ve learn-
ed to know.
Tomorrow chance might over-
throw.
Without confusion or mistake,
There is a power which rules
■ us all,
A higher law we canont break,
An eye which sees the spar-
row’s fall.
In every twig and leaf and blade
I see God’s handiwork display-
ed.
amount of water, cover and
simmer for 3 to 4 hours or
until tender. Remove the heart
and make gravy from the liquid
in which the heart was cook-
ed.
MAYONNAISE MEAT LOAF
3 cups diced cooked veal
3 tablespoons gelatin
3 tablespoons water
11 cups hot veal stock
12 cup diced celery
12 cup sliced olives
1 cup peas
3 hard-cooked eggs, diced
2 tablespoons capers
1 cup mayonnaise
Shoulder veal may be pur-
chased for this dish, or left-over
veal may be used. Trim the veal
of any fat or cartilage. Soak
the gelatin in water and dis-
solve in meat stock. Cool. Add
remaining ingredients to diced
veal. When the gelatin mixture
begins to congeal, combine with
meat mixture and pour into a
loaf pan or ring mold. Place in
refrigerator and allow to stand
until very firm. Place in the
center of a large platter. Sur-
round with potato salad in let-
uce cups. Garnish with radish
roses and tomatoes filled with
cottage cheese and sprinkled
with parsley.
BACON AND
SCRAMBLED RICE
8 slices bacon
2 cups boiled rice
' 4 eggs
Fry bacon carefully so that
s it is crisp and attractive. Ar-
> range the slices around the edge
of the platter. Leave half the
fat from the bacon in the fry-
ing pan and add 2 cups of boiled
rice into which eggs have been
stirred. Fold the rice into the
bacon fat until egg is set, then
heap it in the center of the
platter.
PINEAPPLE BUTTERMILK
SHERBET
> Two cups fresh buttermilk,
2/3 cup cane sugar, dash of
have abdo-
mens, sergeants have stom-
achs; you have a bellyache.”
medico, “officers
more. We realize that
life depends on progress
and development. There-
fore we have kept a-
bfast of the times and
added modern banking
facilities to the strength
and stability of this
pioneer institution.
Hubby: “What’s that you’re
reading about a man who swap-
ped his wife for a horse?”
Wifey: “That’s right. But
you wouldn’t ever think of that,
would you, dear?”
Hubby: “Of course not. But
I’d hate to have someone offer
me a couple of new tires!”
A group of men at the club
were discussing the color of
their wives’ hair, and Jones was
the only man who couldn’t re-
member. He decided to rush
right home and find out. Dash-
ing into the living room, he
found his wife sitting on the
davenport; he looked at her
hair, and cried:
“Brown!”
And from behind the daven-
port came a surprised voice:
“Now, how did you know I
was here ?”
i, d
it’ 8
Le.s.
Diner (rising unsteadily from
a chair in a restaurant): “Shay,
waiter, find my hat.”
Waiter: “It’s on your head,
sir.”
Diner: “Well, don’t bother,
then; I’ll look for it myself.”
sew the opening.
Dressing
12 cup milk
2 cups fine dry bread crumbs
11 tablespoons bacon drippings
1 egg
12 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon pepper
12 teaspoon thyme
12 teaspoon chopped celery
12 teaspoon onion juice
Pour milk on crumbs and let
stand 1 hour. Add melted drip-
pings, slightly beaten egg and
seasonings.
Brown on all sides in a small
amount of lard. Add a small
I
4
CAROLYN HILLEBRAND
IS HOSTESS AT
DINNER PARTY
Miss Carolyn Hillebrand en-
tertained a number of friends
with a dinner party at Club
Rendezvous Saturday evening.
The party was given in honor
of James Harris, due to his
forthcoming departure.
Additional guests were Miss-
es Eva Jo and Virginia Harris,
and Jean Gebhardt, Denny Hol-
combe, Ladgie Svajda, and Ray-
mond Tomlinson.
— BUY WAR BONDS —
A soldier asked his colonel
for a leave to go home to help
his wife with the spring house-
cleaning.
“I don’t like to refuse you,”
said the colonel, “but I’ve just
received a letter from your
wife saying that you are no use
around the house.”
The soldier replied: “Colonel,
there are two persons in this
regiment who handle the truth
loosely, and I’m one of them.
I’m not married.”
ring until sugar is dissolved.
Add drained cucumbers and
boil five minutes. Pour into hot
sterili ed jars and seal immedi-
ately. Makes about three quarts.
SCRAP WITH YOUR SCRAP
r,
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“I have a pain in my abdo-
men,” said the rookie to the
64
85538
tions in recipe above for pick- . salt, one cup crushed pineapple,
ling. two teaspoons vanilla. Mix this
You can make your own dill and freeze to a mush. Remove
pickles in the same manner, and add to it one egg white
Possibly you will have dill in beaten stiff. Whip up and re-
your garden this year — to I turn to tray. Freeze to desired
gallon vinegar add 1 cup salt consistency. Use medium speed
and a good handful of your dill and it doesn’t get so hard or
(or if you buy dill, use 1 cup icy. To change this to banana
dill seed). After placing cucum- sherbet substitute one cup
bers in mixture, cover all with mashed bananas that have been
branches of dill before placing sprinkled with a little lemon
plate on top. juice to keep them from turn-
“Bread and butter pickles” ing dark. Increase the sugar by
are always a favorite for that 1/3 cup. Freeze this slowly also
informal snack— in order to keep the texture
lioht
BREAD AND BUTTER 5
PICKLES
12 cucumbers (about 6 inches
long)
12 cup salt
5 medium sized onions
2 cups vinegar
11 cups sugar
2 cups water
11 teaspoons mustard seed
1 teaspoon celery seed
Wash vegetables. Cut cucum-
bers in one-quarter inch slices.
Place layers of sliced vegetables
alternately in bowl with salt.
Let stand three hours. Drain
and rinse well with cold water.
Mix water, vinegar, sugar, mus-
tard and celery seeds in large
kettle and bring to boiling, stir-
of your precious sugar—“Sac-
charine pickles,” described as
the “most delicious in the
world—not too sweet but delic-
iously sweet!”
SWEET PICKLES
1 gallon vinegar
2 tablespoons saccharine
powder
12 cup salt
1 package mixed spice
12 package seedless raisins
Cucumbers
Stir mixture until saccharine
is dissolved and follow direc-
raw eggs makes it high in food
value.
LEMON MOLD
3 eggs, beaten
Juice of 112 lemons
1 cup sugar
Cook in double boiler until
thick, then' cool. Whip 1 cup
cream, fold into cold custard.
Cover shallow pan with rolled
or crushed graham crackers. If
placed in square shallow glass
Pickling Time
SOUR PICKLES
1 gallon cider vinegar
1 cup salt
% package mixed spice
(whole)
Cucumbers
Mix vinegar, salt, and spice
in crock and into this place as
many cucumbers as mixture
will cover. Put a plate over
cucumbers and place weight on
plate. Cover all with a cloth
and allow three weeks for pick-
ling process. Pickles will keep
indefinitely in crock, but, if de-
sired, at the end of three weeks,
they can be removed, cut up,
and together with juice from
crock, put in sterile jars and
sealed.
And here’s a recipe to make
sweet pickles without using any
8
Don’t put away a frying pan
that smells of onions, fish or
some other strong - flavored
food. Put some vinegar in the
pan and bring to a boil. Then
wash as usual.
When making berry pies, mix
with the fruit measurement for
one pie about two tablespoons
fine quick-cooking tapioca to
make a clear thick juice that
should not run out during bak-
ing and that will serve neatly.
To mend small holes in win-
dow sceen, put a piece of mos-
quito netting over the hole and
coat it with varnish. When dry,
apply another coat or two.
Put a sponge in the bottom
of your potted plants and you
won’t have to water them so
often.
If your family considers
squash a tasteless vegetable, try
serving it with a white sauce
with melted cheese in it. They
will change their minds.
If too much salt is put in the
soup, a few slices of potato will
remove it. A raw potato in the
refrigerator will absorb unpleas-
ant odors.
Woolen garments will retain
their fluffiness and will not
shrink if a teaspoonful of gly-
cerine is added to the warm
water in which they are wash-
ed and rinsed.
Cutworms, which destroy
many vegetable gardens, have
been called “fifth columnists”
because they work in the dark.
READ THE WANT-ADS
The Nonbeliever
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From oxcart to China
Clipper this bank has
moved with the times.
Today we offer you ev-
ery banking service
modern business has de-
veloped. Best of all this
service costs you no
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STUFFED BEEF HEART
Wash the heart thoroughly. M
Remove large arteries and veins E
from the inside. Fill the cavity
with dressing and skewer or
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THE SEALY NEWS, THREE
SEALY, TEXAS FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1943
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Kendall, C. P. The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, June 25, 1943, newspaper, June 25, 1943; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1601753/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.