The Humble Echo (Humble, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1944 Page: 6 of 8
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GET
AFTER___________ , ilB
With a Medicine that will Prove Itself
If you suffer from rheumatic pain
or muscular aches, buy C-2223 today
for real pain-relieving help. 60c, $1.
Caution: Use only as directed. First
bottle purchase price refunded by
druggist if not satisfied. Get C-2223,
Relief At Last
i ForYourCough
^ Creomulsion relieves promptly be-
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and excel
phlegm, and aid natSre
ro soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
Tf” your druggist to sell you
^kottieof Creomulsion with the un-
aerstanding you must like the way it
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
SNAPPY FACTS
ABOUT
RUBBER
ST&GE^i
iCREEN*i_
By VIRGINIA VALE
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
QINCE his return from his
O recent overseas trip Joe
E. Brown has been the talk of
New York — being modest,
he’s told the people fortunate
enough to hear him, things
that he should say to the en-
tire United States. He has
traveled more than 100,000
miles, entertained more than
two million men, on all fronts. The
man is terrific; it’s no wonder that
a psychiatrist who followed him
through hospitals in the South Pa-
cific reported a 71 per cent improve-
ment in the patients’ condition. He
entertained men everywhere—in the
front lines, on ships, in canteens.
* * * ★ '★★★*★
* * •
WmMuWiv
lliiii
More than 25 American auto-
motive companies are making
military vehicles for United
States soldiers and our Allies
—and they have first call on
tires and other rubber items.
Forty thousand additional miles have
been obtained from individual tires
In use at Camp Sfoneman because
of the tire-saving campaign in force
there since rubber became scarce.
No tricks —just plain tire care and
recapping at the right time.
An 875-pound electric magnet
attached to an electric truck
"sweeps" the floors of a mu-
nitions factory of steel litter
and serves the double pur-
pose of solva^-g Lmetal and
Meals Without Meat
Vegetables can be filling, too! If
you are working on menus without
meats, you can
still give your
family foods that pi—i
will give them [j Fk
plenty to"put their 0
teeth into—foods
with that stick-to- l-l -
the-ribs quality.
Lynn Chambers’ Point-Saving
Menus
Creamed Eggs on Biscuit
Green Beans
Wilted Lettuce Salad
Enriched Bread
Cherry Pie Beverage
Merchant Marine Academy
The army has West Point; the
navy has Annapolis; and now the
merchant marine, too, has its own
academy at King’s Point, N. Y.
ANNOYED
with a head cold?
r sta"^eSS
ttom-
Get
BROWN
His new radio show, on the Blue
network, is a quiz show; too bad
he’s not doing an additional one, so
that the public could hear what he
told newspaper people.
Lauritz Melchior, Metropolitan
tenor who scored such a hit clown-
ing with Fred Allen on the air, has
signed for his first motion picture_
it’s Metro’s “Thrill of Romance,”
featuring Esther Williams, the
swimmer. He’ll play an opera sing*
Vegetables will give you minerals
and vitamins aplenty. Some of them
will even supply some quantities of
protein, but fortify these foods with
complete proteins from milk, cheese
and eggs. There’s not a recipe in
today’s column that will not satisfy
your desire for color and zest.
An old favorite, bean roast, is
especially good at this time of year.
It contains no meat, but tastes as
though it certainly had some:
Cheese and Bean Roast.
(Serves 5)
1 No. 2 can kidney beans
34 pound American cheese
1 onion, chopped fine
1 tablespoon butter or substitute
1 cup bread crumbs
Salt and pepper to taste
2 eggs, well beaten
Drain the beans and put them with
the cheese through the food chopper.
Cook the onion in butter. Combine
mixtures, add seasonings and eggs.
Pack into a buttered loaf tin and
cover with buttered bread crumbs.
Bake in a moderate oven (350 de
grees) about 30 to 35 minutes or
until browned. Serve with tomato
“All the other fellows razzed this
chap,” said the soldier who’d just
come out of Halloran hospital. “He
sat down on the side of my bed
and played cards with me and
talked, and was swell. I didn’t know
who he was then. Found out later
he was Frank Sinatra.”
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BUY
WAR BONDS
James Cagney has started his
personal appearance tour of U. S.
army and navy bases in the Euro-
pean war theater; expects to re-
main abroad for three months. He
rehearsed six weeks with a dance
coach before leaving Hollywood, on
a cavalcade of American dancing
from George Primrose to Fred
Astaire.
We won’t see Rosalind Russell in
“Sister Kenny,” after all that prep-
aration, because it’s been indefinite-
ly postponed. But it’s going to be
too bad if she’s assigned to “Rough-
ly Speaking” instead, because that’s
a perfect story for Bette Davis.
sauce.
Save Used Fats!
Creamed Potatoes and Eggs.
(Serves 6)
3 cups diced, cooked potatoes (left-
over potatoes may be used)
6 hard-cooked eggs
134 cups milk
2 tablespoons butter or substitute
2 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon salt
Make a white sauce by melting
butter, adding flour, and mixing in
milk. Cook until
smooth and thick-
ened. Add salt,
potatoes and eggs
cut in slices. Let
heat thoroughly.
One-half cup of
grated American
cheese may be
added for topping before serving, if
desired.
Save Used Fats!
Asparagus and Cauliflower With
Rarebit Sauce.
(Serves 6)
2 tablespoons butter or substitute
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
Shopping for lingerie with his
tvife, Geoffrey Barnes, he of the
ominous voice on “The Mystery
Theater,” yielded to the temptation
to use his radio voice on the ele-
vator operator. Barnes says he nev-
er had an easier time getting out.
STAINLESS SOOTHING
CAMPHO-
PHENIQUE
ANTISEPTIC DRESS! NG
ODDS AND ENDS-That Flying
Fortress named for “We, the People”
is still blasting away at the Germans
... While Bob Griffin was recovering
from a plane crash on CBS’s “Mary
Marlin” he was down with jungle fever
in “Valiant Lady” . . . “The Silver
Theater” may move from Hollywood to
New York, to present well-known stags
players in its Sunday dramas . . . One-
third of the principal players in “The
Robe will be new to the screen; Pro-
ducer Frank Ross believes the story de-
mands fresh faces . . . Jack Benny has
checked off the Warner Bros, lot, after
completing his starring role in "The
Horn Blows at Midnight"
Lynn Says
Food Supplies: Sweet potato
supplies this year will be good,
thus bringing them within the
range of every family in the coun-
try.
Potato supplies will depend on
the May crop. Dried beans, peas,
soy flour and grits, and peanut
butter prospects are good. Sugar
supplies win be about the same
as last year, but more wUl be
given for home-canning.
Fair suppHes only of these
foods are indicated: vegetables,
cheese, cream, butter, ice cream,
beef, honey, jams, jehies, rice,’
salad oils, salad dressings, short-
enings, tea, cocoa and marjoram.
These foods win be scarce: on-
ions—until April, bananas, canned
fruits, lentils, fresh fish, white
cornmeal, corn syrup, hominy
grits, coconut, pineapple, celery
seed, cinnamon, thyme, black
pepper.
34 teaspoon salt
% cup grated American cheese
Few drops Worcestershire sauce
Cayenne
2 bunches cooked asparagus
1 head of cooked cauliflower
Make white sauce of butter, flour
and milk. Add cheese, seasonings
and stir until melted. Pour over
asparagus and cauliflower arranged
on platter. Garnish with pimiento
strips and parsley.
Eggs make splendid, nourishing
food for lenten meals. Treat them
gently — not too
fast cooking and
the egg will re-
ward you well in
texture and pal-
atability:
Spanish Eggs.
(Serves 4)
234 cups tomatoes
34 green pepper, chopped
1 small onion, chopped
34 cup chopped celery
1 teaspoon sugar
94 teaspoon salt
34 teaspoon pepper
1 bay leaf
94 cup bread crumbs
4 eggs
34 cup grated American cheese
Cook tomatoes, pepper, onion, cel-
ery, sugar and seasonings together
for 10 minutes. Remove bay leaf,
add crumbs and place in casserole.
Break eggs on top, sprinkle with
salt and pepper and cover with grat-
ed cheese. Bake in a slow oven
(325 degrees) until eggs are firm
and cheese has melted, 15 to 20
minutes. Mixture may also be
placed in individual baking dishes.
Save Used Fats!
Egg Shortcake.
(Serves 6)
6 hard-cooked eggs
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour ,
2 cups milk
34 teaspoon salt
34 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 teaspoon minced onion
Biscuit dough (using 2 cups flour)
Melt butter, blend in flour. Add
cold milk and stir constantly, cook-
ing until thickened. Add salt and
pepper, five coarsely chopped eggs,
onion and parsley. Heat thoroughly
over hot water.
Prepare biscuit dough and roll %
inch thick. Cut into 12 biscuits and
bake these in a very hot oven until
browned.
Arrange biscuits, one topping the
other with a spoonful of creamed
eggs between them. Top with more
creamed eggs and garnish with a
slice of egg.
Are you looking for salad ideas?
Send a stamped, self-addressed enve-
lope to Miss Lynn Chambers at West-
ern Newspaper Union, 210 South Des-
plaines Street, Chicago 6, Illinois.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Furniture Scratches
Small scratches on furniture often
disappear if they are rubbed with
nut meats. The oil in the nuts dark-
ens and conceals the scratch. An
oily nut like a pecan or butternut is
best. Cut the kernel with a knife
and rub the cut side into the scratch.
Then polish the surface of the wood
with a soft dry cloth. A mixture of
two-thirds linseed oil and one-third
turpentine is also good for rubbing
scratches out of sight, as is a reli-
able commercial furniture polish.
AS PURE AS
MONEY CAN BUY
None faster. None surer. None safer.
No aspirin can do more for you than
Bt. Joseph Aspirin-world’s largest seller
oc j t.’ tablets, 20^; 100 tablets, only
oop. Be sure to demand St. Joseph Aspirin*
UGHTENS
TANNED €PB#1
DARK
25catdruKf?ists.Freo Sam*
OR. FRED PALMER'S
SKIN WHITENER
END LAXATIVE HABIT
THIS EASY WAY!
Millions Now Take Simple
Fresh Fruit Drink — Find
Harsh Laxatives
Unnecessary
It’s lemon and water. Yes!—just
the juice of 1 Sunkist Lemon in a
glass of water—first thing: on
arising.
Taken first thing in the morning,
this wholesome drink stimulates •
bowel action in a natural way—
assures most people of prompt,
normal elimination.
Why not change to this healthful
habit? Lemon and water is good
for you. Lemons are among the
richest sources of vitamin C, which
combats fatigue, helps you resist
colds and infections. They also
supply B* and P. They alkalinize,
aid appetite and digestion. Lemon
and water has a fresh tang, too—
clears the mouth, wakes you up!
Try this grand wake-up drink
10 mornings. See if it doesn't help
you! Use California Sunkist
Lemons.
Since 30 years ago. its-
PAZOi PILES
Relieves painand soreness
For relief from the torture of simple
Piles, PAZO ointment has been famous
for more than thirty years. Here’s why:
First, PAZO ointment soothes inflamed
areas, relieves pain and itching. Second.
PAZO ointment lubricates hardened,
dried parts—helps prevent cracking and
soreness. Third. PAZO ointment tends
to reduce swelling and check bleeding.
Fourth, it’s easy to use. PAZO oint-
ment’s perforated Pile Pipe makes ap.
plication simple, thorough. Your doctor
can tell you about PAZO ointment. I
Get PAZO Now! At Your Druggists!
We£0 (//ujomecf tftu/L-_
iMOROLINBl
1-HAIR TONIC @
AT FIRST — E3*.
sion of a Ira
O use 666
tU TABLETS. SALVE, NOSE DROPS
WNU—P
10—44
That Na^sfins*
Backache
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Modern life with its hurry and worry.
Irregular habits, improper eating and
drinking—its risk of exposure and infec-
tion—throws heavy strain on the work
of the kidneys. They are apt to becom.
over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid
blood ef impuritie* Iron> the hfe-giving
You may suffer nagging backache,
headache, dizziness, getting up nights,
leg pains, swelling—feel constantly
tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs
of kidney or bladder disorder are some-
times burning, scanty or too frequent
urination.
Try Doan’s Pills. Doan's help the
kidneys to pass off harmful excess body
waste. They have had more than half a
century of public approval. Are recom-
mended by grateful users everywhere.
Ask your nsighborl
Doans Pills
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Beaumont, E. The Humble Echo (Humble, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1944, newspaper, March 10, 1944; Humble, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth648360/m1/6/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Humble Museum.