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J THE SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C, JANUARY 9, 1942 Serve One-Dish Meals as Smart Budget-Stretchers (See Recipes Below) Appetite Appeal Plus Dents in the budget? Appetites Wilted after the rich foods as a re sult of the double holidays? Well, you can smooth out those dents and at the same time perk up the jaded appetites by smart, simple, easy - to - manage one - dish meals. Here’s a parade of palate-thrilling recipes with which you can sprint right along even with the slimmest of budgets. v To stretch that food dollar, you can use leftover meats and vegeta bles that are called for in these casseroles. 'Ves, and what’s espe cially nice about them is that they’re tops in vitamins and min erals because they’re fortified with those perfect foods, milk and butter. As you’re pouring out the milk from the bottle, remember it’s just brim ming and bursting with health-giv ing qualities. Here’s a meal-in-a-dish which has a luscious butter and bread crumb topping to recommend it: *One-Dish-Meal. (Serves 6) 2 cups diced carrots (6 medium carrots) 1% cups diced celery 6 medium potatoes, pared and sliced 3 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk 1 cup meat stock or 1 bouillon cube in 1 cup hot water 1 teaspoon salt 3 to 6 tablespoons grated onion 1 cup peas (canned or fresh) 2 cups diced leftover meat % cup sifted bread crumbs 3 tablespoons melted butter ' Cook carrots, celery and potatoes separately in boiling salted water until tender. Melt butter, blend in flour, add milk and meat stock. Cook over direct heat, stirring con stantly until sauce boils and thick ens. Add salt. Combine sauce with remaining ingredients, except crumbs and melted butter, and turn into a buttered casserole or baking dish. Combine crumbs and melted butter, sprinkle over surface. Bake in a moderate (350 degrees) oven 35 to 40 minutes. Cabbage, one of winter’s best vegetables, is featured in this cas serole of tuna or salmon: Scalloped Tuna and Cabbage. (Serves 8) 2 cups boiling water 2 quarts chopped cabbage 2 cups rich milk V\ pound American cheese V\ cup flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 can tuna or salmon, flaked 2 cups buttered bread crumbs Pour boiling water over cabbage, heat to boiling, add 1 cup milk and cheese, cut in pieces. Cook over hot water until cheese is melted. Blend flour, salt and remaining milk and add to cabbage. Add tuna or LYNN SAYS: Can you name the one food that does most for your body’s health, most cheaply? Milk, of course! Why? Because milk does all of the following: 1. Promotes growth and main tains the body’s resistance to in fection through vitamin A. 2. Stimulates appetites and keeps the nerves in top-notch con dition through vitamin B1; pro motes growth and keeps the skin healthy through vitamin B2(G). 3. Helps calcium and vitamin C to develop teeth and bones properly if fortified with vita min D. 4. As an excellent source of phosphorus, it also works to keep the teeth and bones in class A. 5. Milk’s proteins come to the fore in repairing worn-down tis sues and muscles and boosting growth. THIS WEEK’S MEND Cream of Mushroom Soup *One Dish Meal Green Bean Salad Bran Muffins Apple Betty with Foamy Sauce Milk Tea Coffee •Recipe Given. salmon and put in buttered casse role. Top with crumbs and bake in moderate (350-degree) oven 20 min utes. Beef Pie. (Serves 6) 1 pound ground beef 1 onion, chopped Salt and pepper 2!& cups green beans, cooked or canned 1 can tomato soup 4 large potatoes, cooked Vz cup warmed milk 1 beaten egg Salt and pepper Brown onion in hot fat, add meat and seasonings. Brown and add green beans and soup. Pour in greased casserole. Mash potatoes, add egg, milk and seasonings. Scoop over meat and bake in a moderate oven. Baked potatoes and salmon are a favorite cold weather combination, but have you ^ ever thought of •. blending the two ’ ( H j together as one ° dish? No? Then you have a real ^ treat coming if you try: Salmon Stuffed Potatoes. (Serves 6) 6 potatoes, baked Vi cup hot milk 1 beaten egg Salt and pepper 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 cups flaked salmon V\ cup minced onion, sauteed 2 tablespoons butter Buttered crumbs Split baked potatoes and scoop out. Mash the potatoes, add milk, egg, salt. Fold in salmon, lemon juice and onions. Refill shells and sprinkle with buttered crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven 20 minutes. Whisk away your problems with leftover chicken or turkey by serv ing the meat creamed with vege tables in the center of a rice ring, adding mushrooms, sauteed, if de sired. Serve it also cut up in cro quettes, in chicken tamale pie, cur ried with rice, scalloped with noo dles, in chop suey, or as a pie like this one here: Chicken Pie. (Serves 6 to 8) 3 cups diced, cooked chicken 1 cup diced, cooked carrots 6 cooked, small white onions 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 1 cup milk 1 cup chicken stock 2 tablespoons flour Salt and pepper Arrange chicken and vegetables in layers in casserole. Combine milk and chicken stock, add flour, blend ing in slowly. Cook until thick, stir ring constantly, then season. Pour over chicken and vegetables. Cover with a sweet potato crust and bake in a moderate oven 40 minutes. Sweet Potato Crust. This crust is the distinctive part of the chicken pie and a wonderful way to use up those few pota toes that are left over from the holiday dinner along with the chicken. It’s a crust de luxe, a crisp, golden brown topping well worthy of chicken pie: 1 cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder Vz teaspoon salt 1 cup cold mashed sweet potato Vz cup fat, melted 1 beaten egg Sift dry ingredients. Work in mashed potato, milk and egg. Roll V\ inch thick, cover pie and flute edges. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY I chool Lesson By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D. Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for January 11 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se lected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education; used by permission. THE INFANCY AND BOYHOOD OF JESUS LESSON TEXT—Luke 2:25-35, 39, 40. GOLDEN TEXT—Jesus Increased in wis dom and stature, and in favor with God and man.—Luke 2:52. "Nobody knows what a boy Is worth. And the world must wait to see; For every man in an honored place Is a boy that used to be.” Jesus was “only a boy” as He grew through infancy and chOdhood, but in that baby and that boy rest ed all the hopes of mankind. While He was not just like any other boy, yet His growth and development were normal, and we may learn much that will enable us to help the boy in our home, in our block, or in our church. The mother of Jesus, in fulfill ment of the law of her people, on the eighth day identified Him with the nation (Luke 2:21), and then at the end of 40 days brought Him, with her humble sacrifice, to pre sent Him to the Lord. There a beautiful and prophetic scene took place as the Holy Spirit revealed to godly old Simeon His I. Complete Salvation—in a Baby <w. 25-35). The Holy Spirit (not yet come as the indwelling presence in believers’ hearts) had come upon Simeon, a man right with God and with a deep longing in his heart for the coming of the Messiah—“the consolation of Israel.” He was assured of living until that day, and now as he waited in the temple the babe who fulfilled that promise was laid in his arms. He blessed God as he broke forth in praise and prophetic utterance. Note the full conception of the work of the Redeemer—deliverance from bondage and fear of death, light to the Gentiles and glory to Israel, a stone of stumbling but also of rising again. A revealer of the hearts of men—yes, and One whose sacrifi cial death would pierce the heart of His mother. One is glad that Simeon and Anna • (v. 36) and “them that looked for redemption in Jerusalem” saw in Mary’s infant son the Son of God incarnate, for round about was un belief (John 1:11), hatred (Matt. 2:16), and indifference (Matt. 2:4, 5). Is it not so today? Christmas has just been celebrated. How many saw the babe in the manger as Je sus the Saviour? The scene changes—the little fam ily is back in Nazareth in the hum ble home—and there we see II. Perfect Development in a Boy (vv. 39, 40). The period from infancy to ac countability (12 years) is summed up in the full-orbed growth of the boy Jesus described in verse 40. The one business of every child from birth to 12, or somewhere around there, until the period of ado lescence, is to grow without any sense of responsibility except obedi ence to authority; and obedience in the case of a child is always in or der to give the child perfect free dom from everything else, without any sense of responsibility. That is the story of Jesus: He grew!” (G. Campbell Morgan). Growth is, first of all, physical. Jesus stands by the side of every boy and girl as the body grows from babyhood to maturity, for He too knew that experience. We may talk to Him as an understanding friend about the physical needs and prob lems of our children. Let us re member that here, as elsewhere in Scripture, the physical body is rec ognized as important. Mentally, He experienced growth. The strange, apocryphal tales about the child Jesus, representing Him as a man of mature wisdom in a child’s body, do not compare even remote ly with the beautiful naturalness of a keen-minded boy asking questions, observing, always learning. Boys and girls, you may talk with confi dence to Him about your lessons, your growing interest in this excit ing world of ours, of your need for guidance in learning. Be sure that He will understand. The crowning touch upon the growing personality of the child is the spiritual. We read of Jesus that “the grace of God was upon him.” “Grace,” says Dr. Morgan, “is first, that which delights and charms. Grace, secondly, i? desire to impart to others the things that make them happy. Grace, finally, is the ac tivity that does this at all costs.” A gracious child is an altogether de lightful being; and when that gra ciousness is the result of the “grace of God” upon him, it is surpassingly lovely, for it makes him Christlike, even in the days of childhood. Great and grave has been the neglect of the spiritual life of chil dren for whom much has been done physically and mentally. Christian parents must not make tkat mistake —and they need not, for the Lord Jesus here too stands ready to coun sel, guide, encourage, and strength en them in every good purpose and deed. Defense Uniforms Can Be as Smart as They Are Practical By CHERIE NICHOLAS "VT OW that thousands of women ’ are engaged in defense service that takes them into factories and plants, or that keeps them busy on the farm, designers are confronted with a new challenge to create prac tical clothes that are primarily functional but are also chic and be coming. In this program of clothes that are able to resist wear and tear, the first problem to be considered is necessarily that of finding materials that will give satisfaction from the standpoint of wearability plus laun- derability. Since sturdy cottons can “take it,” they naturally are first in fabric choice. Denim holds forth at the top of the list in either solid col ors or stripes (often combined for contrast). Then come coverts, man nish tweed cotton suitings and that favorite of favorites—corduroy. White duck, which holds an en viable record for perfect laundering, is particularly smart for young girls who like snappy fashions and who are stationed in surroundings that demand they look immaculate. This fabric is suitable not only for over alls, but also for overseas caps, to keep straying locks from the eyes. To the left in the illustration above is a costume especially designed for American women at work in de fense industries, on farms, or in the air. This "civilian defense suit” is cut on a pattern of simplicity that any woman can make for herself, even if she is a novice at sewing. Note that this suit of washable white duck is one-piece. This gar ment has convertible trousers which may be worn full or snugged in to insure protection from possible en tanglement in machinery. Uniforms for women must have certain basic protective details such as those mentioned above, and they must also be designed for free dom of movement. They must be easy to take off and on, with straps caught at the back so that overalls will not slip off at the shoulders, with snap fasteners at the ankles for comfort and protection. Corduroy mix-mates give oppor tunity for bright color, style and service and all in one. They meet the farm girl’s needs to perfection, and they are equally as useful and smart in the factory. Not only is the never-wear-out quality of cordu roy a convincing argument in its favor, but corduroy has that some thing attractive about it that meas ures up to any wear required of it from work to play. It goes about town or trudges along country roads with equal adaptability. The attractiveness of corduroy is shown in the illustration above by the culotte ensemble centered in the group. In this instance, a bright plaid cotton shirt is teamed with a corduroy culotte and vest. Cordu roy shoes and cotton stockings com plete a perfect outfit for all sorts of active wear. In this smart, good- looking ensemble one can confident ly go about town on a shopping tour, feeling suitably dressed for the oc casion. Mixmate this vest of corduroy with slacks, shown to the right in the picture above, and you have a suit that gives the answer to a gay young farmerette as to “what to wear” about home during busy hours. Wear a corduroy beret with this suit if you must go into town on an er rand, or whatever the call of duty may happen to be. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Bright Wool What with all the glitter of sequin and spangle, it is a relief to turn to the lovely color-bright soft wool classics that fashion elects for style supremacy this winter. Undoubted ly these flattering little wools, fash ioned as they are with studied sim plicity, will be “stealing the show” during the weeks to come. These lovely classic wools make color their theme, and worn under win ter furs, they lead the first-in fashion group. Pictured is a charm ing model of Forstmann wool in a subtle green that goes beautifully with any fur. There is a restrained accent of sparkling gilt on the belt and front closing. Wear a flaring hat and carry a beaver muff. Dutch Bonnets and Hoods Have Peasant Embroidery A charming new fashion that is going the rounds this winter, to the delight of high school and college girls, is that of cunning little hoods or bonnets cut in the manner of Dutch bonnets or baby caps and made of bright felt. Or, if you pre fer, they can be gaily crocheted. These are adorned with appliques of felt flowers in peasant colorings or trimmed in crocheted flowers. They tie undef the chin, and they lend a most attractive dash of color to a wintry landscape. They’re perfect with skating outfits, or to wear to and from dances, or to school. Here’s the Latest Style: Dresses With Apron Front Here’s the latest bit of fashion gossip. It’s all about the dresses with cleverly designed apron fronts. This new fashion calls for a pencil- slim skirt, at the front of which there is a tie-on apron effect. Some times it is achieved with a cascade drape of material. Again it is a pleated tie-on that makes the apron. However, the cleverest of all, be cause it introduces the right print accent, is the applique of cut out floral prints. The effect is just about as charming as fancy can picture, especially if a corresponding touch of the print appears on the sleeves. Evening Capes Sparkle With Beads and Sequins Just as new as the coming New Year are the new evening capes, some long and some short, that are made of bright colored woolens handsomely and elaborately em broidered with sparkling stones or sequins or vivid yarns. A favorite color for these gay little capes is magenta. Jet beading on black or white wool also ranks high in chio. AN APRON which pleases for its efficiency as well as for its bright gay appearance, easily achieved with a few rows of ric rac, is presented here in a pat tern which is no trouble at all to follow. The picture shows you how this apron extends in back— O-. o- O- O- O- O- O- O- O- o-. o- O- (V* O- o-. O-. fv. <v. cv. 1 ASK M€ O \ | ANOTHER I l ? B ? ? A General Quiz ? O-<*. {v. (v. cv. o-<v. p-(v. cv. <v. <v. ft. (t. (tJ The Question* 1. What is the mile-high city in the United States? 2. Why do air travelers have trouble with their fountain pens in higher altitudes? 3. What country is called Miz- raim in the Bible? 4. During the war with Spain who was commander-in-chief of our forces? 5. The core of the earth is be lieved to be composed of what? 6. What is perique? 7. When did Benjamin Franklin receive his first airmail letter? The Answer* 1. Denver, Colo. 2. The air in the pen (if pen is but partially full) expands, caus ing a leakage of ink. 3. Egypt. 4. William McKinley. 5. Nickel and iron. 6. A strong flavored tobacco. 7. In 1785, when in France. It was sent from England by bal loon. an all-covering skirt and straps which stay firmly in place. A tie- on apron, pretty enough to be any one’s gift, is also included. • • • Pattern No. 8075 is in sizes 14 to 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 pinafore apron re quires 17'a yards 32-inch material, 6 yards ric rac. Tie-on apron, 1 Vs yards, plus 2 ,3 yard contrast, and 3 yards binding. For these attractive patterns send your or der to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. Room 1324 311 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pattern No Size Name Address PURE-WHITE Our Anger Anger is an affected madness, compounded of pride and folly, and an intention to do common ly more mischief than it can bring to pass; and, without doubt, of all passions which actually dis turb the mind of man, it is most in our power to extinguish, at least, to suppress and correct, our anger.—Clarendon. A. Vegetable Laxative For Headache, Biliousness, and Dizziness when caused by Consti pation. Use as directed on label. 15 doses for only 10 cents. Dr. Hitchcock s LAXATIVE POWDER Your Troubles Do not grieve upon your own troubles: you would not have them if you did not need them. Do not grieve over the troubles of “oth ers”; there are no others.—Bolton Hall. CORNS GO EAST Pain roe* quick, coma • peedily nmored whoa you an thin, soothing, cushioning Dr. Ccboll'S Zino-pads. Try them 1 D-Scholls 7' no Working to Forget I do not value fortune. The love of labor is my sheet anchor. I work that I may forget, and for getting, I am happy.—Stephen Gi rard. Charm of Life Illusion and wisdom combined are the charm of life and art.— Joseph Joubert. Give YOUR child same expert care used when QUINIUPIETS CATCH COLD At the first sign of a chest cold—the Dionne Quintuplets’throats and chests are rubbed with Musterole—a product made especially to promptly relieve DISTRESS of colds and resulting bronchial and croupy coughs. Musterole gives such wonderful results be cause it’s more than an ordinary “salve.” It MMOLE helps break up local congestion. Since Musterole is used on the Quintuplets you may be sure you’re using just about the BEST product made! IN 3 STRENGTHS Children’s Mild Muster ole Also Regular and Extra Strength for grown-ups who prefer a _ stronger product. All W. drugstores. Let’s go to town —at Hornet N O TELLING what tomorrow's weather may be. It fools the best fore caster. But we do want chintz for the windows. We do need a car pet sweeper, a new percolator, and a new end-table in the living-room. And we don f t want to slosh around rainy streets to hunt them. Problem: How to thwart the weathf r man. Simple enough! Let’s sit down by the fireplace and read the advertisements. Here it’s comfortable and snug. We'll take* the newspaper page by page, compare prices, qualities, brand-names. Tomorrow, rain or shine, we'll head for the store that has what we want, and home again in a jiffy. •"Buying at Home”—through the advertising columns—gives you wide selection, more time to decide, and satisfaction when you decide. • MAKE IT ONE OF YOUR PLEASANT HABITS!