The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 25, 1944, Image 6
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C.
Lawn Chair Is Like
Mother’s and Dad’s
H ERE is a pint-size lawn chair
to delight the children and
Iheir young visitors. The scat is
10% inches high, 13 inches deep
and 15 inches wide—a good size
lor little ones now and roomy
enough to be comfortable right up
through their early teens.
A hammer and saw and screw
driver are all the tools you need
•d make this chair as well as the
larger edition that you see in the
sketch. All the pieces are straight
cuts of standard widths, yet both
•f them have seats and backs at
comfortable angles. The lines and
proportions are good and the
backs are removable for winter
storage.
MOTE—Pattern 253 gives a complete list
at materials, large diagrams tor cutting
all the pieces ot the child's chair and step-
hy-step directions' tor assembling. Pattern
SB lists materials with diagrams and dl-
aerttosia tor the adult-size chair. Patterna
as* 15 cents each postpaid, or both pat-
teraa tor 25 cents. Order from:
MRS. ROTH WYETH SPEARS
Bastard mils New York
Drawer M
Enclose 15 cents for Pattern 2St. or
B easts tor Patterns 253 and 289.
Hama —
Address
Rome Has Monument to
King Costing $5,000,000
Rome’s manumwst to Victor
Emmanuel II, king of Italy from
1861 to 1878, is the costliest memo
rial of its kind in the world, says
Collier’s. Built of white marble
and embellished with numerous
sculptured groups and reliefs as
well as a great equestrian statue
•f the king, this massive structure
•ecupies almost a square block.
It is as high as an 18-story
building, cost $5,000,000 and was
under construction for 26 years be
tas its dedication in 1911.
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H SHEETS 25^^'
Keep Cool With Shrimp Salad in Aspic
(See Recipes Below)
Keeping Cool
There are still warm days ahead
through late summer and early fall,
and plenty of opportunity for keep
ing cool.
Formerly it was thought that one
should eat extremely lightly of just
low - calorie sal
ads with hardly
enough nourish
ment for the
body, and cold
drinks. Nowwe
recognize the ne
cessity of using
enough proteins
in the diet to keep the body in good
condition, and also know that a cup
of hot soup will be as cooling as the
coolest drink.
Naturally our proteins may be in
the form of salads for we like them
especially well in the summer. Here
is a good one using a shrimp in
aspic, both cooling and nutritious:
Lemon Aspic.
Serves 6)
2 tablespoons gelatine
V* cup cold water
1% caps hot water
% teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
% enp lemon juice
1 cup cooked or canned shrimp
1 enp chopped celery
Chicory or other salad greens
Sprinkle gelatine into cold water.
Add hot water, salt, sugar and lem
on juice. Cool, then add shrimp
and celery. Chill in ring mold. Un
mold on crisp salad greens. Fill
with:
*Shrimp Salad.
(Serves 6)
% cup cooked or canned shrimp
2 tablespoons french dressing
1 cup diced celery ,
1 enp lettuce, ent in pieces
1 cap peas
Lynn Chambers’ Point-Saving
Menas
Strained Vegetable Soup
*Shrimp Salad in Lemon Aspic
Rye Bread-Cream Cheeso
Sandwiches ,
Olives Pickle'S
•Peach Crumble
•Recipes Given
salad dressing to moisten. Serve on
lettuce and watercress.
If you are looking for fruity sal
ads, there are any number the fam
ily will like:
Fruit Ginger Ale Salad.
(Serves 6)
1 tablespoon gelatine
Vi cup cold water or fruit juice
V4 enp orange or other jnice
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons lemon jnico
M teaspoon salt
1 enp ginger ale
1 enp fruit
Soften gelatine in cold water.
Place bowl over warm water and
stir until gelatine
is dissolved. Add
sugar, salt and
fruit juice. Cool
and add ginger
ale. Chill, and
when mixture be
gins to thicken,
add fruit cut in
small pieces (canned pineapple,
pears, apricots, cherries or fresh
fruit such as oranges, apples, grapes
or bananas). Two tablespoons of
ginger may be added if a high gin
ger flavor is desired. Turn into in
dividual molds that have been rinsed
in cold water. Chill. Unmold on
lettuce and serve with mayonnaise.
Mayonnaise to blend
Marinate shrimp 15 minutes
french dressing. Combine with
maining ingredi
ents. Garnish the
lemon aspic with
lemon quarters
and shridhjis.
Do fbu ever
feel iBAt potato
salad has a flat
tast*? That can
easily be remedied by marinatu
the cubed potatoes in french dres
ing to give them an extra flavor.
Creamy Potato Salad.
(Serves 6)
4 cups cold, boiled potatoes, cubed
% cup french dressing
1% teaspoons salt
1 medium onion, minced
2 hard-cooked eggs
Vi cup diced celery
5 slices bacon, fried and crumbled
6 sliced radishes
% cup mayonnaise or boiled dress
ing
Marinate potatoes in french dress
ing one-half hour. Toss together with
remaining ingredients and serve with
cold meats, wedges of tomato and
cucumber slices.
Chicken Salad.
(Serves 6)
2 cups diced chicken or veal
% cup diced celery
Vi cup sliced, toasted almonds
Salad dressing
Mix all ingredients with enough
Lynn Says
Go-Togethers: Some foods
served together are inspired com
binations. You’ll like:
Roast loin of pork with mint
ed applesauce, created • onions,
brown bread and coconut cake.
Curried Chicken with boiled
rice; corn muffins with flg jelly
or jam, or quince honey;*lettuce
salad; date and nuf'pudding with
cream.
Beef en casserole, with pota
toes, carrots and green beans; ap
ple salad; bread and butter pick
les; bread with plum jam; peach
crumble.
Best Salad.
(Serves 6) ^
1 tablespoon gelatine
14 cup cold water
Ijcup cooked salad dressing
1 cup cream or evaporated milk,
whipped
114 cups chicken or diced veal
Vi, cup almonds, blanched and
chopped
94 cup malaga grapes, canned
pineapple or oranges
Vi teaspoon salt
Soften gelatine in cold water. Place
in dish over boiling water and stir
until gelatine is dissolved. Cool and
combine with salt, salad dress
ing, whipped cream or whipped
evaporated milk. Fold in chicken,
using white meat, almonds, and
skinned grapes, seeded and cut into
pieces. Turn into mold, rinsed with
cold water, and chiU until firm. When
firm, unmold and garnish with let
tuce, almonds and grapes.
Fruit desserts? Here are two with
apricots and peaches:
•Peach Crumble.
(Serves 6)
8 fresh peaches, sliced '
Vi cup water
1 teaspoon lemon jnice
94 cup flour
1 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons butter
Vi teaspoon salt
Arrange peaches in buttered bak
ing dish; sprinkle with water and
lemon juice. Blend sugar, flour, but
ter and salt together until mixture
resembles rough cornmeal. Sprin
kle over peaches. Bake in a mod
erate oven (350 degrees) until
peaches are soft and top is brown
and bubbly, about 35 minutes.
Apricot Dessert.
Fill honeydew melon ring with or
ange sherbet and garnish with apri
cots halved and peeled, marinated
in lemon juice and cantaloupe balls.
Cel the most from your meat! Get youi
meal roasting chart from Miss Lynn Cham
hers by writing to her in care of Western
Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplaines
Street, Chicago 6, III. Please send •
stamped, self-addressed envelope for you)
reply.
Releaaed by Western Newspaper Union.
Cover Crop Seed
Increase Sought
Supplies Needed to
Maintain Acreage
Growing of legumes and covet
crops—with particular emphasis on
seed production—is receiving more
attention than usual from Uncle Sam
this year.
The nation’s farmers for many
years have relied upon legumes and
cover crops to protect their soil from
erosion, preserve valuable moisture,
and gather life-giving nitrogen from
the air. In most cases, these crops
are plowed under as green manure
to make room for more profitable
row crops, such as cotton, corn, or
tobacco.
Heavy wartime demands for more
food and fiber crops from each acre
under the plow have increased the
need for seeding legumes and coyer
crops, the War Food administration
says. Records show that growing
these crops in winter will bring
about a substantial increase in per
acre yields of subsequent crops. The
urgent need for more feed crops to
support added numbers of livestock
also has a place in the picture, WFA
says. These crops provide excel
lent pasture for several weeks be
fore turning under, thus supple
menting dwindling supplies of con
centrated protein feeds.
Principal emphasis is being placed
on harvesting of seed from 1944 crops
of legumes and grasses because sup
plies now are at dangerously low
levels. Adequate supplies of these
seeds are essential for providing
Good Clover Stand
winter feeds, protecting land during
the winter months, and maintaining
soil productivity at high levels.
Increases in production of legume
and grass seeds must be made in
1944 if there are to be sufficient new
seedings this fall for hay and pas
ture production and for sod acreage
in regular crop rotations. Nations
liberated from Nazi domination will
need seed quickly to help reestablish
themselves by restoring their devas
tated farmlands. Shipping seed
abroad is an economical way of
exporting food and lessens the drain
on our own food supplies.
Harvesting of legume and cover
crop seed will be encouraged under
provisions of the 1944 conservation
program of the Agricultural Adjust
ment agency. Substantial payments
will be allowed for each acre har
vested, up to a maximum of 25 acres
per farm. Prices of seed will be
supported at levels designed to give
the fdrmer a fair return. Crops eli
gible for AAA payments and sup
port prices include most principal
legumes and grasses.
In addition to the profit realized,
farmers are being urged by the
WFA to produce adequate supplies
of seed for two principal reasons.
First, WFA says, if farmers are to
maintain their record production
levels, every effort must be made to
keep the nation’s farmlands in top
productive condition. Any effort to
draw upon soil fertility without re
placing it is a dangerous gamble
which may result in declining pro
duction in later years. In the sec
ond place, many of the crops now
being produced in record quantities
to meet urgent needs are soil de
pleting. Continued production of
these crops makes it imperative
that productivity be preserved by
every means possible.
Here is how the situation sums up:
1. Red clover—Reserves at 40 per
cent of 1940 level.
2. Alsike clover—Carryover re
duced one-half by two short crops.
3. Sweet clover—1943 crop small
est since 1922. Carryover July 1 ex
pected to be 40 per cent of 1939-1943
average.
Cattle Liver Flukes
Liver flukes, long a serious men
ace to cattle production in parts of
Texas and other western states, are
now being fought with a new chemi
cal treatment, according to the War
Food administration. The drug
“hexachlorethane” is combined with
bentonite in water to make a smooth
emulsion that is easily given as a
drench. Liver flukes, difficult to
reach by medication, are small, flat,
leaf-shaped parasites.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS
It’s Cool, Tubbable and Slimming
Brother-Sister Summer Play Set
■ Jy?
1998
36-52
TTNADORNED save for
charming detail at
For Favorite Pastels
the
neckline,
this matron’s dress is quietly de
signed to make you look taller,
slimmerj Maks it up in your fa
vorite summer pastel shades in
rayon sheers and in cool, tubbable
cottons 1
• • •
Barbara Belt Pattern No. 1996 Is de
signed for sizes 36. 38. 40. 42, 44, 48. 48.
80 and 52. Size 38. short sleeves, requires
3% yards ot 39-inch material.
That Bulldog Grip
The proverbial “bulldog grip” of
the bulldog does not result from
obstinacy or any other quality
but from the construction of the
animal’s mouth. The lower jaw is
longer than the upper jaw, and
therefor* it is physically impos
sible for the dog to let go while
there is any tension on the object
being gripped.
2-6 yrs.
DRIEF, comfortable, cool and
^ pretty—that’s the sort of sum
mer clothes the youngsters like I
This brother-and-sister play' set is
easy to make and launders like a
charm when done in nice cotton
materials.
* # •
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1991 la de
signed for sizes 2, 3, 4, 5 and • years.
Size 3. boys' overalls, requires It yard at
36-lnoh material; blouse 1% yards; girls*
Jumper, 1% yards ot 38-Inch malarial;
blouse, tifL y*” 1 *- •
Due to an unusually Urge demand and
current war conditions, slightly more time
Is required in filling orders lor a few ad
the most popular pattern numbers.
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT,
534 South Wells St. Chicago
Enclose 20 cents in coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No Size.
Name ..
Address
£ ALlr F NE TEA >
cflRmsn
.1. a»ANO
X" PEKOE & PEKOE
v r<f\ y
■■■ Hear'em Cmckle/ mm
■ f&C&yph
RICE KRISHES
-Tb'6d 9r
“The Craiaa are Great Feeds
• Kellogg’s Rice Krispies equal the
whole ripe grain in nearly all the
protective food elements declared
essential to human nutrition.
VERONICA LAKE speaking:
Co-Starring in "SO PROUDLY WE HAIL," a Paramount Pkturoi