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THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C. Crocheted Sacque Ties; Is Seamless Var That Pretty Baby t darling of a little sacque— eted of white baby wool t««Ked in pink wool. The tiny ■tad sprays are embroidered completed garment in pas- sflk floss in colors. The circu- jacket, which ties with satin tat under the arms is excep- ■flty easy to crochet as it is k aO in one piece. There are *"* BB *’ • • • complete crocheting Instnic- ■ tm the Circular Crocheted Sacque Mn Ko. 5759) color chart for em- HeiWe; rosebuds send 16 cents In coin, r oosor. address and the pattern num- CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK Wells St. Chlcaso. 15 cents (plus one cent to at mailing) lor Pattern CASH Tree/ \ Odd** CONTEST Cat Entry Bltmk at rour Dealer’a Midnight October 18 TOD CANT BUT aspirin than the assurance or ■ad purity guaranteed when yon Joseph Aspirin, world’s largest Demand St. Joseph Aspirin. FOR QUICK RELIEF CARBOlLe SALVE ■hrt la tboosands with satisfactory M» ■Wb fee 40 rears—six i valuable Ingredia “ Carboil at drug stores or writs Co., NashvUlea Tens. 2ffkyS u ff e,l? - rti Mini uiii ui mu if RHEUMATISM NEURITIS-LUMBAGO MCNEIL'S MAGIC REMEDY ERiNGS BLESSED RELIEF U aw MMj'iro-SmaU Size 60c I * CHTMI: III HIT II lllltin « I I UK HUES H IT III N itetilt tl rkl 11#., lat. JltlHHIttl «■ ftllllll when root yiACWtl . ft*****? Gairo- o JBhH Mbs your dinner doesn’t set wsdLoud you feel side and miaar- rfta kd toothing PBPTO-BISMOL ymm. Relieves heartburn, sour, HpaWalHnach—helps retard cat for. wt^am and simple diarrhea. Ash yaew druggist for PBPTO-BISMOL oflaa jaor stomach is upset. A NORWICH PRODUCT ■sap the Battle Rolling ,W9ft War Bonds and Scrap Meal Contrasts In Color, Texture Help Appetite Cheese Souffle Sandwiches team up with ripe olives to give good fla vor and eolor contrast to those quickie lunches. How is your contrast IQ in meals? Do you serve whitefish, potatoes and cauliflower all at the same meal and expect the family to eat it? Do you put be fore them Bean Loaf, mashed squash and bread pudding and ex pect them to find the meal palatable? Yes, the foods are all highly nu tritious and may be well prepared, but there’s an important element in meal planning missing in these sug gestions. It is contrast. (There’s a lack of contrast in flavor, color ahd texture In these food combinations, and without that meals will often go uneaten. Real interest in foods is an inter est in the way they look and how they feel in the mouth. If the meal is colorful, the family is immediate ly attracted. There is also a de sire for different textures. That’s why the family wants some'thing crispy in a salad when they have a soft food like stew, Spanish rice or spaghetti. People are very fond of macaroni and corn or potatoes and parsnips, but they don’t care for them at Die same meal. If you’re having mac aroni, try serving it with something green like green beans, peas, broc coli or asparagus and watch the fam ily go for it. The table will be more colorful, too, and we eat with our eyes, too, you know. Now., how would you like this com bination? Mock drumsticks, lima beans and carrots. There’s no same ness about texture or color there. Mock Drumsticks. (Serves 6) m pounds veal, beef or pork steaks, cut thin 6 skewers 2 cups cornflakes 1 W 2 tablespoons milk 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 3 tablespoons fat M cup water Cut meat into strips and roll around skewers In the shape of a drumstick. Roll cornflakes Into fine crumbs. Cover drumsticks with crumbs, then dip in slightly beaten egg to which milk and seasonings have been added. Roll again in crumbs. Brown the drum sticks in fat, then 1 add water, cover tightly and bake in a moderate (350 degree) oven about 1 hour or until tender. Here’s an easy dinner as good to the eye as to the palate: Cream of Tomato Soup Lamb Roll Baked Squash Hashed Brown Potatoes Cole Slaw Apple Sauce Chocolate Cookies, Lamb Roll. (Serves 6) Boned Breast of Lamb 94 pound bulk pork sausage 2 tablespoons lard 1 small onion, diced 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 1 enp tomatoes » Have lamb breast boned, spread with sausage meat and tied into a rolL Brown on all sides in hot fat. Season with salt and pepper. Add Lynn Says Looking Mighty Pretty: Slice cucumbers thinly but not quite all the way through. Place slices of radish in between each slice of cucumber. Fill spiced beets with chopped spinach and serve around beef roast. Break cauliflower into flower- lets, sprinkle with paprika and place around ham slice. When serving carrots with lamb, roll the whole carrots in chopped mint. Bananas and pineapple slices make a smart accompaniment to ground beef. all other ingredients. Cover closely and cook very slowly until done, about 1V& hours. Add more liquid, if needed. Colorful vegetables in this menu are all cooked with the meat: Braised Liver with Vegetables Mashed Potatoes Orange-Watercress Salad Rye Bread — Butter Butterscotch Sundae Braised Liver With Vegetables. (Serves 6) 114 pounds sliced liver Flour 2 tablespoons bacon drippings 6 carrots 2 green peppers 6 small onions Salt and pepper 14 cup water Dredge liver with flour. Brown in hot drippings. Clean and dice vege tables. Arrange in piles on slices of liver. Season. Add water. Cover and cook slowly until liver and vegetables are done. Beef liver will take about 45 minutes. Pork, lamb and veal (or calves’) liver will take about 30 min utes. Now, for a luncheon dish that has unusual flavor and contrast. Firsts here’s the menu I’d suggest: Vegetable Broth or Grapefruit Juice Cheese Souffle Sandwich Jellied Fruit Salad Beverage Date Bars A double boiler will help the cook produce perfect souffle sandwiches; Cheese Souffle Sandwich. (Serves 6) 6 slices white bread 94 pound processed Cheddar cheese Dash of p^Mper Dash of paprika 3 eggs Ripe olives Toast the bread (crusts trimmed) on both sides. Melt the cheese in the top of a. double boiler. Add pep per and paprika to egg yolks. Beat until thick, then fold this mixture into egg whites which have been beaten until stiff but not dry. Pile on toast and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) until puffy and golden brown. Place on a chop plate and garnish with ripe olives. For the fruit salad suggestion, you may have cherry flavored gelatin with melon balls and dark grapes; lemon flavored gelatin with pine apple, white grapes, nutmeats, and cherries. Mock Drumsticks, crisply coated and fried to tenderness, are fine foil for whole cooked carrots and lima beans. Use a circular platter to carry out the pattern. Date bars are a chewy contrast to the rest of the meal. Date Bars. (Makes 2 dozen) 1 enp sifted floor Va teaspoon s<ilt 1 te^ jpoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon baking powder 94 cup bran or wheat germ 1 cup chopped dates 1 eup chopped walnuts 3 eggs 1 cup honey 94 cup melted butter Sift together flour, salt, cinnamon and baking powder. Add bran, dates and nuts. Beat egg until thick, add honey and butter. Mix well. Stir in flour mixture, blending thorough ly. Spread evenly on well-greased pan and bake In a moderate (350- degree) oven about 35 minutes. Cut in squares while warm, then remova from pan. Butterscotch Rice Pudding. (Serves Six) 96 enp rice 2 caps milk 96 teaspoon salt 96 cap brown sugar 2 tablespoons batter 1 tablespoon lemon juice 96 teaspoon vanilla 96 cup chopped dates Wash rice, then add rice and salt to milk. Bring to a boil and simmer 25 minutes. Meanwhile melt but ter and add sugar. Cook slowly un til mixture melts and turns dark brown. Add to rice-milk mixture and stir. Remove from heat and add lemon juice, vanilla and dates. CooL Do you have recipes or entertaining suggestions which you’d like to pass on to other readers? Send them to Miss Lynn Chambers, Western Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplaines Street, Chicago 6, UL Released by Wellern Newspaper Union. Tenure Solved by Dad-Son Partnership National Farm Life Can Be Made Secure “One of the fundamental needs of agriculture is to have a succession of the same family on the same land throughout succeeding generations,’’ according to H. C. M. Case, Uni versity of Illinois college of agri culture. In making that statement. Case said that he was thinking of the good of the individual, the com munity end the nation. One of the major problems of agriculture is the movement of capi tal and earnings from the country to the city. In a period of ten years, approximatley six and one-helf million people go from the country to the city during normal conditions. The costs of their education, the in heritance of farm property by city dwellers and collection of rent from a farm property by city dwellers make a heavy drain on the land. This situation also makes it difficult for young people remaining in'the country to secure ft foothold as farm operators and eventually to become owners of farm property. One way of meeting the situation is by means of father-son partner ships on the farm. Case offered four specific suggestions, each based upon a well-kept system of records regarding kinds of father-son ar rangements which may be made to facilitate the young man getting a start on the farm: (1) Where the father owns all the land, equipment and livestock, and the son supplies only his labor. The common arrangement is to guar antee the son hired-man wages, but if a given share of the farm In come agreed upon by the father and son exceeds the amount of wages, then he receives an additional amount at the end of the year. (2) Where the father is a tenant and the son contributes only labor. The plan is similar to the first one in so far as the son is guaranteed a going wage, but he receives a cor respondingly larger share of the in come received by the father because his labor will amount to a larger proportion of the contribution to the farming operation than it would if he also owned the farm. (3) Where the father and son oper ate a farm jointly. If the son lacks capital, he can give his father a promissory note and pay interest on his share of the investment of the operating capital, which would put him In the status of a tenant with hls father. Under this plan, the father would receive the landlord share of the income from the farm, but in addition the father and son as equal tenants would divide any additional earnings between them. (4) Where the father is ready to retire. In this instance, the son as tenant may take over the owner ship of the operating capital, even though he lacks the capital to pur chase it outright. He may give his father a note and pay interest on the investment or the operating capi tal and become a full operating ten ant of the farm. Or it may be desir able for the father to retire while still owning the operating capital. Under this scheme, the son may ac cept a smaller share of the income from the farm in order to give his father adequate pay for his invest ment in both the farm and the op£s ating equipment. Health Improved by Control of Parasites Cattle grubs spoil one out of every three hides by puncturing the skin, and also cause considerable loss of meat. Similar damage is also done by ticks, mites, lice and other anthropod parasites which interfere with growth and make animals un thrifty. Rotenone and selected dips are recommended as an antidote. Worm parasites of the digestive tract injure older stock, and cause many deaths, especially among young animals. As much as 125 mil lion dollars a year is lost by the damage they inflict. Nodular worms, for example, spoil sheep intestines for catgut sutures and sausage cas ings. Phenothiazine is the principal recommended remedy. Animal livers are spoiled for food and for use in medicinal prepara tions by liver flukes (flat, leaflike parasites) and fringed tape worms. Wartime research bos produced a hexachlorethane - bentonite suspen sion for the control of liver flukes in cattle. Two slices of bread wasted once a week in each home equal three million wasted loaves per year. Protein for Poults Young turkeys thrive on a simple Vegetable-protein diet which does not require any of the animal pro teins in scarce supply because of the war, U. S. department of agri culture research has determined. Soybean meal and peanut meal were the chief high-protein feeds used in the test diets. Most rapid growth to six weeks of age came from a mash containing ground wheat and soybean meal, together with some alfalfa-leaf meal. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Flared Peplum Softly Feminine Sports Jerkin Has Dozen Uses Straight Skirt, Peplum Blouse A SOFT, utterly feminine dress which consists of straight skirt and a peplum blouse. It’s perfect to make up in pastel eye let-embroidery cottons, in colorful print cottons. Nice, too, in flow ered rayon crepes and sheers. Good for afternoon and date wear. • • • Barbara Ben Pattern No. 1219 la de signed for alzes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14, short sleeves, requires 3% yards of 39-inch material. For this pattern, send 25 cents. In coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted. Sore to Flatter A CLASSIC which has a dozen uses and which is flattering on all types of figures. The tailored, buttoned-under-the-arm jerkin can be worn over cotton sports shirts, or can be worn as a cool “sun- backer’’ top over slacks or shorts. Barbara Ben Pattern No. 1222 Is d»> signed for sizes 11, 12. 13, 14, 16 and l&j Size 12, jerkin, requires l 1 /* yards of 39- Inch material; skirt, 1% yards. Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, sUghtly more Urn* Is required In filling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 534 South Wells St. Chicago Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. . Pattern No ............Size...... Name Address Paramnesia Persons who feel they have pre-- viously visited a place or per* formed an activity that, in reality, they have not, are undeis going an illusion called paramne-j sia, says Collier’s. \ For instance, it can occur when a person has his attention dis-j traded immediately after having seen a new place. Upon again be* coming aware of his surroundings,' his memory recalls the scene but places the time far in the past. 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