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CRISPLY COOL ON A SUMMER DAY!
(See Recipes Below)
THIRST QUENCHER IDEAS
The thermometer’s soaring and
the summer sun’s too hot, you say?
:Then you’ll want a cool, gracious
drink with tinkling ice to lift your
wilted spirits.
Indeed the favorite pickup for a
sultry day is nothing more than a
simple drink of fruit juices, tea, or
frosty milk with shimmering ice.
The tartness of the fruit juices in
these drinks will refresh and cool
you, soothe your disposition long
after you’ve sipped them. Besides
they’ll give vitamins and minerals
to pep you up even more.
For a really quick cooling drink
you might try some of the prepared
fruit juice powders on the market.
They can be mixed in a flash and
give a very satisfying beverage. The
i children will like working with
them, too, and won’t muss the kitch
en if they have this type of easy
'preparation to use.
Summer drinks can be especially
attractive when served with those
fragrant sprigs of
mint you have
growing on the
side of the house,
strawberries
from the patch,
or long, length
wise slices of
lemon to bring
out the delicate flavor of tea. Ice
cubes with cherries, red berries,
mint leaves, orange or lemon slices,
or fruit juices all frozen in the cubes
will make your thirst quenchers a
joy to look at.
♦lced Tea.
Tea must be made double strength
when used with ice, so use 2 tea
spoons for each cup of water. Meas
ure 1 cup of freshly drawn water,
bring to a boil. Pour over leaves,
let steep 5 minutes, then strain into
a pitcher. Cool, pour into glasses
filled with ice, two-thirds full. Serve
with slices of lemon.
You can do such delightful things
with this combination of tea, or
anges and mint, so here’s a recipe
which you might like to try. It’s a
company favorite!
Orange Mint Julep.
(Serves 10)
6 glasses of strong tea
2 cups sugar
% cup water
1 orange rind grated
Juice of six oranges
Sprays of mint
Boil the sugar and water and grat
ed orange rind for 5 minutes. Re
move from fire, add crushed mint
leaves and let cool. To the strained
tea add orange juice, and pour into
glasses which are half-filled with
crushed ice, and sweeten to taste
with the strained mint syrup. You’ll
like this garnished with mint sprays
and floating orange slices.
For a really exhilarating drink
that has nutritive value so vital to
lift lagging spirits, here’s eggs and
milk combined with fruit and juices.
It’s so-o-o good and looks like a
charm.
LYNN SAYS:
A snowy frost on the glass in
which you serve your cooling
summer drinks is very attrac
tive and simple to make. All
you do is dip the top of the glass
before it is filled into slightly
beaten egg white and then into
granulated sugar. Allow to dry
thoroughly before using.
If you’d like a true frost for
the glass try a drink which is
guaranteed to have one. Such
are the old-fashioned “granits”
which may be of any flavor you
desire. ‘The granit is a half
frozen drink which is put in the
refrigerator or freezer until a
light snow-frost appears, but
leaves the drink still liquid
enough to pour.
For a strawberry granit, mash
a quart of berries and cover with
1% pounds of sugar, then set
aside for several hours to let a
syrup form. Drain and press
through a sieve. Add 1 table
spoon of strawberry extract, then
mix with 1 pint of water. Freeze
until the top is snow-frosted and
serve in long, thin glasses.
THIS WEEK’S MENU
Fruit Cup
Noodle Ring with Fried Chicken
Cream Gravy Hot Biscuits
Fresh Asparagus with Browned
Butter and Crumb Sauce
Tossed Fresh Vegetable Salad
French Dressing
‘lced Tea
Red Raspberry Fluff
♦Recipe given.
Fruit Float.
(Serves 2)
1 cup water
2 cups sugar
Juice of 2 lemons
Juice of 2 oranges
2 eggs
Vs teaspoon salt
% cup fresh raspberries or straw
berries
Chipped ice
Boil the sugar and water for 5
minutes. Cool. Mix all the ingredi
ents except the ice and beat thor
oughly. Chill. When ready to serve,
pour into glasses half filled with ice.
Garnish with a few whole berries
Fruit Swizzle.
(Serves 8-10)
1 quart strong tea
1 quart ginger ale
Juice of 3 lemons
1 small bottle maraschino cherries
Juice of 3 oranges
2 cups pineapple juice
1 cup diced or crushed pineapple
Mix all the ingredients together,
sweeten to taste and serve iced.
Here’s an old-fashioned treat that
always makes new friends. I can
still remember
how nice the
kitchen smelled
when mother
used to put it up,
and then again
how hospitable
everyone thought
she was when un-
expected guests came and she
served this drink. It has a delight
ful color, and unusual flavor.
Currant Syrup With Raspberries.
(Makes 3 quarts)
1 pint currant juice
2 pounds sugar
6 pounds currents
1 pound sour cherries
1 pound raspberries
1% pints water
Pick, wash, seed, and dry the cur
rants carefully. Seed and stem the
cherries, and the raspberries. Pound
and mash them well and let stand
in a cool place for 36 hours. Then
strain through a bag. Cook the
sugar and water until it will snap
when tested in cold water. Then
add the fruit syrups, let boil 5 min
utes, remove from fire. Let it get
cold and then put up in bottles.
Cinnamon Almond Float.
(Serves 6)
% cup sugar
% teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 quart cold milk
1 teaspoon almond extract
% teaspoon vanilla
1 pint vanilla ice cream
Combine sugar and cinnamon;
add milk and flavorings and stir un
til sugar is dissolved. Pour into tall
glasses and top each with a gen
erous spoonful of ice cream.
Coconut Flake Cookies.
(Makes 5 dozen)
1% cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons double-acting baking
powder
% teaspoon salt
3 cups corn flakes or bran flakes
1 cup butter or other shortening
1 cup granulated sugar
% cup brown sugar, firmly packed
2 eggs, unbeaten
1 teaspoon vanilla
1% cups shredded coconut
Sift flour once, measure, add bak
ing powder and salt, and sift again;
add flakes. Cream butter, add sug
ar gradually, and cream together ;
well. Add eggs, one at a time,
beating thoroughly after each. Add i
vanilla. Add flour and flakes mix- I
ture, mixing well. Add coconut.
Drop from teaspoon on ungreased !
baking sheet and bake in moderate
oven (375 degrees F.) 12 to 15 min- ।
utes, or until done. For variation % :
cup chopped nuts may be added to :
mixture before baking. i
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
(Consolidated Features—WNU Service.)
NEW YORK.—A few years ago,
Anita Loos’ maid used to de
liver to her every day a dash of
gopher dust from Harlem. We
„ . haven’t
Strung Manuscript heard wheth-
Across Continent; er this still
HerNa.lSOOftOO «£s-,*!
seems to be still working. All goes
well as “Blossoms in the Dust” gets
warm, almost fulsome from the crit
ics. Miss Loos did the screen
play for Ralph Wheelwright’s story.
It taps deep founts of tears and
ranges far from Miss Loos’ “Gen
tlemen Prefer Blondes,” and its
Lorelei Lee, the alluring and un
abashed golddigger of 1925. It’s one
of those “where are they now?”
stories, with Miss Loos sitting
pretty, literally and figuratively, as
a deft, swift, workmanlike story
adapter, scenarist and remodeler in
Hollywood—one of the best.
The pint-size girl with bangs—
weight 87 pounds, height four
feet, eleven inches—was riding
on the train from California to
New York in 1925, considerably
bored. She started writing up
this golddigger Lorelei, with a
soft-stub pencil, in big, round
letters. The manuscript strung
along clear through Kansas and
Indiana and on to New York,
and was almost as big as Miss
Loos, what with those big rope
trick letters, when she landed
here.
It brought her something over
$600,000. It was translated into vir
tually every language except Es
kimo and pigeon-talk, and in Eng
land its sales passed those of any
other American book. She later
wrote “But Gentlemen Marry Bru
nettes.”
Her talent for humor may
have been inherited from her
father, a country newspaper
publisher and humorist of the
Bill Nye school, of Sissons,
Calif., where Miss Loos was
born. She was a shy, quaint
little thing, hanging around the
newspaper shop, helping polish
up a gag or feed the flatbed.
When she was 14, she sent a
story to the New York Morning
Telegraph. They printed it. A
year later David Griffith sent for
a girl who had sent a scenario
which had set his assistants to
whooping joyously.
“What can I do for you, my
child?” he asked when the tiny girl
with bangs and pigtails came in.
The Loos girl showed him her sum
mons to Hollywood. There she was
and is. In the years between she
had become a pretty good actress,
appearing in San Francisco and oth
er California cities.
♦
JUST a year ago, Roger L. Put
nam, go-getting mayor of Spring
field, Mass., was much in the news
with the Putnam plan to break bot
tienecks in
Management, Over industry. He
Finance, Rapidly caught the
Forging Into Lead “Xn by
his success in achieving co-opera
tion among the city, industry and
labor, the most important detail of
his formula being the training of la
bor by the city, to fit specific needs.
He’s in the news as Springfield’s
defense director with some snappy
suggestions about the swift and ef
fective integration of civilians and
officials, and private and public
facilities. His successful battles
with two floods and a hurricane give
weight to his words.
He’s Harvard, 1915, did a P.G.
stretch at M.1.T., worked at
engineering and was in the navy
in the World war. In the navy
he learned to crochet cord belts,
an art which he still practices,
and Putnam-made belts are in
great demand among his
friends. He is the father of
three boys and three girls, 48
years old, stocky in build, but
quick-moving both in person and
speech. He is president of the
Package Machinery Co.
More and more management, as
above, is coming to the top, as
against finance. Note James Burn
ham’s new book, “The Managerial
Revolution,”— malign over there,
still benign over here.
♦
A WIZARD in electrometallurgy
is Dr. Francis C. Frary, who
explains the exact uses to which
Aluminum pots and pans may be
put in expediting defense. Since
1918 he has been director of the re
search laboratories of the Aluminum
Company of America at Keystone,
Pa. His work made possible over
2,000 uses of aluminum.
He was schooled at the University
of Minnesota and the University of
Berlin. He then taught for seven
years and became an industrial re
search worker in 1915.
THE BULLETIN
Sl
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ON YOUR boat or on dry land
you’ll enjoy this play suit
which features the smart nautical
theme. The sailor collar top
mates well with either slacks or
a skirt—have both in your vaca
tion ensemble! Make it in faded
rwwWWWfWWWWTWWWWWW
Ask Me Jlnother
0 A General Quiz
1. How many tablets of stone
Held the Ten Commandments as
given to Moses?
2. The average amount of blood
ai the human body is about what
proportion of the body weight?
3. “Double, double, toil and
trouble; fire burn and cauldron
bubble” is a quotation from what?
4. 'What is a binnacle?
5. In Greek legend, who sowed
the dragon’s teeth?
6. What country named its cap
ital after an American President?
7. What is meant by 0:15 a. m.?
The Answers
♦l. Two.
2. One twentieth.
3. “Macbeth.”
4. A box containing a ship’s
compass.
5. Jason.
6. Liberia (Monrovia, named
tor President Monroe).
7. Fifteen minutes after mid
night. The zero is used to denote
that the first hour of the day has
not elapsed.
FFFT b^iHEAT
Give feet wines of coolness. Sprinkle
Mexican Heat Powder in shoes. Relieves
tiredness. Little cost. Lots of comfort.
Deadly Tongue
The second most deadly instru
ment of destruction is the dyna
mite gun—the first is the human
tongue. —W. G. Jordan.
’ll®Br
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J 9 KaHL s®/ ^1 k & ihk !
hßmkJK^W^v
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS CONTAINS
28% LESS NICOTINE ^|W
than the average of the 4 other lar^eet-seUlnt cigarette* teeted-leoe than any of them
-according to Independent adentific testa thtmokt UmV. The smoke's the thingi
blue denim, trim with red, white c
and blue braid, the result is a
smart young costume which will
add fun to every hour you wear it. c
•• • t
Pattern No. 8962 la in sizes 12 to 20 and t
40. Size 14 blouse toh requires 2ft yards
3«-inch material; Slaest, 2% yards; skirt.
2% yards, 7ft yards braid for trim.
For this attractive pattern send your (
order to; 5
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. ‘
Room 1324
311 W. Wacker Dr. Chlcafo
Enclose 15 cents in coins for 1
Pattern No Size i
Name <
Address
Brown Was Starting Early j
To Get Along With the Cook 1
The bus was starting in the
midst of a torrent of rain, when
the conductor put his head inside
and inquired: “Will any gentle
man get out and oblige a lady?”
“She can come inside and sit '
on my knee, if she likes,” said a
passenger, jocularly, and, to his
great surprise, in bounced a
buxom woman, who forthwith ap
propriated the offered knee. ।
After a time the man, Brown,
by name, got into conversation .
with his burden, and asked her
where she was going. On hearing
her destination, he exclaimed,
“Why, that’s my house!”
“Well, then,” replied the woman,
blushing, “I’m your new cook.”
New Jobs Being Offered
By U. S. Civil Service
Bso8 so
There May Be a Place for You
WHAT a parade Uncle Sam ’
could lead of his workers—
workers of every kind. You may
have often w’ondered if there is
a place for you in that parade.
What chance would you have in
the United States Civil Service?
New tests are being given all
the time and there are literally
thousands of different jobs. Per
haps you, too, are the kind of
person our government needs.
• * •
To find out what your chances are, how
you should apply, see our new 32-page
booklet. Lists several U. S. Civil Service
positions with salaries and requirements.
Explains rules for applying, trial period,
promotions, Increases and benefits includ
ing retirement annuities. Send your
order to: _
READER-HOME SERVICE
635 Sixth Avenue New York City
Enclose 10 cents in coin for your
copy of GETTING A JOB WITH THE
U. S. GOVERNMENT.
Name
Address
Noble Issues
Above all, in our dealings with
the souls of men we are to take
care how we check, by severe re
quirement or narrow caution, ef
forts which might otherwise lead
to a noble issue, and, still more,
how’ we withhold our admiration
from great excellencies, because
they are mingled with rough
faults.—John Ruskin.
One reason jelly is tough is be
cause too little sugar is used; an
other is overcooking.
* • •
It takes less time, fewer hours
of labor and, therefore, costs less
to roof a house with strip shingles
than with individual shingles.
• • •
One teaspoon of dissolved gela
tin added to one-half pint of
whipped cream will make the
cream stiffer when whipped.
• • •
Meals with plenty of eolor are
not only more interesting, but are
invariably better balanced than
colorless meals.
• • •
Proper drainage should be pro
vided under concrete floors and
porches, and around wall footings
and foundation walls.
MINOR OJTS, BURNS,BWSEIIWB
Kpenetrh
1 N I I''
No Accompanist
“What is your occupation?”
“An organist.”
“Organist, eh? And why did you
give it up?”
“The monkey died.” •
Makes 10 BIG Drinks*
Unblemished Sun
The sun, though it passes
through dirty places, yet remains
as pure as before.— Ooke.
A SoothiaK C A IVE
antiseptic w
Uaed by thousands with satisfactory ty
suits for 40 years—six effective ingredi
ents. Get Carboil at drug stores or mall
50c to Spurlock-Neal Co., Nashville, Tenth
Much to Learn
“How does Charlie ir/ike love?”
“Well, I should describe it as un
skilled labor.”
To relieve PAT Q
Misery of vi AJ zJ O
tablets I
nose drops
COUGH DROPS
Try“Rab-Hy-TtaW-aWaodrrfal ll lilt
Short on Inspiration
We give advice but we do uot
inspire conduct. —La Rochefou
cauld.
KILL ALL FLIES
| Placed |
Killer attracts and ku»_ ■
Guaranteed, elective. Nrit. I
convenient —CannoS spfll— ■
WCiaoltodorta:ureanrU>n«. ■
kTOKC 33^S# Lasts all eeason. 30e at *3 ■
dealers. Harold Somers. ■
mJDeKalbAw^BklywN.Y. |
Center of Wisdom
Man, know thyself! All wis
dom centers there. —Young.
• WHEN IN NEW YORK CITY •
STAT AT
EAST END HOTEL
FOR WOMEN
East 78th Stmat OveriooMna East Rfvw
TsL BUttsrfiald S-6450
RATES—Wsskly ftWB $• bMWtaR
• Rtoato..Daßys2^SiMMtasMMto •
Without Trials
He jests at scars who never fell
a wound. —Shakespeare.