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Household Neuis
4 *
AFTER THE FOOTBALL GAME
See Recipes Below.
If you are entertaining the crowd
after the game, you’ll find substan
tial refreshments in favor; for the
same crisp air that puts football
players on their toes breeds keen
appetites.
It’s good social strategy to ar
range everything buffet style and let
the guests help themselves. You’ll
rwant a table that
is festive, easy to
handle, and yet
casual. You may
even want to set
up card tables in
the living room to
make your guests
comfortable after
they have helped
themselves from the buffet.
Natural colored linen, or rough
homespun cloth will make a smart
background for your serving table.
Candles are often used very effec
tively, when serving buffet style, for
they add both atmosphere and light.
If you double as hostess and chief
cook, you’ll enjoy the game twice as
much if you plan a menu that can
be prepared beforehand. Sandwich
makings and a hot steaming bever
age are a wise choice. Then wind
up the feast with ice cream and
chocolate cake.
Frankfurter Sandwich.
Boil or steam large frankfurt
ers until tender
and juicy. Slice
thin on white or K
rye bread and j j
serve with mus- J /
tard sauce and
hot potato salad. S
Garnish with ,y
pickle.
Hot Potato Salad.
(Serves 6)
6 medium-sized potatoes
4 slices bacon (minced)
1 medium-sized onion (sliced)
2 tablespoons bacon drippings
Va cup water
Vz cup vinegar
1 teaspoon sugar
% teaspoon salt
V 4 teaspoon pepper
Cook potatoes in jackets. Cool,
skin, and slice. Pan broil minced
bacon, then saute onion in bacon
drippings until brown. Combine and
heat water, vinegar, sugar, salt, and
pepper. Add to mixture in frying
pan, and mix with potatoes. Place
in baking dish and heat in moderate
oven (350 degrees) before serving.
Egg Meringue Surprise Sandwich.
(Serves 6)
6 slices bread
Va cup butter (melted)
Va pound sharp cheese
6 eggs
Salt and pepper
6 slices bacon
Trim slices of bread and brush
one side with melted butter. Place
buttered side down on a cookie
sheet. Cut cheese into strips about
Va inch in thickness. Arrange them,
side by side, or fence-like on the
bread. Separate eggs and drop one
egg yolk in the center of each slice
of bread. Sprinkle with salt and
pepper. Whip egg whites until stiff
and dry, and pile high on top, com
pletely covering the egg and cheese.
Cut the slices of bacon into halves
and place two halves on each sand
wich right across the egg white.
Place in moderate oven de
grees) and bake for 10 to 15 min
utes, or until the egg white is brown
and the bacon is crisp.
Silver Cake.
(Makes 1 loaf cake)
% cup butter
Wz cups granulated sugar
2% cups cake flour (sifted)
3 teaspoons baking powder
Va teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
4 egg whites (stiffly beaten)
Cream butter, add sugar and beat
well. Sift the flour, baking powder
and salt together, and add to sugar
and butter mixture. Mix well, and
place in refrigerator. When desired
for use, remove mixture from re
frigerator. Break up lumps with
fork. Add milk and vanilla, and
beat until mixture is smooth and
creamy. Then fold in the stiffly beat
en egg whites. Pour into greased
loaf cake tin, and bake in a mod
erately slow oven (325 degrees) for
about 50 minutes.
Chocolate Peppermint Frosting.
2 squares unsweetened chocolate
116 cups (1 can) sweetened con
densed milk
8 marshmallows (cut in quarters)
Few drops oil of peppermint
Melt chocolate in top of double
boiler. Add sweetened condensed
milk, stir over rapidly boiling water
5 minutes, or until the mixture thick
ens. Add marshmallows, and stir
until they begin to melt. Remove
from heat and add peppermint. Cool.
Spread on cold cake. This frosting
covers tops of 2 9-inch layers or top
and sides of loaf cake generously,
or about 24 cup cakes.
Vanilla Ice Cream.
(Makes 1 quart)
2 cups milk
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons flour
Va teaspoon salt
2 egg yolks (well beaten)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup whipping cream *
Scald milk, reserving V 2 cup. Mix
and blend the sugar, flour, and salt,
and mix to a smooth paste with the
cold milk which was reserved. Add
this mixture to the scalded milk and
cook, stirring constantly until thick,
in a double boiler for 15 minutes.
Add egg yolks which have been well
beaten and cook, stirring constantly,
3 minutes longer. Add vanilla and
chill. Fold in the whipping cream
which has been whipped, place in
ice cream freezer and freeze, usinf
3 parts ice to 1 part rock salt.
Sausages in Pastry Blankets.
(Makes 8 sausage rolls)
Wz cups flour
Vz teaspoon salt
Va teaspoon baking powder
Vz cup shortening
3 tablespoons cold water (approxi
mately)
8 pork sausages
Sift together the flour, salt and
baking powder. Blend in the short
ening. Then add
just enough water
to form a dough,
mixing lightly.
/ Roll out and cut
into 8 oblong
/ | pieces, each suffi
\ j ciently large to
\J wrap around on#
C link of sausage.
r Place individual
sausages (well pricked) on individ
ual pieces of pastry; fold ends over
and roll up. Place folded side down
on a baking sheet. Prick crust with
a fork. Bake in a hot oven (425 de
grees) for about 30 minutes. Serve
very hot.
Better Baking.
The smell of baking cookies
and cakes will soon be permeat
ing the house. Fruit cakes will
be baked, packed and stored
carefully, until the time they are
to be used for gifts. “Better Bak
ing’’ includes fruit cake recipes
which have been thoroughly test
ed in Miss Howe’s own kitchens.
This cook book also contains
many good cookie recipes, from
old-fashioned Ginger Cookies to
Fudge Drops.
If you are planning on giving
cookies and fruit cakes to your
friends as gifts, it will be wise to
write for “Better Baking” now.
Start your baking early, and
avoid the last minute rush. You
may secure your copy of this
cook book by writing to “Better
Baking” care of Eleanor Howe,
919 North Michigan Avenue, Chi
cago, Illinois, and enclosing 10
cents in coin.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Tip on Molasses
Before measuring molasses for
recipes dip the cup or spoon in hot
water and the molasses will turn
out more quickly.
Test for Cnslard
Baked custards should be tested
with a knife. When knife comes out
of the center of custard clean, then
it is done.
HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL, PERRY, GEORGIA
UT from the tumult and the
turmoil of the football season
the time seems to be about ripe to
turn to the even greater tumult and
E_ turmoil of another
| game—golf. Here is
| World series, in
cluding* football
I tours, we traveled
with a pair of young
| men by the names
I of Billy Burke and
I Horton Smith. While
Grantland Ric others were full of
oratory concerning
Newsom, Derringer, Walters and
blocking backs, Messrs. Burke,
Smith and your correspondent inter
polated our share of golf, from both
the inside and outside angles.
The Sway in Golf
Billy Burke was talking about the
sway in golf.
“This is one of the misunderstood
terms in golf,” the former champion
and one of the best instructors said.
“I sway. Most of us sway. You
have to sway a little. But my first
sway is really a lateral hip shift.
I sway from my left hip to my
right, before I start to turn. But
the upper part of my body doesn’t
sway. My head doesn’t sway—or
even move.
“The trouble with too many golf
ers,” Burke continued, “is that they
sway the wrong way. They sway
with the upper part of the body.
They let their heads drift with the
swing. When this happens the back
swing is all gone, and so is the down
swing. There is neither power nor
control left. When the upper part
of the body—above the waist, in
cluding the head—starts to sway or
shift, the swing is then completely
wrecked. For all balance is de
stroyed.
“I’ve watched thousands after
thousands try to hit a golf ball in
this way, but it can’t be done. It
isn’t even possible, even if a Hagen
or a Jones tried it.”
Complete Agreement
“Billy is just 100 per cent cor
rect,” Horton Smith cut in. “For
the good golfer I
wouldn’t exactly 1
call it a sway. But
there is a swaying
hip motion from the M ,Mm
left to the right, be- #***?*
fore you turn. But
only the hips are in
volved in this first L
motion. The second f
the shoulders and WT
head sway with this - VjBV /” -]
motion you are all s. mkSJ- .....4
through. You might Hor t on Smith
call it a left to right
bend in the middle of the body, but
not in the top of the body.
“Certainly the head must be fixed
in one spot—the anchor to the swing.
But don’t let that head move an
inch until the ball is on its way.”
“What follows after the hip sway
or shift?” I asked Horton Smith.
“That starts the backswing,” he
said. “Then the next move is a nat
ural body turn. It is really quite
simple. After the first lateral hip
motion, where the major part of the
weight is now on the right foot and
leg, the next move is to let the left
side turn. Just as if you were
throwing a ball. The left knee, the
left hip, the left shoulder all come
around together. In this way at the
top of the backswing you have a
feeling both of control and power.
“You are now in a position to use
your hands and wrists, in place of
trying to call on your shoulders and
your body for most of the punch.
“What so few golfers understand,”
Horton Smith continued, “is that
bad foot and bad body action can
lock the hands and wrists.
“Of course, the feet and body be
long to the swing. But they must be
used so the hands and wrists are
free to swing the clubhead. Don’t
let them get in the way. Don’t let
them lock the swing.
“In the average swing you see so
many golfers first dig their feet into
the ground, then lock both legs, then
sway the upper part of the body.
They can’t move anything else. But
if they first take the lateral hip shift
or sway—left to right—keep the
head in place and then take a nat
ural body turn, they will be all set
to get much better results.”
Along the northern belt the trail of
the outdoor campaign will soon be
leading to the indoor schools or to
the sun. But there is still time
enough left to try out one of the
soundest ideas in the game—which
includes largely a head that always
keeps its place.
Use That Left Hand!
I asked Billy Burke about the cor
rect use of the two hands.
“We all have to teach and advo
cate the use of the left hand more,”
he said.
“I’ll tell you why. Golf is really
a two-handed game. But with the
average golfer it is only a one-hand
ed game—l mean the right hand.
Here you have the stronger hand
hitting forward. It is a natural
action. But if the left hand quits in
golf there is neither control nor pow
er left.
»Ask Me Another
0 A General Quiz
The Questions
1. How long is the time from
new moon to new moon?
2. What is the largest cave in
the world?
3. Were other colored lights than
red and green as stop and go sig
nals respectively ever used?
4. Where is the mountainous dis
trict known as the Riff?
5. What is a chromosphere?
6. What baseball pitcher holds
the record for the number of
games w r on during his major
league career?
7. Is prayer an inseparable part
of all religious worship?
8. What does a Scotchman mean
by a brae?
9. What birds drink by suction?
The Answers
1. Twenty-nine days, 12 hours,
44.05 minutes.
2. The Mammoth cave in Ken
tucky is the largest. It contains
more than 200 miles of galleries
and several quite large lakes, and
three rivers flow through it.
3. As late as 1925 street traffic
lights on Fifth avenue, New York
city, flashed yellow for “start,”
red for “caution,” and green for
“stop.”
4. Morocco.
5. A gaseous layer surrounding
the sun.
6. Cy Young, with 511 victories.
7. The 150,000 Druses of Syria
never pray, believing that it would
be both presumptious and imper
tinent to ask the Creator to con
sider their own personal needs and
wishes,
8. The slope of a hillside.
9. The pigeon is the only bird
that drinks by suction, all others
having to throw their heads back
in order to swallow.
31 Presidents
Although Roosevelt is officially
listed as the thirty-second Presi
dent of the United States, only 31
men have actually held the office.
The discrepancy is explained by
the fact that Grover Cleveland is
down in American history as the
twenty-second and twenty-fourth
President—the only President who
served two non-successive terms,
Benjamin Harrison’s term inter
vening.—Pathfinder.
A NEW note is attained in this
captivating pansy bedroom en
semble. For, besides the usual
scarf, vanity and pillow slip motifs,
there is a circle of pansies just
right for a quilt block.
Yellows or lavenders, of course,
would be most suggestive of real
pansies, but any pastel to har
monize with your bedroom could
be used. The illustration indicates
the use of applique; an equally
FLAVOR IN 1
■ IS THE GOOD WORD IN B CAMELS IS THE REAL THING ■
■ CIGARETTES. CAMELS J^FO^TCADVjS^WN^^B
I ™'i;'e ISSh<Si» THE “EXTRAS” WITH SLOWER-BURNING
UssrH CAMELS
I THE cigarette of costlier tobaccos
Bux* 6
JTERNh * V
Department
IIAAiIIiAAAAAAAAAA———
mmmm mmmmmi ■■■■■■ ■
mm* v
J||
1228-8
LJERE’S real lullaby luxury, for
*■ yourself and the lucky friends
to whom you give it—this bedtime
ensemble comprising a high
waisted nightie that’s lovely as a
dance frock, and a sweet little bed
jacket. Send for design No. 1228-
B, and make it up in fine, sheer
batiste, chiffon, georgette or—if
the cold wind sweeps through your
bedroom—of challis or albatross.
It will look as though you had
squandered a shameful amount of
your clothes allowance, but it will
in reality cost very little.
This is an extremely easy de
sign to make—the jacket is cut in
two pieces and seamed on the
shoulders; the nightie requires
charming effect be achieved
in embroidery.
* * •
Briefly—from this one transfer, Z 9105,
15c, you can make a complete group of
linens for the bedroom—and a lovely
matching spread. Send order to:
AUNT MARTHA
Box ICC-W Kansas City, Mo.
Enclose IS cents for each pattern
desired. Pattern No
Name
Address
Symbolic Birds
Storks are encouraged to build
their nests on most chimney tops
in central Europe because it is be
lieved their presence will mean
many babies for the householders;
geese are often taken to weddings
in China because they are consid
ered to be symbols of fidelity; and
pigeons are sometimes released at
funeral services in Japan in the
hope that they will accompany the
soul, at least part way, on its jour
ney to heaven.—Collier’s,
merely two long seams and a few
gathers.
• • •
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1228-B Is de
signed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42.
Corresponding bust measurements 32, 34,
30. 38 , 40 and 42. Size 18 (34) requires
6‘/a yards of 39-inch material without nap.
Just outl Be among the first to enjoy
111 Barbara Bell’s new Fashion Book,
with more than 100 new designs. Send 15c
for it now I Plan your whole wardrobe
this easy, budget-saving way. and revel
in having individual versions of new
styles that you won’t see elsewhere!
Pattern. 15c; Pattern Book, 15c. One
Pattern and Pattern Book ordered to
gether, 25c. Send order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1324
211 W. Wackcr Ur. Chicago
Enclose 15 cents In coins for
Pattern No Size
Name
Address
For delicious
pantry raids :: . feast
for-the-least . . . just heat and
eat.. . economical ... healthful ..;
order, today, from
Fully Occupied
Ziegler—Next to a beautiful girl,
what do you consider the most in
teresting thing in the world?
Munhall—Whenever I’m next to
a beautiful girl I never bother with
statistics.
FALLEN
Bvery
Wednesday Night
w,th
I KENNY BAKER
PORTLAND Hill II
At GOODMAN'S I' I
ORCHESTRA, 1 I
/ULX the MICHTV ALLEH I |
Ndhr) ART PLAYERS I I
JIMWY WALLINQTON | )
“"cbs
Station*
Knowledge
That jewel knowledge is great
riches, which is not plundered by
kinsmen, nor carried off by
thieves, nor decreased by giving.
—Bhavabhuti.
KNOWN FROM COAST TO COAST—NEXT TIME BUY
KENT’”I3LAOESIfIo
CUPPIXS COMPANY, ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI
Sunny Mood
It is good to lengthen to the last
a sunny mood.