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# Household Nems
I THIS PUDDING FAIRLY SHWJTS • •
(See Recipes Below)
ADD one cup of imagination
Once upon a time a friend told
me that to her the addition of "one
cup of imagine
tion’ was the /sandwich* j<Tvv'j j
most important (ron lunch /
ingredient that
could be used in y'wF' \
any recipe. So J fu ,J
whole heartedly / Wfn Pb
do I agree with / 'W[\\ W i
her that today I
want to give you *
a number of recipes to which that
ingredient, imagination, has been
added. In fact, so successfully has
this been done that each of these
recipes is different, yet each is de
licious each fairly shouts “Try
me!”
These recipes, moreover, have
been chosen as luncheon favorites
because, of all of the meals of the
day, the family luncheon some way
seems to be most neglected.
Take the baked apricot and tapi
oca pudding for example; have you
ever before thought of serving a cof
fee sauce with such a pudding? Yet
the blend of flavors which results
from combining this particular pud
ding with this particular sauce is
really delicious—long to be remem
bered.
Sausage Stand-Up.
(Serves 4 to 6)
18-ounce package spaghetti (broken
small)
1 pound breakfast sausages
\ cup minced onion
1 clove garlic (minced)
4 tablespoons parsley (finely
chopped)
1 can tomato paste (6-ounce)
1 cup water
IV4 teaspoons salt
h teaspoon pepper
\ teaspoon sugar
\ cup grated cheese
Cook broken spaghetti in boiling
water (6 cups) (1 teaspoon salt per
. f) n quart water) un-
Jffnf) I /AJ Vvf\ til tender, about
VrnHy j,\ (. 1 ['m 20 minutes, then
W», yunOW drain> PlaCe SaU '
sages in skillet,
add Vi cup of wa
ter and cook until nicely browned,
about 15 minutes. Saute onion, gar
bc, and parsley in sausage fat for
5 minutes, until onions are yellow
end transparent. Remove from fat
end combine with tomato paste and
seasonings. Combine spaghetti with
tomato sauce and turn into buttered
casserole. Tuck sausages into spa
ghetti in upright position, so that
just the end of each sausage shows,
bpnnkle grated cheese over top and
ake in moderate oven (350 degrees
ahrenheit) for 20 minutes.
Apricot and Tapioca Pudding
(Serves 6 to 8)
l h. cup pearl tapioca
cup evaporated apricots or
2 cups canned apricots
% cup sugar
vi teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons lemon juice
d cups warm water
1 tablespoon butter
a°ak pearl tapioca in cold water,
or one bour - Wash apri
-o,.‘aad place . in a well-greased IV2-
6 H , hea f-resistant glass casserole.
* u g ar . salt, lemon juice and
intr »u VVa } er .‘ Pra * n tapioca; stir it
anri f m ixture in casserole
thr. wdb kits of butter. Cover
ovpn 'r!-A and bake in a moderate
1 l" Uao de irees Fahrenheit) for
arp Ul < r r untd the tapioca parts
whin. ! nslucent - Cool, top with
serl d l ° ream > if deseed, and
erve with coffee sauce.
w Coffee Sauce.
CU P sugar
tsblespoons cornstarch
teaspoon salt
2 tahi hot coffee > regular strength
‘tauiespoons butter
< leaspoon nutmeg. desired
in thf ?,. SUgar ’ c °mstarch and salt
part of a 1 -quart heat
cogee | ass double boiler. Add
stirring n ?°°k untd it thickens,
and nuu, r nStantly ‘ Blend in butter
a Pricot - r j B ’. Cool and serve with
001 and tapioca pudding.
When H h.? OgS in Blank ets.
Wr ap str fresh y east rolls,
wieners in °* tbe dou gb around
out of th. 0V^ lng the ends to stick
the dough f r d ° Ugh blank et. Give ,
bake as ,1? to dcobie in bulk and I
85 Usual - These hot dogs in |
blankets should be served piping
hot.
My Style Spaghetti.
(Serves 5 to 6)
Vz cup olive oil
1 small onion, chopped
1 green pepper, seeded and chopped
1 pound ground beef
teaspoons salt
1 cup tomato puree
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
Vi cup grated cheese
1 cup canned corn
Vz package spaghetti, cooked
Heat olive oil in frying pan and
add onion, green pepper and ground
beef. Fry until brown and then add
the salt, tomato puree, and Worces
tershire sauce. Stir in the grated
cheese together with the corn and
cooked spaghetti. Place in buttered
baking casserole and bake in a mod
erate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit)
for approximately 40 minutes.
Honey AH-Bran Spice Cookies.
(Makes 2Va dozen cookies)
Vi cup shortening
Vz cup honey
Vi cup sugar
1 egg
1 cup All-Bran
IVa cups flour
Vz teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
Vi teaspoon soda
% teaspoon cloves
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup seedless raisins
Blend shortening, sugar and honey
thoroughly. Add egg and beat un
til creamy. Add
bran. Sift flour s
once before meas
uring. Add salt,
baking powder, 1.—-
soda, cloves and y'V 7;
cinnamon. Com- / 1 ■
bine with raisins. \ k ~
Add to first mix- A\/; /) ~
ture and beat yj)/)
well. Drop dough ‘ '>
by teaspoons on lightly greased bak
ing sheet about 2Vi inches apart.
Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees
Fahrenheit) about 12 to 15 minutes
Cheese Soup With Rice
(Serves 5)
1 cup cooked carrot (very finely
diced)
4 cups milk
1 tablespoon chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup grated cheese
2 tablespoons chopped pimiento
2 egg yolks
1 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon white pepper
V 2 cup rice (cooked)
Add carrot and onion to milk and
scald. Melt butter in saucepan, add
flour and blend to a smooth paste.
Add milk gradually to flour mix
ture, stirring all the time. Add
cheese, salt and pepper, stirring un
til cheese is melted. Pour over
well-beaten egg yolks, stirring con
stantly. Serve at once with spoon
ful of hot cooked rice.
Mexican Spaghetti.
(Serves 8 to 10)
Vi pound spaghetti
1 can peas (No. 2)
Vz pound raw ham (ground)
V 2 pound American cheese (grated)
1 can tomatoes (No. 2)
cup green pepper (cut fine)
1 tablespoon pimiento (cut fine)
2 tablespoons butter (melted)
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon salt
Vz teaspoon pepper
Bacon strips
Cook the spaghetti in boiling, salt
ed water. Drain. In a baking dish
arrange layers of spaghetti, peas,
ground ham and cheese and com
bine tomatoes, green pepper, pimi
ento, butter, and seasonings. Pour
over the spaghetti. Cover with grat
ed cheese and top with bacon strips.
Bake in a moderate oven (350 de
grees Fahrenheit) for one hour.
Refrigerator Hamburgers.
(Serves 5)
1 pound hamburger
2 tablespoons finely minced onion
Vi cup chopped green pepper
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon prepared mustard
1 tablespoon horseradish
Mix all ingredients together, and
shape into a roll 2% inches in diam
eter. Let stand in the refrigerator
several hours or over night. When
ready to use, cut in slices % inches
thick and fry or broil as for regu
I lar hamburgers. .
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.
ttqttqtov uomc 'oitrn'U. PERRY, GEORGIA
1) ARTOW, GA.—How many states
have turned out more stars, es
pecially in the way of quality, than
the sovereign commonwealth of
Georgia? This angle occurred to
us in roaming the red clay hills and
the stubble in the pursuit of quail.
Georgia’s record is phenomenal.
For her top man in baseball she
B gives you Tyrus
.Raymond Cobb,
once known as the
Royston Roarer.
For men’s golf
she offers one Rob
ert T. Jones Jr. and
for her women golf
ers Alexa Stirling.
Her two best fight
f - ing men were Young
: Stribling and Tiger
“ Flowers. They were
Ty Cobb not world beaters,
but close to the top
when in their prime.
For track and field there is Spec
Towns, who set a new world’s hur
dling record in the last Olympic
games. The last for a long time.
Georgia Tech and Georgia univer
sity have both played their share of
winning football through the years.
Bryan (“Bitsy”) Grant has been
her main contribution to tennis—
never a champion but the man
handler of tennis giants.
In addition to Bobby Jones, Geor
gia also produced big Ed Dudley,
one of the best of all the swingers,
one of the star stylists of the game.
And looking a long way back we
still recall Bobby Walthour, who
for years had the cycling champion
ship and the six-day races at his
mercy.
Her list of star ball players is a
long one, including Nap Rucker,
Brooklyn’s star left hander, and
Sherrod Smith, another southpaw.
The Race Track
It was from Atlanta, Ga., that
Charles S. Howard, owner of Sea
biscuit, Kayak II and Mioland came
along to racing fame.
And it was also from Georgia hills
that Tom Smith, Howard’s famous
trainer, came to the money-winning
top. In the last three years Smith
trained thoroughbreds have won a
million dollars.
Georgia can offer a stout chal
lenge, in the way of quality, to any
other state. I doubt that other
state can offer two such headliners
as Bobby Jones and Ty Cobb.
In baseball Maryland isn’t far
away.
This busy sporting center can pre
sent Babe Ruth, Jimmy Foxx and
Home Run Baker,
whose busy bludg- : v
eons produced more .-I
home-run thunder
than any other trio,
although New York V
is close up with Lou I •
Gehrig and Hank I
Greenberg. ||
And for boxing, IpF -
what about Mary
land’s Joe Cans?
What about Penn- • K
sylvania with Chris- Jimmy Foxx
ty Mathewson, Ed
die Plank, Chief Bender, Big Bill
Tilden, Ted Meredith?
Texas Presents —
Texas would also like to take the
stand with Tris Speaker, Rogers
Hornsby, Ted Lyons, Sammy Baugh,
Davey O’Brien, Jack Johnson, By
ron Nelson, Ralph Guldahl, Ben Ho
gan, Jimmy Demaret, Wilmer Alli
son, Betty Jameson—these and
many more.
New York’s list is tremendous—
Gene Tunney, Walter Hagen, Lou
... Gehrig, Hank
Greenberg, Eddie
Collins, John Mc-
J Graw, Benny Leon
f| '’.ff f? ard anc * many oth
||f m What about Colo-
Jm. rado with Jack
. Dempsey, Whizzer
” White and Dutch
~ ; Or Massachusetts
i:. with John Lawrence
B. M , Leonard “Kot
ton," Mike Murphy, Keene Fitzpat
rick, Eddie Mahan, and Francis
Ouimet.
California's Claims
California is dead certain to enter
her claim. Joe DiMaggio for base
ball—Jim Corbett and Willie Ritchie
for boxing—Little Bill Johnston,
Don Budge, Ellsworth Vines, Helen
Wills, May Sutton Bundy and Alice
Marble for tennis—Lawson Little for
golf—an amazing football average
piled up by Southern California,
Stanford, Santa Clara and California
—an amazing track record headed
by Charley Paddock, Frank Wyckoff
and several pole vaulters who keep
breaking records,
Here are most of our main head
liners for the last 30 years:
Baseball —Cobb, Georgia; Ruth,
Maryland.
Boxing—Dempsey, Colorado; Tun
ney, New York; Johnson, Texas; Joe
Louis, Alabama.
Football—Best all-around back,
Jim Thorpe, Oklahoma; best all
around lineman, Pudge Heffelfinger,
Minnesota.
Golfers— Bobby Jones, Georgia;
Walter Hagen, New York.
Track— Jesse Owens, Ohio.
Tennis— Bill Tilden, Pennsylvania.
PATTERNSJL I
" ~ 1
I* |p
i* \j„ * \ *J* \ y r * ♦
/ ~j^i
“PHERE’S something guileless
■■• and appealing about a yoke
dress like this that will make you
look as fresh and bright as a little
girl all dressed up in a new
starched frock! It’s very becom
ing and youthifying to misses and
women alike. Yet design No. 8876
offers you the makings of a very
comfortable home style, with
waistline that you can comfortably
draw in to just the slimness you
want, by means of the sash belt in
the back.
The high-cut skirt is very slen
derizing to the hips and waist. The
Me Another
0 A General Quiz
The Questions
1. What is the only state in the
Union which is bounded by one
state alone?
2. Which of the following is a
natural magnet—Capstone, thun
derstone or lodestone?
3. What are known as cardinal
winds? ,
4. When was the boundary be
tween the United States and Can
ada finally determined?
5. What are the odors of the
principal gases that are used in
war?
The Answers
1. Maine.
2. Lodestone.
3. Winds blowing from due
north, east, south or w’est.
4. The boundary between the
United States and Canada was not
completely determined until 1925,
or 142 years after our country
signed the treaty with England.
5. As nearly as can be described,
mustard gas smells like garlic;
lewisite like geraniums; phosgene
like musty hay; and tear gas like
apple blossoms.
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU
EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR
AN D O / TO GET *mAl\
\ |EXTRA M,tDNESS \
■ ECS ill M Kw’ A CAMEL FOK 4
■ ■99 FLAVOR J
NICOTINE
any of them according to independent AMERICA S No. I SKIER,
scientific tests of the smoke Itself.
gathered bodice gives you a nice
round bosom-line. Make this of
percale, calico or gingham and
trim with bright ricrac and but
tons. Untrimmed, it’s a good style
for runabout, if you make it up in
flat crepe or spun rayon. Send for
the pattern today, and be among
the first to wear it!
• • •
Pattern No. 8878 is designed for sizes
12, 14. 16. 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires
3 a ,4 yards of 36-inch material without nap;
1% yards trimming. Detailed sew chart
included. Send order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1324
211 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 13 cents in coins for
Pattern No Size
Name
Address
Smiles
Quite Obvious
“Isn’t that a new frock you’ve on?”
“Yes; I got it for a ridiculous figure.”
“Oh, I can see that!”
Grounds for Suspicions
“I’ve searched high and low for
the furniture cream recipe your
mother gave me—”
“Here!” said her husband, put
ting down his spoon, “where did
you get the recipe for this soup?”
A cynic says the cure for a cold
shoulder is to put a fur around it.
Shrinking Violet
The teacher was explaining the
difference between the stately rose
and the modest violet.
“You see, children,” she said,
“a beautiful, well-dressed woman
walks along the street, but she is
proud and does not greet anybody
—that is the rose. But behind her
comes a small creature with
bowed head.”
“Yes, I know,” Tommy inter
rupted; “that’s her husband.”
I \M
I SELECTED FOR YOUR LOCALITY V&S f,
B Get them from your local dealer
Circumstances ‘
There are no circumstances,
however unfortunate, that clever
people do not extract some ad-
NAGGING BACKACHE
/Lfri AlffS >1 -Aj M Inn is t ■ STi wWrT irtUim -«fa «aaM-W?i“ Wmlff
Modem life with Its ceaseless hurry I Symptoms of disturbed kidney function
and worry, irregular habits, improper may be nagging backache, persistent head
eating and drinking, exposure, contagion | ache, dizziness, getting up nights, swelling,
whalr.ot, keeps doctors busy, , pulliness under the eyes—
hospitals crowded. The after , nll . l , r , sn „ nn . N „| a feeling of nervous anxiety
effects are disturbing to THE REASON DOAN S and loss of strength and
the kidneys and oftentimes ARE FAMOUS energy. Other signs of kid
people surfer without know- A1 over the country ney or bladder disturbance ■
mg that disordered kidney Kra teful people left sometimes are burning,
action may cause the „ t hersi “Doan’s lion. scanty or too frequent urma
trouble. helped me; I rocom - tion. nit, .
After colds, fever and men d them to you." In such cases It la better
similar ills there is an in- That |, w ) ly wo aay , to rely on a medicine that
crease of body impurities your neighbor I has won world-wide ap
the kidneys must filter from L__———— nroval than on something
the blood. If the kidneys less favorably known. Use
are ovdftaxed and fail to remove excess I Doan's Pills. They have been winning new
acid and other harmful waste, there is friends for more than forty years. Re sure
poisoning of the whole system. I to got Doan's. Sold at all drug stores.
I POAJPS PILLS
Two Tragedies
There are two tragedies in life
—one is not to get your heart’s
I INDIGESTION
may affect the Heart
Oat trapped Ln tho stomach or gullet may act like a
hair-trigger on tho heart. At tho first sign of dlatres*
smart men and women depend on Bell-ana Tablets to
set gns free. No laxatlvo but made of the faiteat
actlng medicines known for acid Indigestion. If tha
ITIUST DOSES doesn't prove 8011-ana better, return
bottlo to us and receive DOUBLE Money Back. 260.
Humor and Gravity
’Twas the saying of an ancient
sage that humor was the only test
of gravity, and gravity of humor.
For a subject which would not
bear raillery was suspicious; and
a jest which would not bear a se
rious examination was certainly
false wit.—Shaftesbury.
SP® CHOICE OF MILLIONS
f| ST ; si: Joseph iflc
I i ASPIRIN ,
I. J WORLD'S LARGEST
SCLLER A ,I f/Mmi
Qualities of Prayer
Prayer is the believer’s comfort
and support, his weapon of de
fense, his light in darkness, his
companionship in solitude, his
fountain in the desert, his hops
and his deliverance.—Van Dyke.
MORE PEOPLE DIE IN MARCH
THAN IN ANY OTHER MONTH
This is because your resistance is generally
lower after a long, hard winter. Your blood
may have thinned out due to simple anemia, and
instead of a rich, red blood you may have thin,
weak blood. In such cases B-L TONIC will help
nature restore your thin, weak blood to a
healthy rich, red blood. You need good healthy
blood to have pep and vitality. B-L TONIC is a
Tonic, Appetizer and Stomachic. Good foryoung
and old. Insist on B-L Tonic at your druggist.
Duty Toward Health
To do all in our power to win
health, and to keep it, is as muoh
our duty as to be honest.—T. F.
Seward.
Blush of Men
Men blush less for their crimes
than for their weaknesses and van
ity.—La Bruyere,
vantage from; and none, however
fortunate, that the imprudent can
not turn to their own prejudice.—
La Rochefoucauld.
desire, the other is to get it. And
the latter is the greater tragedy.—.
Oscar Wilde.