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PUDDING FAVORITE AS MEAL TOPPER-OFFER
(See Recipes Below)
deserving desserts
Once upon a time a friendly neigh
bor living close to our house in a
small friendly town used to say over
and over, “But a dinner just isn’t a
dinner unless you top it off with a
‘deserving dessert.’ ” And when I
pressed him to explain to me just
what he meant by a “deserving des
sert” he explained that it was a
dessert which was so good that even
at the end of a man’s meal it still
deserved to be eaten.
After all, men, bless them, do like
their desserts and so in this column
today—l am giving to you a number
of brand new, easy-to-make recipes
(or deserving desserts.
All but one, and that’s a recipe
for a deserving salad. And the rea
sons I am featuring this lone salad
recipe with all the dessert recipes
are these: First, it makes one of
the best-to-eat salads I have ever
tasted. And second, I have a theory
that while men like desserts a good
many of them simply do not eat as
many salads as they should.
So, some time, serve this salad in
your dinner menu; then top it off
with any one of these desserts and
not alone will the man of the family
have had his favorite meal topper
offer, but he will have had a health
giving, vitamin containing dish as
well.
Tomato and Ham Salad.
(Makes 10 servings)
1% cups water
2 IOVa-ounce cans condensed tomato
soup
4 tablespoons unflavored gelatin
1 cup cold water
1 3-ounce package cream cheese
4 teaspoons prepared mustard
1 tablespoon prepared horseradish
Vi teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons lemon juice
1 cup salad dressing
1 pound boiled ham (316 cups
chopped)
3 hard-cooked eggs
Lettuce
Heat water and soup together in
saucepan until boiling. Re
move from heat.
MBST'* -J Soak gelatin in
com water f° r s
PsatcJji minutes, then dis
(Pn solve in hot soup.
v | Blend together
cream cheese,
'' * ■ —mustard, salt,
lemon juice and horseradish. Add a
little soup to mixture, stirring con
stantly; then return to remainder of
hot soup, mixing well. Cool. When
mixture begins to thicken, fold in
salad dressing and ham. Rub a
2-quart heat-resistant glass baking
dish with oil. Arrange slices of
hard-cooked egg around the sides,
reserving some for the top. Pour in
mmato-ham mixture. Allow to gel.
Larnish top with slices of hard
cooked egg and serve with lettuce.
Chocolate Fluff,
squares baking chocolate
1 cup milk
I ta hlespoons butter
tablespoons general purpose flour
72 cup sugar
* teaspoon salt
“ e Bg yolks
J teaspoon vanilla extract
6 e gg whites
? Ul chocolate and milk in top of
i .°, e boiler and heat until choco
a i s me lted; beat with rotary
K ff heater until mixture is well
n n ed> P]a ce butter in a sauce-
P aa and melt. Stir in the flour,
a >®, ai , sa tt- Then immediately
the chocolate milk and cook
th nu oVer direct heat until
stir GnS u s ti rr i n g constantly. Cool,
atW I n ‘-If unbeaten egg yolks, and
until a * n i a ex tr a ct. Beat egg whites
l at and , f°' d the cooled choco
buttf.r 1} i tU u e V 1 * 0 them. Pour into a
di-u - td baking dish; set baking
bakf n 0 a P an of hot water, and
p re * n a modera te oven (350 de-
L t approximatel y 1 hour and 15
Xr! S ; f r . until fixture will not
with ° knde blacle - Serve at once
lth w hipp ed cream.
Ue <i Raspberry Snow Balls.
(Makes 6 snow balls)
4 cup butter
2 cup sugar
i general purpose flour
spoon baking powder
,' 4 tea spoon salt
* CU P milk
' ngs whites (beaten)
More About Deserving Desserts.
Speaking of Deserving Desserts
—I want to tell you about my
small 10c cook book entitled
“Easy Entertaining.” From cov
er to cover, it is packed not only
r with new and unusual recipes,
but also with menu suggestions
and ideas for entertaining easily
and happily—for making guests
feel they are truly welcome while
the hostess has ample time left
to enjoy these same guests when
they arrive.
To secure your copy just send
10 cents in coin to Eleanor
Howe, 919 North Michigan Ave
nue, Chicago, Illinois.
Cream the butter. Add sugar and
beat well. Sift the flour, baking
powder, and salt
(TViSXfIN together. Add al
ternately with the
milk and then
fold in the beaten
J&f \ \ gfo egg whites. Steam
ifloßl ' in small buttered
molds for 30 to 35
*B3*l minutes. Serve
with red raspber
ry sauce.
Red Raspberry Sauce.
Vz cup butter
1 cup Confectioner’s sugar
1 cup crushed raspberries
Cream the butter and add sugar
slowly while beating thoroughly. Add
raspberries. To serve, pour over
hot steamed snow balls and serve
at once.
Orange Dessert Squares.
(Makes 15 servings)
Vz cup shortening
% cup sugar
2 eggs (separated)
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
% cup milk
2 tablespoons orange rind (grated)
Cream the shortening and add
sugar gradually. Blend in the egg
yolks. ’Sift together the flour, bak
ing powder and salt and add to the
creamed mixture, alternately with
the milk. Beat the egg whites until
stiff but not dry, and fold into the
batter with the orange rind. Bake
in a greased 9-inch by 16-inch pan
in a moderately hot oven (375 de
grees) for about 30 minutes. Cut in
squares and serve hot with orange
sauce.
Orange Sauce.
% cup sugar
2 teaspoons cornstarch
Vi teaspoon salt
1 cup boiling water
1 teaspoon butter
Vz cup orange juice
2 tablespoons orange rind (grated) i
Combine sugar, cornstarch and
salt. Add boiling water, stirring
constantly. Cook, stirring frequent
ly, until the mixture is clear and
thick (about 15 minutes). Add but
ter, and the orange juice and rind.
Surprise Dessert.
(Serves 10)
Vz cup butter
1 cup sugar
2 eggs , u
1% cups graham cracker crumbs
1 cup milk
Vz cup walnut meats
2 teaspoons baking powder
Topping
1 cup crushed pfneapple (with juice)
1 cup sugar
Cream the butter, add the sugar
and blend well. Add the well-beaten |
egg yolks. Com-
bine the ground •
graham cracker
crumbs with bak- MW / a
ing powder and fij
add alternately
with the milk. pTif
Add the walnut
meats and then
carefully fold in the egg whites
which have been beaten until stiff
but not dry. Pour into a greased
8-inch by 8-inch pan and bake in a
moderate oven (350 degrees) for■3s
minutes. To make the topping, bod
pineapple and sugar together about
8 minutes or until syrup-like in ap
pearance. Chill and pour over top
ef cool cake. Let stand in refrig
erator until ready to serve. Cut in
squares and garnish with whipping
by Western Newspaper C plan l
HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL, PERRY, GEORGIA
''~ w "™ r |MPROVED , ~" W *""“'
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAY I
chool Lesson
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D.
Dean of The Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for March 23
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission,
JESUS CONDEMNED AND
CRUCIFIED
LESSON TEXT—Luke 23:13-25. 32-34a.
GOLDEN TEXT—What shall I do then
tvith Jesus which Is called Christ? —Mat-
thew 27:22.
Two nights stand out in the story
of the life of Christ, and therefore in
the history of the world. The first
was His first night on earth—that
“silent night, holy night” of which
we sing at Christmas, when He was
born as the babe of Bethlehem. The
other was His last night on earth.
Except for the precious hour of fel
lowship in the upper room and His
communion with the Father in the
agony of Gethsemane, it was a night
of darkness, denial, and betrayal.
There were six trials— or mock
trials—of Jesus, three religious ones
before Annas, then Caiaphas, and
then again before the Sanhedrin;
three political trials, before Pilate,
then Herod, and Pilate again. At
the close of this last trial before
Pilate Jesus stands
I. Cleared by the Evidence (w.
13-17).
At the first trial before him Pilate
had declared on the basis of his ex
amination that Jesus was “Not
guilty” (v. 4). Herod, to whom He
had been sent, had only played with
Him (vv. 8-11). What a travestyl
Now Pilate again presents Him to
the people as having “no fault.” It
is a striking truth that no man of
any age has ever been able honestly
to point to any fault in the life or
character of Jesus Christ. Think
that over—unbeliever!
Now came Pilate’s first step in
the wrong direction. An accused
man without guilt should be de
clared innocent and released. But
Pilate feared the Jews who had al
ready made trouble for him with
Caesar. So he compromised and
said he would chastise Jesus before
releasing Him. John Merely was
right when he said, “Under some
circumstances compromise is the
most immoral word in the English
language.” It gained Pilate nothing;
in fact, it led to his next step down
ward.
11. Condemned Tnrough Coward
ice (vv. 18-25).
To avoid a disturbance and to keep
the leaders from complaining to
Caesar, Pilate gave Jesus into their
hands with the “sentence that it
should be as they required” (v. 24)
when they cried “Crucify Him!”
Pilate was in a difficult place, but
that does not excuse him. It is in
the hard and trying place that a
man should stand for the right,
come what may. Too many of those
who profess to follow Christ are
afraid to stand up for Him in the
hour when men deny Him. Some
unbelievers are fearful about declar
ing their allegiance to Him, because
they fear the opposition of men.
Where is our courage, our manli
ness? Have we lost the moral stam
ina of our pioneer forefathers, the
religious conviction of our Christian
fathers and mothers? Pilate was a
coward, and we are ashamed of
him. Let us not be cowardly and
make Christ ashamed of us (read
Matt. 10:32, 33).
111. Crucified with Malefactors
(vv. 32-34a),
The details of and circumstances
surrounding the crucifixion are of
deep interest to every Christian.
We stand with Luther and weep as
we see Christ’s unspeakable agony,
not only of body but of spirit, and
! we cry as did Luther, “For me,
for me!” How can any believer con
template the cross and withhold self,
substance, or service from Christ?
Equally earnest and heart-search
ing is the message of the cross to
the unbeliever. He knows he is a
sinner (Rom. 3:23), he knows that
“the wages of sin is death” (Rom.
6:23), and he knows that “neither
is there salvation in any other, for
there is none other name under
1 heaven given among men whereby
we must be saved” (Acts 4:12).
! Here at the cross he meets that one
j “who his own self bare our sins in
his own body on the tree, that we,
j being dead to sins, should live unto
righteousness: by whose stripes ye
were healed” (I Pet. 2:24).
There were two malefactors who
were crucified with Him (v. 32), and
one railed at Him. The other said,
“Lord, remember me when thou
comest into thy kingdom”; and Je
sus said to him, “Today thou shalt
be with me in paradise” (Luke 23 :39-
| 43). Unbeliever, will you not just
now take the eternal life which Je
sus died to make possible for you?
Loving His enemies to the last,
our Lord prayed for the forgiveness
of those who thus despitefully used
Him. What matchless grace! One
wonders how many of them by re
pentance for their deeds made it
possible for that prayer to be an
swered. That door of redemption
stands open today for every one
who up to now has crucified the Son
of God afresh (Heb. 6:6) by sin and
unbelief.
f>ATTERNS
j SEWDNG CfIIRCLE ~
**'
,
j\ * & el *l/ jj
L JvJ *1 V v'\l?r\
/•' //<*- *a **11: vA
r * f« J * v * " Al* *a ”
'"PHIS is the kind of dress in
■*• which large women look best,
because it is skillfully designed to
accentuate height, place emphasis
at the top, and make curves look
attractive, not heavy. It’s very
, simple—just the type you like best
Me Another
0 A General Quiz
The Questions
1. How far back has the exist
ence of cheese been traced?
2. What animal in that kingdom
has the largest brain in proportion
to its size?
3. Who is known as the father
and liberator of six countries?
4. What two major religions ab
solutely forbid the use of wine or
other intoxicating liquors?
5. What language was spoken by
Jesus?
The Answers '
1. To the year 2000 B. C.
2. The ant.
3. Bolivar (known as the father
and liberator of Panama, Peru,
Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador
and Bolivia.
4. Mohammedanism and Bud
dhism, whose adherents constitute
one-fourth of the human race.
5. Aramaic.
INDIGESTION
may affect the Heart
Ou trapped in the stomach or gullet may act like a
fialr-trtgger on the heart. At the first sign of dlstresa
smart men and women depend on Bell-ana Tablets to
iot gas free. No laxative but made of the fasteat
u llng medicines known for acid Indigestion. If tho
FIUST DOSE doesn't prove Bell-ans better, return
bottle to ua and receive DOUBLE Money Back. iftc.
Lacking Essentials
It is a great misfortune neither
to have enough wit to talk well
nor enough judgment to be silent.
—La Bruyere.
——— -.— - I ■ —■mm
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU
EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR
LESS NICOTINE f COOLER, MILDER—
than the average of the 4 other \ EXTRA /VIILO. m
largest-selling cigarettes tested —less than / . rn,n TUAT Mm - M
any of them according to independent I iL/iS IHAI MM jjj
scientific tests of the smoke itself. V EXTRA FLAVOR MM -SSrIMM I
\ .ti lie follows tlje news fl||
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iCAMEL -THE SLOWER-BURNING CIGARETTE
and wear most—a basic style ap
propriate for general wear and
afternoon. The skirt is slim and
paneled. The bodice is made with
smooth shoulder yokes and just
enough gathers to ensure correct
bust fit. And the neckline of this
dress (design No. 8877) is unusual
ly good, at the same time adding
a definite note of interest and nar
rowing your face.
When you see how beautifully it
fits and how good it feels, you’ll
repeat this pattern time after time,
in flat crepe, spun rayon, silk print
and sheers.
* • *
Pattern No. 8877 is designed for sizes
36, 38, 40, 42. 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38
requires, with three-quarter sleeves, 4%
yards of 39-inch material; short sleeves,
4% yards; 2 ! ,i yards trimming. Send or
der to:
SEWING CIRCI.E PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1324
211 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 15 cents In coins for
Pattern No Size
Name
Address
Banana Oil
Banana oil is not made from
the banana fruit or the banana
tree. Strangely enough, this trans
parent, colorless liquid has no
connection with bananas other
than the fact it has a banana-like
odor. It is isoamyl acetate, pro
duced by the union of certain
acetic acids with amyl alcohol.
\ \ the San Francisco Fair
V-—Copr. 1941 Kellogg Company
Unbidden One
He that comes unbidden goes
away unthanked.
FERRY’S r^S\
Dated WvJSK-i
SEEDS
Enjoyment in Action
Man looks forward to rest only
to be delivered from toil and sub-
I Pi
|stIST.JOSEPH|(Ic
I I ASPIRIN ill I
Jf WORLD'S LARGEST fe J
■■ ~a* > T Ml
Life a Garment
Life is a garment; when it is
dirty, we must brush it; when itj
is ragged, it must be patched; but
we keep it as long as we can.—
Balzac.
GRAY HAIRS
Do you like them? 1/ not, Reta bottle of
T,ea’s Hair Preparation, it is guaranteed
to make your gr.ay hairs a color so close
to the natural color; the color they were
before turning gray, or the color of your
hair that has not turned gray that you or
your friends can’t tell the difference or
your money refunded. It doesn t make
any difference what color your hair Is and
it Is so simple to use—Just massage a few
drops upon the scalp for a few days per
directions like thousands are doing.
Your druggist has Lea’s Hair Prepara
tion or cun secure a bottle for you, or a
regular dollar bottle of Lea’s Hair Prep
aration will be sent you, postage paid by
us, upon receipt of one dollar cash. P. O.
money order or stamps. (Sent COD Uo
extra.).
LEA'S TONIC CO., INC.
Box 2088 - - Tampa, Fla.
-J
The Narrow View
If a man take no thought about
what is distant, he will find sorrow*
near at hand.—Confucius.
ICORK FREE, HAPPY FEETI
I ONE NIGHT M CORN SALVE J
t_AT ALLJWUC STOWESrV&INCE MSgi
Power Seekers
In the struggle between those
seeking power there is no middle
course.—Tacitus.
The Imitator
Nobody so like an honest man
as an arrant knave.
jection; but he can find enjoyment
in action alone, and cares for noth
ing else.—Vauvenargues.