Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 3, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 February 1940 — Page 3

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IJ ERE is a new department that I ■* we know is going to meet with tremendous popularity with our readers, for it brings the opportunity of combining pleasure and profit. With jig, coping or keyhole saw, you may cut these designs from wallboard, plywood or thin lumber. Each pattern brings accurate outline of the design, and complete directions for making and painting. Men, women, boys and girls are finding this a fascinating pastime, and with each order will be sent a circular showing many additional novelties which may be made at home. A host of bright birds in your garden becomes reality when your cutout hobby is combined with pattern Z 9063, 15 cents. Life-size outlines and realistic painting suggestions for eight familiar birds .are given. Can you identify them? There’s the red-headed woodpecker, scarlet tanager, indigo bunting, towhee, oriole, bobolink and blue jay. Scraps of plywood and jig or coping saw will pleasant work of these feathered friends. On this same pattern you also receive outlines and instructions for the delightful rustic bird house. Different-sized openings for various birds make this house adaptable to the birds of your choice. Send Order to: Aunt Martha, Box 166-W, Kansas City, Mo. FOOD FOR THOUGHT Nothing is more dangerous than a friend without discretion; even a prudent enemy is preferable.—La Fontaine. He who reigns within himself, and ru’es passions, desires, and fears, is more than a king.— Milton. The destiny assigned to every Vian is Suited to him, and suits him to himself. —Marcus Aurelius. , Didst thou never hear that things ill got had 4fVer bad speare. He only half dies who leaves an image of himself in his sons. —Goldoni. Lighteth His Soul I met in the street today, a very poor young man who was in love. His hat was old, his coat was threadbare—there-were holes at his elbows; the water passed through his shoes and the stars through his soul.—From “Les Miserables,” by Victor Hugo.

INDIGESTION Sensational Relief from Indigestion and One Dose Proves It If the first dose of this pleasant-fasting little black tablet doesn’t bring you the fastest and most complete relief you have experienced ■send bottle back to us and get DOUBLE MONEY BACK. This Bell-ans tablet helps the stomach digest food, makes the excess stomach fluids harmless and lets you eat the nourishing foods you need. For heartburn. sick headache and upsets so often caused by excess stomach fluids making you feel sour and sick all over—JUST ONE DOSE of Bell-ans Droves speedy relief. 25c everywhere. To Agree Few are qualified to shine in company, but it is in most men’s power to be agreeable.—Swift. Has a cold made it hurt 4 even to talk? Throat rough and scratchy? Get a box of | Ludcn’s. You’ll findLuden’s special ingredients, cooling menthol, a great aid in helping soothe that “sandpaper throatl” LUDEN’S 5* If* J Menthol Cough Drops '4M WNU—J 7—40 WHEN kidneys function badly and! you suffer a nagging backache,! with dizziness, burning, scanty or too : frequent urination and getting up at night; when you feel tired, nervous,: all upset... use Doan’s Pills. Doan’s are especially for poorly] working kidneys. Millions of boxes! are used every year. They are recommended the country over. Ask youri neighbor! 11 ’TGI Ij 11KJ

News wi EOu ’Em ■ IShkml • r \ saferjfl PLAN REFRESHMENTS TO SUIT THE SEASON See Recipes Below.

When You Serve a Crowd Whether it’s your responsibility to provide unusual eats fc; the Senior skating party, or an inexpensive menu for the church supper, cooking in quantities does present problems! Unless you have recipes designed to serve large numbers, it’s safer to make quick breads, cakes and cookies, according to standard family size recipes, doubling them, perhaps, but no more. Proportions of ingredients change as recipes become larger, and it’s no simple matter for an amateur to guess at them. Plan refreshments to suit the season and your guests. When equip-

ment is makeshift, the help . limited, and the number to be 1 served is large, 1 select foods that are easily pre-

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pared and served, and foods that won’t be hurt by standing. For the simplest sort of refreshments after skating or skiing, hot spiced tea is ideal. Clam chowder, with toasted crackers, makes a hearty, satisfying and substantial dish to serve after a sleigh ride invthe frosty air. Spaghetti or macaroni make inexpensive,' mainstay dishes for a church Supper or midwinter meeting of the P. T. A. Served with a crisp salad, hard rolls and fresh fruit for dessert, Italian spaghetti makes an unusual and easy-to-serve meal. You’ll find the tested recipes below practical when you entertain a crowd, and if you’re planning a smaller party, my booklet entitled “Easy Entertaining” will give you suggestions for menus and recipes, too. Cream Cheese Icing. (Frosts 90 2-inch cakes) 4 3-ounce packages cream cheese 34 teaspoon salt 8 cups confectioners’ sugar 1 tablespoon vanilla 2 to 3 tablespoons milk 1. Soften the cheese with a fork, add salt 2. Gradually cream in the sugar, beating until the mixture is smooth and fluffy. 3. Add vanilla, and enough milk to make icing of spreading con.sistency. Italian Spaghetti. (Serves 50) 134 quarts onions (minced) 3 cloves garlic (minced) 1 cup parsley (minced) 114 cups olive oil 6 pounds ground meat (beef, pork and veal) 6 No. 214 cans canned tomatoes 8 small cans Italian tomato paste

3 tablespoons salt 1 teaspoon pepper 6 pounds spaghetti 2 pounds Italian cheese (grated) 1. Cook the on-

ions, garlic and parsley in the olive oil for about 5 minutes. 2. Add meat and cook until meat is brown. 3. Combine with tomatoes and tomato paste and simmer for about 2 hours or until the sauce is very thick. 4. Add salt and pepper just before servjng. 5. Serve on cooked spaghetti and sprinkle generously with grated cheese. Clam Chowder. (Serves 50) IV4 quarts carrot (chopped) P/4 cups onion (chopped) 3 quarts potato (chopped) 7 1 4 cups celery (chopped fine) 5 quarts clams 5 quarts water and clam liquor Salt and pepper to taste 5 quarts milk 1% cups flour 1% cups butter 1 cup parsley 2 tablespoons paprika Chop the vegetables in small pieces and place in large kettle. Chop the clams and add together with the clam liquor, water, salt and pepper. Cover and cook about 34 hour, or until vegetables are tender. Scald milk. Make a smooth paste of the flour and water. Add half of this flour paste to the clam

mixture and half to the scalded milk. Cook each, stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens. Combine and add butter, parsley, and paprika. Serve very hot. Ski-Ball for One. 114 teaspoons sugar 1 thick slice lemon stuck with 12 to 18 cloves 1 cinnamon stick muddler Hot black tea Place sugar, lemon and ths cinnamon stick muddler in Ski-Ball or Russian tea glass (both have handles), pour over this strong, hot, fragrant black tea and serve at once. Ham Loaf. (Serves 100) 10 pounds smoked ham (ground) 6 pounds veal (ground) 114 cups green pepper (minced) 114 cups onion (chopped) 4 teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon pepper 16 eggs (beaten) 2 quarts tomato soup (canned) 2 quarts bread crumbs or uncooked cereal (oatmeal or farina) 1. Combine the meat, green pepper, onion and seasonings. 2. Add beaten eggs, tomato soup, and bread crumbs or uncooked cereal. 3. Pack in bread loaf pans and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) for 114 hours. Reception Cakes. , (Makes 90 2-inch cakes) 2 cups shortening (part butter) 4 cups sugar 16 egg yolks 9 cups cake flour

8 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 2 cups milk 134 tablespoons orange or lemon extract 1. Cream the shortening, sdd sugar very slowly, beating well

after each addition. 2. Beat egg yolks until very thick and add gradually to the creamed mixture. 3. Sift dry ingredients together and add to the first mixture alternately with the milk and extract. 4. Pour batter into jelly roll pans which have been greased and lined with wax paper. 5. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) for 30 minutes. Remove from pans, cool and cut into diamonds. Peanut Crunches. (Makes 8 dozen cookies) 1 cup peanut butter 1 cup shortening 2 Cups brown sugar 4 eggs (well beaten) 2 teaspoons vanilla 4 cups flour 134 teaspoons salt 4 teaspoons baking powder 34 cup milk 34 cup peanuts (chopped) Cream peanut butter with shorten ing.‘ Add sugar gradually. Beat in the eggs and vanilla. Sift together the flour, salt and baking powder and add to the creamed mixture alternately with the milk. Add peanuts. Blend well and drop from a spoon into a greased cookie sheet. Bake in a moderately hot oven (400 degrees Fahrenheit) for 10 to 12 minutes. ‘ If your family has a “sweet tooth,” dessert is a mighty im- . portant part of the meal! But it isn’t always easy to find recipes for desserts that are different, easy to make and inexpensive. Next week Eleanor Howe will give you an assortment of tested recipes for economical and delicious sweets to serve at the close of a meal. « Send for Your Copy of ‘Easy Entertaining’ Now. If it’s about time for you to entertain your club or sewing circle, you’ll be needing some suggestions for unusual refreshments. You’ll find them —menus and tested recipes, too—-in this practical guide to entertaining. Send for your copy now! Just mail 10 cents in coin to “Easy Entertaining,” care of Eleanor Howe, 919 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.)

SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL

I. SUNDAY International II SCHOOL LESSON-:-By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D. Dean of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for February 18 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts selected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education: used by permission. GOOD CITIZENS AND GOOD NEIGHBORS LESSON TEXT — Matthew 22:15-22. 34-40. GOLDEN TEXT—Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.—Matthew 22:39. Character is determined by what a man is in his heart, not by the profession of his lips. This is eminently true in spiritual matters, for we know that it is not by much testifying, hymn singing, or even by church attendance that a man proves himself to be a Christian. The question is. Is his heart right with God? It is also true in his relation to his country. Patriotism is not a matter of speech-making and flag-waving, but an inward devotion to the good of the nation. Most assuredly it is also true that being a good neighbor is not something accomplished by smooth talk or the shedding of a few tears; it is a matter of that right attitude toward our neighbor, whether he be the man next door or in China, which results in a sacrificial effort to serve and help him. I. A Right Attitude Toward God (vv. 21. 37-39). No man will make any real progress in the direction of being either a good citizen or a good neighbor until he has a right attitude toward God. The questions which were asked of our Lord, and which brought forth such precious teaching from Him, were not asked in good will nor with a desire to glorify God, but rather to entrap or snare the Lord and thus give occasion for denouncing Him. Had the Pharisees. Sadducees, and Herodians (the ritualists. the rationalists, and politicians of our Lord’s day) really known God and Jesus Christ, His Son, their problems of patriotism and neighborliness would have been solved in the light of His Word and, what is perhaps even more important, in His spirit. Is not the crying need of our world today, gone mad as it has with misdirected and perverted patriotic fervor and forgetting all responsibilities of good neighborliness, that it should hear and heed the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ? 11. A Right Attitude Toward Government (vv. 15-22). The subtle hypocrisy of the question in verse 17 lay in the fact that these leaders, were not interested in knowing the truth, but only wanted to make Jesus out either to be disloyal to His own people because He advocated paying tribute, or a traitor to Caesar because He advised rebellion against taxation. They coated their clever bait with unctuous flattery, a device which is still common among those who would mislead God’s people. Observe that even though they did not believe what they said, they did speak the truth about the Lord Jesus (v. 16). His answer is complete, final, and unanswerable. He has that kind of an answer to every honest question of man. In this case He clearly states that one who lives under an established government, enjoying its protection, using its money in trade, and so forth, is to be loyal to every proper obligation to that government God and the things of God must come first, but a right attitude toward God will reveal itself in a proper attitude toward government. Why does not some nation realize that the answer to destructive political and social theories is—win the destructive agitator to a living faith in Christ and he will become your strongest "■ force for God and country. The real answer to communism (and every other anti-Ameri-canism) is Christ. Hl. A Right Attitude Toward Our Neighbor (vv. 34-40). We have talked a good deal of late about being good neighbors, and certainly everyone should do everything possible to encourage the good neighbor policy in his own community and throughout the earth. But why does not the good neighbor policy work? Read the parallel passage in Luke and you will see how man tries to dodge his responsibility. See Luke 10:29 and observe the answer of Jesus in Luke 10: 30-37. A good neighbor is not one who is seeking some kind of “You favor me and I’ll favor you” arrangement He does not see the barriers of race, creed, or color. He is ready to help anyone, anywhere, at any cost. It is recognized that only the man who loves God with all his heart will be able thus to love his neighbor as himself. The world-does not so much need treatises on neighborliness as the winning of men and women to faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and thus to a whole-hearted love for God which will inevitably express itself in a love for his neighbor. When this comes to pass, we shall have true neighborliness in the world. Let us send the gospel to all nations, that they may become first of all good Christians, then good citizens, and good neighbors.

Comfort, Style, Color, Novelty In New Spring Shoe Fashions

By CHERIE NICHOLAS

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AS A prologue to the season before us the National Shoe fair, held in Chicago recently, launched many new styles for the Easter parade, and for the spring and summer months to follow. It is not possible to tell of all the shoe fashions exhibited, sb in the next few paragraphs we will cite a few outstanding highspots. First, one is impressed with the striking originality that marks the styling of shoes this season. The big news is the swing toward back decoration. The newest models are styled with all sorts of fancy cutouts in heel and side-back sections. Open toes appear in a substantial percentage, with good taste using a restraining hand. In leathers there is decided ingenuity in combinations, especially with fabrics. In the forefront are leathers from the reptilian family. Patent is a top-honor contender, dividing its style prestige with gabardine. Suede is also definitely in the picture. The stepins are prime favorites. The majority of these, and of pumps, carry elasticised sections. For the initial purchase smart women will select black or the new bluejacket blue, a dark navy. Malibu beige is also a color you will be parading. Gray is due for a decided revival. Heels introduce more novelty in their heights and shapes than in

Pastel Blouse J. I 9HB& ,|h in - ! I J A sheer crepe blouse in monotone pastel, pale blue, muted pink, grayish green or the new wheat color with a dark skirt of rich fabric is a dress formula that carries style conviction. The blouse pictured observes the newest styling details. High neckline, long generously full sleeves, the wide corselet effect that gives a nipped-in waistline, they are marks of fashion-wise dressmaker touches. A matching turban is late fashion decree. Mepotny is launching new styles in chemisier blouses, making them of silk or cotton novelty shirting and trimming them with old-time featherstitched braid and nacre shell-shaped buttons.

any previous year. They will “click” from flat platforms to new spike altitudes. Wedges in medium and high heel versions promise a great vogue. When you see the new play shoes you won’t be able to resist. Wedge shoes with soles in brilliant red kid and tops of Paris blue, buck piped in red, with a red drawstring around the top will embark you gaily on that all-American spring which fashion advises will be here, with patriotic colors flagging interest from head to foot. Ready to step out for spring are bluejacket pumps with bows and moccasin-effect fronts edged in white as shown to the left in the picture, worn with a navy and white print frock and navy and white accessories. Gay stripe wool for coats is a spring promise. To wear with your striped coat choose shoes such as accompany the coat illustrated. the shoes shown in the inset, beginning at the top, No. 1 is the new double platform type. The alligator pumps next below are real smart. They are in the new taupe gray, have the latest square toe and heel design, with stitching in brown. Shown next is a significant style forecast. It combines alligator with suede or gabardine. Two pert bows of alligator add swank. Comfort plus style is the very important message conveyed by the shoe that concludes the group. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.)

Milliners Turn Out Cunning Spring Hats A pastel felt or a gay fabric turban make good “starters” for spring. The sailor theme is a most important one. As for turbans you can wear no smarter headpiece. The latest is to have -a turban match either blouse or bag or match something that has to do with your postume. The outstanding feature about the cunning hats that tilt over the face, 01 some not much larger than the palm of your hand, is that they all throw the spotlight on back views. Milliners have devised all sorts of schemes in the way of snoods and fitted deep bandeaux and ribbon cap-fitting contrivances not only to insure a comfortable fit on the head but to give chic and charm to back views. House Coats to Fit Your Personality House coats and hostess gowns, like all other costumes, should be chosen to match your personality. Once in a while the tall, stately woman may find it amusing to go frilly and feminine at home and the hoyden may try her hand at elegance, but these are the exceptions rather than the rule. Ordinarily the woman who spends many hours in her home likes pretty, cheerful pastels, while the career woman who keeps an eye on the practical side chooses the darker red, wine and blue shades. Wet Day Ensemble Chic and Sensible Copper and white are attractively combined for a rainy day ensemble?'A trench coat of copper-toned gabardine is teamed with white rubbers and a transparent coppertoned umbrella. The umbrella has an old-fashioned ivory tusk handle. An amusing lapel pin for this coat is a pair of white celluloid ducks.

Strange Facts I IF hose Signature? I ‘Proxy Parents' ’ * Live to Collect 9 In a recent experiment the Chicago Police Crime Detection laboratory had seven college professors differentiate between four samples of their signatures, one being genuine, one an expert forgery, one a tracing and one written with no attempt at imitation. Only one man identified his own signature as genuine and recognized the other three specimens as nongOnuine. A new organization in New York supplies capable young women between the ages 6f 20 and 30 years to act as “proxy parents,” taking , children to theaters, schools, parties, dentists’ offices and on shopping tours. They also stay with children wh le parents are away for the week-end; and meet trains and chanerpn girls , who conie to the city tor a visit, In Great Britain, the-fees of barristers, pr trial lawyers, still are regarded as gratuities and, therefore, cannot be collected through legal action. More than 60 per cent of the money now paid out annually by the life! insurance companies of the United States and Canada goes to living policyholders, not to their beneficiaries.—Collier’s.

[ SPEED'S OKAY J r in FtyiNG- -4 L BUT FOR THE J L 'extras' j IN CIGARETTE ] F PLEASURE, 4 L GIVE ME J T SLOW-BURNINGJ ► CAMELS. 4 [thev're extra] F MILD AND t EXTRA COOL! J Ifww // PAUL COLLINS, / President of Boston-Maine Airways, Inc. SCIENCE points the way and the experience of millions of smokers confirms it: For the important extras in smoking pleasure, stay on the slow-burning side. The slowerburning cigarette that gives you extra mildness, extra coolness, extra flavorZand extra smoking per cigarette...per pack—is Camel. In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-sell-ing brands tested—slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to hi FOR EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR— Gumel