Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 43, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 September 1948 — Page 2

Gems of Thought He who lives for himself alone lives for a mean fellow. He who tells a secret is another's servant The superior man’s strength is revealed by the winds of adversity. It is only when winter comes that we know the pine and cypress to be ever green. Kitchen Helper Has Double Duty Purpose *1 THIS practical kitchen helper is really very easy to build from the full size pattern. Once you’ve used it chances are that you’ll make another to go alongside your stove or sink. It not only provides many square inches of additional table top working space, but it also does double duty as a large tray holder. Salad bowls and mixers can also be stored on its wide shelves. The material! which the pattern apeciflea are obtainable at any lumber yard. Trace pattern on lumber specified. saw and assemble. Full size pattern shows exactly where to nail or screw each piece and sUe of nails and screws to use. You’ll have fun building thia piece and save many steps using it. Send 50 cents for Step-Saver Kitchen Unit Pattern No 3 to Easi-Bild Pattern Co.. Dept. W. Pleasantville, N. Y. BRAN WITH TANGY PINEAPPLE Grand Idea Far Sunday Hight topper Ash! Crunchy toasted Kellogg’s AllBran dotted with flavorful pineapple! Different and dee-hcious| *4 cup shortening ’-i teaspoon salt cup sugar 1 cup Kcllogg'a 1 egg All-Bran 1 cup sifted Cour 1 cup undrained 2H teaspoons crushed baking powder pineapple 1. Blend shortening and sugar; add egg and beat well. X Sift Cour with baking powder and salt; add All-Bran. Stir into Crst mixture alternately with pineapple. Mix only until combined. 3. Fill greased muffin pans % fun. Bake in moderately hot oven (400 F.) 25 to 30 minute*. Yield: 10 muffins — 2',» inches in diameter. I Saurks'i awst F" - I f«MM Mtwal / a fca Ueatno cereal I : i -tnsfewtfid ill ft I Yodora (ft checks perspiration ; odor ssdfk THE g Made «itli a /ore cream Jw Yodora | is actudly Mlhtny to nonnal skin*. I No harsh chemicals or irritating ■ salts. Won't harm skin or clothing. J* Stays soft and creamy, never gets U grainy. f Try genUe Yodoea-/<W the wonderful I difference' '' < ** (CHANGER of LIFE?’ . Ara you going through the funo- : Uonal 'middle age* period peculiar to women <3B to 52 ymJT Does thia I make you suffer from hot flashes, feel SO nerroui, highs trung. tired » Then do try Lydia IL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptom*. Pinkham’n Compound also has what Doctors call a stomachic tonic effect! ' LYDU L HNKHM’S SSS* And Your Strength and Energy la Below Par ft may be teasad by tiboedw as todnay function that pannus rnhaenaa waste to accumulate. Foe truly many people foot tired, weak and miarreM* when the kidneys fail to remove exemn acMa aad other waata ■attar from the blood. Yre nay aaffae aaggtaff Uekaeha. rhea antic paisa, boadaetoa. diswtsns. fr2^t U MJ’ a e£aty artaatioa with amaKiag aad bjsredag hi aaMbw Mgn thu oometluair io wroag with There Xuid bo no <fc*bt that prompt treatment h wiser than nogiec*. Van Dent's IMb- It in bettw to retv oa a ■ sdMnt that has w-oa eioatrywfde ep»Hmm rasa •oaMkChiSHt fsVOFHOtJF Lowa. Deem’e CZbS. triad and Met-

p— — ~ 1 '*‘^B5 — mAw TTZ T TZ? .~ ji pS I I *ui lAru ' V 8 L ***° P *i. ■ SCRIPTURE: Aeta It OS-41. DEVOTIONAL READING: Romans 11:1-14. I For a Better City Lesson for September 19, 19M A BETTER CITY" is • * good slogan. No one would think of objecting to it If the great city of Ephesus, capital and metrop- j ■ oils of the wealthiest and most thickly populated province of the Roman Empire, had had a chamber of commerce. no doubt they would all have been in favor of a Better City. There would be no arguDv. Foreman men t about that | The question Is: What makes a city better? Four different Ideas on that line—two very bad ones and two good ones—can be seen In the story of Acts 19. You should read the story itself , before looking over these comments. Because we are beginning toward the end of the story, with the very lowest and silliest of the four ideas how to make a city better. It is a very sinople idea: Just "holler." yell, make a demonstra- | don Make it long, make it loud, and the city will be the better for it For two mortal hours that absurd mass-meeting kept the uproar going: "Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" A curious thing, the mobmind. If something is true, how can noise make It truer? If a thing is a lie, how can all the shouting In the world make It respectable? But the mob-mind thinks that if a thing is said loudly enough and by enough people. It is bound to be true. So that theater-full of fools wasted a good afternoon shouting a lie into the deaf blue heavens It did Diana no good. She was as dead as Marley’s ghost, she had never lived, in j fact It was no use drumming up i the decibels Do you know people who think they can make your town better by shouting about it? It won’t work. You can make a town or county famous if you shout long enough; but you won't make it better. 1 ♦• • • Making Money THE SILVERSMITHS there in Ephesus had another theory. I The way they looked at it. the big thing is money They used to make money selling their little silver j shrines. Now this fellow Paul had come along, persuading people that hand-made gods are no gods at all. and the trade in "sacred” trinkets had fallen off. It looked like a bad year for the silversmiths. To make things better, they decided, they needed more money. More business! More production! The fact that what they produced was not only worthless but actually harmful. did not «eem to bother them. Do you know people like that today? • • • Abiding By tha Law THE TOWN CLERK of Ephesus HHhad a simple idea, vastily better than these other two. He saw no sense in the mass meeting, he seems not to have been taken in by the silversmiths’ crocodile tears. If anything was wrong in Ephesus, he said. the courts were . opeV and trials were open, and trials could be held. We have laws—let us live by them: that was the gist of his idea That is not bad advice. AU honor to the honest seranta es the public who now as then give their best efforts to seeing that good laws are made and well enforced. - i • • • Changing Lives SPEAKING OF LAWS, there are* three kinds of people in the world One kind will not obey the laws whatever they are. These are the criminal classes. A second kind say "inside the law" but they never advance a step beyond them A third kind, too rare, will go far beyond the law’s requirements in personal living and in social helpfulness Now Paul had been in the city of Ephesus for some months, and he I had nothing to do with the laws of j that city. Yet what be was doing was more effective in making that city better than anything the courts could have done. Fer what he waa doing was nothing less than changing Uves. "The trouble with people is that theylre people." and the btaslness of Christianity first at aU Is changing people. It la no use hanftwy opt the slogan "For a ; Better City” unless you are working for better people. A tree is no healthier than its I roots, and a community’s roots are the characters of her people. And from St Paul's day to this, the one land only organization which sets' out to change people from the in|side, is the Christian church. o o o (Copyrtohl by the tasnotfooal Council of *chKotiflNi oa bsholf d 49 FrotMMaat dMoatßOtioßtt. IMaoMd WND Faatureoj Advka Let us discard ’ll this quibbling about this man and the other man —thia race and that race and the other race being inferkw, and therefore they must be pieced in an fotertar presttfon — discarding our standard that we have left us. Lot us discard all these things, and unite as one poofde throughout thde land, until we shall once more stand up declaring that an men are eraj ated equal—Abraham Lincoln.

t J n ?' *y 1 F' • _ ■ •■ k - i *** y ' -41 w ’ •WK* ... Varying Basic Recipes Assures Interesting Meals (See rtciper Mow) • s

Basic Recipes "IS THERE any simple way to learn how to be a good cook?” asks a young woman now starting out jto keep house. Older homemakers have asked me the same question just as often, so the problem seems to be a common one. The answer is simply yes. The 1 method is to learn certain basic I food preparations, then to vary these, and you certainly will have ; a good storehouse from which to j select for meals of all kinds—for j family and for guests The idea is to learn the basic recipes so well that it becomes as much a part of you as any simr pie habit. You’ll | memorize the inf > I » gradients if you repeat the recipe 7p.-. often enough, and the method is even easier to learn. Then it’s no trick at all to make an infinite variety of variai tions of the basic recipe. Once you have learned a recipe in this way, you’ll always remember it, no matter how rushed you are or in whose kitchen you are making it You will have arrived at perfection once you polish the technique of making it. and that is true satisfaction. Perhaps you’ve heard that Mrs. Jones is the muffin maker of the community, especially because of her orange muffins. You can Become famous for any one of several of your recipes just by learning to follow basic recipes, and trying out their variations. HERE ARE SEVERAL good basic recipes with their appropriate variations which can form a good backbone to your collection: Plain Muffins (Makes about 14> 2 cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking powder j H teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons granulated sugar 1 rag. well beaten 1 cup milk 4 tablespoons melted shortening er salad oil Sift together dry ingredients. Combine all remaining ingredients. Add all at once to flour mixture, stirring, not beating, quickly and vigorously until just mixed but still lumpy in appearance so that muffins will have good texture. Fill greased or oiled muffin pans, onehalf full, and bake in a hot <425degreei oven about 25 minutes. •WHOLE WHEAT MUFFINS: Use above recipe, reducing flour ' to one-quarter cup. adding one cup unsifted whole wheat flour. Increase sugar to four tablespoons and use four teaspoons baking powder. | Bake in a moderate (375-degree) I oven Tor 35 minutes. NUT MUFFINS: Use plain muffin recipe, adding one cup finely chopped nuts to other ingredients. ORANGE MUFFINS: Use plairt muffins, increasing sugar to four tablespoons, reducing milk to threequarter cup. and adding one-quarter I cup orange juice and one-quarter cup grated orange rind. CHEESE MUFFINS: Add one cup grated American cheese, lightly ■ packed, to dry ingredients. BLUEBERRY MUFFINS: Mix three-quarter cup of fresh blueLYN?iI SAYS: Use Quickie Recipes Fer Sbert-Cet Meal* Coarsely grated potatoes may be mixed with chopped onion and, hamburger. skillet fried, to give you meat and potatoes all in one quick- i to-fix dish. Beef or calves’ liver dipped in french dressing and bread crumbs is pan tried for just a few minutes to get done. Add some canned sweet potatoes heated in a dusting of brown sugar and butter in a skillet for the accompaniment. Company coming? Get some I lamb ground, shape into patties and | place in a broiler with halves off . tomato dusted with butter, salt and bread crumbs. Add a few slices of pineapple and serve the patties over the pineapple with a slice at mint jelly, tomatoes on the side. Leftover boiled potatoes can be buttered and broiled along with the rest at the meat SVeed, canned or leftover tongue served on a bed at creamed spinach, garnished with hard cooked egg wedges is good to look at, better to eat

LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU •Baked Tomato Macaroni Tossed Greens with French Dressing W’hole Wheat Muffins Jam •Orange Charlotte with Chocolate Sauce Beverage Nut Icebox Cookies •Recipe Given i berries or thawed, frozen blue- | berries in plain muffin batter. A SIMPLE DISH like macaroni and cheese has several good variations that you can use frequently. Here, again, when you learn how to make the dish to perfection, you can be certain to enjoy the food no matter what variation you use. Macaroni and Cheese (Serves 6) 1 8-ounce package macaroni 3 tablespoons butter M cup flour $4 teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper 2 cups milk 1H cups grated American cheese Cook macaroni in boiling salted water until tender. Melt butter in top of double boiler, blend in flour and seasonIngs, then add " j milk and cook until thick. Add grated cheese ’ - .yj and stir until Ed' .. jBRn melted. Combine sauce and macaroni and turn into a greased casserole. Bake in a moderately hot (400-degrre) oven until golden brown, about 20 minutes. HAM AND MACARONI: Take one-third package macaroni, place in casserole, top with thin slices of leftover ham, sprinkle with a little dry mustard, dot with butter and pour some of sauce on top of that Repeat with layer of cheese, ham and sauce twice. Bake as above. MACARONI WITH MEAT: Use basic recipe, with one cup slivered tongue, chicken or corned beef in layers. •BAKED TOMATO MACARONI: Arrange three skinned, thinly sliced tomatoes in layers with macaroni and cheese sauce in casserole. MACARONI WITH CHIPPED BEEF: Shred one-quarter pound of dried beef and cover with hot water; let stand 10 minutes. Arrange beef on macaroni layers. Use cheese sauce on top. Scrambled Eggs 4) 2 tablespoons fat « eggs H teaspoon salt Pepper H cup rich milk or cream Melt butter in skillet: beat eggs and add remaining ingredients. Cook slowly, stirring gently until | mixture sets. Serve with ham, sausages or bacon. WITH CHEESE: Make scrambled eggs, adding one-half cup of grated ’ cheese with two teaspoons minced ■ onion before cooking. WITH MEAT: Use recipe tor ‘ scrambled eggs, adding one-half cup • oL diced ham or tongue, shredded j i dried beef or chicken before cook-1 ing. Released by WNU Features. Bake popovers while you heat ; some creamed chipped beef on top of the stove. Split the popover* and served with the creamed beef. Sliced leftover roast heated u> gravy extended with tomato sauce 1 is excellent when placed over piping hot noodles. Lamb stew takes on a different character when you add two cups ; of canned tomatoes in place* of the water. A clove of garlic, placed on a toothpick so that it's easy to remove when cooking is finished, adds a touch of delicious flavor. Place leftover sliced chicken in : ; between white bread and dip in | eggs and milk. Fry until golden brown and serve with currant or cranberry jelly. Combine leftover diced meat and vegetables with gravy, top with biscuits and bake in a casserole. Leftover pork roast can be sliced and heated with quick-cocking rice and mushrooms sauteed in butte: for a delicious main dish. Place leftover stew into a cas serole, top with a rich biscuit crust and brown in the oven for • 'hastj main dish.

SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL

y THE BABE GOES HOME Whatever means as much as an “all-hot" is getting quite a play today in that Valhalla to which baseball folks go. The angels, we like to think, have set aside their wings and are in shirt sleeves. The bars have been let down somewhat St Peter is not so strict on the gate; those not quite eligible are permitted knotholes. Arguments are not frowned on and a little ribbing goes. For the first time, perhaps, it is all right up there to throw a pop bottle. Diadems are a little tilted. The sun is shining at Its brightest, there Is the snap of flags in the breese, the grass waa never greener. George Herman Ruth baa come home. It is curious how many potentates and great ones of the earth are in the bleachers and how many folks who were not great shakes when cn earth have the box seats. It's very special The score* have been kept I with great care. Those who did it the hard way, who triumphed over handicaps, who came through i against odds are being smiled on. i There is an enormous section for lost sheep and prodigal sons. The harps are put aside for brassier instruments and for tin horns and super-noise makers. Gabriel himself leads a cheer and the Bambino enters. He is dazed and needs a few minutes to get things straight, to realize that the doctors are gone, the men with the stethoscopes and the tubes and the instruments, the nurses and the charts, the agonies and the darkness. He rubs his eyes. “It’s all right,” a voice of infinite tenderness tells • him. "What’s all this? Where am I?" asks the Bambino, young and vital. “It would take too long to explain," says the Voice, “and you might not find it easy to understand. We're not too sure whether this is just the proper thing or not but we are scrambling up values, standards and the rules a little." "But 1 don’t rate all this,” stammers the Babe. "I was a pretty tough one in my time. The reformatory type, remember? “And a bad actor in plenty of spots. There was that time when ...” ‘ “Shut up and come in,” says a fellow with a great shock of hair. “And remember you never got anywhere talking back to me.” “Judge Landis!” exclaims the Babe. “Get Into action," says the Judge. “It’s been lovely up here, but, well, a little too quiet without you.” "Look, is this a dream? Did the doc give me too many dope pills last night?” pleads the Babe. “Take it from us. This is all the real thing," comes from a trio of familiar voices. “Colonel Huston! . . . Jake! . . . Miller Huggins!” cries the Bambino. r “Welcome!” says Colonel Ruppert. “And no salary talks!” The Babe looks himself over. He sees that he is a youngster again. He observes that he is in the No. 3 uniform. He feels the old surge of power. But he still stands a little befuddled. "Have a bat, pal!” “Lou! . . . Lou! . . . Lou Gehrig!” “Yeah. I’ve been expecting you. Babe.” Now the Babe hears such cheers as he never heard before, mighty cheers from the throats of old timers, departed buddies, the great host of kids who were called too soon. Brothers Matthias and Gilbert—all the great company of those who love a game battler, a big hearted guy, a fellow whose chief mistakes came from being too human. He’s at the plate once more—and on such a baU field! The Bambino has come home! • • • Chet Bowles, former bead of OPA. j has been named as the Democratic candidate for governor of Connecticut. He is all for the return of rationing and it is obvious that if he wins over the GOP candidate it will be on points. VANISHING AMERICANISMS "Vm gM you compluhwJ; tbo uniter will oriug you a new order rt once.’' "Tbe bon buowt wM bo u doing." "Tbo follow übo was hired as a comedian was funny.' • • • Fur coat sales are reported off 25 to 40 per cent Who wants to buy one these days when its such fun sitting by the phone waiting for the radio to ring you up and give I you one free? • • • Tennis Ball won • race In New England recently. Plenty of bounce, we assume. : • • • Do« Harry Truman contend that it is not a woman who leaped from that consulate tomdow, but a rod barring? Jade Dempsey thinks he has discovered a heavyweight in Jo Weiden, an Austrian. The first decision to make is whether to tab him the Austrian Assassin, the Danube De stroyer or the Vienna Volt.

Slim Shirtwaist Frock Has Gay Panelled Skirt Wfr sl&lj nWML / J m 4- '■ Extended Shoulders. tailored and slim as ’ can be is this well mannered shirtwaist frock. Extended shoulders are extremely comfortable; the panelled skirt is a favorite with women everywhere. Note the clever button closing. • • • Pattern No. 8356 comes in sizes 36, 38, 40. 42. 44. 46. 48. 50 and 52. Size 38. 4H yard* of 39-inch. Send 25 cents for your copy of the Fall and Winter FASHION. It's smart, colorful—and filled with sewing ideas for every home sewer. Free doll pattern printed inside the book. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells St. Chicago 7. 111. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No size: Name Address Life of Samuel Colt After being expelled from Amherst. Samuel Colt was sent to sea. The ship’s paddle wheel gave him an idea for the revolving pistol cylinder. At the age of 14 he whittled out a model and it worked. Later, he quit his father’s dye plant to seek his fortune as “Dr. Coult". In 1832 he sent his plan of a gun to the U. S. patent office, and was awarded a patent in 1836. After the original company failed, Colt invented the, submarine “mine”, while still in his twenties. He died wealthy at the age of 48.

F ' r WT' ■ "MDSSU __ -u<rrwiiiM L /j> JJ* S > 4XIHi\ ff X>Bsiil s g g 1 PASSENGER WM TRUCK YjfIBSSH TRACTOR WH fwM»Mf k V * 1 M IK W i f‘ 1 M > Hi! I:H wd J iIJ I Tirestone TIMS ■ FOR TOUR TRACTOR/ tyw Save tyw Save fyw Save WHEN YOU BUY Firestone WHEN YOU USE Firestone WHEN YOU RETREAD Tir« because your used Tin = > because tb ' re ’’ Fires, ““J ires because ,he mill's, extra months of safe, tire bodies are strong tires are worth more in dependable service built enough to outlast several trade at Firestone. intc them. new treads. SEE YOUR FIRESTONE DEALER OR STORE , Lutn to tbo Voico of Fireitoao Mooioj ooetuoft, NBC A WANTED; COMR * UNITY D,V,DENDS! Sure, our town needs improving, but X how? Thafs MBy ’ lf 3,1 the do,,ars 11,31 'are spent in out-of-town trade were spent Jg 3 right here, our town’s business would prosper and make our town a better place in which to live. ■

I MORI MOTHERS buy Kellogg's Rice Krispiea K a'qX 7 \ for their families than any other brand of rice cereal. Um! Popular! Delicious! “HSPIfS f ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★# J/it yoWL flek&onaL StuMuhp £uuf, SaoindjA. fionddJ nac mMNiR rius judge hir IAKING ■ m StCREI S 3 nr WIFI WANT* TO KNOW 1 ■D(nof ve , . 5 ■ I MOW you SAKS SUCH j ■ water. Let Red Dry Y«... . I WONOtasut BKEAO C ■ and 314 ' 2 »o J minutes. PtXe u te 44 warns I k z- — J ■ ,hor ‘’ u «hhX<i ,n * bo*l ,uwr - MH I Adi ■ ‘**l weirVj? *° thi » »i«ure Ada I NT wu Add rem »'nder A/w lhon ««i». M r- ■ I & ‘ hape uSSf 0 ” I . / I, rush 'OPS Os InavJ r * nd Ptace in J. dough ■ hC/oL' xl/ I rise in 1“ ,, * h "x with shL^^ eised Pans. ■ )COM7EST ( AN-rObt CAN S' -T JUST BI 'j ' w star YEAST ! i u a supply I affiPWW' ; or mu staa ToMxjf A-i \ \ KAY SOCISS S*Ys: 'You. too. c«W« Wire I I winninj oedrollA with REO STAR. This wonder- U?’ J \fl wf «4 \ fvl Y«en si«« tutre rire end <Mtr» Re»o». Tr» this REt) V'J \ STAR Quid Aiethod breed recipe todey.’’ \/ wm RED STAR any yeast