Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / April 6, 1944, edition 1 / Page 2
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Released by Western Newspaper I'nion. \\f ITH the induction of Catcher William Malcolm Dickey into! the navy, the New York Yankees j lost the last man of an era that j made the champions the most fa- I mous club in baseball. Bill Dickey played with Babe Ruth. Lou Gehrig was his room mate, and in more recent years J there were Tommy Henrich, Joe DiMaggio. Gouge Selkirk. Johnny Sturm, Buddv Hassctt, Red Rutling, j Ken Sears, Phil Rizzuto, Bill John- i son, Charlie Keller and others who j ma lie the Yai kees the champions of the world. When Manager Joe McCarthy re ceived word of Dickey's status he | said: "I guess it's only the beginning. J I'ncle Sam wants him and that's all there is to it. 1 wish Bill the best of luck. We'll all miss him. He was a great catcher, great hitter, 1 and a great man to have on a ball club. The records prove Dickey was the greatest catcher of all time." Exactly how much the loss of , Dickey will alTect the Yankees re- BILL DICKEY mains to be >-•• n. but most observ ers believe that it will rank with the biggest, c mjarable to the loss of DiMaggio. Kelh r or : ■ y of the others who are in service. Dickey's Hating Unquestionably Dickey deserves ranking with the best catchers of all time. He shared in nine World series ruts and appeared behind the bat in every contest of the Yankees' ' last eight series. Only Ruth ap peared in more World series, and Dickey's feat of playing on seven winning clubs tied a mark held by Ruth and Gehrig. The only uniform that Dickey ever wore in the 1 :g show was a Yankee uniform—and he w re that fir 16 seasons The veteran, who will he 37 years old in Jure, receive! the plaque as player of the year at the recent Baseball Writers' dinner :n New York. He holds the major league recor 1 of catching 100 games or more f'.>r 13 consecutive seasons and batted over the .300 mark in 11 seasons. H:s lifetime average is .313. Apparently the Yankee front of fice had seen the handwriting on the wall. Joe Glenn, a veteran, was purchased from Kansas City just a few days before Dickey was induct ed. 'l'he club also has the services of Bob Collins and Mike Garbark, rookies with little or no big league experience, and maybe Rollie Hems ley, a good catcher but a man who says he would sooner be farming than playing baseball. All-Important When the news was given to Mc- Carthy he wanted to say he was gorry to see Dickey go. But he checked his words for fear they might be misunderstood. As the manager of a baseball club It is inconceivable that McCarthy bhould he glad to see Dickey go. A catcher is all-important. A winning ball club must he strong through the middle, from the catcher's box through center field. The trend of the times was evi denced by the fact that, when news of Dickey's induction came, the only catcher in the Yankee spring camp was Claude Lamed, a councilman from Pleasantville, N. Y., where he has a gas station. Lamed is not even trying out for the team. He was around only because he likes baseball and happens to be a friend of Paul Krichell, the Yankee's No. 1 scout. The mighty have not fallen, but their troubles are as numerous as those besetting the seven other clubs of the league. And that alone is most unusual. SPORTS SHORTS C. Elmer Riddle is the 15th pitcher in Cincinnati's modern baseball history to win 20 or more games in one season. C. Major league clubs will play 168 spring exhibition games before launching the championship season of 1944. C. Before the Detroit Lions gave him a contract, Frank Sinkwich signed ■ release absolving the club from responsibility in the event of per manent injury due to his heart con dition THE DVMH'KY REPORTER. DANRURY. N. C.. THI'RSDAY, APRIL 6. 1944 HOVStHO PjfeJr MfM 05... fyJfJa&Li Daily Menus Need Changes to Fit Family's Wants You'll be surprised at how little ] chicken is needed for Chicken Noo- ' die Paprika, but how good the cas- j serole can taste. It meets all the ' requirements for a good, wartime dish. Do >.in plan vour rr.eals to suit the family's moc-d? In spring t r instance, do you sat isfy : nr hungt r lor foods crisp, | crur.ehy ar.d light? Do you get away from the too hearty ar.«i heavy foods of winter and heed the change in v i ather ai.d appetite'' If you v! don't, then you I should' Every I family requires a / ■ changes: food as well as in dross. I ' I ~r-~ f'ood is more fur, for both you and the 1.1:111 ly if you \ary menus from time t • t..•::«•. weed out much-repeat ed r-\ .'xs and add new ones to the family > collections. Do keep in mind the changes of season and their Wraith uf new foods and color schemes t add interest to the diet. Sue I svj Fats! Vegetables : erald the important com;: A of spring—and their use in meals should he more generous, ever: .:. t :e meat course itself where they vi.l act as a meat extender: Meat Balls in Vegetable Sauce. (Serves 6 to 8) ■j pound veal 1 .• pound pork 1 pound beef 1 small oni«n 1 green pepper 1 carrot 1 stalk celery 2 tablespoons fat 3 i cup applesauce ■t cup moist bread crumbs 2 teaspoons salt i pint tomatoes 1 tablespoon flour 2 eggs 3 potatoes, diced >4 teaspoon pepper Chop parboiled or leftover vege tables. Grind meat and mix with I "ft ifi i'i/i applesauce, bread ' ' crum bs, salt, pep /A'' |j/ P er an( * beaten JC\JL ' jfA eggs. Form into egg-sized balls. Melt fat, brown \ A meat balls, add -sir chopped vegeta- r *" bles and toma toes. Bake uncovered 25 minutes in a moderate oven. Suit L'sed Fats! Asparagus and Spaghetti. (Serves 6) I'. 'i cups spaghetti, broken In pieces 1 pint canned or cooked asparagus and liquid 2 tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons fat 1 cup rich milk 3 to 4 drops tabasco sauce ■i teaspoon salt 1 cup buttered bread crumbs Cheese, if desired Cook spaghetti in boiling salted ! water until tender. Drain. Drain | the liquid from the asparagus, cut Lynn Says Mottoes: Produce and preserve, share and play fair are mottoes which should be in every house ; hold notebook. This is what I mean, so check I yourself on the following points I so that you can tell if you're do- I ing the job on the home front: Save cans—to meet the quota I of 400,000,000 used cans every I month. Save waste paper and collect j scrap. Containers are made from these to ship supplies to I forces overseas. { Start the Victory Garden early I —to produce more food than we | did last year. Store leftover food correctly, prevent waste. Shop early in the day, early in the week. Accept no goods with out stamps. Substitute for scarce foods, serve simpler meals to save time and leave you more time for vital war work. Lynn Chambers' Point-Saving Menu •Chicken Noodle Paprika Broccoli Sliced Tomatoes t Rye Bread Sandwiches Lemon Snow Pudding Custard Sauce Brownies •Recipe Given stocks in short pieces and prepare a ' sauce from the flour, fat, milk and j asparagus water, then add the ta- i basco sauce and salt. In a greased ■ baking dish, place a layer of the cooked spaghetti, then one of aspar- ; agus. Cover with sauce and con tinue until all ingredients are used. 1 Cover top with buttered crumbs. Top j With grated cheese, if desired. Bake in a moderate (350-degree) oven un- j til heated, about 20 minutes. Sure I'ted Fats! You'll be getting the most out of j your money if you serve this low-on- j chicken casserole. It's thrifty but j full of nutrition: •Chicken Noodle Paprika. (Serves 6 to 8) 1 _• pound medium-cut egg noodles 4 cups boiling water 1 teaspoon salt 1 j cup diced carrots cup diced celery Salt and pepper to tasta cup onion, cut fine 2 tablespoons shortening l l j cups chicken stock or gravy 1 teaspoon paprika cup minced, cooked chl.ken To the boiling water add salt and egg noodles. Cook until all water is absorbed and noodles are tender. This requires about 10 minutes. Stir frequently during cooking period. Combine carrots, celery, onion and shortening and cook for a few min- ; utes. Add chicken stock, paprika, seasonings and chicken. Cook slow ly until vegetables are tender. Pour this mixture over the cooked egg noodles, place in buttered casserole and bake hour at 350 degrees. Whole pieces of chicken may be used in plage of the minced chicken. - An inexpensive food is the salad, but it provides the mineral and vita min riches necessary to good health and living, and satisfies the need for change of texture and contrast in menus. Ham Loaf. (Serves 6) 1 \'i cups ham, diced 1 package lemon-flavored gelatin 1 cup boiling water ■4 cup vinegar ?i teaspoon paprika 1 teaspoon salt cup water cup nyyonnaise 2 tablespoons minced green pepper 2 tablespoons minced dill pickle l!j teaspoons dry mustard Pour boiling water over gelatin and stir until dissolved. Add vinegar and water and al low to slight ly. Add the other ingredients and 3 turn out into 'oaf pan. Chill until 'Tr~I~ •JV.j l pj firm. Turn out on Vtf* platter and gar- (j* nish with lettuce, endive, sliced eggs and tomatoes. San Vied Fatt! Vegetables should be cooked until they are just barely tender—then no more. Then most of their vitamins are intact, and the color is glorious. Here's a casserole with a riot of new spring color: Garden Casserole. (Serves 6) 2 cups white sauce 1 cup cooked new potatoes 1 cup cooked asparagus, cauli flower or broccoli V 4 cup cooked carrota 1 cup cooked peas Yt cup yellow cheese Make white sauce. Place vege tables in layers in buttered cas serole and pour white sauce over them. Cover with finely cut cheese and bake in a moderate (350-degree) oven 20 minutes. Get the most from your meat! Get your meal roasting chart from Mist Lynn Cham bers by writing to her in care of Western Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplainet Street, Chicago 6, 111. Please tend a stamped, self-addressed envelope for your reply. Rtlaaaed by Western Newspaper Union. Thing!) I \('rT Knnv 'Til I\'ow About C.iinatlu's K or F.ijort) Canada is the only one of Amer ica's Allies which has not used Lend- Lease help . . . Most of her money payments to the Allies have been outright gifts because Canada is op posed to piling up war debts . . . The United States is Canada's best customer; and Canada is at the top of the list of our best customers . . . Canada is the world's largest pro ducer of aluminum. Last year she produced more than the whole world did in 1939 . . . Canada is the world's largest producer of nickel and is practically the only source of supply available to the United Nations . . . Canada is the world's largest producer of asbestos, terrifi cally important on aircraft carriers and battleships . . . She is a heavy producer of lead, zinc and mercury, and the most important discovery of tungsten ore yet found on this conti nent is now being developed by the Canadian government direct . . , It's the backbone of battle armor. Without Canadian radium the field services and hospitals of the United Nations' armies would be almost helpless . . . Canada is producing five times as much armor plate, guns and tools as she did in 1939 . . . She is producing 16 types of gun carriages and mountings, al though before she entered the war she had never manufactured a big gun . . . She has delivered 100.000 units to date . . . Canada has the largest small arms factory in the British Empire. She has produced more than a million rifles and enough ammunition to fire 300 shots at every soldier in the German army . . . Canada is second only to us in building ships, although she had not built a seagoing cargo ship in 20 years when Hitler marched on Poland . . . Canada supplies all of the signal corps of the United Na tions with a large amount of their equipment, including nearly 100 types of signaling sets . . . Canada has developed a new secret explo sive for the invasion—the most pow* erful in the world. Canada has mobilized the mighti est of all her resources, her fighting people . . . Forty thousand women are in the Canadian armed forces. Over 5,000 are in the Canadian Navy Services, and 16,000 are in the RCAF ... On Canada's mighty munitions assembly line, one out of every four persons is a Canadian woman. They handle the technical signaling de vices and secret naval codes—and, believe it or not. they plot the con voy routes . . . The Canadian Gov't has found them so proficient at Ra dar and Asdic that women are used as instructors. Nor is their work confined to intricate mechanical de vices. They overhaul aircraft en gines, operate power machines and actually operate the new instrument which determines errors in cannon fire. The newspaper you are reading probably is printed on Canadian newsprint. Canada is by far the largest producer of newsprint in tho world ... In spite of her terrific war effort, Canada is sending more newsprint to the U. S. than she did at the start of the war. A large part of it goes in direct support of our own war effort, because Ameri can production has declined 24 per cent and our other markets have al most disappeared ... In our cru cial year of 1941 Canadian produc tion of newsprint was more than three times that of the If. S.—and everybody knows how murh paper a bureaucrat can use. In Canada price ceilings mean something . . . The cost of living has gone up only 2 per cent in two years, while in the United States and Australia it went up almost 14 per cent on the same scale of meas urement . . . The Canadian people are shelling out taxes at a rate which would equal more than 30 bil lion dollars in this country . . . Last year the Government of MacKenzie King threw 4 billion dollars into the kitty to beat Hitler . . . Production and national income in Canada have doubled since the start of the war . . . After the war Canada will ex pand like we did in 1900 . . . The Shipshaw power development in northern Canada has an installed capacity equal to the total capacity of Niagara Falls plants on both sides of the river. It has a continuous output of electrical energy greater than that of our own great Boulder Dam plant . . . Canada, with less than a fifth of its water power re sources developed, has the second largest amount of hydro-electric gen erating capacity of any country in the world. The Royal Canadian Air Force has 200,000 men manning its planes . . . There are 36 RCAF squadrons over seas . . . The Royal Air Force it self depends for one-fourth of its strength on RCAF crews . , . The British Commonwealth Air Training Plan is based in Canada . . . Prac tically every man in the service of His Majesty, who has anything to do with a plane, learned how to han dle his job in Canada . . . Nineteen out of 20 of the boys who are drop ping the bad news on Berlin got the know-how in Canada. Slip ami Panlics in Applique r OVELY hand-made lingerie is always a most welcome gift. You can make this pretty and very practical slip and matching panties of white or tearose rayon satin or crepe. Do the flower ap pliques of pale blue for contrast. • • • To obtain complete cutting pattern fi>r «lip, panties and applique, finishing In struction (or the Applique Lingerie Sit (Pattern No. 5897) sizes small, medium and lari?e, send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pattern number. Due to an unusually lartfc demand and current war conditions, slightly more time Is required in lilling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 530 South Wells St. Chicago. Enclose 15 cents (plus one cent to cover cost of mailing) for Pattern No Name Address aUOUSEHOLD mmrm Aii oil-silk refrigerator bowl cov er is perfect to slip over the bot tom of a hanging pot to catch the drip after it has been watered. • • • To avoid shine on much-worn trousers and skirt seats brush the garments after each wearing. • • • When a ladder is used to trim trees or pick fruit, a small, strong chain should be substituted fur the top rung as it grips trees or poles more securely. • • • Stretching is fine for the figure, likewise the budget, but don't stretch table linen when ironing it. Iron while damp and press until dry to preserve its stiffness. • • • Ilang a full-length mirror in the kitchen and small children can see for themselves whether they have i clean faces and combed hair. It also serves as a daily reminder ! of one's own appearance. I "SORRY, BOSS, A WBKISOREION? DONT LET icliin( muscles keep I c __iL_ -| j „,;il yon off tbe job-if SOHETOMI ran I fast With help. Soretone Liniment contain* I Oft Ifl II P■■ * methyl salicylate, ■ mo»t effective I I- || 118 HpR I pain-killing agent. Soretone'* cold I II ■^■l heat action ipeedi bleued,comfort* I m AHI Aaa ing relief. I APTinU I. Quickly Soretone acls to «j». I * 1 IWII hance local circulation. I In coin of 2 Check muscular crampu I MUSCULAR LUMBAGO 3. Help reducm local swelling. ■ RAriTArUB 4. Dilate surface capillary blood I ressels. F., Imm M U». Ut dry, rub U|_ MUSC IS*II PAINS again. There'i only one Soretone— -. intlit on it for Soretone reanlu. j SORE MUSCLES I 50*. A big bottle, only fl. tut u irmt FIEE£ MINOR SPRAINS i W ud «n nt»- ' J "* ■ 4 " •**•- " -1»M t« Ilka U.i 10 liKrai* "and McKeiaon makes U" WHY TAKE HARSH LAXATIVES? Simple Fresh Fruit Drink Makes Purgatives Unnec essary i'or Most People Ilcre's a way to overcome con stipation without harsh laxatives. Drink juice of 1 Sunkist Lemon in a glass of water first thing oa arising. Most people find this all they need—stimulates normal bowel ao tion day after day! Lemon and water is good tor you. Lemons are among the rich est sources of vitamin C, which combats fatigue, helps resist colds and infections. They supply valu able amounts of vitamins Bi and P. They pep up appetite. They alkalinizr, aid digestion. Lemon and water has a fresh tang too—• clears the mouth, wakes you up, starts you going. Try this grand wake-up drink 10 mornings. See if it doesn't help you! Use California Sunkist Lemons. \ f Tou breathe freer al . most Instantly as lust 2 drops Pcnetro Nosa I Drops i pen your cold- UUfll clogged nose to give llfilT your head cold air. Wnl 4'autlon: Use only as directed. 25e. 2Vs times ' us niui'h for 60c. Get Naval Salvage Since 1941. the U. S. navy has salvaged, exclusive of the Nor inandie, naval and merchant ships and cargoes having a total salvage value of $500,000,000, or 125 times as much as the cost of saving them. SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT k) RUBBER fih " " Seriousness of the truck tir* shortage will be appreciated when it is known that 34 of the country's largest cities re ceive all their milk by motor trucks. Underinflotion Is a voraclout waiter of tire rubber. A check on Michigan war workers* cars recently showed that more than IS per cent were underinfloted. « Rubber and processing repre sent about 40 per cent of th« cost of manufacturing a pop ular sixe automobile tir*. The first rubber-tired motor bus was operated in Brooklyn,N. Y.,ln 1900. It wot used for sightseeing purposes. ■ A I »T ■il .f> I ■ ■ ' ■ • 1
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
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April 6, 1944, edition 1
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