Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Nov. 2, 1944, edition 1 / Page 2
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Piarui Prop Rrscue Slups £quippt'd it• r .">(> People I WhM survivors of torpedoed j#nps ari j ditched planes cannot be ,*srued in other ways, a United [ 'Slain AAF plane now drops to &w., by parachute, a boat called '** Flying Dutchman, says Col- j •ier'i. Weighing 3.00J pounds and linMing about 36 people, this boat wries food, clothing, radio, water j ua. fishing tackle and blood ! fiMSssti] also sa Is, two engines - tmi ■ supply of gasoline. Vktrt ttie Flying Dutchman hits las water, a mechanism sets off manfcrpols to mark its loca (km auid fires rockets which carry itac buoy lines to assist sur\ivors •m seaefcing the boat. MONEY CANT BUY mttsi* iMter-ai ting. tuoro ilependaHe | it.— gecoino pure .St. Joseph Vspirin. , Wur» l«rg»st eeller at lOf. Why pay . arm! £« 100 tablet tuio lor only 35t. { RELIEVE COLDS' JIXSSLJL miseries... At bodtime rub thro.it, chest and back with Vicks Vapoßub to case coughing, ißOßenupthe phlegm, help relieve con gestion in upper bronchi.il tubes, invite wsful sleep. Relief comes as Vapoßub PENETRATES to upper bronchial lAeswithitsspecial medicinal vapors, STIMULATES chest and back sur fcces like a warming poultice. Often by morning most of tlie mis sy of the cold is gone! Remember— MIT VAPORUB Gives You this spc ■xd double action. It's time-tested, ill ii the best-known home •Kascdy (orrtliev- mmm jm a Ing miseries of m# | f\ 9 Mmlduxi't colds, ▼ vaporub HIHr?-FAGGEDOUn "3s fw fee; - an tr." ard ready to sleep flfrw « day'? worK? Would you lii;e to teS rid of that tired feeling and join in '■« km—fcive abundant pip ar.d vital 19VT SCa/be your system lac, 3 certain MMRti such as Ii n, lodimv Calcium art Vi'.invn B l. the so-called "pep" «unin. VTTATJEULES, the hl?h-po- Jmwj treatment combining all these tle- and providing IjOO USP units of 3-1 daily, may be just what you lor a happier, healthier, romantic We. especially if vou're over 40—Try *Z?A-B£KLF.S today. Just SI 00 a box 0 yiv 4rj,:s:.-t cr order direct from VfTA-BEKLLS S.U.ES CO. m Miuu U C'le\ eland, Ohio. ———— j MHPfffvMnnvi 1 * 140 j 1 • ARTHRITIS - NEURITIS • SCradmhaU'f Number 40 from you* trvggiu by mail postpaid for $1.25. JUr. back il first bottle fails 10 satisfy. X C MENDENHAII MEDICINE CO. bßßviUct. • - Indiana f^ormmem J Tt'l a fact! The amount of gen added to the soil bv legume tint 1 crops can be boosted as much m 73 On. per acre by inoculating tfn ared with NITRAGIN that casts about 12 i an acre. Tests show •cU-inoculated legumes can add ■p to 125 lbs. of nitrogen per acre, bat sninoculated legumes fre ajuc-itly rob the soil of this valu ■Us plant food. ; aaCMUTE VETCH. CLOVIRS. LUPINES, ! nun PEAS WITH NITRAGIN Fiuuttj say NITRAGIN is good, cheap crop insurance. It makes btgeer, surer yields. Its selected, trttrd (trains of legume bacteria scs in the most modern hbsrxrury of its kind. Get NI TRAGIN where you buy seed. for the yellow can. j wTflfor frH boekttf* mmwm C0739C0 n Booth St. klitvNkN 12. Whs " | FTTV ■II V * r-. ' r' Ski good-tasting tonic aaf doctors recommend JHWUt Scott's Emulsion helps children jpoHls proper growth, strong bones, jsad teeth! Contains natural A & D (WHaiiiiui iTiiiiiili all children need. So (fotfcer—give Scott's daily the year BLjiJiiffiMfjfoirn Dress Up Vegetables, Serve Warm Dessert For Cool Weather Vitamin-rich carrots are hidden in this lovely pudding along with nu tritious cereal. It's inexpensive, 1 point-wise and penny-wise when you're cooking on a limited food budget. Hot Delicacies As the weather becomes cool and blustery, we must shelve many of our warmer weather food fa- /• voritcs. but there Z; ,i r\ t are a host of oth- t ••».! ,1. ' , er good cold ! v. eather recipes to take their place. »|ii \l^r/AAI ! Nothing is quite so important to a Ai'J ! person's well bo- :wf j tng as a good, WwFyaMaaVff"™ | substantial hot food served pipir.g hot. and during' the cooler months, everything at a meal may be scrvt d hot—soup, en tree, vegetables and dessert. First of all, let's look into the mat ter of substantial vegetable dishes you can make with home-canned produce. You probably have green beans, corn ar.d tomatoes on hand. Here are ways to dress them up: Scalloped Green Beans. (Serves 5) 2 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons Hour , 1 cup milk H cup liquid drained from l eans 1 1 cup finely cut cheese ' teaspoon salt ■a teaspoon pepper 1 tablespoon prepared mustard 2 cups drained, canned green beans >4 cup buttered crumbs Melt butter, add flour and blend well. Add milk slowly a*id cook, stirring constantly until thickened. Add liquid from beans, mustard ' and cheese. Stir until cheese is melted. Add salt and pepper. Place , alternate layers of beans and sauce in a buttered casserole, and top with crumbs. Bake in a pre ; heated mod erate (350-degree) oven for 30 min utes. -1 Fried Corn. (Serves 5-€) 2 cups corn 1 tablespoon chopped onion 3 tablespoons chopped green pepper I 2 tablespoons drippings ' s i teaspoon salt s teaspoon pepper 3 tablespoons water Simmer onions and green pepper • in melted drippings for 3 minutes. Add corn, water and seasonings. Mix well, cover and cook slowly about 10 minutes. Savory Tomatoes. | 'j cup diced bacon or salt pork 1 cup sliced onions 4 cups canned tomatoes 1 teaspoon salt '* teaspoon pepper { 4 tablespoons flour 1 Fry bacon or salt pork until near -1 ly crisp. Add onions and cook until lightly browned. '&(£"I-*-- 1 ' Add tomatoes, rari If -I' I 'f sa '* pepper ! an * simmer for MRv J? J \ about 10 minutes. Py&AtfWa. ,!j Mix the flour with lit w 0 £rT,al ' am ount I ifflrtT^'' °' c ®'d water and I stir into the to- I ' matoes. Cook un ! 1 fff liSal ' til thickened. This may be served as a sauce over meat, fish, cooked rice or spaghetti. LYNN SAYS Food Flashes: If a recipe calls for canned fruit, use stewed dried fruit if you don't have the home canned product. If you need whipped cream to dress up your favorite dessert, take top of the bottle milk, chill it well, combine with one of the | whipped cream mixes and set in i a bowl of cracked ice. Beat well. ] Dip scissors in flour before cut ; ting raisins or other dried fruit. Make bread pudding of leftover cake, cookies, and bread. Serve with meringue, lightly browned to dress up the pudding, or orange marmalade, jam or jelly. Use simple icings for cake or dust lightly with powdered sugar put through a lacy paper doily. This saves sugar! THE DANBI'HY REPORTER. DANBITRY, N. C.. TIU RSDAV. NOVEMRER 2. —————————————— Lynn Chambers' Point-Saving .Menu Meat Balls in Mushroom Sauce Snowflake Potatoes •Scalloped Green Beans Jellied Cabbage Salad Pecan Rolls Butter •Apple Crisp Pudding •Recipes Given Another hearty vegetable dish Is this one made with potatoes and onions: Scalloped Potatoes and Onions. (Serves 6) t> medium-sized potatoes 4 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt 8-12 pearl onions 2 cups milk Pare and slice potatoes thin, with fancy cutter or paring knife. Butter casserole well. Flace layer of pota toes at bottom of casserole, sprinkle with 1 tablespoon flour, l i teaspoon salt and dot with some butter. Cover with a lay'er of onions and repeat until all potatoes, onion and season ings are used. Pour scalded milk over top and dot with remaining butter. Bake in a moderate (350- degree) oven until potatoes and on ions are tender. Hot desserts made with whole grain cereals add substantial vita mins and minerals to the diet: Carrot Pudding. (Serves 9) 1 j cup shortening 1 cup sugar 2 eggs I] 21 ] 2 cups grated carrot 1 2 cup whole bran l'j cups flour 1 tablespoon baking powder >2 teaspoon salt '4 cup milk 1 teaspoon lemon extract Blend together sugar and shorten ing until light and fluffy. Add un beaten egg yolks, one at a time, n fill £~ ff—l beating well after ;'J 7V ||l each addition. Stir in carrots « S and whole bran. Sift flour, baking lIS A powder and salt pOOC/K* together. Stir into first mixture al- i ■ ternately with 111 milk. Add flavor ing and fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Turn into greased baking dish and bake in a moderate oven (35U degrees) 55-60 minutes. Serve warm with desired sauce and top with maraschino cherries. liflypLr* jjffcPM Tired of serving potatoes the usual way? Try them scalloped with pearl onions, golden brown and piping hot and you have the answer to starchy vegetable problem of a meal, Apple Crisp Pudding. (Serves 6) 4 cups sliced apples >4 cup sugar >/s teaspoon ctoves >2 teaspoon nutmeg >4 cup honey Vi cup shortening Vi cup sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla extract I*2 cups toasted bread cubes I>2 cups corn flakes Mix apples with combined sugar, spices and honey. Turn into shal low baking pan. Blend shortening and sugar thoroughly; add eggs and flavoring and beat well. Mix with bread cubes and corn flakes and spread over apples. Bake in a mod erate oven (375 degrees) 40-45 min utes or until apples are tender and top is browned and crisp. Peach Rice Pudding. , (Serves 4) 5 or 6 canned cling peach halves 2 cups cooked rice cup brown sugar teaspoon cinnamon or nutmeg 1 teaspoon butter Cut canned cling peach halves into cubelets with scissors to make IV4 cups chopped peaches. Alternate layers of chopped peaches and rice in an oiled casserole, starting with rice. Stir spice into brown sugar, and sprinkle some of mixture over each layer of rice. Make top layer rice and dot with bits of butter; cov er casserole. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) for 25 minutes. Serve warm with cream, if desired, but no sauce or cream is actually necessary. Do you have recipes or entertaining sug gestions uhirh you'll like to pass on to other readers? Send them to Miss Lynn Chambers, ff estern Neuisimprr Union, 210 South Desplaincs Street, Chicago 6, Illi nois. Released by Western Newspaper Uolpo. 1 Looking at HOLLYWOOD TP HIS is the year of child stars, with talented kids in greater de mand than they have ever been, with the possible exception of Shirley Temple. Central Casting boasts 1,500 small thespians whose mothers hang around the telephone night and day, waiting to snatch garet O'Brien, an Peggy Ann Elizabeth Taylor, Garner a Jackie Jenkins, or a Ted Donaldson in her home. Movie moguls are capitalizing on stories with child characters. Jim Ryan of 20th Century-Fox told me: "The problem isn't to find kids with talent and looks; our difficulty is to select the ideal one child for the part out of the mob of applicants." Small stars usually disappear when they reach the awkward age. Occasionally they come back in their teens as ingenues, as did Shir ley Temple, Anita Louise, and Jane Withers. But the first awkward-age i star of magnitude to hit the screen is 20th Century's Peggy Ann Gar ner, now playing Francie in Betty Smith's current hit, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn." Acting Plum This is the most important role ever entrusted to any young player. It fell to Peggy Ann after her dis tinguished performance as the child Nora in "The Keys of the King dom" also the child in "Jane Eyre." This 12-year-old, who works 71 out of the 73 days required by the pic ture for shooting, gets two days' rest before going into "Nob Hill," where she plays Katy, a little Irish immi grant child, an emotional and im portant role. She's not a pretty child in the conventional sense; she has beauti ful bone structure and a face full of character that takes on beauty when the role demands. On Masculine Side Another child star who promises to weather the grim years that , threw Jackie Coogan, Freddie Bar- | tholomew, Dickie Moore, and Peter Lawford out of pictures for a time , is Roddy McDowall. His perform ances are predicated on sheer tech nique and vast spiritual comprehen sion of the adult heart. He has a unique niche in Hollywood 6tar ratings. In "The Keys of the Kingdom," j young McDowall plays Chis- ] holm as a tiy—a role as appealing j as Hiu in "Ili>w Green Was My Val- | ley," which shot him to stardom j overnight. He is now in Kanab, Utah, making "Thunderhead," an other Mary O'flara story and a se quel to "My Friend Flicka." The tale has majestic outdoor settings, gives Roddy the sort of thiftgs he loves best, working with animals. Born That Way Another small fry who promises to have such a record is Metro- Goldwryn - Mayer's seven - year - old Margaret O'Brien, This philosophi cal pixie is no run-of-the-mill beauty, either. Small Margaret's face has quality and spirit rather than baby beauty. She comes of a daCcing family—both her mother and aunt are talented performers. In "Sunday Dinner for a Soldier" Is Connie Marshall, a mini-marvel who, like Margaret O'Brien and Peggy Ann Garner, became known as a model and magazine cover child before clicking with movie cameras. She's lined up against j Bobby Driscoll and Billy Cum- ! mlngs, two scene stealers who won their spurs in "The Sullivans." This is Connie's first picture, but she's a child to keep your eyes on. Siill They Come I spotted George Noakes for a winner in "Going My Way." So did 20th, I guess, because they grabbed him for the part of Andrew in "The Keys of the Kingdom." He's an Eng lish type whose soft-cheeked charm hides an athlete's physique. There's Ted Donaldson, from "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," and Sklp py Ilomeier, who plays nasty Nazi kids superbly. Elizabeth Taylor, who has a steadily mounting following and will be co-starred with Rooney in "National Velvet." Oh, and there's Jackie Jenkins of "The Hu man Comedy," who wrapped him self about our hearts in a brief two hours. The list is as long as your arm and crammed with talent. • • • Looking a Way Ahead Warners have bought 15 acres on top of Hollywood Hills for a tele vision studio, which they figure it will take five years to build and equip. ... At Republic, on "A Song for Miss Julie" set, are Roger Clark, who's directly descended from Capt. William Clark of famed Lewis and Clark expedition, which opened up the northwest country, and Mar garet Early, who claims Confeder ate Gen. Jubal Early as a great granduncle. She plays opposiU Roger. SFJT'iyQ CIIUI.K i'ATTEH VS Magic Moulding of tlic Vt iiistline f\ in linn 11 rc II IB l\ Changeable! I, \ \\ T EAH this jumper costumo (■■■ Kj * * with contrasting blouses, JMR sweaters, and bright belts, and I you'll have many difTerent-look- U\JJj I II ing ensembles. Wools, flannels, jtrfi I 11 jerseys, and velvets will make up I W I / / IfIQA beautifully into this smart and 111 I / / versatile style. # # , Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1221 Is de- Slenderizing! signed for sii-os 12. 14. 16. 18 and to. THE magic moulding of this Si/e 14 ensemble, lon* sleeves, require! j i. .. ■ ... 4»j vards of 39-inch material. dress through the waistline will * • . , .. _ . . . , ■, For this pattern, send 2j cents. In cotnj. instantly recommend it to larger vour namc address, pattern number and women! You'll like it, too, for the ' iue wanted. soft vestee-effect budice which Due to on unusually larpe demand and may be of lace, eyelet embroidery current war conditions, sliyhtly more time or env contrasting material " r"!"" 1 '' 1 In f > llin B orders for a few or any contrasting rn.iM.rtai. of the m(st pi , pular pattcrn number*. Send your order to: Barbara Bell Pattern No 18!)4 ts de- __________________ •lulled for sizes 32. 34. 36. 38, 40. 42. 44 SFWINC CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. and 46. Size 34 dress i with short s eeves iM Suuth Wl .„ s s ,_ Chlcajo requires 4'« yards 39-inch material, (j _ yard contrast. Enclose 2J cents tn coins for eacn For this pattcrn send 23 cents In Coins, pattern desired. your name, address, pattern number and Pattern No 5ize...... size wanted. .. Name Address aUOUSEHOLD 1 - --1 ft! IINTQ Splendid Cough £3' 111 11 Utfea Relief Is Easily Place brown sugar in a mason kilwa/l U nma jar while it is still soft, and it will IVHAcy "*■ IIUIIIC keep that way. No Cooking. Makes Biff Saving. • To get quick and satisfying relief Once food has started to boil, from coughs duo to colds. mix this turn down the flame. It does not recipe in your kitchen. Once tried, need a large flame to keep it boil- ™pby stirrin* . ing. cups granulated sugar and one cup of —water a few moments, until dissolved. Low temperature Is the secret A child could do it. No cooking , , „„„„ rr u:„u needed. Or you can u.sn corn syrup or of tender eggs. Too h'gh tcm- honey, Instead of sugar syrup, perature or extended cooking time Then pet :> 2 ounces of I'incx from toughens the protein in the egg. nny druggist. This Is n special com —•— pound of proven Ingredients, In con- PiriPßn need for covering Jellv cent rated form, well-known for 1U raramn usea ior covering jeiiy rrom[ , t nction pn throut nnd bron . should never be heated to the c j,j U | membranes. smoking point. This causes it to i'ut the I'lnex Into a pint bottle shrink from the side of the glass, and add your syrup This makes a full pint of splendid medicine nnd you get , , . . ul'out four times as much for your A bag of salt may be used in money. It neverspoils.andtastes fine, place of a hot water bottle in f. And for quick, blessed relief. It la pinch. Heat the salt on a skillet, amazing. You can feel It take hold In thnn nnnr it hirk intn t'.e has a way that means business. Itloosena then pour it DacK into t..e uat the phlegm. soothes the irritated mom and use. brunes, and eases the soreness. Thuslt —•— makes breathing easy, nnd lots you To oil the lock on your door sleep. Money refunded If not pleased quickly and easily, dip the key in la evef y way the oil, and turn it in the lock sev- ■ eral times. This accomplishes the i oiling with the least mess, end the —iTlflfll IMC "AIR I least effort. But, of course, taking Rffi^MHHULInCTONic] the lock opart and oiling it com- _ ,jr pletely is still the better way. BOTTU; - « W %. mnr rm Wm II ..RUB/N Sen-Gay QU/CKI • Yes, Ben-Gay gives last, welcome relief from pain and discomfort due to stiff neck. That's because it contains up to 2 Vz times more methyl salicylate and menthol—famous pain-relieving agents that every doctor knows-than five other widely offered rub-ins. For soothing relief, make ■ure you get genuine, quick-acting Ben-Gay I
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 2, 1944, edition 1
2
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