Newspapers / The Black Mountain News … / Oct. 3, 1946, edition 1 / Page 7
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■iflpp , >: : • «» .1 j|®, V“ # , , J i|||H y%js,-'^|s®B j&k* • - - ss&. i .juiKW j®fc»Sß|fc*&MU tmPIBU ~i r ii t > a lnß^ v to < jyis* k 9 ||^Bfe i ®yL-^BBfe>M>IMBS^«• a m Cake at Its Best Depends on Your Care S (See Recipes Below) I Parade of Cakes Bvou long to make a cake ten- B;o the touch, feathery in tex- delicate to the taste, then |X ess is yours if you measure use good ingredients and carefully. I^H a y>}e yours is one of those where the week-end does not begin unless there’s a luscious , cake reposing on the cake dish. If so, you'll want variety in addi tion to goodness, and there will be 1 Iv' % < jßjiferent cake here lor several ■tk-er.es. if you just clip out these and use them as you go Si range cake may be frosted either orange or chocolate ■s:.;.- depending upon your taste: fl Orange Cake. *■ (Makes 2 8-inc-h layers) sifted flour baking powder salt shortening Hip sugar Hies B tablespoons grated orange rind orange juice tiiiur,measure, then sift again Bk. .ler and s ut Cre.it it add sugar gradually cream until light and fluffy. well-beaten eggs and cream then add orange rind. ■ ary tngredients alternately with juice, blending thoroughly each addition. Bake in two in greased pans or as cup or loaf cake. Use a moderate oven for 30 to 35 min ■range Butter Frosting: Cream cup butter with about ■pound of powdered sugar (3% sifted). Add a few grains of Bt teaspoons grated orange ai d 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Bd enough liquid to make of consistency. Butter Frosting: Use ■ho ingredients as abeve. omit orange and lemon juice and Substitute % cup of cocoa B^ 3 with powdered sugar and Bj--' ri iik to make of spread- Btvr.s.svncy. Flavor with IVi tea ■*«>.' vanilla. ■ Chocolate Spice Cake. (Makes 1 9-inch tube pan) B> cups flour baking powder ■ teaspoon salt B teaspoon cloves ■ teaspoon allspice B c ap shortening B 1 eups sugar B e Sgs unsweetened chocolate B< eups milk ■h K f! ° Ur ’ mGasure ’ then sift again B “Ok:ng powder, salt and spices. Cream shorten ing, add gradual ly the sugar and cream together until light and fluffy. Add well beaten eggs, then chocolate which has been melted and cooled and beat until wr ■ ll ■g^jgp . smooth. Add dry e “ lents alternately with milk, LYNN SAYS: [h ' Vhen You Bake Cake*: Use " es * tips to make your work efficient: ,j r '? n should be heated to de t M temperature before placing )r . Calt e within It. A good work w er . to follow is to lay out your li , nsi ' s and ingredients, then ta(! the oven, and then mix your l 0 this way you don't have i, V| “ op during mixing to light the Tb |. g j n ® is done when it is (p ri browned, and when it ; back lightly as touched, 'how very slight shrink the edges of the pan. I'S AM) KEEP THEM LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU Broild Whitefisn Lemon Wedges Boiled New Potatoes Green Beans and Mushroom* Citrus Fruit Salad Toasted English Muffin •Orange Cake with •Orange Frosting Beverage •Recipe given. stirring only long enough after each addition to make the mixture smooth. Pour into a greased tube pan and bake in a moderate (350- degree) oven until done, about 1 hour. When cool, spread with chocolate or mocha icing. If you like fruit in your cake, I’d suggest you try a Prune Cake which will keep nicely moist for at least a week. Dress it up with or ange frosting, sprinkled with shred ded cocoanut. Prune Velvet Cake. (Makes 3 8-inch layers) 154 cups drained, unsweetened, cooked prunes 1 cup shortening 2 cups granulated sugar 4 eggs, separated 3 cups sifted flour 54 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 cup sour cream or buttermilk 2 teaspoons vanilla Measure prunes, then cut into small pieces. Cream together short ening with sugar and cream until fluffy. Add whole eggs, on* at a time and beat until mixture is fluffy. Add sifted dry ingredient* with sour cream, alternately, beating until smooth after e*«h addition. Add prunes and vanilla last and mix lightly. Pour batter into three greased or oiled layer pans and bake in a moderately hot (375-de gree) oven for 30 to 35 minutes. Frost when cool. Maraschino Cherry Cake. (Makes 8 by 12-inch loaf) % cup shortening 154 cups sugar 54 teaspoon vanilla 14 teaspoon lemon flavoring A cup liquid drained from maras chino cherries or 14 cup milk 54 cup finely chopped maraschino cherries 3 cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 4 egg whites Cream together shortening and sugar. Add flavoring and chopped cherries. Add. flour alternately j with liquid ori milk, after flours has been sifted* three times with | baking powdery and salt. Beat; until smooth, : then fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Place in a greased shallow loaf pan and bake 40 to 45 minutes in a moderate (375-degree) oven. Cool and ice with boiled icing. Sugarless Boiled Icing. 2 egg whites, unbeaten IM cups white corn syrup 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Finch of salt Combine all ingredients except flavor in top of double boiler. Place over rapidly boiling water and beat with rotary beater for 7 minutes or until frosting stands in peaks. Re move from boiling water, add va nilla and beat until thick enough *0 spread. This recipe is enough to frost the 1 top and sides of two or three eight or nine-inch layers or an 8 by 8 by 2-inch cake generously. The top may be sprinkled with cocoanut; flavored with peppermint; or after the cake is iced, melted chocolate may be drizzled over the white ic ing. To make chocolate icing from above recipe, fold in 2 to 3 squares unsweetened chocolate, melted, aft er finishing the beating. y . otl Saw It In The News •Tr J SUNDAY C JHijorm International II SCHOOL LESSON nf r!, H J, R °. LD LLUNDQUIST, d. d. °nS ,ft d n, Dlble Institute of Chicago. Released by Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for October 13 !oJ| eS | SOn sub5 ub^ects and Scripture texts se- Cm.S*i U# copyrighted by International Permission IRIOUS Education; used by PAUL MAKES A NEW START in^f Uithians 15:8-10. .MEMORY SELECTION - This is a raithful saying, and worthy of all ac ceptation. that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners—l Timothy 1:15. All that a man has by nature is not enough. We saw last week the preparation by heredity, education and environment which Paul had for a place of leadership. But it was not enough. The capable, well born. well-trained young Jewish aristocrat had to be born again spiritually before he could do God's work. Careful Bible students regard the conversion of Paul and the resur rection of Christ as the two out standing events of the New Testa ment. Without the resurrection of Jesus, the conversion of Saul of Tarsus (whom we know as Paul the apostle) would not have been pos sible, and at the same time his conversion is one of the strongest proofs of the resurrection. We find him in three relation ships. I- By Nature—Contrary to Christ (Acts 26:9-12). It is not enough, as some of us suppose, that a man be sincere. Paul was entirely sincere in his conviction that he ought to perse cute the Christians. He did it with a good conscience (Acts 23:1), for a man's conscience commends him for doing what he believes to be right, even though he may be wrong in his thinking. He was sincere, but he was anti- Christian. By nature man is at en mity with God. No good thing dwells in the flesh apart from the redeeming grace of God (Rom. 8:7; James 4:4; Rom. 7:18). Stirred, probably by the faithful testimony of Stephen, to even great er zeal against the followers of Christ, Paul had to find new worlds to conquer, so he set out “breath ing out threatenings and slaughter to destroy the church in Damascus” as he had sought to do in Jerusalem. He was a bold persecutor, doing all he could “contrary to the name of Jesus" (v. 9), until he met the Lord himself on the Damascus road. Ah, that meeting made him a differ ent man and he became 11. By Faith—Converted to Christ (Acts 26:13-18). Stricken down by a brilliant heav enly light, he found himself talking to the Lord Jesus. He heard from his holy lips the solemn indictment of those who persecute God’s people “Why persecutest thou me?” He who lays unkind hands upon, or brings untrue accusation against, God’s children had better beware, for so closely is our Lord identi fied with his people that when they suffer, it is he who bears the hurt. In a single sentence the Lord dis posed of the persecuting zeal and the sinful skepticism of this proud young Pharisee, and Saul entered into Damascus not as the haughty persecutor, but as a man trembling and astonished. He spent three days shut in with his own soul and God; not seeing, not caring to eat, but entering into communion with God. By God’s grace the old life was pulled up by the roots as it was displaced by the new life in Christ Jesus. God had a great commission awaiting Paul as soon as he was ready for it (vv. 16-18). He was to be the apostle to the Gentiles, and that includes so many of us. The gospel which had come first to the Jews, was now to go out into all the world and to all people. The change in Paul was a drastic one. He was as one who was alive from the dead. It was not a case of adjusting or refurbishing the old persecutor Saul—here was a new creature in Christ, ordained to good works (Eph. 2:8-10). 111. By Grace—Confessing Christ (I Cor. 15:8-10). Twenty years had passed since Paul’s conversion. He had been out serving Christ, in season and out of season. He had known persecution, suffering and opposition. Now he was writing, by inspiration of the Holy Spirit, about the resurrection, telling of those who had seen the risen Christ. He included himself as one born out of his time. It is a personal vision of the liv ing Saviour which vitalizes the spir it of a witness and makes his tes timony ring true. Paul saw Christ. We too may see Him with the eye of faith, and by His grace become wit nesses. Effort and labor ar* involved. This matter of witnessing is not something which automatically does itself. “I labored more abundant ly," said Paul, and yet he knew that it was the grace of God in him which accomplished the result (see v. 10 and Phil. 2:13). That is it! The grace of God working on and in and through a man. And at the same time, that man laboring diligently that the grace bestowed upon him should not be found vain It is in this manner God’s work gets done on earth! Y bonds and keep them 'i **' ' ■*— : x ßß|| ' ' U. S. COMBATS DENTAL DECAY ... The use of fluorine to control dental decay, the most prevalent disease in the world, is being studied in Miami county, Ohio, where U. S. public health officials are checking results of tests conducted on 1,200 school children less than 15 years old. Thousands Claimed Each Year By Careless Hunting Mishaps "The hunted animal is not the only victim during the hunting season,” says Julien H. Harvey, managing director of the National Conservation Bureau. Each fall thousands of men and women who go into the woods to hunt are carried back out wounded, dying or dead. Scores of others are luck ier—they are merely maimed. “This needless destruction of human life can be prevented,” the chief of the accident prevention division of the Association of Cas ualty and Surety Executives de clares. “Our hunters must decide whether or not human life is of more value than one or two extra deer or partridge. “The hunter who blazes away whenever he hears a sound or glimpses a movement in the un derbrush is criminally careless. In fact, carelessness and over-enthu siasm lie at the root of most of our hunting tragedies. Hunting Precautions “If all those who go on hunting trips this Fall would observe the following few simple precautions our 1946 hunting accident carnage will be greatly reduced,” Mr. Har vey said. 1. Wear clothing whose color contrasts as much as possible with TWO SUSPECTS FLEE IN MILK CART; IT’S TOO SLOW o NEW YORK.—A horse and wag on getaway attempted amid a flurry of bullets shattered Brook lyn’s morning quiet but the escape tactics were too slow for modem vigilantes in a patrol car. The chase, began when a police man spied two men descending the file escape of a loft building. The men fled and Patrolman William Griffiths gave pursuit, firing as he ran. Police said the fleeing pair jumped on a horse-drawn milk wagon and, at gunpoint, forced the driver to give them the reins and whipped the horse into a gal lop. DO YOU WANT Some Lumber Dressed? CUSTOM PLANING AND SIZING 6” Tongued And Grooved Roofers 8” Tongued And Grooved Roofers 6” German Siding 8” German Siding Shoemolding—Blindstops Parting Bead Ix 2 For Trim Ix 4 1-2 Inside Trim —Outside Trim CUSTOM WORK DONE FIRST THREE DAYS OF EACH WEEK J. 0. Henry J s; Beyond Grigg’s Sawmill On R ad To Ridgecrest the foliage. Red has been proven the best color. A red cap, jacket, or shirt may save your life. 2. Don’t drink while you are in the woods. Liquor and firearms don’t mix. S. When climbing fences or other obstructions either unload your gun or be sure the safety catch is on. Always unload a shot gun. 4. Keep your gun pointed away from your partner or companions at all times. When walking with a group carrying your gun over your shoulder, muzzle upward, in stead of slung in the crook of your arm. 5. Protect your general physi cal health while outdoors. Don’t over-exert yourself, change wet clothing promptly, and get plenty of sleep at night. 6. Don’t snap-shoot on the spur of the moment. Every time you fire your gun, know beyond doubt what you are shooting at. It is better to come back to camp minus a deer than carrying a wounded man over your shoulder. ERECTION OF SIGNS ON PARKWAY CONSIDERED o Question of whether informa tive road signs will be permitted along Blue Ridge parkway has been referred for study and rec ommendation to National Park service regional headquarters in Richmond, it was learned in Washington recently. The proposal to erect parkway signs which would indicate facili ties avai'able to visiting motorists, along with mileage to various towns in the parkway area, was advanced recently by North Caro lina Travel council and has re ceived the active backing of Sen ator Josiah W. Bailey', Senator Bailey’s office has been advised by P. P. Patraw, acting director of park service headquarters in Chi cago, the whole matter has been Thurs. October 3, 1946—BLACK MOUNTAmjfEWS— 1 NATURE STUDY By Mrs. Thomas S. Sharp Appreciation of Extended Courtesies Many nature lovers of our com munity and among our summer guests have expressed their ap preciation of the opportunity to enjoy and to study the N. C. Wild Flower and other “local” displays exhibited in the window of the Black Mountain Drug Co., during the past year. These “tributes” have come from widely scattered areas, —Canada, England, Hawaii. We wish, especially to thank Mr. and Mrs. Carter Uzzell for having given us this opportunity and pleasure. Later in the window, may fre quently be seen, as several times within the past twelve months, copies of noted paintings and pic tures of famous buildings, with descriptions, and explanations if the purpose and idea of the artist, —all to acquaint our young people with the arts of the masters, to help them in their mental travels. “Never lose an opportunity to see anything beautiful. Beauty is God’s handwriting.” Chas. Kings ley. a passed on to the regional office in Richmond, with instructions to report recommendations. JAPANESE LEADERS SEEK TO DODGE ALLIED CHARGES o TOKYO.—Japan’s indicted war time leaders sought to blot out many of the Allies’ war crimes charges by contending that their nation did not surrender uncon ditionally. The Allies’ chief prosecutor contended just as strongly that the surrender was “utterly with out conditions.” Chief Defense Counsel Ichiro Kiyose argued that, under con ditions of the surrender, only vio lators of international law as it then existed would be brought to trial. Japan’s top statesmen agreed to surrender, Kiyose said, in the ’belief they would not be prose cuted as war criminals. Kiyose also contended that be cause Japan did not surrender un conditionally she was not required to observe every order of supreme headquarters ‘*but only those which are in accord with the Pots dam declaration.” Thus he challenged the tribu nal’s authority to try the defend ants on charges of crimes against peace and crimes against human ity. WOOD We Have Dry Hardwood Split For Cook Stove, j Fireplace or Heater Blocks C. S. BETTS Phone 2681 Black Mountain, N. C. I——M C 11 - t .. T ~ks£-' B. F.GOODRICH SSLVERTOWK OUTWEARS PREWAR TIRES Shipments of die new B.F.Good- more rubber on the road. More and rich Silvertown are arriving regu- stronger cords support this tree larly, and we may have your size. —gi ve j t extra resistance to bruis- But there's more demand for some ing and blow-outs, tire brands than others, and the big plea#e check ur needs we ll in sr ™»-*• ** - even at high spwds. ***' [ ° k «P >'‘ ur #|f There’s b reason! The new tread rolling until we can g 1 * design is wider, flatter and puts get new tires for you. Q sJh„’ Cam ba bought am Small Down Puymant and Coaveniwuf J*ruia WOODCOCK MOTOR €0 - HONE 3771 BLACK MOUNTAIN, M C. Farmers To Get AAA Payments Farmers producing small grain cover crops under the AAA pro gram will receive payments for establishment of a satisfactory* winter cover from Sfeitjbgs of wheat, oats, barley, rye, or mix tures of these crops made in the fall of 1946 it is announced this week. The small grain cover crop in the 1947 program has been in formally approved and payment practice which is to be included at the following rates will be made: wheat, rye, or mixture of wheat and rye $2.50 per acre; barley or mixtures of barley, wheat or rye, $1.50 per acre. A satisfactory cover will be considered to have been estab lished when the land is uniformly* covered with a growth from which a reasonable tonnage of forage could be harvested. The crop how ever, must not be harvested for grain or cut for hay, it was stated. THAT’S ONE WAY A candidate for the police was being interviewed and given an oral examination. “If you were by yourself in a police car, and were being pursued by a gang of des perate criminals in another car, doing 40 miles an hour on a lone ly road, what would you do?” The candidate replied prompt ly, “Fifty.” Patronize Your Local Merchants WE ISA VE SO MANY LITTLE COMFORTS TO MB RECOVERY Beside our complrl**!? reliable p»ef<;tipfioD department, we carry a full Une of "ok*- room” aids: Heating Pods; Hot Wale Lat ties: Air Cushions; Feeding Tioys, etc. Knight’s Pharmacy Black Mountain, N. C. Page 7
The Black Mountain News (Black Mountain, N.C.)
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Oct. 3, 1946, edition 1
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