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This Golden, Fluffy Omelet Captures Interest (See Rccipcs Below) Lenten Meals Eggs, cheese, fish and vegetables - these are the foods that will be popular with the market fcccicet during the next few weeks. If you are going to form the bases for your menu from these dishes cook them just as carefully as you do the meat that you use year 'round, for you can't take chances and let mealtime be come dull or unattractive. Point up fish and vegetables with lemon or other attractive sauccs and flavorings. Serve your egg and mac aroni dishes in attractive settings, with some carefully thought out gar nish. Play up fruit and dessert num bers to lend interest to meals. Now, for some concrete help, I've chosen foods to fit the season. They're vitamin, mineral and inter est-laden. Macaroni Cheese Custard. (Serves 6 to 8) 1 package macaroni, cooked 2 eggs, slightly beaten 2 cups grated cbeese 2 tablespoons onion, chopped 2 tablespoons parsley, chopped 1 pimiento, chopped Salt and pepper 2 cups evaporated milk Combine ingredients and pour into a buttered baking dish. Set in a pan of hot water and bake in a mod erate (375-degree) oven for 45 min utes. An appetite - satisfying omelet? You can't believe it? Well, this one is, because it's made with a cream cheese and chive mixture that makes the omelet heartier, and also keeps it from shrinking discouragingly the moment it comes from the oven. ?Cream Cheese Omelet. (Serves 6) ?4 pound cream cheese with chives 3 eggs 2 tablespoons milk Salt and pepper Soften the chive cream cheese, blend in egg yolks one at a time. Add milk and seasonings. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into o well-buttered, heavy frying pan and cook over low heat until bottom begins to brown. Then place in a moderate (325 -degree) oven until the top is dry and the mixture firm. Fold and serve. Spinach Ring With Goldenrod Eggs. (Serves 8) 4 pounds spinach V: cup salad oil 1 tablespoon salt % cup lemon juice Wash and pick over spinach care fully. Place in kettle without add Lynn Says: Sauces that accent the best fla vor in foods include these: Lemon Butter: 2 parts butter to 1 part lemon juice. This is good on the leafy vegetables, cab bage, broccoli, cauliflower, Brus sels sprouts and artichokes. Mustard Butter: Add just a bit of dry mustard to melted butter before pouring on vegetables. Tart Sauce: (also good on fish) Put in double boiler 2 egg yolks, V? cup cream, % teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoon? lemon juice, flick of nutmeg. Cook until thick and creamy, stirring constantly about 2 minutes. Be careful not to over cook. Stir in slowly, 2 tablespoons butter and serve at once. This Week's Menu: Cream of Asparagus Soup ?Cream Cheese Omelet Orppn Baked Potatoes Carrot. Pineapple and Raisin Salad Popovers Butter Fruit Cup Cookies Coffee Tea Milk ?Recipes Given. ing water. Pour oil over spinach and mix thoroughly. Add salt and cook 8 to 10 minutes. Stir occasion ally. Drain and chop. Add lemon juice and pack into an oiled 9-inch ring mold. Unmold on serving plat ter and fill with: Goldenrod Eggs. >4 cup melted butter Vt cup flour H teaspoon salt Pepper to taste 2 cups milk 4 hard-cooked eggs Blend butter and flour, salt and pepper. Heat mixture and add milk gradually. Stir after each addition o! milk to make a smooth sauce. Separate egg yolks and whites. Slicc whites and add to prepared sauce. Pour sauce into unmolded spinach ring. Press yolks through a sieve to top sauce. Garnish with paprika, parsley and lemon quarters. A souffle is a properly dramatic Lenten dish, but one which must be baked carefully if it is to come to the dining room at the peak of goodness. Select a cheese that will cook readily and smoothly, a dish that is in good proportion to the souffle, and cook ! the mixture at a very low tempera- ! ture so it can rise to its height slowly. Cheese Souffle. (Serves 6) 4 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons flour IVi cups milk 1 teaspoon salt Dash of cayenne Yi pound processed Cheddar cheese 6 eggs Make a sauce of the butter, flour, milk and seasonings. When thick and smooth, remove from fire and add sliced cheese. Stir until cheese is melted. Add beaten egg yolks and mix well. Cool mixture, fold in stiffly beaten whites. Pour into a 2-quart casserole, bake XVSi hours in a slow (300-degree) oven. Serve at once. Cornflake Dream Bars. (Makes 40 bars) First part: V4 cap butter Yi cup brown sugar 1 cup Pour Second part: 1 cup brown sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla % teaspoon sait 1 cup shredded coconut X cup cornflakes 1 cup chopped nutmeats Blend butter and sugar thorough ly. Add flour and blend with fork or dough blender. Press mixture even ly and firmly into bottom of a shal low pan (9 by 13-inch pan). Bake in a moderate (350-degre3) oven about 15 minutes or until delicately browned. Beat eggs well, add sugar gradu ally and beat until light and fluffy. Add remaining ingredients and mix well. Drop by spoonfuls on top of previously baked crust and spread evenly. Bake in a moderate (350 degrce) oven about 25 minutes. Cut into squares while still warm. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By HAHOLD L. LUNDQU1S1. O. D. Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. Helcatr j by Western Newspaper Union. I Lesson for March 8 u ? j subjects and Scripture texts se lected and copyrighted by International Council of Rellglouff Education: uN.*d b* permission. DISCOVERING WIIY PEOPLE DRINK BEVERAGE ALCOHOL LESSON TEXT? Genesis 43 M: Psalm 104:14, 15; Proverbs 31:4-7; Ecclestastes 2:1-3. 10. 11: Isaiah 56 12: I Corinthians 10 6. 7 GOLDEN TEXT? Wine is a mocker. stron* drink Is raging: and whosr.cvcr is deceived thereby Is not wLne ?Proverbs 20:1. "rvio nl^-ohol problem receives at- | tention in (our lessons ol eacn yeai_ This is the first one for 1942 and brings before us a number of scrip tures not often used, to suggest the drinker's reasons for drinking. Why do men drink? E- I I. To Be Sociable (Gen. 43:34). At the banquet prepared by Jos eph the allowance for Benjamin was greatly increased, ind they "drank and were merry." How often that has been the plea which has led into drinking and into drunkenness. The "social glass" has often led to the drunkard's grave. Well, surtly God wants us to be sociablc. Yes, He does, and the nKrfprl nrnvwinn f'"?r m?n'? mwrinl nature is found in Christian fellow ship. II. To Be Happy (Ps 104:14, 15). Wine is supposed to bring happi ness, and we may admit that it does bring a temporary lift whiv-h some call happiness But who is satisfied with happiness? It depends entirely on what "happens " If the wrong thing happens we are un happy. We need a deep abiding joy and only a right relationship to God can give that. . III. To Evade Responsibility (Prov. 31:4. 5). When life's burdens become too much for him the weakling seeks relief and evades his responsibili ties in the deadening power of alco hoi. But that doesn't solve the prob lem. It is still there when sobriety returns, and usually more serious than ever. What can a man do? The answer is, turn to God. He gives wisdom, grace and strength. IV. To Forget Sorrow (Prov. 31: V/. , - "Drown your sorrows" is the ae ceptive promise of liquor; but they stand right there beside man. and when his poor befuddled head be gins to clear they present them selves more persistently than ever What's the answer? The God of all comfort is ready to bear man's sor rows or to give him grace to beai them and to lead him out into a place of peace and victory. V. To Forget Poverty (Prov. 31: *>? Heavy is the affliction of poverty in a world of plenty. Sometimes it is the result of carelessness or ol sin, but often it is the lot of those who are innocently caught in its grip. Men have tried to forget, to "drown" even this problem in drink and have only made their poverty worse and more unbearable. VI. To Find Satisfaction (Eccl 2: 1-3. 10, 11). The book of Ecclesiastes gives the account of a man "under the sun," that is. apart from God's guidance and blessing, seeking to satisfy the cravings of his heart in many ways. All of them prove vain, including the effort to find it in wine and in pleasure. Frustrated souls often seek re lease through intoxicants. They gain a measure of liberty and a sense of masterful power, but it 's all as delusive as the dreams of grandeur of the insane. VU. To Stimulate Hope (Isa. 56: 12). A ccrtain fearful looking forward to the time of judgment tends to dampen the drinker's enthusiasm So he drinks more to reawaken in his heart the "hope" that tomorrow will not bring reckoning, but will be another "good" day. The world has no real hope, in fact, the word itself has lost its true meaning and indicates on'.y a sort of wishful thinking. Is there any real hope? Oh, yes. and the Christian has it. VIII. To Encourage Play (I Cor. 10:6. 7). Paul warns against the folly ot the "eat. drink, and be merry" phi losophy That road ends in disaster. Does not God want u:; to play? Indeed He docs. He gave us the instinct for recreation. We neeti pleasant relaxation, and He has pro vided for us all the beauties of na ture. all the pleasures of wholesome play, and all in the finest of fellow ship with His people and with Him self. Thus we find real recreation not just fun that leaves us empt and dissatisfied ASK ME 7 ANOTHER I A quiz with answers offering information on various subjects The Question ? 1. How many mints docs the United States have for making coins? 2. Fleet street in London is fa mous for what? 3. What proportion of Ameri cans have blue eyes? 4. The bouquet of a wine refers to what? 5. What was the greatest attrac tion of the World's fair of 1893? 8. Who knighted Francis Drake for sailing around the world? I 7. What is made from flux ? ! sweater yarn, linen or rayon? The Antwert 1. Three (Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco). 2. Its newspaper offices. 3. For every 100 Americans who have blue eyes. 70 have gray eyes. 49 have hazel eyes, 46 have brown eyes. 4. Its aroma. 5. The Ferris wheel. 6. Queen Elizabeth. 7. Linen. Crocheted Dinner Cloth PNTERTAINING'S a joy when you've a beautiful crocheted dinner cloth to set off your fine china! Make this heirloom cloth in string. It's filet crochet that has a clear ch?rt to follow. Pattern 7142 contains instructions and chart for making cloth in various sizes; illustrations of it and stitches: materials needed. Send your order to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. ?2 Eighth Ave. New York Enclose IS cents In coins for Pat tern No Name Address Belled the Amazons The most ferocious female war riors in history were the 5,000 Am azons who formed a part of the army of Behanzin, the Negro king of Dahomey, West Africa, in the 1880s, says Collier's. Eventually, they gsew to be so tough and quar relsome that the king had to make them wear bells so that civilians would be warned of their ap proach. POOR GRANDMA Her children prawn op; aha has time to en joy things, but she's worn out from years of work. Old folks often hsve finicky appetites and may not pet the Vitamin Bland Iron they need; Pleasant - tasting V1NOL, the modem tonic, combines these and other valuable Ingredients. Your druggist has V1NOL. 'Best* Man Best man at a wedding in Greece is, in one way, the lucky man. He gets the bride's first kiss! LADX IF YOU BAKE AT HOME, REMEMBER/THE ONLY YEAST WITH ALL. THESE* VITAMINS IS FLEISCHMANN'S O.SOG-LOW *Pef Cake: Vitamin A? 2000 Units (Int.) Vitamin Bj? 150 Units (Int.) Vitamin D? 400 Units (Int.) Vitamin O? 40-50 Units (Sb. Bour.) All of these vitamins go ri^ht into your bread; they are not appreciably lost in the oven. Ask for Fleischmann's Fresh Yeast? with the yellow labeL Bonds or Bondage ? It's Up to You! Buying U. S. Defense Bonds Wiii Tell MOTHER! Give YOUR child same expert care used when QUINTUPLETS CATCH COLD At tho first sign of a chest cold ? the Dion ne Quintuplet?' throats and chests are rubbed with Musterole ? a product mad? especially to promptly relieve DISTRESS of colds and resulting bronchial and croupy coughs. Musterole gives such wonderful results be cause it's mor? than an ordinary "salre." It help? break up local congestion. Sine? Musterole is used on the Quintuplets you may he sure you're using just about the BEST product made! IN 3 STRENGTHS Children'? Mild Muster olo. Alio Regular and Extra Strength for grown-ups who prefer a stronger product. All drugstores. THE ADVERTISER INVITES YOUR P AX)f D A PTC AM Th? advertiser amrN us that hi* goods V^s/lYir xlAlu w iX ar0 good. Ho invite* u? to compare them with other*. We do. Should he relax lor a minute and let hit standard* drop, we discern it We tell others. We cease buying his product. Therefore he keeps up the high standard of his ware*, and the prices as low a* poesihle.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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March 5, 1942, edition 1
11
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