Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 4, 1937, edition 1 / Page 5
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Speed Freezer of Refrigerator Makes Perfect Salads Prevents Formation of Crystals Which Spoil Salads and Desserts ]F anyone should ask us "What is so rare as a day in June” it 1 wouldn’t take us oE our guard. We’d probably speak right up and say, “Frozen Pineapple Salad.” For we’ve just explored the sweet mystery of this summertime delicacy, and after relentlessly pursuing the last morsel which tried to evade us by slipping behind a crispy lettuce leaf, we sighed and punned, "Ah, what food these morsels be!” But seriously, a taste of Frozen Pineapple Salad will electrify even jaded apetites, for the clever combining of crunchy almonds, shredded pineapple and cabbage, plus mayonnaise and beguiling flavor ing has resulted in a sophisticated “something-good-to-eat” that has all the hallmarks of a culinary masterpiece. An Old Smoothie Although some frozen salads are spoiled in the making by the for mation of crystals in the freezing process, this Frozen Pineapple Salad is an “old smoothie.” At least, it is when made in the Speed Freezer of the new Hotpoint re frigerator. And this is easy to un derstand, for this clever unit freezes with such miraculous speed that crystals “don't stand a chance” and the homemaker can be as sured of a smooth ice cream, ice or frozen salad in every case. And speaking of quick-freezing this Speed Freezer makes ice cubes post haste, too, which is a boon to the hospitable hostess now that warm weather is here. The large chiller tray located directly under neath the Speed Freezer provides an extra cold temperature for the storing of ice cubes, as well as space for the quick congealing of desserts. However, here is the recipe for our frozen salad. Don’t just cut it out and put it away with the in tention. of trying it out sometime or other. Have it for dinner tonight and see if your family doesn’t put their seal of approval on it by saying, “Let’s have this again— real soon!” FROZEN PINEAPPLE SALAD 1 cup shredded pineapple 1 cup finely shredded cabbage 1 cup finely shredded celery % cup shredded almonds Juice of 1 lemon 1 cup mayonnaise 1 cup whipped cream % teaspoon salt v % teaspoon paprika Blend together pineapple, cab bage, celery, almonds and lemon juice. Add the mayonnaise, whipped cream, salt and paprika and mix lightly. Pour mixture into freezing tray of Hotpoint refriger ator. Place in Speed-Freezer com partment and freeze from 1% to 2 hours. Freeze only long enough for mixture to become firm. Serve sliced on fresh tomatoes on crisp lettuce, or on cabbage leaves, and garnish with radish roses. 7 '• t and Bullets Save ExpL. ^r rapped In Dark by Deadly Dobra i__ QUICK action with an automatic pistol and a light is believed to have saved the life of one mem ber of the Griswold-Harkness ex pedition to Thibet when a deadly cobra was discovered in their camp headquarters in the Sulu Archi pelago. Lawrence T. K. Grlswolcr, head of the expedition, had stopped with two companions at Laum Secubun, a small native settlement on the Sulu Sea. They were quartered in a grass hut set up on stilts at the margin of the beach. All had gone to sleep, lying on mats spread on the floor. “Tired as I was,” said Griswold, "I woke up suddenly, taut with nervousness. The hut was pitch dark. The only sound was the quiet breathing of my two friends, but I w as obsessed with a fe;.r of some imminent danger. “Fumbling along the edges of my sleeping mrit, I found my flashlight and switcMd it on. The first blink revealed a cobra. He was up, weav ing from side to side, ready to strike, and less than tw'o feet away from the head of one of my com (f panions. A cobra's bite, often fatal, is doubly venomous in the face or neck because the poison goes more swiftly into the blood stream. “Something told me to flash my light directly in the snake’s eyes. Instantly the ghastly weaving stopped, the reptile acting puzzled and blinded by the brilliance. Care fully transferring the light to my left hand, I got hold of my re volver and blazed away. My com panions awoke amidst the din and smoke to find a dead cobra lying beside them. I never before rea lized how much the life of a per son engaged in exploration work depends upon firearms fitted with the right ammunition and flash lights equipped with fresh bat teries. If either fail, he is in danger.” Cobra bites take thousands of lives every year. Formerly the only effective treatment consisted of cutting away the area of the bite. An "anti-venine” has now been developed, but it is effective only if administered immediately after the bite, a condition that can ref o'ten bo fulfilled in regions in fested by the deadly reptile. OUR PUZZLE CORNER ^ ^ *-v___w .... ■■ ■ < ■>«» &0MKFA £lft£ FROMl 702* OHO yOtTLL S£F TH£ / 1SU.au WAR82£R DRfiWR / BiARTtSTJC ART/F. . . ( - conyou s«r ~ g TEN GOOFY TN/NGS 85 fNTHtS & G^OFJNGRflPti'it-I W=l?CAAtyOU ; ZfJMDTEH -y gtmm'rn lOBTECTS/M TH/SZATESF A PORTRAIT OF \ FARMER k -\S/ TUI.ER A 'Get'/e or more .jwotos our of the wortotnoUKTMHSLOE'L. YOUR HEALTH COMES FIRST!!! r--iKPmVMfVWWVWfWfl ^REWORKS, f SHARP POINTED OBJECTS SUCH AS SCISSORS, KNIVES AND OTHER SIMILARLY DANGEROUS INSTRUMENTS SHOULD ALWAYS BE KEPT OUT of CHILDRENS' REACH il Saisr\\ N Pickets is f BVA * DEFICIENT J DIET!!! Mever air FAMILY DIFFERENCES WHEN EATING-.. tLOOM AND TEMPER ruin A GOOD MEALU1 H^MOVAL OF THE TONSILS \ AND INFECTED TEETH , Ml \ MANY PHYSICAL AND MENTAL > AFFLICTIONS i 11 Copyright 1W7. Li»coh« Hrw^gpg* rcfttmm Eta. 122|____ NEW USES FOR BY-PRODUCTS OF MIL: I IT certainly would astonish little Miss Muffet if she knew how many uses science has discovered for milk since the days of curds and whey. Suppose, for example, that Miss Muffet’s modern granddaughter is invited out to a bridge luncheon. Her ivory-like vanity case, The belt buckle and clip on the young lady’s dress, the vanity case, hat ornament, manicure stick and other articles are made from casein by-products from milk. I cigarette holder, lipstick container and her pocket comb are made from milk by-products. She shuffles cards that owe their gloss to milk, keeps score with a pen, whose barrel is derived from milk, on a pad of glazed paper whose glaze is a by-proJuct of the same universal fluid. The little ornament that adds gayety to a chic sport hat may be j manufactured from a dairy by product. So are the buttons on a | new blouse or father’s spring suit, or mother’s shining belt buckle. ] For there are innumerable articles . in daily use that derive from the! original atelier of Madame Moo. Milk by-products enter into the process of making such dissimilar articles as dominoes, book bindings, buttons, -wallpaper and knitting needles. To -find wider uses for the so called "surplus” milk and thereby further aid the dairy famers in come is a -widening activity. Butter-making extracts from milk the fat aDd a small proportion of the soluble constituents. The re maining milk solids are left in the skim, buttermilk and whey. In pro ducing the butterfat for the 1,650, 000,000 pounds of creamery butter which this country found >use for in a recent year, there were some 3,000,000 pounds of milk solids left over. In addition to that, the cheese - makers had 300,000,000 pounds of milk solids not Included in the cheese. The Important by-products of milk are casein, which comes from skim milk, and the various chem icals contributed by the whey, such as lactic acid, sodium lactate and calcium laetate. Lactic acit' may play a part In making the rppetizer at dinner and the pastry at the end. It is used in leather goods and in paints and may also have helped make the soft drink at your soda fountain. The vigorous youth of the milk by-products industry is strikingly shown by government figures. As recently as 1920, this country produced only a third of the casein it needed. By 1934 imports were a mere four per cent. American milk companies furnished the rest, with Wisconsin and California sharing honors as the largest producers. Used in plywood for airplanes, casein helps man to fly, in chem ical sDrays, it helps insects lose interest in flying. Experiments hare even been made with it as a synthetic fabric resembling wool, an undertaking that must make the cow feel rather sheepish. ; Casein products are of two sorts —the plastics and the glue family. Beads and buckles, pocket combs and poker chips belong to the for mer group. Casein glue figures in Coat, vest and sleeve buttons of the busy executive, cigarette holder, pencil, calendar pad base and blot ter are made of milk plastics. paper and paint, lineoleum and leather, upholstering and book bind ing—to mention Just a few. '• Magazine paper acquires Its glossy finish by being dusted with fine china clay after being surfaced with casein glue. Types cf buttons and belt buckles in many colors that are made from by-products of mllk.^ | ----—:- 1 -- . _ _ . „*%**/* r r ^ r?fs~**~r> Flnc*,/'e Minister Sir George Schuster, K C.3.1, K.C.M.G., C.B._, F of India, Succeeds Sir 1 hc.aa., »-»*-* NEW YORK CITY—The announcem at hrs ; " t.; !e at the "general offices of Tho* J Upton, Inc. at * . that Sir George Schuster, K.U.S.I., ; r y Finance Minister oi India, was e.e t d P- • .•. Lipton, Inc., succeed1 n;* the late Sir inomas -..on. »*..«. > tea merchant and yachtsman. __ Sir George Schuster also an-! pounced, on boarding the Nor- j niandie to return to England, -hat ] Lipton, Ltd., of England, has pur- i chased all the shares of Trios J | Linton, Inc., the American company, ■ formerly held and operated as a i separate company by the trustees I of the Lioton estate C:r Geo.ge , went on to say, however, ti-?' the management and- personnel of the company in America would remain the same under the direction of y* w Shannon, executive vice pi esident and general manager * in assuming" the presidency of the American company. Sir George Schuster carries on Sir Thomas Lipton’s work of international goodwill. “Never has there been a time," said Sir George, “when the strengthening of the economic ties between the United Kingdom and the United States of America has been more important to world peace than at present, nor a time when the conditions toward effecting such a bond of goodwill have been more favorable. I personally welcome this new arrangement between the two Lipton companies, because it will give me a chance to visit your country more often and further my friendships and contacts on this Bide of the Atlantic." ( Sir George is also Chairman o the Board of Directors of Lipton Ltd., of England. Holding importan government posts for many years Sir George served the Crown a Chancellor of the Exchequer c India and also as the reorganize of the entire financial system < the Sudan. For these services t was knighted by the King. He i now Chairman of Allied Supplier Ltd., the largest chain store grou In England, having under his direi tion over 4,500 stores, 27,000 en iployees, and a yearly business tun over of over $250,000,000 He is director of Westminster Bank; .member of the Colonial Advisoi | Committee and Chairman of tl i Unemployment Assistance Boar —i He erad'K "d fro. Oxford in 190o Tlie reunion of the two Lipton -, , -v* ■ o!'*’s re coin pan , suit in several a: rent: a to ut» Americr a <: u r will be L‘ to sQio , : ^ America from U Lip ion . a es tates in Cey.cn :■' ft t: -P» ganizafion cf tea bo.vc-s po blenders of Lipton, Ltd,, of Euglai.a, will now be avoi’.ublc to the Amer ican comoany The Canadian com pany, Thomas Lipion o; u*. our a, Ltd., is wholly owned by t**„ ■ »• lean company ‘‘We look forward to r: P d in crease in tea drinking m f;t' ‘ c States.” the new president, said. “We have already noted a deii-ime trend with t.h" A-..- “'C'o h public to preferring the better grades of tea. “Tb re is vast room for increased sales here,” Sir George continued, pointing out that the per capita con sumption of tea per year is as follows 7 lb. per person in the United States. 4.0 lb per person in Canada. 9 0 lb per person In England. Thos. J Lipton, Inc., therefore proposes to intensify its sales ef forts in America and substantially increase its advertising appropria tion here. “We believe in newspaper . advertising which represents the : bulk of our advertising expendi , tnres, as we think that newspapers s are the most effective and best con t trolled method of promotion we r know.” said Sir George, t Liptons now has the largest sales e in this country of any internation s ally known brand of tea and it is j, believed that this campaign will p substantially increase its position :• in the market i- “The workers on both sides of i- the Atlantic are happy to be work a ing together again,” concluded Sir a George, “and we all rejoice in pre y serving the name of that great mer e chant and sportsman. Sir Thomas L Lipton.” . ‘ Pinpoint Of Light Far At Sea Saves Gale-Driven Fishermen AFTER being adrift three days in a disabled power boat, con stantly pumping to keep the craft afloat, two fishermen are alive to day thanks to the smart work of an oil tanker’s crew and the beam of a small portable light The fishermen, Warren Brown of Beverly, Mass., and William Neher, of New York, shown In Insert, for mer merchant ship sailors, were a few miles off Charleston when their motor went dead. For hours they worked over It without getting It to turn again. Meanwhile, the tide was rapidly them to sea. Trouble piled on trouble when the wind blew up strong. The boat heavy-laden with their catch, began leaking, and Brown and Neher manned the pumps. Soon the blow Increased to gale-like fury. Working In shifts, the two men oould scarcely pump water out as fast as It poured In. Instead of being a short distance off shore, they were now nearly 100 miles out at sea. For two days the men kept at their back-breaking toll. On the third night, when almost helpless from exposure, lack of sleep and their continuous exertions, they sighted a ship. Their only chance of signaling was by means of a small flashlight, which had been 1 j rolling about In the bottom of the ! boat, drenched by the storm. I On the bridge of the A. 8. Han sen, bound from Carteret, N. J., to Port Arthur, Texas, was Third Mate Charles Guy, of Port Arthur. Guy spotted the light and awakened the captain, who came on the bridge. Working their ship closer to Bee what the light might be, the tank er's officers heard calls for help.’ They maneuvered their ship along side In the heavy seas and finally got Brown and Neher aboard. "I doubt if our boat would have stayed up another hour,” Neher said. ”We surely owe our lives to the good seamanship of the Han sen’s officers and to our flashlight. The batteries In H were fresh and they stood up under all that pound ing of storm and waves.” ' Brown and Neher soon recovered from the effects of their ordeal. The skipper of the Hansen saw to It that they were taken care of aboard, and haa sent them on their Way to their homes near New York. \
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1937, edition 1
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