Smartly Curtaining Your French Doers HOV? to make French door cur tains harmonize with the win dow treatment in a room is a fasstian that always arises. Fre owtrtly, over-draperies are omit ior the doors even though they «rt used for windows. The same jiass curtain material is then used m for the windows but a heading and rod is used both top and bot tM. However, over-draperies add Eiher a wooden or a metal rod well beyond the sides of *ne door frame may be hooked in jiace shown here in the dia • • • ■Did Thu sketch Is frji'i a book- At ftp Mrr. Spears called MAKE YOUR ct/aTAINS. Tins 32 pai:e book is MR of new curtain and drapery Mmc snti: illustrated stop-by.step direc tmma tor measuring, cutting, making and hum all types from the simplest sash a» the most complicated lined ever- ** stiffened valance. Whatever iwr evrtatn problem here is the answer antrr b»r4 by na:ne and enclose 15 cents fetitrcsff: »'j wnu. RI'TII WYETH SPEARS Hills New York Drawer 10 is Snrfosr 15 cents f>r book ' Make M Vmm Omq Curtains." r.:::::::::::::::::::::::::: HEARTBURN «■ S minutes or double money back WMrrni ftomn.'h a"il cum-m's painful. tnjffoimt iuii .-ruiu.-n ar I heartburn, doctor* usually IMcnM tt>* fanto-t-a.-Vn* in.-!i-in-* for ym'Miit'rHN'i m'it-moaiik«- n IVil-nna {mm* No tatatKe. IMI-ans brintM fomfort in a Vb«r Ax,b*t ruar mnn-y back uu return of bottla toot Sk mi. aJ! dniKgiita. Aftrvorite househvjld antiseptic dress iacaad htumert for 98 years—Hanford's BALSAM OF MYKRHI It contains aaotk> n£ gums to relieve the soreness and ■cfce mi ova used anil strained muscles. Takes the sting and itch out of b-irns, Ksldi. insect bites, onk and ivy poison- A«C. WKX'. and tun burn, chafing and titavoei uctn. Its antiseptic action less ons aw iau£rr of infection whenever the a out or broken. . Kerp a bottle handy for the minor t —wfnri of kitchen and nursery. At pour tfj-jggtst—trial s;/e bottle 35f; ImmmAoi'. size 65f; economy size $1.25. A C HANfORD MFG. CO.. Syracuse, N. Y. * Sole makers of ■ fr oust m gSfc. 70V® v ""666 Sold Preparations as directed Bj * 7 '/ *®7/. i x 77*T^B ~ ■ WmA OMU Stmethrawers ire blazing the road % wlq! Each of these efficient weapon* avail ■pon dry batteries to spark the SHh te instant action. The batteries you mean more fire power for front- Sm Stfkfiog men. Use your available bat- them cool and dry... mt !■ « eften as possible. For Free SMtap ■fits —Write Dept. U 4, Burgeu SMq Company, Freeport, Illinois. 41 feat l om extra for fht SIXTH I BURGESS ■Mil IN THE NATION'SSERVICI djfet; yfc^F A little nest of grated American Cheese will surprise the family in these fluffy potato croquettes. Nour ishing and filling, they fit well inlo winter menus. Thrift and Nutrition There's a clamor among nutri tion conscious homemakers for rec ipes that nourish but that are inex pensive to fix. Expense of food has little to do with nutrition as the recipes today will show. There's li n pood eating in tE (' V- *j. them besides, ill ill l! ' w '" wc ' come sec " r on ds as readily as they *' le more expensive Surprise Croquettes. (Makes 6) 6 Idaho potatoes is cup hot milk 2 tablespoons butter Salt and pepper 2 tablespoons minced parsley 1 teaspoon grated cheese 1 egg 1 teaspoon water Fine dry bread crumbs Scrub potatoes and steam until tender in a small amount of water. Spear potatoes on fork and slip off skins. Mash well, adding hot milk, butter, salt, pepper, parsley and onion. Shape large spoonfuls, suf ficient for a serving into croquettes with a tablospoonful of cheese in center of each. Roll in fine crumbs, dip in beaten egg to which 1 tea spoon water has been added. Then roll again in crumbs. Fry in deep fat (380 degrees) until brown. Serve at once. Onions are plentiful this year and make an excellent casserole with mushrooms. Onion Casserole Supreme. (Serves 6) 4-5 Sweet Spanish onions 1 can condensed cream of mush room soup 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce ?i cup grated American cheese Slice onions in V» inch slices. Cov er with boiling, salted water, 1 tea spoon to each quart. Cook until C just tender—about 20 minutes. Pour into a large a strainer or colan- Ik der and allow to jUilii, ( L? drain thoroughly. [\ Place half of on- 1 I » " ions in buttered casserole and pour >•2 of mushroom soup which has been diluted with an equal quantity of water over them. Then add re maining onions and sauce and top with cheese. Bake in a hot oven (425 degrees) until brown on top and bubbly. Lentils are full of protein and can be served in place of meat. They're especially good when cooked with salt pork: Doppin' John. (Serves 5) 1 cup lentils Ya cup rice 1 quart water 1 teaspoon salt y* pound salt pork 2 tablespoons butter or bacon drippings 1 small onion 14 teaspoon celery salt Rinse lentils and rice and add wa ter, salt, diced pork and cook on low heat 45 minutes. Chop onion fine and cook until tender in butter or bacon drippings. Add to cooked len tils and rice and stir in celery salt. Another bean which is highly nu tritious is the lima. In this dish it Lynn Says: It's Good This Way, Too: Green beans with small onions in cheese or mushroom sauce. Scallop oysters in cream of cel ery soup. Make the soup or use the canned if you want to save time. Combine cranberry sherbet with mint sherbet for first course. Add pink coloring to honey be fore serving on pancakes if you like a blush on the flapjacks. Add chopped ripe olives to car rots ur celery or the two vegeta bles wiien combined. Creamed onions are a good vegetablo-diob to serve with ham. THE OANRPRY REPORTER. DANRURY. N. f„ TWITRSOAY. NOVEMRPR ?*. 10*4 Lynn Chambers' Point-Saving Menu •Hamburger Deep-Dish Pie Celery Curls Olives Toasted Rusk Currant Jelly Molded Cranberry Salad Lemon Meringue Pie •Recipe Given takes on flavor from tomatoes and bacon: Lima Beans In Tomato Sauce. (Serves 6) Hi cups dried lima beans 3 cups cold water lVj cups canned tomatoes 4 whole cloves 6 slices of bacon 1 medium-sized onion 2 tablespoons flour *4 teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper Wash beans. Soak overnight In the water. Cook slowly until tender. Simmer tomatoes : _ with cloves 10 : „ minutes; remove cloves. Fry bacon |[ " 1 !i!:i in skillet until II crisp. Remove i! bacon and brown . onion in drippings then add flour and seasonings and blend well. Add tomatoes and cook until thickened. Add beans and serve with warm bacon over top. You've heard often enough the nutrition story on liver. Here's an other recipe to add to your collec tion on this excellent meat: Liver With Spanish Beans. (Serves 5-6) 1?4 cup dried kidney beans 1 quart cold water 1 cup canned tomatoes , 213 teaspoons salt teaspoon pepper 1 bay leaf \\ teaspoon powdered thyme 2 medium onions, sliced >4 cup shortening is pound thiply sliced beef liver 1 tablespoon flour Wash beans, soak in cold water overnight. Drain and measure the liquid and add enough water to When serving vegetables, try a combination of several such as above and make them the main dish of the meal. Carrots, green beans and potatoes make up the platter. make three cups. Add again to the beans together with the next five ingredients. Saute onion in shorten ing until tender but not brown, then 1 add to the beans, reserving fat. Cov- j er and bring beans to a boil, simmer until tender, about 2'/4 hours. Meanwhile, dredge liver in flour and brown in shortening in which 1 onion was cooked. Cut liver into j small thin strips and fold into the : beans. Liver may also be marinated in ■ French dressing for one hour be- | fore frying whether it is prepared as above or for fried or broiled liver. ! The dressing seasons the meat thor- 1 oughly and gives it an attractive flavor. A casserole that is a time as well as money saver is always a good recipe to have on hand: Hamburger Deep Dish Pie. (Serves 5) *4 pound hamburger 3 teaspoons salt V 4 cap tomato Juice Vi cup peas 3 Urge potatoes, diced 6 small young carrots 5 small onions Biscuit dough Place carrots, peas and potatoes into large kettle. Add tomatoes and cover tightly. Cook about 12 min utes. Grease a casserole. Cover bottom with half of hamburger and sprinkle with half of salt. Add part of the cooked vegetables, then hamburger, salt and remaining vegetables. Pour vegetable juices over all. Cover with biscuit dough cut into biscuits and bake in a fairly hot oven (375 d* grees) for 50 minutes. Use remain ing dough, if any, for biscuits. Get the most from your meat/ Get Your meat roaming chart from Miss Lynn Cham bers by writing to her in care ol Western Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplainet Street, Chicago 6, 111. Please send • stamped, self-addressed envelope for your reply. Rdltwd by WeiMra Ntwapap«r Union. Looking at HOLLYWOOD I 44 '"pHE hardest thing about mak ing a movie is landing the job to make it." This disarming state ment comes from Edmund Gould ing, who, if he doesn't know all there is to know about directing pic tures, can at least give lessons to nine out of ten of his contempora ries. What was your favorite picture? "Dark Victory"? "Grand Hotel"? "The Old Maid"? "Rip Tide"? "The Devil's Holiday"? "Love"? "White Banners"? "The Trespasser"? "The Constant Nymph"? "Claudia"? Goulding directed them all, and many more. Rugged Individualist Goulding is like no one else here. His technique is his and his alone. He welcomes temperament. The tougher they come the better he likes 'em. There is so much to write about Goulding that in this article you can get only a glimpse of the man. When I say that he is fabu lous I'm pulling W my punches. ■ -gf|flK|§Kk I'll let Eddie ■ TIMSPgp. talk. I quote: H "Most of the people who have interested me are those who are in some kind of spot. Edmund They were either Goulding beginning or des perately anxious —Bing Crosby, a natural . . . Bankhead, beautiful, vital . . . Constance Bennett, so posi tive . . . Alexis Smith, so nervous... Dolores Moran, so green . . . Joyce Reynolds, so young . . . Gig Voung, so anxious . . . Geraldine Fitzgerald, so Irishly indifferent . . . Louise Hay ward. Noel Coward's tip and mine . . . David Niven, so refreshing . . . Fay Bainter, BO scared of the movies .. . Helen Hayes (for whom ho wrote 'Dancing Mothers') '. . Paul Lukas, so bothered about our language . . . Richard Barthehnas, so ambitious. . . . Some weird fate brings me into other people's lives when they need me. "Show me someone trembling, per spiring. fearing they're not good, hop ing they will get by—someone to whom the enterprise means life or death—and I become their soldier. Begins With Research • "I want to know all about them. I want to enter their lives, know all their problems; their aches, pains, fears, apprehensions, and hopes. I'm paid well for tny trouble, be cause there is great strength to be given by someone who digs and un derstands more than surface prob lems." As this is being written Edmund Goulding is doing what he consid ers the most important picture of his career. It's "Of Human Bond age," the Somerset Maugham story that catapulted Bette Davis to star dom. Her part of Mildred, the cock ney girl who wrecks the life of Philip Carey, is being taken in the present version by Eleanor Parker. Goulding's method of conditioning Eleanor, an almost unknown, for the important role is typical of his thoroughness. He went down on the set of "Be tween Two Worlds" to see her. She was very beautiful, quiet, more un like Mildred than anyone he'd ever seen. Eleanor said: "Of course I want to play the part of Mildred, but I'm sure I can't." "What makes you so cocksure you can't do it?" asked Eddie. She answered: "Well, it takes an actress, and you've got to be Eng lish." Eddie continued the narrative: "Well—something happened then. It was instinctive, it was a challenge. It was my ego, I guess. "I asked her to sneak away when she could, talk cockney with me. I got the English actress Doris Lloyd to help her. At the end of the week I knew she could do it. "I worked with her like a psychia trist. Altogether it took two and a half solid months of work to play around with that girl until she blind ly believed in me. "We made the test, and I will stake my reputation in the theater and films on the statement that El eanor Parker is as great and excit ing, as thrilling and promising an actress as I've ever directed." Writer, composer ("Love, Thy Magic Spell Is Everywhere"), art ist, world traveler, student, Eddie Goulding is above all things a hu man being whose entire time and effort are spent on knowing and un derstanding people. He loves peo ple. r • • • Blonde Trettet Are Going Lana Turner is a big girl now, so her hair will be cut short for "Week- End at the Waldorf." She had quite a time with that blonde halo while playing a WAC. They parted and braided it, and wound it around her head. . . • Gregory Ratoff, a Rus sian, borrowed Sergt. Bob Davis, an Englishman, from the "Winged Vic tory" set to teach MvcMurray, an Irishman, a guttural German ac cent for a scene in "Where Do We Go From Here?"—burlesquing an 18th century Hitler. SEVTMG CIRCLE ISEEDLECR iFT Sailor Doll Everyone's Favorite I I HERE'S fun! Get busy sewing this sailor doll. He's the fa vorite of young and old—everyone who sees him wants to own him. HUOUSEHOLD aniriTsffi Wax your book shelves. This will permit books to slide in and out easier and cause less wear on them. —• — In order not to scorch milk, rinse the pan with water for sev eral minutes before heating the milk. —•— If candles are soiled, rub them with a cloth dipped in alcohol. Or they may bu rubbed with lard or other fats. —• — To clean under the piano, place an old sock moistened with polish over a yardstick. —• — Add salt to the water in which eggs are to bo cooked. This makes the shells more brittle and easier to remove. .1 —• When sending a book through the mails, cut the corners from several heavy envelopes and place over the four corners of the book to protect them. —e— A little skim milk rubbed over leather chairs several times a year will keep the leather soft and prevent cracking. • Never use a big unsightly knot when sewing. Even a tiny knot should be hidden on the wrong side. Most dressmakers do not use a knot at all in the ends of bast ing threads because in removing bastings the knot may catch in the threads of the fabric and pull them. Three or four fastening stitcljes at the beginning and end of basting will hold it securely. Jones Found There Were Not Enough Comers - In! Jones decided to enter business, and so he bought an establishment from an agent. After some months he failed, and, meeting the agent some time later, he said: "Do you remember selling me a business a few months ago?" "Yes," replied the agent. "But what's the trouble? Isn't it as I represented it to be?" "Oh, yes," said the other. "You said it was in a busy locality where there were plenty of pass ers-by." "Well!" queried the agent. "What's wrong with that?" "There were too many passers by." Millions/^! I I //CORN FLAKESI If "Ik* Crilaa srs Cr«at Fudi"- Jhf&tfr r-£- J. (I If • Kellogg's Corn Flakes bring you J /'%JIb II nearly all the protective food elements IA /S tf* (SB IB of the whole grain declared essential /Bra 18 Mll.l———l .„ !■■■—————M——————— £MM It's wonderful how a lltUa #4OI4IMM HMM# Va-tro-nol roileves transient |#7B|rf mmmm W congestion that stuffs up ths w """" nose and spoils sleep. Quickly to relieve shiftiness, invito MtkM _ sniffly distress of head colds, ife WJ& Follow directions In folder. __ _.W . _ «a(nr (V nose gets stopped op »•«*■•«» y «jS Toniqhtl MTRO-NOL Needlework you'll hale to put down. Pat tern 1)33 contains a transfer pattern for doll and clothes; complete directions. Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, slightly more time is required in filling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: Sewing Circle Keedlecraft Dept. SGI W. Randolph St. Chicago 80, UL Enclose 16 cents for Pattern No Address Table Reminder MAN—Why does a table maka me think of margarine? WOMAN—Because it reminds you of Nu-Maid . . . the Table- Grade margarine . . . made espe» cially for use on the table.—Adv. WHY QUINTUPLETS always do this for CHEST COLDS! Ta Promptly Relieve Coughing— Sore Throat and Aching Masclas Whenever the Quintupled catch cold their chests, throats and backs are rubbed with Musterole. Powerfully soothing— Musterole not only promptly relievea coughs, sore throat, aching chest musdea due to colds — but ALSO helps break up congestion in upper bronchial tract, noea and throat. H'oniisr/ui/orgrovn-aps.teef ins niiuj4.iiin Strengths Invest in Liberty "fa Buy War Bonds 1 J DRESSES MINOR WOUNDS r§rr mOROLINEy WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT k) RUBBER Nearly 3,000 rebber tires daily ware required in North Africa to replace tires which had been worn out or de stroyed in action. • " At a result of the diversion of the petroleum by-product to avia tion gasoline, about 50 per cent of the butadiene produced for syn thetic rubber processing to far In 1944 came from alcohol plants. When you wonder about the shortage of civilian tires, bear in mind that in the time it takes to build one 56-inch airplane tiro at B. F. Goodrich factories/ seven 8.25-20 truck tires or sixty 6.00:16 passen ger tires could be made. And airplano tires or* "musts" these daysl