Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Jan. 4, 1945, edition 1 / Page 6
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miISFMMS OF COUGHING Helps Loosen up PI) I 91C Pfelegm Due to uULUv coughing spasm* s-, that come with colds M try the well-known yW steam treatment? put a good •f-SRtoSSI? spoonful of Vapo- Rub in a bowl of boiling water . . . weathe in the vapors. Grind relief comes with every breath HW take, as tlie soothing medicated epors penetrate into the cold-irtitated upper bronchial tubes. How wonder* ItHy Vapoßub helps loosen phlegm, coughing, relieve upper bronchial Irritation .. . inviting the restful sleep uhi need so much. Time-tested, same-proved Vapoßub is the best taowiihoiiK-reniedv a |*a|>A for relieving mis- \f 1 c.icjofcolds.Try it! jf Vapoßub How Sluggish Folks Get Happy Relief •HEN CONSTIPATION makes y«u (eel luak u the dickens, bnims on stomach ipsat, sour taste, gassy discomfort, take !>. Caldwell's famous medicine to quickly »m 3 the trigger on lazy "innards", and »*» you feel bright and chipper again. ML CALDWELL'S is the wonderful senna juatire contained in good old Syrup Pep tic to make it so easy to take. ■ANY DOCTORS use pepsin preparation! K prescriptions to make the medicine more palatable and agreeable to take. So be sure ttmi laxabre is contained in Syrup Pepsin. MS4ST ON DR. CALDWELL'S— the favorite t millions for 50 years, and leel that whole- K.kCte relief from constipation. Even finicky cuiirto love it. SftUTIONi Use only as directed. DR. CALDWELL'S SENNA LAXATIVE WONIAINSO IN SYRUP PEPSIN i II Imititf it rtllifc Ir I K»f iff from the torture of h» rs, i* \Z' > ointment hu* li«*rn fantou** 'nr .11 .r> than tinrty v* or*. I {•-r• '■« %»h» r »'*/.> ointment Hiioth*** t it-' is. ri leves pain anil iirhin*:. >«-oi»n!. }*%£) ointment iul»r; Mr«# h.irl«ned, piirt i— b« p s P r ' * ' nl rrarkmi; nml ».>rer.»'is. Ihir'l. l*\/t) «• ntnwni t«*nN «»i . 1 "iting I'M ea to PAZO umi g't-r 4 perforate*! I'.'f Pipe niiilvi ap t-hcr. «»n simple Ch* 'ou-'h Vour «l«>fiur Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomuls'.on relieves promptly be a'lie it goes right to the seat of the •rouble to help loosen and expel terrc laden phlegm, and aid nature m soothe and heal raw. tender, in lamed bronchial mucous ni etn a-sines. Tell your drusui.st to si Jl you « bottle of Creomulsion with the un- you must like the way it luickly allays the cough or you are a> have your monev back. CREOMULSION for Coughs. Chest Colds, Bronchitis LAUNDRY SOAP FREE || With CASH ORDER for 2 dozen ( 2>c pk.«s. of Washinjc Powder, we include a.i "tec acquainted ' Kilt, I do/cn 6c bars J jL»andry Soap. Mailed postpaid lor $6.00. j CDKfIAL PRODUCTS GO. rU-2). Albany. CM. I (PMl»rt A lobbift Writ* for Met*) 4 HPIPH '• !■; tj Great Tonic Many Doctors Advise it* bow good-tasting Scott's Emulsion !ke)p« tone up your system; helps build stamina and resistance against colds— a there is a dietary deficiency of A & O Vitamins. It's easy I Simply take Scott's iaCy throughout the year. It's great! Buy THE I)ANBURY REPORTER. DANBURY. N. C.. TIH RSHAY. JANUARY I. 1915 © §>& M Sugar Substitutes Come Into Limelight After the Holidays Pears and other fruit may be stewed or baked with very little ad ditional sugar because the fruit is so sweet in itself. Fruit desserts are kind to low-on-sugar budgets. Sugar-Shy Sweets Have the holidays exhausted your supply of sugar and sweets? Today's collection of reci- W j j, 2> pes is especially planned for the 1 low sugar budget, ' ; VA for strange though /i , % I/) it may seem, WV-V- there are many I iMi.'*- m I which can be tixed with a minimum of sugar. Try packaged mixes, dried fruits, car.tited fruits, and the sugar sub stitutes if the sugar canister is get ting empty. There are many pack nged fillings which will relieve sugar from being used in pie and cake fillings, and these come in a variety of flavors. Substitute as many of the fresh fruits for dessert as possible, and if they are baked, sweeten with maple or corn syrup. If your favorite cookie recipes call for one cup of sun. r, of a cup. They will be just as good, if a little less sweet: Marble Molasses Cake. ' „• cup butter or substitute cup sugar 2 eggs beaten 2 cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder >i teaspoon salt I .i cup niilk 2 teaspoons allspice 3 tablespoons molasses Have all ingredients at room teni [ c-raUirt> Measure out flour, sus'.ar, ,:t and butter in bowl. Beat for 2 : tea. Add i „'gs and ir.ilk and I it fir another two minutes. Take .1 t ,:r 1 of batter and mix with js, >i s end allspice. Drop by :pi rf..'.s into greased lori£ pan, al t riMt.r.g light a:.d dark mixture. 1 in a moderate oven fur 1 hour. S'.rve i'..m or frosted. Angel Cake. 1' ' cups lieht corn s>rup 5 egg whites 5 egg yolks 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 cup sifted flour 1 tablespoon lemon juice >4 teaspoon salt Roil syrup until it forms a soft bail when tested in cold water. Beat egg whites stiif but not dry, pour syrup over I them slowly, con tmue beating, ff Add lemon juice and vanilla. Beat Jy*. Wi this mixture until it holds its shape. Fold in egg yolks, beaten until thick Ci* and lemon-colored. Fold in sifted dry ingredients. Bake in large ungreased tube pan in a slow oven (300 deg.) until well browned and done, about CO minutes. Invert on rack until cake loosens. Ice with following: Lynn Says: Sugar-Savers: When stewing fresh or dried fruits or making fruit sauces, add sugar or syrup just a few minutes before cooking is finished. Don't forget to add a pinch of salt to the fruit while it cooks. Both these little tricks will help make the fruit seem sweeter without using up a great deal of sugar. Dried fruits are rich in sweeten ing and may be made into fruit whips without any sugar. Simply stew the fruit, cook and put through a sieve. Beat two egg whites until stiff and use V 4 cup of dark corn syrup beaten into them. The amount of fruit puree required for this amount of egg white-syrup mixture is % cup. Since powdered sugar is more readily obtained than the granu lated type, use it in icings. Pow dered sugar is especially good when mixed in the proportion of one cup to a three-ounce package of cream cheese and flavored with orange juice. Lynn Chambers' Point-Saving Menu Calves' Liver Baked in Sour Cream Buttered Spinach Fried Potatoes Apple-Cranberry Salad Rolls Jelly •Ginger Pudding •Recipe given. I Sugarless Icing. I egg white, unbeaten ■i cup light corn syrup is teaspoon salt teaspoon vanilla Combine all ingredients in top of j double boiler. Beat with a rotary beater until thick enough to stand \ in peaks. Spread on cake. A delightful spicy pudding can I easily be made from sugar substi tutes, and these are guaranteed to j satisfy the family: •Ginger Pudding. (Serves 6) 1 cup hot coffee 2 tablespoons shortening 1 cup molasses 1 well-beaten egg Vi cup sugar 2 cups flour Vj teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon soda *•» teaspoon cinnamon teaspoon each cloves, nutmeg, i ginger Pour coffee over shortening and j stir until melted. Add molasses and mix thoroughly. % 1 Add egg and beat. I 7 Add sifted dry in gredients, mixun square pan and bake in moderate .jSSgffi&T oven (350 deg.) for 30 minutes. Spread with the following: Orange Topping. 'i eup sugar 2 tablespoons grated orange riud 2 tablespoons orange juice Mix all ingredients and sprinkli on top of pudding. Return to ovei which has had heat turned off. far . about 10 minutes. Orange Fig Whip. (Serves 6) 1 cup evaporated milk 1 cup broken tig-filled cookie* 1 cup orange sections 1 j cup broken nutmeats Whip milk and fold in cookie.s Ada oron.-je sections and nut merits then chill thoroughly. Pile lrjhtly into shcrbi rt glasses and serve. Use an unbaked crumb filling for pie to save fat. Filling can be made of prepared pudding mixes to save sugar. Cookies, too, may be made with a pleasing combination of a sugar substitute and only a small amount of sugar: Peanut Cookies. 1 cup shortening \'-i cup sugar li cup honey l?.i cup sifted flour U teaspoon salt \'-i teaspoon baking powder > j teaspoon soda is cup milk 2 cups quick-cooking oats 1 cup chopped seedless raisins 1 cup chopped peanuts Cream shortening, add sugar and honey. Beat and add sifted dry in gredients, alternately with milk. Add oats, raisins and nuts. Drop by spoonfuls onto a greased cookie sheet and bake for IS minutes in a pre-heated (375 degree) moderate oven. Pecan Crlspies. 1 cup shortening \\'% cup sifted flour Vi cup confectioners' sugar 2 teaspoons vanilla 2 cups pecans, chopped Cream shortening, add sugar and vanilla. Add pecans and flour. Make rolls about 2Vfe inches long and \k inch wide. Place on cookie sheet and bake 15 to 20 minutes at 325 degrees. When baked, roll in powdered sugar and cool on wire rack. Get the most from your meat! Get your meat roasting chart from Miu Lynn Cham bers by writing «• her in care of Western Newspa/ier Union, 210 South Ihsplainei Street. Chicago 6, 111. Please srnd a I tamped, selfaddretsed envelope for your reply. IteleaM* by Waitcrn N«wl»ap«r Ualoa. at HOLLYWOOD XT O MATTER how grown-up we x look or are, we all remain kids at heart. Deep down the child in people remains alive, even though on the outside they grow old and gray. That's the reason folks never lose their taste for fairy tales. In wartime we particularly want to believe goodness always trl ' ■§ day. Columbia is ,B| basing its most «MF '§ pretentious pro- Jlwy color fantasy of Cornel Wilde Si d fg B , d lu ' They ve taken the Aladdin and his lamp story and are giving it a sophisticated twist, with Cornel Wilde playing Aladdin as a crooner, the Frankie Boy of an ear lier age, Evelyn Keyes as a Jive mad jinniyeh. Fantasy de Luxe Director Alfred E. Green assures me that the picture will have all the fairy tale fixings—magic carpets, giants, a subterranean river with crocodiles which change into lotus flowers just in the nick o' time, harem beauties by the dozen, and an under-water ballet that promises to make the old Annette Keilermann subsea movies made during the first World war look like flotsam and jet sam. Even before World War I, fairy tales were popular on the screen. As early as the turn of the century Georges Melies, in France, discov ered that movies could show magic in a way the stage never could man age. It wasn't long before America showed feature length fairy tale« and fantasies. One of the earliest was Mary Pickford in "Cinderella." Owen Moore, Mary's husband at the time, played the prince, and while the "transformation" scenes were crude beside those in "A Thousand and One Nights," they made people gasp when the pumpkin became a coach and Mary's rags turned into royal glad rags before their eyes. Lavish in Old Days, Too It was Annette Keilermann, one time champion swimmer, who made the biggest splash of that period In an elaborate f.inUisy called "Nep tune's Daughter" and another, "A Daughter of the Gods." Annette ( brought the one-piece bathing suit to fame, and gals have never dis carded it since. These films were made on location in the Bnhamas and Cuba under Herbert Brenon. William Fox starred the Fox Kid dies in elaborate versions of fairy tales, with youngsters playing both junior and adult parts. Remember blonde Virgiuia Lee Corbin and Frances Carpenter in "Babes in the Wood" and "Jack and the Bean stalk"? Those movies cost fortunes. Doug Fairbanks knew the dream of youth better than any one else. In "Robin Hood," "The Thief of Bagdad," and "The Black Pirate," he gave us some of the best tairy tales the screen has had. Walt Disney, bless him, really brought the fairy tale to full flower with his magic brush. "Snow White," which is now revived, is a lovely thing for kids of all ages. And now, thanks to a special campaign on my part, it will be revived each Christ mas. Try, Try Again "Alice In Wonderland" came along, too, just at the time th® screen was learning to talk. Para mount made the mistake of cov ering such famous faces as those of Gary Cooper and W. C. Fields with masks. Shakespeare's "Midsummer Night's Dream" was given a spec tacular production by the late Max Bernhardt. Judy Garland played Dorothy ia "The Wizard of Oz," based on th« Baum books, and you oertainly haven't forgotten her singing "Over the Rainbow." Yes, (here's no end to fairy tales, and we're all happier because of them. It's good to be able to adopt the faith and eyes of a child on oc casion and sail through a thousand and one nights of romance and ad venture on a magic carpet. • • • Democracy Still at Work Where else could it happen but in America? Only a few short years ago 1 was talking like a mother to a tall handsome youngster, scared out of his wits about playing a scans in "Children of Divorce." Yet the other night that youngster, Gary Cooper, bid SIOO,OOO in war bonds for one ef my silly hats, and quipped: "I just wanted to get the durned thing off the market." That same kid is not only starring in but producing his own picture. And in many ways he's still the shy, reticent lad. SEWING CIRCLE PATTF.RSS Attractive All-Occasion Play Suit Play Sets for Brother and Sister t Pattern No. 8725 comes In cizea 1. I, I. 4 and 5 years. Siw> 2. dress, require* Hfc yards of 33 or 39-inch material; pantle*. yard; overalls, Hi yards. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells St. Chictf* Enclose 26 cents in coins (or each pattern desired. Pattern N0...... 5ize.,,.., Jerkin Suit Addfe " I IDEAL for any occasion, this two-piece jerkin suit is tops j with the teen-age crowd. The well-fitting jacket can be collar- > tJT&WI' ft less, if you like, and is smart too with long or short sleeves. A f v MM change of blouses gives you many « 1 attractive costumes. Pattern No. 8732 comes in sizes 11, 12. |i ■ 13, 14, 16 and 18. Size 12, without sleeves, I HtMM requires 3 1 j yards of 33 or 39-Inch ma- I | I Wrial; short sleeves, 3*« yards. H--|M |HR Girl and Boy Play Suits i I - DLAY togs for boy or girl—little J 1 tots will love this practical set J-ym Lt* made in corduroy with bright flow- OUw( er applique. Sister's dress has jj/f?*- Klink pert puffed sleeves—and she may j J * *] flWrk-S g* have overalls just like brother's sSfffok Use pretty scraps for the applique. I Smj | |Ljlw Jolly Duck for Toy M • Or Lawn Ornament (f TR Qy_ % wheelbarrow l? easy to FACE'LAUNCHED A THOUSAND make from straps of lumber. SHIPS," WAS SO BEAUTIFUL The wheel is cut out of wood and THAT ADMIRERS FOUGHT held in place with a bolt. \ou THE TROJANI WAR FOR. HcR. may be able to salvage a mt'tal wheel from some discarded toy. The ducks are cut out of plywood ✓ \ with a jig saw or by hand with a 7 H|S mODWn AJSwtev "CUTOUTS FOR WAUSOfi LAWN I ?,« 1 • N V- £ ORNAMENTS BCCAUSE SHE U I FC ! _ .SN'ti- vs> V ,c,'V PERSONIFIES IJ| • V/y l J>'' W'' PURE, SWEET, VI - MM V,». V'-'i' -£♦.*• WHOLESOME V §ML T\? ■) SU-MAIO, THE ONLY -'T\ * l *\ "■ y MARSARINE CERTI' V ix. V;\\ 'J r\ FIED BY ITS MAKER. { A\\ r T WJ ?J - '(/ Wj/ • ic'''*rs + / GRA3E" MARGARINE. f Vft -*y Th« mild, sweet, churned-fresh flavor *1 fy. I .'- 'FOB jyw J; NU MAIO has mod# it a favorite lor P'CHILDS QWIUT #r" -'Toft SIDES , M ii-n „. rt (of I APPLIQUES Wf OF whEELBARROWJ cooking and seasoning, at *«l as la* 1 — A |j a spread and coping saw. They are then nailed lab,# to the sides of the wheelbarrow and the fun of painting and stenciling begins. You just trace the pattern on the wood and follow the color • • • NOTE—Pattern 258 gives on actual-size cutting and painting pattern (or the large wheelbarrow ducks and for smaller ducks TAME Glva It that veil groomed tu be used for lawn ornaments or applique look. Add lustre. Keep yo«r designs. Large diagrams showing how to UNRULY hair tying flat. Always us» cut and assemble the wheelbarrow and a uA ID Moroiine Hair Tonic. Larga complete list of materials required are lIAIIC bottle 25c, Sold everywhere. Included. Ask for pattern 258 and enclose 15 cents with name and address, direct to: AT FIRST MRS. RUTH WVETH SPEAKS IIGN OF A mm Bedford llilli New York Jm/B Drawer V V Enclose IS cent* for Pattern No. 238. f Name u9e UUO Cold PnpaiaUoaa CM dlzaetad We h»»» limUed war-lime quoca of oor patented, cuaraotead, "ZIP-HONI KITS." Por all itandard doublf-tdcc safety razor blades. Incredibly !eo«thens blade life. Beaer thavtt. Takes bat a mom eat. Pays for itself over end over. Simple, practicaL positive sOTi-aotomauc. "ZIP-HONE-KIT" sharpens and suops BAR BEE METHOD. Seat postpaid ■ nrwherein U.S. A.and to service maa and women overseas upon receiptof onijr to money-Older or check. Or COD in U. S.A.forJuVplus small postal collection chars*. (No overseas C. O. D. shipments.) Print n«m« mm 4 MldraaaM plmlmty- (No cash of stamps pl«se.) SMCUL LMITEO OfTIIL discount on orders fot is* or more kits. Buy this way for service friends. National Bank references. KIP-HONK CO, P. O. Bon TIT, It ISM. California i r= , ADVERTISERS OFFER CONSUMERS A FREE CHOICE OF A WIDE RANGE OF DEPENDABLE I I
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 4, 1945, edition 1
6
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