Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / May 18, 1939, edition 1 / Page 4
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ml Page t THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER THURSDAY, MAT nrrr i n n j 1 asty Disk es SALMI OF DUCK Half of a cold roast duck. 1 tablespoon butter. 2 tablespoons flour. y glass cooking sherry. 1 sprig thyme. 2 shallots. 1 small onion. 1 dozen queen olives. bay leaf. 1 sprig parsley. teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, J cup water or soup stock. Salt and pepper. Melt the butter in a saucepan and add to it chopped shallots and onion As these begin to brown,, add flour mix well and let all brown together, Pour in water ar soup stock, add chopped thyme, parsley, the broken- no bay leaf, Worcestershire ' sauce. sherry, and salt and pepper. Sim mer very gently for fifteen minutes Add to the sauce the pieces of cold roast duck, from which all the stuff ing has been removed, and the pitted olives. Cook five minutes longer. This salmi may be served at table from a chaflin-dish. COTTAGE CHEESE CROQUETTES Two cups cottage cheese, two cups mashed potatoes, two eggs, salt and pepper to taste, one cup dry bread crumbs, one egg well-beaten and fat for frying. Combine cottage cheese, mashed potatoes, eggs and seasoning. Form into carrot-shaped croquettes. Roll in dry bread crumbs. Fry to a gold en brown in deep fat, 375 degrees. Garnish croquettes with parsley tops SOAP SPECIALS and serve with hot tomato puree. When the new crop of Winter spin ach needs something attractive to commend it to appetites of youth or age serve it with cottage cheese dumplings for novelty and added nu tritive elements or combine these two ingredients for a most interesting chaffing-dish. Singer Seeks Child ONION SOUFFLE 6 medium-sized onions. 3 eggs. 1 cup milk. 1 tablespoon flour. 1 tablespoon butter. Salt. Peel and cut the onions in quarters and boil them until very soft, chang ing the water once. Drain well by allowing to stand in a sieve five min utes; chop very fine and drain again. Season with salt and a very little pepper. Cream the butter and flour togeth er. Bring the milk to a boa and pour it on the mixture of butter and flour, gradually, to avoid lumping. Beat the eggs (yolks) to a pale lemon yellow and add them to the cream sauce, then add the onion pulp, and finally fold in the stiffly beaten whites. Pour into a butter baking- dish and bake in a moderate oven 25 to 30 minutes. Serve at once with beefsteak. Palmolive ... ...... (Red Box) Super Suds, small . (Red Box) Super Suds, large . . (Blue Box) Super Suds, small . (Blue Box) Super Suds, large Octagon Soap, giant . ,3 for 20c .3 for 25c . .2 for 33c .3 for 23c .2 for 43c ..6 for 25c Octagon Powder, large 6 for 25c Octagon Toilet . . Octagon Cleanser . . Octagon Chips . . . Octagon Granulated Crystal White Soap .4 for 19c v2 for 9c . 2 for 18c . .2 for 18c .3 for 14c Junaluska Supply Co. Lake Junaluska, N. C. KIDNEY BEANS WITH TOMATOES 1 cup kidney beans. 1 cup peeled chopped tomatoes. green pepper. M pod red pepper. 3 thick slices of bacon. 1 medium-sized onion. Salt. Let the beans soak in cold water overnight. Drain off the water and set to boil in fresh cold water one our. Put the bacon in a saucepan with coarsely chopped onion and een pepper, and fry until the onion begins to Color. Add tomatoes, chopped red popper, and salt, the beans, and a cup of the water in which they have cooked. Simmer very j gently until the beans are tender, add ing more of the beart water as need ed. When done, there should only be enough of the liquid to form a thick tomato sauce. MUSHROOMS ON TOAST 1 pound mushrooms. 2 tablespoons butter. Juice of one-half lemon. 1 teaspoon chopped parsley. Buttered toast. Salt and pepper. Peel and cap the mushroom tops and stems and let stand in cold water ten minutes. Drain thoroughly. Put butter in a frying-pan and when hot add the mushrooms. Cover, and let cook slowly ten minutes, tossing con stantly. Add lemon juice and chopp ed parsley, sajt, and pepper, and place on the pieces of buttered toast, which have been arranged on a hot : 7 (T; 7 - 7 i i m r Alarion Tallcy Marlon Talley, one-time Metro politan opera singer, enters New Youk supreme court where she is contesting with her husband, Adolph Eckstrom, voice teacher, for the custody of their daughter, Betty Ruth-Susan, age four. Eck strom calls the child "Betty Ruth," while the singer insists the tot's name is "Susan." platter. PIE ive ate icJit Beans PINTOS 2 lb. 13c YELLOW EYE . . . .2 lb. 15c MICHIGAN WHITES ....5c BLACK EYED PEAS ....5c MIXED . ....... . 3 lb. 10c CUP AND SALTER NATIONAL OATS 3 lb. 25c Wilherts PASTE WAX, lb 39c HEALTH CLUB BAKING POWDER, 25c size ... .19c F. F. V. SALT SODA CRACKERS 2 lb. 15c 10 lbs. 24 lb. bag SUGAR FLOUR 49c 59c FAT BACK EGGS 2 pou-ds 15c 17c p.. Potatoes 3 iLlOc Beans . . 5 lb. 25c Lettuce 2 for 15c Lemons' doz' 18c SWEET , Cabbage 4 lb. 5c Potatoes 3 lb. 10c Farmer's Exchange WE DELIVER PHONE 130-M A FAVORITE LEMON 1 cup sugar. 1 cup wet light bread. 3 eggs. juice of 1 large lemon. 3 tablespoons sutrar for the mer ingue. Butter the size of an egg. Remove the crust from fresh bread and dip into a bowl of water until it will take up enough to be wet thor oughly. Squeeze out the water and measure in a cup not packing too tight. Put the wet bread, sugar, yolks of eggs, lemon juice and butter into a double boiler and cook until thick enough to stand when cut. Pour into a baked crust. Make mer ingue of the whites and sugar, cover the top and bake in a slow oven for ton minutes or until brown. DRIED LIMA BEANS WITH TOMA TOES 2 cups dried 'linui beans. 1 onion. 2 tablespoons bacon grease. '4 teaspoon sage. 1 cup strained tomato juice. 1 carrot. 4 sprigs parsley. Salt and pepper. Soak the lima beans overnight in cold water. Fry the chopped onion in bacon grease, add tomatoe juice, carrot, parsley, sage, salt, popper, and the drained beans. Cover with water and cook gently until the beans are tender, adding more boiling water when needed, and stirring from time to time from the bottom of the pot Remove the carrot and parsley and serve. Almost all of the liquid should have cooked away. MUSHROOM CHEESE SOUFFLE 3 tablespoons butter. 4 tablespoons flour. 1 Vt cups milk. Vi cup grated cheese. Vi teaspoon salt. teaspoon paprika. V tablespoon celery salt. 1 tablespoon chopped pimentos. cup cooked mushrooms. 3 egg yolks. 3 egg whites beaten. Melt butter and add flour. When mixed, add milk and cook until creamy sauce forms. Stir constantly Add cheese seasonings, mushrooms and yolks. Beat two minutes. Fold in whites and pour into buttered baking dish. Bake in pan of hot water 35 minutes in moderate oven BANANA FRITTERS 1 cup flour. Vi cup milk. 1 tablespoon butter. 1 tablespoon sugar. 2 eggs. 2 teaspoons baking powder. Mix into batter, let stand until ready to use. Add whites beaten stiff, slice bananas in half lengthwise, cut each half in two pieces, dip in batter, fry in deep fat. Serve with sauce made as follows: une-nair cup sugar, one-half cup water, boil together for three min utes. Add half cup tart jelly, flavor with sherry jell Serve over hot fritters. Orange or other fruit may be used. Presidents as Slave-Owners Ten men who have occupied the presidency were owners of slaves. They were Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson, Tyler, Polk, Taylor, Johnson and Grant. The first eight of these were slave owners in the full sense of the term and most of them had slaves while holding the office of President. An drew Johnson bought a few slaves whom he kept as personal servants, but he never sold one of them. Ulysses S. Grant was at one time joint owner of at least one slave and accordingly was technically a slave-owner. After his marriage his father-in-law presented a slave boy to him and his wife. 'Mother Goose' Jingles Old The first collection of the rhymes and jingles of "Mother Goose" was published about the year 1760, but they were found scattered in chap- books and had been current orally for centuries. SOAP SPECIALS 'almolive . .... ... ... .3 for 20c (Red Box) Super Suds, Small . . . .3 for 25c (Red Box) . Super Suds. large ... . .2 for 33c (Blue Box) Super Suds, small .... .3 for 23c (Blue Box) Super Suds, large 2 for 43c Octagon Soap, giant ..6 for 23c Octagon Powder, large 6 for 23c Octagon Toilet ..... .1 for 9c Octagon Cleanser ...... 2 for 9c Octagon Chips . . . . . . .2 for 18c Octagon Granulated . . .2 for 18c Crystal White Soap ... 3 for 14c W. A. BRADLEY Hazehvood, N. C. 4 oz. Jar 10c 8oz. Jar 15c 16 oz. Jar 25c 32 oz. Jar 43c Sauers Vanilla 10c SOAP SPECIALS SUPER SUDS, Klue Box .......... SUPER SUDS, 1 Large-1 Small, Both OCTAGON LAUNDRY SOAP .. ..... OCTAGON WASHING POWDERS OCTAGON CLEANSER . .... . , . . ... SUPER SUDS, Red Box OCTAGON TOILET SOAP ...... . ... OCTAGON CHIPS .... . . . . ... . . . OCTAGON GRANULATED SOAP PALMOLIVE SOAP . . . .......... for .3 for 25c . . .6 for 23c ....6 for 25c ....2 for 9c ..3 for 25c 6 for 25c ...3 for 25c ...3 for 25c .. .3 for 17c Cash Grocery Co. MAIN STREET HAZELWOOD, N. C. Shortening gSS: FLOUR Roll Call 24 lb. bag ...61c Yukons Western 79c tXk is u 45 MIRACLE WHIP Salad Dressing ; SKINNERS . Macaroni or Spaghetti ...2 for Green Gian PEAS 16 Country Kist CORN . . .... .3 fori SODA CRACKERS ..... .2 lb. box 1 SOAP SPECIALS Palmolive 3 fori Small Super Suds (red box) 3 for 21 Large Super Suds (red box) 2 fori Small Super Suds (blue box) 3 for! Large Super Suds (blue box )2 for Octagon Soap, giant 5 for l Octagon Soap, small . .. . .. 10 for 2 Octagon Powder, large . ....5 fori Octagon, Powder, small . . .10 fori Octagon Toilet 6 for 3 Octagon Cleanser . .... .... . 2 for Octagon Chips 27orl Octagon Granulated 2 for j 6 W.iZ:J-$J,m:Ka The Quality Is Excelled SANITATION IS OF THE HIGHEST OW and WE ARE PREPARED TO MEET YOl R "EE ROYAL CHW ' ft i(Jf 'Hi WITH YOUR CROC AM) 3IEAT5 AtC.E.Ray's& The Gold Piittprn with . . You ArcTafflW At The Food of?' Levely.Xew'.Pattera .ny Home ..Mit'ht & Any China Tickets With Every Pur TME FOO03) STOP HI I TI fTH T. lot m Me E!il foil k; JTov at', o a '.o a jC'rei Italic JeSo fling ac ft to ing fny. COIN A. 8th. his er , F.N. ma Phil illips pich fk 2 fstfo refe fders: the F StK ft as 8 the ST2-
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1939, edition 1
4
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