Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 27, 1949, edition 1 / Page 14
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THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER HALLOWE'EN GOODIES UBBY'S PEARS 3 -17 oz. cans 57c Large No. 2U Can UBBY'S PEACHES 3 for 79c No. 2 Sliced UBBY'S PINEAPPLE 3 cans 87c IC-Oi. Can rr.-f harvestof mmm 1 1 - LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE 3 cans 77c No. On LIBBY'S PEAS S CARROTS 3 (or 49c ALL LIBBY'S PRODUCTS AY A GREAT t,.' ; rnp a wot h k k wfrtt r .rAGfc MA fecund Setiiou 1'l'iirsJaN V J r OFFKlii i at titt-- -AtK flZ S iTlv -:r ? T". it.f! iT t& f 4,. it gjl,,.!., j Phillips Fjrlv June COCOA I lb. Box 23c i PEAS 3 No. 2 cans 29c SANTO COl l II , Olyuipia Yellow Lb. Pkg. ? - 3 lbs. $1.21 CORN 3 No. 2 cans 29c V in ,inii- SkyUnd Valley Prime PORK 6 BEANS GREEN BEANS Whole Kernel Corn 3-16 oz, cc.ns !V3c 3 -No. 2 cans 33c 3-12 oz. cans 33c Niblrts I Bush's Bis CORN JV "cleans 47c HOMINY 3 -No. 2 cans 25c 1 mdm mff 43?Q c PUMPKIN PARTY Hallowe'en icings for cupcakes. L J- 9' " Fruit INGREDIENTS I). l-Munt,. RAISINS 15-oz. Pkq. 17' ( i 11 R.1K Chocolate Drops Lb. Qfic I'ur "I IJ:.-ar Sll i 2 7 ..mi lb. Box 4S( II riff -fir S1K LOIN T-BONL WESTERN STEAK Lb. 79 39 ROAST lb. 49c Fresh Ground BEEF HAMS I nib Shoulder lb. 4 to 6 lb. lb. Prize Winner Print Bag FLOUR Kansas Maiil FLOUR Ben Gee 25 lb. bag $1.93 25 lb. bag $2.03 CHOW MEIN DINNER 49c Ripe-Pac TOMATOES 2 - No. 2 cans 23c Comet l.on;; Grain RICE 3 lb. box 49c California Heavy Syrup Hunt's Mo. 2''2 Can Peaches 3 for 69c PIE CHERRIES No. 2 Can 27c Nihlets Spears ASPARAGUS 18 oz. Can 41c ORANGE-ADE 46 oz. Can 29c By CECILY BROWNSTONE Avuciatei) Press Food Editor Make a luleli of runrakes for Hallowe'en and let the kids in jour tamily have Hie Inn of decorating them. You'll like the following leeipe bee.uee the condensed tomato -oup in it gives a delicious ilavol' and help., the eakes keep moist. HALLOWE'EN TOMATO SOUP CUPCAKES Ingredients. 2 cups sifted cake flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder, teaspoon baking Loda. t teaspoon cloves, V2 teaspoon mace, teaspoon nutmeg. 1 cup seedless raisins, cup shortening. 1 cup suy.ar, e'gs. l ten-and-one-half-ounce can condensed tomato soup. Method: Mix and sift flour, baking powder, baking soda, cloves, mace, and nutmeg. Wash raisins under hot running water and drain well: choo with a knife. Cream shortening, add sugar gradually and continue to cream thoroughly. If electric mixer is used beat in the eggs well, one at a time; if not beat the eggs well first wiih a rotary beater and then beat in well with mixing spoon. Add the flour mix- tuie in ioui additions, alternately with the soup; begin and end with the flour and mix only until well combined each time. Fold in the laisuis. iuin into tiutea paper baking cups that have been placed in muffin pans of matching size. Bake in a moderate (375 F.) oven for auoui id o) m minutes or until done (depending on size). Remove from pans and place on cake racks to cool thoroughly before fronting HALLOWE'EN FROSTING llKrr,.aint.l... 1 . U.. . lu.wita. 4 tup uuuei 01 margarine, uasn 01 salt, Z cups silted confectioners' sugar, 4 tablespoons labouli cream or milk teaspoon vanilla, orange food coloring, 2 squares (2 ounccsl unsweet ened chocolate 1 melted 1. Method: Cream butter or margarine and salt. Add suar and milk alternately until proper consistency to spread. Add vanilla. Divide irosling in half; add orange food coloring to one part, chocolate the other. EASY HALLOWE'EN CUPCAKE DECORATIONS n 1 . M 10 nuiKe decorations the kids will fove try these: For chocolate pumpkins and witches' cats, form round balls of chocolate frosting, " " 1,1 I'anns 01 nanus, anil shape. For eyes, nose, mouth, and pumpkin stems use hits of jellied candy, cloves, chocolate hits slices ol maraschino che rries, and corn candy. A fence for I he cal nmy he cm irom a long jellied licorice candy. Km :mall pumpkin faces use round flat orange jelly candle in half crosswise to make pumpkin faces a shiny orange. cut .vt',.V-jh'2 Care Needed jWhen Packing Summer Clothes By RUTH CURRENT Stale Home Demonstration Agent Memo for packing away spring and summer clothes: Keep a pad and pencil in your apron pocket when you are packing away' sum mer clothes. Jot down as you work v.hal you put away and where. You will save lime, trouble, and coni'ihiou next spring. Sv : temal ic housekeepers nnst 1 011 attic or eloset doors a list of I articles stored in hags, boxes, or I certain closets. Some also label each trunk, box. and bag with its ; contents. Any device which helps the housekeeper and her family Know where possessions are a,t a moment's notice makes for good home management. . . 7Sie Best Ever! Just imagine the rich, rare flavor of fresh black walnuts . . . blended with the delicate, daily fresh sweet cream flavor of Pet Ice Cream! That's the flavor of the month . . . Pet Black Walnut Ice Cream - the best ever for Autumn! And, delicious, creamy Pet Ice Cream is made only of daily fresh whole milk and daily fresh sweet cream! It's the most refreshing Ice Cream you've ever tasted! Buy some today , . . you'll love it! JZ - ffl&&4 f tout's r A tested recipe for pecan pie: Pecan pie will appear on dinner tables the country over this fall and early winter when pecans will he in good supply on markets, especially in sections of the State where pecans are grown. Here is a tested pecan recipe from food specialists: Ingredients: 1 cup pecan kernels; 3 eggs; Vfc cup melted table fat. To make: Beat the eggs, add sugar and sirup, then salt and vanilla, and last the melted fat. Place the pecans in the bottom of an unbaked pie crust. Add the filling and. bake slowly in a moderate oven (350 F. ) for 50 lo 60 minutes. The nuts will rise to Ihe lop of the pie filling and form a crusted layer. When not being worn, gloves ."loves should not be folded up into a ball and crammed Into a purse or pocket. They should be smoothed out and folded, not in half, but at the base of, the fingers. This will keep the creases away from the body of the glove and help prevent cracking of the leather in the palm or over the back of the hand. Experiments Show Tomatoes Can Grow In Haywood D. E. Ellis, associate plant path ologist for Hie North Carolina Ag ricultural Experiment Station, re ported this week that tests m ihe Mills River Fruit and Vegetable Laboratory near Hendersonville "degaon-itrate conclusively hat , despite severe outbreak.; of late blight, tomatoes can be grown suc cessfully in Western North Caro lina." A severe epidemic of late blight occurred during the past summer, Ellis said, but tomato plots dusted with tri-basic copper were still producing good fruit in mid-October, whereas non-dusted plants were killed by the late blight fung us in early August and produced practically no disease-free fruit during the entire season. Frost, lather than blight fungus, will be responsible for killing the vines on dusted plots, he added. The tests are being conducted by C. E. Lewis, supervisor Of the Mills River Laboratory, in cooperation with Ellis. This year's results, similar to those obtained in 1948. show that tri-tasic copper sulphate dust containing 7 per cent metallic copper is one of the best and least expensive fungicides for con trolling the late blight disease. Two other fungicides, Dithane Z-78 and Parzate, also showed con siderable promise in the 1949 tests, Ellis said. Recommendations for controlling late blight are given in Extension Circular No. 331, copies of which may be obtained from county farm agents or from the Agricultural Editor, State College Station. Raleigh. There is no charge. ODOR LINGERS FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) Po lice couldn't stand the smell of one prisoner, so thev released him from jail upon his promise to appear in court for trial on a peace dis turbance charge. The man had been working for a feather Arm, clean up feathers Inundated in a spring flood. The odor from the feathers lingered on his clothing and smelled up the entire jail. , New Patient: "Shake hands, I'm checkover. Old Patient: "So so. I'm aehlns f,rom lumbago." New Patient: "Shake hands, 'm Middleton from, Humbolt," 83 ' Of Farms In State Electrified RALEIGH Electrification of farms in North Carolina took a substantial upswing in 1948-49, re sulting in this state for the first time topping the national percent age of electrified farms, according 10 data received here from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. North Carolina's percentage of farms with electricity jumped from 68.3 on June 30, 1948, to 83 ft nn .Tuna 10 1CUO Tn ' tire U.S. only 78.2 per cent of the farms are electrified. Nineteen of the states are below the U.S. aver age, and 23 states top North Caro lina's standing. In announcing the USDA SAld! "r.vnorlpnno iiInAH . - -"v.c i ill 11 U ICS that as the electrlfirnt inn f9 iitnl America progresses, the. lob of reaching the remaining unserved farms becomes more difficult." FBlEd DIXIE-H0M SUpER MARKffl T" Al l Wkll. rainy siiunku rum A A A SALMON Tall can 39c frmrT Yellow Cling Halves Hunt's PEACHES . 2 - No. 2i cans 53c Libby Fancy Sliced PINEAPPLE No. 2 can 30c White House APPLE SAUCE, 2-303 cans 27c Barna Pure ' GRAPE JAM TRICK otfi ,!t' i'rrpared For Tl, "ciis 1 Hi. bag Corn Candy Urac ils 1 lb. bag Cream Peam Uracils ('ho(ol;1t,. r nernes I.udens l b I,,, 2 lb. jar 33c hoc,DrPs For Better Baking Rose Royal FLOUR 25 lb. bag 1.65 Fancy Long Grain RICE 3 lb. cello bag 43c Evaporated APPLES 8-oz. cello bag 19c i-ier ran 7' mw i-.. Peanuts Nabisco Butter Cook J Nabisco Old Time Sugar Coolti Hersheys 6 -oz. pks. Silver Bells .. MEDIUM SHARP CHEESE CHEDDAR : . . . Lb. FRESH GROUND BEEF lb. FRESH SMALL SPARE RIBS 49clb- iiiiiiiniiiiiuiiuiiimf i TABLE DDI HENTUJ 5a Southern Gold Colored MARGARINE 1 lb. pkg. 33c I lb. prints, per lb. 35c LIFEBUOY SOAP 3 Reg. Cakes DIAL SOAP Cake c LUX TOILET SOAP Bath Cakes 5WAN SOAP 3 Medium Cakes SILVER DUST Large Pke. 29c LUX TOILET SOAP 3 Keg. Cakes TIDE POWDER Large Pkg. 28c SWAN SOAP 2 Large .Cakes 27c PICTSWEB FROZEN F001 Pirtswfft ll-oz. pkg. Green Peas I'ict.swi'Ct 12-07.. pkg. Strawberries Pirtswret l()-oz. pl.i:. Cauliflower Pirtswri'l 10-oz. ikr.. Cut Green Beans Pil'tsHI'Ct 12 07. i'l Baby Lima Beans VERI-BEST PRO rn nuulili- Ri ll leli ius APPLES-31bs.29c-B Crisp GoWcn Hcurt-ExlM Ie A CELERY ORANGES 5 lbs California Ki'd Kmprrnr GRAPES SEA FOOD Fla. Red 2-4 si7r Snapper H- 1 ,( Fresh ViiK'i"'-' Pan Trout lb. 29f Jumbo Green Shrimp 73c Fillet Of Whilinf,' lb. 2.ic Fillet Of Haddock '3jf 2 lbs. Lit Cannc Veal Loa v lifil I.iinfh T' No. 1 W Tripe Sausage Meal 1 aaS" &,.c.wK'tem I Wax PaPer
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 27, 1949, edition 1
14
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