COOKING SUCCESS DEPENDS ON OVEN Good Stove Is Investment That Pays Interest. By EDITH M. BARBER Several letters have come to the edi tor of this column recently asking for more information about the use of the oven in baking. I am answering a number of these together today by an article devoted to the whole question, First of all, the first aid to the cook is a good stove, which is an invest. ment that brings interest in the form of success, If this good stove has an oven regulator it will make the bak ing question much easier, as all stand. ard recipes now have baking tempera: tures attached. If your stove has no regulator, an oven thermometer is the next best bet. In fact, it Is a good piece of household equipment to have on hand in any case, as it enables you to check your oven regulator which may be jarred out of accuracy some- times, If you do not have either of these household aids you may estimate your temperature successfully with experience, A slow oven according to my esti mate is from 175 to 350 degrees F, A moderate oven Is from 3750 to 400 degrees PF, A hot oven is from 400 degrees F, up. For starting the cooking of meats, for starting the baking of potatoes, for fish, biscuits, for and for pastry a hot oven is in order. For baking butter ate oven, 370 degrees FP. is for angel and sponge cake, oven, 325 degrees F.. which is a hotter oven than was formerly for these cakes. Experiment that 320 degrees ig the best cholee, For rec indicated with the exception of ms roons, kisses or meringues which peed a very slow oven, 250 to 275 degrees F popovers moder. chosen ; cakes, a a slow little used i ’ SIiows sonsled cookies, depending upon the pe, 370 to 425 degrees I. is ust For meats and potatoes the temper ature i3 lowered after fifteen minutes to a moderate a0 to 375 de grees F. For fruit and custard pie. it is niso lowered after fifteen Almost everything else demands a moderate oven, baked in pans of take =n temperature of Most scalloped dishes made of cooked fond and covered with erumbs take a mod erate oven to heat the food thorough ly and to brown the crumhs, There are so many dishes which ean be cooked satisfactorily temperature that if meal It oven, minutes Custards and souffles hot water gn iad decrees F with the same oven ate your you plan an is possible to regul temperature to suit them all. A few typical menus of this sort which have been worked out by Miss Dorothy Shank, the expert on temperature follow It is interesting to may the length prefer for cooking by regulating the temperature. This makes it possible to start a meal and leave it, If yon like, while you go out afternoon, Cottage Ham. Temperature, 450 degrees for brown cookery, note that of time you choose yon for an then tempers time 3 time, JU ing: yer minutes; ture 270 degrees baking, for hours; or temperature 250 degrees baking, time 4 or 5 hours, ' 315-4 pounds coitage ham for 14 cup hrown sugar 10 whole boiling wi cloves ter tage ham with brown 14 cup Rub ar and insert the the co cloves in the ham, them equally over he Fibuting ut the meat on a 1 roasting pa find piace in (he oven rack in a ment for 20 minutes with the reg ilator sof WY degrees fhen hot hake 3 hour at 295 de to brown add one-half cover the antl or 4 or 5 hours roaster CTOs, wd) degrees, Baked Potatoes en Casserole Temperature, 270 degrees; hours: or 5 temperature 250 degrees; time, 4 or 5 hours, well as many potat AMERICAN ® r. F ANIMALS This fat old ram is big and burly, His heavy horns are long and curly; In mountains high he likes to be— Ten thousand feet the sea! above But he must watch where- ‘er he goes, Because his kind has many foes. For pumas catch the ewes and rams, And eagles steal the baby lambs. And hunters seek him in the Fall To hang his head upon the wall; But he is smart and hard to stalk And runs with ease where men can't walk. desired for the meal, Place in a bak ing dish and cover. Let bake for 3 hours with the regulator set at 273 degrees, or 4 or 5 hours with the reg ulator set at 250 degrees, Potatoes prepared in this way can then have the skins removed and be treated as a baked potato or can be served with a parsley and butter sauce, such as wight be used for boiled They will be very mealy and tender and will have a fine flavor, potatoes, Apricot and Rice Pudding. Temperature, 275 degrees: time, 3 temperature, 200 degrees: hours or to 5 hours, time, 4 1 cup i pound rice dried apri 15 cup sugar 2 tablespoons butter 4 cups cold water Wash role. Then cut rice well and } an the &j been other Ing fer and add them they have and the Cover and place in the regulator set at 2 for 3 hours or 250 degrees for with heavy crean the oven with degrees for 5 ho or with an apricot Quick Meal. VEr % Rerve BOUOe, French Dressin «] Pineapple Colleen, 8 qui kiy pre ’ upon short Never cook the fact it depends cookin for its tenderness liver and ready will not bear star While it until! every one is hot ae almost f the are bal ive time to shred the pineapple. potatoes 13 fell Syndicate —-WND My Neighbor Says _ ss) Youd cake crumbs for boiled dessert Kervice dite of » or angle food cake can be i hich boiled this nice Ane seed oll, For clouded glass ose a solution of rock lime, part lime, two water, Allow {it one parts to dry an lime with denatured two off cloth and polish with wash off Afler with soft clean soft cloth * d - hour, minutes wipe To wash a jersey dress successfully have warm ton any good soap flakes and let sonk in this for a while but not until water Is Then squeeze it out. If dress is badly this two or lukewarm water nearly dry. good suds, ¢ irom dress plenty of hot, not made cold, three times, and hang Press on solled, do Rinse in out until wrong side, (DD by the Associated Newspapers) WN Service vory By WALTER TRUMBULL Lights of NEW YORK Society Is returning to Central park in increasing The returning on roller Nowadays observers may bers of the Junior league gliding the long hal on roller from the the Social Reg numbers, sOC] elect are skates mem aver Celebrities of the in the park In the afternoon. clally elect traveled the winding drive- ways at a slow pace in their carriages and other smart equipages, with sedate conchmen and frozen-faced footmen as attendants, When the automobile first that cars were barred from the park. with only occasionally a carriage, the occupant of which Is usually haughty dowager of another day. » . A Manhattan tions : ramblings and rumina. Raises his hat and a coin drops into his cup, . . . never misses a note, |, , | ut street and Fifth avenue, , | . to grow more dingy Claimants for the vast fortune fighting In Surrogate's court, . . . A pallid Broadway columnist breakfast in Sardi's at fourp. m. . , . Probably up early at that, , . Lay offs in front of the P: ona another how good they Vaudeville folks the timists in the world, . Actors are a close second, | . Constance Collier on her way to the Actors club Sign In 8 candy, camera, filled drug store window : so fill prescriptions.” ce telling are, . . greatest are op- alarm clock “We nl # * * teh A Park ocle avenue with a mon- Haven't seen any of them in rid- ing breeches though. Accidents not infrequent on Central park paths , The daughter of a in trousers as yet, . . . Plenty are prominen nily Is wearing a plast ii r cast as the res fone a year & question able to walk Whenever | when ing up and £2 I i But I see IMPROVEMENT? 1 Lie » Mich, who are almost all Dutch by annual festival centers, OW IT STARTE By JEAN NEWTON ‘Familiarity Breeds Contempt’ 6 [CAMILIARITY breeds contempt.” says the old saying. In other words the best way to retain the re- spect of people is to keep them at a safe distance, Carried to its logical #onclusion this would be a hard philosophy. For it would open to us the alternatives only of being respected but absolutely alone ~-0f enjoying compsaionship without respect Naturally we all hope for the possi. bility of so conducting ourselves as to be able to enjoy intimacy and yet retain the respect of our friends! The saying, so frequently used In current speech, that “familiarity breeds contempt,” we owe to the Spanish au- thor, Cervantes, In whose world fa mous “Don Quixote” we find, In the sixth chapter of the third book of part one, “I find my familiarity with thee has bred contempt.” ©. Bell Syndicate. «WNU Servion a Knitted Things Demand Extra Care in Washing Have you succumbed to the knit ting or crocheting fever? Whether or not, you certainly have sweaters, knitted suits, ete, for who can be without them #80 nitractive, these days? They're and indispens able for sport and everyday wear, and if washable, as many of them are, it's so easy to keep them clean. lefore washing an new test it to be sure the colors are fast, by squeezing an tion in lukewarm water five minutes or so Knitted things shape when ing them to the correct proportions almost Hw enter, inconspicuous por for cleur, often get out of wel, 80 to insure restor Just draw an outline on clean ping paper dentally, the outline is when before w etting, ideal time to the swegte before have you ete, streiched bows, Then be used this outli each time you wenter, Remove unwashable les, ete, and turn wrong-side out. M: mild, neutra have the sud warm or and by through and i Never rub wash soak colored Thor No squeaky springs in the big new Dodge Six.. Special new Oilite Springs cant need oiling @® Just one of the many features that will make your Big New Dodge “Six” stay new—and give you new car service for years to come , . . Come today and take a demonstration ride in the car that is thrilling America You'll ind it down among the low-priced cars in cost and up- keep-~but among the costly cars in performance and style. NEW ‘“SHOW-DOWN"’ PLAN SWEEPS NATION Imagine a car that sells itself ~and doubles its sales simost overnight in city after city. That's what the new Dodge fs doing . . . laying its cards on the table . . . then asking any other car near its price to match it on the open road, in traffic and up hills. Go to your near- est Dodge dealer today and ask for the sensational “Show-Down” score card. Then make your own “Show-Down” test against any other car, DODGE “6” with Floating Power engine mountings $595 Dodge Eight $1115 to $1395. All prices , 0. b. factory, Detroit. Rebtand's Sulphur Sap A