(WNU SERVICEY TRS] ’ wil Pe a { | — - va cant! Jie ei , ars WHAT TAoxers Do To Kee? THE. OTHER TELLAMY : NOBODY CANT IT NOT3ODY WHEN THEY ARE PoP NEX Time He STARTS To Bell Syndicate —~WNU Service SUBMERGE © NO, SIR - ) By J. Millar Watt WNU IT! Bell Syndicate ~WNU Service JUST THE THING - fl Tommy Fish—I'm hungry, Ma! Ma Fish—All right I'll fix you some bread and jelly fish. Fooling Bossy A Nebraska farmer was troubled with his cows crawling through an ordinary barbed wire fence, so he put up a single strand and charged it with electricity. The cows came in Contact with the wire several times, then refused even to go near the fence. “lI turned off the juice, and the cows haven't found it out,” he says. “lI guess it will work until I get another hand.” “What a trifler that musician is!” “Yes, he does nothing but play.” Pu snd = Cookies in the Cupboard | What cookies do folks like best to eat? A cookie that's rich, and spicy and sweet? A soft, thick cookie with fruity fla- yor, Or the thin, crisp wafer the tea drinkers savor? A chocolate cookie that's moist and rich, tasty which May be flavored with honey, mo- lasses or spice? Any kind of a cookie is pretty nice! Or a tidbit with nutmeats, There are as many varieties of servingthem And what satisfy- ing morsels they are for the school lunch box, for afternoon tea, or for a family meal at home. You'll find among the tested cookie recipes below one for any such occasion ranging from dainty tea cookies to thick, soft, mo- lasses cookies for an after-school or bedtime snack. They're all grand recipes for the Girl Scout cookie sale you may be planning, or for the next meeting of the church guild. Soft Molasses Cookies. (Makes about 7 dozen cookies.) 1 cup shortening 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 1 cup New Orleans molasses 2 teaspoons soda 1 cup buttermilk 8 cups flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon ginger Cream shortening, and add sugar gradually. Beat in the eggs and molasses. Dissolve the soda in the buttermilk. der and spices together and add to the first mixture alternately with the buttermilk. Drop from teaspoon onto a greased baking sheet. Dip the bottom of a tumbler in cold wa- ter, and press down gently on each cookie. Sprinkle with sugar. Bake in a hot oven (425 degrees) for about 8 minutes, Even on Sunday evenings hun- gry families demand good food. It's simple enough to provide a meal that is temptingly different with suggestions such as those Eleanor Howe will give you in her column next week. Be sure to look for her article “Sunday Night Suppers’! Butterscotch Brownies. (Makes 2 dozen small cookies.) 4 tablespoons butter 1 cup brown sugar 1 egg (slightly beaten) 3% cup flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 15 teaspoon vanilla 14 cup nut meats (cut fine) Melt the butter in a small sauce- pan. Add sugar slowly, and cook for 2 minutes. Remove from flame, and add remaining ingre- dients, Mix well. Pour into shallow greased pan and bake in a slow about 18 minutes. Cut in squares. | Chocolate Applesauce Cookies, (Makes 3 dozen cookies.) 14 cup shortening 1 cup sugar 2% cups flour 1 teaspoon soda 14 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons cinnamon 14 teaspoon cloves 1% teaspoon ginger 4 teaspoons cocoa 1% cups applesauce (unsweet- ened) Cream shortening, add sugar and beat well. Sift together the flour, . soda, salt, spices, and cocoa and add alternately with the applesauce, | Beat thoroughly. Drop by teaspoon- ly 15 minutes. Orange Ice Box Cookies, (Makes 5 dozen cookies.) 1 cup shortening ¥% cup brown sugar 3% cup white sugar 1 egg 2 tablespoons orange juice 1 tablespoon orange rind (grated) 2% cups general purpose flour 1% teaspoon salt 1% teaspoon soda 12 cup pecan nut meats (broken Cream shortening and add sugars while beating constantly. and orange rind. Mix and sift flour, the broken nut meats. Form in rolls in wax paper and chill over- night in refrigerator. Slice thin, degrees) 12-15 minutes. Grandmother's Sugar Cookies, (Makes 5 dozen cookies.) 1% cup shortening 1 cup sugar 1 egg, and 1 egg yolk 2 cup sour cream 1% teaspoon vanilla extract 1% teaspoon lemon extract 3 cups flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 12 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon nutmeg Cream shortening, and add sugar gradually. Add the egg and beat until flufly. Combine sour cream with flavoring extracts, and add to mixture alternately for about 3% hour. Roll out and cut. Place on greased cookie sheet. Brush tops of cookies with unbeaten egg white and sprinkle generously Bake in a moderately minutes. Pineapple Cream Tarts, PART ]l-—Tart Cases. i cup butter 1% cup granulated sugar 1 egg yolk (beaten) 1 teaspoon lemon extract 13% cups cake flour AROUND y THE HOUSE Icing for Doughnuts, — Frost made doughnuts with » » » After Using Paint Brushes, — turpentine for an Then wipe with a soft - * » | Cleaning Greens—A teaspoon of | salt added to each quart of water | cress and other small-leaved greens will help to draw out small insects which may be in them. » * . Restoring Brass. — Tarnished | brass can be restored to its for- mer brightness by applying a little methylated spirit on a soft cloth. Add a few drops of this spirit to rinsing water for organdie, mus. lin and table linen to obtain the slight s required. * Melon in Refrigerator — For storing melon pieces in the refrig- | erator, wrap them in waxed paper | held in place with rubber bands. | This will keep the flavor from | permeating such mildflavored | foods as milk and butter, [| See ee — (To Check Couipation Get at Its Cause! If constipation has you down so you feel heavy, tired and dopey, it's time you did something about it. And something more than just taking a physic! You should get at the cause of the trouble, If you eat the super-refined food most people eat, the chances are the difficulty is simple-you don't get enough “bulk.” And “bulk” doesn't mean heavy food, It's a kind of food that isn’t con- sumed in the body, but leaves a soft “bulky” mass in the intestines, If this common form of con- stipation is your trouble, eat Kellogg's All-Bran for breakfast every day and drink plenty of water. All-Bran isn't a medicine ~ii's 8 crunchy, toasted, nutri. tious cereal. And it will help you not only to get regular but to keep regular, day after day. Made by Kellogg's in Battle Creck. Sold by every grocer, J Aids to Truth Truth is strengthened by obser- vation and delay, falsehood by haste and uncertainty.—Tacitus. “Every kid's Mom should know about DWIN" the fragrant insect killer — will not stantly. Add the beaten egg yolk \ re J and lemon ex- a, tract. Then add — the flour. Divide ft °F dough into 12 ,< even pieces. Then oA . lay one piece at i i a time in the left muffin tin. Then fit each piece into the muffin tin and prick well with a fork. Bake approximately 20 min- utes in a hot oven. apple Filling. PART Il—Pineapple Cream Fill- ing. 3 tablespoons cornstarch 3 tablespoons sugar 14 teaspoon salt 1 whole egg (well beaten) 1% cups milk (scalded) 1 teaspoon lemon extract 1 No. 2 can shredded pineapple 1 cup whipping cream (whipped) Mix cornstarch, sugar and salt. Add the egg (well beaten) and mix thoroughly. Pour on the milk (scald- ed). Return to a double boiler and cook until thick. Remove from flame, add lemon extract, and al- low to cool. Fill tart shells and just before serving place one spoon- ful of crushed pineapple (drained) on top of the cream filling. Send for Copy of ‘Better Baking.’ Of course you'd like to be able to make a feathery angel food cake, lemon pie that melts in your mouth, and crusty delicious rolls. You can make all these and many more tempting dishes with Eleanor Howe's cookbook, “Better Baking," to guide you. Send 10 cents in co to "Better Baking,” care of Eleanor Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, for your copy of this valuable book. (Released by Western Newspaper Union) Thought a Seed | Thought is the seed of action.— Ralph Waldo Emerson. i ~ FLORIDA © Of Its Fresh Water and Deep Sea Fishing © Of the Bountifulness of Its Game new and delightfully written book “SO THIS IS FLORIDA” By Pronk Parker Stockbridge ond John Holliday Perry Over 300 pages 63 full page illustrations beautifully bound » Send $1.00 to Box 600, Jacksonville, Florida a SR. ©