THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. October 3, 1940 Page Six — Sarah Ann's Cooking Class a w.de ne The. sweet potato offers a variety in the ‘menu, It ean used for breakiast, dinter or p= per. Try sauteed potatoes with your breakfast bacon, A baked po tate is the simplest to serve, a po- tato baked in a slow oven for an hour or longer is much nicer than one baked in a hot oven —— Fried Sweet Potatoes, Select peel and slice in Put in a small amount grease into a fry- ing pan Have medium hot, piace slices in pan and Iry to a medium brown. Keep pan covered to creal steam, Sprinkle with sugar —— large hall<inch of potatoes slices Nut Loaf Ltatoes Sweet Potato 3 cups mashed bealen bread nut SW eel 1 egg cup dry cup chopped % cup butter 1 teaspoon =alt Mash rumb meats eppM hot. Add salt and beaten potatoes Ww hile 2-3 cup of nuts, butter pepper. hall crumbs and egg. Thoroughly grease the mold and sprinkie with crumbs and nut meats mixed, shaking out any thal do not adhere to the mold. Turn in the mixture and pack tight Cover top with remaining crumbs and nuts. Bake 2 hour in oven 35( degrees. Serve with a of auce Sweet Potato Perk Roll 1% cups mashed sweet potal 1 pound ground rork 1 egu, well-beaten 1 teaspoon salle Prepare the mashed tatoes with | iy i FONINR liberal amounts of and pepps ani 1 table:poon Beat thoroughly and seen too dry form a milk. Form a roll of swe with rounded ends. Let the refrigerator until firm Mix the eggs and seasonings with the pork and flatten mixture out on a plece of heavy waxed paper The meat is easier to handle cool. Put the po’‘ato roll in the center of the meat mixture and bring meat up around the rol ing the paper off the edge lapping the mea then down smooth, Using paper under il whi¢ h may serving. Bake grees for 20 minut with eXtra needed at the This Mil is dav ahead then sliced cold ly butter desired, double buiter otatoe add a lf potat to the be 0 the prepare 4 relrigeraton hot in Sweet Potato and Pineapple le weet slices of pineay medium sized teaspoon salt tablespoons sugai cup melted butter blanched almomnis A esserole Pare VASO sweet potas top of pineapple, add alt ugar and butter. Over this. pour the juice from a quart can of pineapple. Sprinkle the al+ monds over the mixture in the cas- serole. Cover and bake one hour in an oven 375 degrees Sweet Potato Pie 1 mashed sweet potatoe beaten sugar 1% cups 3 eggs cup of brown slightly well pack- ed 15 teaspoon salt teaspoon cinnamon teaspoon ginger teaspoon alispice : cup milk tablespoons <herry tablespoons melted butter tablespoons raisins Mix all the ingredient hued pie plate and bake in an oven 450 degrees heat to 3°0 degrees ar bake 26 to 30 minttes, Fill 19 minutes the then reduce for Sweet Potato Pone Crate enough sweet make 3 ecupful Acid of melted buter, 1 cup of brown sugat and 2 well beaten eggs. Pour in 1 eup of milk and flavor with 4 teas spoon nutmeg, also a few broken pleces of orange peel Mix thoroughly and bake in a buttered pan 45 minu'es in an oven 325 de- grees, Stir while cooking, tatoe clip In the South rice is served ofien few foods have as dainty a flavor Another thing in its favor is that it is inexpensive, wholesome H. L. HARPSTER AUCTIONEER Prompt attention given all sales Phone 3579 PINE GROVE MILLS, PA. | food that offers many possibilities {In the planning of well-balanced meals a —.—y Shrimp Cwmry 3 cups of shrimp J tablespoons butber Salt and pepper tablespoons walter cups of thin cream sauce tablespoon of curry powder egy yolk 2 tablespoons of cream Plenty of well cooked rice Clean the shrimp. Melt 2 table- sroons of bu.ter, when hot, add the shromp and cook 2 minutes, Sea n with salt and pepper. Then add the cream sauce and the curry powder which has been mixed to a pasie with the water. Simmer | minutes jen, the egg yolks slight. lv, mix with (he cream and add some hot sauce to it, blend ing well. Stir this into the shrimp mixiure Cook until thickened stirring cons.antly. Remove from heat and Just before serving add the rest of the butter. Serve with the rice fb Of Lhe hot QALITY MILK NEEDS CARE IN PRODUCTION Produ ity demand principles a requirements I'he ton of milk of high qual- observance of certain i definite essentials in producing high quality milk attendants, cow surreundings, milking equipment milking methods straining and cooling, County Agent R. C Blaney Attendant are SAYS who milk cows handle milk must be clean and healthy, and the same thing is true of the cows which produce the milk Proper housing is another impor- tant requirement. Barng which are id well-ventil will with com- animals out of and clean. dry, a: ted herd All other hould ide the healthy quarter oexXcent « Ws the w barn Prov fortable be kept Feeds often cause flavors in milk » of the most frequent causes of milk feeding After milking is omm 1 time OLhey normait.e m ventilation Or oft milking flavored bef are caused by poor barn in winter A cow properly fed and cared for will not produce off-flavored milk One of dairyman’s chief jobs ation of bacteria fro in handling rinsing, wash. be of the the ; acl ie the equipment milk. This ing, and sterilizing Sanitary pract necs Ar Use used neindes ire of hether determine % or tiddes y remove followed medina with med 6% 131 ium i -_ —— STRIP FARMING SAVES SOIL LOSS BY EROSION Ma eroding good and whi farm field [HOOT ton } topao | il ing wa annually. Ti hed away is largely caused hig gradusn in mudd forming mt R. C. Blaney amental importance of I use and good agronomic control of erosion and more erosive kept in protected improved practice in Bteeper should be tree areas long-lasting hay iitivated fields, erosion should through the use of to obtain good mn of high fertility following of good crop rota- liberal and intelligent cover crops, and sod be reduced first lime sods levels legumes tenance and a fy tions i the ise of manure waterways Most farms, however will need ome attention to the above farm- ing system to protect the land from the ravages of sheet erosion Pennsylvania farmers were the first to recognize the soundness and practicability of strip farming to atl water josses ion. In some farmers have generally practicing for many years 212, telling “How to Re- Erosion Losses by Strip Farming is available at the ural Extension Office in fonte among recluce soil oroey wollon heen strip caused by these betler farming Circular dnuee Soll ries Belle- EVANGELISTIC MEETINGS AT PLEASANT VIEW An Evangelistic campaign will open at the Pleasant View Union Chapel, one mile north of Belle- fonte, on Sunday evening, October 113, and will continue for two weeks, The meeting will be in charge of Rev. and Mrs Robert DeBoer, of Monument, who have had great success wherever they go. Groups from different churches will have charge of the devotions which be. gin every night at 7:30 Everybody is invited to come and have a part in the service —— ————— The French, unwilling to resist German aggression, seem to be hunting excuses to fight the Brit- ish Mr. HUNTER : WINCHESTER 12 & 16 Gauge Shotguns . . . $22.50 WINCHESTER 30 30 Carbine Rifles . . . . . $30.00 i DOWN Delivers any Gun or Hunting Outfit $ DOWN Use our New Budget Plan BELLEFONTE HARDWARE CO. Phone 205 = ~ MW. WILLIAMS, Owner BELLEFONTE, PA, Expert Advises Women To Budget Their Time Most health authorities tell us to figure out how much sleep we need per night, then to bend every effort to get that amount But here's an expert who says that the important thing is to figure out how many hours of activity-—mental and physical-you can stand per day. then to organize your resting and sleeping hours accordingly She is Jorephie L. Rathbone, Ph D., assistant professor of health and physical education at Teachers’ col. lege, Columbia university business to find out you oan attrac. until “Make It your much stimulation stand.’ says the dark-haired, Miss Study ow definitely It's a drive how tive Rathbone you kr take to continue When you have body will do will ingly, stop going at top speed and great 1m to yourself done all that your obvi s Rathbone poise says that the Among so it of trying them ous lack of many emen today 1s the hey for 4 | who ed and a morning of getting chool and putting n order ought not to force bridge that after. not bridge-—that res to do too much leave ves no time st all relaxation finds her. extremely { Vo hersel! to play It's a nap he needs Miss Rathbone is even firmer convictions about what the and should noon in Ca an should not burt the wacher, work plus a speaking dinner d an eve. for the article for a h for the aver. K never any- On says practical But a day's engagement at luncheon, a discuss business at a paper or an Unmatched Eye Images Often Cause Headaches As some persons have ohe foot larger than the other, there are pers Just 1s who have one eye that sees a larger image than does the other v#&, reports the Better Vision In This condition is known as 1a." Recent studies hed visual uncommon indi. ile that caser of unmat ire not freauently 7 ihe may result in ng. headache irain or sea.-gick intere fe Oo ting mages reported in i= visual Sent He was found t« in each lege st Bern sith ieet in al vision eve, bu headaches blurred sion after extensive use of his eves He had months orthoptic eye exercises with. out Investigation showed that of the image in the right 3 per cent smaller than the image in his left eve. Spec. rrect the aniseikonia provided His headaches immediately, ut fatigue irred, double vision in reading taken for six relief the size eye was tacles th were he can atl were reduced read longer with and the same time bi inated More Toys Toy orders placed thus far t year are about 15 per cent ahead of 1929 figures, H. BE of the Toy Manu facturers of the U. §. A. Inc., an. recently Mr. Lubrs slso ie American toy indus- sally independent of for. eign sources of supply and regard: less of war conditions this country’s normal quota of $230,000,000 worth of toys would be available. H buyers will protect themselves by placing orders early enough to permit the manufacture of the mer- chandise, American toy makers are certain that they can All all require ments as usual, no matter what hap- pens abroad,” he said The intérest in national defense, he added, has been reflected in in creaded production of toy airplanes, toy soldiers and sailors in Ameri can uniforms, miniature sub. marines, destroyers, coast gun de- fenses, air rifles, marksmanship ranged and games based on battle siratagy fin comparative Luhrs, president nounced hn 3 stated that t try was virt ET Tw Plaster Cracks Unaveldable There's nothing quite so disheart- ening to a homemaker as a freshly decorated room that has suddenly developed ugly plaster cracks, Tragic though it may be, it's un- derstandable, Plastering brings into the house between 200 and 300 gallons of water that must be evap- orated. In the evaporation process the lumber framing of the house is subject to warping and twisting. The natural result is broken plaster. A new and successful solution to this problem is the use of insulation | board lath as a plaster base. The lath forms a moisturé-resistant bar. | rier between the plaster and fram. ing which will not buckle as the | plaster dries out, The insulating lath is obtainable | { in thicknesses of onehall inch, | three-quarter inch and one inch and ! firnishes valuable insulation protee. tion stronger plaster base, No Els | It was six years before anyone in | Popular Bluffs, Mo, named a baby Eli, sithough Eli ' Eli Campball end Eli Osborn of fered $1 each to ine child whose par. | ents took that nase for their child, | | Mr. and Mrs. Clatence Macom now | i demand that the Elis hand over $4. Wynn Fredericks Appointed. J Wynn | ven, well known throughout Centre | County, has been appointed chief of | | health and physics! education ir the Department »f Public Tnstrue- | tion, ueceeding PF. P. Maguire, re- f signed, in addition to providing a | liget, Eli Martin, | ks, of Lock Ha. | Bathers Ride the Waves On New Bags of Wind Almost every year something new in the way of gadgets to bathing more enjoyable pops up at the beaches that skirt the of Californin. The visitor to these sun. ny watering places will and ride on, bags of wind that probably were inspired by the familiar ter wings." make coast Ree, “wa The light-weight sacks are of material which is practically wa ter-light when it is wet, and are big enough to support a husky 200-pound swimmer. They can be filled with a pump, or by just blowing wind into them made Some of the users of the traption to add to the fun of play in the surf the worked out a trick which makes a UNNeCessary which little lung work They wouth of the bag. hold it shoulder-high and r with it. The fills device new con ng and sunshine pump for only a open the n and calls un all ile balloon-lik« Ugh! w cere the i n nits a snappy about like a In thing of a pace cork stopper race, lively water it trick to these overgrown pillows stay The bags are popular with vaca tionist wi are not cr like spend a lot water Vith of the sausage-like play- it is possible to float com. around for hours, h ' aCK wWirn- mers but who of time in 10 the the co- operation basking of the sleek surfd sometimes ride the new gadgets ff LL | Devotees for the fun but they prefer that this adopted from Hawaijl, A cr of the surf-Doard can slide along at 30 miles an hour when the surf is right and, of course, no such speed is possible on a blimp-like contrap tion fash the country ack rider wooden slivers med of cloth Rare ‘Streamlined’ Fish Caught Near California The Ameri History has acquired a rare strean lined fish, Acrotus Will byl, wh neither scal ventral believed 1 champion, of fish th of its kind kr caught, Yecny of Salinas, terey, Calif The fish iz of great science, Dr. Nichols said known near relatives, but the ghape of sUgge fo the mackerel! can Museum of Natural called ug has ba lane ch nor curator the fish was interest 1 It has r relat It was pur is tail is a nahi hased of fish be placed scale uti -~ on exh specimen measures and weigh of n length lack ventral 6 name Acrotu n the Greek ant The mes which i means part Charles A. agent who 887 or name © Willoughby, caught the firs the Pacific coa in in Aids Lumbering Development of dry automatic control of temperature, bumidity and air circulation has radically changed lumber seasoning practices, according fo products laboratories of the depart ment of mines and resources, tawa Certain species of wood can no be dried in kilns and pul to exacting uses a few days aller being sawed, while other gpecies, more difficult to dry, may be made ready for fab rication in 8 matter of weeks. For. merly timbér was piled in a yard for several months and sometimes for years. I it wag required for exacting uses such as for furniture it was held in a building for a fur. ther long period before being final. ly used, with kilns the forest Ut. The use of these highly efMcient | dry kilns also eliminates to a large extent losses through checking, cup- ping. staining and other seasoning defects which formerly were some times responsible for reducing the value of wood by as much as 25 per cent. Diet Hinders Conservation Netherlands authorities in Java, trying to carry out an admirably planned conservation program, have their troubles because of many na- tive beliefs and habits, The Malays believe that children | can acquire the characteristics of birds by eating them. So they feed | kingerows and shrikes to infants, to make them lively and communica. | tive. Dull, lazy children are com. | pelied to eat fantailed Aycatchers, | which are very active, birds. | A great deal | bird lite ix wrought through the Ma. | lay fondness for pets. Children are | given young storks, bulbuls, pigeons industrious | of destruction of | and starlings to play with—natural. | ly, with ultimately fatal results to | the birds, Some birds are not given even | i nominal protection simply bécaure | | efforcement of regulations would be | Fish owls, which real) | lvable birds, are killed for | impossible ¢ Vi food even by native policemen. Coal Prices Up Minium prices adding an aver. ‘age of 11 cents a ton to the na- tion's soft coal bills went into ef- feet. Tuesday. Officials said the new ‘schedules were iNtended to raise the jbl » of soft coal to approxi- mately the cost of production, i Penn State May Putman Employees Aid In Defense (Continued from poge one) Employes of Putman Inc. contractors hullding fonte section of the College road, were given Bualurday sonic Camp at wis In honor of the 200h anniversary of Mr. and Putman, of North Allegheny Bellefonte, Mr. Putman Is vie ident of the company anc nnd hue whether it | Lo instruction in mstruction | position area where give such in a Hn hosts at a needed night at the It will be able to particlpmte eith- Wingate The er in campus training or through extension courses Special gram will training under the pro- be glven In aeronautical, chemical, electrical, Industrial, me- chanical and marine engineering Emphasis will be placed on design and inspection, production supervi- sion, and production engineering for alrerafy and shipbuilding industries county Nearly 60 employes pany from all parts of Pennsyly and from Ohlo attended the Mr. and Mrs. Pu were china tea set by Harry Collin h Of Lhe Courses to be offered will be di- oh rected toward pre-employment and training. In all probabll- for the Mr ollin trained for pre-employ- alse in the a1 work will be taken from those the already had three engineering work wilich was pres in-service ity student ment who hi COMpany charge of affalr chicken prepared by company’s served, Dan ler and hi burg Richard ve years ol According to testimony offered be- fore the House appropriations com- mittee between 3.000 and 3.500 snecially trained men are needed in the aircraft Industry, 5000 specially balned men required makers and have need for followed the Dolmetsch are charge of t} by ship- want 30. - indicated 80,000 by the ad B. Putman ident of Putman Both men B. Putman Guests pany, incl Bwanson al N pres B builder and tool 000 immediately will be a of 1940 Members of the advisory com- mittee which will assist in deter- mining whether Penn State is elig- ible for ald under the program in- clude Audrey A. Potter Dean of Engineering Purdue University chairman; R. E. Doherty, President Carnegie Tech, Gibb Gilchrist, Dean of Engineering, Texas A. & M.: H P. Hammond, Dean of Engineering Penn State: W. OO. Hotchkiss Pres- ident, Rensselaer Polytechnic: R 8 McBride, Washington consuiting en- gineer; Thorndyke Saville, Dean of Engineering, New York University. C. C William: Lehigh B M Woo chairman Department of Garden Mechanical Engineering, University x hown of California; and Allen W. Horton Office of Education ———— ders n B a ’ Club Speaker woods and por (Continued from there the end not employe ded Mr of { the Bager TAaphs « William Public Sales BATURDAY. OCTOBER Cinre Ex« ried Sale a : FE M Smit} SATURDAY, OCT tick will all on farm den Hee ft " page one) nt ook » Bale at 107 kK nove dvancine ir AGVADULE he] iMprose tov. and SATURDAY oy Guests at Dinner (ireen Belle Bellefonte. State Ma aflal wedding Mi ¥ sLreet : pre in charge fairy of the construction work in Centre | Bale om nun parts given a ented wired and aL for revalr electricity and in 71 ! ! airs ’ is meets the milk mre barn Oe) ‘ ment i eur neyer fa nditior Iade Kno HiuWmler, suct x4] XIORM i £ aris phe fore ’ et pli in wo] of sale. EK ¥ ATUIDAY Mave A B oct the E Mey WTURDAY yb ihe ma at h mile ernst Howard enidence ement and aM 1 9p m Bm} auct OCT, 28--Bchmick ¢ Highway east offer at public 4} u and hows i i | iammehire fled chick mn \ Bmiu : 1 FA ; I MPLEMENT URDAY re "eS P p ( ) BATURLDY rd, w Wyre hus Meccan Whi rangement the Saturday, October 12 CHARLES BR, McCUCLOSKEY } re of Romo Saturday, October 12 DALE MeceCLINTH ~ : 1 ery uy ” &k H FRIDAY or hier Ta VMARCH * offs IMPLEMENT WaROT Wit Wed r 3 Saturday, October 5 vic wr SN, CLAUDE HERR Charge Batteries the Easy Way ... In the Car No More Fussing, or Delay. NO 24-HOUR WAIT NO RENTAL CHARGE Drive your car to this garage, leave it here for one-half hour, and then drive away with a full charge in the battery. Battery doesn't have to be removed from car you have your car washed, greased, or minor oP adjustments made. Ro = a, ’ rf 8 El aad > The UNITRON x. current is controlled by delicate throughout the charge to prevent damage to the - battery. Something New! CPE GD EGP TP GP i A aed - Spring St. (Phone 674) Xe rh ae Sook 2a BX A Fal 2S aR SR EA Se Es a It can be charged while The ALLEN HALF-HOUR UNITRON is the remarkable new machine that makes this service possible. This instrument locates defective cells immediately and prevents the waste of time and money in an effort to charge a battery that is worn out or damaged is fully automatic and the instruments Something Different! WE WILL BE GLAD TO SHOW YOU! Decker Motor Co. BELLEFONTE, PA. FP EGP EGP GP GH 2 ®
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers