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Harrisburg Telegraph from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 6

Location:
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 ACROSS Serpent 4. Lines of Join ice ft. Conjunction 12. African worm 13. Small dnclnc bird It.

River: Spanish lk. Entire amount IS. Betel palm 17. Part of a play is. Double tooth Meta Given flour, JJ.

Persia ti. African Hottentot 51 Restore IS. lioroccaa ailTcr coin 49. Identical 4L English letter 42. Bar of contra tine color 44.

Weapon! 44. Direction 47. Egyptian tint ing gin 20. One of a dwarf 4JL Consequently Philippine race 22. Blue Grass state: abbr.

23. About 24. Measure of capacity IS. Heated compartment 21 Dry ii. Scene of action JL Age SO.

Correlative of either 5L Medicated pellet S3. Lazy person 55. Remunerate 67. Kind of goose 69. 60.

Devoured CL Fraerance 62. Literary (raf ments ii. Chop or isp. cereal beverase Milk (for children) 2 cups milk Luncheon Luncheon eggs (see recipe a oove) Lettuce salad head lettuce, cut into wedges, 1 3 cup mayonnaise, 2 tbsp. pickle relish 1 bunch radishes, diced fine and added to the dressing Bread and butter 8 slices en richod bread, butter or forti fied margarine Raspberry gelatine 1 pkg, rasp Derry iiavorcd gelatine Doughnuts 4 bought doughnuts Honey milk for all 14 c.

evao milk, 2 c. ice water, 1 3 c. honey, aasn 01 salt, berve chilled. Dinner Meat croquettes 3 tbsp. fat, l2 c.

evap. milk, 1'2 water, 2 cups diced left over meat, from Sunday's roast, li tsp. salt, Vi tsp. celerv calt. tsp.

grated onion, 1 egg, 2 tbsp. iiuiK, smea anp Dread crombs American fried, 1 Vi lb. potatoes, Vi cup fat, salt and pepper Broccoli with lemon sauce 1 v. HIS SISTER'S AGE Johnny says today is his sister's birthday. He is going to write her age on the board.

If you would like to know his sis ter's age, join all the numbered dots together, starting with dot number one and ending with dot number ten. Color this picture with y.our crayons. SATURDAY EVENING HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SPARriEpl ITrjOlLlEj cafe pate xi oral eta war e.game.rum AGE AMPjT ari SI HQ 2 IZ2 ROUS 3i WPS; ASMDULLSTifJ 15 I JL A RNj BUM A LjEIDi Sp I I A 1.51 1L A AN AY NONE; FjF JlensLt1re1y; Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzlt 44. Post of a stair case (S. Temporary style DOWN Mission Texas i I3 WC a 111 1I11 WLJLJt 1 i rlllIl 34.

7 38 IIIIlIIIII" 37 ii I iilll 1 5LJLiL 1 1 I 1 I 1 1 I 2. Legislator X. Grow unin terestinr 4. Cut of meat a. Goddess of healing Vertical: nautical T.

Rodents 1 Stationary mechanical part I. Southern constellation 10. Familiar appellations 1L Discolored by decay 1J. Copy JL Genus of the oat 25. Cherry color Those related through the mother IS.

Great desert 29. Beast 30. Impertinence: dialectlo 31. Blunders 32. Repeat agala 34.

Wing 37. Lisping 38. End 43. Farinaceous drink 45. Angrr 47.

Permit 48. Medicinal herb 49. Mountain nymph 50. Marine fish 52. Learning 54.

Molded mass 56. Tree 61 Form for shaping hollow metal objects: Modest Budget Menu First cousin, to that long time American favorite, the Denver sandwich, is this luncheon egg dish. It also belongs to the omelet family to the French or non puffy branch. People who prefer it insist that this type is the only real omelet. It has the advai tage of making a very good sandwich filling, good hot or cold, but it can be eaten separately from the bread as a real egg dish.

Notice that this is a very specially nutritious dish, with all the food value of the eggs themselves plus the high Vitamin A content of the green pepper, which is one of the very top sources of this valuable vitamin. Luncheon Eggs 4 strips bacon (3 oz.) 1 3 cup chopped green pepper 1 3 cup chopped green onion 1 3 cup chopped celery teaspoon salt Dash paprika 4 eggs, slightly beaten Cut bacon into small pieces and put into a small skillet. Add vegetables and simmer for 7 to 8 minutes. Add the salt and paprika to the slightly beaten eggs and pour over the vegetables in the skillet. Cook over low heat, with out stirring, until egg is firm, about 5' minutes.

This may be used as a luncheon dish or as a sandwich filling. 4 servings. MENUS FOR MONDAY Breakfast Tomatot juice Remainder of can left from Sunday Prepared cereal 2 cups prepared cereal, top milk, sugar Toast and butter 8 slices enriched bread, butter or fortified margarine Honey 1 3 c. honey Coffee (for adults) 3 tbsp. coffee, small head broccoli, butter, salt and lemon juice Creamed turnips 2 lbs.

turnips, 1 cup medium white sauce Rhubarb short cake 1 lb. rhu barb, c. sug. 2 tbsp. water, 1 c.

all purpose flour, 2 tsp. b. p. tsp. salt, 2 tbsp.

sugar, 3 tbsp shortening, 1 3 c. milk; serve with top milk if desired. Milk (for children) 2 cups Tea (for adults) 2 tsp. tea Cost for day: about S2.30 Points for day: 0 blue; 0 red for meat and cheese 23 red for fats Dine Well By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE NEW SANDWICH TIP (Point Rationed Foods Are Starred) Hot Sandwiches For Four Barbecued Steak Sandwiches Sauce Buttered Cauliflower Grapefruit Salad Chocolate Meringue Topped Pudding Tea Barbecued Steak Sandwiches (Open sandwiches with chopped meat toppers) 2 pound pepper chopped beef i teaspoon 1 tablespoon celery salt minced 1 teaspoon onions chopped 3 tablespoSns parsley catsup 2 tablespoons Y2 cup dried margarine or bread bacon fat, crumbs melted Yt teaspoon 4 slices toast Mix together beef, onions, catsup, crumbs and seasonings Shape into 4 cakes.

Brush with melted fat and broil 5 minutes. Turn and brush the other sides with fat and broil until well browned. Arrange on toast, serve with Barbecue Sauce. Barbecue Sauce 3 tablespoons teaspoon catsup salt 2 tablespoons Speck paprika vinegar 1 teaspoon 3 tablespoons Worcester boiling water shire sauce Simmer blended ingredients in covered pan for 3 minutes. Chocolate Meringue Topped Pudding Vz cup sugar 2 egg yolks Vi cup cocoa 2V2 cups milk 1 3 cup flour ii teaspoon Vs teaspoon salt vanilla Thoroughly blend sugar, cocoa.

flour and salt. Add yolks and milk. Cook slowly, stirring con stantly, until thick and creamy. Add vanilla and pour into shallow, buttered baking dish. Spread with meringue.

Meringue 2 egg whites honey Speck salt teaspoon 2 tablespoons vanilla Add salt to whites and beat un til thick. Add honey and beat until creamy. Stir in vanilla. Roughly spread over pudding. Bake 15 minutes in slow oven (325).

Serve chilled. brown for white sugar in your bread pudding for a different flavor. Bacon driDDines rioured over hot cooked cabbage, onions or cauliflower make a savory winter dish. Dibert Rathgeber Lock Haven, May 29. Miss Gretchen F.

Rathgeber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis W. Rath geber, became the bride of Pvt. Charles David Dibert, son' of Mr.

and Mrs. Charles Dibert, Renovo, on May 18 a New Brunswick, N. with Lieut. Col. L.

S. Drumheller, U. S. Army chap lain, officiating. 1 LA' By JOHN H.

CUTLER The little redhead who wanted to be a nun was the daughter of a poor widow who worked in a beauty parlor. She was sipping a soda when a publisher of a motion picture trade journal asked her, "How would you like to be in pictures?" She played her first role in THEY WONT FORGET. Now she is the sweetheart of about 40 fraternities, and she even had a rum drink and a baked potato creation named in her honor. The student body of Los Angeles City College voted her Girl They Would Like Best to Marry." The contract of this pretty little eyeful in a few years will call for $4500 a week, yet she had little more than a year of high school education. She was 19 when she married Artie Shaw, who had worked um her in DANCING CO ED.

This union soon hit the reef s. After spending one morning posing with Artie for newspaper stills she told newspapermen as she disengaged his arm: "We're through for keeps." The moral is don't ever get married to a fellow after having only cne date with him. Though she made her debut as the Sweater Girl (Walter Winchell called her "America's Sweater she no longer enjoys or likes that title. Her best part was as Sheila Regan in ZIEGFELD GIRL. You may have also seen her in TWO GIRLS ON BROAD WAY, MARCO POLO, and in some of the Dr.

Kildare or Andy Hardy series. Her dramatic coach called her "the most brilliant girl I've ever taught," even If Artie Shaw did tell her she was ignorant. The first passing shadow of tragedy to enter her life was the murder of her father, who was a miner and stevedore. After a crap game he was blackjacked in an alley and died of a cerebral hem mute. For a while her boyfriend was Tony Martin, but she married Stephen Crane.

Seven months after their first marriage it was dis covered that Crane's first wife's divorce hadn't become final, so she had their marriage annulled. Then, six weeks later, she remarried Crane in Mexico. WHO IS IT? Answer on Opposite Fate ITCHES THREADED GUARDS HATLESS LOFTIER By YV. L. GORDON WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, "In what portion of Indiana do they live?" Say, "In what part of Indiana.

OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Delinquent. Pronounce de ling kwent. not de lin kwent. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Boulder (a large stone); observe the u. SYNONYMS: Change, alter, convert, modify, transform, trans WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day.

Today's word: INCOMMODE; to give inconvenience or trouble to. "We are incommoded by want of room." Letter Out for what an irate gorilla thumps. Letter Out and combine it with a quality of character. Letter Out and rarely see them in drug stores. Letter Out and he takes what he shouldn't.

Letter Out and play with someone's Remove one letter from each word and re arrange to spell the word called for in the last column. Print the letter in the center column opposite the word from which you have removed it. If you have "Lettered Out" correctly it's where the big baked potato was featured. Today's Pattern Lilacs for Spring, and they can add a touch of brightness to your furniture. So get out your cotton and start on this filet crochet that is different in design.

The set is equally appropriate for your buf fet. Pattern 571 contains direc tions and charts for making set; illustrations of it and of the stitches; list of materials Send ELEVEN CENTS in coins for this pattern to the Harrisburg Telegraph, Needlecraft 82 Eighth avenue, New York, N. Y. Write plainly PATTERN NUM BER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Mil war mm mm A and have the same in come.

A saves 1 3 of his, while Jt. who spends $700 a year more than at the end of 4 years is in debt $240. What is the income of each per year? Answer on Opposite Page HOW By ANNE ASHLEY Q. How can I remove onion odor from the fingers and from the breath? A. Rub the fingers well with crushed parsley.

Chewing a sprig of parsley after eating onions will clear the breath. Q. How can I get good results when sprinkling clothes? A. The clothes will be more evenly dampened if a small brush or whisk broom is used to sprinkle water on them. Hotter water can be used and the clothes can be ironed much sooner.

Q. How can I make food di gestible? A. To render any food more digestible try using gelatine in the food mixture. 3 ILE AWi By A. C.

GORDON 1, Which are the two most uhi versally consumed grains in the world? 2. What are words called that are spelled alike but pronounced differently? 3. In what river was Jesus baptized? 4. What is the highest moun tain in South America? 5. Who were the parents of Queen Elizabeth? Answers on Opposite Page MODERN 5 ETIQUETTE By ROBERTA LEE Q.

When a dinner is given in honor of a distinguished person, should all guests be presented? A. Yes, by all means. Q. What should one do with the napkin when one has finished a meal at a dinner party? A. Merely place it at the side of the plate.

Do not fold it. Q. When giving a theatre party, how far in advance should the invitations be extended? A. Not later than a week in advance. Seyler Sweeley Lock Haven, May 29.

Miss Pearl Lucretia Sweeley and Clair Newton Seyler, both of Salona, R. were married Wednesday evening at the East Main Street Methodist Church by the Rev, Reyburn L. Fritz. MAY 29, 1943 IRAFTIE By FAUX FOGEKTX i suoe vjouldA I Of 00 heard it on A 1 1 no kidon' 1 1 rep ija covin LIKE KMOW THEYRE VOU HStCWjl A HIDDEN I PUT YE HANDS OUT LOUO ARE HOW DA 1 COIN' GREAT. RADIO.

I USED I DOWN, AM ICO, I r.M ALL PROM DODGERS ARC OUGHTA WIN TO LIVE IN ANVBOOV PROM VIVA BROOKLYN MAKIN'OUT. 1 THE 1 I BROOKLVN. I BROOKLYN DON'T PENNANT, V. KJl SCORCHY SMITH we're finished here. I the Russian cant u' 5o I WITH OUR PLANES CONt Wfe HAVE CUT US OFF WEIL I JjTI 1 llfefOVA; HEAD SOUTH THROUGH THE MA rr HEAD A LITTtflP' jfH Wif ff WOODS I'LL CALLV WHAT'S 10 rER 'h 5sP P8 SUPERMAN By JERRY SIEGEL and JOE SHUSTER OO MBBS, eU IMIMATHD UOO CprJS? 1 fal'w lIX u'u Lcooe book ACOuiRBO rris wrrw uatmaiNa 6Po.wifnv hb nomawb" WNAPwSI.

ACBBTHBCJWrm WILL BE PSli BUT NOW I MUST Be ON ANOTMBB BOOK SNATCHBD OFt" PLEASED! alSUUNG fc, CAPTAIN YANK By FRANK TTNSLET LOOK. SIR, thetreTlet 'em alone. ..1 I sXn I Vfi II JxJ BOAROINQ US rfTWEV KNOW WHAT IT AVl CHANGE ACT, CHILLUN lsX SHALL I RE POINCr UPRISEPN HOMER HOOPEE By FRED LOCHER IZMOMER, VDlI ARE NO! TO SET 1 1 OKAY, SHOJf fTlM I YOURSELF UP A DICTATOR AND I'LL LIST THE (OlI CAM LIFT OUT AuKnnntV KARBtrRARiLyoReeeeRrrbr chores and we jhe first wfWASH NG.ftt MICKEY FINN By LANK LEONARD GOOD NEWS AT) AND HOW! 800801 I I THAT'S YOUR SURE MY 1 IwEU HE SUReUeAH! IT'S SURE I I ISPSS, TRMTrSr LAST, EH, UNCLE PHIL HAS LOST IDEA OF UNCLE PHIL CAME THROUGH A LOAD OFF ONE WE'LL BE BUT I KNOW MICKEY? THIS LUCKY CHARM WAS GOOD CAN'T STAND FOR YOU JUST MY MIND ASSIGNED TO, WHERE I 0 UKE ROBBED OF ALL THE MONEY NEWS, EH? PROSPERITY IN TIME NOW LET'S TAKE MICKEY AND 1 TO Ol TO (7 HE'D WON GAMBLING IT MEANS HE'S VOU CAN SHOVE A WALK WHERE WE LLPACIF IC AND HAS BEEN GIVEN THE BACH TO NORMAL OFF WITHOUT I OVER TP THE SO? gTDW THE ADVENTURES OF PATSY Trademark Registered VA Patent Office i NOW THAT WE'RS. mmi WBVEUSeOUPNJJ 'HEf Hkll BV ii SETTIMS USED moRM HALP FoH LELY TO RA reV Pill Itfi ffi LiSMT Wli, I OUR PIHE Lsi 1 WAMTEdA Aelf HAVE, WftWuillk 5A. lSi I KMOTS SOS ACW TO DIG A LAMTERM AM' SHOVEL.

JJ fmrPJ sVl i Tl A)J a WEXL HArTA UTTLE fOf. 1 AH' EiATTRYS FOR Mill VjfJM amy TRTHE 'j1 Mm OAKY DOAKS By R. B. FULLER CHIEF WAHOO YOU 'BOUT HEADY VnOT YET, IVS TO SNATCH UM SNOOZE, I SOT TO FINISH THIS jL WiPORT TO NAVAL INTELLIOENCE Jy IS: niaV 9 i. im i til jurrrn IV A II LT SHIT A k.

I m' Mfr i i 7M i By WOG TALK ABOUT TICKLISH JQ88 WM THIS ONE IS GOING TO BE TOUGHER STHAN DOING A TAP DANCE OH A BASKET OF.

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About Harrisburg Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
325,889
Years Available:
1866-1948