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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 14

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER: SATURDAY. AUGUST 24. 1935 14 5f CCCC SUMMER GREENS NEED SA VOR SALAD DRESSING Fash ions iVeitf Pleated Skirt Eliminating Need of Child Wearing Blouse; Is Suitable for School Wear CULINARY SUGGESTIONS BABETTE'S STYLE HINTS MODERN AM) SMART I 1 Plaids and Navy to Be Popular for School Days By Babette 'OSING THAT in spite of that you've shopped to a frazzle- this week eiaMBjaaifMSMaaBBaBaaWaaaB Eimmamm CHS Mi kmmmmmmi The list of cold meats adaptable to easy and delightful service is almost unlimited. There or children outfitted for mmtmrr liiiiiiiiii ii ol is last minute finds you 1 Li if luLk tnort of the goal and still Either that, or you've are big and little sausages, some dry and some milder and less dry; there are canned hams, spiced pork luncheon meat, corned beef, pigs' feet and a variety of Mixing at the Table Is Method Now in Vogue A good salad dressing meets the approval of all. But let it be a variety of salad dressings, all good ones, that your family may enjoy.

Monotony will spoil any family favorite. Salad dressings are so easily made that they may be changed frequently. We have everything in the markets at this time of year to make good salads. The greens and herbs mixed with tomatoes and cucumbers are very generally popular. These call for a savory salad dressing.

AN OLD IDEA. There is an old French quotation that says "to make a perfect salad dressing four persons are needed: a miser for the vinegar, a spendthrift for the oil, a wise man for the salt and a madcap to mix the ingredients." Considering these factors in order, the vinegar may suit your taste, using tarragon, malt, wine or cider vinegar as youTprefer. There are many good olive and salad oils on the market and their selection is another factor depending upon taste. The amount, of iY I wPB I mimMmifidMM. r- ned from your vacation and you.

have to dash out today to get the new things Elizabeth Ann needs! One thing you should look for is that new pleated skirt that eliminates the need of the child wearing a blouse. It is so designed that a separate collar can be buttoned to the bodice top of the skirt, leaving it to the pullover sweater to complete the picture. When the sweater is on with the neat white collar finishing the neckline, the effect is every bit as smart as though there were a blouse underneath. mmmm -iZZJ) 5a. liiit' Lir spreads which Prudence Penny unmold into perfect circles onto the board.

Make any assortment your family or guests prefer and arrange them any way that best fits your sausage board. It makes a perfect service for the simplest of family meals or the popular informal guest meal. VA As advanced as next winter's YOUR PLEATED salt is approximately one teaspoon per cup of oil used, but this styles (have you seen those new NEWEST STYLES in hot cake turners are artistic. Long or short handles are available in different colors to match your kitchen. I ill! 1 jb.

skirt preferences may be plaid wools, or plain navy flannel or serge these types are available in this new "skirt plus" (plus a Besides the one separate collar that comes with the skirt, you can select several other additional collars from the variety of ever-so-trim young styles provided. If you have two or three of these collars on hand, that small bit of laundering is all that is necessary to keep the outfit fresh looking until it's time to send the skirt and sweater to the cleaner. Two or three sweaters, of course will help the situation. ECHOES FROM THE PARIS OPENINGS Do not have the kettle, more than two-thirds full when making jam or jelly, otherwise there will not be room enough for the mixture to boil as it should. Sweeten Berries To Taste for Cake When berries are used for shortcake, they should, of course, be washed and hulled and about one quart allowed for six servings.

Reserve a few whole ones for garnishing and crush the balance slightly or cut in halves and mix with about a half cup sugar, depending on the sweetness of the fruit. Let stand for a half hour and put between layers and on top just before ready to serve. Peaches should be peeled and sliced and sprinkled with sugar. If allowed to stand too long they will discolor. will vary with other seasonings used.

Surely there is a good mixer in your family, to shake all these together. USE OIL LAST. Mixing the dressing right onto the greens at the table is becoming a popular method of putting the salad together. When doing this remember that the oil should be added last because it will otherwise cover5 the leaves and prevent them from absorbing the other This method of mixing the salad with the dressing also calls for a larger bowl than would ordinarily be required. It muBt be chilled, as well as having the ingredients chilled, beforehand.

The chilled bowl may be rubbed with a clove of garlic, then the various greens tossed into It. INTERESTING TANG. For something different, use the lowly turnip tops, mustard and beet greens. These, of course, must be very young, but you will find that they add an interesting tang to the usual greens. If you wish Prudence Penny's favorite French dressing and its variations send a self-addressed stamped envelope to her, with your request, in care of the San Francisco Examiner.

shorter as new as tomorrow's newspaper and as exciting as your first 'plane ride! That's the "build up" for the latest group of salads to come out of the laboratory kitchens just in the nick of time to prevent a severe case of summer Appetite Wilt! Talk of ease and economy seems a trifle dull in a discussion Of anything so delicious, but the truth must be told; these combinations require no unheard of ingredients, no special knowledge or equipment, and they are not the least expensive. Summer, as some hapless wit has said, is the season when every well behaved dinner plate is "wearin' of the greens." When salads are to be not just a single course but the whole meal they should contain ingredients with plenty of food value. That's another reason why these too-new-to-be-famlliar creations are welcome. If you want to lead the crowd instead of following it, don't let that old adage starting "be not the first by whom the new is tried" stop you! These recipes have been thoroughly tested tried in the balance and found delicious! BRAID FROGS and fur patches on suits fur coats with parka hoods, a la the Eskimo most evening gowns just escape the floor, some distinctly shorter ulsters or three-quarter loose, vivid top-coats for sports in rough wools slim frocks with shiny metal slide fastenings and bolero trimmings lame I1 brocades, extremely shiny satins, stiff silks ribbed with velvet, and changeable stiff velvet important LINCOLN MARKET new materials for evening town suits of soft' finish wools in dark blue or brown in slim 761 MARKET ST. silhouette with much fox.

fur around the shoulders, or with Betwaen 3rd and 4th flat furs placed slantingly on side pockets wools of every type CUP CAKES MAK ANNIVERSARY SALE ETCHED AGAINST the San Francisco skyline, Miss Cembra Stephens appears as A harbinger of autumn in her two-piece suit of greige tweed trimmed with brown Persian from military cloth to thinnest tweeds like plaid voile colors Boneless Cross Rib Roast Beef Sirloin and Tenderloin Steaks include burning red, deep blue COM170EI? in hot woathor MLB I FEATURED SMLE DESS odd buttons including knots of enameled rope, are details. royal, light porcelain, deep greens padlocked belts, Sorority Alumnae Plans Board Meet 14' SPICED GEMS cup shortening KAPPA ALPHA THETA Alum lb. Sew This Yourself Twenty years ago this week in American Falls, Idaho, a young man spent the last of his savings to start a grocery store. All this week, in approximately 3,000 stores from coast to coast, nae will fiave an executive board meeting on Tuesday at the home of Mrs. T.

G. Anderson in Parker wmswammmf-s-mmmmm avenue. The following officers were elected at their last meet the event will be celebrated with PATTERN 9349 YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL it 1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed 1 egg 1 cup sour or buttermilk Yi teaspoon salt 2 'i cups special cake flour 1 teaspoon soda FREE: With a 50c purchaie of meat, you receive 5 lbs. soupbone free, Saturday only. Atk for them.

ing: resident, Mrs. u. a. uma- strom; vice president, Mrs. J.

B. By Cembra Stephens AUTUMN AND NEW SUITS are practically synonymous, so far as I'm concerned. In fact, with the first hint of fall, I began immediately to think of tweed and fur with new respect. One of the smartest suits I've seen is the one I'm wearing, in diagonal tweed, with its double collar and tuxedo front lapels of Persian lamb. The colors of the suit in my picture are greige (a sort of gray beige) tweed with brown fur, although the same style is done in all black, for later fall.

The collar, being double, can be worn several different ways up all around, down all around, or up in back and down in front. Eck; secretly, Mrs. V. Balfour James; treasurer, Mrs. T.

G. Anderson; corresponding secretary, is and bound to be loved! This simple frock knows the only charming way to eliminate bothersome sleeves is to let a flared ruffle daintily encircle the shoul a great anniversary program. The young man who walked down the streets of American Falls that August day in 1915 is M. B. Skaggs, now chairman of the board of one of the world's largest food retailing organizations, and the store he founded is No.

1 of Safeway Stores, Inc. 1 teaspoon each cinnamon, nut Mrs. Warren Schultz; architect, Mrs. Bayard Ryder; peninsula Logs of Yearling Lamb meg and cloves 1 cup raisins, If desired cup nutmewts, if desired Boneless Beef Pot Roast w. ders! So simple and chic its styling, this dress depends entirely upon "fabric" for its calling representative, Mrs.

W. W. Holt; Palo Alto representative, Mrs. Ralph W. Evans; Panhellenlc rep Cream the shortening well, Local Safeway employes have 1SC.

gradually cream the sugar into been busy for the past several days with preparations for the big anniversary event, which is resentative, Miss Marian Mc-Cardle; advisory board, Miss Erma Luce, Mrs. Raymond Murphy, Mrs. Holt W. Alden; editor, Mrs. F.

E. Hoffman. card! For a morning or about the house frock, a flowered cotton or dotted swiss with organdy ruffle would be Fresh As A Daisy! Pattern 9349 may be ordered Bonaleit Brisket Corned Beef Prime Rib Roast Bee (Short Cut) only in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30, it, then add the egg and beat well. Add the sifted dry ingredients alternately with the milk, beating each addition in well. Lastly fold in the slightly floured nuts and raisins, if used.

Pour into greased cup cake pans, half filling them with the batter. Bake in a moderate (350 deg. 15 to 20 minutes, or until done. This i i sw 'i i planned to be one of the merchandising highlights of the year. The dates set aside are August 22 to 28.

5K To prevent cheese from becoming moldy, brush over with olive oil before placing in the refrig From Chollys Notebook Kellogg's manes light, crisp and refreshing are an ideal hot-weather food. Millions of Americans have found they suffer lee from the heat when they en joy Kellogg's daily. Delicious for breakfast, with milk or cream and fruits or berries. A perfect hot-weather lunch. Fine for the children's supper, or a bedtime snack to help yon sleep more soundly.

Ask your grocer for Kel logg's in the red-and-green package. Oven-fresh and crisp, even in hot, humid weather. An exclusive manufacturing process gives them that extra crispness. And they're protected by the heal scaled WAXTITE inner bag a patented Kellogg fea ture. Quality guaranteed.

Made by Kellogg in Battla Creek. CORN FLAKES 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 3T yards 36 inch fabric. Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for EACH MARIAN MARTIN pattern. Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, the 15i MRS.

FREMONT B. HITCH- THE YOUNG SON of Mrs. lb. erator. This will also keep it 1 makes one dozen large or two Harold Berton Russell, who was from getting hard and dry.

dozen small cup cakes. born on August 20, at Dante STYLE NUMBER and SIZE of each pattern. THE MARIAN MARTIN SUM COCK, who has been the house guest of the B. F. Schlesingers, has returned to Carmel, where she will be with her mother, Mrs.

Margaret Chamberlin, until her departure for Chicago next Friday. Mrs. Lee Schlesinger and Sanitarium, has been named Harold Berton, for his father, Lieut. Harold Berton Russell, who died in May at Mare Island. The baby has four MER PATTERN BOOK will lead your way to warm weather Chic! From its forty pages view the parade of Clothes for every occa her young son, Lee who were also guests at the B.

F. Schles sion for every member of the family. Designs all beautifully il lustrated, patterns all easy to inger home, left yesterday for DDDO Los Angeles. make. Styles for the small girl, the Dashing Deb, the Blushing MR.

AND MRS. ROBERT Bride and the Mature Matron plus some useful hints and some EYRE and their daughter, Miss Jean White, and her fiance, Mr. delightful reading. SEND FOR YOUR COPY NOW! PRICE OF BOOK FIFTEEN CENTS. BOOK WsT CALIFORNIA Fred Enemark, will leave -next Friday for Honolulu, where they will remain for two weeks.

RIPE AND PATTERN TOGETHER, TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. CHOPPED OLIVES Remdy to Serve OLIVE for its bringi new iet to salad, hot old favorite for'different'sondwiches. Try it heated on toatt! HI AlTHfUl-ICONOMICAl DELICIOUS I. ni your trArn Pattern twrtmtnt, Saa FraaciM Examiner. RAVIOLI, lb.

AA. FntinJ with aur II 11 apeclal aauea Sm 17 FRESH sa "An every Jay gpecialty" at Para. lacloas. I a a 1 1 chaaatt cleanly Iramtka vita. Congenital ronemi-aal.

Ideal wker-ertr anitaeaa i rl aliiei art atefl urn mm ikih eooKirr alltlt e.CKlNO co eiviasini. Calif. CLCDIFCFCECE IM IMRKCT FKIIM KOATKK AND rf.AVE GOOD COFFEE lb. Oflaa 2 39 UG 15.1S Hllmore and New Iratlnn. t3ri ana MIaUn Market Vacation Special! Royal Velvet Ice Cream Full quart brick 25 "FrnipB ITfaltlt" Tha IAal Dmwrt ROYAL ICE CREAM CO.

11. VI MrAlliatrr, In tbc hurt of hf rltr Wa atll kc Ofrt tiU r. M. WSOfRBROS btlicatesscn lit Mnrkft. Grant Market 17.1 Market, ommrrclal Market Ilk anil Market.

Hale' tM Start "Ml ALITV SirtEMK 3 It rear dealer ran't anaplr rail IiOnalaa 1MXO I San Iraa-rlaea ar TH orajwall lkA la Oak-laad. F.I.I. rt KMQ CO. i.

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Pages Available:
3,027,640
Years Available:
1865-2024