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The Waco News-Tribune from Waco, Texas • Page 17

Location:
Waco, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Maro Nfws-Cribuitf Friday, January 22,1954 Waco, 1 3 ood OUT-OF-THIS-WORLD CHOWDER, mushrooms, and vegetables. made with lobster, Soup Can Make a Meal By CECILY BROWN STONE Associated Press Food Editor A hostess trick from a famous teook book author! Irma Rombauer, tiis distinguished and charming author of Joy of (Bobbs-Merrill), has been visiting in New York City, and while I was cooking dinner for her at my house one night, she let ms in on one of her own secrets. Mrs. Rombauer lives in St. Louis and has a small country house in the Ozark foothills.

in the country that she has lots of company during week ends; there, she a ays, that she finds it a big help to serve soup as a first course. She ladles it into cups and brings to her they sit down to a tray. Then as they are enjoying this, she says, she has tftme to put the last touches on the main course and get it ready to be brought to the table as soon as she has ssated her guests. This Is, of course, a fine idem for the hostess who has to be cook and waitress, too. That conversation started us on an Ode to Soup.

Mrs. Rombauer and I are both devoted to this good course, and we agree that a hearty and delicious soup is a wonderful main dish for a company lunch or Sunday night supper. You can serve a salad after it, if you like. Or you can follow it with an assortment of cheese, they do In crusty bread and sweet butter. It goes without saynig that a stantial dessert should follow a soup meal.

A good choice would be a favorite of Irma nut cake. If you like the idea of an easy to-get soup meal, we urge you to try this Lobster Chowder. Our taste testers were enthusiastic about its combination of flavors. Lobster Chowder Ingredients: 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, Yl cup finely diced onion, cup finely diced celery, cups water, 1 small bay leaf, one 10-ounce package frozen mixed vegetables (defrosted), one 3-ounce can chopped broiled mushrooms, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, one 8-ounce can tomato sauce, 2 cups milk, 1 teaspoon salt, teaspoon pepper, one 6 Yt -ounce can rock lobster. Method: Melt butter in saucepan over moderate heat.

Add onion and celery; cook 5 minutes, stirring often. Add water, bay leaf and contents of package of defrosted vegetables. Cover and bring to boil. Cook until vegetables are barely tender, from 5 to 10 minutes. Remove bay leaf.

Drain mushrooms, reserving broth. Mix mushroom broth with cornstarch until smooth; add to saucepan, stirring constantly until liquid thickens. Add drained mushrooms, tomato sauce, milk, salt and pepper. Coarsely flake lobster and add. Heat slowly serving temperature; do not boa.

Simmer a few and aerve. Makes 4 generous servings. VA EMPLOYES DONATE 110 PINTS OF BLOOD Bmploytf of the Veterans Hospital donated 110 pinto of blood the bloodmobile visited the jtioepitai Monday. Dr. Marlon C.

fCerter taid that this was the group donation in Waco, p. Carter is director of the Red Central Texas Resrional Renter, 523 North Eighteenth Street. Blood donors weret 322 Oak. 3500 Sleeper. AMa Jlnes, 1209 Paul Quinn.

Elmer McFzdden. 1608 Lexington. Puentes. Route 6 Dorothy L. Beckham.

Route 2. Mt. Calm. Shelby C. Buchanan.

1004 Connor. Eusene Hull. 3800 Beverly Drive. Father Mahoney, P. O.

Box 124. Prank Graham. 2625 Bayior. Albert B. Coker.

Route 2. Robert Williams. Route 2. Robert Y. Hutyra.

2705 Baylor. James W. Wright, 2312 Baylor. Velma Donley. 1417 South Twelfth.

Fred Morrison, 1408 Sheppard. Aubrey P. Crook. 2717 Cleveland. Lyon R.

Milam. 2209 Magnolia. Simon Tobis. 1006 Connor. Alice Jenson.

Veterans Hospital. Mrs. Haxel Wetzel. 3025 South Third. Lavada Harris.

911 Kate Ross. Carold G. Buchanan, 2512 North Thirtieth. Alfred M. Connell, Veterans Hospital.

Earl L. Coleman. 1819 Herring. Taft L. George.

1712 Indiana. James S. Gregory. 1117 Holly Vista. W.

H. Sanderson. State House Hotel. Woodrow Baxley, 1516 Lexington. David E.

Wood. 4201 Sanger. Welton T. Harris. 1121 Preston.

Miss Ann Michalxa. 2023 Gorman Luther B. Webb. 2220 Lee. teenth 1904 8outh Pour" Miw Clara Varnon.

Veterans Hospital. Dr. Donald Gorham. 2820 Herring Prances Hardlsty. 4107 Memorial Drive.

Miss Anna M. Cernosek. 1712 Colcord. Albert L. Hutchison.

2603 Pine. Robert Buel. 3920 Austin. Glenn A Propst. 512 Walter M.

Shostack, Ross. Kenneth H. Jones, 1502 South Forty- 1 3617 North Twen- 3917 Gurley. Niels E. Olson, 1401 Sheppard.

Oeonrt H. Moore. 918 Ernest O. Snyder. 8604 Rolando.

Joe 713 South Seventh. Charles H. Hale. 4701 Beverly Driva. Mrs.

Nora Hanks. 3229 Trice. Victoria Espinoza. 16 South Tenth. John E.

Miltner, 701 North Thirteenth. E. K. Brashner, Route 1. Crawford.

Ernest L. Willis. West. M. C.

Murphy. 1007 Van Buren, McGregor. Alfred Route 7. John Gabe, Veterans Hospital. Emma Mullins.

325 North Tenth. Edgar Cobbs, 2519 Colcord. Garnet Dennis. 1524 Lexington. A.

P. Kubacak. West. Mrs. Cecil Hay ley.

2128 Austin. Ben P. Caperton. 2812 Lyle. R.

Polk. 2625 Cleveland. W. B. Holder.

128 Bellmead. Joe M. Gonzales. 2621 Speight. Jeweil Slaton.

2426 Cleveland. Mlchie Osboame. 4012 Memorial. John B. Shown.

2125 Gurley. Thurman A. Gregory. 915 Reynolds. Henry Schleffer, 2217 Proctor.

Knape, 1701 Reuter. Welch- Franklin, fifth Martin, 3120 North Twenty Clarence H. Pierce. Route 8 Alfred Tharp. Route 8 Charles H.

Hopkins, 3029 Reuter. Joe W. Parham. 1712 Dutton. Driskill Faubion, Route 8 Raymond Allison, 606 Maryland.

eighth 1107 North A. R. Slaughter, 701 Van Buren. Me- Gregor. Marvin Kingston.

204 Van Buren. Me Gregor. Edward Pugh. 2625 Mitchell. Andrew Waggoner, Veterans Hospital Calvin Darby.

308 North Twelfth. Jess M. Posey. 1915 Park. Watson 3700 North Twenty-first.

Zora L. Greathouse. Eddy. Mary Lee Kaylor. Veterans Hospital.

Vernon K. Hanson. 1601 McKenzie. Joe Gonzales. 308 McKeen.

Tommie Long. 1125 Preston. Theodora Rast. 2524 Bosque. William A.

Mayfield. Route 4. J- B. Francis. 1405 Park.

Grady Lee. 4007 Memorial Drive. Homer Caniv. 3129 Wenz. Isaac Cummings.

621 Dutton. Joel Linthicum, 2629 Proctor Raymond Coronado. 2219 Magnolia. Ernest R. Martin.

3802 Shelby Elza J. Ollv-r. 2505 Parke Lake Drive Joe Shaw. 3335 Maple. John Galindo.

1515 Burnett. Jesse Walter Mahoney. 3408 Rolando. William Charles Hurst, 3712 Lasker. By WILLIAM GLOVER THE CASE OF THE BURNT BOHEMIAN, by Christopher Bush (Macmillan; TOO SOON TO DIE, by Henry Wade (Mac- mgjan.

JOURNEY TO NOWHERE, by a Tyre (Rnopf; Since cycles Influence and emerge in practically everything these days, it surprise whodunit fans to find a new trio of hopeful spine-tinglers built up on one basic situation. This is Emily Schwank Dies Thursday Mrs. Emily Schwank, 75, of Golinda died at 10:15 a. m. Thursday at the home of her daughter, Mrs.

R. J. Gummelt of 2017 Baylor Avenue. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Funeral Home pending the arrival of relatives from Wisconsin. Mrs.

Schwank was born in Falls County and lived in Golinda most of her life. Survivors Include six daughters, Mrs. R. J. Gummelt of Waco, Mrs.

L. S. Biron, Mrs. Albert Friess, Mrs. Lloyd Jacobson and Mrs.

Clarence Johnson, all of Rice Lake, Mrs. J. A. Koym of East Barnard; two sens, Herbert Foster of Fort Worth, and Gus Foster of Robinson; one sister, Mrs, Walter Truitt of Lorena; two brothers, W. F.

Guderian of Brenham, and Rudolph Guderian of Lorena; 14 grandchildren and four grandchildren. (See obituary, page 14, See. apparently to be impersonation season on the chiller shelf. has all the classic touches of the old Holmes British school, plus those deductive variations favored by fashionable amateur sleuth Ludovic Travers. An unkempt artist gets himself knifed in Bohemian London, and the trail leads onward to solution and backward in time to World War II Paris.

have a pretty good time figuring out doing what to whom before the mask- switching is over. Soon to has to do with some double imagery in which the reader is backstage with the props all the way. and therefore is a couple of strides ahead as Scotland Yard tries to catch up with a son who joined forces with his disease-doomed dad to save an old estate from going into the inheritance tax catchall. A book for those who prefer a lesson in open sleuthing rather than any suspense. Miss Tyre, one of the newer writers, provides another variation on the impersonation theme.

Her usual Southern lady, on the way this time to a European vacation, finds herself in a nightmarish sequence of luggage-grabbing, phone calls mysterioso, Chas. Addams mansions and frantic notes tucked in books. all a bit Gothic and bizarre arriving at its front page subject matter, but Miss Tvre is pretty good at twisting up the tension. Moisture proof and air tight packaging, with low oxygen, does 2Hu t0 keep powdered acquiring the or ted la prewar 69 WHS Seniors Graduate In Last Mid-Term Rites Sixty-nine Waco High School seniors received diplomas last night at Waco Hall in the last mid-term graduation ceremonies to be held by the school. Graduations from now on will be held only in June when the school year ends.

Ceremonies went off as scheduled at 8 p. m. in spite of subfreezing weather. School principal Thomas Ware said he put off the program because it would hold up the new school term. Registration for the new term begins next week.

have graduation and registration for the new term at the same Ware said. School Superintendent E. N. Dennard gave the graduating seniors a challenge to make successes of their lives in his address, entitled American Avery R. Downing, assistant superintendent of the school district, presented the class to the board of educaticm.

Walter Dossett, a member of the board, presented diplomas Two girls took top class honors. They were Elene Griffin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Griffin of 1805 Fort Avenue, and Linda Zachry, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Woodie M. Zachry of Lake Waco. Miss Griffin was valedictorian with a three-year average of 93. Miss Zachry was salutatorian with a 92.92 average.

Camp Fire Officers CORSICANA. Jan. Dave Walker was elected as president of the Corsicana Camp Fire Girls organization here Tuesday night, succeeding Joe Tate. Other officers are C. C.

Crowson, vice president; Owen Elliott, treasurer; Mrs. Fred DuBose, secretary, and Mrs. L. S. Cooper, regional representative.

PUSH BUTTON WAR IS WORSE HASTINGS ON HUDSON, N. Police Sgt. Alexander Polowishz did was press a button for routine testing of the village fire alarm system. But what happened, said the sergeant, anything I ever heard while fighting In the South button-pressing set off an explosion yesterday which wrecked the two-storv brick municipal building. No one was hurt.

The blast was attributed to acid fumes from basement storage batteries which power the alarm system plus a short circuit in the wiring apparatus. The force of adhesion between two materials is believed to reside in a relatively few layers of molecules next to earh surface. Terms Eased As Testimony Helps Police DALLAS in sentences were given two men whose testimony helped convict a third on charges which grew' out of the fire which destroyed a wrestling arena here. Roy Houston Tatum. 26.

former Chicagoan, received a 2-year term after saying set the blaze which burned the Sportatorium to the ground. Tatum also pleaded guilty to conspiring last April with William Theodore Moncrief, 38, to burn the sports arena. He got two years on that charge, too, to run concurrently with the first. Alfred Huey McCrory, who was working as an aircraft mechanic in Los Angeles, when arrested last summer, pleaded guilty to conspiring Moncrief in January. 1953 and received a 2- year probated term.

Tatum testified he hacked out. PETUNIA! Skimping on my ca iorics Is where I really shine. And cottage cheese on berry pie Is utterly divine Right, Petunia! Make it a one-crust pie, top it with cottage cheese, and a delicious dessert. hacke NEA to Check On Dismissal Of School Head HOUSTON seven-member committee of the National Education Association will Investigate the dismissal of W. Ebey as deputy superintendent of Houston public schools.

The NEA group will hold Its first meeting here next Wednesday, an announcement from Washington, where NEA is headquartered, said yesterday. Miss Jimmie L. Davis, Cincinnati, Ohio, chairman of the Commission for the Defense of Democracy Through Education, announced appointment of committee and its personnel. She said the study will ba made of Ebey case and related problems pursuant to the invitation of the Texas State Teachers At a Canadian conference ft waa estimated that one Canadian in 60 is an alcoholic. This package of JOLLY TIME POP CORN is free whan you buy Kraft Oil at your grocer's! Makes op to 3 heaping quarts! favorite popcorn.

and this special package is yours as a gift when you buy either a pint or a quart of Kraft Oil, Jolly Time Pop Corn is processed in a patented every kernel is guaranteed to pop. No hulls. No hard centers. Your Sift package will make three heaping quarts of tender, fluffy popcorn Hie most delicious popcorn ever Easf my to pop com with Kraft 09 I. Heat 2 tablespoons Kraft (Ml in popper until a kernel of com starts to spin when dropped in.

(About 3 min.) 2. Put 3 ounces cup) of com into popper. Cover and cook until only an occasional popping is heard. (If using heavy skiflet, shake gently several times during cooking.) 3. Pour com into serving bowi Salt to taste.

Mi Mi 1 4 I How to save on a WHIRLWIND ELECTRIC CORN POPPER At your where Kraft Chi is sold, you can get a gift certificate worth $3.00 toward the purchase of a Whirlwind Electric Corn Popper. Certificate gives full instructions for ordering this $7.96 retail value for only Pops com fast and stirring or shaking 3-quart kettle is made of heavy-gauge aluminum Heat-resistant glass cover Kettle and hot plate may be used together or separately for other light cooking Fully guaranteed against defective and workmanship Electric cord included Approved by National Laboratory Kraft Oil.

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About The Waco News-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
195,188
Years Available:
1907-1973