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Show JANUARY 3, ins; THE JOURNAL Della Robbia Birthday Cake ft Try Sandwich Pinwheel Plate Release: 1st JFk. Jan. 1 , ( Local Dimes March Opens 1 The campaign for g funds got underway in this community and throughout the nation this week, as volunteers geared themselves for the doubled effort that will be necessary to help the March of Dimes keep pace with the march of polio. campaign period has been doubled this year because the National Foundation has been forced into debt four years in succession by surging polio incidence. The drive started Jan. 2 and will continue until the end of the month. During the last four years, the National Foundation and its chapters have spent $79,000,000 in March of Dimes funds for patient care charges alone, as compared with $41,000,000 in the previous ten-yespan. polio-fightin- ar By Marguerite Mickelsen This cake is a real beauty and its beauty isnt merely frosting-dee- p, either. Inside, the cake is golden and moist. Outside, its petal pink with a festive wreath of fruits and nuts. Best of all, its downright good to eat. About the candles . . . its our theory that birth certificates have no place at a birthday party, so we have one candle for each guest instead of a candle for each year. For fun, theres a little scroll with a bit of verse or a fortune hitched to every candle. Cut the cake and let the fortunes fall where they may! To make the picture complete, have plenty of rich, hot coffee, too. Fill the cups, and in the candles glow, let good friends drink to the guest of honor! Such are the moments all of us remember and cherish.. 1 cup shortening 2 cups sugar eggs, unbeaten 3 cups sifted, enriched flour 4 teaspoon salt 3 teaspoons baking powder V--i 'DE-BARKI- NG 1 This situation was By Marguerite Mickelsen cup milk Fillings: 1. Flaked salmon, may a . sandwich loaf and coffee as a onnaise. rather special party snack we could 2. Egg salad not find the necessary unsliced loaf 3. Relish cheese spread in our neighborhood. So we thought 4. Deviled ham and cream cheese wed see what we could do with the 3. Pickle relish and butter small slices of bread available. As How to assemble: we assembled the little slice-size- d loaves, the idea of cutting them Use thin-slicefresh white diagonally and making them into bread. Make a sandwich stack, a pinwheel suddenly seemed like using all five fillings and six slices an inspiration. It worked out beau- of bread. Repeat until there are tifully, too. Each segment makes seven stacks. Trim off crusts. Cut one serving and there is no carving each stack in two, on the diagonal, at the table required. Fact is, it form two pinwheels. Frost top was prettier than any sandwich loaf Arrange triangles on a platter to weve ever made and certainly and one slice of each triangle with easier to serve. cream cheese, whipped until fluffy Next time you want to serve aft- and tinted pale green with food ernoon or evening refreshments, coloring. Garnish each wedge with we hope youll give this idea a try. a nolive, shrimp, pickled onion or Of course, we hardly need mention anchovy fillet on a toothpick. Place that youll want to serve plenty a radish rose in center of each pinof hot, fragrant coffee with it, too. wheel Makes 14 generous servings. One day when we decided to serve teaspoon vanilla Boiled frosting, tinted pink 3 dried figs, chopped fine Vi cup seedless raisins Vi cup finely chopped dates Vi cup broken pecan meats Vi cup finely chopped maraschino cherries Cream shortening and sugar. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Mix and sift flour, salt and baking powder. Combine milk and vanilla. Add flour mixture alternately with milk to egg mixture. Pour into two greased and floured layer cake pans. Bake in moderate oven, 373F., 33 to 40 minutes. Cool 3 minutes in pans. Remove from pans to cake racks. Prepare boiled frosting, tint pale pink. Combine fruits "and nuts and add about half d of this mixture to of the frosting; spread between layers. Frost top and sides with remaining plain frosting; garnish with wreath of remaining fruits and nuts. Decorate with small candles. 1 9-in- ch one-thir- d, about not only by rising brought costs Taut also because there were more cases during the last four years than in the entire previous decade. Added to increased costs and increased incidence has been a third factor that has compounded the difficulties of the National Foundation. Polio doesnt just hit and run. The effects of any one years epidemic are not soon for of the stricken gotten pnes, nor by the National Foundation chapters which pay the bills. In 1951, for example, the March of Dimes organization provided care for 45,000 men, women and children stricken in prior years in addition to the four out of five of the new patients who needed and received help. This black picture has meant that the National Foundation is annually faced with an average of 30,000 cases, in contrast to the ten to twelve thousand cases a year formerly considered normal. This is the reason why the 1952 March of. Dimes period has had to be increased; it is also the reason why contributions will have to be increased thi year, if polio is to be checked and eventually conquered. Visitor from Tibet SURGERY SAVES DOGS The over-a- ll beauty of the new Plymouth for 1952 is typified by the impressive styling of the front end. Designed for smart appearance and brilliant performance, Plymouth has many new features contributing to driving ease and passenger comfort. The trim design of the new hood molding and ornament and the hood medallion are examples of styling refinements. The luxurious interiors, with their perfection of color harmony and their quality fabrics, blend beautifully with the cars exterior colors. an operation that made them bark-3- " affectionately Indicate Joe and Honey, two friendly spaniels, Lloyd Sagon. He saved their lives when lr gratitude to their master, them destroyed after neighbors had an Francisco judge ordered the howling dogs kept them awake. Sagon rushed them to (International) aSmal surgeon who removed their bark. )UCED TO SILENT ADORATION by BDCSaUS JANUARY 2-3- 1 EDUCATION L - . ... Iv Jm ..i- - S .SSS Y Tenki Angmu Tenduf La FIRST WOMAN ever to come to the United States from Tibet, Miss Tenki Angmu Tenduf La Is interviewed on her arrival in New York. She has been awarded a fellowship by the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China. The Tibetan woman will enter Barnard College in February, 1952. (International) What we need in religion, is not new light, but new sight; not new paths, but new strength to walk in the old ones ; not new duties, but new strength from on high to fulfill those that are plain before us. Trjfon Edwards. N R |