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Show J 4 over The the WOMENS stove by Marge Burgener you scream, we alt scream for ice cream Rah! Rah!" Brother, that one really dates me, doesnt it? Say, how long has it been since ya made good ice cream? If ya dont have an electric freezer, the ole crank one works Just as well! Tell the kids that they cant turn the handle, and youll get plenty of offers! About the only thing youll have to worry about is keepin the kids and Pa from knocking each others teeth out trying to lick the dasher! Theyll probably want some twice a day and three times on Sunday! But the "makins are really easy and the end results are coolin, refreshin and goodness! Here are some hot tricks for the cool treat! 1. A quart freezer requires about 6 lbs. of ice to freeze the dessert and pack it for about 2 hours. 2. A 2 quart freezer requires about 10 lbs. Allow a few extra pounds for the ice that melts. 3. Put pieces or cubes of ice in canvas bag and crush it with a mallet. Finely crushed ice melts faster and hastens the freezing of the ice cream. 4. Scald and cool the cover, the dasher and the can of the "I scream, freezer. cream mixture should be cold when put into the freezer. A warm mixture results m course texture ot the ice cream. 6. Fill the can only 23, full as it swells as its beaten. 7. Use 8 parts of ice to 1 part coarse salt 8. When the crank becomes to difficult to turn, the dessert is frozen. 9. For a better flavor, let the ice cream ripen from 1 to 2 hours before serving. To do this, remove the dasher, hand it to the kids and Pa, and press the mixture down in the can and cover the repack the freezer with a mixture of 3 parts crushed ice to 1 part coarse salt. Now cover the freezer with lots of newspaper, or a heavy cloth or Dads old mackinaw. 5. Remember, ice -- Here are some of our favorites: 5 1 1 2 cups 2 cups 1 no. 2 lemons eggs, beaten can milk pt. whipping cream Add milk to within 3 TUTTI-FRUIT- 5 , 5 1 THERES NOTHING quite so yummy on a hot July afternoon, or evening than a dip into a ed or the electric Sundae made from homemade ice cream. Turned by hand-cravariety, its a special treat to make the old and young remember when. nk NO I. WHY THE URGE 1 BY Faye Hadley Their problem may be that they dont know how to go about finding such work. Having been away from the job market for some years or not having ever worked at all, they may need to build confidence in themselves. Many may need job guidance. They may need refresher courses to update old knowledges and skills or to acquire new ones. Some Facts About You Assuming that you actually take a part-tiJob, the chances are you are somewhere between the ages of 25 and 64. There is a Jairly even distribution of part-tim- e employment from age 25 through age 54, although there is a little concentration from about age 3$. to 40. If you're like most other married women who take part-tijobs, youre likely to do so about the time you have scrubbed, polished, and blessed your last child into school. Its about that time you begin to ask, "And what of me? Of all women who work part-tim- e, including teenagers beginning at age fourteen, married women account for 60 per cent of the total. If you discount the teen-agemarried women account for 75 per cent of all women who from age work part-tim- e twenty and up. The right time to go to work is not necessarily when you can provide for the care of the children. You really need to have a motive for going to wort and you must be satisfied that it is a very good one. It needs to be sufficiently compelling to help you over the difficulties, frustrations and hardships which you are bound to experience as you make the adjustment from being a homemaker to that of a woman who has to manage well both home and job. No one need tell you when the time is right. Youll know it. The idea may come to you in the aftermath of a family discussion of finances. It may come to you as a result of a growing realization that there are some satisfactions as a adult that you re not achieving. There may well up within you a desire to assert at least a little of your own personality rs, 12 top TI 2 cups 2 cups 1 2 sugar white Karo med. can crushed pineapple pkgs. frozen strawberries 1 12 quarts milk to within 3 inches o i top CUSTARD ICE CREAM (Makes take care of what is called the "discontinuity problem" in the work experience of This is not an invitation to married women. This is the revolt. Rather, its a suggesduring which a married period tion that you recognize the woman drops out of the work symptoms ,and discuss them force to raise her femily until with your husband. One socithe time when the children ologist, Lawrence J. Sharp in school. It is during of Washington State College, are all this interval that her skills out that the under pointed become rusty to the point right circumstances your emwhere she might later become ployment could very well unemployable. It is a serious the of strengthen solidarity problem for college graduates the family. most This is whose educations can become likely when you derive actual all but obsolete after a lapse job satisfaction from what you of 10 or 15 years. are doing in addition to conTheres another reason for tributing to the familys finances. If, on the other hand, keeping ones hand in, which youre merely trying to run no proper woman likes to conaway from a problem, or if template, and thats the possiyoure trying to satisfy some bility that she might have to inner discontent or neurotic return to wgrk if anything drive, without regard to your should happen to her family familys best interests, your status. Although divorce or work could lead to a weakenseparation is always a possiing or worsening of family bility, widowhood is a more likely prospect. The cold, sorelationships ber, statistics are thata wom- an will average about 40 years of life after she has installed her youngest child in school, and that the last 12 or 15 years of her life may be spent in widowhood. It takes a lot of insurance to provide for those years. Against this un- happy possibility, a woman does have to think a little of Is there a family that cant use some additional money? Whatever the family income, no matter how much your husband earns, theresalways something the family needs -or thinks it needs - for which you can use some extra cash. The big worry hanging over the heads of most parents nowadays is how to finance their children through a college education. In the earlier years, there could always be that vacation youve wanted, or the new TV set, or the new deepfreeze, or a better house, or a new car. These are standard-of-liv-i- There may be much work yet to be done in the typical household, but it no longer provides the same creative satisfactions that were available to women of earlier generations. Modern women have lost an intimate relationship with the task at hand. ng ' The modem woman must find new prestige values. Her proficiency in the home arts is no longer an important Her topic of conversation. status is derived in part from what her husband does, in part from the accomplishments of her children, and in part from what she does productively in the community. This woman in greener pastures has a more varied wardrobe, different experiences out of an adult world about which to talk, and more money to spend on herself and her This woman of the family. working world seems to exude a sense of confidence,' indeand personal pendence, achievement. ' Excerpted from the book Womans Guide to Part-tiJobs," by Joseph D. Cooper. Published by Doubleday & Company, Inc. "A me There is absolutely nothing like getting out in the wilds and roughing it." So saith the owner of camper or trail- - The Family Scrapbook by Dr. Ernest G. Osborne The Bentley s found it hard to understand why there was such a close their friendship be- son, Arthur, and Billy Doakes next door. To be sure, they were both the same age, out from that point on tween they seemed to be entirely different. 2 Z 1 slightly beaten egg yolks cups heavy cream Tbs. Vannilla extract I DON'T UNDERSTAND WHAT HF SEES 1KJ Scald 1 12 cups milk. Mix flour, sugar and salt. Add remaining cold milk. Add scalded milk slowly. Cook over hot water about 7 minutes, stirring constantly. Now stir hot mixture slowly into egg yolks. Cook and stir for 2 min. longer, cool. Add cream and Vanilla and freeze. VARIATIONS Mash 4 BURNT-ALMON- ripe bananas. Add to cream mixture before freezing. ICE CREAM D toasted, blanched almonds to recipe for vanilla ice cream. Substitute light brown sugar for granulated in recipe. Add 1 cup chopped, COCONUT ICE CREAM 1 cup toasted shreded coconut Add cream. recipe for vanilla ice CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM Add 2 squares sweet chocolate to 1 cup cream. Heat over hot water until chocolate is melted. Beat thoroughly. Combine with remaining 3 cups cream and other ingredients and freeze as vanilla ice cream. COFFEE ICE CREAM Scald 13 cup ground coffee with 1 cup cream. Strain and let cool. Combine with remaining 3 cups cream and other ingredients in vanilla ice cream recipe. PEPPERMINT -- CANDY ICE CREAM Omit sugar and flavoring in vanilla ice cream recipe. Crush 12 pound peppermint molasses kisses or peppermint stick candy. Combine with cream and salt in the vanilla ice cream recipe. A hermit at heart, I resent what the convenience of has ways on the go. He talked and moved in a most lively sort done to our forests. Once of way. Billy was peaceful refuges have been slow- - talking and never converted to City Parks on upset. Yet the two youngsters Sunday, complete with icespent most of their free time cream wagon. Incasement in a metal fort together. Friendships are interesting furnished with bed, gas range, things. There seem to be so and refrigerator stocked vrtth many different reasons why GIDDY-YA- P certain people are friends. Among these reasons is a factor that probably explains the closeness of Arthur and Billy. Each senses in the other some of the things that, in a sense, he would like to have. The balance between the two July 15 and 16 are the days works out well. For each of being circled by the young horseman of the area as they them, apparently, theres a kind of wisdom in their aseagerly await the annual Youth Horse Show sponsored by die sociation that helps each keep Salt Lake County Recreation on a steadier keel than otherwise would be true. Department. Dozens of young horse lovers ages 18 years (Copyright, 1966, by United and under will prance the Feature Syndicate, Inc.) steeds in the special event. Bry Sorensen, show man Arthur was full of life, slow-movi- al- ng, LITTLE Eekl The Tent Leaks Besides , Theres Mice by Pat Cummings To the strains of 'Camp Granada," I open my first report written home from camp: Dear Mother Ididnt like it at first, but then I got used to it and now I like it a lot." the world in a nutWe may not like something at first, but once we get used to it, we probably end up Theres shell. liking it. Avocados, shorter skirts, expulsion from Paradise, a new job everything new takes a bit of "getting used is a new experience all its own. Not the camp of Batman and Robin, tomato soup and welded fenders, but the camp of sky blue waters and starry nights and five other people in a leaky tent. Camp is so unique that you cant really imagine the fun and wonder unless youve been there yourself. If I shut my eyes and think hard, I can remember Camp Widjiwagan, a far flung clusscreen ter of wooden-floore- d, sided cabins with canvas roofs. Each morning the can vas sides had to be rolled down, shaken to remove mice and spiders, and then rolled back up. The girls who were afraid of mice got the job of sweeping out the cabins. The main lodge was on a rise that looked out over a sparkling lake, and we ate our meals on a screened porch that ran the length of the building. The food, as I remember, was marvelous, especially breakfast. The majority of us ate like starving animals looking with disbelief at the few who picked at their food and who didnt like milk. By the end of two weeks, however, the fussy eaters were attacking breakfast with the same abandon and calling loudly for seconds. Theres nothing like camp to build an appetite. Most of all, though, I remember the feeling of wonderful freedom and the sense of Stars are everything new. brighter' at camp...r.friend-ship- s faster. ...fun is easier. Ones whole pattern of life is changed into a new and exciting one. full of the smell of potatoe salad expands upon the daring safari into the back yard, and is vastly more exciting than the backyard venture. The fountain of youth drowned in private water tanks, liberally laced with clorine is not the least of the thrills of camper-trail- er adventure. What happened to the cool, not icy, texture of watermelon chilled in a natural spring? Walls of insulated metal cocoons do much to correct the noisy clatter and whistle of squirrels andeffectivlydim to silence the distracting sounds of water rumbling down a creek bed and wind touching the treetops. As a child I was astounded by the miracle of Lilliputian strawberries growing wild, free to the finder. Picking a small cupful consumed hours mindless pleasure. Sugar jit content and contentment mads the project worthwile. Though considered unsocial, I still find time to climb sunny slopes in search of the mountain fruit, to sit quietly until a curious squirrel moves almost within reach, to wade barefoot in the glitter flecked sandy bottom of a brook, to pretend industry by fishing without bait for sheer joy of watching patterns in the wahome-ma- de ter. Refusing entrapment by card games and organized softball, stubbornly resisting cuisine, I persist in throwing ears of corn in the fire, hoping for an edible return on my home-on-the-ra- Horses Prance For Youth On July 15th BOX- - to. And camp er, not acknowledging truthfully the roughness experienced on such expeditions is the shift of household chores from urban to rural locale. A childhood authority, my mother, had as a family maxim: "a change is as good as rest." The change to which she referred didn't consist of shrinking a six room home into a convenient four by four area. Because a campground requires no sweeping and a campfire needs no scouring after use, rest comes in form of change from boring routine. I found I hadnt lived until I spent three rainy days in a trailer, occupied by four adults and two active children. We unlearned mountaineers can't return completely to nature. Living off the land would restrict us to a diet of fish, berries and doubtful mushrooms. But while bacon and coffee, cooked In 8 camper, are still bacon and coffee, the same in pure outdoor air are food for the Gods. Potatoes roasted in the coals, charred black outside and sometimes not baked through, make mockery of their unappetizing appearance when seasoned with butter and salt. BANANA ICE CREAM: herself. reasons. Its amazing how much you do without if you have to. For some wom-p- n, however, a part-tijob is the answer to getting enough good food into the house, warm clothes on the childrens backs and the payment of expensive doctor s bills. If youve worked before or have had previous professional, technical, or other specialized training, you have a reason for Very practical In this working part-tim- e. way, youre able to keep abreast of new technical developments and practices in your own field, whether it be in one of the sciences, teaching, nursing, social service, or other technical specialties. As an office worker, you might not wish to lose your skills, or to lose touch with the changing methodology of the office. In this way, or by taking refresher courses, you can 12 quarts) cups milk cups milk 1 Tbs. flour 34 c. sugar 14 tsp. salt in your own behalf as well as in the service of others. The Reasons 1 2 2 Jobs Part-Tim- e ed. 1 Tbs. pure Vanilla extract about Womans Guide To Millions of women already work in part-tijobs. Most of them work for others, but many are There are millions of others who talk about a part-tim- e Job; who wish for it but cant seem to achieve their desires. 1 new-fangl- TO WORK are at pt. whipping cream 12 to 2 quarts milk 3 oz. Vanilla (Imita.) or 1 inches of the lemons eggs, beaten can milk 14 cups whipping cream Fill In A Cramped Camper inches of the top. eggs, beaten cups of white Karo can Eagle Brand milk cans of milk 34 cup sugar Fill W ere T enting T onight sugar white Karo can crushed Pineapple VANILLA ICE CREAM to within 3 e SCHOOL OF THOUGHT PINEAPPLE SHERBERT (Makes 5 quarts) 5 ONE OF THESE homemakers will be crowned Queen of the forthcoming Parade of Homes-Homshow (see story on Valley Living Cover Page). They are, from left, Joyce Hartley. Lmda Ronneburg, Aloma Wegnall, Bunny Lewis and Sandy Maxwell. ager, predicts at least six hundred entries for the show. Mr. Sorensen said that die July 15th show would open at 7 P.M. Entry forms are now available at the county offices, 5177 South State Street. A charge of $1.00 is made per class to help pay for show costs. The Salt Lake County Fairgrounds will be the scene PEOPLE'S PUZZLE THE CLUES ARE IN THE PICTURES Solution in next weeks REVIEW pines, the darkness of night, the sad notes ofmourning doves. At night, flashlights and sweaters in hand, we would to the bonfire area and sing and watch the fire blaze against the dark sky. Ones best friend sat next, a forever" friend, and we sang happily and heartily with the enthusiasm that only happy children have. But for me, the most exciting times were early in the morning. Having always been an early riser, I would bounce out with the sun and rush headlong down to the lake, glorying in the fact that I was the only one awake in that wonderful, wonderful world . of green pines and silver dew on cobwebs in the grass. I would sit on the dock and enjoy the solitude, listening to waking sounds from farms across the lake, and thinking about a song we had learned, God has created a new world ....silver and green and gold." In the early morning of dew and sun, the world is always fresh and new. go tJ ,1 |