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Show Your Home and You ' ' By BeUy Callister EATS FOR THE PICNIC IjT ETS have a picnic. Who will '," make the sandwiches?" . That is . the question usually asked until by the time the picnic ! season Is well advanced the girl who has the reputation for being willing to make picnic sandwiches wishes that picnics bad never been Invented.. Sandwiches seem so easy If you don't have to make them. But why bother with sandwiches, anyway? any-way? To be sure they provide bread and butter and something else in a conventional form, but there are just as many disadvantages disadvan-tages about sandwiches as there are advantages. More and more experienced picnickers and campers are getting out of the sandwich habit. For one thing, butter SQjt enough to be spread without breaking the bread Is far less appetizing than butter that starts off to the picnic as hard as ,the refrigerator will make it, packed in a tightly closed Jar containing broken Ice. Most people like a little lettuce In their sandwiches, but it becomes hopelessly hope-lessly wilted if the sandwiches nre made an hour or more before they are to be eaten. So Instead of sandwiches let me suggest for your next picnic an adequate ad-equate supply of rolls, a jar of butter but-ter In Ice and the necessary spread of fillings carried separately. These may include a jar of mayonnaise, slices of bam, chicken or . other meat wrapped in oiled paper, well chilled whole tomatoes, small cans of potetd meats and well washed lettuce leaves wrapped In a damp cloth, then wrapped In waxed paper pa-per and carried in an air-tight tin with a little ice. & 1SSL MeCltire Newspaper Syndicate.) (WNU Service.) |