Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 22 November 1935 — Page 2
THEPOST-DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1935.
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When there’s a “free lunch” in the bai-rjyaiii twenty-four hours a day, it’a tirae for Ole Man Turk to watch hiu niick! Easy victuals — like easy money — may foretell the begimiiiti; of the end. The wise Turk eats in moderation* to keep his figure — and his head! Wise timers, too, eat in moderation— even on such feast days as Thanksgiving. Or, if the food is just too tempting to resist, they try to balance their diet. Since the alkaline reaction of fresh fruit juices tends to offset the ill effects of heavier foods, natural, unsweet* ened Hawaiian pineapple juice, served as an appetizer or used in a fruit salad or dessert dressing such as this below will aid marvelously in the digestion of that Thanksgiving dinner.
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Dessert or Salad Dressing Ys package cream cheese 1 cup whipping cream Vs teaspoon salt % teaspoon paprika 1 cup Hawaiian pineapple juice Few drops lemon juice Work cheese to a smooth paste, add gradually the cream, salt, paprika and pineapple juice. Just before serving, beat well and add the lemon juice. This is a delicious dressing for fruit salads. One tablespoon chopped walnuts may be added just before serving, if desired. And while we are talking about Thanksgiving dinner, here are a few additional suggestions that will tend to make your meal this year particularly delicio.is and decidedly “different”: Brazil Nut Stuffing 2 minced onions % cup melted butter 2 cups sliced Brazil nuts Salt and pepper Sage oy other herbs S cups soft bread crumbs Mince onions and cook two minutes in the butter. • Mix nuts and seasoning with bread crumbs and stir into butter. Cook two minutes more, stirring constantly. 1 If a moist stuffing is desired, add a Uttle water. This stuffing Is enough for a ten-pound turkey. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF PERRY TOWNSHIP Xotice is hereby given by the undersigned that an emergency exists for a meeting of the Township Advisory Board of Perry Township, Delaware County, Indiana to make appropriations of additional amounts of money for expenditures ‘for said Township during the current year of 1935, as follows: town t: Fund No. 22, Repair of Bldgs., and care of grounds—$150.00. Fund No. 24, School Furniture and Equipment—$30.00. Fund No. 25, School Supplies— $15.00. Fund No. 26, Janitor Supplies— $25.00. Audi that a meeting of the Township Advisory Board of said Township and the trustee thereof, will be held at the office of said Township Trustee at his residence in the said Township of Perry, on the 2nd day of December, 1935 at 7:30 p. m. of said day, at which time said appropriations will be. considered. R. N. Carmichael, TRUSTEE OF PERRY Township. (Nov. 22 & 29)
Dy BETTY BARCLAY Ml , J Turkey Ring la cup sliced mushrooms or stems 2 tablespoons butter 1% cups chopped turkey 1% cups chopped veal % cup diced celery 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 3 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca % teaspoon salt Dash of pepper % teaspoon onion juice Y cup stock or milk Creamed mushrooms Sautd mushroom stems in butter; combine with remaining ingredients in order given. Turn into wellgreased ring mold and bake in hot oven (450° F.) 30 minutes, or until done. Let- stand 2 minutes before removing from mold. Unmold and fill center with creamed mushrooms. Or (fill center) with any desired creamed vegetable or combination of vegetables. Serves 6. Creamed Mushrooms 2 1 /a cups quartered mushroom capa tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour cup stock - !4 cup top milk 14 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper 2 teaspoons Sherry Prepare mushroom caps and sautd in butter until tender. Add flour and stir until smooth; add gradually stock and milk and cook until thickened, stirring constantly. Season with salt and pepper. Just before serving, add Sherry and turn into center of turkey ring. Makes about 2 cups.
BETTY BARCLAY
Brazil nuts seldom lie around Too tempting they, by far. You nibble at them till they’ve gone From nut dish, bag or jar. But when perchance you have d few Or a fresh purchase make, Don’t cat them raw, delight your guests With this delicious cake. Sandwiches, cake and coffee have always been the principal foods for a light lunch. No doubt they will continue to be served for generations to come. However, women who have reputations as hostesses vary their sandwiches and cake so that their luncheons are looked upon as “decidedly different.” Nut cakes will be very popular this season. Those made with Brazil nuts certainly will be “different.” The following cake is entitled to “DECIDEDLY different.” Brazil Nut Cake 2 cups ground Brazil nuts 6 eggs V*. teaspoon salt I cup sugar Grind the nuts (iy a cups or shelled nuts or about y 2 pound) and mix with sugar and salt. Beat egg yolks until foamy and beat in sugar and nut mixture. Beat thoroughly and fold ,in beaten egg whites. Pour into 3 greased 8-ineh layer cake pans. Bake in a moderate oven, 350 degrees F., for 30 minutes. Or pour mixture into a greased SVz inch tube pan or spring form and bake in a slow oven, 325 degrees F„ for 20 minutes; raise the temperature to 375 degrees F. for 10 minutes and then decrease heat, to 325 degrees F for mtantMi.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS QF
revenue of the City of Muncie, Indiana, actually' levied in the year 1935, ami to be collected in the year 1936, • and now in the course of collection for the year 1936, for the general fund of the department of public parks of the City of Muncie, Indiana, and ordering and directing the execution of notes of time warrants of said city, evidencing the v same and designating the manner in which the said notes or lime warrants should be sold, and providing for
bidders thereon.
Taxpayers appearing shall have the right to be heard thereon. After the special apyiopriations have been decided upon by the Council, ten or more taxpayers, feeling themselves aggrieved by such appropriations may appeal tc the state board of lax commissioners for further and final action thereon by filing n petition therefore with the county auditor not later than ten (10) days from the
the final action of salcV
HEARING ON APPROPRIATIONS I ciate oi - , . ,
certain ordinances by common council of the City of Muncie, Indiana, Delaware County, providing for special appropriation of funds. Notice is hereby given taxpayers of the City of Muncie, Indiana, ] Delaware County, that a public hearing will be in the City Half Muncie, Indiana, on tiie 2nd day of December. 1935, at 7:30 o'clock p. m. on ordinance making special and additional appropriations. An ordinance authorizing the borrowing of the sum of $70,-008 as a temporary loan in anticipation of current revenue of the City of Muncie, Indiana, actually levied in the year 193o, and to be collected in the year 1936, and now in the course of the collection for the year 1936 for the general fu*w
of said
Will
hearing in this city. COMMON COUNCIL, of City of Muncie, Indiana. Linton Ridgeway, City Clerk. Nov. 22 & 29.
NOTICE To the Taxpayers of Center Township, Delaware County, Indiana: Y'ou are hereby notified that the Advisory Board of Center Township, Delaware County, Indiana, on the 5th day ol December, 1935, at 7:30 o’clock p. m., will hold a public hearing at the office of the Trustee of said Township in the Community Building, 1128 South Mulberry Street, in the city of Muncie, Indiana, to ■ determine
whether or not an extraordinary
•ity, and ordering and dn l emergency exists for the foilow-
reeting the execution of the notes ing additional appropriations in of said city evidencing the same addition to the sums heretofore designating the manner in which said notes should he sold, and pro-
viding for bidders thereon. An ordinance authorizing the
borrowing of $10,000 as a temporary loan in anticipation of current
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‘CHEF’S BRAIN” OF ELECRIC RANGE
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QOOR /AND mi
CHILD
'AND TliE SCHOOL
By Dr. ALLEN G. IRELAND
Director, Physical and Health Education Wow jersey State Department of Public Instrneiton
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UNUSUAL FACTS REVEALED
-by “Movie Spotlight”
Richard Cromwell nwer umtfs 1t) sec, smdL, or taste mother fish! OMfincj the fiimnq of wharf sam In UnJuunvn VJoiiuui" Duck was swamped In fish. P- Sr }fe stood aces hhfh with
stray cats!
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Manao Marsh mcmmtmd her qrtcdjLst thrill whin she stood on the top of a hazardous qiacier in fmtzertmd. C 1933 - Columbia FeatureS«rvu ».
At thi Cdlurnlm Studios when they say qet that punk! no Insults are in (ndirbitjustacallfor. . tfa assistant' cammman.
appropriated for the current year. Special School Fund Budget Item 22 Repair of buildings and care of grounds $ 100.00 Special School Fund Budget Item 25 School Supplies 500.60 Special School Fund Budget Item 33 Transportation, children 1500.00 Tuition Fund Budget Item 36 Pay of teacher^. 500.00 GARL E. RUSS, Trustee, Center Township, Delaware County, Indiana. Brady & Watson, Attorneys. Nov. 22 & 29. WENT JOHNNY ONE BETTER A lady was entertaining a visitor who possessed an abnormally large nose. Time and again she saw her small son eying it curiously. Time and again she cut short some
innocent juvenile comment on the proturberance with a frantic, w-ell-judged “Sh-h-h, Johnny, little boys should be seen and not heard!” Finally, to her intense relief, the nurse appeared and ushered the child into the nursery.. With a happy smile, the hostess turned to her guest and said: “And now, Mr. X, will you have one or two lumps with your nose?” ? o THE LORD UNDERSTOOD A man had a wife who was of a very scraggy order, in spite of the fact that she ate enough for three harvest hands. Not long ago she “up and died on him,” as he expressed it. TRUE—BUT WHERE
A happy home is where your wife asks you how to pronounce a difficult French word, and then accepts your interpretation of it without question.
BY FRANCES WEEDMAN Direeter Hoinoint Electric Cookery Institute
It may be a tiny tot, it may be the father of the tiny tot, or it may be both that your cooking efforts cater toe but, whoever it is, they will like custard. Plain or fancy, don’t you find yourself rustling up a custard every few days so as to please some well-guided appetite? Of course you do, and perhaps, sometimes, it’s only pure devotion that makes you bring out the old
dinner while you’re gone, to making cakes in an unpreheated oven now adds “double boilerless” cookery to its list of cooking miracles. And that feat is accomplished by the heat-controlled surface units of the miracle electric range. For instance, when you turn the control switch ta Low you get low heat, and very low heat at that; you get heat which is measured, heat
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The oven timer-clock of the modern electric range releases time to the busy housewife by automatically turning the oven “on” and “off”, thus eliminating ail need of watching and waiting while the food is cooking. Above, a modern housewife is setting the timer-clock before leaving her home for an afternoon’s excursion free of all worries about the evening meaL Modern homemakers have dubbed the timer-clock their "chef’s brain” because of its never-failing dependability and its time-releasing and labor-saving benefits.
At Bat When parents want something really serious and important to ponder, think of a boy’s baseball game. There’s no subject more profound. The truth of that you will have to discover for yourself by analysis. I gan’t do it in the space at my disposal. Nor can you prove it, if you’re an adult, by playing the game. Adults play for | fun. They re-create. Boys work at it. To them baseball is serious. There’s all the difference in the ' world. Look int > the face and the eye? of a boy standing at home plate when the bases are filled and a hi. means winning the game. Try to ' imagine what’s going on inside. What a situation! Pitcher against : batter. Skill against skill. Wits against wits. No fooling there. But a real case of “delivering the goods.” He’s got I to “come through,” It’s no time to say “Gee, fellers, ^ gotta go home, my mother wants m*.,” No quitting under fire. No alibis. No faltering. Just nerve, concentration, giving every bit of one’s seif. Such are the times when character is torn and tried. If he tries, that is ail the boys ask. He may not hit the ball, but if he did his best, he passed the test. He’s got the “stuff.” He’s good material for shaping into a man. Are bare feet dangerous? Dr, ] Ireland will discuss some facts and fctlLacicft about them in hie next wtidor
Delicious custards which children like may now be made with little trouble on a modern electric range.
double boiler and heat it up to set the stage properly for the making of the custard- Yes, making a soft custard is usually a bit o’ bother, but it is a health and appetite promoter; it is indispensable deli-cacy-one which should be served in every home! Taking the “Cuss” Out of Custard Here’s good news, then, for the custard makers of America—at last here’s a way to take the “cuss” out of custard making! And three cheers for the new automatic electric range which really turns the trick. Perhaps you know, or perhaps you’ve guessed that it’s the double boiler that’s been Completely given the “go-by.” Now you can make custard in a saucepan right over the surface heat unit of the electric range without any worries at all, and without much stirring, too. It’s a real cooking miracle which you can see and carry out right in your very own kitchen! Yes, the same-electric range which doe* most everything- from cooking-
which is constantly maintained, heat which is consuming a minimum amount of electrical heat units. Therefore, the old double boiler method of regulating the heat when making a custard is no longer necessary. Since custards are so good for children and grownups, too, since custards are so well liked by almost everyone, since custards maynow be made with so little trouble the new electric range way. you’ll want to treasure this miracle recipe.
Soft Custard
2 eggs 2 cups milk
CROSS-STREET MANNERS THE LITTLE ENGINEER
A QUICK getaway is very useful ** to a burglar or hold-up man. But to a motorist it seldom means a darn thing except possible grief. The seconds we save by taking desperate chances are practically never put to good purpose. Say there are ten corners- on a main street equipped with traffic lights. Each of those corners has a cross street. And in two or three of those cross streets there are drivers who are sick with a mental i malady known as “light beating.” f These poor creatures see the lights | change from green, to red but they figure they can sneak ahead before the main traffic gets fully under* ’ way. They step on the gas and .dart across the oncoming line of cars at great speed. If in that line ithere i^ one habitual “quick geta;wayer” he dashes out in front of the oncoming “light beater” and by dying a horrible death ties up traffic and makes a lot of peopie l^te for their engagements. You may get homted at a little by impatient drivers behind you but if you never start to cross a traffic light until the green iz on full and you are sure no maniac is "hellbelting” out of the cross street you may live to dandle your great grandchildren on your knee and let them play with your long white beard. MADE ALLOWANCES
A small niece, three and a half years old, often adds au originality to her evening prayer. After a bedtime story, giving a moral on perservance, she knelt down to say her usual prayer. “God bless Mummy, Daddy, ect. Please make Warda a good girlie, and if at first you don’t succeed, please try again.”
Hamburgers 6 for a Quarter 15c Plate Lunch 25c Dinner JACK’S LUNCH 318 East Main
BOB MAYNARD
^ Texaco TEXACO SERVICE STATION
N. Walnut St. at Bridge Let Us Prepare Your Car NOW For Winter
Williams Plumbing Continuous for 20 Years 721 E, 7th Phone 1155
SPECIAL This ad, sent with your laundry, takes 15% from your bill at the DAY & NIGHT LAUNDRY 213 E. North Phone 4540 10% Off for Cash and. Carry ALL LAUNDRY INDIVIDUALLY WASHED 'Guaranteed Service
5c DRINK 5c Pepsi Cola Double Size 5c 5c
: N. & N. RADIO SERVICE 503 E. Willard St. Phone 1111
Call 298 S. B. DENNEY BUS CD. For Special Trips to Any Place At Any Time 824 N. Walnut
3 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon vanilla
Mix eggs, milk, sugar, hftd vamlla thoroughly together. Pour into a saucepan. Place on surface unit. Cook on Low heat until custard thickens, stirring occasionally, during the cooking. If preiom-d, milk may first be scalded cm Low heat and the eggs gradually bettsn into the hot milk..
GLENN’S Sheet Metal Shop See us for Skylights, Metal Ceilings, Slate, Tile and Metal Roofing, Blowpipe and Job Work. Gutter and Leader Pipe. Rear 213 E. Main St. Phone 310
Get Your Gas and Oil At the In-and-Out Service Station Madison and Willard Muncie, Ind. or the SUNNY SERVICE STATION 18th and Madison
C. F. MILLER’S Groceries And Meats We Deliver 900 Wheeling—Phone 1895
Yellow Grill Pete Barlow, Mgr. For the Best in Lunch Beer Liquers 501 S. Mulberry
For a Real Glass of BEER ON TAP OR BOTTLE Go to Hughey Haugheys’ Corner of Willard St. Hoyt Ave. Tasty Sandwiches also Served. Haughey keeps his beer always in first class condition.
BLUE BEACON COAL FUEL ECONOMY Is Your Guide to 1. MORE HEAT . . Burns Completely. 2. HOLDS FIRE . . for a longer period. 3. LESS ASH . . 96% of Blue Beacon Coal provides heat. 4. NO CLINKERS . . to jam the grates. 5. FREE from SLATE . . Nothing but coai . . 6. REMARKABLY EFFICIENT HEATING . . Clear, penetrating heat reduces your coal bill. A BETTER COAL More Heat Units per Dollar Muncie Lbr. Co. Muncie, Ind. 316 Ohio Ave. Telephone 145-146
See Them Today 1936 PLYMOUTH and DeSOTA Models Now On Display ORR MOTOR SALES
218 North Walnut Street h ‘MAKES YOU SMART—KEEPS YOU THRIFTY”
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Hydraulic Brakes
All-Steel Body
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Carthage
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Boii’i Take a Chance ON THIN SLICK TIRES! Remember that brakes stop only your wheels —it takes Tires That Grip to stop your car. For your own and your family’s safety, buy new Goodyears now—The new cost is so small it’s not worth thinking about and you may save a lifetime of vain regret. THE QUALITY TIRE WITHIN REACH OF ALL! Stepped up in safety—in appear-ance-in mileage—stepped down in price! The. new Goodyear Pathfinders are even better than 17,000,000 former Pathfinders which made. a reputation foxthrift. Priced as low as THE WORLD’S MOST POPULAR TIRE. Year in and year out, on the basis of tested quality, the public continues to buy more Goodyeai- All-Weather than any other tire. Greater mileage, greater traction, greater safety and low prices all contribute to -still greater value in the 1933 edition! Priced as # g low as And up
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! Tftv JBity SujppJLy Haase oyjndi-ajta_\
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; Store PARK GILLESPIE, Service Station 309 %. Mgtin St. Manager 118 S. Jefferson St. Phone 730
