Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 182, Decatur, Adams County, 2 August 1935 — Page 6
Page Six
COOL FOODS THAT CHALLENGE SUMMER APPETITES
In order to tempt jaded summer , appetites your meals must be composed of cooling foods — not necessarily cold foods but those dishes that seem to promise refreshment and relief from sweltering heat. Os course you will serve plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables and only those meats that are not over-rich in fat. Here are some dishes that should quicken the palate to enjoymentt Fruit Punch 1% cups sugar 3 cups water 2 cups orange juice 2-3 cup lemon juice 2i cups grape juice 6 cups iced water Boil the sugar and water 10 minutes. Cool. Add the rest of the ingredients and chill. Serve in glasses one-third filled with chopped ice. Cantaloupe Fruit Cup 1 cup cantaloupe cubes 1 cup diced pineapple % cup pineapple juice 1 tablespoon lemon juice, garnish with a few preserved' green grapes Serve very cold In cocktail glasses. Melon Halvas with Raspberries Thoroughly chill small honey dew melons, or cantaloupes and raspberries. Just before serving cut melons in halves and carefully remove centers. Fill with raspberries and sprinkle lightly with powdered sugar. Garnish with mint leaves. The fruit must be very cold when served. Ham Mousse 2 tablespoons gelatine 4 tablespoons cold water 2 cups cold stock 2 cups cooked ham. finely ground 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons prepared horseradish 4 teaspoons Worcestshire sauce Dash cayenne Dash ground cloves % cup mayonnaise 1 cup whipping cream Soften the gelatine in cold water and dissolve over boiling water. Add the stock, ham and all the seasonings except the mayonnaise. Fold the mayonnaise into thel
CORN FLAKES 19c BRAN FLAKES, Country Club 2—15 oz. Pkgs 23c ____ CAKE - Large Angel ,? Ia „ s 2 n Ja P rs .’^ ,,a T Food. Each .. oVC 9175 c p '”‘6sc ,/i Gal -99c Country Club Bread, oven fresh 16 oz.loaf 6c —24 oz 9c CANESGAR — Jack Frost 25 lb. cloth bag $1.37 MILK - Country Club with Vitamin D 3 sm. cans 10c Tall Can. 6c RED KIDNEY BEANS - Serve Urite Brand, 3 cans 25c CHUCK ROAST, Choice Cuts _ 14V& lb RING BOLOGNA, Quality Made 15c lb BOILING BEEF, Soft Rib 10c lb JEWEL COFFEE 17c LIDS — MASON Pure Zinc Porcelain Lined, dozen 20c FO TT "O Avondale — General JL.J \z vJ Purpose 24 lb. Sack f O FRUITS AND VEGETABLES JH Oranges , “7”“., 23c peaches 4 it 25c lemons » 35c CELERY 3 for 10c 1 Sweet Potatoes • New Crop Indiana Grown, 5 lbs 25c |o POTATOES 15 Z 2?,c
I whipped cream. Fold the mayonnaise mixture into the ham mixture. Turn into a mold. Chill until firm. Unmold. Garnish with carrot cups filled with vegetable salad and sprigs of water cress. Pottage Steak Pound well thin slices of top round beef. Dip in flour and brown in butter. Boil in water w ith bay leaves 1 hour. Make gravy of butter, flour, juice. Broil meat nad gravy together 5 mln- ' utes. Crisp Bacon with Pineapple 12 slices bacon 6 slices pineapple Salt and pepper Flour Fry the strips of bacon, pouring off the fat as it forms so that the bacon will be dry and crisp; re- [ move to hot platter and keep hot. ■ Sprinkle the flour with salt and I pepper. Slip the six slices of 1 canned pineapple into the flour to i cover both sides. Brown in hot bacon fat. o Railroad Pension Bill Is Approved Washinton, Aug. 2 —(UP) — The ' house interstate commerce committee today favorably reported the Grosser railroad (pension bill. It added an amendment sought by President Roosevelt to appoint a special investigation committee to study permanent legislation. The Grosser bill is aimed to supplant the railroad retirement act which was outlawed by the supreme court. The retirement act provided that railroads must contribute four <per cent of their total payrolls and employes two per cent of their wages to the retirement fund. o Law School Dean Qualifies Eugene, Ore. —<U.R> —After being dean of the University of Oregon’s strong law sqjiool for many years, Wayne L. Morse decided he should be admitted to the Oregon bar. He took an oral examination and passed. Dean Morse had never I been a member of any state bar.
YOUTH ADMITS KILLING TWO I ■■— Young Mountaineer Confesses Slaying Grandmother And Uncle I - Marllngton, W. Va., Aug. 2—(UP) —Clyde Sharp, 21-year-old mountaineer, was in Pocahontas county Jail today charged with the brutal murder of hie grandmother and a ftital asault on an uncle. Authorities intended to place before him for signature the 18-page confession made last night to prosecuting attorney Stanley Bosworth of Randolph county after state police climaxed a 48-hour search of densely wooded mountains with his capture. ’ Clyde's grandmother, Mrs. Jennie Sharp, 73, was found dead in her fitrm home near here Wednesday, her head battered. On the floor above, her son, William, 41, was found sprawled unconscious adross his blood-stained bed. His head, too, had been bludgeoned. Clyde told the prosecutor he visited his grandmother’s farm late Monday and after performing a few chores with his brother. Raywood. 10, a 12-inch square-head-ed bolt and returned to the house. Clyde retired with his uncle. Raywood with the matronly grandmother. Partially disrobed, Clyde went down to the porch, retrieved the bolt and returned to the bed room to find the uncle sitting on the bed. Without a word, the youth struck Sharp twice with the bolt. He calmly rifled his uncle’s pockets of sls, secured a saddle and ' went downstairs. Mrs. Sharp was 1 standing in a doorway. Clyde struck her with the bolt. His grandmother dropped to the floor. Joined by his brother, the youth saddled a horse, took Raywood up behind him and the pair cantered of in the direction of Elkins. The bodies were discovered 48 hours later by Patrick VandevenI ter. neighbor, who went to the farm ■ to pay Mrs. Sharp for some cattle. Sharp was still living but he died
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. AUGUST 2J93?.
Goodrich on Way to Prison k 1 ■ .KT, 91 / IM r A 1 .... Merton Goodrich On the way to life imprisonment in the Marquette, Mich., penitentiary, Merton Ward Goodrich, confessed slayer of 11-year-old Lillian Gallaher, Detroit schoolgirl, poses for cameramen. Goodrich was given the maximum sentence under the Michigan law for the crime.
early yeeterday in a Marlington has-, ipital. Clyde’e only repentance was his terse statement to state troopers who found the pair in an abandon-1 ed shanty in a (brickyard. "I didn’t mean to kill them.”. Clyde was quoted as saying. "I only wanted their money." o Beer Licenses Received Here Indianapolis. Aug. 2 —(UP) — A' total of 112 liquor-beer, wine and (beer extension permits were issued today by the state alcoholic bever-; ages commission. They included:
Re grocery I B. STULTS Free Delivery Vheat .... 10c n 10c sties, 1g... 10c SF in — W 10c IES .... 12 1 2 cy Toilet Tissue W 1 Wheat. 12' 2 cg| 4 Wheat 10c fl B ‘gß° lls £■ ikes 10c I ,/C ackers, pkg i9c uts, box. 17*/ 2 c IS OMS 29cL 22c i 25c 4 — Bk Peck || TOMATO JUICE OKpHHK Rolls, doz 5c H 2 Ik- 19c bottles ..£Ov r_._ Fly Rolls 12c Ii SUNBRITE CLEANSER, 3 Big Cans 13c H SEEDLESS RAISINS, celophane pkg., 2 tbs 19c I lb. 18C H PERFECT LYE, High Test, 3 cans 25c I Marshmal- 1 r U PERFECT GELATINE DESSERT — 3 pkgs. ... 14c I lows, tb. .. IDC I U AMMONIA — large 19c bottle, only 15c ITE A , -| A 3 BAKING POWDER — large 25c can 19e I Jf 4 , pkg ’ A ’' L I fl FLY SPRAY — Kills Them! — large 29c 1 Buns doz j £)(» « U COCOANUT — Fresh Shredded — '/< 1b 10c g Rolled Oats Qr p fl H PASTRY FLOUR — Best Quality — Bag 72c Y 5 tb. bag. . AitT fl H PORK AND BEANS—VanCamps — can 5c J Apple PEACHES — 2 large cans — No. 2 «/ 2 33c ■ jar "~ B | WHITE PEERLESS Kh« or? I ■ NAPTHA FLOUR «'or Z/C I H Toilet Soap A , | 1| SOAP — F ° r Bread or Pastry 2 for yC I n’Qr* Plenty Fregh Fruit* j nikfcta 4»CBag w OQ “Decatur’s Largest Tom»toe*. I _ S mOC Selling Flour.”
UIDDm UJERTHER (HEALS
I Adams County, Preble, W. H Freitag, beer. Bernard Clark, operating the j Green Kettle, received a beer license Thursday. o Abandon All Hope For Missing Flier Long Beach, Calif. Aug. 2—(UP) ' —Airmen today abandoned hope ol j finding lieutenant Arthur E. Skaer i army reserve Her, missing two days I j in a mystery pursuit plane reported i to be the fastest in the world. Apparently the speedy ship met ‘ with some accident and plunged in-
tot ■’ ocean surface were the only clews I to the fate of Skaer. ' Couples Flow"to Altar Wellsburg. W. Va., —U • ar ‘ riage went on the market in a big way here when 57 couples obtained licenses in one day. It wan the third highest number Issued within a- - period in the hiatory of Brooke . county. — Jail Dungeon Revived Joplin, Mo.. -(UP)- The dun-, geon cell at police headquarters is back in use as a cell for cronfc nebriatee. Police Chief Harry J. Meade thouhgt "some of the regularpolice court customers” should have more severe pnnishment than confinement in lighted “TOOK ALL KINDS OF PILLS, THEN CEREAL BROUGHT RELIEF” Constipation, Due to Insufficient “Bulk,” Relieved by Kellogg’s All-Bran A fine letter from Mrs. Snyder: “I have had trouble* with my bowels for years, taking all kinds of pills and drugs, with no relief. “One year ago, I saw Kellogg’s All-Bran and bought a package. I have good movements every day. I I am 73 years old. I am telling my i friends what bran has done for me .”_Mrs. Sallie Snyder, 918 N. Craft Ave., Hollywood, Cal. ★Constipation due to insufficient I- “bulk" in meals. Research show’s that Kellogg s ALL-BRAN furnishes “bulk” to e exercise the intestines ALL-BRAN , r also supplies vitamin B and iron. Two tablespoonfuls daily are usually sufficient to correct common constipation. With each meal, in serious cases. .The “bulk” in All-Bran resists digestion better than the “bulk” in T leafy vegetables. How much better to use this food in place of patent ') medicines. ' >f At all grocers in >r the red - and-green ’s package. Made by j I Kellogg in Battle Creek. '\SlKXj' it 1- ”“~~~~~~~ ~
Hall Mows Hay Crop I Center Point. la.-<U,R>-A farmFrank Allbones, didn’t need a mower for his
('SCHMITTS | SI’FX IAI THIS WEEK-END I Large Spring Chickens to fry 27c lb B BAKED HAM with cloves 9 and brown sugar. H All cuts Home Dressed Native Lamb. hB fl GOOD YOUNG FAT STEER BEEF ■ THIS WEEK-END. 9 Specials for Saturday! RIB-PLATE BOILING BEEE 10c II) I FRESH HAMBERGER,... 2 lbs. 25c B GOOD MEATY BEEF ROAST 15c lb B Fresh Hog or Calf Brains, 2 lbs. 25c B Meat Loaf (Veal ’ Pork & Bee,) 22c lb B Good Round Swiss Steak 22c lb B I Special Short Steaks 25c lb 9 Lfl Veal Steak or Chops 25c lb B Smoked .Towels (home cured) 22c lb B Hockless Picnic Hams 22c lb B Quick Naptha Soap. 5 bars 10c B Rival Dog Food, can 10c ■ Whole Tomatoes, 2 cans 25c ■ Large Bottle Catsup, 2 for 25c ■ SPECIAL! Lime Rickey or Ginger I Ale, quart bottles 10c ea. 9 Miller's Bread .... 9c loaf, 3 for 25c g Farmers Attention! I Make our store headquarters for your Thresh- ■ ing Order. Special prices on good meaty beef ■ roast or beef boil, meat loaf, veal steak or veal S roast. We also have a complete line of good cold ■ meats and cheese. Come in and get our prices ■ and suggestions. We know how much von need. ■ Try us first, we know you will be satisfied. | Our Meats are all Native Home-dressed. fl Free Prompt and Sanitary Delivery fl Phones 95 or 96. | I When Attending the Fair Visit Vs. 1 HITE’S GROCERY THE Bit; SOUTH END STORK I A full line of Cold Drinks. Bananas, Melons. Granites. I Peaches, Cold Meats and Groceries. Thirty-live years| of dependable service. Phones 31 and 201. I Sweet Potatoes 5c Large Georgia 1 HOMINY Xnl Melons, each .. ttc/v can 5 bxs. Snow’ Boy 1 D Pork & Beans Xpl Washing Powder LvU van I Macaroni, 2 lb. IQ n King Bee Kraut Xn l pkg. Elbow .... Lift can V | Raspberries x wN " p,rt 25c (Dozen cans .... $1.19) King Bee Tomato f* Vegetable Soup Soup, can OU can Tomatoes, 1A Large cans 1 ()/' Little Elf. can.. JLvC Pork and Beans Avv Tomato Juice, 1 Ar» Peas and Carrots large can I vt can Little Elf Corn Flakes x Sc (3 for 25c) Fancy Peaches QF 2 lb. jar 25C large cans, 2 forO DC Preserves ° r "’Sc Red Beans r Fresh Fig Bars 1 As can t/C a pound BANANAS xr
did the work for him. \ hailstorm cut II mris ( ,f .‘ bo Hliek that all 1 h a ,| , |(| ( rake it up and load i ■ » said. B
