Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 20 September 1935 — Page 6

Page Six

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TCE BOX DELICACIES

Ice Box Cookies 1 c shortening! 1 e sugar, white. 1 c sugar, brown. 1 t soda. 1 c raisins, ground. 3 eggs. 1 t cinnamon. 1 c nuts, ground or chopped. 5 c flour. Pinch salt. Cream shortening and sugar well. Add beaten eggs, nuts and spices. Dissolve soda in small a- i mount of warm water, add raisins. j Mix in flour and knead well. Form in, long rolls and place in coldest place in refrigerator, allowing it to , remain until firm or chilled through. Slice thin and bake in oven from 10 to 12 minutes at temperature of 325 degrees. Ice Box Pudding 1 dozen macaroons. 1 dozen lady fingers *4 dozen cocoanut kisses. 1 c pecans. 1 c sweet milk. •3 eggs. 3 T water. 3 T sugar. 1 pint cream. 2 cakes sweet chocolate. IT vanilla “I SUFFERED WITH CONSTIPATION* FOR SIXTEEN YEARS” Then All-Bran Brought I Relief to Mr. McNeil We quote from his unsolicited letter: “I suffered with constipation* for 16years. Finally,! started using Kellogg’s All-Bran in con-, nection with other nourishing foods. “I consider myself a well man at this time, not having had an attack for over two years. I am sure AllBran helped wonderfully by overcoming constipation*.”—Mr. L. M. McNeil, Lockwood, W. Va. ★Constipation due to insufficient “bulk" in meals. Tests show Kellogg's All-Bran provides gentle “bulk” to aid elimination. Also vitamin B and iron. ! This “bulk” resists digestion better than the fiber in fruits and vegetables, so it is more effective. Isn’t this food safer than risking patent medicines? Two tablespoonfuls of All-Bran daily are usually I sufficient. If seriously constipated, use with each meal. See your doctor, if you do not get relief. Use as. a cereal with milk or cream, or in cook- - ing. Sold by all jjggyjggjjL grocers. Made by LgQQQSSJ Kellogg in Battle (■KhSW/ Creek. X“£)ci£/ t

HITE’S GROCERY Phones 31 and 201 Another Truck Load Fancy Yellow Onions, 10 lb. bagl9c BROOMS vZ 29c CRANBERRIES- 15c SOAP Q r^ p,, “..25c ORANGES 19c SNOW BOY Boxes .... 10c pAHIi NEW PACK 1 f)p luxsoap -20 c c ;: ldenßrown e — Picture Free - dUbHll 10 P°unds SW. POTATOES 25c BANANAS pS"- 5c PRUNES, New Crop Kp RAISINS, New Crop 95c pound Seedless, 3 lbs ” n sh Fig IQ c linger ]Ap New Peas |Q C lb. .. e n?ns lb. . can ROLLED OATS Bl ” k BAKED BEANS package Raspberries • , cans ■f 2 cans lUC (Tumbler Free) £»tJV Pork and Beans, Red Beans, Kraut, Hominy, £JC Tomato Soup, Vegetable Soup, can

Break cake into small pieces, soak in 1 cup sweet milk, cream egg yolk, water and sugar. Stir over hot water until slightly thickened. Add melted chocolate. Coo), add vanilla and stiffly beaten egg whites and whipped cream. Hiur mixture over crumbs, add pecans and mix well. Put into long shallow pans and place in refrigerator I and when set may be cut Into 1 squares und served with or without whipped cream. Garnish with i cherries. Fresh Peach 2 c crushed peaches. 2 c sugar. 1 quart thin cream Crush peaches, add sugar and let stand until sugar has dissolved. Stir in cream gradually, chill and I freeze. Any fresh fruit may be used, strawberries, cantaloupe, ap--1 ricots, or bananas. — HOT BREADS EASY TO MAKE Women are afraid to try their j hand at breads and biscuits when they will approach a difficult cake ,l>r meat recipe with perfect aplomb. If you’ll try some of these recipes you’ll find that, after all, bread and biscuit making can be a simple art. Whole Wheat Muffins 1 egg. 1 cup milk. 1 tablespoon butter. 1 to cups whole wheat flour. U teaspoon salt. 1 teaspoon baking powder. If sour silk is used add teaspoon soda. Mix all dry ingredients and mix all liquids. Combine and bake. One tablespoon sugar may be added if desired. Date Bread 1 tablespoon butter 1 cup sugar. 1 egg. Vicup nuts. IVA cup cup or a little more flour. U level teaspoon soda. 1 cup dates. 1 cup boiling water. Dissolve level teaspoon soda in cup of boiling water. Pour over > cup of diced dates. The creamed butter and sugar are then adde.. Add some of the flour, then the beaten, the salt aud the bal--1 acct ofathe flour with nuts. Bake in moderate oven. Prune Nut Bread 2 tablespoons shortening. \ cup brown sugar. 1 egg well beaten. 1 cup boiling water. 2 cups chopped prunes. 1 cup chopped nuts 1% cups flour. 1 teaspoon soda. Vi teaspoon salt. Sprinkle prunes with soda then pour boiling water over them and let stand till cold. Cream shorten-, ing and sugar, add egg, then prune mixture. Add flour, salt and nuts.: [Bake in slow oven until done. This|

' bread is rich enouglTto serve it place of cake. Quick Rolls '• 1 yeast cake, Vi cup sweet milk 11 scalded and cooled, Vi cup luke 1 warm water, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 scant teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons ’ lard, 3Vi cups flour. Dissolve s yeast in warm liquid, add sugar ! and half of flour and lard, beat * well, add salt and rest of flour. Roll out and cut with biscuit cutr ter. Place in greased baking pan 1 slight distance apart. Let rise 2 hours and bake in hot oven ten 1 minutes. Virginia Spoon Bread 1 cup corn meal. 1 cup buttermilk. 1 egg. 1 cup cold water. I Vi teaspoon soda V» teaspoon salt. I 1 teaspoon sugar. ' 1 teaspoon baking powder. 1 cup boiling water. Mix cornmeal and buttermilk to [which the soda has been added. Add egg. then pour the cold water into it. Next add the salt, sugar and baking powder. Last add the boiling water. Put teaspoon of shortening into small baking pan and heat. When melted pour in mixture and bake in hot oven until the top is dark brown. Egg Dumplings 3 cups flour. 1 scant teaspoon salt. 5 teaspoons baking powder, 4 tablespoons shortening. 1 egg, milk Mix and sift flour, salt and baking powder. Rub in shortening with two knives. Beat egg with 1-3 cup milk and cut into dry ingredients. adding more milk if necessary to make a soft dough. Put on a lightly floured molding board and roil into a sheet about one inch thick. Cut in squares and drop in boiling stew. New are the strips of adhesive material, to put around the edge of pies w>jile baking and prevent juice running over. o THREE JUDGES CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE tution and laws of Indiana and the . constitution of the United States. Military authorities have made [more than 100 arrests and searchhouses without proper warrants, Cox charged in the injunction petition. The suit also charges that “various individuals connected with the military authorities refused to release arrested persons unless they promised to return to the Columbian plant as employes.” Right of workers to picket the Columbian plant and to strike also , was abrogated, the suit charged, ! and strikers were “coerced, threatjened and intimidated by the tniliI tary authorities." The legal action was initiated, by [ the socialist and labor defense league, which has been prominent in the attack of martial law in the j ,area.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1935.

CONFESSES TO 1 KILLING FATHER s r Man Says He Killed Fatht er After Mother Was Threatened k. Orange, New Jersey, Sept. 20 — “ A polite and calm young man asked 1 policeman John Harrington if ihe might have a word with him. “Why, certainly,” Harrington replied. "Well. I Just ehot my father dead. [ He's lying in a gutter over on Henry | street.” Harrington walked with hie informant. who gave his name as Rocco Marano and his age as 30. to the [ designated gutter. There was the body of Ciconio Marano. 64. 1 “You see,” said Rocco, “he told my mother he was going to cut off her head and eat her heart. I believed him.” "Why should you believe such a thing?" "Because he was turned out of prison just last July. He served 15 years for killing a woman.” “Yeah?” “You see," Rocco continued, "there must be some bad blood somewhere. While papa was in prison his brother killed his wife and baby. The cops are still looking for him.” ‘Yeah?” “And just a few years ago they found pap’s mother killed in the village street back in Italy. Someone -bad cut off her head." Harrington took him to jail. He

A grocer who your v X•• A GOOD GROCER the same carefulb attention you yourself would receive — who -A. keeps his prices equal and often lower than elsewhere — and x°“ BURCO COFFEE 17 P bl.slevs POUND *‘ C H '™ G^ E POST BRAN He iSPqo'' MACARONI 1 BLRCO. 2 lb. pkg I Little Elf Sauer Kraut, Staley's Golden Syrup, I tS3 I large can - 9c I'/ 2 tb. can . 11c *“*" Elf Red Kidney Beans, Orange Slice Candy, lb. 10c IW>SS?t t |HR No. 2 can 9c Chewing Gum. 3 pkgs. . 10c ;S "jßj ' Elf Baked Beans, tall can 9c Little Elf Coffee, fb. 23c Ejj,"j HHi -'1 -lN* King Bee Green Beans. Pure Cider Vinegar, gal. 25c .x large can 9c Parowax, pkg. 10c OPI u* Bunco Icing Sugar, 1 tb. pkg 9c Elf Fruit Pectin, 3 pkgs. 29c lajSSjal'j Burco Cocoa, 1 tb. pkg. lOc Perfection Milko Fig Bars. Crisco. 3 tbs. can 61c; 1 tb. 21c pound 19c • JUNE PEAS Op R (!\ I TS D PEANUT BUTTER OKp „ B 1 k LITTLE ELF. 24 oz.. JAR Small Q Pkg. .. i/v ife Silver Dust with Free Towel. 2 pkgs. 27c 1 Lifebuoy Soap, 3 cakesl9c SEMINOLE Rinso, large pkg 21c TOILET Littl Boy Blue, bottle 9c TISSUE Little Bo Peep, quart 23c 4 ROLLS nr U La France, 3 pkgs 25c Kitchen Klenzer, can 6c 1 ——— Burco Toilet Tissue, 4 rolls 19c BANANAS 5 POUNDS | HADDOCK APPLES ?Kp B NO BONE 9 r Jonathan Delicious Grimes. 6 Pounds .... H 2 pounds ttdL ORANGES 288’8 1(L. 8 Dozen OYSTERS Sweet POTATOES |jC ■ Extra Standards QQ 5 ,bs CJSwRKIl Pint Little Elf ■ Nut wJri a FRESH BRAINS i Margarine - g| „ 9LB a Bologna, Liver np. 29c |^2^ ...25c LIMD chops tb. 25c AmH LEG ROAST tb. 25c mviu STEW lb. 15c nrrr roast ’ P ' EA u T 'j" dTENDER .... 15c DLLi STEAK round sirloin, t-bone 25c Pou n d V Quality Food Market 121 N. 2nd St Decatur, Ind. Phone 192 Free Delivery

was charged with murder. ENGLISH RESIDENTS | CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE shoulders to provide gmple defense in case of attack, of which ■ there is at present no fear. Reports that an obstructive net had been swung into place at the southern entrance to Admiralty harbor were at first doubted by the public, but have be?n confirmed. The northern entrance is clot ed in the same way each evening and remains closed until morning. Revive Conference (Copyright 1935 by UP.) Geneva, Sept. 20.—<U.P>-A revived French-Brttlsh-Itallan conference as a last hope of averting war after the failure of the League of Nations to settle the Ethiopian dispute was mentioned informally today among league delegates. The latest indications received by league circles from Rome suggested that Premier Benito Mussolini’s reply to the league proposals. while making it clear that the compromise is not acceptable in its present form, may be accompanied by a hint that Mussolini would be prepared to revive the three-power conference which failed in Paris in August. Mussolini might hope at such a conference to get better concessions than he could get here. It was Thdicated in reliable Geneva quarters that if he tfifns dowm the • present league plan, he will be offered even smaller concessions in Ethiopia. 6 Troops Parade (Copyright 1935 by UP.) Addis Ababa. Sept. 20. — (U.R) — I

Five thousand of Emperor Haile Selassie’s picked troops paraded before the Royal palace today in! a dress rehearsal oT the mascal feat on Sept. 27, which marks the end of the ralffiS and the possible [ [opening of war with Italy. | The men proudly displayed the I 1 modern weapons with which they! are confident Ethiopia can repel' 'an invasion by motorized units of the Roman legions of today. The infantrymen shouldered mausers. ' Lancers and cal vary men rode in I the ranks with mouted machine gun units and 2-inch anti-aircraft guns, carried on muleback. Motor-' ized units carried their guns mounted on new American trucks. SEEK MEANS TO CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONE discuss the negotiations. “The TVA has shown what can be done in the way of producing electricity cheap,” Keller said. “It was shown you can make more money at a lower unit rate because of increased amounts used. “The big coal companies won’t let anyone know what the real cost of producing coal is. The only way to find out is by the federal government experimenting in the field. . “We have a supply of soft coal in this country sufficient for 5,000 years, while oil and gas used to produce electricity in large quantities will run out within a fewdecades. Only by using such a basic substance as coal can the nation permanently have low cost fuel and power.” Keller, after conSTffTing with othler coal area leaders, drafted a

tentative bill which embodies in the main tne essentials of the TVA [act. It provides, in addition to Jcoal experimentation, flood control, reforestation and electrical power development in the area of the "middle Mississippi river.” It bears the title "coal authority of the mid -die Mississippi valley act.” I He indicated he might Introduce his bill the first of the session which changes enabling the govern ment to build coal "demonstration plants" In Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kansas, and possibly other coal producing states. | 0 Kennedy Resigns Government Job Hyde Park. N. Y . Sept. 20. <U.R) —President Roosevelt said today that he had received the resignaition of Joseph P. Kennedy as chairman of the secifiities and exchange

Fschm/ttsl DUALITY MEAT MARKET ! Specials foF - Saturday I / Plenty Fresh Calf Liver 35c lb j ; Soring Chickens <3 ' 2 ‘° 4 n,s ea ‘o 27c lb fl Sirloin or Porter House | Steak (Tender) 25c lb I Hamherger (All Beef Fre.h Ground tv If) I Fresh Drains .. 2 lb. for 25c II Rib or Plate Boiling Beef 2 lb. for 25c I Fresh Neck Bones 2 lb. for 25c II Fresh Meaty Spare Ribs 20c lb Ij Minced Ham < Good Qu ’ ,i,y) 19c lb II Veal Shoulder Steak or ( hops 25c lb H Veal Loaf <Solid Vea ' 4 Pork) 30c lb I Snow White Bulk < 3rbs 6 c 23c lb V Miller's Bread Twin - ,inß ' e or ,liced 3 for 25c ‘ / Battleship Coffee, a real good | vacuum packed coffee 23c i —FISH— I Boneless Fillets 15c lb « Fresh Dressed Pickeral 25c lb Boneless Perch, Fresh 35c lb Fresh Bulk Oysters 30c Pint OUR MEATS ARE ALL NATIVE HOME DRESSED PHONES 95 or 96 — *6 » Ulhib I j I "T 1 Tlw.jL,£uz...l. * Appelman’s Grocery FREE DELIVERY PHONE 215-211 Home Grown Cante- Jello. 3 pkt - loupes ... 8c and 10c Ice Cream Powder, , Eating and Cooking 3 pkgs - x Apples. 6 pounds 15c Minute Tapioca. * Peaches. 5 tbs. ... 19c package '-f Toilet Paper- » Apple Butter. Onions, quart jar 19c 10 pound bag • 1 Salad Dressing Soda Crackers quart jar 29c 2 pound box .... D* Mustard. Smack.-, the Better quart jar 15c Crackers, box b BANANAS ™ 4 Ibsli f’anev Rice, Choco’ate Drops ' 3 lbs 17 C Very Good. lb. I,c Ovaltine, Peanut Clusters large size 69c pound ’ Bosco, the 3 Food Miller's Cakes. Drink 25c each . PULL \t Cloverleaf Cream 4fl AO Very Good - pound Van Camp Sardines Kitchen Klenser 15 oz. oval cans.. 10c 2 cans • ;••• Campfire Marshmal- Crystal White soap lows, pound pkg. 19c 4 giant bars Rippled Wheat Oxydoi, large package 10c box

coinmiHalon. . K n - . dent uiTTh-d. H- explain. ,| that 1 tn ID tip. adding that h , , i|( only for a S |„ , place. omeintj,™ On leaving ...„ . 9 sail for Hur,,,,,. ”fl Mr. Roosi'v..!' said that £ cessor hua !,... MRS. lOH\[,o z J ,,. nv , Anr I Rev. Elbert M ' Mo»r eHtur,!. tt u!{lvms <fl | ed b > 1! “' !■' ’ r It, "fl The Itods tti || t... ,« i ,bp »-ob.nu. f,' a; Monro- to th,. ,7J home Satnrda-, ~ viewed nut i: ■ - ... ”