Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 9, Decatur, Adams County, 10 January 1936 — Page 7
Ar THRIFTY SHOPPERS
tr377ni)ears In New Guises MMr To Make Meals That Capture Prizes
"Stuffy" f f ilk*' l Dished EX hu>v ■ 11 ’ 1 ■Li r ~:i: ■M. the H.'.d I "’" . 1 ' K beSi - n.-uits Ha r’r; ■H: ' '" ' ||l||K_..'. *■ ■ •'"■ * l,l * x * ; ” u f ’‘’ l,llll Bal ____
M ; <»M W *J 4i ITJnvUW PRICES ON FLOUR! B>. ■‘./ NOW . WE ARE PASSING THE AMOUNT OF FWE TAX ON TO YOU—-A BIG SAVINGS-STOCK UP! I 4'" l: ». 75c I purpose 24 »• •?« MIT 4 :: 25c OLD FASHION FLAVOR—Long Cut Shreds I |InCY MICHIGAN—HAND PICKED I Ha VY BEANS 10 lbs. 29 e I C/TSUP — ~loc Quality—Fine Flavor 14 oz. bottle I TV IST BREAD , lOc Club. Oven Fresh 24 oz. Sliced Loaf AVV I StDA CRACKERS c FLAKEY 2 lb. box 1 • V I IMIALITY— FIRM—PINK tHa lmon 2 16 oz - cans 25c Jl IVEL COFFEE 1 7 e SMOOTH. FRAGRANT tt>. AI V MACKEREL 3 oz - cans 2*AP and ECONOMICAL Adt7V IBoUNTRY CLUB—FANCY Grapefruit no. 2 can 1 n c I M*3 ment s of Tree Ripened Fruit in Syrup 1W PANCAKE ELOUR 5 ib. sack 91 CLUB PREPARED AJXV PURITAN SYRUP Pint Jug 1Q P MCH MAPLE FLAVOR IVV HAWAIIAN HINEAPPLE 9 No. cans 9Q(* cilices in Rich Syrup “ ez V/ Sanant syrup 5 lb. Can oq.. (Solden blue label -at/v >1 Al> DRESING QT. OKn II; P SASSY ~ R,CH — SMOOTH fram T BUTTER 23 oz. Jar ?9,. »• BASSY - FINE FLAVOR ■■RAPE JAM 2tt>jai’lQp •URE FRUIT . JL«/V f JERRIES * No. 2 Can 1 Red Pitted, For Pies, Sauce, AW ■"kXKLE, Gelatin Dessert I pkgs. lOn ■ DELICIOUS FRUIT FLAVORS ±i7V ■ I Sardines % size can £/» I DOMESTIC—IN OIL OR MUSTARD MV FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ,® TOMATOES Red-Ripe I "IO | Pound IWU ReIERY HEARTS |(U •WEET’S QUALITY 2 bunches I * 7V ■RhLN ONIONS Mild, 2 bunches 9c I HEAD LETTUCE ■ARIZONA ICEBERG rt Head — Solid Crisp m For AOV I^ FLORIDA ORANGES !g? \ jJ Temple Brand, Sweet, 97/* - Juicy, 5 tbs " I U I ' . GR AP EFRU I T ■ EXAS FINEST O IT,, ALITY — Seedless O For JL • V
cheese for sandwiches; fill dates with nutmeats and roll them in sugar and a dessert or party-sweet la ready; etuff them with fondant or marshmallow and get confectionery! Try Them, Say "Mmm!" How about making that steak “go farther" and taste better by filling it with a micculent stuffing of delicious rice? Or glorifying the onions with an appropriate filling? Stuffed oranges delight the young tilings in the family, and warm gingerbread stuffed with a creamy filling makes guesta demand the recipe. Stuffed bananas are new as next week. too. Here are some extra-special recipes for stuffed dishes; there's nothing "stuffy” or prosaic about one of them!
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 193 G.
Stuffed Bananas Allow one yellow-ripe bannnal 1 lor each serving. Peel, and split | into halves lengthwise. Place hajves on a plate, cut side up. ! With a silver teaspoon make a, slight groove down the center of | each banana half. Make a stuffing of cream cheese thoroughly blended with canned crushed pineapple. Spread the mixture on one i ixtnnna half and place the other I half on top. Spread the stuffed , banana with a thin coating of cream mayonnaise and sprinkle with finely chopped nut-meats, preferably salted pecans. Serve on shredded lettuce or watercress as salad. Stuffed Steak 2 cups boiled rice I’4 lbs. round or flank steak 2 tbsps. chopped pa: I 1 teasp, onion juice Paprika Combine the - and seasonings. Pound t' ..leak until thin, sprinkle w'i ..it, spread with a layer of .1' ■ rice stuffing threefourths (•: i thick. Roll and fasten wi'ii kewers or toothpicks; 'or fl' .th string while cooking. I P in a deep oven dish. Add iei a hot water to come up one-! '■ f inch in pun. Cover, cook in mxlerate oven (350°F.) about 2 1 , hours. Remove the cover to brown I -and thicken the stock to serve as gravy. 6 servings. Stuffed Oranges 6 Orangee % cup pasteurizezd dates % cup nut meate cup cocoanut 1 egg white '< cup powdered sugar Cut a slice from the end of each orange and carefully remove the I pulp. If feasible, cut edges of orange i 'shell in scaliope. .Mix orange pulp. | ■ sliced dates, chopped nute and cccoanut together and refill the I orange shells. Beat the egg white until stiff, add sugar gradually and continue heating. Cover top of orangffl with the meringue. Bake in ■ a slow oven (276-F) for 15 mlnuten ; or unti the meringue is brown. I Serve warm, sprinkled with cocoai nut. 6 servings. Stuffed Onions G Perniuda onions 12 salted crackere 14 cup ground cooked mfat 2 tablespoons tnazola Salt and pepper 2 cups medium white sauce >4 cup grated cheese Veal and parboil opiuos in boil- , ing salted water. Drain centers and . combine with crumbled crackere, nr at. mazola and seasoning. Fill j onions with this mixture. Place ! them in a buttered baking dish.. Cover with medium white sauce and ! sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake | covered 15 minutes in a hot oven I (450-F. Uncover and brown. 6 servings. Stuffed Gingerbread Make a gingerbread loaf, using ' the prepared mix based on Mary package directions. While the ginWashington’s recipe, and follow gerbread is baking, mash 2 packages scream cheese, add 2 cups sliced pasteurized dates, and tg teaspoon salt. Add enough cream so mixeture will spread- Slpit the baked gingerbread, spread with filling. replace top layer and serve warm | Antioch M. B. C. H. W. Spencer, pastor Ollie Kreps. superintendent Sunday School. 9:30 a. m. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. Prayer service Wednesday at parsonage, 7:30 p. in. Missionary Sewing Circle will meet at the home of Mrs. Charles Arnold, all day Thursday, January 16. The public is invited to all the services. o Craigville Christian Union Rev. John O Hensley, pastor Bethel Church Craigville Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Mary Leiineustoll, superintendent. Morning worship. 10:30 a. in. Miss Rae Kempt horn of Toledo. Ohio, speaker. Revival wilt continue for an inI definite period, with Rev. Hensley, the pastor, occupying the pulpit. Freeman Walters in charge of the music, and Miss Kempthorn in the role of personal worker. Special music each evening. We are glad to announce that on Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock we are to have' with us the Moser children of Bluffton, if you have heard them] you will be present and if you have | never bad the pleasure of hearing them, don't miss this opportunity. Come early if you want a seat. Zion Church, Honduras Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Lauren Yager, superintendent. Morning worship, 10:30 a. ui. | Message by the pastor. Leadership training school be-1
Lb, AND tr cHiatcif towm Uhe OLD "GRENADIER" HOUSE at NORWELL,MASSACHUSETTSt>» 1930 • ” SOLO FOR * SOO - A RELIC OF COLONIAL > ' OAYS -ALMOST A RUIN " A derelict THEN CAME THE MIRACLE... THE OLD GRENADIER HOUSE WAS RESTORED. ENLARGED. ANO MODERNIZED, FOR $1350 - - CONVERTED INTO A CHARMINGLY INVITING RESTAURANT ANO TEA HOUSE ITS NOW VALUED AT 25 000 THATS WHAT THE OWNER WAS RECENTLY OFFERED FOR THE PROPERTY AND THE BUSINESS I HE ENTIRE RESTORATION WAS FINANCED WITH A '■ } MODERNIZATION CREDIT LOAN INSURED IV THE FEDERAL' 1- HOUSING ADMINISTRATION C.'S BEING REPAID IN 'CONVEN'ENJ^. MONTHLY INSTALMENTS \ A *25.000 PROPERTY FROM A, 1 25 I~ ? 5 °° W " ECK '
gins in the Kirkland high auditor- ' ium Monday, January 7th, with I Rev. D. Grether, the dean, in I charge. Rev. H. H. M'eckstroth will teach the "Origin of the Eng lish Bible." Mrs. E. Lochner will teach "Daily Vacation Bible" and Rev. John O, Hensley will teach the required course, "The Teaching Work of the Church and . Church School." oDecatur M. E. Circuit Lester J. Brunner, pastor Mt. Pleasant 9:30 a. tn. — Sunday School.] Chauncey Sheets, superintendent. 10:30 a. m.—Class meeting. Ed Spangler, leader. There will be no Epworth League service except of the circuit league at Pleasant Valley at 6:30 p. m. Bible class Wednesday at the I parsonage. Beulah Chapel , 9:30 a m. — Sunday School, Wil-] lard Mcßride, superintendent. 10:45 a. m. —Worship hour. 6:30 p. m. —Circuit Epworth Leajue at Pleasant Valley. Pleasant Valley 9:30 a. m.—Sunday School, liariold Porter, superintendent. 6:30 p. m.—Circuit Epworth Lea1 gue. Harold Porter, leader. 7:30 p. m.—Worship hour, subject. "Shall 1 Believe in Myself." Washington 9:30 a. in. — Special business session at call of the pastor and district superintendent. Every person out. 10:30 a. m. — Sunday School,
Hite’s Grocery Phones 31 and 204 DDT AR The original potato U lit HU bread. 3 loaves fatll ORANGES S sbe -. swd, " s 18c DATES 10c PEANUT BUTTER X l B "' k 15c OLEO S EUCIA 25c Mixed Nuts, 1 KRAI 1 RLz* pound AVt can HOMINY BEANS 1 Q|* can <JV 5 pounds At/V REI) BEANS, (T .. LHUe’EW Canb .. 25C Vegetable Soup. can v Peas, Tomato Soup, 3 cans can t>V Baked Beans Large Grape Fruit can Ov each •• • • •• • ’ We sell Prune. Raisin. Whole VVheat. ( racked Wheat. Vienna, Corn Top and Rye Bread. Fresh Ginger Vanilla Fig Bars Snaps. < ookies, lb. |h. 2 doz. 10c l()c 15c
Harry Andrews, superintendent. Do you have your envelope for j "Save the Sanctuary” Sunday? I They will be given out Sunday. Come, worship witn us. o St- Paul Revival services at 7 o'clock each evening. We uxge all to come and join us in our worship. The Van Wert gospel team is expected to he with us next week, also Brother F. J. Wilmert, noted prophetic messenger. Calvary Evangelical Church For two weeks the program of Calvary Church wil be changed. Sunday S?hool at 1:30. instead of in the morning- Worship with sermon by the Rev. Ernest F. Rpesti at ' ! 2:3h. Rev. Rosti will also sing at ! this service. Calvary Church will '| send a delegation to the Revival Services at the First Evangelical I Church, on Thursday Night, where •'the Rev. Roesti will preach each : night next week, closing life services on Sunday night January 19th. o DEMOS CHOOSE CCONTINVEF> I ’HOMEPAGE selection. National committeeman Patrick Nash was confident he had pledged votes to return the Democrats to the scene of their good luck meeting of 1932. A mid-western convention next I June would have offered spectacular opportunity for a “dirt farmer demonstartion" in behalf of Mi. . Roosevelt and his outlawed agricul-
tural policies. Whether any such maneuver wan planned if the convention went to the prairten i« not known but It could easily have been arranged with undoubtedly strong politkal effects. Selection of a Democratic convention city ended seven days of fast political action centered lu the capital. The show began with the opening of congrenH when Mr. Roosevelt appeared before an extraordinary Joint session of houne and senate to deliver an annual message on the state of the union which was denounced by hie opponents an a speech of pure foiitics. Mr. Roosevelt followed through Monday with a budget message which was outmoded before it delivery had been completed in either house iby a supreme court decision scuttling the Agricultural adjustment alminfatration and some $500.000,000 of revenue the President bad expected from that source. ’Wednesday night Mr. Roosevelt took another bow before the nation in an address before the SSO a plate Jaikson day dinner here. The President there let go the first undeniably political salvo of his reelection campaign with p plea for active support of Democrats, Independents, progressives, farmers, and laborers. Yesterday's national committee meeting ended the New Deal drive Momentarily and as Democrats consolidate the gains of gn active week the opposition is maneuvering to attack, o BONUS BILL PASSES <CONX I NUEDJ;' HOM PAGE ONE) oi about $3,500,u90,0dd or about SI,OOO per man. Supporters claim that the tremendous cash flow would pour into every state, increasing purchasing power and stimulating economic recovery. In urging approval of tlie measure, the house ways and menus committee irointed out that 189,000 ex-veterans have died since the world war and that 500.000 probably will have died by 1945. and that “they will never receive their bonus unless congress acts now." More than 100 bills were introduced during the 68th congress convening Marcii 4. 1919. Bonus cheeks LZLJLJ COLDS QOO FEVER first day u<u-i»-tahi bts Headaches salve-nose neauanicß DltOl’S i» 30 minutes
MRwunOllßL BEEF PORK Hamburger, 2 lbs,2sc Pork Shoulder Steak, th. .. 25i Beef Boil, 2 lbs2sc Neck Bones, 2 lbs2ac Sirloin or Minute Steak . 2ac —- Swiss Steak, lb22c . — FRANKFORTS, BOLOGNA or PUDDING, lblsc GOOD BONELESS FISH lb. 15c EXTRA LARGE DILL PICKLES each oc TALL CANS LIBBY’S MILK 5 cans 37c MILLER’S BREAD9c, 3 for 25c GOOD SOLID BULK MINCE MEATIb. l»c BUTTER OLEO EXTRACT Creamery Vanilla or Lemon "79c 15c -<29c LarKesiM 2sc Some Nice Solid Chunks of Beef for sausage, per lbl7c Also some Good Small Quarters of Beef, about 109 pounds each. Sassafras, burteh • 5c No. 2 cans Mayfield PeasSc, 2 tor 15c Smoke Salt, Old Hickory, can 75c Burco Coffee, Ib 17c Pure Black Pepper, Ib2oc M. J. B. Coffee, Ib »5c P. W. Crackers, 2 boxes 25c (with a sample can) Large box Rolled Oats 23c Large cans Peaches 15c, 2 lor ~.)c 2 Ib. box Soda Crackerslßc Small cans Rival Dog Foodloc, 3 cans 25c Peaches, Apricots and Pears Old Master Coffee, Ih. 27c Blue Ribbon Malt, can 88c S a £/ Deliveries Please order ■ ffaß KaBK a. B B" B B-B.& w an.v early for BB B * w Service, yF F- FF < ( • ( /•hones 106-107 five Ocln'cry
bills in the past have been vetoed by or failed in congress during ndmlniatmtiona of Presidents Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover. o CONGRESS TODAY By United Press Senate in recess. Foreign relations committee hears state department officials on neutrality legislation. Munitions committee continues
BACK AGAIN! I FMPIRE Mother’s ! % «’ OLD "STAND-BY" f>,'# EMPIRE R cofffr COFFiE . - 25<ib. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded Get it at Your Neighborhood Grocery Store J PHONE 88 or 98 : Stults HOME Grocery ®
POLAR BEAR 1R ■ FLOUR, bag >pl ,A ’ 7 Peerless Flour .... 79c ■ Finest Bulk • PEANUT 1 r Z BUTTER, lb. .. ItJC ■ Pure Granulated • SUGAR. rr q 10 pounds VOL ■ Post Toasties 2 for ■ Holsuni 1 ■ Raisin Bread . . LW • Pure Lard 1 ® P° und "• * * Heyerlv ® POTATO BREAD S O Big O Loaves •ooeeooeooo
PAGE SEVEN
Morgan inquiry. House Votes on soldiers' bonus _____ Q... . v Boon to Whisk Brooms Boston. — (U.R) — It’a lobe like | Ernest Patrick’s that have kept the whfak broom manttfmttiring ' companies in bushteM. Nightly. Patrick has to sweep the Metropolitan theater's auditriium of 6,4(10 square feet. It contains more than 2,000 seats.
2 pound SODA 1 ✓ CRACKERS lilt c*' P.W. Crackers, 2 for 2-vc Swiss Cheese pound 29e Cream Cheese, lb. 23e POTATOES Fine White 1 Q/» , Country, peck.. l*zC Giant Size Cakes P & G SOAP 4 „ < Each £ 10 for 37c A Swift's White Naptha k' SOAP. 1Q p f Marshmallows 1 Cpound A MV THAT GOOD Qf* < OLEO. 2 lbs. . .
