Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

FISH DINNERS SOLVE THE PROBLEM OF LENTEN MEALS Just about now you Are probably nu king your brains and scouring your cook books for something to take tho place of meat on Lenten inetUs. If that’s the ciw» you'll w< Iconic suggestions for new ways to prepare fish. , , . . You'll find the same food nourishment value In most sea food ns von find In moat, and the tempting menu possibllttlee offer a. new appetite appeal. You’ll find the wlp. on this page handy during and after

la-nt. Fillets of Sole Carmen Soak the fillets in half water 1 and half milk for 2 hours. Dry w 11. fold over each fillet and. Place in a buttered dish. Sprinkle. lightly with salt and poach In a ' short bouillon in the oven for' about 10 minutes. Prepare a <ream sauce made with the bouil-l lon of fish and thickened with the ! yellow of eggs. Prepare apu.t a' dish of fried tomatoes. Arrwigoj the fillets of sole on a long platter I making a circle around the dish. I Dress over the sole the cream I sauce and garnish with thin slices : of truffles. Place a mound of the J tomatoes in the center of the I platter. Broiled Bluefish and Banana Broil the bluefish the regular way hasting frequently with melted butter mixed with paprika. Saute the bananas and place them around the ftah on a platter. Sprinkle lemon juice on the bananas I and on the fish pour this mixture,l hot from the pan. i tablespoons butter. 1 tablespoon minced parsley and 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Serve with any vegetables you choose. preferably string beans or peats. Creamed Codfish in Mashed Potato Ring >4 pound salt codfish 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk 4 hard cooked eggs, shelled and sliced 4 cups well-seasoned mashed potatoes , Cover codfish with cold water and let stand several hours to I freshen. Drain, cover with cold, water and bring to the boiling > point. Drain and flake. Melt the ■ b'.itter in a, double boiler, add the I

4J gftllAUlU rO j ■mw - jMMNh vKttV .•'sti\ SALMON 2 tall cans OKn • LH,,eEIfnNK L’d \ \JiD- \ # TOMATOES 4 No. 2 cans OOp ’ \/ Standard Pack " t7V SODA CRACKERS 2^.boxlfi P Little Elf “ IOC NUT MARGARINE MACARONI 2 lb - box IJ c 21t)S 97 or SPAGHETTI—LittIe Elf «• C Chocolate Drops, 1b .... 10c ————————— — Minute Tapioca, pkg. 12c Head Lettuce Elf Wisconsin No. 1 Cream Solid Head Cheese, lb. 22c \ AVY Van Camp Tuna Fish. 2 cans 29c Grape Fruit Campbell’s Tomato Soup, Arizona Seedless, 6 for BEA N S m 3 s M c S Macaroni, pkg. .1 1c Cauliflower IK p Dried Peaches, tb. 15c Snow White, head lov Q IDS. lAn Shredded Wheat. 2 pkgs. 25c Bananas •J IVv Gelatine Desert, all flavors 5 pounds 3 pkgs. ....... 14c , ... , — , _ Bursley's High Grade Coffee Celery _ ______pound 26c Large bunch .... • V Home Store SSX%J? £& ,fc £X Crtta « 4c BUTTER I Pastry Flour, 5 tb. bag . 19c I Oranges OJJT — I iAz-i 4+ " Little Elf Tomato Juice, Blue Goose Seedless, doz. 39C Little Lima Beans * <*"*"* IQC No. 2 can 10c 3 pourds ——— — — King Bee Peas, No. 2 can ... 10c CORN MEAL 5 tbs. FLOUR 241b.bagfiEp ’ JPi PEANUT BUTTER 9 iar OK.. Little Elf A-DC A- * 777"| LaF?ance’ P pkg. barS . ”c Suggestions for daliea Satina, pkg. . ;; ffc I, F N T Ppannfc Oxydol, large pkg. 19c UIS f p o k r 9 FRESH HALIBUT STEAK /V Elf Hdw. Castile Soap. 4 bars'"" 19c FRESH SALMON STEAK Vi/* Iwan Ma°tches Ti 6 U b e ;x 6 es r °" 3 ' ' ll- FRESH PER( E FILLETS Jelly Bird Eggs, Ib. . 10c HADDOCK FILLETS — TSr Little Elt Cocoa, quart SMOKED SALMON ’ mason jar 15c ■ 10. Sardines in oil. 4 cans 19c Brick f’hopso IF> 9Kn Burco Coffee, Ib. 17c , lh , 1 " Ce , S ,t” *”• -■■•••• £->C Sweet Milk chocolate, tb 19c Longhorn Cheese, lb. .. 23c ~ . ........ , Cream Cheese, lb 22c Government—MEAT—lnspected — — FRESH PICNICS, lb. ... 17y 2 c Minute Steak, lb 23c Pork Shoulder Roast, lb. .. 20c Choice Round Steak, lb ... 25c Pork Loin Roast, lb 23c Swiss Steak, lb 20c May We Suggest LAMB for your Sunday Dinner? Quality Food Market 121 N. Second st. Phone 192 Free Delivery Decatur

| flour and blend. Add the milk land cook until thickened stirring ' constantly. Add the flaked fish land tho eggs; heat well. Arrange | the mashed potatoes around the I .-(Igo of a serving platter and pour I the ( teamed fish in the center. Oyster Stew 1 dozen oysters and their juice I pint cream 2 cups milk 1 h*®.ping tablespoon flour I 3 henping tablespoons butter | 2 small carrots I 2 small white onions 1 small white turnip parsley 2 hearts celery paprika , salt and pepper Make a cream sauce by melting j 1 tablespoon of butter, add the ■ flour, stir well and gradually pour in the scalded milk. Ke . a • t in a double boiler. Pe. I the carrots, turnip and onion and scrape 1 the celery. Wash <f.e:n carefully! and cut them up very fine. Chop I the parsley. Take the second ta-1 blespoon of butter and put it into a frying pan. then add the chopped vegetables and fry to a golden brown being very careful not to ! burn th . Next put the oysters 1 and their juice in an enamel saucepan with the rest of the butter,;, salt lightly and add freshly ground ■ pepper. Heat the, cream. When j ready to serve put the oysters on i the fire and heat them until they curl at the edges. Now add the j chopped vegetables to the cream i sauce, then the hot cream to the ■ sttaee. and last of all the oysters and a little of their juice. Put a.t once into a soup tureen, sprinkle ’ l with a little parsley chopped fine .. and a dash of paprika. 11

Fried Oysters clean and drain large selecte< oysters, then seauon with salt ipepper tend paprika and just i ' dash of mace. Dip each oyster it flour to dry it further, then ft slightly beaten egg, then in fin« ' rolled nicely seasoned ( racket crumlip. Leave for a few moments then dip once more in the egg and cracker crumbs and fry in deep fat heated to 400 degrees Drain on paper and serve garnished with lemon slices and parsley. Oysters Fried In Batter % pint oysters 2 eggs ’■i pint milk sufficient flour to make batter salt and pepper to taste a little nutmeg hot lard Scald the oysters In their own liquor and lay them on a. cloth to drain well. Break the eggs Into a dish, mix the flour with them, add the milk gradually with nutmeg and seasonings and put the oysters In the batter. Heat some lard in a deep pan, put in the oysters one I at a time, take them up with a sharp pointed skewer and place : on a paper to drain. Salmon and Caper Sauce 2 slices salmon >4 pound butter U teaspoon chopped parsley 1 shalot salt, pepper and nutmeg to taste I-ay the salmon in a baking dish, place pieces of butter over it and add the other ingredients rubbing a little of the seasoning into the fish, baste. When done remove from fire and drain. Lay in a dish and pom- caper sauce over it. FLOOD MENACE iCnNTINVEF FROM RAGEONE)_ 28 feet there. The Wabash river remained asl the only immediate threat. At | Logansport, it climbed to an 18-I foot level last night and inundat-1 ed streets and lowlands. Traffic ' on state roads 25 and 29 was de-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1936.

tourned through the city. ,1 Davis bridge at Logansport, dam- , aged by un ice gorge Tuesday, was r under inspection of state highway i officials and was closed to traffic, i The water works was crippled, but > maintained service. A crest of 2!> feet, the highest 1 since the 1913 flood, was reached ' by the Wabash nt Lafayette. Sev--1 eral families were removed from • their homes. A school wus closed ’ at Battle Ground, Tippecanoe county. when power lines were disabl ■ ed, leaving the school without I electricity. Leave Homes Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 28. —(U.R) Water piling up behind jams in the ice-clogged Missouri river today forced farmers to leave their lowland homes near Oak Mills, Kansas. Several hundred acres were Inundated during the night when a two-mile section of ice detached itself from a seven-mile gorge upstream and lodged against dikes | and pilings below the town. Government engineers succeeded ( in lowering the river down-stream ( by dynamiting a small channel through the ice near latan Bend tor 1 protect government work boats. The blasts caused the river to fall a foot at Oak Mills, reducing the threat to farm lands and the . Fort Leavenworth air base on ■ Kickapoo Island. t Indications that the jam above < Oak Mills waa about to break up minimized some of the danger to (

MILLER’S Super Bread Potato Bread iy 2 lb. loaf Large Loaf 9c 10c 3 fol 25c Have Miller's Bread on your table at every meal. Its healthful goodness is essential at every meal. ON SALE AT All Grocers - Meat M' Stop in on your way hame for fresh baked pastries We feature a wide assortment that will please yoi and your family. Hot Cross Buns every Friday. Miller’s Bakery

Hite’s Grocery We appreciate your phone orders and they will be given our Personal Attention. Just call 31 or 204. POTATOES One peck (15 lbs.) I ViniVLC N() j p otatoes ! peck ( 12 ] bs .) and APPLES Wa^ner A PP |es ’ Both ss)c ORANGES T T“E' d . Flori . dM . 29c SOAP Q I“ THA : 19c SOUP vegetable ° r tomato Fresh Fig Bars 2 !b. can Pure 1 Q pound JLvV Fresh Cocoa ..... Idv Fresh Ginger Ifjp Large cans Snaps, lb AVV Pork and Beans _ Fresh Chocolate 17 p 3 cans Cookies, lb LAV 2 lb. jar Little Elf Wards Parker 1A p Peanut Butter House Rolls ... Ivv Wards Butterfly 1 9 C New Seedless Boßs ,’j iii Raisins, 3 lbs.. . Fancj' assorted Jelly. large'glasses 1 Corn, Peas or ~1 M JLtJ V Green Beans, can JL V V l ! SALT Bread and O L E O I FISH Butter Pickles, 2 lbs. pound can q 15c 15c 25c Large cans 1 A/» Solid Pack Rasp- QKp Spaghetti IvV berries, 2 cans. . 3 cans Little 2 lb. box Gra- rtQ Elf Red Beans, iidl ham Crackers .. iiOl Pure Buckwheat p* _ Gallon cans pound tJv Applebutter ...Ot/V Gold Dust f* 6 rolls Toilet rtf* Cleanser, can ... MV Tissue <wt)v

residents of the Bean lake and • latan area from which more than i 20 families fled .for the second time in 24 hours. Flood warnings weft issued to Missouri and Kansas residents on each side of the river, but government engineers said there was no occasion for panic. However, they ordered ten families to leave Cowisland, between latan and Oak j Mills. IAP OFFICERS f (CONTINCEP FROM QNB>_ before, a part of the insurgent troops had agreed to return to their barracks, but apparently had failed to do so after the remaining part stood their ground and made demands on the government. Private advices indicated the government had threatened to shell the insurgents in the government buildings which they occupied, but the embassy here was un ' able to confirm such a threat. The embassy lacked any details [ of the reported final agreement, or of the completion of the future I permanent government. o ROOSEVELT TO JfpXTIMJFROM "off the record" that the tax bill would call for $500,000,000, but others estimated it up to $700,000,000. The president’s message is not expected to mention the bonus di-

rectly. merely to ask for new rev <-nue to meet expenses not provld- : ed for In his budget message. Congressional leaders will avoid , appearances of a bonus tax. Su< h a tax. it was siiffl. would face a stiff tight from inflationists who favor issuance of new currency to pay the bonus. Taxes to meet farm relief costs probably would i not encounter serious opposition. President Roosevelt, in his budget message, estimated he would need $5,069.000,000 for "regular activities" of the government in the fiscal year beginning July 1. He estimated receipts at $5,654,00,000. but said $580,000,000 of this would be needed for debt retirement, leaving an estimated $5,000,- , 000 in receipts over expeditures. Three days after his message 1 the supreme court declared the AAA unconstitutional. The budget was soon thrown . farther out of line by passage of the $2,237,000,000 soldiers' bonus , i over the president's veto.

i COURTHOUSE Find for Plaintiff In the complaint on note of the Firet State Bank against Orville D. Kessler and Otis O. Hocker the court found for the plaintiff in the sum of $134.22 and coete. Final Report Filed In the (petition for partition A i ' V V >- ' For 1c you can mend a L / bole in shoe®, boots, ga\V/ V 25 patches for I X/ So-Lo Rubber Spreads on like butter — I dries tough over night. Flexible—non-skid—water-proof. Guaranteed ! Tear out ad and ask for So- Loot— Morris. Newberry, Gamble, Wards. Sears or nearest 10c or Hardware store. ____' I SPRAGUE OFFERS Bed Room Suites, $49.50 to SBS Three Budoir Chairs with each suite. Ironing Boards . 85c End Tables9Bc SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 S. 2nd st. Phone 199

SCHMITT’S Specials for Saturday SMALL LEAN LOIN PORK CHOPS 25c I LEAN PORK LOIN ROAST 24c 1 SMALL LINK SAUSAGES (*"•’’«>'*) 25c I LEAN PORK SHOULDER STEAK or ROAST 23c I FRESH PICNIC HAMS < sto 7tb - each) 18c. MEATY SPARE RIBS 20c FRESH SIDE PORK (any amount) 25c FRESH PORK HEARTS 15cl BEEF Extra Fancy Home Killed, Corn Fed, Steer Beef. Try a nice Rolled Rib Ro® a Choice Juicy Steak out of No. 1 Fancy Corn Fed Steer Beef. , Meaty Chuck Roast (out of this No. 1 Steer Beef) ‘ 1 Other Specials SWIFTS PURE WHITE LARD (any amount) I<)C fl BONELESS WAFFLE STEAK < a,lmeat > 2 lb. for ’J SWISS STEAK out of the Round /V FRESH GROUND HAMBERG ER 2 lb. for-J SLICED BACON : 'c HOCKLESS SMOKED PICNIC HAMS SUGAR CURED BONELESS ROLLED HAMS 32c» FRANKFORTS, BOLOGNA or PUDDING A REAL GOOD BONELESS FISH /V SALT LAKE HERRING 15c lb., 2 lb. for PEAS, CORN, GREEN BEANS, PORK AND BEANS, TOMATOES. and Large cans of KRAUT 10c a can. •> ■ ■ SILVER BAR PEACHES (sliced or halves) 18c can. - lpr Some more of those meaty chunks out of the hind quarter for |J canning or summer sausage Watch our window display for other Specials! Our Meats are ■MMFTy'jTT W L.. _jL I'luilU'' A,,Nalive I yJ B 95 or 96 Home DresueJ Iy I • w y IF* e* w "fli

of Eva Hedington. and others against Lawrence Jotitwon, and others, the final report was filed, examined and approved and the commissioner discharged. Answer In Denial . iln the collection of note and foreclosure of mortgage suit brought against James W. Anderson by Charles H. Snyder, and answer in general denial was filed by James W. Andrews and Hattie Andrews. Final Report Filed In the (petition for reciver of the First Joint Stock Land bank of Fort Wayne against Lizzie M. Tapp and Vernon Stehr the final report of ths receiver was filed, examined and approved and the receiver discharged. Set For Trial The suit for the collection of a note by the Old National Bank and Trust company, of Fort Wayne against the American Security company and otheres, was set for trial on March 19th. Motion for Continuance In thed amage suit of Everett B.

Appelmans Groce! FREE DELIVERY PHONE 215 K Apples, Good Eating Salt Fish. S and Cooking Apples, pound S 7 pounds 25c W Seedless Grape Fruit Heinz Dill tickles IS I>arge, eachsc ' .H| SunKist Oranges. Salad Dressinji. fIE dozen 15c quart jar BURCO WHEAT CEREAL pk/lB (LITTLE ELF BRAN FLAKES FREE. SALMON Soda ( rackers. 2 cans 27c 2 pound ho\ MB Minute Tapioca, MACARONI Ml package 12c 2 pound box ~ Peanut Butter. Graham Crackers. EE 2 lb. quart jar ... 25c2 pound box SEMINOLE TOILET Paper I (SAVE WRAPPERS AND GET BATH TOWELS) Fresh Lima Beans. Pancake and Buckcan 10c wheat I lour. Peas. Corn, and Large Kraft's Malted Kidney Beans, can 10c 2 pound can . HK Dog Food, No. 2 can POP CORN MB each 10c pound . Cocoa 2 lb can 19M Kraft's 2 pound Cheese Bartlett Pears American, box .... 55c large can MM Brick, box 55c Royal \nne ( Pimento, box 60c large can Swiss, box 68c Plums. No. 2 can Old English, box .. 79c 2 cans

sMc ,Gm " 1 ' ’"Tahaß '"‘'cast . . ... ■ ' '' K. ' M ■ .’K" ll"li.ii( l !; 1 Vi,V ■: Perfect Hand I, c , \ ISv I