Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 199, Decatur, Adams County, 21 August 1936 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Family Gets ‘Pie-Eyed’ (In A Nice Way!)
Feed Your Flock On A Shepherd's Pie! All is not dessert that Is pie! Pie filled to the crispy brim with fruit or u cream and festooned with pastry or Huffy meringue is the dish we think about when the word is mentioned. Hut pie with meat or stew or vegetables in its middle is just us truly pie, and just us de luxe-ions! Ever feed your flock with a shepherd's pie? Lamb makes a tempter out of that. And how about a pork pie? Beef or vegetable pie is another dinner highlight, and those deep-dish chicken and meat dishes with mashed potato or pastry 'lids’ are delectable. Oh, do get the family "pie-eyed" in this nice way, and prove that Simple Simon was a very wise man! Building the Meal With a meat pie you won't need much else for the main course. Provide a savory accompaniment —what better than a glistening baked banana, tucked into the oven a few minutes before serving time? Then add a dainty salad, and if you like, a desert of devil's food —made the easy way with the new mix. Presto—dinner’s ready
SCHMITT’S “Real” Specials for Saturday RIB or PLATE BOILING BEEF, Tender 10c Ih FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER .2 lbs. for 25c FRESH SPARE RIBS «• 2 lbs. for 25c CHOICE MEATY BEEF ROAST 15c lb BONELESS VEAL PADDIES. (outofthe Round) Special ...... 25c lb A Real Good BONELESS FISH (a,lyouwan 15c lb SWISS STEAK, out of the Round 25c lb BEEF AND PORK HEARTS 2 lbs. for 25c SHORT TEE BONE or WAFFLE STEAK 25c lb FRESH PORK HAM STEAK or ROAST 30c lb MEATY SMOKED HAM SHANKS (For Gree " Bfans ) 15c lb MINCED HAM ( slicedorChunk ) ... 18c; 2 lbs. for 35c Qt. Jar MUSTARD (Good Quality) 2 jars 25c PERFECTION LEMON COOKIES ...... 10c doz., 2 doz. 15c LEAN HOMECURED SMOKED JOWELS 20c It) OUR BEST LEAN SLICED BACON < Rhi " eless ) 38c It) FANCY LEAN BACON in a chunk 33c It) HOME BAKED HAM (with cloves 4 brown sugar) s pec i a ] 60c th SPICED HAM ( AH Pork f ° rSandwicheß > 35c lb CHOICE LINE OF COLD MEATS, PORK AND BEEF TENDERLOINS, CALF LIVER, SPRING CHICKEN'S, AND EXTRA GOOD STEER BEEF This Week-end. OPEN SUNDAY MORNING UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK. FREE, PROMPT AND SANITARY DELIVERY SERVICE. Our Meats are M | |■ ■■ PIIOHCS Home Dressed FVT i '''W IL ▼ lUF W . 1 'l-L" _ , llvr I ' B I J. <J ■ 950 r 96 All Native |M | r, « MW
Check Over Your Printing Suppies THERE IS ALWAYS SOMETHING YOU NEED AND TO WAIT UNTIL YOU ARE ENTIRELY “OUT” MEANS INCONVENIENCE AND DELAY. ORDER NOW! FOR SALE Yellow Second Sheets B'/ 2 xll, 9 V wrapped in 500 sheet packages. White Mimeograph paper B'/ 2 Xll, wrapped in 500 sheet *■ .■< J/r’ . , packages. wrapped packages. Manuscript covers 9xls'/ 2 100 sheet boxes - *. *" White Bond paper B'^xll and S» 111 | I B' 2 xl3 and 14, wrapped in 500 • \ Will Wl sheet packages. £ Cardboard In white and tA colors. JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS ph one 1000 ® DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
and what a meal for April appetites! When Dining Is Pie-ning! Pork-u-Pie 1 tbsp, fat 2 cups tomato 1 onion % teasp. salt 1 lb. pork shoulder, uncooked Hteasp. pepper 2 cups cooked rice. Melt fat, add sliced onion, add meat which has been cut into small pieces an dstlr until red color disappears. Add tomato and seasoning after onion is browned, and heat through. Grease a baking dish, put in layer of rice, then add meat and gravy and cover with rice dotted with fat. Bake in moderate oven (350 d. F.) tor 30 minutes. Serves 6. Chicken Pot Pie 2 cups cooked chicken cut in pieces. 1 teasp. cornstarch. ’«j cups milk ’.teasp. salt Dash of pepper 2 tbsps. butter. 8 unbaked baking powder biscuits. Combine ingredients, except biscuits, and turn into greased caserole. Bake in hot oven (425 d. F.)
25 minutes, stirring twice during first 10 minutes. Place biscuits on top of pie after it has baked 10 minutes; return to oven and bake 12 to 15 minutes longer. Make your biscuits the "spdedy” way by sifting together 2 cups flour and 2 teaspoons baking powder, und 1 teaspoon salt. Combine U cup mazola and cup of milk and stir into dry ingredients, using I enough of the milk to make a soft ! dought. Remove dough to wellfloured board and pat until smooth. Cut into rounds and bake in hot I oven (450 d. F.) 10 or 12 minutes. Rice and Vegetable Casserole ’ 1 cup rice , 1 small turnip, cubed 1 cup canned peas 1 cup canned tomatoes 1 onion, sliced 4 potatoes, thinly sliced 1 teaspoon salt 1-8 teasp. allspice. 4 cups brown stock. Wash rice thoroughly. Put ingredients. except stock, in alternate layers in casserole, pour on stock, and cook until rice is tend- . er. in slow oven (325 d. F.) Serves six. Baked Bananas (To accompany meat pie) i Select firm, partially ripe or yel-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1936.
Chicago Deb Crashes Movies ' Ok x . .. 'MF' L K * Mrs. Gilbert Keeler One of those fabulous Cinderella tales of success came true for lovely Mrs. Gilbert Keeler of Chicago, the former Lynn McHale, who won a movie contract on tha strength of a picture which she had sent in to producers.
low-ripe bananas; peel and arrange in a shallow baking pan. Brush with melted butter, sprinkle lightly with salt, and bake in a moderately hot oven (375 d. F.) for 10 to 15 minutes or until tender. Serve very hot. Fruit Waldorf Salad (To serve with a “Pie Dinner”) 2 cups apples, diced 2 tbsps. lemon juice. cup celery, diced (4 cup mayonnaise 1 cup orange, diced *4 cup pasteurized dates, sliced Marinate apples in lemon juice; combine with other fruits and blend with mayonnaise. Serve on crisp lettuce. Shepherd’s Pie 214 caps meat stock or gravy 2 tbsps. cornstarch 2 cups cooked meat, diced (4 cup tomatoes, canned x 4 cup cooked onion 14 cup cooked carrots 1 tbsp, parsley, chopped 1-8 teasp. pepper 1-8 teasp. paprika 2 teasps. Worcestershire sauce % teasp. salt 2 cups mashed potatoes, seasoned 2 tbsps. butter. Bring stock to boil; add cornstarch which has been dissolved in % cup cold water. Boil 1 minute, stirring constantly. Keraove from heat, add meat, vegetables, | and seasonings; turn into greased, baking dish. Spread with potatoes, sealing to edge of casserole and leave opening for escape of steam. Brush with melted butter. Bake in hot oven (450 d. F.) 20 minutes, or until potatoes are browned. Serves 6. o Camp Life Too Warlike Cheyenne, Wyo.—<U.R>—Wyoming national guardsmen encamped at Pole Mountain camp had a touch of realism added to their war games oy the drought. Because of
I BELL'S -™ 1 "p n hone s<er GROCERY ph°one 555 and MEAT MARKET 292 FREE DELIVERY—CALL EARLY FOR SERVICE PEACHES—Ring Packed 4 lbs. 25c Basket $1.95 SUN KIST ORANGES — Dozenl7«/ 2 and 30c POTATOES—No. IPeck 50c Bushel $1.95 POTATOES—No. 2Peck 35c Bushel $1.25 CELERY 3 for 10c, 5c and 8c GOOD HOME GROWN CANTELOUPE . .10c and 15c CANDY SALE—Orange Slices, Jelly Beans, Milk Cherries, Fudge, Mixed Candy, th. .... 10c BROOM SALE29c, 39c, 49c and 59c TOILET TISSUE—6 - 1,000 Sheet Rolls2sc PORK AND BEANS 3 Ig. cans 25c doz. 95c PINEAPPLEIarge cans 22'/ 2 c doz. $2.43 APRICOTS large cans 19c doz. $2.10 RED KIDNEY BEANS ... 3 large cans 25c doz. 95c KELLOGG CORN FLAKESIarge pkg. 10c RIPPLED WHEAT—Packed 28 Biscuits 10c JOLLY JELL — 4 packagesl9c SILVER SEA COFFEE —Packed the new way .. 22c THAT GOOD 7:30 COFFE—Pound 19c MILLERS POTATO BREAD—3 large loaves ... 25c We are paying Top prices for Fresh Eggs. We Redeem Camay and Oxydol Coupons. Truck load of Michigan Peaches Monday and Tuesday at lowest prices.
■ a water shortage they had to go 1 without baths for 10 days. “It’s • too much like war,” said Lieut. • Col. R. L. Esmay. WPA Gardeners Busy Los Angeles (U.R) — Nine carloads of vegetables totaling 35,000 pounds, grown entirely by WPA ■ workers who otherwise would have ' been without employment have . ' been shipped to drouth sufferers in the Middlewest. A chedule will be ; kept up hereafter of two carloads weekly for the Middlewest and five i for California. 0 Prisoners Miss $440 Toledo (U.R)— Police found $4401 j belonging to Mrs. Rose Butler, of i Temperance, Mich., under the seat cushion of a patrol car where it t had been for 17 days, within easy reach of at least 50 prisoners. o Heat Kills 2.200 Turkeys Lenmoore, Cal. (U.R) — Even if the turkey does not get the ax at; Thanksgiving time, it faces an- ■ other death. Twenty-two hundred, j valued at $9,000, died here of the | heat when the temperature suddenly rose to 110 degrees. 0 — Old Capitol Is Museum Fillmore, Utah (U.R)—Utah’s first 1 state capitol here is now a museum 1 where relics of ipompous days of ! state in pioneer days are kept. The j building was completed for the leg-, islature to meet Dec. 10, 1855, and, was used only for two sessions. Britain Uses More Medicine London.—(U.R)—The growing con-1 sumption of medicine in England is worrying Sir Kingsley Wood, I minister of health. “We are rapid-1 ly becoming a nation of medicine drinkers,” he said in a speech to I the House of Commons. The cost 1 1 of medicine per head in Britain, ' | he said, is double that fn Scotland.
LANDON'S TOUR f LEADS TO EAST Gov. Landon’s Campaign Moves To lowa And Illinois Omaha, Neb.. Aug. 21—<U.R)—Oov. i Alf M. Landon’s campaign for the presidency led eastward through lowa and Illinois t<xlay after he had' warned America against "mortgag-1 ing that equality of opportunity toward which we are (striving.” As a climax to a party celebration in Omaha, the Kansae governor appealed to Republicans, Democrats and Independents of Nebraska to weigh the issues of the campaign dispassionately and "make our decisions each according to the die-: tates of conscience as to what is 1 best for the America of our Allegiance.” “We want government to do its full share in protecting us and helping us to meet our necessities,” Landon told a breakfast conference of Republicans in continuing his emphasis on liberalism in the state which has long been attracted to the progressive policies of Senator George Norris. The same friendly and informal attitude which had marked Landon's journey across Colorado and Nebraska — enroute to make three speeches in Pennsylvania and New York — was emphasized in his arrival in Omaha last night. Rain splattered the crowd that met him at the station but they cheered until he climbed up on a tench to wave his hat and greet them informally. There was another crowd at his hotel when the party rolled up with a screaming escort of motorcycles. But after police had made away for him through the hotel lobby, Tendon retired to his suite for several political conferences. He went
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to bed early to rest up for this morning's breakfast for several hundred party workers and for another arduous day. The journey across lows and Illinois catted for many brief talks to crowds at station platforms enroute. A group of four or five Nebraskans who said they were Democrats und who were headed by William Ritchie visited Landon at his hotel. Ritchie, a lawyer, a cousin of the | lute governor of Maryland and once a candidate for governor of Nebraska on the Democratic ticket, said 1 the group pledged their support to Landon. Denies Charge Os Waste On Projects Bloomington, Ind., Aug. !I—<U.R> —John T. Stapleton. Bloomington city engineer, in a signed state- ■ ment. today denied as "ridiculous" I charges of inefficiency and waste 1 in connection with works progress administration projects in Bloomington and Monroe county. It was reported yesterday the Republican national committee gave Stapleton as authority for the purported statement that WPA expenditures in Bloomington and Monroe county were 300 per cent higher than private contracts for similar work in Indiana. “The stories give an enitrely false impression,” Stapleton asserted. "We are having fine results at economical costs.” o Governor Olson Losing Strength Rochester. Minn., Aug. 21 —(U.PJ —Gov. Floyd B. Olson, suffering from an inoperable cancer, lost strength steadily today although physicians announced he rested more easily than at any time since he came to Mayo Brother’s hospital by airplane Monday. The farmer-labor leader remained cheerful and planed details of his campaign to win Minnesota for Pres. Roosevelt.
Tax Schools To j Examine B U( J Indianapolis. 21. .. County budgets win i„. in tux schools t,, i„ o, |,| out the state well u w making mc-dh.ii „. I|l|( . | W the Indiana Farm Bur.-au ul|ll W dlana Taxpayers A —.i. lt 1(>ll ■ sponsors of tin- m- . . . 1|)||() B ed today. W - . H Former governor Harry <• is in Decatur looking utt,. r for the Standard Life company. Indianap<d ■, is ipmddent. I meat] SATURDAY SPECIALS | LARD, pound fl SHOULDER I .1 (chunk or sliced) I HAM I I (chunk or sliced) I i i Fresh Sausage ... 20c & 1 FRESH SIDE 1 SPARE RIBS. Nice stnd Meaty, pound 1 I NECK BONES, pound .. 1 ’ or 3 lbs. 1 Boiling Beef. 1b... 11c - i Babv Beef Steak.. 20c & I BEEF ROAST. 1h... 15c-! . BEEF LIVER BREAD 9c. 3 for j a J CAKES 15c and j . Watermellons .. 10c and i 5 t POTATOES, peck i u Tomatoes, nice & fresh 5c Phone 226 Free ’Delivery il EARL SUDDUTH <1 s 512 S. 13th st.
