Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 211, Decatur, Adams County, 4 September 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

It’s Time To Treat To Sweets Again !

You can pamper your palate ugain! You can tickle your tongue, tempt your sweet tooth ami appease your appetit.e. How long since you’ve made fudge? Did you stop because yours “always turned to sugar?" There’s n remedy for that —Just use karo in your home-made candy and it won’t crystallize. (The same goes tor frostings.) How übout a piece | of brittle to munch on while you're listening to the radio? And what about a really good dessert —the kind that deserves > the word "nectareous”Turn to ba-1 lianas for this one, and you can't

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. I miss. How about a new kind of custard, fun to make, fun to eat: Honey Custard is the unewer to yon . maiden's prayer! Go ahead and Indulge yourself this once! i Oriental Delight 2tablespoons gelatin •/z cup ccold water 2 cups coffee ; J z cup sugar 2 tablespoons cocoa or i V/t squares melted chocolate 2 cups pasteurized dates > 2 cup nut meats, chopped

1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup cream Soak gelatin In cold water for 5 mlnutua. Pour over It hot strong coffee and stir until dissolved. Add sugar and nmia or melted chocolate. Chill. When mixture begin* to thicken, add sliced dates, chopped nut meats, and vanilla. Fold in the stiffly beaten cream. Four into mold which has been rinsed In cold water, chill until firm. Peanut Brittle 2 cups karo (dark) 1 cup sugar 1 4 teaspoon vanilla 1-3 teaspoon baking soda

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 193(5.

2 cups roasted peanuts Combine the karo and sugar and boll to 300 degrees F. or until brittle when u little Is dropped In cold water. Add the soda, to the candy and spread thickly on oiled pans containing a layer of routed peanuts. Honey Cstard Make a rice ring as follows: mix 2 tablespoons cornstarch a.nd ’4 cup cold milk. Heat 2 cups cooked rice, ; 2 cups milk. >4 cup sugar and ’4 teaspoon salt in a double boiler. Add the cornstarch mixture and cook 15 minutes. Fold in 3 stiffly 1 beaten egg whites and turn into a Ting mold. Chill. Unmold onto a large plate ajid serve with Honey Cstard Sauce. Honey Custard Sauce 2-3 cup milk 1 egg yolk 1i ; tablesppons honey Few grains salt Scald milk in double bolle.r Pour ■ over egg yolk mixed with honey land salt. Return to double boiler, stir and cook until mixture thickens. Strain and chill. Pour custard in center of ring and serve. Froen Banana Sponge 24 marshmallows (about •-£ (4 cup pineapple juice 3 ripe bananas, thinly sliced 3 tablespoons crushed pineapple 1 cup cream, whipped Lady fingers or thin slices of sponge cake Heat marshmallows and pineapple juice in double boiler until ' marshmallows are melted. Beat until cool. Add bananas mixed with ■ pineapple. Then fold in cream I which has been whipped until fluffy but not stiff. Line the bottom of automatic refrigerator tray with . lady- fingers or slices of sponge i cake, placed close together. Cover with marshmallow mixture and I freeze until firm. Serve in slices ! cut % inch thick. Garnish with ad- ■ ditional whipped cream and sliced ! bananas, if desired. Serves 10 to 112. Date aramels 2 cups sugar 1 cup brown sugar 1 cup white karo i 1 cup cream 2 cups milk •/4 cup butter

2 teaspoons vanilla 1 pkg. pasteurized dates, sliced Put all Ingredients, except Vanilla, in large eaucepun (Uid cook, stirring constantly, over low heat until candy reaches firm ball stage (246 degrees F.). Remove from they add vanilla and dates, and turn at once into slightly greased pans. When cold remove from pan; cut into squares with hot knife and wrap. Tropical Nougats 1 medium-sized potato •/z cup peanut butter J'z cup canned fresh-keeping cocoanut y 2 teaspoon vanilla I'/z cups confectioner’s sugar Roll potato until tender and force through a food chopper. While still warm, add remaining ingredients in order given. Moisten if necessary with cream, but the mixture srould be very thick. Drop onto heavy wuxed paper to form small candies. Allow to stand for at least 1 hour or until firm enough | to pick up. — 0 SUIT PARTIES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 000. The rock aephalt companies demanded the full |7,000 and instigated three suits to collect this amount Last spring the cases were combineci into one. Wended Macklin testified Hits morning and afternoon at the examination. it was reliably reported that the attorneys for the conxpanies will attempt to affect a compromise after the examination today. However, the examination was concluded at 2:15 o’clock this afternoon without I a suggestion of a compromise. REBELS CAPTURE (CONTINUED FROM^PAGE jONE)_ Funes. Minister without portfolio—Jose Girla. Caballero. De Vayo, Negrin. Prieto. Galarza, and Gracia are socialists. Uribe and Hernandez are communists. Del Rios is a member of the republican union. Pie is a Catalan nationalist. Funes and Girla are members of the left republican party. A Basque nationalist is to be included in the new cabinet as minister of public works, but so far his name has not been announced. Largo Caballero, 67, is a colorful figure, long prominent in Spanish politics. He had a difficult struggle as a youth, going to work at the age of seven. Hence he has always been close to the toiling masses and has been constantly identified with leftist movements. In 1917 he was sentenced to life imprisonment because of his political activities, but later was released. He was a constant agitator against King Alfonso, who was forced to abdicate in 1931. He was accused of inciting the revolution against the republican government in 1934, "but later was acquitted by a court. He is highly influential in labor circles and was largely responsible for forming the "popular front," now in control in Madrid. REBELS CAPTURE understood he was negotiating with the rebels to prevent the destruction of San Sebastian, their next objective. Eyewitness Story (Editor's note: Edward G. De Pury, of the United Press Paris staff, is one of the seasoned United Press men sent to cover the Spanish civil war on the spot. In this dispatch he tells of his experiences with a rebel column—--1 and says that he saw himself the bodies of priests on the cross. >' will be noted that De Fury describes what he actually saw and , quotes a rebel officer, whose statements may be taken or rejected, for the rest. United Press, New York). By Edward G. De Pury, (Copyright, 1936, by UP.) Belchite, Spain, Sept. 3. —(U.R) — (Delayed)—l saw this morning the bodies of two priests, crucified. They were only a few yards from us. within the lines of the loyalist militia in the village of Pina where The PINES Bellmont Road Sunday Dinner Watermellon Balls Fried Spring Chicken Mashed Potatoes — Gravy Green Beans with Bacon Harvard Beets Perfection Salad Choice of Butter Scotch PieGinger Bread with whipped Cream or Sliced Peaches and Devils Food Cake 50c Mrs. Leota Beery —Manager For Reservations Phone 283

the rebel column to which I am attached at present has its advance |M)St. One body was crucified upright. The other was crucified head downward/ We had trudged along in the thick dus’ In a 30-mlle march southward from Zaragoza, a mixed column of cavalry and infantry under Lieut.-Col. Arce. A little while before, about three miles from this new war front, we passed a village so small that it is nameless in my field maps. Eleven villagers, men, women, and children, lay dead against the wall of a church. Each had been shot in the back. Officers of the column, which I am acconpanylng by virtue of u special pass of the rebel general staff that permits me to be the only foreign war correspondent on this front, told me that the dead people were peasants and that they had been slaughtered a few hours ago as the loyalists withdrew. Lieut.-Col. Arce, white with anger. ordered detachments of dismounted cavalry and volunteer foot troops to press ahead as fast as they could and occupy as many villages as possible, before loyalist execution squads could do their work. Arce said to me: “These red savages are doing the best they can to intimidate us. But they can only rouse my men to anger. They are cowardly. They find courage only when advancing in large numbers against inferior forces. "Among their dead we have found convicts from Barcelona prisons and the worst elements of Barcelona slums — pickpockets, white slavers. "These people prey upon the countryside, pillaging, raping, killing anyone with property.” 0 1 , . Father, Four Sons Killed By Train Coshocton, Ohio, Sept. 4 —(UP) —A father and his four eons were

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killed near hero today when thy automobile In which t hy were riding was struck by a Pennsylvania railroad train at a grade crossing. The dead were, John W. Fields, 54, and his son Raymond, 18; Cletus, 13; Clarence, 11; and Russell, 5; all of Adamsville, Ohio. London Society W oman On Trans-Ocean Flight London, Sept. 4—(UP)—Mrs. Beryl Markhum, 31 year old London society woman, took oft from Abingdon airdrome, Berkshire at 11:50 A. M. CST on a trans-Atlantic flight to New York. She hopes to be the first woman to make the westward crossing. Mrs. Markham took oft desipite unfavorable weather forecast. Her plane has a range of 4.000 miles und a cruising speed of 150 miles an hour. — -0 — — PRESIDENT TO (CONTINUED FROM state chairman; Irving Lemaux and Bowman Elder, both of Indianapolis. Congressmen from Indiana have been invited to attend the luncheon for the president, the governor said. o Lower Long Distance Rates Are Announced A reduction of long distance telephone rates on calls in excess of 240 miles became effective Tuesday, the Citizens Telephone Company announced today,. The rate reduction fe the seventh in the last 10 years and follows increased use of long distance telephone facilities. Station to station and person to person long distance calls are affected by the new scedule of rates. On person to person calls the station to station additional minute rate applies after six minutes of conversation.

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