Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 24, Decatur, Adams County, 28 January 1938 — Page 7

morican Favorite Takes irsi Place Among Winter Desserts

"“'J.' xHan-.- si ,icv {rU,lß> H ' L such g.neral th- > Wl, (his favrif (lesser' I KuTIIEG MER |NGUL PIE J ■ itieU--> ns flour I s EJolka . MLoon. butter juice sugar ,k. BiLm-ea ... 11.. U! >«•' flour. ■Sr uu' snio.eli. ■■ and eoek 1" " hl " s Si-ink-II Bpimpkin pie I cue !'9 ht b ro * n su aar

KITE'S Grocery PHONES 31 and 204 tH P RUNES -H FRf SB MEDIUM SIZE - --- I CANNED GOODS SPECIAL ■ COIN, 3 cans 25c I GRI EN BEANS, 3 cans 25c IrOJ ATOES. 3 cans 25c *&SED BEANS, 3 cans £ 25c ■■RCKERS ' , ' KX ™ ES, "’il. 25c MBsT TGftSTIES I arge package -- I Bple butter bread 2 lb. Tin Can Large Loaves w 15c 3 for 25c » mirror We s P eciaiize ° n •** kinda ° f Krafts Cheese—2 tb. box ggg» g WIIbUVU American or Brick — ■ED PEACHES Fancy 2sc |||slNS "" —25 c | ■Steak- and Roasts are cut from Tender Baby Beef. is pure, free from scraps and adulter- | atioi | KRAUT lHF RK an,) BEANS hominy RED BEANS TOMATO JUICE K PE.AS AND CARROTS Tomato and Vegetable ■ I SPAGHETTI Soup ■ CAN 5c

, !i; *2£c fcZ £BIC hearts 121 c liver 12 * c sfeak 22>C ~ ' vi?vcu u 4 m BEEF POT f* PURE PORK SAUSAGE fcn'AM 24c roast*” 20c roAst.. *sc Bi;LK 17c W~ OUR OWN MAKE 25C CASING " C H'ities 25c uver l±Fc !!<> " POBK lQ4c PUDIMNC. »** C p ork ( hops 20e STEAK >9* C I I PURE I APIA r, , . , i ORIOLO or KUHNER he Smoked Jowl 16c short Ribs ... 12>/ 2 c O LEO,2for .... 25c > iM) s 25c Brains 10c ■ — CHEESE AMERICAN or BRICK FRESH RIG EYE CHEESE ■TTEK OjC OYSTERS 3&3iC SWISS zib.Box_.__ 54C I SORG’S MEAT MARKET [ SECOND 0(!R ()VVN EREE DELIVERY PHONES <>s and <H» I OR QUALITY MEATS AT LOWEST PRICES AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED —

ti 1 teaspoon salt t/ 4 teaspoon ginger [ i/g teaspoon cloves 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 egg a 4 cup milk t/ a cup medium cream Unless pumpkin la very dry, cook ■ over low heat to evaporate moisture. Stir frequently. Remove from stove, mix sugar, salt and spices and stir into the pumpkin. Stir in unbeaten egg and mix thoroughly. Stir in milk. Stir in >4 cup cream. Idne pie plate with pastry. Pour in pumpkin mixture. Pour remaining % < up cream over top. Place in hot oven and cook until pastry is cooked on the bottom. Remove to center shelf of oven and reduce heat to moderate. I Bake until mixture will not ad-; here to knife inserted in center, or about 25 minutes longer. Top with whipped cream. APPLE CRUMB PIE Plain pastry for 1-crust pie 4 large tart apples 1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 4 cup flour 1-3 cup butter Roll out pastry and fit into pie pan. Peel and cut the apples into eighths. Sprinkle with % cup: sugar that has been mixed with I cinnamon. Stir the remaining H cup sugar with the Hour- Chop the butter into the flour and sugar mixture until it looks very crumbly. Sprinkle this over the sugared apples. Bake in a hot oven for 15

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1938.

minutes, then reduce the hast to I moderate and bake 3U minutes i more or until the apples are tender Reheat just before dinner and serve warm with cheese. CHOCOLATE CREAM PIE 3 square unsweetened chocolate 2 lz a cups milk 1 cup sugar 6 tablespoons flour '/a teaspoon salt 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 baked 9-inch pie shell 2 egg whites 4 tablespoons sugar Add chocolate to milk and heat in double boiler. When chocolate is melted beat with a rotary egg beater until blended. Combine sug- , ar. flour and salt, add gradually to 'chocolate mixture and cook until I thickened. stirring constantly. Then continue cooking 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Pour small amount of mixture over egg yolks, stirring vigorously; return to double boiler and cook 2 minutes longer. Remove from boiling water. add butter and vanilla. Cool and turn into pie shell. Beat egg whites until foamy, add sugar gradually, beating until the mixture will stand in peaks. Pile light-, ly on tilling. Bake In moderate; oven 15 minutes or until delicately brown. I APPLE PIE SUBSTITUTE Make a baking powder biscuit dough using the following proporj lions: Two teaspoons baking powder, three tablespoons shortening, and one-fourth teaspoon salt to a cup of flour. Enough milk to make a soft dough. Line a pie tin with the dough and spread generously with heavy sweet cream. Cover the pie with circular slices of apple that have been cut alatut one-fourth of an inch thick and from which the core has been removed and arrange them to overlap Sprinkle ' with sugar and cinnamon and bake ■ from 20 minutes to half an hour in a hot oven. If the apples are a kind that do not cook up quickly, stew the slices a few minutes in a small amount of water, but not long enough to cook out of shape. BANANA CREAM PIE 3 4 cup sugar 2 tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons cornstarch

EQUITY’ FRESH VALUES BUTTER 2 ib 69c First Grade Only At Equity Full Cream Cheese, 1b.19c Fine Swiss Cheese, 1b.33c Big Eye Swiss, lb. FANCY — FULL NUT FLAVOR J J** Pecan Log Roll Vanilla Brick, Orange lee Center Rolled OlTyj s\&N._Qt. Brick.. 19C Wpeak/ Icnnn icecream yUUvH/ 26 Varieties Bulk and Cone \ / 7 Assorted Bricks I lljf] Hot Fudge Sundae 10c i 151 OPEN .I" IVI T 1 N. Second 8 A M - EaWrVM to street 12 p. M. Every Day

teaspoon salt t 2 egg yolks, beaten 2 cups scalded milk grated rind of lemon 2 bananas sliced Mix sugar, flour, cornstarch and salt thoroughly. Add egg yolks and milk Cook and stir over low heat until very thick and smooth. Add lemon rind. Remove from heat. Chill. Use baked pie shell, covering bottom with sliced bananaa. Pour in cream filling. Cover top with — Lemon merhigue: Beat 2 egg 1 whites stiff. Add 4 tablespoons I sugar and ' 2 teaspoon lemon juice, i Place pie In slow oven and bake ! until the meringue is a golden brown. o NEW COLD WAVE the flood neared its crest in that I section. The hydroelectric plant i at Dixon, 111., was disabled by wat-1 era from the same river. Coal deliveries were halted at Rockford, the city hardest hit in the flood area, while truck drivers debated demands that they join a chauffeurs union. The temperature hovered near zero. i An iron county, Wis., snowplow I ■ crew released a bus driver and passenger near Hurley, Wis.. from | a bus in which they had been marooned 30 hours. Only New England and the far | west escaped the full brunt of the , storm and cold wave. The mercury went up to 80 degrees at Los An-, geles. Representative temperatures included: Duluth. Minn., -4; Greenville. Me.. 0; Moorehead. Minn., -2: 1 Austin, Tex.. 72; Pheonix, Ariz. • 74; Bedford, Ind.. 0; Wausau. Wis., | -2; Chicago, 15; Minneapolis. 12 below; Bemidji, Minn., 30 below. „.... o TITLE-HOLDING .'f’ONTiNtrßp rnoy (>?rw;) attorney's suit claimed that the windshield device obstructed a driver's vision and "assisted criminals.” “It is ridiculous to say that a• driver's view is obscured and it is j far-fetched to think that the devices will assist criminals,' Judge Cox said “I cannot see anything unconstitutional about the law. If ' I were to declare this law invalid.

1 1 would have to declare all other i regulatory measures unconstituI tlonal likewise, for this law is nothi ing more than a regulatory statute.” ... 0 - , LIST EXPENSES OF ALL UNITS All Indiana Governmental Units Show Increased Costs Indianapolis. Jan- 28. — (U.PJ —In- 1 creased spending in all Indiana governmental units accounted for the $19,773,000 boost in operating: expenses last year, state satistician . ’ Robert E. Strahlem's annual re-; ' port disclosed today. The state and each of its sub-' divisions, counties, cities, towns ■and townships, spent more money during the 1936-1937 fiscal year than during the preceding period. | Cost of the state government I amounted to $40,672,159 last year as compared with $34,765,509 in the preceding period, an increase of $5,906,650. Operating expenses for the state's 92 counties increased $3,1 469.915, totaling $27,666,151 last i year and $24,169,236 in the precedI ing year. Civil cities spent $27,630,303 dur- ) ing the last fiscal year, an increase I of $3,130,544 over the $24,499,759 I expended during the 1935-1936 perI iod. Town governments increased i their expenditures $134,974, operating expenses last year amounting I to $2,389,549 as compared with $2,254.575 in the previous year. Operating expenses for the civil townships totaled $12,399,214 last year and $10,183,308 in the previous year, an increase of $2,215,906. School townships spent $21,655,941 in the 1936-1937 fiscal period, ail increase of $1,457,761 over the i $20,198,183 perviously spent. o— - ■ WOMAN SENT TO ICO VTTNTI t:n FHOTW T.*/-*J! ■ < ?yt? > - out a preliminary speech. He had ! carried a cross. The executions took place immediately after mid- ( night. Mrs. Porter, Giancola and his younger brother. John, 20, were convicted at Belleville, 111., for the insurance-murder of her brother, l William Kappen. July 3. on the eve of his marriage to Miss Irene ' Traub. John, a minor participant 1 in the plot, is serving 99 years in prison. The Giancola brothers were to : have received SBOO of the $3,000 Mrs. Porter honed to obtain from insurance on Kappen s ine. The policies named her as beneficiary. She feared he would change the policies after marriage and so had him shot to death. All the principals were residents of St. Louis. Kappen had quarreled with his sister and intended to make his fiancee the beneficiary of his policies. Mrs. Porter, in the last months, had showed no inclination to see her children, but decided late yesterday to see her oldest daughter, Mrs. Roberta Kuehl. St. Louis, for a few minutes. She pushed away all food put before her and concentrated on her pinochle game. “I won’t eat," she said. "What's | the bid?” I She wore a black silk dress for the electric chair. It was similar to a jumper and designed so that her legs could be bared for the I electrodes. She sent no message to Gian- | cola. He had paced his cell for hours before he died, and paused i only during a visit from his mothI er and father. Mrs. Porter and Giancola were to have been executed last Friday but the 11th hour reprieve of Lieut. Gov. John Stelle, acting in the absence of Gov. Henry Horner, grant-. ed them another week. The reprieve was to permit Giancola’s j family to present new evidence. I I That evidence was a claim that ' Angelo’s moral resistance had been weakened by a social disease contracted from Mrs. Porter. SATURDAY MEAT SPECIALS I Shoulder Steak, !b. 21c j Sliced Ham, 1b.21c Fresh Side (chunk or sliced) 1b.19c i Sausage, hulk. 1b.20c Pork Roast, 1b.20c-24c Pure Pork Lard 2 lbs. 23c Raby Beef Roast lb 11-17-21 c Baby Beef Steak, lb. 18c-21c Hamburger 2 tbs. 25c Bread, loaf 10c; 3 loaves 25c Calif. Oranges, doz. —2O c J Apples, basket6oc-70c ’ Bananas 4 lbs. 22c Appleslo lbs. 25c, Potatoes, peck 24c Pepper 2 lbs. 25c I Eggs doz. 26c SUDDUTH MEAT MARKET 1512 S. 13 st. v Phone 226 Open till noon Sunday. Free Delivery.

ACCiPr THIS AMAZING GUAAANTII K' n M ■ M V A V ■ • ■ • ,a orwiMl eouUiMa and •• will r-plam >< FRKX Wk an, brand wr aril <V t»a w»« >lrm. n-jardlrra ot prur Spotlight ilI Ep COFFEE 3 43clUlvJu 1 ■ ■ Campbell’s TOMATO SOUP 4 cans SODA CRACKERS 2 1 NAVY BEANS 6 tbs. Fancy Michigan Hand Picked FANCY SYRUP PACKED PRUNE Plums 2 25c COUNTRY CLUB FANCY Country Gentleman or Corn -- N - 10c 6T 1/. Farmer Home Lancheon Al /4 Demon.tratioa Price. PEAS No. 2 1 ... Beautiful, useful pi.ca. Avondale—Sweet, Extra Standard can • WFW ~ Part thick molded aluminum >rr» 4 »Trrt aXT m M ..Steam ti t ht cover. KRAUT % NO. 2' £ ..s.v,. »ork.ndfuti Avondale-Old Fashion Flavor ** cans fow-Vartay i? riche?- moo KROGER MILD AMERICAN CREAM Fiavor ,uy,Jnl IL Ayf p ASK FOR FREE MONEY SAVING IM CARDTODAY! OHLY AT KROGER’S country club tasty 1 Pork & Beans ' 5« COLLEGE-INN RICE Lb. Chicken Noodle K ' - Z CORNMEAL 5 tb. T2T2 E-Z-Bake, Yellow sack * / Jit AVONDALE ALL PURPOSE MATCHLESS FLAVOR! FLOUR SACK RICH GOODNESS! 3 25c (iRAPENUT FLAKES pkg -1 Oc 3 3 GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 18 oz. fl ftr. — COUNTRY CLUB can •V W BCTTCR, racsHCA QLEO 2 IBs 25C BECAUSE IT'S TIMED! — ■mm mp clock Prunes slb 25c nn ir a n peaches 2 tbs. 25c jgjß gan Fancy California—Fresh Stocks—niG ! ■!■- E. Buckeye Brand sack •dP Twinkle Gelatin Dessert 4 Cvantry Club Creamery M j L K 314 OZ. f Qfi BUTTER Country Club Evaporated tall cans “ Finest Quality—9o Score W M Fresh and Sweet VlVAltlv & & J&CP IN ROLLS 3* Mm, Lb. Raleighs, Camels, Old Gold. Cartoon £ < Lucky Strikes, Chesterfields —of 200 SI JL * — FANCY FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES — Red Beets and Turnips, Jnk grsgr fresh California bunch Wb Vegetables - - Bunch.. — CAULIFLOWER each NEW PEAS Another shipment of Snow White Heads “ and Green Beans HEAD LETT! ( E 2 heads 1 Large, Solid, Fresh, Crisp Heads ” Right from the GRAPEFRUIT 10 for c , Unnv . OU Another shipment of those Texas Fruit 2 tbs. IQc CELERY l,arge bunch J rfjc " & We are still featuring California Pascal Celery New Potatoes. 1 tbs. 22c POTATOES 10 tb. bags ■■ i i Extra Fancy Maine Sand Grown Potatoes ... GUARANTEED QUALITY MEATS — Features for SATURDAY. Tenderloin <"“■ 25c Young Fancv Steer FRE S H PO R K BEEF tb-Olc STEAK tb. BOIL 2 or CHOPS V BEEF POT ROASTS— 11' 2 c CHOICE CHUCK ROAST2Oc ROUND BONE SWISS23c PORK LOIN ROAST 23c CHEESE JZL 49c VERY SPECIAL—Your Last Chance at this Low Price. PORK SHOULDERS FRESH SAUSAGE Picnic Style 4 Guaranteed 2, ,bs - 5 lb. average lb. AjL Pure Pork A V BULK PEANUT BUTTER 2 lbs. 25c BONELESS HADDOCK FISH ... 15c BONELESS PERCH FISH 15c “GOOD LUCK” OLEO 21c SMOKED BACON JOWELS 16c KROGLR "HOT DATLD" IKI 11 4ITIIJWT 1 4k n,ru ' riddv ’ 1 " 30 d COFFEE PRESENTS LjIINVA O I ItVol LAM iu C. S. T. over WOWO.

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