Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 265, Decatur, Adams County, 9 November 1948 — Page 7
■EMBER 9, 1948
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■Making Tips by || Ann-"' K - Williams BL* Demonstration Agent ( and Steady ---..d- is the rule t 0 M nkin. bacon and ff'.Wl-.-’ ti.ivor. lender text-wa-te. By keeping KK ■. ,- meat products : thoroughly without ' K w<i•■:■ I'.g or scorching, it Be A ' ii;ls another advant ’ r>.p in these meats smoking point t GL j[4 less digestible in . pan fried*or broil- . Kw-s ■ ■"’ ,,ip beat a,wa *' s K>L.v low. Turn slices ... krd for even cook Kbsusid’- To prevent greas|p tn fid,;. !> pour off the ■ton tin- pan as the bacon K,ui(i«l.-:. dime lift onto abKtt&.'i irain before serv- ■ « K| A:a'*’ ami sausage patties Hi • ..1 or oven-cooked. K cue ’to prick the links Ktgnt.. ’iie .i with a fork beKtbll t- o :t juice and flavor. links, place in a frying ■ritbr a tablespoons of watfive minutes. cover and cook ’urning frequently jKjie?. .... > brown and any ■bt •.- pi” has cooked away. Ktw patties, place in a cold ■lift and cook over low heat '. '.nigh and brown on sausage in the oven Blok-: a is convenient and tlie oven is being foods. Bake either Bor; rii-s in an open pan in hot oven (about 375 Bbrll .' io minutes, turning ■«nc| for even browning. ■ Pius Nuts nil's may he added to ■fsv4r. .. ... f or breads, niufHMsr i attics, cookies and ■kt*- ta . when the large nut B all - • plies so abundant pMn i sted is one-fourth iMMlf' up ■ f nuts to each cup in th,, recipte. to a cake mixture. t. .' ii'tely chopped and
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■ Wf -*tartm a Station) eSec'rr- ■ ""' movement. Solid wood H Sr!i rubbed in walnut. Sail*. B r ' ■ ■ etc., highly polished ■I *>rom e pi a t ec j p r j j n o ther ■ fcre, it V3JO ■ VSE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN u
put them in Jast of all ingredients i so that they will remain suspended I in the batter during baking and not ■ sink to the bottom. New Bantam Books WHAT BECAME OF ANNA I BOLTON by Louis Bromfield; ’ THE GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER by George Malcolm-Smith; GREAT STORPES FROM THE SATURDAY EVENING POST edited by Ben Hibbs; THE BIG BET by Edward Harris Heth; ENCORE FOR LOVE by Katharine . Dunlap; THE CASE OF THE MEXICAN KNIFE by Geoffrey Homes; SHORT GRASS by Thomas W. Blackburn; DEAD MAN'S by Tom J. Hopkins. Bill Mauldin's Book Bill Mauldin is working 12 hours a day on a new book which he describes as “a kind ,of fantasy.” It’s the first attempt at fiction writing by the wartime G. 1. carI toonist whose previous books, “Up ! Front” and "Back Home,’’ are cari toon collections with accompanying commentary. Mauldin says his fist fiction piece has him plotting and replotting, writing and rewriting, to such an extent that he isn’t sure just ; what the finished product will be. Book Notes SOME ARTISTS search in vain i for the right subject to illustrate i an idea while others have it hit | them in the fac® the first day out. ■ The latter is what happened to Stevan Dohonos when he set on to do a cover for the Bantam Book edition of “Great Stories from The Saturday Evening Post." Arriving in New York from his home in Westport. Conn., he was prepared to spend Hie day tramping around the city. He walked a few yards from the railroad station and there it was, the best covei scene he could amagine. The fin ished cover shows an atnusei. newsdealer seated behind his news stand with his nose buried in thi la est copy of the Saturday Even lag Post. Here is Dohonos' accoun of his discovery. —oOo—"The Cautious Armorist," Nor man Lindsay’s saucy story of a girl and three men shipwreckec. together on a desert isle, was ig nored by movie producers for moi
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than 15 years. Then a Bantam Book reprint edition es it scored a nationwide success this year. Result: Based on the book's new popularity a British movie company is filming a screen version , which will be released in the U. S. soon. Dual Jobholders Lose Battle For Payments Indianapolis. Nov. 9 — (UP) — Four of five Republican state legislators seeking $25,000 in back pay for other state jobs appeared today to have lost the final round in their battle to collect the money. The state supreme court voted against their petition for a rehearing of their case yesterday. The vote was 4-1. Head judge James A. Emmert cast the dissenting vote. The legislators, Sen. Clyde R. Black and representatives Charles Miser, Elmer Weller and Beecher
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
I Conrad, recently were told they ! could not collect the money because dual job-holding was alDrunken Driver Is Given SSO Fine Today Ralph M. Krum in, of Wolcottville, was fined 850 and costs amounting to SG2 ii} mayor's court this morning, and his driver's license was recomtnened suspended for 90 days. Krumm was arrested Monday by sheriff Heiiran Bowman on a drunken driving charge. E. Stanley Jones will not undertake his usual to.ur in India next i year. Instead, he plans to spend the first four months of the year visiting some of the lands of southeast Asia, and will not arive in . that country until around May 1, ' to stay until September.
Crusade Against Gambling Halted .Woman Disgusted By Small Fines Charged Moline, 111.. Nov. 9. —(UP) —Redhaired Marie Van Meulebrock called off her "Carrie Nation" crusade against gambling today. Miss Van Meulebrock. 26. said she was "disgusted" with the $5 j fines imposed on five tavern keep- - ers whose slot machines she had smashed in her raids. Her mother. Mrs. Prosper" Van j Meulebrock. hinted that a second death threat was a factor in the ' decision to call off the anti-gamh- ■ ling crusade. Mrs. Van Meule- . \ brock had joined her daughter in I the raids, and together they had
| become the terror of MBline's less | law abiding element. The mother said her husband had insisted that the}' "call the whole thing off" after receiving their second death threat in three days. The first one was hurled through | their window. The second came ; through the mail yesterday morning. Letters pasted on a piece of brown wrapping paper said: ‘•‘You are to be shot tonight." j Marie said she wasn't bothered by death threats. She said she was i “giving up the whole deal" because i she got no cooperation from “local groups." Marie began her anti-gambling drive when the city refused to raise the money for an animal shelter. She took it upon herself to solicit 'funds for the shelter from tavern keepers, and when they turned her down she raided them. Her mother joined the fray when
Marie was jailed for hurling a pop bottle through a saloon window. Mother and daughter ferreted out slot machines in dozens of ! places, and succeeded in bringing ! charges against 13 proprietors, I most of whom paid minor fines. ALLEN COUNTY (Cont. From Pajre One) | sion was made stronger when Lobaugh denied his guilt while under the influence of "truth serum" at. ! the state prison last March, they said. Bloom refused to say whether indictments had been returned in connection with two other deaths, those of Anna Kuzeff and Wilhelmina Haaga. Lobaugh walked into the Kokomo, j Ind, police station in’ 1947 and confessed to all thiee murders. Both Dodson and Christen were
PAGE SEVEN
held without bond. 808 HELLER (Cont. From Page One) of a direct primary bill, and reducing the state tax b"rden on Ho iers. In solving these problems, the \ most obvious of which is paying out millions in bonus checks while cutting taxes at the same time, the Democratic legislators were expec- . ted to get their advice from the man who helped lead them to their greatest Hoosier victory in 10 years. Gov.-elect Henry F. Schricker, a former state senator experienced in the legislative branch of the government and a former governor exj perienced in the executive branch will meet with the 82 Democrats and help them crystallize their thinking on the issues.
