Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 205, Decatur, Adams County, 30 August 1951 — Page 7
THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1951.
Homemaking Tip by Evelyn Gerke ' Assistant Normal room temperature—not - sunlight—is the key to ripening tomatoes ; thatj have not reached J full redness and ripeness. A temperature of 60 to 70 degrees is for ripening this scarlet pride of the garden. The snnny window sill has no advantage over\ shaded or dark places such7 as the basement, for the ripening process. In summer, the. sua sometimes gives too niufh heat 1 and-light for proper coloring of picked tomatoes that are underripe. Too much suplight may either prevent normal color
Attention Ladies! 7 . -7 ,- ‘ ", I ; ! '• < - 'i >' ■ |J ■' .- •. • ' ' ’ ; • We Invite You to Tune In Your . EACH TUESDAY ft_ JB ■ .jfrwte ' gp, 12:15 P.M. C.D.S.T. Y Station WKJG Ft Wayne ,■ 1 ■ /’’■'?■' ■'' ' • 1 T’' <1 and hear the “Harvester Hostess” program conducted by Marjorie L. Shaffer, Harvester Home Economist. -J * Marjorie L. Shatter ■■ 3-i' ■*;■■• 7’l- . '• ■ ' ‘ ' ; ' ' ' < . i f- 1 - ■ . : \ Learn how to freeze food properly and how to useyour home freezer the economical way. L’ V « /' ■; i > ■ \ I * » ' ' i f We help to sponsor this program so the people of this community will learn more about frozen foods — so feel \ • ' . ' ' 7 ? 1' '• V ' ■ t 1 • free to send your questions in to Miss Shaffer. • 7 f ■ m Seafcx-Sveu/Pay PLUS year'round TIME, MONEY and FOOD SAVINGS t with these NfW 1951 INrSRNATIONAL HARVESTER • -O>-/ FREEZERS \ With NEW OVERALL FAST FREEZING! .r. Makes perfect freezing truly carefree! '7—7— — _ — — Place food anywhere on all 5 in/n/ eide surfaces and it’esar/r/yfroaeri , ._ — or mont hs of sealed freshness! . n - r —' 'Freezing it as much fun as servBe ing'the treats you’ve stored from ft I' Bp every season of the year! And SH there’s room for months of ' MKc meals for most any size family! • "VST 1 ‘ ■' ■ TWO HUGE SIZES wtkkSM 7 ' x New, Exclusive Features \ • Pound! „ 7.— Hr' f, 7 / f Over-All Fest Freese Area — 25 <EH |yßf Bu sq.ftoffasefreeze area in Model 'M // //—-Hl —over 33 sq. ft. io Model w 158! ' ' Aa Dri-Wall Cabinet—stops excesAftL sive moisture on outside of cab- — Si lent-Sealed Operation — no I l r .“7 s fan, no noise. M^ 1 I ' r Plus ... Frost-Lok self balanc11.1 Cu. Ft. I 89z ing lid...Vac-U-Scalinsuhtioa s • ‘’ ’ automat * <: interior light... I lEr handy baskets, dividers... 'Tight Wad’* 5-year warranted ' refrigeration unit, and many ~ more features. See them today! ■•’■ \ '. ' SIZE MODEL 70 ML Easy Terms Tabletop-all < I ? A < - ' _ «??W HAVE YOU ANYTHING FOR A TRADE? SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY!! Mollenkopf & Eiting - / Corner Dayton & N. 13th St. .- 'u . — - - ■ ' \ Also On Hand For Used Immediate Delivery: * , Equipment International trucks; Fartnall tractors; Me- Plows Discs -Cormick plows; heavy duty disk harrows; 7 The new 1951 No. 64 Harvester Thresher, 7 W 30 Tractor straight-th V-u job, 6 ft. cut; elevators, culti- • > F 12 With Cltivators * matchers and cultipackers. 1946 International Pick-up Truglc - ■! Il "j| "
development or make the color splotchy. This effect of Sunlight in ripening differs from j what sunlight does to tomatoes on the vineGrowing tomatoes benefit richly from light, a determining factor in their content of important vitamin C. Summer field grown tomatoes, which get abundant sunlight, contain about twice as much vitamin C as winter and fall greenhouse fruit. z The refrigerator, of course, is the place for storing fresh tomatoes which are already ripe. But placing underripe ; tomatoes in the refrigerator stops the ripening process and makes the tomatoes watery. \ - 1
Is ScaWia* Necessary? Do vegetable* need reheating as part of their preparation for freezing it they’ll be used within a short time? Farip housewives .especially are interested in avoiding any unnecessary work n preserving vegetables by freezing When there’s a heavy load of green beans ready in the garden, isn’t it possible to package and freeze without taking time to preheat, cool and drain? What about freezing corn in the husk just as it comes from the garden? . Tests on asparagus, green beans, and corn were made to see if scalding is really necessary. One lot of each vegetable was prepared by the recommended
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
r ■ — ICiiiSb j»3l 1 > ! EBB LEE' v ' BHHBB BbL Charles Fujimoto EMeen Fujimoto John E. Betnecke Ujjgj T 'MW W ■ I H b KBV IBmB Koji Artj oshi Dwight Freeman J. D. Kimoto SEVEN COMMUNIST party leaders are under «g« FBI arrest in Hawaii on charges of advocat- , \ 1 ing overthrow of the U. S. government ' Charles Kazuyuki Fujimoto is party chairman; Eileen Toshiko Fujifnoto has been a party i executive board member since 1936; John E. 1 Reinecke is an executive board member; Jack ' j W. Hall is Hawaiian representative of the ✓ International Longshoremen’s union headed .** 7 by Harry Bridges; Koji Ariyoshi is editor of * \ 7 the weekly Honolulu Record; Dwight J. Free- } ft man Is a party organizer; Jack Denichi Kinrbto is an executive board member, wrs ‘ ’ party chairman. (International SoundvhotosJ Jack W. Hall
scalding. The other lot was frozen 1 without preheating. Ears of corn were frozen husked and packaged, also in the husk? Freezing was done at 10 F. followed by storage at zero F. All the vegetables frozen with-' out preheating developed offflavors within a month, but those scalded in advance showed little if any change. The unscalded green beans and asparagus lost' their attractive color as well as their flavor. Unscalded green showed little change during freezing but deteriorated Ip storage so that they were unpalatable in three weeks, and nnedible in foijr weeks. Corn is the husk was un- d palatable by thd, itime >it was frozen and corn husked and packaged but* not preheated changed flavor in one week. The scientists concluded: ScaldinC~fi a necessary step Ifn preparing md s t vegetables for freezing, regardless of how long they are to be stored.
1 WII 1 n WIOSRITAL V n Admitted: Mrs. Harold Fast, Decatur; Paul Fuelling, Decatur; Mrs. Artie Rickford, Ohio City, O.; O. F. Gillioin, Berne. i Dismissed: Leroy Adams, Derne; Mrs. Robert Hammond and baby girl, Judith Elaine, city; Mrs. Levi Schwartz, Monroe. A Democrat .Vant Ad —lt Pays. If You Have Anything To Sell Try
f .-BBL) * Kr" • DEMOLITION BOMBS from U. S. B-29s explode in marshalling yards oi Rashin, North Korea, 20 ihiles from Manchurian border. The raid ii the first in more than a year that UN planes have flown that neai Soviet Siberian border. Three hundred tons of bombs were unloaded or locomotive shop, rail yard, warehouses. flrUsnuUional Radiophoto,'
Kleft Is Lecturer At Ceylon University The August issue of the Valparaiso University News pictures Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Klett, who sailed last month for Ceylon, /India, where Mr. Klett will be a lecturer in geography at the University of Ceylon, Colombo. Ceylon. Mrs. Klett is the ...daughter of the Rev. and i Mrs. Paul Schatz of Lake Wood, Ohio, formerly of this city. Rev. Schultz was pastor of the Zion Lutheran chureh and his daughter, Edna Mae, fs a graduate of the | Decatur ' school. The Kletts were married last spring. _ , Selected from a large group, Mr. Klett was working toward his doctorate in geography at the University of California, prjbr to his appointment to ’ the Ceylon post. The Kletts will be gone at least two years. for Tung Oil Four-fifths of the tung oil Is used In top-grade paints and varnishes. Large amounts are used by linoleum and oilcloth manufacturers. The oil goes into printing inks, electric Insulating compounds, automobile brake linings, lacquer linings for tin cans. Its wartime uses included weatherproofing cannon shells, rifle cartridges, tank guns, tents and vehicle covers, and a wide variety military fabrics. An Elephant’s forefoot has four toes while the hind foot Las only three.
Mrs. N. Johnson Dies At Daughter's Home Mrs. N. C. Johnson, 64. of Farmhaven, died at 11:15 p.m. Wednesday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. C. E. Michel, 828 Line street where she had been visiting for’ the past three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson came to Decatur with the Michel family, who had been in Farmhaven last month, and Mrs.' Johnson suffered a stroke soon after her arrival. Death was attributed to complications. Mrs. Johnson was born in Mississippi May 25, 1887, a daugh-
B‘B| BM 'BB BB - f* ■JB MH gg 4KROGER STORE WILL BE CLOSED* , Mfl HIM IMBB ♦SEPTEMBER 3 FOR LABOR i SMOKED fSSRBn -*»•»»*♦•**•’* a 7 ■B B Selected Top Quality .. . White Reeks. M' Kingan's Reliable Frying CHICKEN u.. 59c r SHANK HALF >a ■ m SILVER SHIELD I Jit.‘A. 63c Shank Portion SLKED BACOfJ | M ro U^I H i* LF ftß Veh No Bone.. No Waste •. •to S lb. av. E ib ZLWc cannio ham »t* F Smoked PKNKSu.4»c I WIENERS u. 59c PO rk CHOPS lb. 79c I I»S Ffbsh, Lean Large. Sliced or Piece GROUND BEEF u, 65t BOLOGNA »59c H ' ’Trager-Cut Tenderay ... U. S. Good Tasty ... - 't | STEAKS “S.” »Wc HADDOCK .. 45c 3 j MIRACLE WHIP j I KRAFT'S Qt. B" Or I E Salad Dressing Jar J’w'" I IDelicia Pure Sugar Wafers » g 39c Cane Sugar 25 £>,2.39 ! KROGER. Strawberry KROGER. Fresh | Preserves 3 KROGER. COLLEGE INN Orange Juice c.” 23c whole Chicken 1.69 I PORK ‘ BEANS Kroger BREAD u 20-ot. MF r I 2 33‘ ’ -15 | Cubby’s A a PACKER’S LABEL. In Syrup « I Fruit Cocktail 24c APRICOTS "V? 29c 1 * KROGER HOT-DATED .. 3-lb. Bag 2.25 KROGER. FamUy Size, specially Priced. I SPOTLIGHT COFFEE Bag 77c LAYER CAKES Only 39c ; l7 Vacuum Packed ... Assures Freshness Delicious Krager-Mrde Candies.... KROGER COFFEE ’£ 85c CANDY SALE 19c .. - -^^aaaaegaua:araruTi ioate..n l MaawiMjraaßßMi kj POTATOES U. S. No. 1 CLEAN & gH HOME GROWN COBBLER □U-ID. V H l (j 15 P*k 49c Bag < I a Far Cooking ( Calif. Sunkkst... Large 176 Size .. NEW APPLES 4 39c JUICE ORANGES 0«59c | | SUNKIST LEMONS YELLOW ONIONS 29c |
tor of Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Ray. In addition z to the husband and daughter she Is survived by two other daughters, Mrs. George Quinn, Junction City Cal.; Mrs. Paul Rogers, Jackson. Miss.; a son. Edward Johnson. Farm haven; and three brothers Elmer Ray, Ludlow, Miss., Ervin Ray, Canton, Miss.; and Ellis Ray, Gilmer, Texas. She was a member of the Farmhaven Baptist church. The body was taken to the Gillig and Doan funeral home and will be returned to Farmhaven. Funeral services will bo held there Monday at 2 p.m., in charge of the Canton Undertaking Co. If You Have Anything To Sell Try ▲ Democrat Want Ad —lt Pays.
PAGE SEVEN
Newtek Corn Tb prnlwi Mt busbsli <rf corn, tes aofl awt dalivw ROORIOO pounds of water, IM pounds st nitrogen. B pounds of phosphorus. B pounds of potatetwa oat St pounds st Ums plus orpanto aoatter.
CreameUes /q /TidS v »*• Mrfgeg MACAKO* 1
