Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1928 — Page 20
PAGE 20
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Prize Winning Recipes
Here are this week’s prize winning recipes by Times readers. 'Send directions for your favorite and newest dish to the recipe edito to compete for the weekly and daily dollar awards. Neatness and legibility is a deciding factor in selecting winners. Recipes should be typed or printed carefully whenever possible. Checks are mailed two weeks after publication. Checks will not be mailed to winners unless a street number, rural route *or postofflce box number is given.
Collegiate Combination One cup boiling water, three level tablespoons Minute Tapioca, one cup tomato pulp, one-half cup cheese (cut in small pieces), two level tablespoons butter, salt and pepper, one-half cup stale bread or cracker crumbs. Cook tapioca in water fifteen minutes. Stir constantly. Add tomato pulp, one-fourth cup cheese, one tablespoon butter and season to taste. Pour into well buttered baking dish. Stir in one-fourth cup bread crumbs and cover with the remainder of bread crumbs, butter and cheese. Bake until brown. May be served hot or cold. MRS. LILLUS A. ARTHUR. 916 Moncrief Apts., Indianapolis. Squab Jolly Take sweet potatoes as large as two fists. Cut off tops for lids and cut out center to hold a fine squab. Season with butter, salt and pepper. Arrange in a dutch oven or other covered vessel and cook. Dish of tomatoes and okra are good served with the “Jollys.” J. N. COULTER. 328 E. Washington St., Indianapolis. Macaroni Salad One package macaroni, one small head lettuce, one stalk celery, one mango, one small can pimento. Cook macaroni until tender in salt water and drain. Cut into small pieces, heart of lettuce (reserving outer leaves), celery, mango and pimento. Mix together with mayonnaise and serve on lettuce leaves reserved. GRACE HUME. 429 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis. Potato Doughnuts Mash and measure one cupful of potatoes. Work in one tablespoon melted lard and let cool. Beat two eggs very light. Add one cup sugar. Beat potatoes in this mixture. Next add one-half cup sour milk, then sift in two cups of flour, to which has been added two teaspoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of soda, one-half teaspoon salt and one-fourth teaspoon each of ginger and cinnamon. Add enough flour to make a dough as soft as can be handled. RoU to one-fourth inch thickness, or less, and fry as usual. Sour milk and a soft dough are the secrets of good doughnuts, but this recipe makes extra nice ones. MISS FAN SHOAF. R. R. 5. Greensburg.
Salmon Croquettes One can of salmon (well cleaned), boil one-half pint of milk, then beat one egg, one tablespoonful of flour, pour egg and flour into the boiling milk. Pour this mixture over the salmon. Make into patties and roll in cracker crumbs. Fry in hot lard. MRS. PAUL E. JUST. 33 Parkview Ave., Indianapolis. Pineapple Delight Three tablespoons pineapple juice, one tablespoon butter, three tablespoons sugar, one-half teaspoon salt, dash paprika and red pepper, two eggs (add whites and yolks well beaten separately). Mix well and th'm add one envelope Knox gelatine dissolved in two tablespoons water. Put this on fire and just let it heat. Remove and add one-third cup vinegar and two-thirds cup milk. Put back on fire and cook until done. Remove from fire and add one medium can shredded pineapple, one cup diced orange and as many cherries as desired. Mix well add one-half— pint whipped cream. Set on ice in small loaf cake pan and cut in slices when ready to serve. Serve with whipped cream and cherry. GENEVA APPLEGATE. 1124 Broadway, Apt. 12, Indianapolis. Cherry Pickles One dozen four-inch cucumbers, one quart of cherry tree leaves, one cup salt, one cup vinegar, one and one-half gallons of water. Scrub the cucumbers and pack them in a stone jar in single layers, using three or four thicknesses of well-cleaned cherry leaves between them. Cover with a brine in the quantities named by pouring the slightly heated vinegar over the salt and then adding the water cold. Cover with a plate, weighted down to hold the cucumbers beneath the surface of the liquid, the exact quantity of which will depend upon the shape of the jar, and allow to stand ten days. Then drain, wash well in fresh water, heat to a boiling point in equal portions of vinegar and water to cover. Drain, cut crosswise, in three-eighth inch slices and pack in sterilized jars. Cover with a syrup made by boiling togfiether for five minutes one and one-half cups sugar, one cup vinegar and two tablespoons mixed pickling spices with red pepper removed. Seal and allow to stand two weeks before using and these pickles will be crisp, juicy, spicy and sweet. D. PEFFLEY. 1239 State Life Bldg’., City. Stuffed Eggplant Soak an eggplant in cold salted water for one hour or better still, over night. Parboil it for twenty minutes. Scoop out the pulp, keeping carefully away from rind. Drain through a sieve and mix with one cup bread crumbs, three-fourth cup drained crushed pineapple, a tablespoon butter, one-half teaspoon nutmeg, one beaten egg, and just enough rich milk to make a good stuffing consistency., Season the mixture with salt and pepper, stuff the eggplant shells, cover top with buttered bread crumbs and bake for about twenty minutes in a moderate oven. MRS. WALTER WITHROW. 2428 Pierson Ave., City. f Creole Corn Fritters Mix together one dozen ears corn (grated) one beaten egg, five tablej[Tum to Page Twenty-one^
HORSE AIDS IN FIGHT Saves Thousands of Lives Producing Serum. Bn United Press ROCHESTER, Mich., Aug. 24. Tess, one of the world’s greatest life-savers, observed her fifteenth birthday at Parkedale farm here today. Tess is a mare who has never been hitched to a wagon, but who has, nevertheless, pulled thousands of lives out of danger. When she was four years old she was added to the herd which is maintained by the Parke-Davis research laboratories to provide serums in the war against disease. In the eleven years she has been on the job, Tess has produced 1,023 quarts of tetanus antitoxin, containing 265,062,950 antitetanic units, which amounts to thousands of doses. The soldiers in the war and numerous civilians since then owe their lives to Tess who has enabled them to be protected from the danger of infection from lockjaw. Although Tess is serving man in a unique way, she is no martyr to science or to humanity. She has already exceeded the life expectancy of the average horse and seems well content with her lot. She has never been sick or laid off for any reason. Gets Snake Bite Serum FT. WAYNE, Ind., Aug. 24.—A supply of a newly developed serum for snake bite has been obtained by the Methodist hospital, as a result of several persons being bitten by snakes in this section recently. The serum is obtained from horses which have been highly immunized to snake venom.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Lady's An Admiral
It’s Admiral Mrs. Lucia N. Foster-Welch (center), Lady Mayor of Southampton, England, you see here. She came to the United States on the Leviathan for a week's visit. She wore a red robe with a heavy gold chain about her neck. She’s a British admiral because of the political office she holds.
BATHING TOGS PUZZLE Decency RRDe .. Aarying Standards. pa United Press ROME, Aug. 24.—Just how far women bathers may go In exhibition; legs, arms and necks this season in Italy is a difficult problem which has just been put up to the various prefects and police authorlties of the country. A decree has been issued to the prefects stating that “only bathing costumes which do not offend de-
! cency may be worn at seaside ! resorts.” The order does not attempt to fix any rule of what constitutes decency, but leaves the matter to the local authorities, some of whom naturally will be more /Strict than j others. The legs of wheelbarrows are to be lengthened as the result of | experiments by the Industrial Fa- | tigue Research Board, that has | made tests to discover the ‘‘physiological cost” of wheeling a barrowI load of bricks.
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ESTABLISHED 1859
AUG. 24. 1928
