Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 108, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1934 — Page 21
SEPT. 14, 1934.
Deep Frying Gi\ r es Li\ New Appeal Proper Lard Temperature Needed to Produce Pleasing Dishes. BV KITH CHAMBERS A>tkritv #i Mt Iwkrr? Doughnuts, fritters, croquettes and potatoes are common foods which we fry in deep, hot lard But, have you ever prepared or eaten liver which has been cooked by that method? If not. you have a treat in store if you will follow the suggestions I make below. Perhaps every woman does not know that lard, with Us low cost and digestibility. Is a most desirable medium for deep fat frying. On- of the reasons it Is an excellent fat for this use. is because it can be heated, without burning, to temperatures high enough to cook all the foods we fry in deep fat. In this proce s of heating there is no nndersirable change in the lard's fla. or or odor, and with the proper care, lard can be used over and over. Another desirable quality of lard for deep fat frying is that it has a dehcious nut-liko flavor which enhances the flavor of the foods fried in it. Bread Test for Frying How can you tell when the lardJ is the right temperature for different kinds of foods? How will you know when It is 350 degrees, for example? The best way, of course, is with a deep fat thermometer. But if you do not have a thermometer, the best way is the bread test. The following table gives the temperatures as indicated by the bread test. Cut it out and paste it in your cook book for handy reference. Lard at 3.V) degrees will brown a cube of bread m not less than one j minute. Lard at 350 degrees will brown a cube of bread in one minute. Lard at 360 degrees will brown a cube of bread in about forty seconds. Never, never use the “smoking point” as a gauge of telling when fat is hot enough, because smoking fat is burning fat and burned fat ruins the flavor of the food cooked in it, and it is not so easy to digest. It has been proved that properly fried foods are not difficult of digestion, and the temperature is the important consideration in proper frying. There is an economy angle, too; fat which is allowed to reach the smoking point does not keep so well as fat which is not allowed to reach an unnecessarily high temperature. French Fried Liver One delicious recipe which I know lor French fried liver suggests serving it with French fried onions—a combination which can't be surpassed. Remove the membrane from liver and cut in or.e-inch cubes. Salt, roll in eggs and crumbs and fry in deep lard at 350 degrees until well browned. Serve with French fried onions which may be cooked in the same lard after the liver is finished. Drain, place the liver on unglazed
Greatest Credit Sensation! G> „v e* *- * \\ \ \\ I | SJI Sepi^J s ale to P w\ Here*s News /or Thrifty J'l Shoppers! FURNISH your entire home, take two years to pay for it— II at Kirk’s thrifty prices ... A ■■■■l™ NEW CREDIT SENSATION . . . that makes it easy for every one to buy everything they need for their home—and pay for it, on the most liberal terms — • You'll find bargains for every room of your house ... AT AMAZIXGLY LOU PRICES! LEONARD FM yH "1 BUY your Leonard Refrigcra- I j tor now—at end of the sea- H i sen prices. Take two years to H " j pay lor it —with no extra ■ B jJgSSNgmjj charges—no interest. While ■ stock lasts —hurry—Prices H J Complete Home Outfit S-pt. ... rS| at .. • 'em|letc honir •ill- RRPf W 0 ” V 0(1 room .. . bedroom . an.t kit-'h.n . . M ,vv r :'ler. so tb rnallf>t detail ... a quality Jj 9 O 9 home . oSt . . . complete for Take 2 Years to Pay—Xo Interest M I it B4HIP 21.i W est Washington Si.
3/ * e' c >-V , o U £itk Sufe*. /O Ly> \ I' I Jbkahna irv Vie>t_
Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 353. Size Name Street City State
THIS jumper frock can be made in materials to suit the seasonwool, cotton or silk. Patterns are available in sizes 8 to 14 years. Size 12 requires 2 1 * yards of 35-inch fabric for the dress and lVs yards for the guimpe with short sleeves or l’i yards with long sleeves. • * * To obtain a pattern and simple seeing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail It to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street. Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin • • * The Fall Pattern Book, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs, now is ready It’s 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send an additional 10 cents with the coupon. ,
paper, and keep in a warm place, while the onions are being fried. Freneh Fried Onions ti medium-sued onions 1 rup flour 1 rup milk 1 e*r H teaspoon salt Lard Peel the onions, slice in U-inch slices and separate into rings. Make a batter of flour, milk, egg and salt. Dip onion rings in batter. Heat the lard to 360 degrees. Place the onions in a frying basket, lower into hot lard and fry until a golden brown. Drain thoroughly Arrange on platter around the liver and serve hot. French friend onions wall remain
crisp and may be reheated and used another day. Liver a La Madam Bcgue And from Madam Begue's famous old restaurant in New Orleans comes another recipe for French fried liver. Remove membrane from liver and cut into one to one and one-half-inch cubes. Marinate for thirty minutes or longer m a well-sea-soned French dressing, using twice as much oil as vingear. Fry in deep fat at 350 degrees until well browned. Serve piled on platter and garnished with parsley and lemon. Card Party Schcdidcd Marion County Council of Republican Women will hold its annual card party at 1:30 Tuesday in the Banner-Whitehill auditorium. Mrs. Louis R. Markun. council chairman, announces the following committees: Prizes, Mrs. Ralph Sharpe and Miss Margaret McFarland; cards, Mrs. B. L. Dougherty; hostesses, Mrs. Charles Mann, chairman, assisted by Mesdames Lee Ingling, Fred C. Atkinson, Forrest Bennet, Edward Chapman. Hubert Jordon, Fred Wagoner and Misses Mary Peacock and Nina Schmidt.
3-Pc. “Romance Combination” Diamond Engagement Ring WITH WEDDING RING TO MATCH yf/L mtVl", 75c a Week! EACH OF THE ABOVE CAN BE BOUGHT numiilUl^Bkuil//// SEPARATELY! U Oiamond and Wedding Baguette Wrist in t\ r W\WtJQB&& Match ° 19.85 Kind’s Gents’ am QF FU M|| Cameo mh".. 7VC •21 SO. ILLINOIS ST. • K,n * ”
Girls’ Gym Suits Official for all high schools. These $ A i C suits are preshrunk and guaranteed I■ I w fast color. A complete range of sizes and and an exceptional value at these #4 AP prices. 1 .ZD SMITH-HASSLER-STURM CO. 219 MASSACHUSETTS AYE.
VALUES \ Never before offered to the women of ■ssVl|P Jv Indianapolis. Until further notice we give you the opportunity to purchase this wave at the lowest price in history. VSB*' f THE STREAMLINE £ M RE-OaLISTIC PERMANENT A THOROt’GH ! ,or * lls SHAMPOO and m m • Hot Oil Treatment artistic tin err •■ JB I • Finaer AVave ■" || ace. rinr and //M f I • shampoo • Rinse 1% Vlf end rnrlt. all £— ** I • Neck Trim jj |jl Other AVave* at *1.9-*.!S-*s.*®. Thursday. Friday. Saturda/, 7e ECONOMICAL—EXCLCSIA E—EFFICIENT lc Termanents at 951 N. Tenn.. Wt Mass. Ace.. 110 Kresge Bldg. and |t(>: Shrlhr only 95* Penn. ——rw m'l j-m i m MM Shelby 3MMS fntral If TTtf'lf M 4 F - ]n,h suns Cntlere Wk A Wiil L™ kl IA9 E. Mich. 4117 colleae w „. h .,rcnn. S ,s. E ~ "” h
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
City Nurses Will Attend Convention
Delegation Announced at Meeting Which Heard Visiting Report. Director? of the Public Health Nursing Association held their September meeting yesterday at the headquarters in the Majestic building with Mrs. F. R. Kautz, presiding. Miss Beatrice Short, superintendent; Miss Marie Winkler, assistant superintendent, and several members of the staff, will attend the annual convention of the Indiana State Nurses’ Association in Ft. Wayne, Oct. 2,3 and 4, it was announced. Miss Short is chairman of the public health section which will hold a session on Wednesday and Miss Winkler is secretary of the state organization. Ira V. Hiscock, professor of public health at Yale university; Marion Howell, dean of the school of nursing, Western Reserve university, Cleveland; Mrs. Charles E. Bills, president of the association, Evansville, and Miss Florence Kirlin, executive secretary of the local League of Women Voters, will be among the speakers. Miss Short reported that during June, July and August there was an increase of patients over the corresponding months in 1933, with 400 more cases in June, 330 in July and 314 in August. The increase covered maternity cases, sickness among adults and children's diseases. A total of 6,114 visits was reported for June, 6,267 for July and 6,476 for August. Miss Marie Moran of the nursing staff, who has been granted an Abbie Hunt Bryce scholarship, will leave for New York next week to take post-graduate work in public health nursing in Teachers college, Columbia university. In the State Health Board building at the state fair last week, a group of public health nurses gave daily a dramatization of the nursing care of communicable diseases. Mrs. Vernon Hahn, a member of the board, coached the nurses. Present at yesterday’s meeting were Mrs. Hahn and MesdamesJ. O. Ritchey, Smiley Chambers, John G. Rauch, William A. Eshbach, William H. Insley, George A. Van Dyke, James C. Todd, Theodore B. Griffith, B. J. Terrell, Benjamin D. Hitz, Charles F. New, W. W. Thornton, E. M. McNally, Alex J. Cavin and Robert Bryce; Misses Deborah Moore and Helen Sheerin. Club to Give Party Mrs. Mary Arnold is general chairman of a card party to be held at 8 Monday night at Odd Fellow hall, Tenth and Rural streets, under the auspices of the Second Ward Democratic Club. Mrs. Gertrude Vogel, Mrs. Cecil McConahy and Mrs. Nelle Rittenauer comprise the bridge committee; Mesdames Susan Von Burg, Mary Collins, Anna Heck and Maude Holtkamp, 500; Mesdames Josephine Fultz, Hazel Jarvin, Eunice Garvin, Henrietta Welsh, Anna Bauer, S. R. Kennedy and Russell Haase, euchre. Mrs. Hannah Noone and Mrs. Frank T. Dowd are in charge of prizes.
Daily Recipe EGG-SANDWICH 1-4 Clip relish spread 2 Hard-cooked eggs, finely chopped Blend ingredients thoroughly and spread on thin slices of whole wheat bread with butter or vegetable margarine
HORIZONTAL Answer to Prerlonp Pnrrte training is X who is th* fr"£7A_'s ; aft q'm'TTl British banker 15 was * “P* 13 r;:r —• the body, 1 * God l° v *- 14 A wellcurtx 20 Elm. 16 Myself. LACE 511 NKBG ArbTP 22 Festive is Broad, I I/( 11 |M & A,_T TEN 23 Huge monster 19 Leaping SByTjSV UHO IfITTC U L 'eIHBE. 25 To appear amphibian. 1 CZtWRs 27 Frozen 20 Toward. BftONTE desserts 21 Unit of work. _Je Ipl 1 laJ ttMAWF 1 31 Bewitching 23 Natire.metal. IE-NG L i §nflsu CCE &5I " oman , “ 32 To perplex. *4 Baked meat. 44 Measure of VERTICAL 34 Spinal cord 26 Large member area. 2 Exclamation 37 Metric foot of the cat 45 Eruptive of surprise 39 Viewing family hot spring. 3 Modern 41 Either 28 Small Island. 47 Constructed. 4 Infectious 42 Bill of fare 29 Company of 50 Stranger tinge 43 Railroad seamen. 51 Unit’ 5 To total 44 Genus of slugs. 30 Bronze. 53 Commonplace. 6 Above. 45 To yawn. 32 Honey 54 Johnny-cake 7 Almond 46 To blind the gatherer 55 Mature person. Sindian eyes of a hawk 33 Form of *'be.” 57 Spiral of wire 9To respond to 48 Alms box 35 Third note. 6S He is governor a stimulus 49 To erase 36 Corpse. of the Bank 10 Insane 51 Queer 37 Credit of 11 Morindin dye 52 Sprite 38 You. 69 And a leader 12 He received 55 Form of "a." 40 Lodgers. in his business 56 Seventh note TANARUS"" TANARUS“ 5 1- """" <0 7 |8 |£ ’’"to rV 1 r§r - p i = ae = *- = 5T 55 — 52 z 11 1 11 I rrl I ! 1 I ,J
Chapter Meeting Set Mrs. S. R. Artman wdll talk at a meeting of the Jenny Lind chapter, International Travel-Study Club,
POSITIVELY ONLY 13 YIOHL MIA OL •* ;. '{GOING OUT gfSgSt,V V \ in'”/ \ st* 4 A OUR LEASE EXPIRES September 2 9th OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FINE WOMEN’S FALL APPAREL MUST BE SACRIFICED. COATS DRESSES—SUITS —BLOUSES—SWEATERS, SKIRTS, MILLINERY AND SHOES. Dresses s r , -’l* 7 - , 2 ,7 -*3 77 II Cools *9 77 . $ H 77 -‘14 77 -’23 77 SACRIFICING 600 „ NEW FALL S'" **> i (\ SHOES V V. V\ Values tns4 \V \ Him M. J\ Xy <*7 MUST BE SOLD V. MB * at T!As Sacrifice Price ' afl( l All Kids Patents 51.97 A -ew Mt Wk ffl 4° tions. All Sizes- /A C °J t ,ZV m Sizes 3-9. All Widths 2 0 W • W AAA ’° Materials a^ues U P 1° They Go! JMpfjj. 10* (Jw Remember —This is " in *“ r * —— iais. 26-28 East Washington Street . n -N.
Inc., Monday night, W’ith Mrs. Miriam Shumaker, hostess, assisted by Miss Agnes Kirkpatrick. Miss Ruth Maider will play piano selections.
Miss Meyer to Be Honored at Bridal Shower ' Miss Lillian Kluger. assisted by her sisters. Mrs. E. V. Schulz, Mrs. J. B. Wakeland and Mrs. Emmett B. Lamb, will entertain tonight with a kitchen shower and bridge party for Miss Dorothea Meyer, brideelect. The marriage of Miss Meyer and Paul McCune, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. McCuhe, will take place Sept. 30 in St. John's Evangelical church. The bride-elect is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Meyer. Bridal colors of blue and yellow will predommate in party appointments. Guests with Miss Meyer and her mother will be Mrs. McCune and
S C l ENT,I Fil.C EYE EXAMINATIONS ■ by j REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS O ur-Rep u ta ti o n lis \\our t CompleteiSatisfaction H yOLK pros are too ilelicnfr anti / valuable to trust to Inferior f r ” treatment. At Kay’s you are as- I F Sttred of the finest and most corn- I I plpte scientific examination hr our I skiltod Registered Optometrists! Ar- I runup payments in small weekly \_^wi|rtT.y II -si J ”diTLiT."id. LITTLE fmuTwA?HiNblON M EACH | [BpWBB3gBWWgWSHI i WEEK
PAGE 21
Mesdames Nathan McCune Max KJuger, William Schulz. Elmer MeCown, Oscar Koster. Harold Fanchum. Edward Tillman, Lucille Fox. Richard Birsfield and Betty Roell; Miss Henrietta David. Meredith Dick. Sophia Rosenthal. Naomi McCune, Betty Crowe. Edna Silox, Pearl Woods. Ruth Adolay. Myrla Breitfield and Mildred Schulz. 11 VODSTOCK DANCE TO FETE STUDENTS Mcbers of the Woodstock Club and their guests will gather tomorrow night at the clubhouse for an informal dance. The event will honor young members who soon will be returning to out-of-town colleges for classes. In charge of the evening's entertainment arc Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus. chairmen, who will be assisted by Nicholas H. Noyes Jr., Wilson Mothershcad. Miss Frances Holliday and Mrs. Malott White.
