Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1937 — Page 23
PTRURSDAY, SOFT Many Food Needs Met By Sausage
© Baked Apple Becomes Cup in Which Meat Can Be Served.
The annual Indianapolis Times cooking school will be conducted by Ruth Chambers, Oct. 13, 14 and 15.
By RUTH CHAMBERS National Livestock and Meat Board
Easily cooked and nutritious sausage is a most versatile food. It offers the right answer to any number of problems. It is one of the real standbys of the perplexed mealplanner. When nothing else will do, "or there isn’t much time to plan or prepare a meal, sausage comes to your rescue. And one of its advantages is that it is suitable for ' any meal in the day. It is tempting as part of the breakfast menu. It is easily prepared for lunch. It is hearty enough for dinner. Since it is such a useful friend, sausage merits a little more consideration than it gets in some house"holds. I mean, it is entitled to a little variety in the way it is prepared and served. The next time you decide to have * sausage, whether for hreakfast or lunch or dinner, try serving it in any of the tempting ways described in these recipes.
Sausage With Baked Apple
With a sharp knife scoop out the centers from the stem end of the required number of large red apples. Remove all seeds. Do not cut through to the other side of the apple. Peel the cored end of the _ apple one-fourth of the distance down. Stuff the apples firmly with bulk sausage. Stick three or four . whole cloves in the peeled portion of the apple. . Place the stuffed apples in an uncovered baking dish and add just enough water to prevent sticking. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F. until the apples are tender. Serve very hot.
Luncheon Sausage
Butter the required number of}
small individual baking dishes. Fill two-thirds full of sausage meat. With a spoon press the sausage toward the side of the dish, making a cavity to the bottom. Break an egg into this cavity. Sprinkle with ted cheese and season liberally with paprika. Bake 20 minutes in a moderate oven. Creole Sausage
1 pound link sausages 1 cup tomatoes 2 tablespoons flour 1 clove garlic Salt and pepper Prick sausages and brown in their own fat. Place in a saucepan and over them pour tomatoes. Add pounded clove of garlic and salt and pepper to taste. Cover and simmer gently for 30 minutes. Thicken the liquid with flour blended with a little cold water. Serve with a garnish of toast points and parsley.
Deep-Dish Sausage Pie
11; pounds pork sausage 2 cups diced potatoes 1 cup diced turnips 1 cup cooked peas 1 cup diced carrots 11 cups meat stock gravy Biscuit dough Make pork sausage into small patties. Place in a frying pan with %
cup water and cook slowly until the |
- water is evaporated and the sausage browned. Place diced vegetables in a buttered baking dish with sausages on top. Cover with gravy. Cook in a moderate oven (350 de- _ grees F.) until vegetables are tender, about one hour.
Sausage and Vegetable Loaf
11% pounds pork sausage 2 cups bread crumbs 2 eggs, slightly beaten 1% cup milk 14 cup uncooked carrots 1 cup uncooked celery 1; cup uncooked tart apples
Combine pork sausage and bread crumbs. Moisten with slightly beaten egg and milk. Add carrots, celery and apples. Shape into a loaf and " bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until done about one hour. one hour.
G-MAN CHIEF RAPS SENTIMENT IN LAW
WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (U. PJ). —Chief G-Man J. Edgar Hoover said today that one of the biggest handicaps in successful crime fighting is the “sentimentalist who contends that we should slap criminals on the wrist and turn our other cheek so they once more may hit us with a blackjack.” “There is no medicine bottle in
the world big enough to hold the}
nostrums of quacks. who believe they can make criminals stop committing crimes by merely asking
them to be good,” Mr. Hoover told,
the International Association for Identification.
ACCUSED SLAYER OF G-MAN GETS LIFE
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., Sept. 30 (U. P.)—Guy Osborne, young Oklahoma desperado, who Killed a Department of Justice agent, escapea with his life 1ast night when the jury at ‘his murder trial recommended against capital punishment. The Government had demanded his life for the murder of Truett Rowe, 33-year-old FBI agent. The verdict made a life sentence mandatory.
9 PROJECTS APPROVED
Nine Indiana WPA projects costing $320,582 have been approved by Federal WPA authorities, State ~ WPA Director John K. Jennings announced today. None is in Indianapolis or Marion County. The largest project provides for
Jasper County road improvements] -
at a cost of $120,080.
© ISLEY
Styles $4.45 and 84 95
» ey
1937
1937 CENTER corners. $2.98 PERRY . WARREN .. WASHINGTON ......
WAYNE
CENTER ....cesteeeese 01 PERRY eer 2.55 WARREN ...... sessess 1.56 WASHINGTON ....... 110 "WAYNE ceceesess 1.88 DECATUR ......ccc... 98 FRANKLIN .....c..... 165 LAWRENCE .......... 1.80 PIKE ......... services 158
Relief rates.
1937 STATE .....ccr000v0ss 415 COUNTY . . CIVIL CITY ......... 114 SCHOOL CITY 1.07 CENTER POOR RELIEF .18
TOTAL RATES
Board up to Saturday.
*TAX RATES FOR TOWNSHIPS INSIDE INDIANAPOLIS
OUTSIDE INDIANAPOLIS
*Figures include State, County, Civil and School City and Poor
*INDIANAPOLIS—CENTER TOWNSHIP PROPERTY TAX RATE
*These rates are subject to revision by County Tax Adjustment
Allowed Cut $3.20 42 cents 3.27 21 394° az 2.93 412 2339 >
Request $3.62 3.48 3.16 3.05 3.74
1.74 2.47 1.95 1.21 2:51 1.09 1.90 - 1.65 1.55
141 “2.24 1.90 1.17 2.24 1.05 1.84 152 149
Request Allowed Cut 15 i — 52 49 03 1.29 © 1.25 04 1.05 1.00 05 61 31 «30 . $3.62 20 $42
¥
SURVEY OF NATION'S BUSINESS ORDERED
WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (U. P.). —Secretary of Commerce Daniel C.
Roper ordered his field offices today to make a quick survey of business and industrial activity so that the nation’s businessmen may be apraised of the outlook for the final quarter of the year. > He issued the order after being
advised unofficially that financial circles believed that neither business nor industrial producton had measured up to expectations. Mr. Roper indicated that he considered the reports unduly pessimistic in the light of available business statistics, but decided that a quick check was necessary.
SOUTH SIDE CLUB TO MEET
The South Side Civic Club is to hold a social meeting at 8 p. m. to-
morrow night in Druid’s Hall.
STRAUSS & COMPANY—THE MAN'S STORE
KIDNAP CLUES PROVE FUTILE
G-Men Seek Witnesses in Hunt for Abductors of ~ Charles Ross.
CHICAGO, Sept. 30 (U. P.)— Federal agents and police sought new witnesses today in their sofar fruitless search for Charles S. Ross and his kidnapers.
A woman whose name was withheld told Sheriff O. N. Larson of DeKalb County she saw three men in a car follow Mr. Ross as he left a Sycamore, Ill, hotel with his secretary last Saturday night. Mr. Ross was kidnaped, by three men on his way to Chicago a few hours later. Investigatorg retraced his route, seeking othef witnesses who might describe the abductors.
Other leads in the case had failed. A telephone call saying Mr. Ross’ body had been found in a suburban roadhouse proved false. A special delivery letter delivered to the Ross apartment was announced to be an offer of assistance from a Washington, D. C,, medium. Capt. Daniel Gilbert of the State's Attorney's police denied it contained a demand for ran-
som. . A telephone call to the Ross apartment, possibly from one of the abductors, could not be traced. Officers said they found no clues
WEARINGTONS x —and they are Wonders!
POLIS
\GE 28
Aids F ind Drive
LeRoy- C. Breunig, above, is chairman of the commercial division of the 18th annual Indianapolis Community Fund campaign to get under way Oct. 8 and con-
tinue through Oct. 20 with a goal set for $721,287.
in description of the kidnapers by Secretary Florence Freihage, who was with Mr. Ross when the abductors stopped his car, or in the description given by a bellboy of a man who talked with Mr. Ross in Sycamore. Mrs. Ross, waiting in her apartment for word from the kidnapers or her husband, was near collapse. A physician treated her.
VALUE OF MODERN SCHOOLS STRESSED
‘Governor Speaks at Bluff
Ave. Dedication.
«The modern child has transportation facilities which supplant the old-time boast of the man who ‘walked miles through the snow’ to get an education,” the Governor said. - Mr. Townsend pointed out that
despite the fact that school busses
travel thousandsof miles - annually “they have carried the responsibility with utmost safety for the, children.” J. Malcolm Dunn, Marion County Schools superintendent, stressed the importance of modern school buildings. : ; : “The community must keep pace continuously with the need for adeguate physical properties,” he said. Floyd I. McMurray, State Superintendents of Education, said that a modern building is a “monument to progress in education.” Modern school facilities were contrasted with the old-fashioned buildings of earlier generations by Governor: Townsend in an address at dedication exercises for the new $118,000 Bluff Ave. school building last night. More than 1500 pupils and school patrons attended the cer-
lemonies.
*
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Gui Id Lecturer
1 #5 ) 00 Mrs. Bertita Harding St. Margaret’s Hospital Guild today announced a course of six
lectures, opening Oct. 7 in the Marott Hotel.
Harry A. Franck, known as the
~ “Prince of Vagabonds,” is to open
the series, speaking on “The Day’s Events and Their Background.”. Other lecturers, their subjects and dates of appearance are: Mrs. George Philip Meier, “Lion's Paws,” Oct. 14; Burns Mantle, “The Romance of the Theater,” Oct. 21; Countess Irina Skariatina, “Russia of Yesterday and Today,” Oct. 28; Mrs. Bertita Harding, “The Twilight of Royalty,” Nov. 4; Dr. Victor G. Heiser, “An American Doctor's Odyssey,” Nov. 15.
2 DILLINGER ‘PALS’
REFUSED PAROLES
12 Other Prisoners Also Ard
Denied Term Cuts.
Two men, allegedly connected with John Dillinger in 1933 before the notorious outlaw completed ore
ganization of his “terror mob,” were.
among 14 prisoners denied paroles by the State Clemency Commission today. : They. are Paul Parker, sentenced in the Marion County Criminal Court, Sept. 8, 1933, to 10 years in the reformatory for robbery, and Noble Claycomb, given a like term in the State Prison by the Dela-
ware County Circuit Court for auto banditry on July 17, 1933. In a statement which the Come mission said was made at the instie tution, Parker said that he, Clay comb and a group of other Indie anapolis men, including Dillinger, committed 11 roberies here. Parker and Claycomb were arrested in
: Muncie.
The Commission commuted the
15-year sentence given John Mc- .
Henry in the Grant Superior Court to a six to 15-year term. He was found guilty of auto banditry in connection with the burglary of a ons store and sentenced Oct. 13,
L. S. AYRES & CO.
Anniversary
of Boys’ Wear
Laskin Lamb Jackets
Anniversary Sale Price
oo The kind every boy wants.
9.98
Trimmed with genuine front
quarter horsehide . . . full zipper. front... Cossack
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Sizes- 8
Shirts, Blouses
Anniversary Sale Price
Broadcloth shirts in plain colors and patterns, dustytones * and deeptones. Sizes 8 to 14!/;. Blouses in shirt-tail style
—some with matching ties.
yk Ofher Boys' Wear Sale Priced: Boys' a prs. for 1.00 Cotton Ribbed Underwear ............pr. 74c , ‘Shirts and Shorts ..................4 for 1.00 Heavy Shaker Knit Sweaters .......%......4.29
Red, green, blue, maroon, oxford, navy.
Baby Shaker Crew Neck Pullover. ........ 2.59 Mohair Campus Coats. ..... sceeseenes...898
Cotton Knit Suits. ....oooveeeerencnees. 1.69 Gabardine Raincoats cinesissasereveisa 3B Laskin Collar Horsehide Coats. ..........12.98
BOYS’ SHOP—FOURTH FLOOR
3
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