Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1937 — Page 29
i
enamel
FRIDAY, OCT. 8 1937
THE INDIANA
Lamb Ideal | For Variety Of Dishes
Always Tender Meat Has Delicate Flavor and Is Easily Cooked.
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 Roast leg of lamb for company dinner, or lamb stew for the children’s lunch—whatever the occasion, there seems to be a lamb dish which is just right. The growing popularity of this delicately flavored, easily cooked meat shows how well it fits into the menu of the average household, Are you one of these wise cooks who serve it often and in’'a variety of ways? There was a time when lamb was considered a seasonal meat, but now it is available in most markets throughout the year. Since it is the meat of a young animal, lamb is always tender, Its flavor is delicate and combines well with most vegetables and with fruit. This is one reason why it is popular for use in meat salads.
Serve Hot or Cold
Lamb is equally good hot or cold. One thing to keep in mind about lamb is that it should be either hot or cold, never lukewarm. When you serve roast lamb have the platter and plates warm. When the fat of Jamb cools and hardens it loses its fine flavor. On the other hand, when it is actually cold it is again very tasty. There's nothing better in flavor than cold sliced lamb roast. Because of its tenderness, all cuts
of lamb can be cooked by dry heat. The leg and shoulder of lamb make | good roasts, while the chops can be | broiled. Lamb is usually cooked to the well-done stage, but it is very good | when medium done, or even slightly | underdone,
Roast Leg of Lamb
Do not have the thin paper-like | covering known as the “fell” removed. This does not affect the! flavor, and the leg keeps its shape better and roasts a little more quickly when the fell is left on. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. | Place, skin side down and cut surface up, on a rack in an uncovered | pan. Insert roast meat thermometer. | Place roast in a slow oven (300 de- | grees F.). When the thermometer | registers 175 degrees F. the lamb is | medium done. At 180 degrees F, it| is well done. Thirty to 35 minutes | per pound are required. Other cuts which may be roasted are lamb shoulder, breast, loin and sirloin roll. The bones may be removed from the shoulder and it may be Sewed on two Sides to form a
| wept over the fact that | may ruin everything"-—meaning her | friendship with the crooner, | playing
1939-41 SLUMP
“St. Paul's Wayside Cathedral,” top photo, the automobile trailer church of the Rev. Henry Wise Hobson, of Cincinnati, youngest Protestant Episcopal bishop in the United States, Paul's in Cincinnati, which is to be razed. Below is an interior view,
showing altar and bishop's chair,
the trailer carries a loud speaking system, motion picture projection
equipment and a library.
FORECAST FROM rn SUNSPOT CURVE
Increased Solar Activity Points to Upset, Scientist Says.
NEW YORK, Oct. 8 (U. P).— Sunspots of record size and number ripped up another billion square miles of the sun’s surface today, and the advice of science was: Prepare for another depression— in 1939, 40 or 41, Dr. Harlan T. Stetson of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology told the Amateur Astronomers Association that the sunspot curve leads to the conclusion that another business slump is scheduled from 1939 to 1941, [ A billion square miles of the sun's | surface is being devastated, he said. | by one of the biggest groups of solar | cyclones on record. "Curiously enough,” he added,
replaces the historic St,
With seating space for 24 persons,
Dream of Press Agent Soured, Vallee Says Denying Romance
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 8 (U, P).—The press agent who had Actress | Gloria Youngblood and Crooner Rudy Vallee engaged to be married agreed with Mr. Vallee today that his (the press agent 's) dream Soured.
After the report was released by the Goldwyn Studio that the two were engaged, Mr. Vallee said: “Miss Youngblood is a very | charming voung woman, but we are
not engaged. Some publicity man’s |
dream apparently soured.” The publicity man remained anonymous—and silent. Meanwhile, Miss Youngblood
“this—it
who is the Cocoanut Grove --—
OS M.-G.-M.
at | nightclub. Mr. Vallee visited the
lot day before yesterday and had | { his picture taken with Miss Young- |
blood, who is part Indian, and other
| members of the cast of “The Gold-
| wyn Follies.”
Later a publicity man handed out an announcement of the engage- |
ment, setting the wedding for “sometime before Christmas.”
pocket, which is filled ‘with dressing. For roasting boned cuts, allow about | | 10 minutes longer per pound.
“Camay’s pers lather will
gos
MAPLEWOOD, N. &
Foolish to hat
—twhen having really lot
' a difference in good looks!
lather seems 10 glorify smooth and clear!
(Signed) (Mrs.
September 2 “y 19 37
HEN the music “tarts to play and the dancing begins—you'll always notice men gather around the girl with the loveliest skin! “It happens at club dances time after says charming Mrs. Lewis. “And I always wonder why every girl doesn’t have a lovely skin! It’s so easy if you use Camay!”
time,”
A charming young bride with an active social life needs a beauty care that’s effective, but
e skin that’s "just aver age” ely skin makes such
Camay's gentle
my skin — keeps it
Sincerely, DIANA LEWIS
Salim L. Lewis)
that's simple, too. "I have no worries when I use Camay!” Mrs. Lewis tells you. “There's no worry about time, no worry about results. Camay always keeps skin smooth.”
If you've had any worries about your beauty care, perhaps you don’t know this: No soap has the same rich lather Camay has. In every cake are millions of tiny bubbles that were made to get skin clean. Camay removes grime and dirt from deep in the pores,
No beauty soap on the market today is gen-
Camay
e-aisumw.asiiwW rim,
Skin”
SAYS THIS CHARMING NEW JERSEY BRIDE
tler than Camay. Tests have been made against all well-known toilet soaps on every type of skin. And time after time Camay has come out on top—definitely, provably milder. And though no other beauty soap is better than Camay, you'll find Camay very low in price. Why don’t you buy half a dozen cakes today? You'll find what thousands of girls are saying is true..."Camay keeps skin lovely!”
THE SOAP OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN
‘SIX YEARS IN DARK ENDED BY WIDOW, 90
MARION, Ill, Oct. 8 (U. P.).— After six years of blindness, both eves darkened by cataracts, Mrs. Sam McNeill, a 80-year-old widow, longed for the bright, colorful world again. She underwent an operation for removal of one cataract. | A day later, her physician re-| moved the bandages and tested her. “Why, I see only one finger,” she said, dismayed. ! “That's all I'm holding up,” plied the doctor.
re- |
BEDSIDE WEDDING HELD
ELYRIA, O., Oct. 8 (U. P.).—BErn- | est Goodside, a steel worker, refused | | to postpone his wedding just because | | injuries he had suffered at the miil | | were serious enough to keep him in | a hospital. The wedding ceremony | {was read at his bedside,
Annivers
A once-a-year
maculate washings,
economical use over a long
8 1.5.AYLES
saving on thi of 30,000 Indianapolis women. It's the washer that more than pays for itself in fresh, im-
ease of operation and
A smart buy at any price,
value at this low Anniversary Sale price!
POLIS TIMES
PAGE 29
“prices on the New York Stock Exchange have paralleled these dis turbances during the last decade in a most uncanny fashion, even to the temporary slumps of March and September, which were marked by reactionary periods both in Wall Street and on the sun. “Going back over several booms and depressions one can find that four out of the last five major business slumps have followed from two to three years after a period of maximum sunspot activity.”
BUYS MACHINE GUN TO GUARD GARDENS
ROCHESTER, N, H, Oct. 8 (U. P.).—Now Charles Pinkham has purchased a machine gun to protect his gardens against marauding tourists. Mr. Pinkham told police motorists had been going into his garden and helping themselves. He said he found a man in his garden who “just wanted a few onions for soup.” He didn't get them.
OHIOAN FAIR MEDALIST NEW LONDON, O, Oct. 8 (U.P). —-Charles McClave is looking [or new fairs to conquer. McClave, a poultry exhibitor, has won 75,000 ribbons and 100 medals in the last 04 years.
Mother Loses Leg in Saving Her Children
NEW YORK, Oct. 8 (U, P.).— Mrs. Ruth Powell, 29, lost her right leg today beecause she had saved her children, Barbara, 7 months, and Eileen, 52 years, from being crushed by a 400-pound cornice falling from a four-story apartment building. Something made Mrs. Powell glance upward just as the stone broke loose and hurtled down to the street. In a split second, she pushed Eileen into the gutter and gave Barbara's carriage a shove that sent it rolling to safety. ‘Then the stone struck her to the sidewalk. Her leg was crushed so badly that amputation was necessary. Doctors said she also had suffered a fractured skull and was in critical con-
dition. The children were un- | harmed.
POLICEMAN SCORNS WHISTLE OF METAL
BINGHAMPTON, N, Y, Oct, 8 (U. P).—When George Weslar, traffic patrolman, loses his lower front teeth, the city of Birmingham will have to buy him a whistle. For the past eight years he has been known as “the cop who whis-
tles like a whistle—~without a whise tle.”
Motorists say they , cannot dise tinguish his natural whistle from blasts which other traffic patrols men make on their brass whistles.
TREES MARK CENTENNIAL TOLEDO, Oct. 8 (U, P.).—Permae nent reminder of the city's celebration of its centennial this year will be thousands of trees to be planted this fall,
"Theres SOMETHING aboul them: you'll like
And the Tareyton
~ TAREYTON
[VERS
| Tomorrow
ary Sale
(so
s favorite washer
period of years.
an exceptional
Trade-Mark Reg. U, S. Pat. Off,
Priced
Down
Payment 16c Per Day
Small Carrying Charge Included
79.50 AMC GAS RANGE
big 4-burner, table-top range, packed with AMC quality and complete
with drawer-type broiler, oven light and top-of-range lamp.
range tomorrow, sure!
You save $20 by buying this AMC
Gas Range tomorrow! It's a great
Last D
MAYTAG
Anniversary Sale
20
See this
No Down Payment
13¢ Per Day
Small Carrying Charge Included
EASY-TO-OWN APPLIANCES—SEVENTH FLOOR
CIGARETTES
& COMPANY
| of
ah | k
I. i J Hive
Hl TLL yo mi i mo i o nmi OR) 4 1)
LET 1)
~I
* The new Model 32 Maytag, which replaces this Model 30, will be priced at 109.50!
Priced
With Your ' Old Stove
