Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1937 — Page 10
PAGE 10
Eggs Prove Cheap Meat Substitute
Expert Gives Three Recipes to Aid in Cutting Meal Costs.
(Last of a Series)
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
The white of an egg is & wonder- | 4
fully valuable source of protein, and the yolk is rich in essential vita= mins and minerals. With meat |
prices high, eggs can roll right into |
family favor and prove themselves stanch allies ih the fight for more reasonable food costs, An egg, remember, is all food. There is NO waste to it Eggs in Tomato Nests With Spaghetti (5 servings) Two cups spaghetti, 4 cups boiling water, 1 teaspoon salt, 5 medium size tomatoes, 2 tablespoons grated cheese, 4 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 cup fine buttered crumbs, 5 ges
Break the spaghetti into 2-inch | lengths and cook ih the 4 cups of |
boiling, salted water for 20 minutes, or Drain, blanch and pour into a Wwell-greased heat resistant glass casserole, 1li-quart size. Cut a thin slice from the stem end of each tomato and scoop out enough |
rapidly about
pulp $0 ah egg can be placed in |
the tomato. Add the tomato pulp, | cheese and butter, cut in small bits, to the spaghetti. Sprinkle salt and buttered crumbs over each tomato. Make 5 wells inh the spaghetti
and place a tomato in each. Break |
into each tomato, and each egg With salt 1 season. Bake uncoverad in a moderate oven until the spaghetti is not and the egg whites are firm Serve in the same dish. The hot baking dish keeps foods hot for second servings. Bake 30 minutes in moderate oven (350 degrees F.).
an egg sprinkle
a
Creole Eggs to 6 servings) Six epps, 8 tablaspoons butter, onion, 4 green pepper, 4 cups | canned tomatoes, 2 teaspoons salt,
<
4
teaspoons Worcestershire sauce, |
5 tablespoons grated cheese. Chop pepper and onion very Saute in butter for 5 minutes, then add tomatoes and seasoning. Beat eggs slightly, and when tomato mixture is very hot, add eggs. Stir With fork until nearly done, then add grated cheese, Cook another minute and serve at once on Piping hot buttered toast.
fine
Poached Eggs de Luxe
(4 tO 6 servings) Six eggs, 3 large tomatoes, © strips bacon, 6 rounds hot buttered toast, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon salt, Cut ends from tomatoes and slice in half crosswise, Dot each half with butter and grill under flame. Dice bacon and fry until crisp Poach eggs. Have bread toasted, buttered and very hot. One ach slice of toast, place a hot grilled tomato. Sprinkle tomato with grilled bacon end then lay poached egg on top Serve with Hollandaise sauce, The End.
Todav’s Pattern
| ®
until tender. | spaghetti |
American |
PT. A. Notes
| Wiss Mary Charlene Wilson is to | talk on “Books for Adults” at the | Parent-Teacher meeting at 8 p. m. tomorrow at School 25. ® ® ® “A Visit to the Home of the .ilgrim Fathers” of a talk by Mrs. D. T. Weir at | School 29 at 2:30 Pp. Mm. tomorrow, | The primary group is to present { Thanksgiving songs. ® ww
| Grades 1 to 5, School 30, are to | present a Thanksgiving program | from 3 to 4 p. m. Friday. Supper is to be served from 5 to 7p. m. From 7 to 8 p. m. patrols are to He entertained by junior high schodl pupils | with a Thanksgiving program.
® ® %
School 38 is to open its P-T. A. meeting at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow, Featured ate to be a program by the junior high school glee club, moving pictures by Miss Evelyn | Kluge from the National Dairy Council and a talk by a Red Cross representative.
| |
» »
School 85 is to hear Mrs. Wil liam R. Shirley, Indianapolis Coun=cil membership chairman, talk on “Why P-~T. A. Should Join the State and National,” at 2:45 p. m. | tomorrow. Musical numbers and readings by school *pupils are to complete the program. >» ®» » Sergt. A. CC. Magenheimer is t© talk oh “Safety” at School 75 at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow. Music is to be provided by the Boys’ Glee Club, > 9 School 76 Study Club is to meet at 1:30 p. m, tomorrow. Members are to hear Virgil Stinebaugh, assistant superintendent of schools, speak on “The Child, and the Parent.” ® 0% Ww | A patriotic program has heen planned by School 80 at 2:15 p. m. tomorrow. Miss Minnie Lloyd, Shortridge High School, is to talk on “Our Constitution==What Tt Means to Us,” a special feature in observance of the sesquicentennial | celebration of the Constitution.
. Church Groups Arrange Events
For This Week
Club meetings are hot the only events for Which local women are | planning this week, Iive church |
|
programs are on the events calen- |
| dar. The ciety, All-Souls Unitarian Church | is to have a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. | Thursday in the church, A program is to follow, Mrs, Dan-
fel Glossbrenner is to read a paper |
Som Lamb==A Farm Experience | Edwin Ray Bazaar The annual bazaar and dinner is to be held at the Bdwin Ray Meth odist Church tomorrow night. Charles EB. Huess is chairman of | booths, to be arranged by the | church’s organizations.
is to be the subject |
the School |
Jessie Wallin Heywood So- |
g &
which docked at Norfolk, Va,
tossed waters oft Cape Hatteras,
BUSINESSES SWELL RED CROSS ROSTER
‘More Firms Report 100 Per Cent Enrollment,
|
More Tndianapolis businass firms | | than usual appear to be aiming at 100 per cent employee support of the | American Red Cross, the annual] membership campaign committee reported today. Likewise, downtown building workers are showing increased sup= port, according to campaigh workers soliciting memberships. Included among firms whose em= ployees have joined 100 per cent are Fertig Tee Cream Co, March & Mc- | Lennon, First Federal Loan As= sociation, the Colonial Furniture Co, and the Royal Typewriter Co.'s local office. Several other companies have por ted gins in Shroliment.
‘BUTLER’ WOMAN,
| OYSTER BAY, N, YY, Nov. 16 | (U, P)=Doctors revealed today | that they could have saved the | life of "Alfred Grouard” if the quiet, | efficient butler in the home of | | wealthy Joseph Hamblen Sears had been willing to submit to an exes | amination which would have un- | masked ‘him” as a woman,
Grouard posed as a man for 14 | years. Th all that time not once | was her true sex suspected. So well |
Huddled in a bunk aboard the Coast Guard Cutter with 18 survivors of the freighter Tzenny Chandris, First Engineer Matthew Kkaris Zuhis of the horrors of the 30-hour battle with sharks
HER DEATH REVEALS
[in 2a ph 5
Mendota, foundered tells C. b in storme-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Tells of Escape From Sharks
337 EMPLOYED
ONVARIOUS NYA |
PROJECTS IN CITY §
High School Boys Direct. Traffic; 109 on Rolls At Technical,
| National Youth Administration | projects in Indianapolis high schools employ 337 boys and girls in a itt varfety of work, it was announced | by State headquarters here today. | Thirty-five Shortridge pupils ate | at work on NYA projects, which n= | clude grading and checking papers, | filing records end cards for the com- |
mercial, chemistry and Pagiish de- |
partments, arranging music and copying parts for the music de= partment, mending books and per forming page services in the school library and repairing equipment and supervising lockers in the gymna= | sium. On the large Technical campus, | NYA boys are assigned to traffic | duty. Others check attendance in physical education classes, make absence blanks and assist with dis-
WANTED 00D FOOD; DRANK BABY'S MILK
| A man Who gave his hame as | James Lee went into the home of | Mrs, Mary Glaser at 123 Leota St. | today, and said he wanted something to eat. Mrs. Glaser poured him a cup of coffee after he refused to leave, but he spurned it. | “I'm Boing to get something good | to sat,” he said. | He went intd the kitchen, took the | baby's bottle that was warming in | some water, removed the nipple and | drank it. Police are holding him on a vag- | rancy charge.
PLEAD FOR END OF JERUSALEM RIOTS
JERUSALEM, Nov, 18 (U. P) = | An unprecedented joint appeal to check terrorism was published today by the Arab and Jewish mu= nicipal counsellors of Jerusalem as [clashes between Arabs, Jews and police authorities continued. Twenty-four members of the Betar Twenty-four members of the Bear | Zion Revisionist Youth Organiza= | tion have been sent to a detention camp at Acre on suspicion they were | implicated ih riots Sunday during which seven Arabs and one Jewish | woman were Killed, it was ans nounced today. | Twenty-one additional members | of the organization were ordered to ( report to police authorities each | day. An Arab detective was zhot dead | Yesterday near a police station at Acre. Two bandits were killed, and
Mrs, EB. A. Blanford is chairman (hag she hidden all details of her one soldier wounded, when two mili
| of the luncheon and dinner to te Saves respectively from 11 a. m. 1 pm and from 5 to 7 p. m,
St. Mark's Event Set
St. Mark's English Lutheran Church, is to hold its annual bazaar Thursday. Luncheon is to be served from
[11 a. m, to 2 p. Mm. and dinner from
¢
——————— 4
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{ ments
5pm to 7p m The First Baptist Church Servs fee Class is to hold its monthly work meeting at 10 a, m. Thursday in the church parlors with Mrs, William O. Cheesman presiding. Class to Make Garments The class is to make baby garfor the Ooleman Hospital
charity ward, A covered dish
| luncheon is to be served with Mrs.
Jack Moore as hostess chairman, assisted by Mesdames Carl Aumann, George Brown, W. 8, Evans, Mary Herrick, Lona Kriel, William Rogge, P. L. Warner, H, M. Wright and Mrs, A, E. Mathews, Mrs, George P, Steinmetz, who has just returned from a twomonths’ tour of Europe, is to relate her experiences and display her collections, A minstrel show is to be presented by the Builders’ Class of St. Mathews Lutheran Church at 8:15 p. m, Friday in School 54 auditorjum, 10th and Dearborn Sts. Dane ald Paidrick is arrangements chair man,
———————
Circle to Have Luncheon
The Mary Oonkle Circle, Third Christian Church, is to meet for luncheon at 12:30 p. m. today in the home of Mrs. T. M. Rybolt, 5602 N, Pennsylvania St. Mrs, Rybolt is to be in charge of a musical program, Mrs, E. 8. Cummings is to lead the devotions,
we—
requires 3% yards of 39-inch material, To obtain pattern and Step-by-Step Sewing Instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your [pame and address, and mail to Pate tern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 Ww. Maryland St., Indianapoiis,
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38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 18 (36)
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Please Come Early or Call LI. 8531 for Appointment!
Vermont FREE PARKING
(| past that police, searching through her effects, could find not a single | clue to her identity.
A plaster death mask was made of her features today and this will | be photographed and sent to police | departments all over the United States and to France in the hop® that someone will recognize her,
SCOUT EXECUTIVES
“A Balanced ing Plan” November Scoutmasters’ meeting in the Indiana War Memorial Build=ing tonight at 7:30 o'clock, Robert Webb, Boy Scout field executive, will present the plan, A membership achievement propram for troops and cub packs for November and December will be outlined by S. IL. Norton, assistant executive, H, TT. Vite, director of cubbing, will speak on “Cubbing Growth and Program.” January is to be set aside for diz trict rallies and court sof honor, F. O. Belzer, scout executive, said,
‘DRUNK-O-METER’ BOUGHT BY TOLEDO
TOLEDO, Nov. 18 (U, P.) —Toledo traffic police will no longer have to argue with those “Why, I'm not drunk, officer,” guys. Machines, invented by Dr. R. N. Harger of the Indiana University School of Medicine which “will register the amount of liquor an offender has consumed by breath tests, have been ordered by the city and will be supplied traffic officers,
TO SPEAK TONIGHT
System Recruits | will be discussed at the |
| tary platoons clashed near Safed with a band of 40 men who had been | visiting villages to collect money and foodstuffx by means of threais,
‘HIGHWAY CONTRACT BIDS TO BE RECEIVED
Bar] Crawford, State Commission chairman, nounced that bids on two grade separations and 13 bridges, having an estimated cost of $540,000, are to | be received Dee. 7. This is Lhe first series of contracts for the 1938 construction program, | the Commissioner said. The projects fare on highwave in Vermillion, [y Senington. Clark, Dearborn, Foun= tain, Delaware, Clay, Benton, News= | ton, Harrison and Grant Counties,
C.1.0. UNION LOSES IN MILL VOTE HERE
Robert Cowdrill, National Labor Relation: Board regional director, announced today that the United Grain Workers Local 88, a ©. I, O, affiliate, had lost a referendum at the Evans Milling Co. here, In a recent election, 115 workers cast ballots opposing the union while 43 voted for it ag =ole bars gaining agent, Mr, Cowdrill said, There were no void or challenged ballots, he said, ASKS PLEA BE DROPPED WASHINGTON, Nov, 18 (U, P)) = The National Coal Association today asked the Interstate Commerce Commission to dismiss the railroads’ application for freight-rate increases affecting bituminous coal
Highway today an-
and coke,
\® 5S 0) v NRE # We ath
~
* J
-
up
, wl? iy
' HUDDLE?
x
ciding thet The Roosevelt is a happy 8 Yor your Naw York hotel, ‘or deciding
tribution and collection of equip- | ment. Project workers alse assist | shop teachers by checking tools, and | perform clerical duties for teachers | in the main office and for the di=| yector of vocation guidance, NYA projects at Tech employ 109 pupils One of the largest NYA activities (at Washington is assistance in a | | school safety project. Pupils grade | and schedule driving tests, NYA | work at the school employs 35 pu- | |pils. Th the home economics de= | | partment, NYA assistants arrange | | supplies, launder towels and assist at teas. Others keep clipping files in | th ¢ school library and art depart ment, perform maintenance work in the printshop and set up experi= | ments in the laboratories and assist teachers with grading and clerical duties,
FOUNTAINTOWN MAN HELD ON NEW CHARGE
SHELBYVILLE, No Nov. 18 (U, P) Rex Scudder, 21, of near Fountaintown, was under arrest again today
with an alleged attack on Miss Mathhena Siders, 17, also of near Fountaintown, Scudder war released from jail here recently under an $800 bond on the alleged attack charge, His second arrest came after Miss Siders recovered sufficiently to ex= plain to the officers that Scudder picked her up at a school where she
carried her to his automobile, foreed her in and transported her a short distance. She said she was struck on the head during the confusion. Seudder originally was held on a charge of Hl and battery with intent to
| |
STORM WARNINGS SHOWN IN SOUTH
NEW ORLEANS. Nov 18 (OU. PP) =The U, 8 Weather Bureau today ordered northwest storm warnings displayed along the Gulf Coast from | Brownesville, Tex... to New Orleans. Rain and wind of 31 milex an hour were predicted, A cold wave, advancing south. | eastward from Texas, was scheduled to bring severe weather to the mids South tonight, Weather Bureau officials called the Gulf Ooaxt digs | turbance an “inland horther.”
0. E. S. INVITES FRIENDS
Naomi Chapter 131, Order of Eastern Star, is to observe Friends’ night Friday in the Masonic Temple, North and Illinois Sts, Mrg, Genes | vieve Bard, Worthy Matron, and William R. Wigal, Worthy Patron, are to direct the meeting. |
|
on a kidnaping charge in connection |
was attending a Halloween party, |
[fell in the water,
Consus Starts
7
Timex Photo, This wag a big day for Tn= dianapolis postmen David BE. Reynolds, 2721 High= land Place, was one of the 320 postmen who distributed ecards to homes here for the nation-wide unemployment census,
G. 0. P. SOUNDS OUT
LEADING EDUCATORS
Move Soonas as Drive to Shape.
1940 Policy.
WASHINGTON, Nov, 18 (U, P). =JRdividuals on the National Executive Committee pri= are pounding out
presidents on their
| |
| vately University
Republican |
geveral | res |
|
| |
FOR CITY POSTS TO START SOON
Sessions to Be First Under
1937 Legislature Act,
OAR Says,
The first Police and Fire Depaitment merit schools under a law
|
passed by the 1037 Legislature is to |
begin “in a few days,” Merit Com= mission President W. Rowland Alfen announced today. The Commission is examining a list of 128 Police Department and | 125 Tire Department applications, | he ®aid. There are 22 vacancies in the former departments, nal wmelections for the schools will be certified to Mayor
| Boetcher soon, Mr. Alleh said fol |
lowing a Merit Board meeting fast | | hight. Commission te Select
Under the new
Formerly they were chosen
|
| |
and 12 ia the latter
two |
law, applicants | | are selected by the Merit Commis= | rion.
from the recommendations of party |
leaders, Mr, Allen claimed. The law | Yequires that the schools have no | Tews than 50 members,
filled by candidates with the high= est grades attained in the school, which lasts four to five weeks Others who receive grades above passing are placed on a "Waiting | Hist.” Under the ald law, one Aw out of every five in the school had to be placed in the Departments, Mr. AleR 1 maid.
OWNIE BUSH TO BE MEN'S CLUB GUEST
The Fletcher Trust Men's Club ix
to have as guests at its meeting to= Morrow in the Athenasum, (Ownie) Slush, Minneapolis American Asx aeiation baseball team manager, ana John (Red) COeoiriden, Chicago | Cubs’ coach, | Bd Kepner, Furance Co, agency secretary | speak at the dinner meeting, which 100 reservations have made, Erwin Bohn,
Indianapolis Life Th=
for been
club president,
ceptivity to a poseible offer of the preside and athletic reports are to
party's program manship, it was disclosed today. | The program committee formed b) [to formulate a set of policies on which the party would base efforts to regain power, Among leading educators have been approached, reportedly were Harold W. Dodds, Princeton president; Robert Maynard Hutchs ins, Chicago University president; James Bryant COonant, president; James R. Angell, president, and Robert G. Sproul, University
committee chairs
its
who
of California president, |
It was underztood the approaches |
have not been formal proffers of the post, but merely informal ef= forts to find what attitude the uni= versity presidents would take to
| *uch an offer,
CHILD TOPPLES INTO TUB OF HOT WATER
ROCHESTER, Nov, 18 (U, P) == Four=year-old Howard Nathan Cul= ver was reported in a critical cons dition today with first and seconds | degree burns received when he top[pled inte tub of sealding water, The boy's father, George Oulver,
A musical program also The elub has been
he made, is scheduled.
WaE | organized 3 more hah 15 years, the National Committee |
SAYS CHILD SUPPORT
|
| Btitute's Ww ater
a TUESDAY, NOV. 16, 1087
MERIT SCHOOLS
Toastmaster
¥arl Beam is to be toastmartep for a dinner in the First Baptist Church tomorrow night marking the Becond anniversary of the Young Married People’s Class, Murical and motion picture ens terfainment are to follow the dinnel
Vacaneies in the departments are | =
ROBERT PURDY WINS WATER COLOR PRIZE
Floyd Hopper — Herron Art Show.
in
Purdy today held Ast the John Herron Art Ins color painting class
Robert prize in
| show
| 16
Second prize, awarded by the Art Association of Indianapolis, went Floyd Hopper First honorable
| mention went to Lucy Tageait and
| honorable
second Helen
and to
Harris jointly,
mention
Kohn
Batehelo
ir 10 |
| tion
ir to |
Joseph Hurd, | day | dentally
PREVENTED BY POLICE
Harvard | Yale |
Father Sentenced Despite Testimony of Cousin.
An elderly woman testifed in Ju= venile Oourt yesterday that cousin, a man of about 40,
|
her | "eould |
not support hie child beeause police |
| him for gete A job.”
Saturday had bagged two pheasants |
on the last day of the state's fours day open =eason on the birds. Yesterday he heated a tub of [water preparatory to cleaning the birds, Howard, who was vlayving nearby, accidentally stumbled and |
held for his recovery.
| hard,
Little hope was |
officers track him down and arrest nonsupport,
The woman said her eousin, ix separated from hiz wife and child “gets arrested or has to quit work
land run away to escape arrest every
time he starts to make some money.” Oourt authorities testifed the man had been haled inte eoult three times before on
charges,
Testinmony showed that on two |
occasions the husband had procured
child naglect
every time he |
who |
| = |] » | |
a job when police reached him to |
serve warrants nonsupport charges, Juvenile Judge John Geekler, who presided at the trial, said "I under stand the way of the transgressor is But I think this man de= Ferves some time in jail "Thirty days in jail and $25 and
"eoRts,
on
INDIANA BE
LL
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wore students in conducted hy
The competitor: the water color class Eliot O'Hara A similar competis is to be held each vear, the Thastitute announced The present show ix to be on exhibit for the next two weeks
YOUTH HURT BY HUNTER AURORA. Ind. Nov, 18 (U, P) 14, Wag recovering tos from gunshot wounds accis inflicted in his ahd right arm vesterday when he Waa struck by shot fired by an uhidentis fied Ohio County huntasman
=
nose
hy £9
SR a aR
for i
long the finest and fastest daily train to
* | California
Alone in its field as the hours-fastest and only extra-fare daily train bes tween Chicago and Calis fornia, the Chief is to be dressed anew from end to end this winter ® With delivery of car after car of their new JB ks weight equipment, sheathed in gleaming stainless steel, the six regular trains of the daily Chief are gradu. ally acquiring the match. less beauty and comfort of the famous Super Chief,
THE SUPER CMIEF
This superb extra-fare train Diesel drawn and Se in stainless steel, strictly first class and but 3934 hours be: tween Chicago and Los Angeles, attained instant and continuing popularity among discriminating California travelers = for its roominess and beauty of appointment, its speed and smooth.riding comfort.
® Again this winter, four times each week, the Chi will carry a throug Phoenix Pullman from Chicago, and theve will be splendid sevvice to and rom San Bernavdine, for Palm Springs, via both the Super Chief and Chie,
CALIFORNIA LIMITED
A perennial favorite for 40 years, the solid-Pullman Calis fornia Limited, without extra fare, is another fine Santa Fe daily train between Chicago snd California.
Let us work with you in devel. oping your plans for a Calif ornia or Southwestern trip,
RP Fin, x yp Aont PINpIANATOLY Bank
one: Rie iy
