Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 53, Number 34, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 9 April 1931 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Every Sunday iXCURSIOII
A Whole Day Visiting/ Exploring CHICAGO (C.3.T.) Lt. Napphnec . . . 4:22 am \Ar. Chicago . . . ,8:00 am •p Lincoln Park, Field Museum, Art Institute, Theatres, Lake Front, “Loop," and .visit Garfield Park Conservatory, open day and night. Returning trains ;/ . . (C.S.T.) • ' Lv. Chicago' . . 6:15 ptn Ar. Nappanee . . . 9:30 pm-
FAIRY THEATRE ___“Home' of All-Talkies^-—! • i a % rj Friday .and Saturday, April 10=11J “The Last Parade” With JACK HOLT and TOM MOORE Sunday and Monday, April 12-13 WILLIAM HAINES in “A Tailor Made Man” H. • . ■ . i ' * ’ y ‘| Tuesday and Wednesday, April 14-15 “Don’t Bet on Women” With EDMOND'LOWE ancj JEANETTE MacDONALD Don’t Forget Tuesday < Nights are Bread Wrapper Nights Friday Night is Children's Night - - . ■ 2 for 15c.
JITHEY PAW MIS Have A Dozen Thanks, Hopes and Promises
HUFFMAN BAKERY ! * ■' i *>_ „ . p 4 Wrapped in a plain glazed paper suitable for reheating. -.A- “Be Sure and Get Your Daily Dozi” It
THE MARKET BASKET By the Bureau of Home 'Economics U. S. Department of Agriculture, and the Woman’s Division of the President's Emergency Committee for Employment. Family Food Guide . - Every meal —Milk for children, bread j . for all. ■ C Every day—Cereal in porridge or! puddings. ■ Potatoes. w ' ] Tomatoes (or oranges) for children, j •. A gree* or yellow vegetable. I A friiit or additional vegetable. -j Mill, for all. . Two to four time§ a week—Tomatoes for all. Dried beans and peas or peanuts. Eggs .(especially for children).’. ! i! Lean meat, fish or poultry, or ■ cheese. , p . ■ ■v ■ ! Another of our grandmother’s ''{flst home remedies, ihe . sulphurt-and-molasses cure-ail for lias been relegated to the past, and Dr. Louise Stanley, Chief, of the Bureau of Home Economics. United S: ate s- DeoiliX tme nt of Ag ricnl t u re, off - • ers a substitute'. Site.says that the use of -fresh Vegetables' in the diet ; will,do everything tijsfi the old stand-by-was supposed to do. ’’The. modvit-ii theory of nut.rition ha's substituted fresh vegetables for the- sticky mass every member of,the! family \ya.s urged to. Take daily .by-' the spoonful as-soon ,t' spring canuyshe said. “About this time every! .year the - jar of sulphur and molasses! U-sed to appear in tin- kitciten i.up board and great store was .set by its’ curative pojvers. Though little' wasknown of the special nutritive values of the various kinds of foodsr the' spring tonic ■ was assumed-to b.e a necessity following the more ■ restricted diets of winter.'^ “Our national eating habits have changed, so greatly that any sort of spring tonic is '.sujperflous. We now j have an abundant supply of fresh! ti’ujt and vegetables the year round. facilities for shipping per-’ ishable foodstuffs -from the southern markets enables us to provide a winter diet little different from our summer diet. . These fruits an<L Vege-tables-'offer. ..a ’continuous supply of vitamins amt minerals which ; are really efficacious in maintaining! good nutrition. One vitamin, especial- j ly, which is found in varying degrees! in fruits ant) vegetables’! automatical-j lv takes- care of lagging* appeiitesj and promotes good digestion amt; the; absorption of food. Because the [ body’ has only a limited capacity -toj store tnfe vitamin, the food- supply j should contain an abundance at all! times'’ ’’*•’■ ■ For the more remote rural districts where the markets are likely io lack a- supply-of-fresh vegetables
WE THANK The people for the many ntc.e things ■ said about us. A .
WE HOPE That you will continue to buy. us and ( - like its. . '*•
WE PROMISE To be baked from two' to four times dailv. ■ ' - -
1 • ' * NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS, NAPPANEE, IND
#■ t Doctor Stanley suggests that the people take advantage of the '"’information recently offered by the Bureau of Plant industry which Tistiftsrr may soon be found in the fields and woods. The list includes poke, lamb's quarter, nettlel plantain, mustard greens, and tliWaleUons.. Sweet pot,at o tops, they say, VuiaUHO edible and when picked do not kill the parent roots. ) Beet and radish tops may be gathered and used for- greens while ’’they'; are young and," ;©nder;~c.Thb tiny beets but not the little radishes may be' cooked along with the greens. '’- / \r , : "Nettle, which to the bare? legged country child means a stinging plant to- be. avoided, is an old-world potherb. It should be picked when the sprouts are fingev-Utag and .should be cooked like spinach. Plantain was used commonly in Fram e in Tiie 16th Snd 17 1 h centuries as a potherb but it can also be served in salads. Mustard greens and iamb’s-quarter are cooked, like spinach, and poke in , the same 'way as asparagus. Most persons are familiar-with the many ways in which dandelion can ’be served as a salad, it has -recently grown so .popular tftat.it ts now being raised commercially and shipped (o market. Practically ail the benefits which might be( derived- from vegetables may- be lost in,cooking,-Beeto'r Stem, ley points out. ..The best methods, of cooking vegetables for preserving the food value, are in the- following order: baking, steaming and boiling in the skins. 'When water is" ffseu in cooking, the bureau advocates using a small quantity tor most vegetable's.' This method, with brief cooking retains ’most of the vitamins and minerals many,. of- which aresoluble .in wafer -and frequently thrown away. The, greatest fault in vegetable preparation, the bureau finds,] is over-cooking. - The addition or Tifear bonate of soda to the-vegetable water is tr- practice which the—bureau descries for it has, a tendency to destroy file vitamins and break down the .fibres and makes the y egeia hie mushy. . A Family -of “ Five Including father, mother, and three childreh should buy every week: Bread, 12 - 16 pounds. Flour, 1 - 2 pounds-. Cereal; 4 - 6 pounds. , - ■ Tr* Whale, fresh’, milk’. 23 -28 quarts or tinned unsweetened milk, 23 -’2B fall cans. - ’Rotator's, 15 -” 20 pounds.. Dried, beans, pea-, peanut bSfTor, 1 - 2 pounds'. ~ ' Tomatoes, fresh or canned, or citrus, fruit, 6 pounds. - Other vegetables some of green or yellow color) afid inexpensive fruits, KJ - 18 pounds. Fats, such as bacofc£ butter, larjl, margarine, salt pork, etc., 2 1-2 lbs. j Sugar and” molasses, .Tpounds. Lean meat, -fish, cheese, eggs, (8i eggs> approximate \ pound), 5 -7; pounds. Eggs (for children), 8- eggs. Coffee. 1 pound. ;
WE THANK The home grocerymen and clerks for the many friends they made us.
WE HOPE That you will keep our bakers busy * now that depression rs over.
WE PROMISE To remain of the same quality, glazed with Freesoland butter.
Tea, 1 ; 4 pound. Menu - wheat porridge; . top milk, coffee; 'milk for children. Lunch—Vegetable plate of baked stuffed potato; creamed carrots; cereal foT baby; boiled turnips; bread and butter; milk for all. Dinner —Macaroni and cheese; lettuce and dressing; beets; toast ;._!tea; gingerbread. *’ Baked Macaroni or Spaghetti with Cheese . 2 cups macaroni or spaghetti, brolfen into smalt pieces. 2 tablespoons flogs’. 4 tablespoons butter or other fat. 2 cups milk. 1. teaspoon sail** 3-4 pound sharp-flavored cheese. .Shaved thin. 1.-2 cup buttered bread crumbs. Cook the macaroni or-spaghetti in] 2 quarts of boiling salted water unltl. tender, and drain. Make it Sauce; with the flour, fat, milk and salt. Take it from. the stove, add the cheese, -and stir until the cheese is melted. i’lace the macaroni or spaghetti in a buttered baking dish in alternate layers with the' cheese sauce, sprjnkie the buttered crumbs over the top, and {take in a moderate oven (350. degrees FJ for about 30! minutes. , , ' j Gingerbread 1 cup enilk. “ , 3 1-8 cups sifted .soft-wheat flour. T 1-3 cup fat. 1 egg. --> **j. . I 1 egg. £ , ; *; 1-2 teasnoon.-soda. , . . ',.4 teaspo’ons baking powder. 1-2 cup Sugar. 1 -cup molasses.. 1-2 teasitoon salt. 1-2 teaspoon cloves. - :, ’ ] .1:2... teaspoon cinnamon. - ’ Mix- and sift the dry ingredients, j Stir 'the., liquid into the dry - ingrod-i ienfs. For a-shallow loaf the oven! should be. moderate about 375 degrees| F.; if muffin pans are used. thp. oven! should be fairly hot, or about 400 degrees F. * In this recipe sour milk may he: used instead of sweet ih the same! quantity. In that case the,soda! should be increased to a scant tea-| spoon, and baking povvder decreased; to 2 teaspoons’. MISS GARBER TO FILL PULPIT AT FIRST BRETHREN CHURCH - Rev. B. F. Owen, pastor of the. First Brethren church le|t^Mondayj for Alexander, 0., where las will qonduct re'vival meetiiig services. Miss] Garber, Bible" teacher in the, Nappanee schools, will take ”Rev. Owenls’; place in tJjtF pulpit Sunday morning.' In the evenihg Mrs. Bryan Stofer will give a short address, followed i i by pageant hv they Hik-J ter-hood girls."
J, J, •* J, fJ, ]• f, ♦l PERSONALS t W v *!• *l* *l* v T V *1" *l* -I* *!-
Edgar Kline of Hammond, Ind., with Mr. and, Mrs. Charles Kline, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Frevert and family of Goshen visited Monday With Mrs. E. E. Frevert. ■ - 8 - ' - . ' -- - . Mrs. Theodore Kline of Culver, Ind.', spent the past week with Mr, and Mrs. Charles Kline. - ’ , - FOR BEST QUALITY GRASS SEED AND FERTILIZER, CALL SYLER & SYLER - PHONE 87. .- V A Mr. and Mrs, Guy . Farrington andfahiily were. Sunday dinner guests,at Mr, and Mrs. VV. A. Farrington. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Farber and two sons of Lagrange were Sunday guests 'of iter parents, Mr., and Mrs, O. L. Plummer. Mr. and Mrs.; Robert Zirin of South Bend, and Mrs. P, H. Voder were Sunda'y u guesfs of Mr,and Mrs. Minear of near Warsaw. . Noah Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Stump and fatally bf Gravelton, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gall and family, Mr. ahb’~Mfs.~ Thurlo Gall Snd,Mrs. Frank Gall yis-Ued at the Quincy Brown farm Sunday. F’rank Cali, and oaugbter, Kaihryfi entertained at Sunday dinner,: Mr. ami- Mrs. Charles Burlfiehl of New Paris, Mr. anti . Mrs: Curtis Stump and family of Gravelton and Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gall and' family. Mr. and Mr's. Daniel Yoder and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse P Albin anfd family, Mr. and Mrs.'Aifrol* Mill-' er and family and Mr. an-d Mr%, Bleile and on were Sunday . dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Bleile and family. - Mr. and Mrs. Guy Farrington apd daughters, Mary Alice, Donnabelle and Janet and son, Stanley were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Laudeman and family at-Elkhart. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. ‘M. 1. Grove and son of Elkhart.* STOMACH AND BOWEL troubles are benefitted by -my treatments. Dr. Warner, v phone 176, Goshen. eifher -day -or evening, .
vww ■ ■ ■ a ■ ■ ' m v ■■
WE THANK The fanners Jor the maple syrup that Helped us to put it over.
WE HOPE That wo gave complete satisfaction to all'of our customers.
WE PfeOMISE To return your jitney if yon are mol satisfied with us..
SPE GIA LS' FOR WE E K Beginning April 10 EARLY SEED POTATOES, Certified seed, pk. - A 50c SARDINES, large oval can, mustard or - tomato sauce, 3 for \ ok^ PEANUT BUTTER, pt. Mason jar--!'! ‘ v S. & H. CORN, extra fancy, can .... '.. PINK SALMON, 2 cans ; ‘;; ■ ''' BANANAS, golden yellow, 4 lbs. ... ok* CELERY HEARTS, bunch V.'." 10c NAVY BEANS, Mich M hand picked, 4 lbs. . 25c CHIPSO, large size ~ GOLD DUST CLEANSER, '2 for '.. X'. ’' 9® - APPLES, extra good eating, 4 lbs 29c SUGAR, in cloth bag, 10 lbs . ’’';' HEIT MILLER LAU, fa!mous Chocolate candy lb 29c PRUNES, 4 lb. pkg. .............. '' ‘ 05; PASTRY FLOUR, 24 1-2 lbs .* ] 49® -COFFEE,'Red Letter (with the green glassware) lb. 35c Mishler Grocery * Phone 96 Quality Grocers
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I HE* children at their spring sports ... Vflf rH just another opportunity„to add a chap- [IfA 1 \'§ ter to your snapshot history of their lives. ,|y M Get outdoors with a Kodak. Get those JpW pictures that will become so precious in- p ™
later years. All photographic supplies are ready for you here. New Eastman cameras, rnoderately priced. Genuine Kodak Film in the yellow box Prompt, carefuLphoto finishing:
Dunham & Love Call 45 Drugs ■ We Deliver Sodas
WE THANK The radio artists and the weather nian,for their assistance.
IWE HOPE ’ " To put on another big week some time in thy near future.
V W 1 tipi ft If[|
WE PROMISE To be for Xappanee, .first, last and always, . A
THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1931
Qet Outdoors I with a Kodak Tajce Those Precious Pictures of the Children
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