The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 October 1939 — Page 4
Ourcfeje/u-
j
rw r s r»t ot
prepared by
Your Newspaper—Betty Crocker Home Service Department NEW AND DIFFERENT PARTY COOKIES Receptions, teas, club meetinps and informal evening or afternoon KatherinRs call for food. Sometimes it's merely a social cup of tea or coffee—or a cold refreshinp fruit drink—and, of course, some delicious little cookies. So we’re ever on the look-out for new and different cookies to offer on these occasions. And here, I believe, are two such cooky recipes. One is an interesting; and unusual filled cooky -while the other is a delicious little drop cooky that’s full of delightful surprises —such as pieces ol refreshing; pineapple or crunchy bits of nut meats. Doesn’t that sound exactly like what you've been wanting; for a Ion'; time—cookies just a little different from those everyone else is serving? Here are the recipes: Filled Golden Jubilee Cookies 2 cups all-purpose flour 6 egg; yolks 1 cup shortening . Sift flour once before measuring. Cut the shortening inlo the flour with a pastry blender or two knives. With a fork, blend in the beaten egg yolks, a little at a time. Place pastry in bowl covered with waxed paper, and chill for several hours. Roll dough into a very thin sheet on a cloth-covered board (using flour rubbed into cloth to keep dough from sticking), and cut dough into 3-inch squares. Place 1 t a-prton of the filling on one corner of the square. Fold dough ovcHapp ng the filling like cornucopia. Place on floured cooky sheet and 1 ake •!') minutes in a slow oven, 300'’ F. Cool and dust with confectioners’ sugar.
Leads District
w
ClnX.nJ dy l) e/rjtt-
Kollywood, Califonr'-'.
There’s a battle royal ensuing! crystal pennies and hooded in the i..- amino style arbiters to see Schiaperclli manner. Both sweater
This makes 5 dozen cookies.
4 egg whites % tsp. salt
% tsp. cream of tartar
1 cup sugar
Filling % tsp. vanilla ■A tsp. almond extract M tsp. cinnamon 1 cup ground almonds
Add the salt to the egg whites and beat until foamy. Add the cream of tartar and continue beating until mixture holds its shape, when a little is dropped from the beater. Beat in the sugar, about a tablespoon at a time, until all is used and mixture is very stiff It must be so thick that when mixture is cut through with spoon it will not come together, bat remain divided. Fold in the flavorings, cinnamon and nuts. Use as filling for Filled Golden Jubilee Cookies. Honolulu Cookies
'/} cup butter
cup sugar
2 eggs, well-beaten
3 /i cup crushed pineapple (well
drained)
l 1 -! cups all-purpose flour 3 tsp. baking powder
'/) tsp. salt
’ti cup finely chopped nuts
Cream butter, add sugar gradually, and cream thoroughly. Blend in the well-beaten eggs. Blend in the well-drained pineapple. Sift the flour once before measuring. Sift the flour with the baking powder and salt . . . and add to the pineapple mixture. Blend in the nuts with the last addition of (lour. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto a well-greased cooky sheet.. . about 2 inches apart. Bake 10 to 12 minutes (or until delicately browned) in a moderate oven, 350“ F. This recipe makes about 5 dozen small cookies (about 2'A to 3 inches in diameter). As soon as these cookies come from the oven, remove them from the cooky sheet because
they are likely to stick.
——Copyright 1939 by Betty Crocker. Inc If you have any specific cooking problems, send a letter requesting information to Betty Crocker in care of this newspaper. You will receive a prompt, personal reply. Please enclose 3 cent stamp to cover postage.
now among style arbiters to see whether the wind blows hot towards the bustle and corset vogue or the hobble skirt-pencil slim silhouette. And while these fashion feathers fly, Hollywood indulges in a multi-
tude of whims.
Adrian designed every typo and mood of clothes for “The Women.” Norma Shearer, as the well-bred young matron, wearsawasp-wajsted peplum suit, lipstick red jacket subdued by flared black skirt. The coat with its square velvet sailor cdllar is jauntily toqued by a velvet .visor beret. To the other extreme, | Joan Crawford is the femme fatale in an r .otic long-sleeved evening gown, empire bodice of black velvet in eontra,st to the vivid lobster mcine skirt having hem looped under haremstyle. Joan also dashes about in a beige camel’s hair suit (swell for brisk October strolls)—short swing coat popping silver bullets and circular gored skirt topped by an old rose knit sweater. The skirt’s broad cummberbund assures a -breathlessly narrow waist. Joan’s is a gentle trotting outfit. For more ardent hikes I like Constance Moore’s Tyrolean ensemble ... a hunter’s green twill with bittersweet challis shirt and screaming colored Bavarian socks and again waistline nipped! Lana Turner, the “Dancing Co-ed” who’s prancing to stardom, boasts a fine rumble seat protector in her maroon angora sweater, buttoned front via
Schiaperclli manner. Both sweater and hood are lined with quilted Colonial percale, a 1940 flapper fad
clicking already
Cocktail fro'ks and midnight clothes go in for more fashion "musts." Rosalind Russell comes along in a 100 f > no foolin’ bustle dress — also in the "The Women.’’ Navy and white taffeta with skintight jacket caking way for tho hoomps-a-daisy skirt. There’s also an amusing hat of wired fuehia taffeta loops (hat nod gayly for no reason. Olivia de Haviland in “Raffles’ 1 wears a black crepe necklace frock in modified line with deep suede corselet girdle c uring that waistline stranglehold. And the bustle vogue is hinted again in her black postillion hat with its blue ostrich plume bouncing be hind. And are evcnini styles confusingly variable! Well — “Eternally Yours” has Loretta Young bandaged into a turqioisa mummy gown even to the gloves— a stunt of Paquin’s. “Fast and Furious” shows Ann Sothern in blue crepe formal draped with the full Turkish aura that Lanvin created. And in "Remember?” G eer Garson 'is startling in an original gown of lime green flannel, with the flowing classic linc-j of a Greecian robe. And
I did say flannel!
I From the foregoing you car. determine that fashions are running wild this season and that mostly anything goes — provided of course that your waistline is nipped, waspy
and small
College Beauty Shoppe, Shelton permanents, marcels, finger waves. Reasonable. 210 north College. Phone 570-R. Mrs. Hazel Clin Scroggln. 12-lt.
—For Sale—
Kayinoiul Riley All-time sales records for the Kroger Grocery & Baking company were broken during the company’s Fall Carnival sale, which was concluded last week, according to Raymond Riley, manager of the Kroger store in Greencastle. Stores operating under the Indianapolis branch of the company led the ntire chain in sales increases during the sale, and the company’s Greencastle store was the leader in a district that includes stores at Columbus, Linton. Crawfordsville and Brazil, Mr. Riley has been advised.
SOMFRSET BIBLE CLASSES
Further damage, however, may be neutrality program,
prevented by a simple treatment, ac-; s-nators on both sides of the cording to Davis. | neutrality fight sought to compose
Lime, preferably hydrated lime,
their diff r mces on the matter of
“freedom of the seas.”
Chairman Key Pittman, D., Nev.,
ASKS FOR NEW TRIAL
Arguments will be heard in the j Montgomery circuit court Nov. 11 on the motion of J. Cameron Moag, fonner New York and Chicago brok-! er, for a new trial. Moag was con- j victed last Sept. 8 and his punish-1 ment was fixed at two years in prison and a fine of $500 on a charge of being an accessory before the fact in the making of a false entry in the books of the Tippecanoe Loan and Trust Company of Lafayette. The Nov. 11 date for the new trial: arguments was set by Special Judge ; Howard Hancock of the Parke cir-
cuit court at Rockville.
Moag was accused of having been an accessory to Miss Margaret Cheney in the making of the false entry. Miss Cheney, a former officer of the bank, now is serving a term in the Indiana women’s prison for making
the entry.- Crawfordsville Journal
and Review.
applied to the beans when they are! placed in storage is the recommend-1 ed procedure. For a small quantity, I
say a peck, use about one part of of the foreign relations committee, weight of lime to two parts of beans, arranged a series of informal conferIf a peck up to three bushels, use'enccs to discuss shipping proposals
one part of lime to three parts of beans. If more than three bushels,
The second Of the series of Bible Classes given +>y Prof. Ainsley of Purdue University will be held at j Somerset church Friday evening at ! 7:30 o’clock. FARM BUREAU MET IN MADISON TOWNSHIP
See v Strain's Orchard for applet and cider. Apples, choice picked Grimes, 50 ■ bu„ also cider at Crystal Springs Apple Cave, west Farm Bureau. Kenneth Harris. Phone 287-W. 10-5t.
FOR SALE; Apples and cider. Buchheit Orchards. 4-tf.
FOR SALE: Starks golden delicious apples. 50c per bushel. Fresh cider daily. 304 N. Jackson. 10-3t.
FOR SALE: Picked apples, 25 and 50c, cider. Harley Harris, Cemetery Road. ll-4p See the 1940 Ford on display at Bainbridge. Koon Motor Sales. ll-6t. FOR SALE: White satin formal, black satin formal, crepe dress, sizes 13 and 14. 509 S. Ind. St. 12-lp.
Protecting 1 Beans Important Factor The numerous letters received
from citizens throughout Indiana, inquiring about methods of protecting beans from weevils, is evidence of the importance of this insect pest of dried beans. And. yet, according to J. j. Davis, head of the entomology department of the Purdue University Agricultural Experiment Station, it is a comparatively simple matter to' prevent this damage to stored beans.
Circular holes in beans, evidence of
the emergence of bean weevils, is a warning of an infestation, which if not checked may infest and destroy entirely the beans being held over winter for planting or for family use.
advanced hy Si n. Hiram W. Johnson. R., Cal., Isolationist leader, and
use one part of lime to four to six ehairmam Josiah W. Bailey, D„ N. C.. parts of beans. The lime should be 0 f the commerce ccmmittee, a produsted thoroughly through the beans ponent of the administration's pro-
so that they will receive a slight gram, coating. The residue of lime which
will sift to the bottom should not be removed, but allowed to settle through the beans to the bottom of
the container.
Shipping Rule May Be Changed
•i r?
WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 (UP) —
Administration leaders conceded pri- it will be a war of strangulation, and vatcly today that the Senate prob- j't is thii strangulation that wd 1 afably would modify some of the rig.d f ec t °ui commerce. We are trying restrictions on American shipping j to adjust our sea-going comerce to contained in President Roosve't’s j that situation.”
"I'm satisfied that the admiristratiot) will support modifications of the shipping provisions- consistent with the peace objectives of the bill -intended to preserve our merchant marine, which is a great arm of our national defense," Bailey said. “Certainly nothing will be done inconsistent with preserving the peace. The question Is: How far should we go. If this war continues,
The Madson Township Farm Bureau met Wednesday evening at No. 10 school building. Musical entertainment was furnished by the Reeves sisters. Albert Ficst and daughter Helen, and the Irwin brothers each gave a comedy act. Discussions of Farm Bureau meetings and programs were led by County Agent David L. Grimes and by Elvin Harlan. The main speaker o' the evening was Walter Thompson from Crawfordsville. Mr. Thompson is the 5th district director of th*t Farm Bureau. He spoke on the organizatioi) of Farm Bureau work. Refreshments of cider ancf doughnuts were served to a large crowd.
James White, Cloverdale, returned to his home Wednesday from the Putnam county hospital.
FOR RENT: New three room modern apartment. Call 563-W between <5 and 8 p. m. ll-3p.
PUBLIC AUCTION: House furniture, Majestic range, electric refrigerator, player piano, electric radio, living room suite and other articles, also 2 wheel trailer at my house, Indianapolis road Monday, October 16, at 1 p. m, Ernest Rader. 10-12-2t.
FOR SALE: Repair parts for all makes, coal or wood, heaters, cookstoves, ranges. Many in stock. Furniture Exchange. East Side Square. Phone 170-J. 12-lp. RUMMAGE SALE Saturday morning at 9 o’clock at the court house. First Ward P. T. A. 12-?t.
Foil SALE: Three burner wickless oil stove, splasher hack, green and black, new condition, $6.95. Furniture Exchange, East Side Square. Phone 170-J. 12-lp. FOR SALE: Three sows and twen-ty-five pigs. W. S. Lawter, Morton 12-lp.
Intsoducing^o^ggSr
v
V-
tp
jO New Low-Priced Sixes and Eights Setting New Standards of Pride and Performance to Win in Four Great Markets!
TONG FAMOUS AS THE BUILDER 1 j of America’s finest low-priced car, Pontiac makes its greatest forward stride and presents four new series of Silver Streaks for 1940— the biggest, most beautiful ever built and priced to upset every current idea of dollar-for-dollar value! If you haven’t seen these bigger, better, longer, lower beauties — you’re missing the year’s best buy! If you
haven’t driven a 1940 Pontiac — you're missing a lifetime thrill. For here's the only car of its price that can thrill you with performance and fill you with pride! It’s big. It’s distinguished and impressive . . . yet prices start just a few dollars above the lowest. It’s so good you can’t afford to miss it. So why not buy a Pontiac and have a car that makes you both proud and happy?
HAND FIRING
t/li- U eU, OLD FASHIONED
OLD
0AK1N BUCKET
There is only one reason why everyone doesn’t have Automatic Heat. And now that reason is blasted out of the way. For as little as $5.00 per month you can have a fine STOKOL-MERCURY Automatic Coal Stoker installed and commence to enjoy its comforts and economies the day you start it up. STOKOL-MERCURY is a comfort maker—a labor saver—and a money maker besides. It gives you better heat from less aoal. Investigate.
m mm rohmnmmb
Wtk MHMMM I
A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE
lor Pride and Performance HOLLY'S FRIENDLY SALES AND SERVICE 119 NORTH INDIANA STREET • GREENCASTLE, INDIANA CARS ON DISPLAY SATURDAY, OCT. 14
rOR SALE: Pop corn and sweet potatoes, either $1 per bushel. Charies Lemmink, Phone Rural 20F11. 12-2p.
—Boal Estate— FOR SALE: A 180 acre farm. All buildings and fences in good repair. 105 acres under cultivation, balance good pasture with running water. A high grade farm in good community at very reasonable price. J. T. Christie. Real Estate. 12-3t.
—For Rent— FOR RENT: Newly finished five room apartment, corner Anderson ind Bloomington streets. Very good and reasonably priced. J. G. Campbel1 - 30-tf. FOR’RENT: By week at 209 east Seminary street. Furnished suite of two rooms on first floor, private entrance and kitchen privileges. Suitable for two people. 12-3t. FOR RENT: Large downstairs furnished room. Private entrance. Call 241-J. j2.it.
FOR RENT: Over night comfortable guest rooms. Pearl O’Hair’s Guest House. 12-3t.
Il ' LnJ' sketch or pTj Talent Test (No occupation. Adrlre* Banner. >n apartment, Banner.
FOR SALE: Picked Keifer pears. Delivered. 50c per bushel. Ralph Minter, Coatesville R. 2. 10-3p.
wanteBTS^ with company ^ woman. Phnne ^ wanted HTtr ewes. State ages and i Box DE, Banner. Get W h. Evonagj building, repairs ^ Have done more buji other man in Putnam, ~HA TOHING Kqjl Send th kimlcfbnJ name to Ray Hatched (Formerly Cardinal w
Sel! your c Id aut J sheet scrap, wire, cojd Indianapolis, India* 1 COMPRESSED '•••rj
WANTED:
sh.'ii'' M y i'd G •;■/;*
WANTED: Loa i ^ Cammack’s Studio. WANTED to rent Close in. Possession | L. P. Sample. 303 Jai
-Miscellaiu
GOOD ROUTE AVJ 800 Rawleigh consmnia castle and nearby. Xa| needed. Large sales t fits. Permanent. Fullf Rawleigh's, I) ■ • port, 111.,
A registered pediatristf on Sunday for the treaty ailments. For an appoS 234. Society Mrs. Sconce Hostess To Section Four Mrs. Max Sconce w| Section Four of the Fa church Wednesday el( twenty-nine nier:tv r s I guests present. Respo-stt, Quotations Mrs B. D. S charge of t L ■ ■ "• 1 , Baughman review'’ ! ar book entitled' The Arttfli .new member was taken . ments were served. Dr. M. H. Mucker* Terre Haute Wdhv’sday4 Day banqu ' held at 'tel, commi mratms: ^ej Lambda Cl AT 1 - : ^ Nu nation il ■ rial Mr. P Reetsville R. 2, are the« son. Ronald So t. I* 01 *] morning at the Putnam^ pita). Burl Bittlos of nearP'^ jured south of Manhah noon, while loading 1°P to the Barnaby mill «" was sent to th^ P uln:1 ” -pital, but the extent were not learned. James Hill empkytf 1 Star Ceme: 1 pin' ’ " !S the Putnam County ^ day mornir for treatmj ies received during n
STOKOL-MERCURY DOMESTIC MODELS
AS IOW AS Completely Installed
$135
.. . Nothing more For you to pay Payments as low as $5.00 per month Three years to pay 2-YEAR GUARANTEE STOKOL-MKRCIJRY is a fine stoker, built of .he best materials and to the same High standards of quality workmanship as the entire STOKOL line. MOORE ELECTRIC PHONE 72 A Product of SCHWITZER-CUMMINS COMPANY Indianapolis, U. S. A. Builder, of STOKOL, STOKOLMERCURY and STOKOL HEAT Winter Air Conditioners
PHONE ECONOMY STORE The up-tonn Free Delivery Service Store pi • • I' 1 Kitchen table for cash or pay-dtiy settlement. CHICKENS, Country Dr-'sxed Fries for Saturday ’ h Ol STI RS, Fresh in the Sanitary Sealed Pint . , FISH, Fancy Pike Fllletn, I-h. S5c; Perch 23c, Sal • < ELKKY HEARTS, Fresh from the field, 3 !> <,s Lettuce. New Hot Houne I-enf, Ih. lOe; Head, q"' 1 "' " ORANGES, California Seediest*, Sweet, Medium s,/ ( VRKOTS, So full of fond value, larg ■ hunch ONIONS, Small rooking size, 10 lb. ling Xliples. Putnam Co., Grimes Golden. 10 lbs. POTATOES, Michigan Rtirnls, 15 lb. |>erk Snis-t Potatoes, Nancy Halls, nice and fresh. I SWEETHEART SOAP, Rest for Baby’s Bath m" 1 , * 11 Shave. S for PINEAPI’LE, Whole sliee, in good syrup, N"- ’ 1:1,1 j ’ PEACHES, Fre- Stone, in gotnl syrup, while they Him 7 No. »U t ons ASP \r,\<;i s, Tljm and Cuts, extra tender, N». j < OFFER, Premier with PREMIER QI VI.ITV. , MAXWELL HOUSE. 3 lb. can (Happy Host Fresh <‘ r " swifts Better meats must please vot o1, BACK Slf \K, Itrnlly cubed, always lender and juicy h’ , REEF TO ROIL, Itih, sawed and not cut with < REEF ROAST, Heavy, Meaty, Tender, Tastv, lb. VEAL CHOPS, From Swift's Select Veal, lb PORK CHOPS, CHOICE CENTER CUTS, LB PORK Steak, Ih. »Sc: Roast, SWIFTS PREMIUM BACON, I ER. ROLL SWfKPS TsndeHzed .S«^or (Aired Ham. center Slices.
