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Rapid City Journal from Rapid City, South Dakota • 5
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Rapid City Journal from Rapid City, South Dakota • 5

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Rapid City, South Dakota
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5
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THE KAIMD CITY DAILY JOURNAL, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1937. PAGE FIVE rr? rei? raft i SMS Calif ornian Differs With Tiger Tamer Coming To Rapid LENTILS, BEANS, ECONOMY GUIDES SPECIAL CONCERT SET FOR SUNDAY SLUM CLEARANCE BILL IS SIGNED Favors Sugar Bill Teacher Who Did Not Take Liquor Gash Given Help rierre, Sept. 3 (Commendation and cash contributions from the eastern seaboard and the middle west have been received by a former Mellette county school teacher for her stand on refusing to accept old age assistance because part of the fund Is derived fro-n the liquor tax, J. W. Kaye, state sm'al security director, reported Thursday.

The elderly woman last week returned her July and August assistance cheeks saying she would rather go cold and hungry than to accept aid from liquor taxes. Kayo said he returned the cheeks to the woman and explained "If there Is any taint on the money It has been removed by the worthy purpose for which It Is being used." He explained that' only small part of the assistance money Is derived from the liquor tax. An Omaha, woman who read of the South Dakotan's action sent a $5 check to assist her. The former Instructor also received letters from a Mont-clalr, N. woman, the American Business Men's Research Foundation of Chicago and several South Dakotans.

Kaye would not reveal the name of the old age assistance recipient or her benefactors. Captain Roman Proske and his Royal Bengal tigers, shown above, constitute one of the 41 feature acts that will appear with Polack Bros, indoor circus at the municipal auditorium here, Sept. 30 to Oct. 6. The circus is under the auspices of the Knights of Columbus.

Pageanl to Feature Butte Achievement Day Event Saturday Nisland, Sept. 8 An extension club pageant, "The Pioneer Spirit in Butte County," will be a feature of an Achievement day program at Nisland Saturday. Mrs. Stella Day, Newell, will be narrator for the pageant, Frieda Schroeder, county Store canned fruit In a dry dark place to avoid mold; light causes it to fade. Canada produced approximately 29,459,000 pounds of sugar and syrup during 1936.

Hyde Park, N. Sept. 2(JP) President Roosevelt announced Thursday his approval of the Wag-ner-Steagall bill launching a experiment in federal-local slum clearance and low-rent housing construction. He also signed the senate bill authorizing a government monopoly in the production of helium and changing export rules to permit its sale of foreign countries in restricted quantities for commercial or medical purposes. Agitation for loosening existing restrictions on export of this non-inflammable gas began eoon after the German dirigible Hindenburg crashed in flames after an explosion at Lakehurst, N.

J. The loan-grant housing act cre ates a United States housing authority in the department of the Interior. It authorizes up to $500,000,000 in government-guaranteed bonds to raice funds for loans and an additional appropriation of $25,000,000 for The housing authority may lend to public housing agencies to up to 90 percent of the cost of the projects. The local communities would put up the other 10 percent. Loans may run for a maximum of 60 years.

bbead Is Your Cheapest and Best Food IODIZED OR PLAIN i -V 1 By MRS. GAYNOK MADDOX (NEA Service Staff Writer) Lentils are the roast beef of many a European diet. And you don't have to favor the league of nations to know that with meat sky high foreign dishes offer substantial ways to cut the food bill without cutting down the family nourishment. Lentils, little appreciated here, can be delicious and interesting; they cost hardly anything. Lentils With Egg Sauce (4 to 6 servings) One package dried lentils 1 pint), 2 carrots, 1 large onion, salt to taste, 2 1-2 tablespoons bultcr, 3 teaspoons chopped parsley, 1 egg yolk, 1-4 cut soup stock, pepper, 1 tablespoon lemon juice.

Wash lentils well in cold water. Soak over night, Jn morning drain and set to boil with onion, carrots, and salt in cold water to cover. When tender, drain olT water. Remove onion and carrots. Turn into saucepan, add butter and parsley.

Beat egg yolk, add soup stock and continue to beat until light. Stir into lentils. Remove from heat," add lemon juirc and pepper. Serve at once. SauU'ed lentils to 8 servings) One quart lentils, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-2 teaspoon pepper, 1-4 teaspoon baking soda, 1 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons lard, 1 minced onion, Wash lentils, soak overnight.

In the morning drain, add rold water and soda and bring to the boiling point. Boil 1 hour, drain and cover with fresh boiling water and boil until tender. Drain. Melt fat in a frying pan, add the lentils and seasonings and onion. Cook over a low fire about 20 minutes.

Soy beans and split peas also enme to the homemakers' aid while the cow jumps over the moon. Raked Hoy Beans 6 to 8 servings) Six cups yellow soy beans, 3 teaspoons salt, 2 onions, 5 tablespoons molasses, 2 teaspoons mustard, 3-4 pound salt pork, 1 tablespoon tomato catsup. Soak beans 12 hours, heat to boiling point, simmer until tender. Put besns in bean pot, add salt pork which has been cut in strips. Mix salt, mustard, catsup and molasses, add 1 cup hot water and pour this mixture over the beans.

Put cover on Sjeart pot and bake in a very slow oven (250 degrees for 10 hours, adding water when necessary so they are kept covered. J'ea Roast (6 to 8 servings) Two and a quarter cups stale bread crumbs, 2 cups green split peas, 3 teaspoons sugar, 3-4 cup walnuts, 3 eggs, 3-4 cup melted butter, 2 1-4 cups milk, 1 1-2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon pepper. Soak peas overnight, boll until tender, drain and mash. Add to the mashed peas, the bread crumbs, then sugar, nuts, beaten egg, butter, milk and seasonings. Bake in a slow oven (300 degrees in a paraffin lined bread pan 3-4 hour.

Turn out and serve with white sauce. CROPS GOOD Whitewood, Set 3 Crops are good in the vicinity of Whitewood. Howard Mayer has a yield of 30 bushels to the aero on a 100 acre field of wheat." Alvin Reuppel's wheat averaged 35 bushels and H. K. Jacks had 34 bushels to the acre.

The elevator of the Tri-Statc Milling comany is again In operation. For the the first time in years, housewives are trading A violin, cello and piano concert by Mr. and Mrs. B. M.

Goodsell, Bozeman, and Mrs. D. J. Burns, Minneapolis, will be given in the Rapid City Presbyterian church Sunday at 7:30 p. it has been announced.

The concert is open to the public on a free will offering basis. Goodsell, at present head of Montana State college music department at Bozeman, was first violinist with the Chicago symphony orchestra for ten years and for eight years was with the St. Louis symphony orchestra. Mrs. Goodsell was formerly head of the music department of the North Dakota state teachers' college at Dickinson.

The program is as follows: First movement of "Trio in Flat Major" Mozart) violin, viola and piano trio. "Ye Who Have Yearned Along" (Tchaikowsky), "Serenade" (Cas-sado) and "Gavotte" (Popper) cello solos by Mrs. Goodsell "Goin Home" from "The New World Symphony" (Dvorak), "By the Brook" (Bolsdeffre) and "Waltz" from "The Serenade for Strings" (Tchaikowsky) violin, cello and piano trio. "Campanella" (Paganini), "Romance" from "The Second Concerto" (Wieniawskl), "Saeta" 'from "Chants d' Espagne" (Nln-Kockan-ski), "Kol Nedrel" (Bruch) and "Bourre" from "The Third Suito" (Rles) violin solos by Goodsell. "Cradle Song," "Midnight" and "Spanish Serenade" (Godard) trios for two violins and piano.

NEUSON DISBARRED Pierre, Sept. 3 () The state supreme court has disbarred Thomas R. Nelson, Dupree attorney, from the practice of law in South Dakota. In an order issued late yesterday, the court said Nelson's conduct "not only warrants, but requires, disbarment." The order said Nelson'i record disclosed repeated instances of conversion of funds belonging to clients. Shhh! Just three minutes more, Mr.

Cuckoo, If you had ever taited Schilling Flavor, you'd want a second cup, too! Schilling Coffee One for Percolator another one for Drip pr Glass Maker. MM F. R. It's all in the point of 'iew. To President Franklin D.

Roosevelt, who lato Wednesday reluctantly placed his signature on new sugar-quota legislation the act is a product of an "unholy alliance" between United States beet and sugar cane growers and the seaboard refineries. To Congressman Richard J. Welch, San Francisao, whose congressional district embraces two seaboard refineries employing. 5,000 men, the legislation is a means of protecting the mainland's white labor from competition with cheap Asiatic labor of the Hawaiian Islands. president said the act legalized a "virtual monopoly" by a small group of seaboard refiners.

He signed it only after assurance from congressional leaders that beet and sugar cane growers were ending their "unholy alliance" with the coast refiners. Congressman Welch, who with Mrs. Welch and son, Grant, stopped at the Alex Johnson hotel in Rapid City Thursday night on his way home from the national capital, said the alternative to the imposition of sugar quotas against, offshore producers was the ruination of the United States' domestic sugar industry. The California representative is no novice at the game of protecting the United States' Beaboard refineries. Veteran A republican, he has served seven terms in congress, and he admits at least some of his 14 years as a congressman have been spent in the interest of the two San Francisco seaboard refineries, the Spreckcls company and the Hawaiian American Sugar company, which furnish jobs for 5,000 voters in his district.

"If we permitted Hawaiian su gar to come in without restriction," Congressman declared, "the cheap Asiatic labor employed by growers and refiners over there would enable them to put the San Francisco sugar industry and your Black Hills sugar beet industry out of taurines," He admitted the new legislation would mean higher sugar prices to consumers. "But," he added, "those consumers would be taxed more for relief should the seaboard re fineries shut down and throw. 000 men out of work and should farmers in the United States be deprived of the income they re ceive from sugar beets and cane grown in this country." Congressman Welch also commented on the failure of the house to pass the Black-Connery wage- hour act approved by the senate. A member of the house laoor committee which favorably report ed the bill, he said the more pow erful rules committee held up the measure presumably because "they were anxious to end the session and get home." The California representative said "there is little doubt the bill will be passed by a substantial majority at the next session of con gress. The measure, as approved by the senate, provides for a minimum wage which would not be higher than 40 cents an hour and a maximum work week which would not be shorter than 40 hours.

help in feeding the threshing crews fried chicken and vegetables from their own gardens. 2 sprigs parsley, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-2 teaspoon pepper. Cut each chicken In 4 pieces, wah well and dry. Dip In flour and then a batter made of the beaten eggs, tomatoes, chopped onion and parsley and seasonings. Fry in deep fat, serve with tomato sauce.

Tomato Sauce Two cups tomatoes, 2 cups water, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon allspice, 2 sprigs chopped parsley, 1 tablespoon chopped onion, 1 tablespoon butter, 1-2 teaocn salt, dash pepper, 1 heaping teaspoon cornstarch. Boil together tomatoes, water, seasonings, sj.vi? and parsley. Saute onicn in butter, add corn-rtarch and cook well. Add this to tomato and seasoning, cook until thick and strain. Tan Fried Chicken (6 servings) Select 2 broilers weighing 1 1-2 pounds each.

Wash carefully, dry and cut in halves. Place in a roasting pan and salt and pepper well. Pour over them 1-2 cup of melted butter and 1 cup of heavy cream. Bake about 3-4 hour in a hot oven (400 degrees basting frequently. When almost done add 1 teaspoon of paprika to gravy.

Fry small pieces of bacon very crisp. When ready to serve pour pan gravy over chickens, place a piece of crif-p bacon on top and serve with spiced peaches. 'A FRUIT CUP CAKES GO WITH COFFEE By MRS. GAVNOR MADDOX (NIC A Service Staff Writer) The English like their tea and biscuits; we go in for cakes and coffee. Each man to his taste, even when it comes to banana cup cakes.

Banana (lip Cakes (18 small cakes) One-half cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup mashed bananas, 1 1-2 cups pastry flour, 1 egg well beaten, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Cream butter and sugar, add egg well beaten and stir in mashed bananas. Sift dry ingredients togeth er and add alternately with soda dissolved in a little hot water. Bake in greased small muffin tins in hot oven (400 degrees for 15 min utes. Cool arid sprinkle- with powdered sugar.

Orange cakes make a novelty number. Served on the same plate with nut cup cakea, there will cer tainly be rejoicing at the coffee hour. Orange Cup Cakea 24 small cakes) Two eggs, sour cream, 1 cup su gar, 1 1-2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-4 cup melted butter, 1 orange. Break two eggs into cup, fill cup with sour cream. Beat with dover egg beater.

Add sugar. Beat well Add sifted dry ingredients and then melted butter. Use grated rind of one orange for flavoring. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees for 20 minutes. Nut Cakes (18 small cakes) One-half cup butter, 3-4 cup su gar, 1-3 cup milk, 2 eggs, 1 1-3 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1 cup Jordan al monds, blanched and cut in pieces, Cream butter, add sugar and con tinue beating.

Add well beaten yolks and then milk, sifted dry ingred ients and nuts alternately. Fold in stiffly beaten whites. Bake in indi vidual tins 20 minutes in a hot ov en (400 degrees Plain Icing, sugar or nuts can finish off cup cakes with the proper touch. But for extra perfection, try a chocolate icing. Delicious Chocolate Icinr Four squares of chocolate, 1 1-2 cups confectioners sugar, 2 table spoons cornstarch, 2 egg yolks, 3 tablespoons cream, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 pinch salt.

Melt chocolate in top of double boiler, add sugar and cream, then cornstarch and lastly egg yolks Cook about 5 minutes stirring con stantly. Remove from fire and beat until consistency to put on cake. STOCK SWINDLING RING BSHASHED Washington, Set 3 (JP) The se curities commission and the justice department said Thursday a national stock swindling ring has been broken up with the conviction in Atlanta of men described as leaders of the ring and two of their fiims. Those convicted, a formal joint announcement said, were Joseph N. Sherman, Leonard Sutterman, Joseph P.

Mendelson and Joseph Ricebaum and the firms of Gould and Company and Kopald, Quinn and Company. The trial, described as one of the longest on record in a federal district court, had been in progress since April 19. It terminated, the announcement said, "extensive bucketshop and scU-and-cwitch operations in Chicago, Duluth, St. Paul, Wilmington, Houston, Atlanta and Detroit." The announcement said it was impossible to determine accurate ly the amount lost by Investors, but it was estimated the loss between October, 1929 and the middle of 1935 at about $5,000,000. Thursday's announcement said customers were induced to buy various listed securities on a 50 percent, down payment.

"High pressure salesmen then persauded customers to switch from these listed securities to ether securities which the group had manipulated to excessively high prices," It was said. "As soon as the ling had accom plished the switch into the mani pulated securities and had obtained all the 60 percent payments, it would withdraw Its support from the market and let the prices collapse. Thereupon the customers were informed that they had been wiped out The ring kept the 0 percent cash deposit and the cus tomer got nothing." BREAD) Is Your Cheapest and Best Food FRESH EVERY SUNRISE Pears And Grapes Joust For Honors By Mrs. GAVNOK MADDOX NEA Service Staff Correspondent Pears hang ripe on the treeo and the purple grapes give luxury to the vine. Make the meet of this season.

Can them and make jellies and jam, put up grape juice for winter breakfasts and preserved pears for cold weather suppers. But don't forget to use a few of these luxurious fruits right now for desserts and sauces. Pears can be stewed many ways. Peeled, cooked in syrup and used as a September dessert, they are always popular with the menfolk. If some are left over, they can be stuffed with cream cheese and nuts and ueed in luncheon salads.

They can be baked in the skin as well as baked peeled. A stick of cinnamon and a clove or two add flavor of the syrup. For jce creams and cottage puddings, make sauces of diced pears cooked In syrup with a little ginger added. Ccok both pears and grapes gently. They are delicate in flavor and consistency, so don't let a fur ious fire destroy these things.

Pear. Sauce (4 to 6 servings) One cup any left-over fruit juice, 2 cups sugar, juice of 2 lemons, 2 cups water, 2 tablespoons cornstarch. Boil juice, sugar, "water and le mon. Dissolve cornstarch in cold add to. hot mixture, cook until thick and clear.

Take 3 fresh pears, peel, dice and add to above sauce, cook until tender. Serve on any left-over pound or sponge cake for dessert. Grape Sauce (4 to 8 servings) Boil until soft 2 quarts of blue grapes with a little cold water. through a sieve. To this juice add 1 cup of sugar and juice of 2 lemons.

Boll until thick enough to serve. Serve cold on ice cream. Ginger Pear Sauce (4 to 6 servings) Three pears, juice of 2 lemons, 1-4 cup chopped preserved ginger, 1 cup sugar, 1 1-2 cup water, 1-2 cup ginger syrup. Cook sugar, ginger, lemon, water until well blended. Add peeled, diced pears and cook Palace 1'hone IW Free Delivery Keep Worth 10c but given with 2 packages of Morton Salt while limited supply lasts.

At all grocers! Here's an entirely new and different balloon one that can't be bought in any store I When placed on floor or table with its legs spread wide apart, it leaps into the air and lands squarely on ks feet. Substantially made of heavy rubber, it will give your children many happy houri of play. Worth 10c but given FREE with 2 packages of Morton's Salt solely to induce you to use this famous non-caking brand! Cool With Ida lln iimmI lumi Broilers And Fryers Are Belles Of Roasting Oven home extension agent, announced Thursday, Each club has arranged to depict some period of the history of the county from its beginning. The morning will be taken up with 4-8 club demonstrations. The Newell club will demonstrate "What a 4-H Girl Should Know About First Aid." One Nisland group will give the audience "Tips on Posture," and another will demonstrate "Selection of Better A club from east of Newell has chosen "Care of Lamps" as its subject to present.

Mrs. A. G. Teague, Nisland, will have charge of the community singing during the afternoon. Butte county's healthiest boy and girl will be selected following a clinic in the morning.

Evelyn Aal-seth, Rapid City, Lawrence-Pennington home extension agent, has been chosen to judge the contest and decide who are the county's healthiest. Exhibit booths of 4-H and women's work and school displays will be open to the public. A refreshment stand, sponsored by the 4-H club plans to serve the crowd and members during the day. A dance sponsored by the county fair board is scheduled for the evening to close a long day's activities. until pears are tender and syrup Is the consistency of maple syrup.

Serve on ice cream or a plain cornstarch pudding. BREAD Is Your Cheapest" and Best Food Market Open Sundays RIB STEW, Lb RIB CHOPS, Lh I4c 25c All Cuts In LAMB CREAMERY BUTTER.JjJg Mt'STARD, 1-lb. glass MILK, 4 tail 91 cans fcIC CHASE It SANBOR.VSMfi. COFFEE, lb fcOC TOMATOES, No. I can, I rt-extra standard BROOKFIELD SALAD 9Q DRESSING, quart YELLOWSTONE PRESERVES, RASPBERRY and STRAWBERRY, 4-lh.

lar OfcC Complete Selection Fruits Vegetables Fresh Daily Bakery Goods "IHE BEST FOR LESS" Dairy Products Staple and Fancy Groceries BV MRS. GAYXOR MADDOX NLA Srvlcs Staff Writer A chicken in every pot is not so Interesting as a chicken under every broiler. To say nothing of the oven. Now that broilers and fryers are the belles of the poultry world, the following different recipes will put a lot of sun in Sunday dinner. Special Roast Chicken (6 servings) Selection two 2 1-2 pound frying chickens.

Singe the chickens, wash inside and out and dry. Place a teaspoon salt in each chicken and shake to distribute evenly. Salt the ovitrfido lightly and tub well with 1- 4 pound cf butter which has been creamed. Scape and cut in picco3 2 large carrots. Peel and slice small onions.

Cut 2 of celery into 2- inch pieces. Place vegetables Sunday's Menu -BREAKFAST: Iced, cantaloup, country sausage griddle cakes, clover honey, coffee, milk. DINNER: Special roast chicken, tomato gravy, stuffed baked potatoes, corn on'cob, molded cucumber salad, meringues with cherries, coffee, milk. SUPPER: Creamed hard cooked eggr, pea sauce, garden salad, French bread, fruit. evenly in the bottom of a roasting pan from which rack ha been removed.

Add 1-2 bay leaf and 1-4 teaspoon poultry reasoning and a little water. Place the fowl cn the vegetables and roast. Badte frequently. Do not cover chickens unless they brown too rapidly. Bake from 45 minutes to 1 hour moderate oven (330 degree When chickens are cooked, strain off (fravy from the roasting pan, add 1-2 cup of soup stock and 2 tablespoons of tomato soup.

Remove excess fat, thicken With 1 tablespoon flour and serve in a gravy dish. Fried Chit-lien a la Creole '4 to 6 servings) Two 2-pound frying chickens, 1 cups curs tomator, 1 onion, MALIUDW' MAMKET Free Delivery, Any Amount Phon 20 OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY MORNING YOUNG BEEF Sugar, 56c Boil, lb. 10c and 12c Ketchup, 2 14-oz. bottles 23c Roasts, lb 1 5c and 1 7c Pis Cherries, No. 2 can 1 8c Tender Rib Steak, lb.

18c Oxydol, pkg 23c Fresh Hamburger, lb. 15c Butter, 1st grade, lb. 34c Calf Tongues, lb 18c Golden Bantam Corn, 2 ens 21c Tender Sirloin, lb. 23c Peanut Butter, quart jar 23c CORN-FED PORK SuSaprV3 0 i Hills Bros. Coffee, lb.

29c lli IIs ruin eiMR, iu. JQmQ 25C 2 cans Sugar-Cured Hams, lb. Carrots, teh flc All Culs in LflHB and VEflL Bananas, 3 lbs 23s Pieklas-Gheesa-Luneh Meals fm' im ureen Peppers, 2 lbs. ISc Fal Hens Spring Frys Crale Peaches Plums Pears BEEF Young, Tender SHOULDER ROAST, I Choice Cuts, lb I UC LEAN NECK POT I ROAST, lb I 3C FRESH HAMBURGER, All Meat, No Cereal, 5 SHORT CUT STEAK, CHOPPED ROUND STEAK, lb PORK PURE LARD, SHOULDER ROAST, Jq PORK SAUSAGE, 0 VEAL SHOULDER ROAST, Qg 7 BREAD 3 Made Purely for You Jit Your Favorite rocer.

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