Newspapers / Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, … / April 6, 1933, edition 1 / Page 12
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Business Mothers Prepare Canned Dinners Eating Out Of A Can Not So Bad At Times: Miss Camp Canned foods, judiciously used, are certainly one of the blessings of modern times, for modern moth ers in business. There is hardly anything that you can’t buy in cans, and keep for unexpected guests as well as the family. Some of the most delicious din ners I have ever eaten were pre pared by a friend of mine in a neighboring city who works in an office eight hours each day. She gave me some of her canned dinner secrets. She always keeps lettuce in the refrigerator for a crispy salad to supply vitamins. The two children who attend school regularly prefer “eating in”, and gladly help with breakfast and dinner—luncheons they buy at school cafeterias and restaurants. The “professional” mother does not spend all her precious late afternoon leasure cooking. She builds her menus on a foundation of fresh vegetables, raw fruit, fresh milk, lots of lettuce. Here are some of the dinner menus. I Tomato Juice Cocktail Lamb Chops Potato Chips Canned Peas Currant Jelly Fruit Salad Crackers Cheese Coffee (Milk or cocoa for the children). II Canned Tomato Soup Broiled Steak Baked Potatoes Succotash Watercress Banana Shortcake Coffee or Milk III Grapefruit Juice Cocktail Hot Baked Ham Spaghetti Tomato Sauce Spinach Pickle Canned Pear and Cheese Salad Toasted Crackers Coffee or Milk IV Oxtail Soup Cold Baked Ham Broiled Pineapple Egg Noodles, buttered Creamed Asparagus on Toast Chocolate Pudding Coffee or Milk y Fruit Cup Broiled Pork Chops Candied Sweet Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes Canned Apple Sauea Hot Biscuit Lettuce, Russian Dressing Coffee or Milk Once or twice during the week, this family has a meal made up entirely of fresh foods, nothing that has ever seen the inside of a can. Then seasonable vegetables and fresh fruits are included in; potatoes are cooked and left to scallop for another day—a roast is cooked which may be eaten cold later on. A favorite home-made dessert, too, is usually made on this non-canned day. And all this is placed in the automatic oven and allowed to cook without any “peep ing.” The temperature is controll ed by this modern servant and nothing ever burns. Oven Meals Fresh Fruit Cup Chuck Roast Mashed Potatoes Harvard Beets Fresh Snap Beans Apple Crisp Pudding Coffee or Milk II Veal Cutlets en Casserole Scalloped Sweet Potatoes and Pineapple Baked Tomatoes Cold Slaw Salad Peach Polly Coffee or Tea III Tomato Canape Meat Loaf Potatoes au Gratin Buttered Carrots and Peas Salad Steamed Pudding The other day a New York de partment store sold 12,000 pounds of nuts in three and a half hours. A group of New York mothers complained that these blood and thunder radio sketches are doing their children no good. Advertising signs have found their way into the interior of the Grand Central Station in New York for the first time. Revenue Collections Show 4 Million Drop A drop of more than $4,000,000 is shown in general fund and high way collections for the first nine months of the present fiscal year, as compared with collections of the first nine months of the fiscal year. General fund collections are $12, 918,675, as compared with $14, 835,244 a year ago, and gas and auto collections are $14,659,233, as compared with $16,846,047 a year ago, the report of Commissioner of Revenue A. J. Maxwell shows. Lic ense plate income is half a million below that of a year ago, $4,126, 800, as compared with $4,636,362 a year ago. Income taxes in March reached $4,699,267.42, as compared with $5,758,169.26 in March, 1932, exclusive of $120,442.09 in checks not deposited on closed banks. The income tax, particularly of foreign corporations, is holding up re markably well. The Reynolds To bacco Co., paid more than 2,000, 000 of it. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as the Admin istrator of the estate of Ruth M. Rainey, deceased, late of Halifr.x County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased , to exhibit them to the undersigned i at Washington, North Carolina, on \ or before the 17th day of March, j 1934, or this notice will be plead- | ed in bar of their recovery. All , persons indebted to said estate will lease make immediate payment. This 15th day of March, 1933. T. B. ATTMORE, Administrator of the Estate of 6t-4-20-TBA Ruth M. Rainey ! Stanley Winborne Is Appointed to New Job Stanley Winborne, junior mem ber of the present Corporation Commission, was named by Gover nor Ehring-haus as Utilities Com missioner, the new position created by the present General Assembly, which abolished the Corporation Commission, along with the jobs of the other two members, Chairman W. T. Lee and George P. Pell, ef fective next January 1. The Sen ate by ^unanimous vote confirmed the appointment of Mr. Winborne. Two men to sit with the Utilities Commissioner on call are to be named at the will of the Governor, by January 1. Mr. Winborne was appointed, then elected, to fill an unexpired term, then last fall was elected to a full six year term, all in about three years. He is con sidered an excellent appointee. SAVE! { Four little letters that have become the “watch-word” of the Nation: u S-A-V-E” . . . and the buy-word of hundreds of thrifty shoppers at the M” System. Come down this week-end. See Our “New Deal” Values and Prices and SAVE on every purchase! Specials for Friday and Saturday, April 7th-8th at the “M” Store FRESH CREAM Guaranteed to Whip l/2 Pint 12c APPLE SAUCE No-2 Cans 3 ^or 25c PURE PRESERVES Large Jars 30c GRAPEFRUIT & ORANGE JUICE 10c& 15c NORTHFIELD MILK 2-Large Q . 4-Small A . Cans ^ Cans ^ SOUTHERN PINES FLOUR 24 55r Pounds vUt smtp BEANS 2lg-cans 25c EGGS Fresh Country, each let POT AT QESRiv,n!iss5c jOLEO Margarine — Lb- 10c BEETS No. 2 Cans 1Qc| COFFEE (;Zz;ri 15c WEENIES 2lbs- 25c PICKLE Sour — Quarts 15c HOME MADE SAUSAGE 12 %
Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 6, 1933, edition 1
12
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