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Show By CHERIE NICHOLAS Chelstino Chiesa, CHICAGO. life of a pennithe lived 75, who Company Dinners Easy to Prepare Even on Slim Budget fV'fc' Green beans take on extra appeal when prepared with shrimp and a carry sauce. They make a colorful dish for dinner as well as point-fre- e guests. Company dinners on a slim budget? Yes, indeed, theyre possible even in these times. Your company will get poetical about economical dinners if theyre well cooked and attractively served. You can make meat go a long way but still have lots of flavor if you turn out a dish of rice and meat balls, dressed in its best with cucumber lily garnishes and a nest of parsley. Or, try a completely point-fre- e meal in the Green Bean and Shrimp Curry. Desserts do not lack for appeal. Fresh fruits, now in plenty, can make a ' beautiful platter all by themselves; and then, theres a variety of desserts that can be whipped up with sugar substitutes. Company Dinner Menu I. Chilled Orange Juice Green Bean and Shrimp Curry Molded Fruit Salad Hot Rolls Iced Tea Relishes Lemon Chiffon Pie Green Bean and Shrimp Curry. (Serves 5 to 6) 2 cups cooked string beans 2 tablespoons bacon drippings 2 small onions, chopped 2 tablespoons flour 2 teaspoons curry powder 1 teaspoon salt U, teaspoon pepper 1 cup water 1 cup cooked shrimp, cleaned Drain cooked beans, reserving liquid. Melt drippings in saucepan, add onion and cook slowly until browned. Remove from heat, add flour and stir until well blended. Add curry powder, salt and pepper. Add bean liquid and water. Cook until slightly thickened, stirring constantly. Add beans and mix well. Cook for 3 minutes, add shrimp and serve with hot, fluffy rice. Company Dinner Menu II. Hot Vegetable Broth Crackers Chili Meat Balls Mashed Potatoes Green Peas and Celery Cucumber-Lettuc- e Salad Rolls Mint Grapefruit Ice Chili Balls. (Serves 12) 1 pound ground beef 1 pound lean pork, ground 1 beaten egg Vi cup milk ' cup uncooked rice 1 teaspoon chili powder 2 teaspoons salt Lynn Says the Meat: With civilians getting only about one-ha- lf the meat of former years, economy in its use is the watchword. Do it this way: Serve meat in stews but extend it with noodles, dumplings and vegetables. Extend ground meats with cereals such as oatmeal, cornmeal, bread and cracker crumbs. Stuff cuts like heart, breast, etc., with your favorite dressing. Use the soup bones, shanks, knuckles, and other inexpensive, bony cuts for soups. Combine leftover meats, ground, with potatoes and other vegetables for hash. rich-flavor- ed less recluse, was buried recently, 24 hours after a rusty key found m his ragged trousers unlocked a bank ZH cups cooked tomatoes he deposit box and disclosed that 2H cups water had left an estate of $250,000. 2 tablespoons chopped onion Indications were that most of the 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon chili powder money will go to charity. Chiesa, who live in a 20 cents a 1 Mix meats; add egg, milk, rice, day flophouse on S. State street, teaspoon chili powder and salt. died in the Cook county hospitaL Form into small was attributed to debility death His 1 - inch balls; and malnutrition. brown in hot fat. inInvestigators found documents tomaCombine the dicating that he had amassed toes, water, onfortune from $13,500 which he had ion and remaininherited in 1900 from his father. ing seasonings. Acquaintances said Chiesa was so Bring to a boiling penurious that he was known to point and drop in walk miles to save carfare. rhili balls. Cover; cook slowly 1 omitIt was by chance that the fortune hours. Chili powder may be was uncovered, said Probate Judge ted if desired. F. OConnell. After his death, John Mint Grapefruit Ice. T. John 4 to Dempsey, public administra6) (Serves ordered an investigation to detor, 1 teaspoon unflavored gelatine Chiesa had left whether termine 2 cups grapefruit juice, canned funds for his burial. Investigators or fresh went to his 5 by 6 foot fourth floor yt cup water room. The key was the only article cup sugar found in his trousers and it was recPeppermint flavoring ognized as the type used by a Loop Green coloring bank for its safety deposit boxes. Soften gelatine in cup grapeBank officials said Chiesa had fruit juice; combine water and sug- been a depositor for more than 20 ar; stir over low heat until sugar years and account that his dissolves. Add softened gelatine; of more than $8,000savings few but had stir until dissolved. Combine with withdrawals. The deposit safety grapefruit juice and add a few vault which the key opened yielded and of flavoring peppermint drops packages of stocks, bonds and other green coloring to make a delicate holdings that totaled more than green. Pour into freezing tray and freeze until firm. Pile into grape- $250,000. A will found in the box, dated fruit shells or tall glasses. March, 1924, left the estate, less a $500 bequest to the Catholic archCompany Dinner Menu in. Poached Lake Trout bishop of Chicago, to a brother and a sister, John and Mary Chiesa, Slivered Carrots with both deceased. The will stipulated, Boiled New Potatoes in the event of their death, that the Broiled Tomatoes estate was to go to the archbishop, Biscuits with Honey and Butter Pickles Radishes Olives as trustee, to keep the principal invested and devote the income to Regal Pudding the poor. Beverage One known surviving relative, a Poached Lake Trout. Detective Anthony Ecknephew. (Serves 6) said that he was unaware of ert, lake trout his uncles wealth. He said he had M cup milk not seen him for five years. Chiesa Vi cup water formerly was an elevated railway 4 slices lemon guard. teaspoon allspice Y$ teaspoon salt 1 sprig parsley Saddlemaker Tossed for 2 cups medium white sauce Loss by Girl Wrestler Juice of y lemon Sixteen-year-oCALIF. GARDENA, d 2 eggs, chopped Taricco proved to Place cleaned fish in skillet or court sheMargrete Dacould toss ong pan; add combined milk, wa- vid McLean over her shoulder. ter, lemon slices, Frank Carrell called for spice, salt and theJudge in a preliminary demonstration Cover parsley. and cook for 20 hearing on attack charges against minutes. Careful- McLean after attorneys told him the saddlemaker boasted in his ly remove to plat-te- r. cell: jail Combine If a little slip of a girl like that white sauce, lemon juice and hard can throw me, Ill plead guilty. cooked eggs; pour over fish and McLean, flat on his back a couserve at once. ple of yards away from the girl at the end of the demonstration, changed his mind and went back to jail under $1,000 bond to await trial. Miss Taricco said she handled McLean just that way a week ago when he took her home from a party on his motorcycle and parked in a lonely spot. She picked up her knowledge of wrestling by practicing with friends, she said, and only two weeks previously flung a boy friend over her shoulder. . ld hard-cooke- 180-pou- six-fo- top-flig- TT WOULD seem this year that American designers are breaking all previous records in creating the best looking clothes ever for smart daytime wear. Made of sterling quality flannels, 'checks, homespun jerseys, gabardines, weaves and such, they have that thoroughbred look about them, yet styled as they are, with a sophisticated simplicity that bespeaks class, they are just the type American women love to wear. College and career girls needs must have clothes that are as good looking as the best of em together with a practicality. that assures dependable wearableness. This fall you will be delighted with the smooth and distinctive styling given to even the simplest daytime suits and dresses. The fashions from New York Dress Institute collections, here pictured, go to show what a treat is in store for you if you are looking for style, quality and serviceability. To the right see a dream, by the favorite designer, Claire This suit illustrates McCardell. all-arou- nd co-e- co-e- With Sequin Accent 140-pou- nd muiu-colore- d also works up charmingly in cotive two-piewim stumes. Bold contrast achieved c more using jersey in three or ways ors is played up in striking also. Vivid scarlet wool jackw with brass buttons are worn neutral tweed skirts, or with sie no classroom dresses made of the gray flanels. ce Released by Western Newspaner Union. Stool to Stage Holdup CLEVELAND. A patient robber, who waited on a stool in a cafe for more than four hours, finally held up jacket-with-ski- rt -- Released by Western Newspaper S-S- Patient Robber Waits on self-fabr- ic ...... wear. For smart day fashions, gay kttie dresses are being made of a whic narrow stripe jersey, attra . hard-cooke- combines hips. ' This three-piec- e with zephyr flannel gray stuning knit in gray, black and white check. The buttons are silver, decorated with heraldic emblems. The suit is double stitched in black thread around the edges and the arm holes. The smartly styled dress to the left tunes perfectly to the current fashion mood for classically simple clothes. It is outstanding because of the designers novel and graceful in manipulation of the "amedieval-inspired way of the lmoner bag, ingeniously suspended from the waistline. Centuries ago bags of this type were carriedIn byits official dispensers of alms. modernized version this bag fasinto the scheme of present-da- y hion with high distinction. The deep armhole sleeves lend a definite note of chic. The new rave this seor ason is to wear handsome gold silver jewelry with dresses of sophisticated simplicity. Ideal is this gray for crepe gown as a background important jewelry pieces. the The diagonally closed bodice, fluid and new rounded shoulderline sleeve treatment are styling points new that combine to achieve the dress look for the neat daytime centered in the picture. Black and white check wool in homespun weave is the material used. The selvedge edge of the fabric gives smart contrast. The extreme si-or mplicity of this dress is typical wod the fashions that damen are for pracical selecting ytime Chaplain Calls for Help To Express His Feelings , ht best-dresse- 180-pou- nd Cool as a sherbet is this grapefruit mint ice served prettily in grapefruit shells a perfect ending to a warm evening dinner. Cold Sliced Meat in Aspic. (Serves 8) 1 envelope plain, unflavored gelatine i cup cold water 1 cups consomme, highly seasoned y2 cup cooked peas 1 cooked beet, sliced 1 d egg, sliced Slices of ham Slices of chicken or veal Soften gelatine in cold water and dissolve in hot consomme. Pour a thin layer into a mold that has been rinsed in cold water. When it stiffens, arrange on it decorations of the peas, beet, and egg. Cover with a little more of the gelatine mixture which has been allowed to stiffen slightly. Dip other pieces of the decorations in the aspic and set them against the chilled sides of the mold. When these have stiffened, fill mold alternately with slices of the ham, chicken, and thickening aspic. When firm, unmold on a bed of lettuce leaves. Garnish with radish roses. Slice for serving. ds ds ot WITH THE MARINES. Although navy chaplains attached to marine combat units are traveling with men whose vocabularies are often highly colored, they never forget their ecclesiastical background, according to Jerry OLeary, a USMC combat correspondent. It seems that Chaplain Lonnie W. Meachum of Virginia Beach, Va., was standing in a chow line when someone accidentally doused him with a container of scalding soup. After a tense moment the chaplain managed a wry grin and said, Would some layman please say a few appropriate words? designers three of this trends in her current collections. They are the fitted frontier jacket with quaint wrap sleeves, the new curve-lin- e around skirt with definite fullness, and thirdly, the frontier hip pockets, giving a new widened line to the Union. Cotton Dresses Tune To Early Fall Theme Women of smart f fashion by weanj setting a precedent their pretty cotton dresses and the very last minute of suw and then on as long as warm Suits for afternoon wear that take er lingers. At the current mo on beadwork and other glitter acd women are seen cent are in the news for this fall and in fashionable hotels and winter. Black sequins, giving that rants looking their prettiest in gala look are used on the front of flower-fres- h seersuckers that the jacket of the handsome black meticulously styled as if nvcatcb-o- f cocktail suit pictured. It is worth crepe or sheer wool. M while keeping an eye on the suits ing are the pink suits of an that take on the glitter note. The weave ' with their big P. sUjts idea is being carried out in unique plastic tied-o- n buttons. BlaoVing ways for fall. Sometimes the glit- of washable weaves are v ter is applied in a beadwork design most wearable in the the eo to one shoulder that looks as imson period. They are tun' posing as an official decoration. A early fall picture via stunn favorite use of beads or sequin em- neckwear items and dasning broidery is seen on pockets, lapels sories such as a sequin1 ..nt m and suit revers, on this otherwise dickey or a satin gilet Joseph Joyce, bartender, and escaped with $1,357, which he took from the till. Police were told the robber appeared about 2 p. m. and sat on a stool at the bar until 6:30, at which time he pulled out t revolver, locked James J. Kilroy, owner, in a washroom, took the money from the cash register, and left. simple suit. best-dresse- i color. |