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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1922)
1r 13 TIIE 3I0RXIXG OfcEGOXIAN. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1923 kaoK'al Free Exhibition of Thomtay's Masterpiece, "The Man of Galilee" Fourth Floor ic . . . i , ; - . f See Also Full Page Advertisement on Page 13, This Paper if f " - -f ' v ! I fl ill 4- lr V " w ' , V - , " I II !$ 5 ? ' - ' - IIS Fink Thoto. Mm. Edirard A. Valentine, who Is a patroncs for the American Leerion -carnival tonight. MISS RUTH BRUERE, a recent bride-elect. wa8 the motif for a smart bridre tea yesterday, at which Miss Elolse Huggins was hostess, at her home on Willamette heights. Presiding at the tea table were Miss Suzanne Caswell and Miss Helen Hawkins. Assisting about the rooms were Miss Eliza beth Boshke, Miss, Georgiana Mears and Miss Janet House. One of the most attractive parties of the holiday season will be the New Tear's eve fancy dress ball at which Mr. and Mrs. Cicero Hunt Lewis will entertain. Many din ners will precede the affair. . Members of Friendship Bethel of Job's Daughters will give a -silver tea for their mothers and friends today from 3 until 6 o'clock In the Friendship Masonic hall at Fifty seventh and Alameda drive. Among the attractions of the afternoon will be a vocal selection by Miss Cleone Andrews and a reading by Evelyn Keyt. Mrs. H. T. Cattee and Mrs. S. B. Dickinson will pour. Members of the council, Mrs. South, Mrs. Drake, Mrs. Wicklund, Mrs. Dickin son and Mrs. Rich, will act as host esses. Among those assisting about the rooms will be the Misses La Verne Cattee, Mary Fenn Baker, Marlon Dickinson and Dorothy Franklin. The committee' In charge is Virginia Peck. Myrtle Burkhardt and Helen White. ' Mrs. Oscar Rittenberg. who has been visiting in Portland as the guest of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rittenberg, left last night for Seattle. Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Letcher have Just returned from a visit to Los Angeles, and have- as holiday guests their daughter, Imogene Letcher, of the University of Ore gon, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Kefuss and daughter, Adelaide RamBdell. of Hudson, iiich. m -t The Chi chapter of Alpha Chi Omega entertained with a luncheon at Hotel Portland yesterday. Honor guests were the girls entering Ore gon Agricultural college. - Dr. and Mrs. Harry M. Hender shott were hosts at a dinner at Hotel Portland Tuesday evening. Chrysanthemums formed the center piece. CoverB were placed for, 12 persons. Following the dinner, the party enjoyed bridge at the Hen darshott nome. . . TleteMoodTaste Bylkdld JtonaldsoaEterlein. Framing Picture. GENERALLY speaking, there are two differing classes of frames the wide and heavy ones, natural ly appropriate to. the solid medium t of oil, and the lighter and slenderer moldings used for water colors, prints and the like. The landscape or sea piece should have a simpler frame than the orna mental figure subject; oftlmes th simpler it is the better. For old portraits nothing is so ap propriate as the frames of their own times. Unless portraits of women me emphatically modern in spirit we may use for them in the very beautiful Adam, Louis Quinie or Louis Seize designs. Men's portraits wiJl be more appropriately framed in rather heavier and simpler mold ings, of which the Whistler styles are among the best examples. Paintings of strongly decorative character such as the figure pieces of the great Frenchman (used pri marily for panels), formal scenes and flower pieces with sculptured sses partake largely of the nature of architectural decorations and fciif'Uld be treated accordingly. Glass is usually not employed over oil paintings except where spe cial protection Is needed. JOaifrQuiz WHAT are the two plurals of in dex? Have they the same meaning? It is correct to say, "He invested his penny in gum"? Which syllable Is accented in Ir revocable? Illustrate. " Answers to Friday's Questions. Indention, meaning a blank space at the beginning or end of a line, is not used interchangeably with in dentation, a dent. Say "He doesn't know whether he can come" not "He don't know If he can come." In front of Is correct; In back of is a vulgarism. Say "His camp Is behind (not "in v ij-ack of") the wood." sage hag been cooked. When sau-i sage is fried before packing, it is not necessary to process it quite so long. Pints require processing 45 minutes, quarts 60 minutes at 16 pounds pressure. Possibly this is the salad you mean. California Luncheon Salad. Dis solve one package of lemon Jelly in one-half pint of boiling water. Stir until dissolved. Then add. two tablespoons of vinegar to enough water to make one-half pint and pour all together. Then add one tablespoon of Spanish pepper. When the jelly starts to set, add three or four slices of finely-chopped cold boiled ham, one-half cup chopped raw cabbage, one-fourth cup pimen to shredded, three sweet pickles chopped fine and one-half cup brok en walnut meats. Serve on lettuce leaves with mayonnaise dressing. Celery might be substituted for cabbage, and the nuts may be omitted or diminished In quantity to suit personal taste. Orange Marmalade. Orange mar malade may be made less bitter by soaking the rinds in brine from 24 hours to several days, according to the flavor desired, and then fresh ening them In cold water until all trace of salt has disappeared. Or, of. course, you may omit some of the peels or scrape away some of the white part, but both of these methods unduly Increase the cost per glass of the marmalade and decrease Its tendency to Jell. The jellied texture Is an important fea ture of any first-class marmalade. Twelfth Night Cake. For the Twelfth Night cake use any good fruit cake and have either baked in it or inserted in the frosting two dry beans (according to the old cus tom), a-- large and a small one, by which are chosen the king and queen of the Twelfth Night revels. Cover the cake first with "march pane" (almond icing), then with any preferred white icing, and dec orate with holly or mistletoe wreaths, cut from green citron or green fruit paste with bits of cherry or red or white small round candies for berries. Each guest cuts his own slice. The finders of the beans are acclaimed king and queen, and given royal honors and literal obedience for the evening. Uhey may sit in state and command all sorts of "stunt" if desired. Hoii$Md Proton? bq Lilian Ttnqlo PORTLAND, Dec. IB. Dear Miss Tin frle: Will you kindly give me Informa tion as to the following: (1) A pork si-usage lor canning in pressure cooker. 1 2) A kind of jellied salad made with im.i. iiiu ircpiJern ana, 1 tninK, long celery or cabbage. (3) How to prevent my. orange marmalade from tasting bit- itr. . now to mane a Twelfthnight' oake? Thinking you in advance, MRS. C. 8. T. T. HOPE the following will suit I you: Pork Sausage. 10 pounds lean 2 pounds fat pork. cup salt, 1 tablespoon finely-ground sage, 1 tablespoon black pepper. Cut meat into pieces that will conveniently pass through meat grinder. Grind and mix well with other ingredients. Grind all to gether again, using the finest plate of the meat grinder. The sausage may xnen be made into small cakes. Pack into jars, fill with hot lard or other fat, partially seal, process pints one hour, quarts one and one half hours at 15 pounds steam pres sure. Seal. Store in cool dark place. Or the sausage may be fried until a deep brown color, packed into jars and covered with a gravy made by adding a little flour and water to the fat in which the sau- BftgJ )-JO TfiinYoullLovo "" to Make lMO""Wn ril IiiiSi ill hi ii'if ' r ' 11-30 Children love animal coat hangers. THE kiddies will love to pnt away their wraps if they liave animal coat'hangers on which to hang them. Cover small hangers with some furry material like that of which teddy bears are made. Cut it after the pattern indicated by the black diagram above. Half of one side is shown. You will need two full pieces. Place the two pieces over the hanger. Overcast or button hole the edges together, leaving a small open space through which to put some cotton stuffing. Fill the head until it is well rounded. Pad the arms of the hanger fairly well. Tie a ribbon and bell around the neck of the cat. Other animals can be worked out in the same way. JUDGE7 CATEflS IIS CIRCUIT COURT PLANS TO HOSOR SUCCESSOR. IdU Coliec Pot la Place oi an Asparagus Cooker. ASPARAGUS cookers are very ex pensive. If you do not care to buy one you can get practically the same results with a coffee pot. Place the asparagus in the pot. The stems will stand upright. Cover them with water. Put down the cover and al low them to steam. THE HOUSEWIFE. QLOSER RELATION ASKED Idaho Falls Invites Coast Capital to Investigate Resources. Closer relations between the Pa cific coast country and the inter- mountain region are urged in a reso lution received yesterday by the Portland Chamber of Commerce from the Idaho Falls, Idaho, cham ber. The traffic and marketing com mittee of the Idaho Falls body for mulated the resolution, which spoke for the development of marketing and other relations between the up per Snake river valley and Portland. An invitation was also extended to Pacific coast capital to invest! gate the many undeveloped resources of that region, with a view to the mutual advantage of both sections of the northwest. ... Reception to Be Held for Louis P. Hewitt Tuesday, Starting at 9 : 1 5 A. M. Plans were completed yesterday by the judges and attaches of the circuit court for an official recep tion to be extended to Louis P. Hewitt, who becomes judge in de partment No. 5 and presiding judge the first of the year. The recep tion will be held Tuesday, January 2, starting at 9:15 A. M., in the courtroom of Presiding Judge Stapleton. Judge-elect Hewitt will occupy the bench with Judge Staple ton and will jointly attend to assign ment of cases and other routine alter the ceremonies. His first duties as presiding judge, directed from his own room, will be those of instructing the new grand jury. C. M. Idleman, whose rooms Mr. Hewitt nas been sharing in his private practice and a close per sonal friend of the new judge, will be the speaker and will introduce him. After the response of the judge there will be brief greetings from ms colleagues. Judge-elect Hewitt has made known that he will retain the ner- sonnel of the presidine- inrtire's court. L. A. Harlow will serve as calendar clerk, Joe Rogers as pre siding clerk and George Dufur as court reporter. In taking up the work of presid ing judge during the first six months of his .term on the bench, Mr. Hewitt faces a rather awesome amount of detail, but he hopes to familiarize himself with all his multifarious duties in a short time. Judge Gatens, whom he succeeds, completed the moving of his books and legal equip ment from the rooms of depart ment No. 5 on the third floor yes terday so the judge-elect may move in today and become established for the beginning of his work. The Oregonlan publishes praeti cally all of the want ads printed in the other three Portland papers, in addition to thousands of exclusive advertisements not printed in any other local paper. 1IIBINF Yon Cannot Bay riv wpw Eves fSb Bat vou can Premote a p SScieaD.BealihyCoodiiloB YfMtB FVFl??? Murine Eye Remedy wvr "Njgnt and Morning." Eeep yonr Eyes C'ean, Clear and Healthy. Write for Free Eye Care Book. Kgrlw Cy Bcatfv Cy 9 Cut Cbia Sin!. Cl&sM Portland Agency for farter's Underwear Olds, WSrimmt 4Pijj RELIABLE MERCHANDISE RELIABLE METHODS. jT - RELIABLE METHODS. Portland Agency for Bates Street Shirts I Men's Store Clearance i . , , - An Event of Interest to Every Man in Portland! Men's Store Main Floor Men's Store Main Floor SEE OUR WINDOWS SEE OUR WINDOWS ill mi r T-TTunr" "ir i ir " 1 r L 'iiiinir r iimriM iimi In History You get quality you get value in this sale. The extraor dinary savings are only one feature of this eent. Fine Overcoats naturally are the first consideration here, for they are correctly styled, made from superior all-wool fabrics and tailored with custom care. And with all this you get variety sufficient to satisfy the preferences of the best dressers. To GROUP NO. 1 M en's Overcoats Values Up to $35 8' 1 7 TV OK Serviceable all-wool fabrics, smart styles, skillful tailor ing these are the qualities you'll find in these Overcoats plus the added, attraction of extreme low price. You have seldom had such an opportunity the values are exceptional for garments of such character. We cannot emphasize the importance "of this event like a personal visit to this store will do, but do state in the strongest words at our command that this' is a sale worthy of your immediate attention. Single and double-breasted Overcoats with convertible collars, raglan, karmona or set-in sleeves. Beauti ful heather mixtures and solid colors in grays, tans and browns. fl- Q Of? Ail sizes 34 to 44. All-Wool Overcoats worth up to $35.00. Sale DX0J the man who appreciates the utmost in quality this sale is for him. Here are Overcoats that have all the good points of high-grade garments with the additional advantage of being priced within the reach of all. You cannot afford to miss this sale if you have the slightest need for a new Over coat, as values offered have no counterpart in all Portland! -GROUP. NO. 2- Gl earance o Parents take quick advantage of this sale it's an opportunity vthat affords savings of the most pro nounced sort. Hundreds of Boys' All-Wool Overcoats in a sweeping clearance at the lowest prices in years. Every garment is carefully tailored and the styles are the season's best. Sale in Boys' Store, Main Floor. $16.50 Overcoats $8.95 -SIZES 4 TO 12 (5 i Men's Overcoats Values Up to $50 $ 6DT1 OP In this group of high-class Overcoats every man no matter how critical hp may be can find a pleasing model All-around belt or belted-ack styles with roomy, easy-fitting raglan, kar mona or set-in sleeves and large patch pockets. Rich shades of tan, brown and gray, solid colors and heather mixtures alao handsome overplaids. All have convertible collars. Every Overcoat in the assortment is carefully tai lored from virgin wool fabrics and all are regular $35.00 to $50.00 values. Today, more than ever before, prudent buying is the watchword! Here is an opportunity that should command the attention of every man in flJOQ QK Portland and vicinity who wants the utmost in value for his money VveOtJ i Boys O vercoats We expect to clean up this entire lot in record time, for, to our knowledge, no such Overcoat values have been offered in Portland for many a day. Every garment is made from Made From Virgin Wool Fabrics and the tailoring is of the highest order. Blues, grays, tans and browns. Latest belted Styles with full raglan shoulders and convertible collars. In cluded in the assortment are many beautiful plaid-backs. For little fellows of 4 to 12 these splendid Overcoats are needed for winter. None (PQ QK worth less than $12.50 most all are $15.00 to $16.50 values Sale DOtl $25.00 Overcoats $14.85 -SIZES 13 TO 18 You must see these Coats with your own eyes to appreciate what truly remarkable values they are at the Sale price. Come in and look them over whether you intend to purchase or not. Made From Virgin Wool Fabrics and tailored in the snappy styles boys like so well. Sleeves are lined with Skinner's Satin and inside seams piped with same material. Grays, tans, and browns in solid colors and heather mixtures. High-class Overcoats such as you would expect to pay $25.00 for in the regular way. All sizes I or for boys 13 to 18 years. Shop early for best choosing. Sale price 5Xr00 We Give S. & H. Trading Stamps An Additional Cash Saving Portland Agency for KirscHbaum Quality Clothes I ! i I i v