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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1932)
Thursday, July 28, 1932 LA GKANUE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE. Page Three SOCIETY NOTES Mis Bras Duke, Society Editor Telephone Main 000 Until 9:30 . i Misses Anne and Jane Stange Are Hostesses at Charming Party Last . Night at the Home of Their Parents 'Tho Misses Anne and Jane Stangc were hostesses at a charming summer party last evening whoa they enter tained at a eliowor at tho homo of their parents, Mr. and Mr. A. J. Stange, on Walnut street, for Miss Lois Nelson, whoso wedding to Win chester H. Hclcher, of Ban Anselmo, Co)., will be an event of next month. Guests were Invited for fivo tables of bridge, at which Mi 'J. H. L. Hull made high score. A buffet supper followed bridge, with Mrs. Stange, Mrs. O. h. Larison and tho two hostesses presiding. Gardening Takes Place on Calendar Whatever else It is that comes and goes as diversion, gardening appears to have an everlasting run of popu larity. Along with golf, gardening must have an almost daily place on the calendar for it takes more than Contrary Mary's little watering pot to make fine flower specimens. With the gladiola and dahlia sea son "Just around the corner," and first hints of the annual Neighbor hood, club flower snow In tho air, in terest In rockeries, lawns and beds of sumrner blooms Is mora than ordin arily strong Just now. Mrs. John Thelsen will be tho gen eral chairman this year for the an- ' nual flower display that has come to have a premier place on uie inn so cial calendar. Mrs. Thelsen oaid to day that tho show will be held early this year and ahe advised garden en thusiasts to bo thinking of the an nual event. Enjoyable Picnic Given Wednesday A delightful picnic took place yes terday at Pino Cone when 32 mem bers of the So-Ne-Ho club gathered thero at ten o'clock in tho morning lor an all-day affair. A potluck lunch eon was served at noon, with a busi ness meeting following. Plans were made for a contest to encourage en thusiasm and Interest among club members and Mrs. Ella Koeter and Mrs. Edith Lindaey wer0 named cap tains of the two teams. Mrs. Velma Vedder was elected vice president to take the place of Mrs. Freda Yesko who Is out of town. The group decided to have an overnigot trio un cauicrine crceK ior ns iinai summer meeting, lat In August. Mrs. Kato Redhead, president, was In charge of the busincos meeting, which preceded a social aitcrnoon. Games and swimming were enjoyed and several tables or bridge ana pi nochle were formed, with Mrs, Blanche Prouty making high score at plnoohlo and Mrs. Oertrude Sullivan winning at bridge. Handicap Tourney Finals This Week GoltlnR activities this week will In clude tno mntcli uelweon Mrs. Charles E. Reynolds and Miss Anne Stungo. to determine the wlnnci of tho annual handicap tourney. They plan to begin this 36-hole contest this afternoon and probably will finish un Friday afternoon. Next week looms as an exciting one inr feminine Golfers as tho annual club championship tourney will bo started. Members will play to qualify early In the week. SPECIALIZING IN Permanent Waving Edyth Doan Personality Hair Cutting Men - Women and Children By Appointment Loren Carver IMtlCES REASONABLE COLONIAL BEAUTY SHOP I.n Grande Hotel Miiln S3 E. 0. N. Students To Hold Weiner Roast The first social affair pic students at the Eastern Oregon Nor mal school during the second half ol tlio summer quarter will be a swim ming party aud weiner roost Friday evening. Arrangements aro in charge of Miss Hekm Moor and Elmo Steven son who have not yot announced the place and time for the event. Etta-Belle Kitchen. Hostess Wednesday Several Interesting affairs are blng planned to compliment Miss Dorothy Leo And rows, brido-elect. Miss Lucille Bowman and Mloa Etta-Be! le Kitchen wore hostesses last night at a bridge party and bridal shower at the howie of the former, honoring Miss An drews. Saturday night MlS3 Mien BcrBanous will entertain for the bride-eiect at her summer home. -The Portland Oregonian. Plans Made For Annual Picnic Plans have boon completed for the annual picnic of the L. S. to.B. of L. P. and E. and the B. of L. P. and E. Tho affair will be at Pine Cone, Fri day. July 29, with a potluck? supper at six o'clock. Members and their families will meet at tho.Eagleu' hall at 2:30 o clock and will be furnished trans oortatl on there. Cars will bo at the hall aain at six o'clock; for those who cannot go earlier in tho alwr- noon. v ,, N. 0. W. Picnic To Be Held July 31 Another fraternal picnic planned for July is tho annual outing of the Neitrhbora or wood era it? wno win spend Sunday, July 31, ' together at the Pine Cone park. Members who do not have transportation are asked to meet at 10 o'clock at tjiq i. u. o. F. hall. An all-day outing, with a basket lim"Eh shortly after noon, has been planned. COPTAT. PAT.TVNTIAT?. - Wednesday, Aug. 3 St. Peter's Guild will meet at Honal hall. Thursday, July 28 2:00 Lutheran Ladles Aid, with Mrs. Nels Nelson. 8:00 Flfty-Flfty club, with Mrs. Ralph Worrell. The Francis Brown auxiliary to meet with. Mrs, Walter M. Pierce at the Pierce home in tho valley. ' . Moose women's card ETAOINNU "7:30 Moose women's card party Friday at the home of Mrs. Mary Fuerchelm. with Mrs. Wallace Cass assisting. Saturday. July 30 2 :00-l 0 :00 Lawn social, Blblo Searchers class of the Presbyter ian church, on the lawn of tho old manse. "Indian Givers? Swapping Horses On Tribal Visits PONCA CITY, Okla, (A1) Gift horses come back to look their Indian own ers In tho mouth, now that the plains tribes are enjoying their outdoor sea son. Tribal visits between - tepee vil lagers end Invariably with give away feasts. The visitors go home laden with bolts of calico and blankets and leading gift horses, but when the hosts In turn become quests the same horses frequently am brought back to (heir former homes as presents. Tho federal government long has attempted to discourage the gift custom, but It sticks among the plains Indians who move into the open cither as. families or tribes each summer. They believe Mother Earth provides many cures for human ailments and that man should live as close to her as possible. Menus Of The Day ONK-l'OUND HAHY THRIVES KANSAS CITY (P) Charles Bern ard St. John, tho "incubator baby' who weighed only one pound at birth, has been doing very well. At three months he weighed more than 014 pounds and was In good health. IIOMKKS FEW IN GALVESTON GALVESTON, Tex. (P) Fewer homo runs were hit out of the Gal- ! veston park than any other in the Toxns league during the first half of I the 1033 season. Only 10 bolls cleared the fence hero, whllo 75 were clouted jln home games of the Wichita FuUa I Tyler club. Co ahead and ... Enjoy it tnA lrinlc without distrcitne after effects The I'funder treatment relieves and correct alcoholic stomach. Iklchinp sour indicates too much arid. Gas forms. Fh ere is a burning scrn?tion ... a sour acrid taste. Hsartburn, pains am! distress follow eat ing, of ten vomiting. Plunder's Tablets re- lisve KfJic liyptnc.dit)-. soda stomach, permanent baJ breath, bitting jnd oausci. Pf -ict'iGuoranUedSlsmAchTabltli 1KIAL IKEATMIiNT Fit Eg F.H Pfumlw MOON DRUG CO. Ph.G. JOEL' Main 759 3 Phones Cor. Cedar, & Washington FEATURES FRIDAY & SATURDAY 3 Palmolive Soap, 2 Giant Crystal White Soap for ...23c Tall Can Crushed Pineapple, 2 for 25c 1 Can Mission Peas, Tomatoes and String Beans 29c Liquid Sunshine Silver Cleaner, qt. 10c Swansdown Cake Flour 25c School Boy Peanut Butter, lb. 15c Picnic Shoulders, lb 13c Old Potatoes, sack 50c Home-grown Yellow Bantam Corn, dozen 25c We Pay 18c in Trade for Large Eggs . My Ml. AWi(lor 4jwi! 4 fVhY DAY ' Urrakroxt . Cantaloupe ' ' ! Ready Cooked Whrnt Cereal Crsam Buttered Toast Coffee Luncheon prilled Tomatoes and Cheese Bread Butter . (Sugar Cookies Iced Tea Dinner Spinach Ring Creamed Mushrooms Buttered Lima Beans Biscuit Plum Jam Sliced Cucumbers Watermelon Colfe drilled Tomatoes and Cfaeese 6 firm tomatoes. 13 oltces bacon. 13 slices ehecso. yt teaspoon pepper. , teaspoon salt. Wash and Peel tomatoes. Out out stems. Cut tomatoes In halves. Place In shallow pan and spread pith ret of Ingredients. Broil or bake IS min utes. Carefully Arrango on a 'serving platter and garnish with parsley, Spinach King 3 cups cooked spinach ' 1 teaspoon salt. V, teaspoon paprika. 4 teaspoon chopped onions. 1 egg, beaten, Mix Ingredients and press into m: Al tered ring mold. Set In pan Of hoi water and bake SO mlnutea in mod- ANGORA, Turkey wr Although 1 ernto oven. tt stand 6 minutes and Turkish peasant women have tilled carefully turn onto platter. Pill con tho soil and dono the work of a man wltll creamed mushrooms. Cash Bonus Offer Interests Turkish Women in Farms for centuries, Mela hat Hanlm Is the first Turkish woman to be interested In agriculture. She Is the only woman enrolled In the Agricultural School of Angora, which has recently been reopened. The teachers have been called from Germany and German methods are taught. Creamed Mushrooms 4 tablespoons butter. 1 cup diced mushrooms. -, 4 tablespoons flour. teaspoon salt. teaspoon paprika. 14 teaspoon celery salt. 1 tablespoon chopped parsley. Melt buttor and add mushrooms. In summer the students aro given mmn nnri BM flntl nrf ftnoV practical training on the Gazl's , mtto bmmu M mfc Jn. model farm, where they are pro-1 , a. mlp Mgt. onfi creamy. ( !!., vlded with bed and food plus $25, Thus It pays to be Interested in agriculture In the Turkey of Kemal, and already a number of young girls are applying for enrollment next year. Another Gypsy Meal Baked Beans Chill Sauce Boston Brown Bread View of U. S. Makes Starlet Blink Miirvlvn Ilaiioll I horpo, who at three weeks has become fii1te n Rlohe trotter, posed for her first outdoors picture on arriving In Los Angeles with her mot lief. .Mary As tor, film star, (he wife of Dr. Frnnklyn Thore. Ikihy Marylyn, wlio was born In Hawaii, Is shown getting her first Klltupsi of the If. . from her mother's arms. Cucumber Salad Apple Pie Oof roe A SIMMKK TtNTHKQN MKNU Chilled Melon Balls , Jellied Chicken Supreme Bqttered Peas Olives Radishes 1 Hot Rolls Currant Jelly Pineapple Slwrbet Cocoanut Cake teed Tea Salted Nuts Clilllrd Dleloo B4ills Kr )8 fl cups cantaloupe balls 8 cups watermelon balls 8 cups honeydew balls 3 cups water cup sugar 4 mint leaves 4 tablespoons lemon Juice Select firm fruit and out out balls with French vegetable cutter. Mix water, sugar and mint leaves. Boll slowly ailuutes. Remove leaves and add lenion juice. Cool and chill. Arrango balls, which bave been chilled, In cups. Add sugar mixture and serve. Jelled Chicken Supreme for 19 9 tablespoons granulated gelatin & cup cold water 9 cups boiling stock 2 cups diced, cooked chicken 1 cup chppped oelery cup chopped green peppers teaspoon alt 14 teaspoon paprika 12 slices olives 12 slices tomatoes 24 thin slices cucumbers 1 cups stiff mayonnaise Souk gelatin and water 0 minutes. Add stock and stir until gelatin has dissolved. Cool. Pour a little Into the bottoms of Individual molds which have been rinsed out In cold water. Set molds in cojd place to stiizen a little and arrango olives in bottpms. Add chicken, celery, pep pers, salt and paprika to remaining stock. P11J molds and chill until stiff. Unmold carefully. Arrange molds -on tomatoes which have been placed on lettuce. Add cucumbors and mayonnaise. Garnish with pars ley and serve at once. Chicken Stock Z cups stock teaspoon salt 4 celery leaves 1 slice onion X tablespoon parsley 2 tablespoons green peppers The stock is liquid In which the chicken has been cooked. Remove tho chicken and let it cool and then chill. It Is then ready to be cut up for Jellied chicken. Add rest of In gredients to stock. Cover and cook slowly 10 minutes. Strain and use In jellied chicken. This seasoning adds flavor tp stock. I LONDON Ym OFFICIALS FIX I OWN 1NCOAIK TAX It ATI, ( LONDON WV-Rcgistry offlco Of ficials who marry a blushing bride and her swain and then pocket his fee with a smile have been brought into line with those of nioro regular Income who havp had salaries cut. The fees are not subject to in- come tax but the registrar-general felt that a percentage should go to tho treasury regardless. He pointed put that resignation offi cials on salary had suffered reduc tions in Income whereas those who elected to depend upon fees had sacrificed nothing. As n consequence the fee officials are making ''voluntary contribu tions" t? tho treasury. Chats With Parents SAINTS FINIl PAY-OFF COMES ON RUNS ST. PAUL, Minn. If double plays regulated games won or lost St. Paul, 1031 cnompion, wouia dv far out In front In the 1992 Ameri can association chase Instead of floundering ha the cellar. At mid-July tho Saints led their nearest rivals in this department by about 35 double plays and were well t on their way to break the league rec ord set by tho 1927 Saints. They were ahead of the '27 paco ny cioeo k 20 twin-killings. The Infield combination setting such a blistering pace includes three former major leaguers, First Baseman Phil Todt, Second Baseman Irving Jeffries and Shortstop Clyde Beck. At third base Is Marty Hopkins, sought by several big league teams for two seasons. The. Saints are far ahead of major league leaders In double decapitations toOe Tbey had registered 114 when Washington, American league leader in this department, had 84 and Brooklyn, pace-setter In the National, had racked up: 80. But they don't pay off on this play alone, so President Bob Connery of the Saints gladly would trade his combination's extra spark of defen sive speed for some extra run-producing base hits. . MoCLUHKKY EYKS POLITICS SOUTH MANCHESTER, Conn, m Joe McCtuskey, Fovdham track cap- tain who spt a new worm rccora in. the 3000 meter steeplechase to get a place, on the Olympic team, wants to enter polities after ho is graduated. TOO YOUM? TO LISTEN 11) A lice JmlKoit I Vale Most of us still can remember the rage we felt when two grown-upB talking, stopped suddenly In the midst of an Intriguing story with a "more of that some other time'' and a significant motion of the head in our direction. We know that we were consid ered too young to listen. Some times we wero even sent from the room with the remark that "chil dren mustn't know everything." What could bo more Insulting? And what mountains of resentment children have piled up over just this sort of thing What passionate curiosity haB beon built up fqr no faintly serviceable end) Adults have secrets 'that one Is thought too silly aud stupid to know. Adults exclude one from every thing that is most exciting, Grand parents, aunts and uncles, as welt us parents aud older brothers and Bisters, conspire to keep one in ignorance about everything that Is really important. And all this too tonse curiosity, this resentment, with Its accompani ment of Inferiority feeling and Jeal ousy, pan be avoided. Adults need only to be courteous. Nine times out of ten It Is not at all necessary to broach a topic of conversation which a listening child may not hear through to tho end. And when as sometimes happens, it actual 1 y Is necassa ry to d I sc uss something which a child may not hear, he should, in a tactful manner, bo asked to leave tho room. It can be explained to him that tho grown ups have something to discuss which concerns only them, Just as he often has a secret with one of them or with a frlond, that everybody somotlmcs must talk over matters with only one person. MAKES REFRESHING AND DELICIOUS SCED TEA FyQ I I II II sv w4 A 11 M If All TEA LORETTA YOUKI.- Urtt National future a tar Be SERVE Kcllogg's often. For lunch, cM. tlrcn's suppers, and laic snacks, as well as breakfast. Costing only a few cents a package, it is a most economical food. Beady prepared. Delicious with milk or cream, fruits or honey. Qualily Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. KEs fid J' 1.11 U Jr-JIdt Prices Effective Friday and Saturday, July 29 - 30 2 GIANT BAPS Jbk. VV sV . Highest quality. Lo- , cal manufactured butter. : i 2 l. 45c WTHfCAICSS OF f OOp ns a s . mm fill WLM I II IUI. rvtt. Pineapple Clorox Salmon Rainbow Sliced. A real value in making up your apricot conserve. ' For bleaching and inakr ing washday a pleasure Use Clorox. Columbia River Chinook. Size No. 1 can's. Makes delicious summer meals.' Hard Campaign No Worry To Garner: He's Stumped Texas On Horseback r- f"yL AS HE CAMPAISHtD IN TtXA5 30 YEARS AGO JJ j i i .' . i rat I AitM5 J5-' ' Julm . Garner, lirinorratlc nominee for vice president, known what a hard political campaign Is for he toured Jcyan bark In the days when It ww nerewar)- to travel y horse. Me talks ftrnlnlit-from-the-lioiiUler and putff lili whole body Into Ills addresRW. Clwup aIiowr him In a typical sneaking poe. ' WASHINGTON m It Will be something new to this generation to see "Cactus Jack" Onrnor mount tho Dollticnl stumn. Down In Texan, whore a district that lacks lust four square miles of being as large as the whole Btate of Maine has sent him to congress for 10 consecutive terms, the old tlmcrs may remember him as a hard- ridtng. straight-talking, noracnacic cam Dole ner. But to the younger crowd, ho Is known as a man whose constituents have thought so highly of their rep resentative that he has found It nec essary to make only a few cam paign speeches in years. It will bo lo his behavior on the I house floor, then, that observers will havo to look for a clue as to what sort of a campaigner the Democratic vice presidential candidate will no. On the basis of this, his public may expect colorful and fearless speeches, a dominant thread of bluntneAS relieved with touches of wit and humor, and no references to manuscript or notes, lie always) speaks extemporaneously. His appeal Inrgely wilt bo to the plnin people, whom ho la of and for. He speaks with his whole body. waving hln arms and driving home i points with hln fists, but his talk In of the stralght-from-the-shoulder j variety with no flights into oratory. Hia voice Is hltfh-Dltclicd but his' delivery is vigorous and he Is noted j I for his ability to strip away the j misKs or a sunjece ana anve at me facts and figured. Nervous before making a speech, he gains assurance once he Is on his feet and words are clipped out with machine-gun suddenness as he. warms to his subject. If his pant record In Texas bears any evidence, he will be ready fori whatever rigors tho campaign may ' have In store because ho has tackled j many a man-sized campaigning Job in nis early days in congress. His district then contained 33 1 counties and he had to address ral- lies In every on of them, Transpor-j tatlon was not of the best and he turned to the saddle as his means of covering ground. i ..49c Lls:...,.S5c 1 jj No, 2 Size Pel Monte Fancy jj Whoe Kernel .3 cang I Honey ; Cereals Sugar i up g.th m '"'Mothers Aluminunvware. Pure Cane. Hf- Ml I'ail H3 Largo p.. C. & II. G,,,l,M IM W 2 1'kns. 4QC m ' U j 79c ika. ,.z5c ...54c I cantaloupe standard UjUl A solid meat quality UffJ m merchandise of real VegCtaDleS rih IRI v;liue. CORN, STRING BEANS, VAN CAMP'S HOMINY M JU A Real Value! JL W mr X5C 3 cans 355c iwj ran . j riti I VANILLA WAFERS IVORY SNOW ifjpl Fresh manufactured quality A Heal Value! . . ISUl rijj merchandise. , ONE PKG. FREE rJJh HP s ., s4 HrJ RKj I UUHU sCj JJ . 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