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About Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1922)
Herald Home Corner Mil J)RED V. SHORT ZC cssrm ! Brkk. BullJInq Blocks* at reduced prices E. HE YUNG Call Automatic 625-67 maae«ee«oeeeee.o.ee..eee.. WOOD SAWYER Harry Searb Antematic 613-10 M. A R. (Mathes) Market, 5927 92d St S. E. Chester's BARBER SHOP Now at Fiftieth and Division The aame high-class work as always Children’s haircutting specialty Housewives may mail requests for recipes or ask any questions concerning recipes published. A Herald subscriber, a woman versed in cookery, who desires to remain anonymous, will be de lighted to publish requested rec « ipes or answer questions. —The Editor • • • • • Cold Slaw Select a heavy cabbage, take off outside leaves and cut in quarters; slice one-half very thinly, using a ¡harp knife; soak in cold water until crisp; drain and dry between towels; arrange on a flat salad dish; cover with two small onions, raw, thinly sliced; pour over onion French dress ing and garnish with parsley. Onion French Dressing Mix 4 teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon paprika, 2 tablespoons vinegar, 4 tablespoons olive oil and a few drops onion juice and stir until well blended. Ladies* Cabbage Boil a firm cabbage 15 minutes, turn off the water and add more from the boiling teakettle. Then cook until tender, drain and let cool. Chop well >01 j Foster Road add 2 beaten eggs, salt, pepper, a MACHINE SHOP good tablespoon of butter and 3 table spoons of milk or cream. Stir all to Repairs to any machinery. gether and bake in a buttered dish Res. 618-18 (Office I’hone 610-22 until brown. Serve hot from the oven. Ae’jWINKLER MATT GREENSLADE West Indian Cabbage and Rice Cut about 4 pound of pork into bot tom of kettle, stiring often to prevent Horseshoeinq A Gen. Btecksaiihinq burning. Next add 4 can of toma toes, a little thyme, 3 or 4 bird pep AUTO REPAIRING pers (capsicum pods) and 4 a head 9W Foster Road LENTS of cabbage cut into small piece». 'S Cover with hot water and let it cook »lowly for about ten minutes. Add a DR. P. J. O’DONNELL cup of rice and water as needed to KXODONTIA keep the ingredients covered, Cook Ph—re 615-16 (office) slowly till rice is done and serve at 618-18 (residence) once. Creamed Cabbase Cor. 92d and Fester Road Wagon Repairing Y. AONO Associated AU kinds Gasoline of Oils Tires, Tubes and all Accessories. Northeast oom er of 82d and Divi sion street*. AH kinds of Light Trucking Garbage Hauled B. F. COOK Auto. 614-48 10207 57th Ave. S. E. r HOUSE’S RESTAURANT 128 Third st, bet. Washington and Alder sts. Just 14 blocks from "M-S” car. One pint of boiled cabbage, 4 pint of hot milk, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 teaspoon flour, 4 teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon pepper. Mix the flour and butter, add the cabbage, salt, pepper and milk. Stir until smooth, being careful not to scorch. Fried Cabbage Place in a frying pan an ounce of butter and heat it boiling hot, then take cold boiled cabbage, chopped fine, or cabbage hot, cooked the same as steamed cabbage, put it into the bet butter and fry a light brown, adding two tablespoons of vinegar. To Can Cabbage to Keep One Year Chop cabbage fine, season with salt. %<?Krrc™ MEALS ANDJLUNCHES L______________________________ / Nippon Florist Co ■ 371S Sixty-Uiird SL CUT FLOWERS for all occasions » Floral Designs a Specialty Phone Auto 635-71 T is a consoling thought ^1 to know that your dear one was laid away by a flrm that does not con sider the service mere ly as a business trans action. L D. KENWORTHY & Cl ). I f«MrAl Directors 1 Day and Night Service I | ftem 618-21 A D. KeaworiM 1802-4 92ad St «. 5. Nnd-rwe RALPH HARRIS CO. OFFERS Some bargains in pretty little homes, which can be handled with from $100 cash up to $500, in de sirable residence districts. Courte ous, efficient service. List your nroperty with us for quick results. AND REMEMBER We write fire and automobile in surance. RALPH HARRIS CO. 316 Chamber of Commerce Bldg. Broadway 5854 Geo W. Crockwell. M. ,f Naturopath, Spinologist 706. 720 Dekum Bld*. ELECTRIC TREATMENTS SPECIALTIES Stomach trouble. Chronic disease and Female complaints. No matter what your trouble is I can help you: I have cured hundreds! Why not you? Consultation and examinations Free. “Pay as you can.” No knife. No operations. No in carable case taken. Free treatments thia week. The homemaker must fill many alchee tn her home and at the same time have the ability to direct with force and Initiative all the buameas at tl.e household. MORE GOOD THINGS A nice dish for breakfast and worth trying Is ripe, sliced toinstoes. served with sugar and cream. Another good breakfast dish Is bot tomatoes poured over two or three beaten eggs; stir and cook until th< eggs are cooked, season with but ter. pepper end salt. Serve on or with toast. Cheese Potatoes.—Take one quart of sliced potatoes, one-fourth of a cup ful of cheese, one cupful of milk and two tablespoonfuls of floor. Parboil the potatoes two minutes, then ar range the potatoes and cheese in ■ well-greased baking dish with a light layer erf flour sprinkled over each layer. When the dish Is full cover with milk to which any desired season ing has been added. Bake one-half hour. Hashed Browned Codfish.—Take one tablespoonful cacti of flour and but ter, three-fourths of a cupful of milk, one tablespoonful of parsley, a dash of pepper, one-half cupful of flaked codfish and two cupfuls of cold, chopped boiled potatoes. Make a sauce of the butter, flour, milk and pepper. Stir In the fish (which should be previously freshen«^!) and nd<l the potatoes. Turn Into a hot spider con taining a tablespoon’ul of^fat; press tn the mixture, cover and set In the oven to bake until a rich crust Is formed. Serve accompanied with ba con curia. Frozen Apple«.—Use the pulp from stewed or baked apple or a glass of apple Jelly; partly freeze, then stir In some sweetened and flavored whipped cream. Pack the freezer and leave until the contents are flrm. Parker House Rolle.—Iloll out the mixture until one-half inch thick, cut with a biscuit cutter Into rounds, but ter.one-half and fold over. Place In pans to rise. When very light bake In a moderate oven. Fruit Meringue.—Heat the halves of cant ed fruit with a bit of lemon peel or candled ginger In the '■enters; cool and place on each a tablesp'XMiful of meringue. Use the whites of two eggs and one-third of a cupful of sugar for th» meringue. oepper, vinegar, adding a little sugar j whispered to him a secret. His eyes Cook 15 minutes. Seal in glass jars ' opened wide. She seemed so sure with new rubbers and it will keep for about it. he began to smile and be Neva. one year and longer. “HI remember the three things, THE HOME irrandma," ha said. Promise me, darling, you will try The home ia the thing. them, whenever you feel the least bit The home is society’s solid earth. afraid “ The nation that ia blessed with The next afternoon this fear in the homes, alone will endure. night seemed a very foolish thing. It Education ia good, if it ia sound was a beautiful summer day. The education; business is good, if it is sun was shining and a soft breeze honest business; art and science are stirred all the lovely green things. good, if they are rooted in nature and Neil braced his shoulders back as In truth, but when its homes begin to nin over the meadawa. disappear, a nation has run its race. He sat down in a pretty spot on Behold Rome! The prows of her the hillside. There were great rocks commerce - laden vessel* broke the about him, and he made believe he waters of all the seas. Her triumphs live! in a cave. He peeped over the of art drew admiring throngs from rocks down into the valley below, and every land. She sent her statesmen then imagined he was a king In hla to rule and guide the destinies of a castle. It was so warm and a hun hundred nation«. Opulent, strong, dred insects were humming a lullaby. learned, old. the embodiment of human He still heard a murmur. At first wisdom and power; glowing in her he thought it was the insects, but it magnificence; she neglected her grew louder and louder into a roar. homes and fell. His heart beat faster. He looked The home means family—father, around wonderingly. There on the mother and children; not a man, a rock near him sat Aunt Grace. Her woman and a pet. It means pera- hands were clasped and she seemed ncnce; no temporary arrangement to shrink back while she gazed ever made a home. It means un straight down towards the valley. The divided affections; no home is worthy noise grew louder as though it were the name unless the heart is there. going to crush in their eardrunis. It means forbearance, patience, love; Aunt Grace!” he whispered. No for what would life be without these answer. Neil sat up. and as he looked sweet virtues, and oh, shame! if they at her he knew she was afraid of are exhibited to strangers and not something, very much afraid. His shown at home. eyes followed hers to the valley. The human affections that do not There was a horrible black monster spring up in the home are like a trail down there, puffing and roaring. It ing vine without roots, which clings looked like a dragon to Neil. An I to the first projecting support ami Aunt Grace was afraid! Neil was, dies when that is torn away. The | too, at first, then suddenly he re human attractions that draw away membered what grandma had told from the home are like those strange him. and perilous magnetic currents that Don’t be afraid. Aunt Grace! disturb the manner's compass and Nothing can hurt us!" he cried, and lead him off his course into waters jumping into her lap he folded bis of destruction. The activities that arms about her. She said nothing but cause men and women to neglect the held him tight. They both heaved a duties o fthe home, are like Wolsey’s sigh of relief. little wanton boys that swim on blad “What—what was it?” he asked ders in a sea of glory until the frosts breathlessly. of old age nip the bloom of life, and "A snake!" exclaimed his aunt. its withered stem without fruit or “A snake!“ repeated Neil turning flower crumbles under its own weight to her suddenly. He pointed to the and goee back to the earth barren. retreating dragon, “a snake!" God love« the home. The first com Then Aunt Grace laughed: "Oh, mandment touching human relations that's a steamroller, Neil. The men given on Sinai, was to preserve the are fixing the road around the bend.” solidarity of the home: Honor thy The boy looked from jier to the big father and mother. This is the one black monster. Just aa ft turned commandment to which God affixed the curve he aaw a man sitting on it. a specific promist for its dutiful ob “And he’s driving it!” Neil ex servance: “That thou mayest be claimed, aa his face brightened. "It longlived in the land which the Ix>rd was the first one I ever saw. But thy God will give thee." Aunt Grace, how big was the snake, Our Divine Lord lived but 33 years so big?" he taxed, measuring his on earth; He spent 30 of those at arm. home. She cocked her head a little Yes, the home is the thing. Look ashamed: “N—no, Neil, not quite to it, my son; and let nothing but half so big!" She rather expected heaven, your eternal home, stand in him to laugh at her, but be did not. the way.—The Record. When they returned to te house. Aunt Grace told grandma all about HOW TO BE BRAVE it, adding, “and bleil was braver Neil lay trembling in his bed. than I." Grandma and Neil looked at each Strange, but he seemed afraid of everything. He tried to lie quiet and other and smiled. Then he said: “It worked, grandma!" not call grandma or Aunt Grace. A “What worked, Neil?" asked Aunt little hushed bang sounded somewhere near, and Neil pressed his lips firmly Grace. “Grandma old me last night if I 9» he clutched the sheet, and sprang up in bed. Swaying shadows played was afraid, I must trust in God, toss terrible antics on the walls. In the my head and laugh. Then I wouldn’t distance he heard a long, shrill cry. be afraid any more, an’ I did, an’ it Neil knew it was a cat, but oh! it worked!” “It always will!” remarked grand «oundfd so like a child. The moon began to peek in the window. Neil ma. shivered a little until he looked at the big round face. Then with a sigh lay back on his pillow and dozed off. Suddenly he felt as though he were being choked, «nd with s big effort tried to free himself »nd open his eyes. Bending over him was a big white object. Was it a real polar again ? “Help, help!” cried Neil, loud and frantically. This seemed to wake him. Sh-h darling! It’s only grandma. “Oh-ch,” he sobbed, “I thought you were a polar bear—and—and I know I’m a ’fraid cat!” ‘No, no,” she replied; then added presently, but would my boy like to be afraid of just nothing at all?” He nodded, eagerly. Then she Song Is the Gladness of all Things Like light, song is the gladness of all things: the whispering forest has its music, and the rippiing brook its melody; the great sea utters its un resting praise, and the vast temple of nature is full of the song of the view less winds. And who shall say that it ia imagination <yily that speaks of the "music of the spheres?" It is in religious life, that music and singing has exerted the greatest influence. Singing seems insepara ble from eminent religious life; wher ever there are religious earnestness and joy, there will be religious song. For praise is the very highest ex ercise of our spiritual life. More effectually than lny other thing it appeals to the holiest feelings and touches the profound.*! sympathies. Preaching is merely the address of one man to another; prayer ia the in ternted approach to Goal of a need} suppliant; but praise te the worship of a self-forgetful adoration. And ft ia God’s blessed order of things that we are benefited the moat when, tn loving «»If-forgvtfuln«**, we praise Him; wa are elevated by the thought which fills us, transfigured by the ; glory upon which we gate; au like mercy, praise ia . , . . twiae' bl eas’d; It bleaaeth him that gives and him , that takes: and. like charity, “it never fafleth," for praise ia the religion of heaven I The grace that comes from God, I streams into loving, self-forgetful | we get, but of what we become; not ! of a thing put into our hands, but of a transformation wrought in our hearts. In prayer, we receive, in praise, we become, and it is greater to come than to receive.—F. Joseph Kelly. Mua. D. REDUCING STOCK SALE Dave Nepom’s Cash Grocery at LAURELWOOD STATION SUGAR, pure cans, lOOdb sack................... COFFEE, our very beat bulk, 3 U m . for............ COFFEE, our No. 2. 3 lbs. for....................... 65c WESSON a MAZOLA OH« 1 gallon............... AMERICAN CLUB coffee, per pound .......................... 29c WESSON AND MAZOLA OIL, 4 gallon................. CAI.UMKT BAKING POWDER. per pound... 28c WESSON AND MAZOLA OIL, quarts..................... JAR RINGS, extra heavy, per doaen ......................... * 5c WESSON AND MAZOLA OIL. pints CORN FLAXES. 3 for.................................. TWENTY-MULE HORAX (HIPS large taravi si*. CHIPS, size «toV TUB CITIZENS BANK Grand avenue at East Alder INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS Many Othar Bargain» Special prices on Cigars and Cigarettes by the box and Cartons VELVET TOBACCO, OC- 2 for.................................... ¿.«JV 1 A VU WALNUTS, soft shelled, A C_ No. 1. 2 lbs. for............... ITils pre mg it in clear limewater, which has of your body to do *o. bean heated to the boiling point A caution should be observad particu few minutes' immersion ia usually larly by elderly people. sufficient to remove the stain. Grease spots in table linens may be easily removed by soaking with limewater, which will saponify the grease, and then washing with clear water and (On carline, opposite Hr land aoap. Whenever limewater ia used, elation.) care should be taken to rinse the article thoroughly in clear water be- fore drying. Firland Barber Shop If you are obliged to go out while suffering from a severs cold, it ia an excellent plan to warm your shoe., rubbers, coat and other thing* before putting them on. It is much better to warm them by the stove or heater than to draw upon the vital warmth A trial the first time; a steady patron there after. ED. McMAHON, Prop. Agency of Liberty 1.sundry 71194 Slat Ave. 8. E. THE AMERICAN GAS STATION CURREY'S PHARMACY GRAYS CROSSING Gas, Oil, Tires and Accessories For sen ice call us night or day Mid and Division Streets ■ It’i all Rif ht or Your Money Back ■ ■ ■ PHONE 633*42 Towing ' , ■ —. 82d and Division Streets Cantaloupes, Watermelon', Tomatoes, Perches ALL HOME GROWN TOM MAHER’S Place Dectrlcal Expert = . Clean Up Paint Up Tune Up Canning Peaches YOUR AUTOMOBILE We are equipped to _ give • complete renovation and repair service on your automobile. We will get it ready for the road in jig time and at lowest prices. All expert workmen. Drive in today. THE FRANKLIN GARAGE Willamette Valley early Crawford canning peaches now ready. Look for the “Stop for Peaches” signs on 82d street about three blocks south of Division street. Hop Pickers Tabor 8503 TAVEI.LI * MACK 1383 Division Street New, exclusive Electric Washing Machine and cleaner store is now open at 1038 Hawthorne avenue. Don’t buy a washer until you have seen A. B. C Electric Clothes Washer Families desiring to pick hops please apply at the above stall. A. B. C. Beaver Island Fruit Acres, Inc. AND SPEND THE DIF FERENCE $50 Now we wrap our own bread--Try it These warm, dusty days have an iced drink at our fountain. Have you tried our whol« wheat, cracked wheat and rye bread ? Wedding and birthday cake* to order. Quantity and Quality 25c A—■■JJ Try our pantries and candies. CANTALOUPE CAMP 69c Free Tablets to Ghildren-Frss Shopping Bags to Women Folks Safety Deposit Boxes 89c 49c 27c PULLER WHITE SOAP. Cl 25 bars for........................ - T“ LESLIE SALT SHAKER. It pours, a can................. Amplifying sets Tube detectors Crystal sets All Radio supplies <1 HQ ONE WEEK ONLY 25c OYSTERS, 5 cana for I'evfui Suggestions Attention RadioFans ELECTRIC LIGHT GLOBES, from 25 watt Io 00 wstt................................ TOMATOE PUREE, 24 site, 2 fur......................... McCormack Will Slag Again John McCormack, the Irish tenor,! whose concert tour wa* interrupted by illness some months ago again is able to sing, according to reports from hi* manager. He will take thing* easy until the spring of 1923 whea ho will return to America for a brief tour. Turpentine has many uses which the housekeeper will ap|»rociste. A very little of ft in the suds on wash ing day lighten* the laundry labor, and a teaspoonful to a quart of water, if applied to plants once a week will make the leaves greener anil cause the blossoms to become brighter. It ia a sure preventive against moth* by just dropping a trifle in the box tom of chests, drawers and cupboards. Iodine stains may be removed from cotton or other white fabric by rin* HULK TEA. Gunpowder so und English Breakfast, lb JOv $7.20 . 85c Liifht Groceries LAURELWOOD BAKERY less than any other washer of the same quality. Specifications 1— Heavy tin-lined copper tub. 2— Heavy galvanized iron cab inet enclosing all moving parts. 3— Swinging wringer, ran be operated at same time as washer or separately. 4— Special oversize washing ma chine motor. 5— Noiseless marhine cut gears running in oil. $2 Per Week $115 Complete ELECTRIC SERVICE CO- 6232 Foster Road Phone Main 7370 F. WESOLOWSKI Store No. 2 is at 1038 Hawthorne avenue Automatic 624-63 Store No. 1 is at 175 Park street. il