10 THE MORNING OREGONIAN. FRIDAY. MAY 5, 1922 f2 . , RS. NEWTON" CARSON SMITH I IVl a sister, Mra. John Hunt f Hendrickaon. will entertain to- i lv at a tea, complimenting- Miss , Mary War rack, the much-feted bride- j elect. Those who will preside at the tea table are Mrs. Loyd Grey, Mrs. Eldon Furnish. Mrs. Maurice Barnes and Mrs. Edward Sturgeon. They will be assisted by Mrs. Allan Russell, Mrs. Maurice Jones, Miss Margaret Hawkins, Miss Marjorie Peterson an4 Miss Marjorie MacOuire. Mrs. George MacPherson will en tertain this evening with an informal dinner party. Covers will be laid for eight. Mrs. Roderick Macleay will enter tain tomorrow evening at a dinner for Miss Fay Alger, who is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Henry Chaney. On Sunday Mrs. Guy Webster Talfoo t will be hostess at a gathering at her home on - Columbia river highway. Mrs. D. W- L. MacGregor entertained for Miss Alger on Tuesday. Mrs. Meredith Bailey left yesterday for a visit In the east. She will re turn to Portland probably In the early fall. Before leaving Mrs. Bailey had an informal tea for a few friends, who were her guests on Monday. HONOLULU. T. H., April 13. Mrs. W. M. Seward of Portland, Or., is a visitor to Honolulu. She has Just come from a season at Palm. Beach and a visit to Jamaica, Panama and Sal in a Cruz. Waverley Country club will hold a dinner dance tomorrow night at the clubhouse. Many of the smart set will entertain for groups of friends. Frank B. Soramerville, who for merly lived in this city, is a visitor here from Edmonton, Alberta, Can ada. Mr. Sommerville is at the Port land hotel. Mrs. Otto Kettenbach was hostess Wednesday at a luncheon of six cov ers at the Waver ley Country cLub. Mrs. Edward Geary was a luncheon hostess Wednesday when she enter tained friends at the Waverley Coun try club. Mr. and Mrs. John Clark Burgard, who have been traveling in Europe for several months, are at present passing a short time in Switzerland. They wll sail from England for New York the latter part of May, arriving In Portland some time in June. Mrs. Fred L- Olson will go to Cor vallls today to sing for convocation at Oregon Agricultural college. Miss Nettie Leona Foy will be her accom panist and will go to Corvallis with Mrs. Olson. The Gamma Iotas will entertain Mrs. Olson at their frater nity house. Mrs. Joseph P. Maginnis of Tilla mook, who Is visiting her mother. Mrs. Allen McDonell, is at present at St. Vincent's hospital, recovering from a serious operation. Yesterday Mrs. John L. Burke entertained with a smart bridge tea at the Waverley Country club. A social event of interest for to morrow afternoon will be the tea to MRS. OTTO KETTEXBACH, HOSTESS AT WAVERLEY COUNTRY CLUB. be given at Reed college by the As sociation of University women. From 1:30 to 2:30 the college will be open for Inspection and students will serve as guides. The programme will fol low and afterward tea will be served In the Anna Mann cottage. In the receiving line will be Mrs. Norman Coleman, the retiring president, the newly-elected president whose name will be announced at that time, the president of Reed college, Dr. R. F. Scholz, Mrs. Scholz, Miss Bertha Young, dean of women at the college. At the tea table will be Mrs. Caroline Benson Unander, Mrs. Iee Patterson, Mrs. Richard Park and Mrs. Pat H. Allen. Assisting will be Miss Gene vieve Shaver, Miss Maurine Iaber, Miss Juanita Parker, Mrs. Edward Clark, Miss Henderson, Miss Gro shong. Miss Riley, Miss Mildred Steln metz and Miss Marjorie Silverthorne. The committee in charge of the tea and receiving reservations includes Mrs. Norman Coleman, Sell wood 1 j 28 ; Mrs. A. W. Cooper, Main 852; Mrs. W. H. Thomas, East 1829. Mrs. Pat H". Alien entertained 60 guests at a party at the People's to witness the production of the film, "The Orphans of the Storm." Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Leiter will leave soon for San Francisco to sail later for the orient. Cards and dancing will be the di version at the party to be given to night by the members of St. Mary's parish at Columbus club auditorium, Morris street and Williams avenue. In honor of Miss V'Ona Guthrie. Miss Gretchen Klosterman will give a luncheon today, at the Waverley Country club. Delegates to the national Parent Teacher convention at Tacoma will leave Portland Monday at 8:05 A. M. via the Northern Pacific. It is ex pected that there will be 75 delegates from Portland. All have been asked to get their certificates when pur chasing tickets here so that they may obtain special rates. Holman Parent-Teacher association Is sponsoring another community dance to be given tonight in the school assembly. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Brooks will assist the chairman. Mrs. A. F. Burkhart. The Progressive Woman's league will hold its last programme lunch eon of the year tomorrow at 12 o'clock at the Hotel Benson, with Mrs. X. Perry Evans as chairman. An in teresting programme has been ar ranged. Mrs. C. B. Simmons win report on the convention of the National League of Women Voters and the Pan-American conference at the regu lar monthly meeting of the Oregon League of Women Voters today at 2 o'clock in room H of central library. The meeting was postponed from yes terday on account of the late arrival of Mrs. Simmons. Louis I. Herz will also speak on "The Tax Issue." The Young Women's Christian as sociation vesper service will be held In the social hall at 4:30 Sunday aft ernoon. A discourse on "The Interrupted Pi nner Party" will be given by Dr. B. B. Sutcliffe. Dr. Sutcliffe was formerly connected with the Moody Bible institute of Chicago, but re cently was installed pantor of the Q0QQ SupromQ (asWells AIIONAl CREST Coffee Tflrphour Direct Calvary Presbyterian church. He is widely known in Portland through the many Bible clashes conducted last winter, "he soloist at this service will be D. R. Matthews. Young peo ple from Calvary church will assist during the social hour. Extensive plans are under way to celebrate Mothers day, Sunday, May 14. This week ends the second semes ter's work in Bible study as con ducted under the religious work de partment of the Young Women's Christian association. There are eight classes of high school students, most of whom will take the exam ination on Friday in the New Testa ment. Some girls will take examina tions in both the Old and New Testa ments. The course is given after school hours. Franklin high school Parent -Teacher association and the Hi-Y boys of the school will give a dance tonight in the gymnasium. There will be music and refreshments. There will be a special meeting of the Woodstock Study club today at the Woodstock library at 1 P- M. The subject for the next year's work will be approved and a committee appoint ed to work out an outline. Anyone planning to take the work will be in terested in the programme and all members are urged to attend. Thompson Parent-Teacher associa tion will entertain with the last com munity dancing party for this season, tonight at 8 o'clock at the school au ditorium. Community Service hikers will leave union station at 7 A. M. next Sunday for their annual Wahkeena Multnomah falls hike. Warm cloth ing and heavy shoes should be worn. Take food for two meals. Round trip $1.57. Next Tuesday at 8:15 P. M. the club will present the Red Lantern players in "What Happened to Jones." at Turnverein hall. Thirteenth and Main streets. The membership committee of the T. W. C A. will hold Its monthly meeting at a luncheon at the asso ciation building today at 12 o'clock. bt) Lilian Tiiujlp CUSHMAN SITE APPROVED Geologist Reports Test Made for Proposed Dam. TACOMA. Wash.. May 4. (Special.) The Cushman power site in Mason county, acquired by the city of Ta coma, has received final expert ap proval in its geological aspect by Raymond P. Tarr, geologist and en gineer, who has just completed an exhaustive investigation of the proj ect. He made his report today to Ira S. Davisson, commissioner of power an light- Doubt has been expressed from time to time concerning the practica bility of the dam construction, and city engineers have completed tests by driving holes and tunnels In the area at the southwestern end of Lake Cushman. satisfying themselves on the stability of that section. The geological report completed the tests. The entire section was investigated by Tarr, making tests to a height of TiO feet, the maximum to which water would be raised. Clubwomen Visit Portland. PATTOX, Or., May 4, (Special.) A delegation of women from the local civic club and representatives from Amity left here by special bus for Portland yesterday morning to be guests of the Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industries during the day. Delegates from these organisa tions met the women at the bus ter roJnal with cars and treated them to aseason of sightseeing. HOFF, Or.. April 18. My dear Miss Tingle: Could you tell me through your household column In The Oregonian whether any smelt recipes were printed in The Oregonlan recently; if so, what date? If not can you please tell me where I can get some ? Can smelt be pickled or canned if freshened after being put down In salt? I certainly enjoy your recipes and want to send a sour cream cookie recipe we certainly think very good.. Sour Cream Cookies Two cups of sugar. y$ cup of shortening, 1 cup of sour cream, i-a teaspoonful soda stirred in the cream, t) teaspoonfuls baking powder. tea spoonful fresh ground nutmeg. 2 eggs well beaten. $4 teaspoonful of salt, flour enough to make a rather stiff dousrh; roll out, cut with cookie cutter and hnkrt in not too hot oven. MRS. C. A. S.TELT recipes were given in a spe cial article in The Sunday Orego nian of February 12. This you might possibly still obtain from the business office of The Oregonian, but I am not sure. A few recipes for canning were in this Household Problems column re cently. I hope you saw these. Fol lowing are a few others: If not too salty, 'the temporarily salted smelt can be used later for smoking, canning or pickling. I am glad you find this column helpful. Many thanks for your recipe. As the warmer weather comes on there is usually an interest among housewives in sour cream and sour milk recipes. 1. Salt smelt for summer use Fifty pounds perfectly fresh smelt, 4 to 5 pounds, coarse salt, stone jars to hold the fish; take, the smelt just as they come ; do not wash or clean them: put a layer of smelt into the jar. then a thin layer of salt, then a layer of fish and so on until the jar is full. Put a plate or board on top of the" fish with a weight to keep the fish below the brine which forms. "When wanted for use take out the necessary quantity, wash and clean them; let them stand In cold water six or eight hours, to freshen before use. Brine to cover is needed. Add extra brine if necessary. 2. Smoked smelt Clean as for cooking, but leaft'e the heads on. Sprinkle lightly with salt and let drain 12 hours, string on a wire and hang in the smokehouse three days. Store in a cool, dry place. 3. Smoked fish with liquid smoke Small fish may be cleaned as for cooking. Fish 12 to 18 inches long may be cleaned, split and flattened out. Large fish may be sliced. Rub with salt or leave in brine 3 to 24 ELSIE'S Exclusive Pattern Hats on Sale Thursday, Friday. Saturday 300 MODELS AT $15.00 Some of Theup Are 30 Values, Shop Early, llrlns Y our Friends. ELSIE'S LARGEST EXCLfSIVE MtLMN. ERY IMPORTERS IN PORTLAND, Second Floor, Artisans Building, X. W, Cor. Broadway and Oak St., Inst Below Hotel Bennon on Broad way, SPECIAL ORDERS AND MAKE OVER W ORK SOICITED. hours, according' to thickness. Let drain until the surface is partly dried out, then paint all over with liquid smoke and finish drying. Thick fish may need two coatings. Store in a dry, cold place, protected from in sects. When needed for use soak in cold water to freshen and use for fish balls, creamed fish. - patties, souf flees, salads or sandwich pastes. Smelt, herring, black cod, haddock and salmon are particularly good pre served in this way. 4. Baked smelt in Vinegar Wash and clean the smelt. By using a pair of scissors heads can be cut off and the fish emptied in about two motions. This counts when there are many fish to clean. Let drain and pack like sardines, head to tail, in a baking dish, adding two or three cloves, six or eight peppercorns, a tiny bit of bay leaf and yellow lemon rind; if avail able, and if liked, a slice of onion. Barely cover with mild vinegar, or a mixture of vinegar and water, if pre ferred. Cook slowly until the liquid boils, when the fish usually will be cooked enough. Tou can test this by pulling out one of the backbones. If it comes out whole and easily the fish is done. Serve hot. either plain or with a piquant sauce made with some of the liquid, extra seasonings, such as mustard or chopped pickles and thickening. Or serve cold, plain or with tartar sauce. One, two or three, according to size, of these little spiced fish laid on lettuce, with their little backbones extracted, and with mayonnaise or boiled dressing or tartar sauce above them, will make a useful luncheon salad, either with or without a little finely chopped celery or cabbage. Pounded up with butter or mayon naise, they make a good sandwich filling. PORTLAND. Or.. April 16. Dear Miss Tingle: Please give directions for using "liquid smoke" for fish; also, please, a recipe for smelt pickled in vinegar. Thank ing you. MRS. D. P. See the answer given above to Mrs. C. A. she was riding overturned, recalled to several here the recent unfortunate deaths that the Hall family encoun tered. A brother, Charles Hall, a rancher and trapper, was found dead at Cable Cove, near here, about eight years ago. Another brother, George Hall, was killed seven years ago while working on the skidway at a logging camp at Bates. He was crushed be neath a pile of timbers. the safe. If anyone starts to drill the safe he will receive a thorough gassing. School Attendance Increases. over last year. The attendance in all injury yeyterdav ftrnoon In loa the schools has reached 1227. or a 8ng carap He was a buckrr. Smwln lncrease of T7 over last year. j Qff r lQg upper .:ipp.d mn0 Injured Logger Oies. ; -aught Ame le. tearing IteM ; Two logger companion. R, J cardetr NORTH BEND. Or . May 4. iSpe-I and S G. Stftckles. gave a quart of GRANTS PASS. Or.. May 4. (Spe cial.) City schools of Grants Pass i ciaL) Jacob Ames died at Mercy hos- . blood each to support him for an show a large increase In attendance i pital tnis morning as a result of ar. operation Poison Gas Protects Safe. SHERWOOD. Or.. May 4. (Spe cial.) The Sherwood bank has in stalled a modern burglar alarm. This is a poison-gas device attached to Pupils Train for Tournament. GASTON. Or., May 4. (Special.) The Gaston high school and the grade iRtnHpntt: a r wnrkirtP harri for the meet Saturday at Forest Grove. At the preliminary meet Jast aaiuruaj, on the downtown baseball grounds, a staved latn to sse all the events and encourage the youngsters. Members townspeople acted as timekeepers and rererees. .fians are oeing intue iji i.rrl n Vl n t TQ rli" meet Saturday, making an all-day nic fashion, on the Pacific university campus. Miss Eula Black, the prin cipal, is working toward a victory for the Gaston school and it stands a pretty good chance. New Hotel Projected, CENTRALIA, Wash.. May 4. (Spe cial.) Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Fair, owners of the Centralia hotel, have plans under way for the erection- of a 200 room hotel in Centralia, according to announcement by them yesterday at the weekly luncheon of the Kiwanis club. If their plans go through, the Fairs will leave about June 1 for an extended trip through the east to get ideas in hotel construction and oper ation that later will be embodied in their building here. If erected, the plans for the new structure will be drawn by the architect who designed the Davenport hotel in Spokane. Mr. Humphreys Lauded. Senator McNary sent the following telegram Wednesday to Lester W. Humphreys, United States attorney: "September 1, as the date of your res ignation, entirely satisfactory to me. Your services as United States at torney have conformed to the highest requirements. Wish you sucpess in the private practice of your profes sion, r. J. Gaiiagner oi Ontario, or., and Walter L. Tooze Jr. of McMinn vllle. both of whom have been men tioned as successor to Humphreys, ar rived in Portland Wednesday. School Attendance High. ABERDEEN. Wash., May 4. (Spe cial.) The average percentage of attendance of the 3046 pupUs' enrolled in Aberdeen schools was 97.19 during April, according to the- report issued yesterday by Superintendent Miller. The banner for the building show'ng the best attendance was awarded to the Whitman school. The grammar sch ool grad e ban ner went to Miss Owens room in the Whitman school and the primary banner went to Mrs. M. Potter's room in Stevens school. Family Has Bad Ijuck. BAKER, Or., May 4. (Special.) The reported fatal accident at. Mullin, Idaho, Tuesday, m which Mrs. Hen Schmidt of Wallace, Idaho, formerly Miss Sadie Hall of Baker, lost her life when an automobile in which There's a grand parade of finest Boys' Suits keeping step to the Tune of "Most for Your Money at the Juvenile" The drum corps playing the battle cry of freedom from high prices with these extra valued suits, with equally extra knick ers. No matter how severe the playing offensive may be or how often the cow ard foe attack, our clothes are always ready for battle $10 to $20 SPECIAL FOR Friday and Saturday FREE! A SCOOTER CAR with each pur chase of a Boy's Suit, Overcoat or a pair of Shoes. Tfti Juvenile lOmfitters .for Children 391 Washington Street Opposite the Hazelwood "We Tell It With Values" LSwediAteerv Coast to Coast Suits, Coats, Dresses Largest Exclusire Ready-to-Wear Business on Coast Largest Exclusive Ready-to-Wear Business on Coast Suits, Coats, Dresses Priced "Sweet Sixteen Way" $25.00 to $75.00 ii4iif(i(Hi,,I.: MHn Mi"nni!itumiiHi)i ii mmem 145-147 BROADWAY Bluhill Pimento Cheese makes some sandwich ft spreads like butter 3 ! : 2 S 'What yotir gmcer saps. abovt We eat Snow Flakes at our home. I tried them first because so many people called for them that I was curious to test their goodness, too. We keep them regularly now. -they are so crisp and delicious. If you want the best soda wafer, I recommend Snow Flakes. Don't ask for crackers, say Sn dw Flakes Sold in red packages and in bulk Pacific Coast Biscuit Co., Portland, Ore, Your Grocer Recommends Albers Quality Grocers like to sell Quality Products that's why they recommend Albers Flapjack Flour. Housewives have confidence in their grocer's recommen dation hence you'll find Albers Flapjacks the hot cakes of the West. Order a Package From Your Grocer Carefully sealed cylindrical con tainer insures absolute sanitation.