THE OREGON:; STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, - JULY: 15, 1923 .-5 ill i . & i is i 5. r 1 4. i ! Summer Salads Prove Popular Dishes .Variations of old fety' to prepar. seasonable vef table given ; . lot summer, i;- y v If salads contain all the essen tials of health, why not eat them rather than heavy pastries and rich deserts. The diet has suf ficient sugar and fat but it is of ten lacking in the! things which a salad gives, such as minerals. vlt- a mines, bulk and appetizing - adds. - ' ' 1 To be Buccessfnf a salad must , be fresh, crisp, and the leaves frea from excess moisture. Often -with the color and flavor It is the most attractive part of the meal. But it should be used wisely. Either . it should be planned to ft the meal of jthe meal planned about the , salad. With, a substantial I meal a light salad with a, small I serving, should be used. A salad '" should never be an after thought. Lettuce is not j essential but it it Is serred it should be eaten. It It a rule that all garnishes should ' be edible. Besides lettuce, one may' use water cress, parsley, or if Y' a real necessity arises, nasturtium I leaves. Cheeseb alls, marshmal lows, and nuts may also be used. An unsuual garnish Is chees shap ed into carrots with parsley tor the tops. , . Variations from saltlna wafers are cheese straws;! cheese biscuits, or crackers with a mixture of one third batter and two-thirds cheese spread on and toasted ' Cheese straws are made by-rolling cheese Into pie crust,1 cutting it into strips half sin Inch wide and bak ing. The best croutons are made If the crust Is 'removed and the bread cut Into strips and buttered before baking. M - ' ' , The dressign is Important. May onnaise has been worked to death when there are other dressings Just as good. French, boiled, fruit, and golden dressing offer variations. Too large a serving spoils the flavor, makes the salad too heavy an dtakes away from the attractiveness ' j . One serving of : fresh, uncooked vegetables or traits should be eaten every day, authorities say JL salad Is the J most attractive way of getting this Into the diet. It ia economical as well because left-overs may Put to use. -v These combinations have prov ed successufl: ; ! Cherries with peanuts substitu ted, for the seeds may be piled in - the center of a pineapple ring for a flower salad. Butterfly salad Is made by cut ting a ring of pineapple in two 'parts and placing them to resem ble the wings of ..butterlly. Pin iento and olives make the mark4 lngs. and feelers. :j f '"" : - ' . Cucumber ' boats are made ' by hollowing out cucumbers and f ill ling them with, - hopped tomato, radish, peas and edeubers. Toma to shells may be treated In the . A pineapple ring, with ehredded 4una fisb or crab In the bole, cov ered with bait4 of aT canned peach Is unusual, f i Oranges and onions blend well j-" together, althoafh the combina tion Is a bit unusual.' Gelatin salads offer a variation Such vegetables aa celery, bage 'aid pimento are cut up and . allowed to set in the gelatin. - Baby bti, boiled, quartered, nd serv Vitb, cottage cheea balls. are efNCtire '' ! . ; ! Candlestick salad Is made with ring or pineapple to represent j the. bolder, a half banana for the i catadle,-a cherry for the flame, a gleee of coeoanut for- the' "wick, f ' and dressing lor the candle drip- l pings. ;v -v-'i'-' ! Baskets from carved apples or I oranges tiUed with chopped fruit add to the table decorations. ' -- ' ' - - - ; AT TOE LIBRARY ' .(Continued from page 3) some ethics for the business man or woman, by Nela Braddy. jit IS THIS CONTEMPT OF COURT? i. - III 7ilU S la V V i : jjj ju ii '- ''' - '"T -.i-iv.. , ...:.v.;..--Ji..viv,v 'irvvi ' f i This iombstone la a father's protest against the State that took Af sotVa iff" George M. Baker was executed in Lafayette. Ga, for - KSSrdirof Deputy Sheriff J. W.. Morton. Hl bcp.ther WtJpAfc v llavaJifeientence.- The father refused to live In Georgia . 55ejmZ The case,?ea-J4i " h mahV to, b-n3UStrI i will prove interesting; and often helpful' reading. I :'rnWt j: "Four and Twenty Minds," es says on prominent figures in his tory and fiction,, by Glpvannl Pap ini, the Italian author who has recently published ' a, "Life of Christ," which has proven popu lar.. ' v. ' : i : "Confessions of a ,Hook lover." his own appreciation of books, be ginning with his boyhood reading, by Maurice Francis Efean. ".Household Arts, jand School lunches," the results lot a survey by the Cleveland Foundatlon, written by Alice Boughton. "The Blood Shlp,"j a novel by Norman Springer. j- "The Book of DanieS," a volume of the Expositors' Bible, written by Dr. F. W. Farrar. f. let Adele Garrison's Hew Pbaae of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE CHAPTER N03 3S4 THE WAY DICKY TOOK THE NEWS MADGE BROUGHT : ; I I - . "Where Is RichardT ; Mother Graham shot the ques tion at me when I had finished my: breakfast ana. was .rising to go upstairs to - unior. t "Still sleeping when .1 came over to help you with.. Junior."! I feared my f cheeks showed a be traying flush at the consciousness of the tarradiddle. , ; , , ; , i . "Humphl' My mother-in-law gave me a keen, sceptical glance. "To pick wild flowerjf more Hke- ly. It's a wonder you haven't got a mess of, 'em with you." I laughed guiltily as I pointed to a vase of wild geraniums on the table. I had picked them from the hedgerows las I came along I never can resist gather ing blossoms when I iknow there Is no Injury to the plants entailed and Mrs. Ticer hadf provided a vase for them. Myj embarrass ment was not, as my mother-in- law thought, caused f by chargin at being caught in onef of my prin cipal weaknesses, but by the con sciousneas that I was tains to let her think; almost my morning i errand truth. anything of save the I A Decision. i V .smiled sar that ,: the "I thought so,". she donically. - but I saw chance to put .me inj the wrong bad restored her good humor and would give a fillip ti her diges tion. "Now you needn't wofTy yourself about ' Richard Second. I've taken care of hiii all these weeks. I Imagine I might be able to get him through this morning without his either starving or do ing himself an injury. You go on back and get Richard out of bed and over here to his break fast in double-quick time. There's been time enough lost In this bus iness. I shall find a place to live today. Now,' Mre. TJcer, if you'll it" i ;- J j ' She turned her hack upon me In undisguised dismissal, and I thankfully seized the opportunity to speed back to Dicky. He was still sleeping soundly when I entered thej room at the other farmhouse, aid I infinitely dreaded waking hin, for I knew from bitter experience that rous Ing a sleepy lion from his lair and trying to gel'Dlckyi . up In .the morning werev or sf 1 whimsical ly fancied, distinctly similar pro cesses, j j f But I knew that I could not de lay the performance, so I march ed resolutely to tie bed, bet over It, and kissed him lightly on the forehead, hoping against the experience of years that this time honored method of conjugal rous ing would be effectual. Because 1 i.z--, i - - A r fc. :-: "-.Sf I ,. .: i.- -.-.i-.-v.- I ";SJ U L31 la It : EJjlM f v3S2Bi a i i:M man ..z, -a m x i mmr r i -aw ' k Kr -mi o f in iif m ciicna ere crj, 1. - T ' ' ' t : ! ' " iion HUSBAND MAUGHAN ON afjri5Mfca&.te-'.. ::i , i raaa"'ZT?,t.i FRANCISCO Lieut. Russell L. on one of two rare occasions it has proved itself valuable gener ally try it first. "I Can't " : ' '!''' Alas for sentiment! My hus band stirred and brushed his hand Impatiently over his face. jL "Cursed-flies," he muttered, then? turned heavily without open ing his eyes and sank into, pro found slumber again. There have been times in my earlier married life when this re sponse would have brought tears to my eyes,' and an ache to my heart. But time has brought me common sense or callousness I sometimes think the two terms eyn onymous and I only smiled ap preciatively as I bent over my husband again, shook him vigor ously by the shoulder and called: "Dicky! Dicky! Wake up." "What the dickens!" Roused In to irritation, he opened his eyes and glared at me. "Let me alone." He jerked his shoulder loose from my hand and rolled back sleep ily. - ' "I can't let you alone," I said firmly, sitting down upon the side of the bed. "Your 'mother is up, and wants you to get over there immediately so that after break fast you can go with her to find a house!" The mention of his mother's name brought him to a sitting po sition with a jerk. ''. . "Mother!" , he , frownlngly ejac ulated. "What's eating you? She isn't here." "No, but she's over at the Ticer house," I patiently explained. "How do you know she wants me?" ' ' "I've just come from there." r i Tor the love of Mike, also Pete! Did you go over there and rout her out to start that crazy scheme of yours?" J I wisely forbore to remind him that the crazy scheme to make his mother discover the Dacey farm and propose buying it was con ceived In his own fertile brain. Instead, I hastened to pour oil on the troubled waters as fast as possible, lor- to borrow f from Dicky's own vocabulary -It look ed like a wild night at sea.' 4,No, Indeed," and I felt that much of my reply to be truthful at least, "I went over I to help im,sf,fiv i - ' -'it jr v1sfi 1" li ' x aiW7.7rri-5, . . : 1. 'i VM I Wf .1 . OLDFIELD . QUALITY TIRES From established dealers equipped to give, you real tire service at these unusual prices J 30x3 ; 30x32 30x3y2 31x4 32x4 33x4 34x4 33x414 34x4Va 36x4 33x5 35x5 37x5 36x6 38x7 40x8 Oldfield Tires hold all the track records for the last three years and ' are the only American tires to win the French ! Grand Prix the classic of Europe ! VtCEC BROTHERS" -Trade Street aqilgh ; t J I ' j' 1 .' HIS ONE DAY FLIGHT TO PACIFIC ur,f,m Maughan, his army plane a nd the with Junior, but she was already up when I arrived!" ! "I wouldn't believe you on a stack ' of Bibles," Dicky growled, as he rolled laboriously out of bed. "And if I hadn't promised last night, like a fool, to go thru with this thing, I'd let you and that old ruin' you want' to buy Bo where McfSinty traveled." , (Tobe continued.) Heirs of Abdul Hamid Will Fight for Fortune CONSTANTINOPLE, July 14. American lawyers may soon begin a legal battle to establish i the right of the heirs of the late Sul tan Abdul Hamid to oil proper ties and real estate in the terri tories now detached from Turkey, estimated to be worth $500,000, 000. The heirs of the former Sul tan include four princes and four princesses, and they are beaded by Prince Mermed Selim Effendi presumptive successor to the Cal iphate. ' The heirs are seeking satisfac tion at Lausanne, and if this, endeavor fails they will instruct their American attorneys to begin Legal proceedings. They say that the Lausanne Conference seems inclined to give a decision which would class the properties in ques tion, as belonging to the Turkish Crown. This they aver la wrong. declaring that according to law. the properties should pass in eq-j ual succession to Abdul' Ham id's sons and daughters, and that they will take, every means to sen cure justice. i Although the former govern- ment of the Committee of Union and Progress usurped certain of the rights of the heirs and did Its best to invalidate succession, it is claimed that it failed in its ob ject. n A number of American concession-hunters have been after the heirs to grant them rights in the immense domains of the former sovereign of Turkey, and have competed with British promoters in their financial offers. If Lau sanne decides in favor of tha heirs, they will be able to form out the properties without delay. Otherwise they will contest and make a legal fight. T iiJTT rT T - a r Tf H t Atj. ;t :i ofpm ""yr: field-, ; r Buy the Famous Road and Race Tested "999" Fabric .J "999" Fabric .........:... Cord .... Cord ...... .. Cord Cord ........... Cord . j Cord ..... ..... -Cord cord ..:::..:... Cord Cord ...... ... Cord ....... Cord ............ cord ......::. Cord . ..........l. route across the continent. Worlds Fastest Train Averages 61 Miles an Hour LONDON, July 14. The fastest train in the world is now running between London and Swindon, a distance of 77 miles, which it covers In 75 minutes, traveling at the rate of C1.8 miles an hour. This is one of five trains' an nounced In the summer sche dules of the English raroada. that will. make better than a mile a minute on regular runs.. The longest run is between London and Bath,' 106 miles, which is made at the rate of 61.1 miles an hour. . --' ., ' '" Another feature, of the summer train schedules is that daily non stop trains are run between, Lon don and all the important cities and summer resorts in England, which are designed to allow the worker to live at the "seaside and continue to work in London. RAY McNAMARA'S (Continued1 from page 1.) had a puncture, nor did I even have to put additional air In the tires. Therefore, the Cord tires contributed in a large measure to the success of this tour. Their great strength over fabrics permitted higher sustained speeds with total ab sence' of trouble.1 Their easy . x rolling qualities Increased speed i.eeppomy and ease of steering, f.j, thus making big daily mileage possible with very little ! physi cal effort. ! i Therefore, every car 1 owner starting out on a long tour should have his "car well shod, a-good spare and some extra tubes. Do not attempt to patch tubes along the road side, extra tubes will pay in the long run. To start witbS old tires may set you back on your schedule a few days. When you compare the cost of meals, hotels and patches, resulting, from -delays occasioned by tire troubles, this will more than offset the ad ditional cost of replacing old tires, or the additional 'cost of cords over fabrics, ' so beware of false economy. CAUTION! - When retir ing your car keep these-points ." in mind: j , 1. In changing j to over-size $ 7.40 . 8.85 ... 10.65 ... 18.95 ... 19.90 20.90 ...21.80 ... 27.80 ... 28.90 ... 29.65 ...33.90 ... 34.90 ... 36.70 ... 59.80 83.90 -108.90 u Salem, Oregon tires, be sure that the fender and wheel; housing design on your -cat will provide enough clearance for the larger diameter. You can test this after mounting a tire by meas uring distance between tire and fender, then comparing this with distance between frame and spring bumper. The frams should strike bumper before the tire can make contact with fender, also cut front whee3 to full angle in each direc tion, ithen with a couple of men on either side of the car, sway the body) violently until frame hits bumper. "At the same time ob serve clearance between apron of fender and tire on front wheel3, and between body and side of tire on tte rear wheels. This is very important for if the over-size tires rub at' any point on account of their) larger diameter, they are liable to be damaged and should not be used. j 2. In replacing one tire, see that it measures the same diame ter us -your other tires; for in stance different makes of tires may vary slightly in diameters, and in the case of a cord and fab ric tire of the same size, usually the cord runs an inch larger. This will unbalance your car slightly, making steering difficult, and on the rear wheels will cause your differential to work all the time. Ask Our Tires - 271 Chemeketa TO BE TO BE TO be Cars i - KA VNAAV'-Vr-: r--V. . V,WvYv ,WA VvV.'vVi4;5, -V- One tire being smaller gives the same action in the differential as when turning ; corners, one wheel running faster than the other. 3. Keep your best tires on rear wheels, equalize brakes properly, so that one wheel does not lock sooner than the other. This might wear your tread through, or de velop flat.-spots on tires, causing vibrations. - " 4. Front wheels should,' be inspected for proper toe-in. Af ter striking , curbstones -too hard, or in collision, flat tread or chaff ing on tread of front tires-indicates toe-in. See-Instruction on front axle in instruction-book; - 5. . Soft - tires will cause hard steering (and will injure fabrics or cords. . Hard tires will cause Phone 1249. UNION ABSTRACT COMPANY j I Before parting with your money for a deed ! or mortgage; be assured that the title is O. K. by securing a reliable abstract. : U. S. Page,, President W. L Hanson. Secretary it 1 i - Customer s ARMSTRONG 1 -s ::. r- Salem automotive servigegoj full value for your money. the make and model car represented. in good running condition, and in all - 101? everything that we tell you OiH about the car. - WE HAVE From $85 hard riding, make, car unsteady on road and 'hard to control it speeds, also" reduce efficiency of brakes, increase tendency to skid and will increase rattles. Consult your instruction book carefully on this, or the maker o your tires. In my experience w,t i cord tires, a .3000 pound car witu five passengers, 32x4 tires ope ate' best, under' all conditions wita GO pounds of air In front the an. C5 pounds In rear. Incre "- re tire pressure five pounds, for hea vier loads." For the Owners ttcrapbock Last Week Police should fine motorists $1 per foot for bad brakes. Next Week -Hints on driving on trans-conUnental tonr. 345 State St. About Us ... it - Tubes J Phone 361 1?? and Up to Show You -...-x v.-v -