SATURDAY-MORNING, AUGUST 22, 1025
SIMESMMM MARKET PAGE FOR OUR BUSY HOUSEHOLDS
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON
it
Molasses and Squash Pie "
Beat together one egg, one cup
of mlfk, one-fourth cup of ;sugar,
; one-f onrth teaspoon; of salt, one
fourth teaspoon of ginger-And
this to one can of squash mixed
with one-third cup of molasses
and three-fourths teaspoon .cinna
mon. Tutn into a pie plate lined
with pie crust and hake until
firm. This is especially delicious
if served with hipped cream.
' Apricot Pi '
Fresh apricots are usually rath
er insipid so if you would, hare
a really tasty pie! use the. canned
product in the following recipe:
Drain the Juice from one "can of
apricots and fit into each haired
piece of the fruit a blanched a!
mond. Lay in ' regular ' rows in
the . bottom of pastry-lined , tin.
sprinkle with sugar, and cover
with strips of pastry, laid on cross
, wise. Bake, and serve Cold with
sugar and cream.
, Flve-Minute Tie . T
When the ' call comes for a
quick dessert your problem can be
solved in five minutes if you hap
pen to have in the house, a can of
fresh fruit, a baked: pie shell and
some- cream. ! Turn the -fruit from
which 'most of the juice has been
Make a white sauce, jh . the topi
of a double boiler, of the first sisj
ingredients,' mixing s the mustard
with the other dry ingredients. Set
the top part of the boiler over hoi
but "not boiling water. Add the
cheese, cook and stir until tit is
melted. . Serve on hot 'toasted
bread or on ealtlnes. One-half
cup chopped olives may be added.
This dish may be varied by" add
ing one or two slightly beaten
eggs, just after the' cheese- has
melted and continuing' the cook-
Ing until the egg has thickened
the mixture. . :r;"
the brim. This was taught me by
a child "who had almost no other
amusement for weeks in bed. Ab
solutely happy 'she made bats for
all her dolls. and. trimmed them
with flowers and paper bows. The
entire cost was little more than
50 cents. :- 1 'A ''".'-!'
with whipped cream and you have
a pie fit for a king
. A Cooling Diet for
y Warm Weather
During i the summer a great
tnany 'office workers begin to lose
fleah, because of eating unwisely.
Others already fleshy continue to
gain in weight; no matter how hot
It becomes. 's
f Bulky FooHs m
y Necessary- " "
It is more common to find sick
ness among people who do little
work than among the working
classes." This, I believe, is due to
the fact that the first, are man
inclined to live on highly concehj
trated food which leave no residue
such as I chicken, polished . ricei
mashed potatoes, fine j white bread
and pastries, " i,sW,j...4.
A diet composed mainly of these
foods will eventually result in de-
MI
boo mm
mm
rangement of the liver: and chronic
drained into the shell and pile up (constipation, A person in this con
dition eventually becomes pois
oned by ;bls own waste material;
Sooner or later the vitality is w-i
ered and disease finds an ieasyj
foothold. i-r- '- ! J
The diet of laboring man usual
ly consists-of simple,' plain' and,
generally;, coarse foods.- having f
large percentage of cellulose ma
terial forming plenty"; of bulk sb
necessary to perfect health. ' j
Green vegetables, legumes; fruit
and some cereals arte owing to
Household Hints
When Milk Gravkn Crdle ".
If the milk curdles when mak
ing milk gravy, put in a. little soda
and it will thicken '.up and be
ready to serve.
'To-Clean -Rugs :
" To clean a rug on the floor, and
without dust, put 2 tablespoons of
ammonia " In . ."gallon : of . water.
Take a cloth a yard square, damp
en In the water, lay on rug. and
beat gently with a -carpet beater
or heavy wire j spoon.- Then rinse
well In clear water.. Continue
laying cloth next to where you
left off until you hare given the
whole rug a cleaning. . You will be
surprised at the results.
For Cleaning Screen loors
Have a stiff brush, dip it in
pasoline, and go over the screens.
It takes off the rrease and dnst.
and makes them Took like new.
To Brighten Ktel
A Steel that is rusty should be
cleaned with a cut onion and left
for a-day. Afterward it. can be
polished either with emery powder
and para fin, or with a paste made
with brick dust and turpentine.
Steel articles that are to be stored
for, some time should fir3t -be
put hr a dry place.
Commission Fils to Obtain
Lower Figures After Two
- Day Session I -
Peruvian transport Ucayali. has in
creased daily since it first ap
peared August 10.
BUM
SEVEN HOMES -BURNED
FOREST nLAZE DESTROYS
' MANY KANCH BUILDINGS
nra
COSTS SHOW INCREASE
Books Raited From 10 to CO Per
Cent Over Figures for 1819; ! !
Adoptions Are Listed :
j for Periods ; r ;
. The fact l.t few Deonle eat cor
rectly during' this season of the . their cellulose formation, found tb
SAXEil MARKETS
OSAIN
Xo. 1 whita j
No. t Ttd. aafkrd
..SI .47
. 1.40
year. Hours of hot cooking can
be. avoided by careful planning.
Among cold dishes there is noth
ing more attractive, to serve than
aspic Jelly. " i .
', Vegetables; ' too, "are cooling.
During these long hot days the
system cries loudly for moisture.
Evaporation from the skin is ex
cessive and the several pounds of
water lost every day in the body's
effort to keep its temperature nor
mal must be supplied.
. Cooling drinks. Ice Water, lemo
nade, grape juice, milk, etc, at
the soda fountain supply much of
the moisture required. ,
Vegetables ! and fruits do the
Test. In spring and summer the
- garden looks attractive and the
foods from it are fine. p. They con
tain almost no fat and their starch
, and . sugar content ' Is f usually
small. j. , -..,"..:. -.:.:". -
t The fresh or canned 'fruits 'and
vegetables always make excellent
salads for, summer and, - winter,
put the niain.essentialjs that they
be fresh, -crisp "andjcokh- They
contain minerals, needed so muoh
at this time of the year.
be lexative. Such foods as spin-
achj carrots, .green " peas,, green
beans, sauerkraut cabbage either
canned or Tresh, 'whole . wheat,
fruit, . either fresh j canned, or
dried, prunes, cherries, grapes,
figs, oranges, etc, may easily be
worked into the menus of ihe dif
ferent meals; for instance: .j". :-
Breakfast: , Cherries, pineapple,
orange or fig marmalade,, oatmeal
and bran bread and gems.' : j ' - j
Noon-time:: Green; peas, spin
ach, green beans, sauerkraut,
cooked fruit snch .as apricots, and
whole wheat bread may be : used.
. For the evening meal, lettuce,
dlli.ol"'tnn..tn. - i :
j . x. kvuiatuca, v u u m uei s, ra
dishes, cress, prunes;- pears ,' and
I graham bread. !
! POSK.
Top hnga
hnwi ..
Top ateera -
Cowa
finlla
lftJTTOjr
AJTD BEE
:.... is
I9.5010.AO
.is
OS
2.50(5.00
Stt4e
finrinc lamba, 00 lh and undr Bea9 V,
HTlor ; oau
Val ,, 7ea74
Drcsaed Teal ... , , , , .13
-Light hna .
HYjr krt .
Old rooHri
Broilcra
POTJ1.TBT
.18
.200 33
. .
-lSQsa
EOOS. BTJTTEB AKD BTJTTE1TAT
Bnttorfat Jb
Crmworr ' bnttar
E
Klaadarda
HoIvcm
Milk. pT rwt. ;..
-so a 53
.28
.2S
.30
$2.30
iN Use oly fresh.
Steps in Cold Pack
Canning; , r
ripe pro
ducts', ' clean grade and out or
slice. . ' !f
Blanch . by lowering product
: in r cheesecloth bag into boiling
water and holding there from 1
to 10 minutes.
3. Cold dip immediately into
cold clean water and drain
I 4. Park into hot sterilized jars
add boiling syrup or water using
1, teaspoon saltlo every quart Jar.
Adiust calded. rubbers and
caps leaviug-' clamp on top partlal-
iyopen. . .r.. -. ..s-.
.u. btermze required, time ac
cordlns to standard time, "j.
".7; f Tighten clamps"' or
' I Avert to cool ' 'and test
Store InVool dark place.
cover
ioints
Recipes
Orange and irape Kulad
I
i
it-
General 'Markets
Entertaining a Sick
V Child! V
Hooks; of course. are: the flrdt
suggestion, and, some. few children
tS . . . . i
woum De sauijiiea almost, indennv
ttely with then. Hut'theve l dan
ger of eye-strain, headache ,.and
fatigue. And some Ichildren : djo
not enjoy them at all. Games are
good, but not -the best;, for thejy
need two people, and often a busy
moiner can not sit down even for
an hour a day at the .most fasc
natlng game. Puxzles will do for
some children fdr a time, but they
Often nrovp rrit attntr . ,!' iinsnt
a nervous child or one who is not
strong. - j ' I
Keep the room as simple as
possible, but : have j something,
bulbs or a potted plant, for them
to" watch growing. :;; You will be
amazed how much joy they ,wi)l
get from" this. And' if you ca.
get one : of those little Japanese
wind birds' to hangi in the win
dow ; r children love, to hear them
tinkle ; as they are stirred ' bv Sa
passing breeze, -'f? ...Vw,:frr.-i-
r or , the ? toys, . have a . lew, od
SPOKANE. Aug. 21. (By As
sociated Tress.) Seven ranch
homes were destroyed today by a
forest fire which has burned over
nearly 10 miles of cut-over land
on a -two-mile front near Deer
Park. Wash. . The fire was Hear
ing commercial ' timber tonight
and all available men are fighting
the blaze.
The fire at a r ted last night at
a point about one and one-half
miles from Deer Park. At 11
o'clock this morning it was be
lieved under control but a strong
east wind spread it over six miles
in a few hours. The blaze jump
ed Blake Lake, at a point where
it is a quarter of a mile wide, and
late tonignt had burned over
three miles on the other side of
the lake.
. The property damage to the
ranches is estimated at $30,000.
While members of the state
textbook commission failed to ob
tain lower prices for the books
adopted for two and four year
periods at the end of their two-
day session Frloay the meeting
at least served to stabilize prices.
With nn lv nn Axrntlon that Of
. ii.,. i... j . iv. ..I,. . . , inucu mat is Buirormai id ine
r..rf.V- RATE ASKED general weather Utoatlon. but
I""' " I I
est current price obtained by the
E
PROBED BY BOARD
Geographic Society Unable
to Determine Cause ot
Complex Conditions
is a fragmentary way and tue
huge areas of European Russian
Siberia and most vf the rest ot
Asia must remain largely blank
on weather maps. It is such in
complete data available the suc
cess of the United States weather
burean fn achieving .a high per-
centace ot accuracy in Its fore
casts is remarkable. v .
WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (By
the Associated Press.) The nn-
usual weather conditions in the
Arctic which caused abandonment
for this year of the MacMillan ex
pedition's plans to. explore the
polar sea were described by the
National Geographic society to
night as apparently vnly one
manifestation ot nature's com
plexity in producing the current
summer. j
"A look at weather records with
a view to finding, whether this is
a 'queer summer' as some laymen
assert." said a statement issued
by tne society, "does not show
Dairy Exchange;'
PORTLAND.' Aug. 2 1 .Butter
evtras, r.0c; standards, 48c; prime
firsts, 46c; firsts,, 45c
EKgs. extras.. S9c; firsts, 36c
pullets, "34c4 current receipts, 3lc
- Grain Futures
PORTLAND. Aug. 21. Wheat,
hard white, blue stem and Baart,
August. $1.60; September, $1.39;
October, fl.ojl: soft white. August
and September, $1.58; October,
$1.56; hard (winter. August and
September, $1.56; October, $1.55;
northern spring, September $1.55;
October, $1.54; western red. Aug
ust and September, $1.54; Octo
ber, $1.52; BRU hard white. Aug
ust, 41.63; September, $1.62; Oc
tober. $1.60.
Oats No.
feed. August
$31;. No.
ber, $29. '
" Barley No. 2. 46-ponnd. Aug
ust and September. $32; October,
$31; 44-pound. August and Sep
tember, $31; October, $30. .
Millrun. standard.' August, $31;
jSentember. $30.50; October. $30.
I'OKTLAP, Aug. zi. Hay
Buyinr prices: Valley timothy.
2 36-pound white
September, October,
38-pound gray, Octo-
so-called "textbook" trust In other
states upon which basis J. A.
Churchillt superintendent of pub
lic Instruction, proceeded to base
his '.course of study and order
books. I
1 .
Prices on books purchased this
year are from 10 to 60 per cent
higher than for the same texts in
1919, according to the contracts
awarded yesterday. By adopting
books suitable to the current needs
Of the schools some savings were
effected. .An example of this is in
the adoption of a year book in
mathematics 'instead of a year
and ' a half book. In nearly all
cases new books are higher ; in
price than old books. Several
books on the : list were not adopt
ed by the commission. So diction
aries were adopted for the two-
year period while there were, no
adoptions in , drawing? textbooks,
domestic science for high schools
or commercial arithmetic and gen
era! science for Junior high
schools. ;
Books adopted by. the commis
sion for a two-year period are: .
Elementary textbooks . .... j
Hamilton's "Essentials of Arith
metic."" books 1 and 2; ' Gordy,
"Stories of American History";
Potter. Jeschke & Gillett; "Oral
and Written English." books 1
and 2; Progressive Music Series,
books 1 to 4 Inclusive; New World
Speller, books 1 to 3 iaclusiye
High school textbooks
Miner. & Elwell. "Principles of
Bookkeeping'; Ward, "Sentence
and Theme"; Clippinjrer. "Written
and - Spoken English": Payne.
"American Literary Readings with
Introductory History of American
Literature"; i "American Literary
Readings"; Long. "English Liter
ature"; -Waters. "Essentials"? of
Agriculture" New Rational Type
writing. ! , " v'
Books adopted for a four-year
period are: ' ;-
Elementary textbooks ' 5"
David. "Productive Farming";
Carpenter,-"Stories pictures Tell
Recommended for ' Teachers,"
books 1 to 8 inclusive. Winslow.
'Healthy Living." books 1 and 2.
High school textbooks
Gregg, "Shorthand Manual".
and "Speed Studies:" Smith. "El-
ADVKRTISIXO PRICK SHOULD
BE RASED OX COST, MAID
heavy. The old wife was carrying
it. As they crossed a street, the
husband held out :hls hand and
raid. "Gimme that basket, Han
nah." The poor old woman surrender
ed the basket with a grateful look.
That'a real kind o ye. Josh ma."'
she quavered.
"Kind!" granted the old man.
"I wna afeard ye'd git lost!" .
It
SPOKANE. Aug. 21. A stand
ard advertising rate for all coun
try weeklies was urged by E. P.
Murphy of the Entiat Times at
the afternoon session of the 39th
annual meeting ot the Washington
Press association here today. Ap
proximately 75 editors attended
the opening sessions today.
Mr. Murphy declared that ad
vertising epace should be sold on
the basis of cost of publication in
stead of having circulation set the
advertising rate. He added that
costs ot publication were virtually
the same for country weeklies.
The matter will be taken up later
by the association.
J. C. Harrigan of the Colville
Examiner talked on "p'olitical lim
itations and the danger zone."
The afternoon t session included
the address of Dean M. Lyle Spen
cer of the school of journalism,
University of Washington, on
"how much- shall we edit?"
ine nignt program included a
dinner with talks by Dr. Henry
Suxzallo, president" of tfc Univer
sity of Washington and John M.
Allen, service manager of m the
Washington Press association.
COOUDGE PARTY -BACK
PRESIDENT TO CONKER WITH
POSTMASTER GE.N fell A I,
SWAMPSCOTT. Mass., Aug. 21.
(By Associated Press. Presi
dent and Mrs. Coolidge reutrued
late today to .the summer White
House after an absence of one
week. 'Their 145 mile afternoon
automobile ride from Northamp
ton', Mass.; where they stayed over
night on their way from. Ply
mouth, Vt., was without incident.
Still undecided as to when he
will return to Washington, the'
president on his ariral, found a
mass of routine business and a
crowded calendar for tomorrow.
During the day be will confer with
Postmaster General New, Senator
Wadsworth, republican of New
York; Senator Edge republican.
does show what a complex clutter
of cross currents go to make up
the world's leather.
"MacMillan pushing up the
coast of Labrador in June found
more Ice than had been present
at that season in the memory of
oldest sealing skippers. At the
same time, however, the tempera
ture over practically the entire
United States was from one to
six degrees j above normal. Fur-
thermore, since January except
during a part ot May. this excess
of heat had been marked over the
whole United States. In some re-?
gions and in some months the
average ran as much as 12 degrees
above normal and the areas of
excess temperature extended well
into Canada.
"Beginning the latter part ot
June, there have been Inroads of
below normal, temperatures from
the northeast and north, possibly
a reflection of the unusually cold
conditions which MacMillan has
found in the far north. This Is
borne out somewhat by the rec
ords from Alaska. Those avail
able (for the early months of
1925 only) show consistently low
er temperatures than normal for
the three typical stations' Juneau
in the southern Pan-handle; Nome
in the northwest: and Eagle it
the Yukon valley, near the fron
tier of Canada. These abnormally
low temperatures were being rec
orded in Alaska at the time that
abnormally ' high temperatures
were present over the rest of the
United States. . r t
"Th ffratfat hanriian tv tu-
clents of weather. Is the lack of refj
ports from a sufficiently , large
srea. The weather with which
be United States Is concerned is
'brewed all 'over the northern
-emisohere i-tn fact. It Is highly
probable that in its larger phases
wwther north of the equator
effected somewhat by conditions
In the southern hemisphere. Yet,
the United States obtains complete
reports only from Its own terri
tory. . i
"Conditions in a vast area In
the north are unknown except
when some expression like MaC-
Millan's remains there for a time
and sends but information by
John, suburbanite, kissed his
wire goodby In the morning, and.
telling her he would be home at
6 o'clock that evening, got Into
his auto and started for town.
At 6 o'clock no hubby had ap
peared, and the little wife be can
to get nervous. W ben the hour of
midnight arrived she could bear
the suspense no longer., so she
aroused her father and sent him
off to the telegraph office with
six telegrams to as many, brother
Elks living In town, asking each
if her husband was stopping with
him overnight.
Morning came, and the frantic
wife had received no Intelligence
of the missing man. As dawn ap
peared, a farm wagon containing
a farmer and the derelict hnsband
drove up to the house, while be
hind the wagon trailed the broken
down auto. Almost simultaneous
ly came a messenger, boy with an
answer to one of the telegrams.
followed at Intervals by five oth
ers.; All of tnem read:
'Yes. John is spending the night
with me!"
LUTHER LEAGUE MEETS
ASTORIA, Or.. Aug. 21. The
seventeenth annual convention ot
the Luther league, Portland dis
trict, will open here tomorrow
with a business meeting from C
to 8-p. m. About 150 delegates
and -visitors are expected for the
session. which will end next bun-
day night.
Forest Grove Last of 1$:
crop dried prunes shipped out.
I
A certain young man's friends
thought he was dead, but be was
only In a state ot coma. When.
In ample time to avoid being bur
ied.' he showed signs of life, he
was asked how It seemed to .be
dead.
"Dead?" he exclaimed. "I
wan't dead. I knew all that was
going on. And I knew I wasn't
dead. too. because my feet were
cold and I was hungry."
"But how did that fact make
you think you were still alive?"
asked one of the curious.
'Well, this way; I knew that If
I were in heaven I wouldn't be
hnngry. And If I wa In the other
place my feet wouldn't be cold."
An old couple raise In from the
country with a big basket of lunch
to see the circus. 'The lunch was
iil Frni n ttve III
Choice Cuts
. at - . -
Moderate
Prices
Day in and day out McDow
ell Market carries the fin
est assortment of meats in
Salem
Whether you plan
a quiet dinner for
the family or a
large banquet,
you'll find the
kind of meat you
want here at a
- price you can af
ford J
McDowell
Market
.Where a dollar docs its
" duty
Phone 1421
173 South Commercial
7 S24.30; alfalfa. $19; clover. Commentaries": Gunnison X- Har.
S!r:iffi VOICE PLEA
' " . i t- ,..--. , iiuugn c crown, -virgu s Aeneid
DISCRIMINATION IS CHARGED
WITH REFERENCE TO QUOTA'
cups orange sections
; 2 tbsp. Grape-Juice
cup Malaga " grapes, peeled
and :seded. i '':'; f; :
'Stbsp. French dressing
Pee) fine large oranges and sep
arate the sections, removing every
'particle of the white inner skin.
Peel and seed the grapes and mix
with ;the oranges.'. Set aside, cov
ered,! on ice until -very "told. 'Pour
over 'dressing. .t'V -" "
i Sainton An Gratis v
1 cup cooked salmon, fresh or
canned-- j. '-T- - -V-: -V- AAA-
leup drawn butter sauce
jSaJe and pepper, , .
2 lbs p. lemon Juice
Bread crumbs ' '.
. Flake i the cold . salmon,: mix
with-the drawn butter, salt,, pep
per and lemon Juice Fill little
earthen dishes with the mixture.
cover with fine (bread crumbs, and
brown. ;
r:. Prone Whip .
12 large prunes . :
3 egg whites C
' - 2 tbsp powdered sugar
Soak prunes over night and
stew in tbe eame water until ten
der. ' Remove the stones and mash
to a smooth pulp. Beat the egg
whites until stiff, fold in the sug
er and then the prune pulp. Turn
into: a greased baking dish and
bake In a slow oven about twenty
minutes, i Serve at once with
cream, soft custard or any desired
tauce.
shoe boxes in which to store thef1? 6. east erp Oregon $21 mentary. Latin'; Kelsey. "Caesars of Liberia.
things. '. Keep the articles, belong
ing to each occupation separate,
and it is an easy 'matter to gather
up and put away one set before
producing - another, j Tie -pencils,
scissors and ruler with ribbons jto
the bed so that . they are ' always
within reach ,and never , lost on
he floor, A little wooden table
that fits over the knees and resits
on.te bed with two broad wooden
legs uakes the best- workboard.
The counterpane gets' so crumpled
and dirty that quite; the aicest
thing is to . inake ; some of ' un-
New Jersey and State Senator j rad?j. The whole of northern
Whitney, republican, nominee for j Canada Is uncovered by reports
governor in that state and also, above the northernmost transcon-
Edwin Barclay, secretary of state j tlnental railway, .which runs 115
miles south of Hudson-bay. Data
comes from the Danish settle
ments In southern Greenland only
$7.50 $8 per ton.; Selling prices Beniiett. "ew Lat:n Grammar!;
$2 a ton more, r- (- Welfs & Hart., "New High School
NUT- MEN
Algebra": "Modern First Year
FINISH "TOUR Algebra" and -Modern Second,
Course In Algebra"; Durrell 4b
GROWERS AND EXPERTS VISIT I Arnold. "Plane and Solid Geome-
MAXY ORCHARDS ' try"; "New plane Geometry" and
Uew Solid Geometry"; Bergen &
Soils must be selected for the! Caldwell, "Practical Botany'; Mc
growing ot nut crops wttn - tnei Pnerson - & Henderson. "First
same , care that they are selected Course' in Chemistry'; MilMkan &
for other crona and it Is best thatlnaln rtrat rvia oh..i .
nlPA phM ncHn rA k ma . V a I f . . it t . . 1 . I .
.--f " " uo.i . met vu ire vflritLifx itowh DR umiiea. iireier- i u lib,, n.u jl rvi .n....
'17. . " . . I v- iji", riaciicai
s"i uu cnceriui ub some udit to the- Fraquet. itayiam ana phr.w- rn . i)ni)un. ..
" I ai aaa, UMUIUVVU, JA'
Meyett varieties, u was aemon- vanced Physiology and Hygiene';
siraiea on. ine iwo-oav lour 01
growers and! experts who Inspect
ed six. nut groves in this district
on Wednesday and Thursday.
More than forty cars carrying
growers and; those interested in
I
1 1
'. !-.., i Welsh Rarebit
& cup milk " Vt tap. salt
1 tbsp. flour . . Few grains pepper
l.cup milk " , tsp. mustard
.Vt to 1 lb. cheese (according to
richness desired), shaved of
, cut fine 6 slices buttered toast
cretonne, flowers cut out .ahd
roughly , a ppliqued on.
; Lollypop Family !
If they will. promise not to eat
them, they, can have a box of
candy lollypops, with the tissue
paper m wnicn to dress them. One
Robinson, "Commercial Geogra
phy." . ,
No adoption was made on house
hold administration, domestic arts
or manual training. t-
little girl dressed a dozen of thesf. I the future of the Industry here
puMt-a on ine wiae-eyea piquant
uttle faces, and used them as la
vors at the party she had to cele
brate her first day up. ; '
There are innumerable ; other
suggestions. "Blocks of all kinds
for tiny tots, blocks that grow
up into whole honse and garden
sets, with bricks for building
roofs, gardens, walls and trees, to
made the trip, which was cheduled
by the Western Nut Growers "as
sociation, j i i
At "each farm where a 'stop was
made conditions under which the
crop was jgrown , were analyzed
and the problems of culture, dis
cussed. -' Groves ; were Tlslted that
had produced -a successful - yield
and others where 'the yield had
be arranged, and rearranged.! hiwn nnAf Anil . war thA ' r fi 11 pn
i utre are books, oi ? nouses dOnelWPr Pvamlned
n pictures, each room, bare of
furniture, on one page, and op
posite a page of furniture, to be
cut out and pasted in place.
. Making tissue paper hats for.
dolls is a most delightful indoors
occupation for a-girl of twelve or
more. - Cut three strands of tissue
paper (the color combinations can
be varied for each j hat), crush
them gently so as not to tear, and
with the ends pinned to the bed.
braid? them carefully, splicing In
a new: piece whenever needed!
The braid is men rouea mto a
flat mat and sewed In place as
you go
Several experts from ' Oregon
Agricultural! college were on the
trip, .among them C. V. Rusek. ex
pert on soils, D. C. Mote, of thej
entomology t department, D. " L.
Long, of the' extension department
and. C. E. Schuster of the horti
culture department. ,
LOANS SHARKS FLAYED
SEATTLK, Aug. 21 Cltyp
Comptroller iCarrol toda yordered j immediately visited Angnstin Ed
PERSHING STOPS RIOT
. 1 aaaaaaBBBapMBBMBBB v
CHILEANS OFFENDED RY SALK
OF PERUnAN PAPER,
ARICA. Chile. Aug. 21. (By
Associated Press.) Gen. John J.
Pershing, president of the Tacna-
Arica plebtscitery commission, in
tervened today when he hostility
or Arica'g Chilean Inhabitants to
the newspaper Published and dis
tributed here by the Peruvian del
egation to the commission, result
ed in disorders in front of his res
idence. . ' .
A Chilean crowd this morntns
frightened newsboys Into the door
way of General Pershing's resi
dence where three members of
the American . delegation Inter
vened. , When, the general's atten
tion was called to the incident he
WASHINGTON. Aug. 19. (By
Associated Press.) The Japanese
do not object to America's restric
tion of Immigrants, but to dis
crimination against their nation
als, Motosada Zumoto, editor of
the Herald of Asia said here to-!
night, asserting that If they were
placed on a quota basis as Euro
peans are, the situation would be
greatly relieved. ., '
Mr. Zumoto explained that ; be
was in. the United States to ob
serve' public- opinion through In
terviews with influential persona,
to ascertain whether anything was
being done or contemplated to
alter the present law by congres
sional action . or through state
legislatures. ,
As the representative of the
Japanese-American relations com
mittee, wit hheadquarters at
Tokyo and comprising influential
Japanese leaders In business, edu
cation and religion... he declared
feeling over Japanese . exclusion
was strongest among the "young
Intellectuals, of his country. He
bad found that Japanese were
treated much better In Hawaii
than in the Pacific coast states,
where "discriminatory" law ex
JELLY
BEANS !
'' '! - '
Special for Saturday Only ;
v; 18c lb. I
2 lbs. for 35c ' ' - :
Limit 2 lbs. to a customer
-. '
Only at
SCHAEFER'Q
DRUG STORE J
The Tcnslar Store
135 North Commercial
Trllow Front Phone 107
Peerless Bakery
170 NORTH COMMERCIAL STREET
Our regular Prices of Bread,
1 12 lb, loaf, 13c, 2 for 23c; Ub-loaf 9c, 3 for.
Cookies, 2 dozen for -r: '
Butter Horns, 6 for ,
J2Zc
.23c
-23c
-23c
Apple Turnovers, 6 for,.. .
Cakes, all varieties I 15c up to 50c
Doughnuts, Cinnamon Bolls.Tea Sticks nd Buns.
per dozen 1 20c
Pies 10c and 23c
Milk, Bread, French and Rye Bread, 3 loaves23c
. Wc Serve Coffee and Lunches ;
Try Our Krause's Candy
members of his office to honor no
further assignments of city em
ployers' unearned salaries, to
"loan sharks." He also sent a
Continue this dowii around the letter to Corporation Council
sides till the crown Is complete, Kennedy asking for advice as to
hen it flat azaln to make wnai mriner acuon to t.aas.
wards, head of the Caileandele-
ration and afterward announced
that the Peruvians "will-have a
perfect right to sell papers or to
go anywhere in the city.'
- The Aricans-hofltillty to the pa
per, which Is published aboard te
r. s, -
Goverament
, Inspected
MEAT g
Steunloff Bros. IVIarket
Corner Court and liberty i Phone 1523
Capital City Co-operative
Creamery
Manufacturers of
BUTTERCUP
. BUTTER :
The best butler In Salem made from the best te-
Iccted cream always uniformly good. Buy one
pound and youTl hare no other. . . .
For Sale At All Grocers
c
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