jaiteffi Jams and jellies That Are Different I KueRft w all like to try new recipe in tije Jam-aml-jeUy line.d m ra-t an exenange of rTtese reoi pea among friends is quite cus . torn. Knowing that a rare con serve or unusual jelly often trans poaaes a commonplace dessert or a pimple meaUfnto an Interesting and- delectable , little feaat. 4t , la well to keer. a small supply at least on hand. There is, moreover, a feeling of satisfaction in having at hand a bountiful supply of sweets. These two may be new to you ana : have the same appeal they had f tor me. .4 mlover Conserve is made by an old family recipe thus: Boil 5 pounds of currants 15 minutes; - strain out every bit of juice. Boil 3 cupfuls of raspberries, (mashed) and press out the juice. Put 2 oranges and 1 tangerines (or lemon) through fod chopper, add to the currant and raspberry juice with 1 pound of seeded raisins. Boil 8 minutes, then add 5 lbs. of sugar, and bol 2 minutes longer. Put at once into sterilied glasses. This is one of the very finest of conserves; delicious with meat or for dessert with toast or crackers. If fruit la raised on the place, the conserve could be to!d at a good profit. Ruby Jelly used to be made with the last raspberries and the earliest apples; but nowadays the ' "ver-bearing" berries may well serve us. Or, can raspberries juice and nse it witb fall apples. To a .kettle., of apple juice prepared as for ordinary .apple Jelly, add any preferred proportion of raspberry juice.' Boil 20. minutes, add -equal weight of-Tiot sugar, boil 5 min utes skim. nd pour into hot ster ilized glasses. Frozen Dishes- 'Of all desserts, and we might include salads, too, the frozen one is the favorite for summer time, it is not only, appetizing, but most refreshing, since it cools the blqodj therefore making the entire-" body eooler. .." - Many, housewives, have the idea that , to make a lroezn dish is long laborous task. Really it takes no Johger to make a freezer of Ice cream or sherbet than' it' does to make and bake a pie. If you are hating company for the noon.-day.meal, the dessert or aalai may be tmade : and frozen early, in the -.morning when it is cooler; then you have no standing over a hot stove making a cooked dessert. On of the most important points to remember In making frozen dishes of any kind is that the smaller the proportion of salt to . the Ice used the slower the freezer will be, but you '.will have a product of smoother and finer texture. - . V. ' V The freezer can should not be filled -mote han three-fourths rull since the mixture increases in vol ume due to -aid being incorporated into it by, the ; turning of the crank. Generally speaking, three parts of ice' to one of salt shoula be used in freezing. The brine should not be poured off during freezing but when you are ready to pack, then pour off the brine and repack, using four parts of ice to one of salt. Before beginning the process of making a frozen dish, a few articles are necessary, such as a heavy canvas bag, ice pick, heavy hammer of some kind. Ice cream salt Js not necessary, but it is convenient to use, and. what is left In the freezer may be used 1 General Uarketa K " 7KODT7CS tny POET LAJtD, Ore-. 8pt. 24 (AP-- unlri 40 : pr lrU 3Stt . firt 33-; print. 47e: carton 48c. Milk tdjr; b eburtnnf. ertmm 44e elTer6 Portland 46c pr pound. lUw milk 4 pr eent).t.23 - b- .Portland. Potato and iioni, quiti, Onio loc.l 15frf 1J0; WH Avail vuc f. $1; iotte ILMBlS wck. - ' . ..1jXTSTOCK PORTLAND, ,Spt-.84. (AP) Ctt nd eWe BminUy tdy: no r'I ' Uof' tdr; moipt. 1.633. (372 if tret. 40 rootret). . . " . Ubcep ad Umbo nominally steady, WettpU 20,- ooctyct). - DIAXT rOKTLASD. Ore., .Sept. 24. (AP) Dify exfhaor it Prc: Butter ex ini 4le; tndrd 40Hc; prime firU t;38V4e,- rirt 85 He: etr tr 42e; '. f'trtU 4K ; pallets 6e ; current . receipt . 37e- ' .'' GHAUT POttTLAKD. - Ore- Sopt. 24. (AP) Wheat: BBB nrd white, Sept.. Oet.. Now. t.34: feilerBtion BpU 0t., Nov. 1.32; . im HS. baart. xoft white, wwt- whit. Soot.. Oet.. Nf. 1U1: hard winter, northern priu. Sept.. Oet., No 1.32; western rd. Sept, Oct., Nor II 31 OaU Xo. 2. 36 wond whfteSed and rt KDt.. Oct- JiOT. $30.00. ilariey X. 2. 45 poo ad BW p. $28; Xar.. S2S.50. Corn Xo. 2. ET ahipment, Sept.. Oct. S37..-.0: Nov. S36. MiUrnn. klandard. Sept. 2I..'0; Oct. fM; Nor. SM.S0. . ' ' HAT - OHiRTIiAXD, Ore, Sepv 24. AP - kavina- irire: Ktm Oreeon ti flth S20W22:' do vaiw-y 17i 17.50: cheat I3; alfalfa f 17.0 IS: oat hay 13: oat and vetehv $14.S0i 13: atraw $7 U 7.50 per ton- .Selling pricoa S2 ton mora. - WHEAT CltldAfJO.: St. : 24.-(AP) trheat priroa anderweat a material aethaf k to day owing chielj Jo iraproTcd weather in the nwthweat i"1 alao to a dearth of buying; for Kuropc. ClMiag quoUtionn on wheat Vero-heavy 14 ul S fk net lower with com 3-8 to "i-S down.- oats a xhado to 8-8e np, and proviaiuni varyiaf Irum unchanged figure to a riao of 12 eenta. ''.(-."-.:' : HOPS BTEADT ,XIW TOKK. 8pt; 24. AP) Etap , oratod apples dll; prunea oaay; , apricot .and peach ea quiet; hop atrady. ' ' .wooi, ' . .,COaTOy, 8ept. 24-(AP) The aitua tioa on the wool market ia tandiat gtoad ily U atrengtben.- hUlli are ofteriag atift - roatanco , to any .further rite bat thay . , are ; paring recently adraaced asking pricea. The cheaper lota of wool are he- Poultry - tay": mew7 w 117" "7, .prh.r light 22 (S 23c; d. . 1. C f77 V DftTf tiw-. Sir- VnIored'1517ei Mairfcet the second time; 'therefore, when you consider that jt.may be. used again, ice cream, or rock" salt Is not so expensive. Proezn dishes include desserts ueh as ice cream, custards, mous ses, frappesv ices. We also have frozen or chilled fruit used as a cocktail for the first course, and troezn salads of various kinds. . Night Snacks One of t"he nicest ways to en tertain Intimate friends or others .who drop in for Sunday night supper is to serve them from the table on your porch, if you have one, . or in the shady spot in the backyard, or if ydu haven't elthef with a cold lunch served buffet from the dining room table, or on plates fro-rathe kitchen. One need not have an acre or so of blooming flowers and. closely mowed lawn in order to invite friends for an outdoor affair. Ten or twelve can be entertained nice ly in the tiniest garden imagin able, providing there is any shade at all. If serving on porch, small trys holding silver, linen, plate, glass, or cup and saucer may be given each guest. . The company, not the food makes even the most simple and informal get-together a .success. But let a group of people arrive who have nothing in common and who cannot mix and it is pathetic and certainly keps the' host and hostess busy. When there is such awkward ness, the early serving of the lunch helps break the ice, espe cially if one has to help himself or pass things. Let some of your ill at ease, people do the nonors for you; in this way ey forget themselves and so appear more pleasiag. Recipes Hant Mousso lxA lbs. finely ground ham 1 tsp. mustard Few grains cayenne 1 tbs p. granulated gelatine 1-4 cup cold water .1-4 cup hot water Va. cup heavy cream Add the mustard and cayenne to the ham and mix well.. SoaK gelatin in cold water. Dissolve in hot water and add to the ham mixture. Fold in cream beaten uni til stiff. Turn into mold. Chill.; Remove from mold to cold serv-f ing dish, garnish with parsley. ; Orange Itrend 2 eggs M cup sugar 1 1-3 cups milk s 4 cups flour 1-4 cup shortening i 1 level tsp. salt 4 level tsp. Calumet baking powder ; 1 cup candied orange peel Cut the shortening into sifte4 dry ingredients. Add the milk to the well beaten eggs. Mix with the dry ingredients and beat well. Add the candied orange peel. Bake in a moderate oven 330 degrees F.t f6r 50 minutes. ' . ' Butterscotch Biscuits 2 cups flour i 2 level tsp. Calumet baking I powder 1- level tsp. salt 2 tbsp. shortening 7-8 cup milk 1-3 cup butter 3-4 cup brown sugar ', Sift the flour, baking powder and salt. Rub in shortening with a knife, add mili. Cream butter and brown sugar. Holl dough thin and spread with the creamed mix ture. Ftoll up ylke a jelly roll- ! Cut off pieces 1 inch thick puf in greased muffin pans cut side up, and bake 15 minutes at 4 degrees F. This makes 16 biscuits, Chocolate Ice Box luiu 1 dozen landy fingers or equal amount of sponge cake 1 cup butter 1 cup confectioners sugar 2 squares chocolate (2 oz.) 1 tsp. vanilla 1 cup granulated sugar 1- cup water 4 eg8 , J4 pint , heavy cream, whipped. Line bottom and sides of round baking dish with lady fingers, sep- ated, rounded side toward pan, and close together. Chocolate Filling: Place cnoco- late. granulated sugar and water in double boiler and wnen meuea and smooth add yolks, Well beat er.. Cook until thick and smoth, stirring constantly. Remove from the stove ana cool, cream me oui ter and confectionerssugar to gether. Add the egg mixture and vanilla. Stir well, and-lastly fold in the stiffly beaten whites. Place tilling In round . pan on lady fin ger and cover with rest of lady fingers. Place in ice box to hard en, hen-done remove to.a platter, cover with whipped cream and decorate with, candied cherries and nuts. I Salem Market w 1 Sr. 1, wheat, white Rfd, wheat, hacked Oata, Pr . Hay, ta, vooak per ton PORK. ItTJTTOH' AJTD iOTT Top hs. ....,...-,. Sewl Top ateers .. ... , 7,. 0wa 1.21 .45 14.00 .5t.S .26 .4 '-f .10 - .1 Ball Rpriac taatba, vadar 90 Ibt. - Top TeaJ Ireaaed veal Ired tors POULTET Light heaa . Heavy hang Spring. ., . ... Kooatora - lleayy fry .11 .20 .It 6. 82 &. ; -2' CSOS, BOTNEft, BTJTTEUT AT Mandarda .- : . Select Ptr po4. Butterfat L. Cream but tor VEGETABLES, rXUTTB Vegetable boeta. Backed .03 vnuena, oa, pvbcm 40.80 r.Un AM. banchaa 7 4.0063 1.10 New cabbage - , .2 2 Tote, Uttoee . . ,..- ' .73 -fl.l mUUm '- -- M Ixeal bow -potatoes ... IW.t .35 .37 .24 -.4 .48 ' : WatermeUe ' FREEZE THBESTEFiS iDPr Ann r nnnn innnr nrrir limn Weather Bureau Says Cold Wave at This Season Has No Parallel SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 24. (AP). A record cold wave ex tending throughout the great northwest and reaching down as far as Denver, was threatening wholesale damage to ripening apple and other crops today. The weather bureau here said that such an extensive cold wave at this season of the year had no parallel in the meteorological his tory of the Pacific coast. The thermometer went-down to six above zero at Helena, Mont., last night, while at Kalispell. Mont., it was but eight above. A record low temperature of 20 above was reported from Yakima, Wash., and Baker, Ore., and the chief, damage to the bumper apple crops was expected in these re gions. .Walla; Walla. Wash., with 28 above last night, experienced the lowest temperature in its his tory, while at Winnemucca, Nev., the. mercury went down to 26, a record September figure. The cold wave will n$t affect California and was receding along its southernmost extremities, the bureau said. COLD WEATHER STRIKES WEST HALB0F COUNTRY Continued from page 1.) deep in "snow -front Winnipeg to British. Columbia, with damage to unharvested crops estimated at $12,000,000. Ohio, at the eastern end of the storm zone, computed the losjpes from a tornado which killed a child and did $300,000 damage when it swept through three coun ties along Lake Erie last night. Originating in the upper Kooky mountains, the phenomenal colli wave brought Seattle the lowest September temperature since 1SS7 and sent the mercury Iown to S degrw?s at Helena, Mont. It scur ried on through Wyoming, the Dakota and Nebraska, bringing six inches of snow to several North Dakota points near the Canadian line, and heavy falls at Ilapid City and Pierre. S. D., and Crawford, Neb. .The temperature fell 40 degrets in 24 hours at Omaha to 41, and Alliance, Neb., reported a temper ature of 20. At Goqdland, Kan sas, frost was felt when the mer cury dropped 54 degrees in 12 hours. At Dodge City, Kan., a fall of 56 . degrees was experienced overnight. Snow fell at Albert Lea, Minn., and Cedar Rapids, Iowa, as the storm moved eastward, and Evan ston, 111., reported a trace of snow followed by rain and hail. Tonight killing frosts were gen eral over the states In the storm area west of the Mississippi river. Illinois rainfall was general to day and brought reports of rising waters along the Fox and Illinois rivers. At Aurora the Fox was two feet above normal and at Ot tawa it, rose 14 feet over night. Tuo state armory was opened ixt Ottawa to shelter homeless fam ilies half a dozen of which. still occupied it tonight although the rain had stopped. Many more were living on the second stories pi their homes. A dam in the Illi nois Tiver at Lockport was endan gered. Damage to crops near Ot tawa wa3 estimated at several hun dred thousand dollars. Rain washed out railroad track.- at Bloomington, III., causing re- rounting.of trains and patrolling of all, rail lines. DENVER, Colo.. Sept. 2 4 . (AP) -From the Canadian border to northern New Mexico and. Ariz ona, the .Rocky niouiUaine region odav shivered in tl.o eriu of the first general cold spell of the aut umn season, while snow continued f 11 intermittently in parts of Mpntana and Wyoming. Forecasts were for Colorado's first .snowfall tonight, with tem peratures well below freezing. The cold wave is expected to continue rnrough Sunday. Several points in the mountain area -recorded low .temperature marks for September. At Butte, Mont., the mercury fell to 3.5 above zero, several degrees lower than all previous records for the month. .Five, inches of snow fell at Butte. Helena was;-visited by 6 above zero weather, while other Montana points reported low tem peratures and. snow, r Sheridan, Wyoming, experienceil its -second snow of the season, ac c-ompanied by sharp ; temperature drops.' Snow also fell, at Casper. Yellowstone park-, was the cold- est place in Wyoming last night. the mercury falling to eight above! zero, with two inches, of buow. CRAWFOUlr; Neb.. Sept. 24.: Snow started falling.! here this morning and at noon was steadily increasing. At , noon it w&s .Z' above And getting colder. J3TTAWA, Ills., Sept. J 24.- Many .persons were' driven . from their homes by the worst rainstorm In year last night and early to day, ' The rainfall ' measured 4.02 UNLUCKY NUMBER BRINGS LOCAL CITIZENS SUCCESS (Continued fraiii pg" 1.) ,4-pnes, Portland. L liandall S. Jones, Portland: 'James Edwin Keech, Stayton; rank. P. Keenan. Portland; John .Kilkenny, Ileppner; Dal M. King, I Myrtle Point; Eugene C. Libby, Portland: Ralph McClaflin. Eu gene; Carl B. Mautz, Portland: Miller F. Kneeland, Portlaud; Paul L. Patterson, Eugene; C. E. Potter, Portland; James P. Pow ers, Portland; O. C. Roehr, Port land; Matilda W. Scott, Portland; Waldemar Seton, Jr., Portland; Edward L. Short, PortlandMau rice n.! Snyder. Portland; Bertha Stone, Portland; M. J. Trubey. Portland; James Tynan, Portland; Grant J. Williams, Eugene; Charles E. Womersley, Portland and Olive L.. Zimmerman, Port land. PORTLAND FIREMEN BUSY PORTLAND, Sept. 24. (AP). Forty-two fires, most of them resulting from chimney sparks fanned by a high east wind, kept the Ore department busy in the 24 hour period ending at 6 o'clock tonight. Few of the blazes did more than nominal damage. Engine company 23 put out three roof fires while on cne ran on East Ninth street. LOS AXOGELES. (AP) Red-haired femininity, wbose suc cessful world conquests are tra ditional in ' song and myth, has been touted at filmdom's first line of defense the casting bureau, y INot only are the auburn haired lassie's chances of passing this skirmish line considerably le.ss than those of her darker tressed sister, but in the first place her susceptibility to becom ing movie-struck semes to be? of less degree. Roberta Risks It (Continued from 1 page 4) PiSjry li done a ROiisstionnl "high dive tr a man from drowning. The ia- jwrs play it n r.nd H'razenosn Senior ats to h.tvo liix n.inn in the pair. Just ns hit fathi-r's indictment rmx- warm, reporters are announced ami l'iffE? Iravf".. promising to na.v vul of sight for a few days and behave himself, lie starts for New York hut at lht Hudson ferry ;i man. of hi own sennaly typo aro5ts him rind explains that lie "in "un able to mcvt a certain voum lndy nt Grand Central, that he must bp met by someone; and will Pijcicy do it. as a mat tr of chivalry ? Sure, savi Pipey. With vajrie d--riptitn of her he spat 4 her in the crowds and steps up to her. The vounjj ldy i.i disconcerted. She wan to hare married that other ehap. She i independent, very, and d.rline to trou ble this handsome stranger. Hut Pipjcy insists mi heinif troubled. He finds she is in real trot. hie. So he sujtpesia - break fast t Sherry's and that nh tell hira nil .ttmut it so he ran help. Now what h-ippens? Carrron wilh the yarn, you'll like it. "It's my sister.1' said the girl slowly. -She's being kept a pris oner and I've come to get her out." "A prisoner?" "Oh, not in jail. In my in a country house in New England. My father's an autocrat. He thinks we're puppets and ought never to move unless he pulls the string. He's always been like that. Mother's never thought for her self, nor decided anything for her self, since she married him. But then, she's never wanted to. She's a 1,0ft, pussy-cat sort of woman, perfectly contented to sit on a silk cushion by the fire and purr, and she thinks we ought to do it. too as far as she thinks at all. Father provides nice fat cushions and a warm fire and plenty of ice in summer. He's a good provider. I admit that. He's generous to everybody he approves of. But he wants to order everything his way He can't see any other. I wouldn't be ordered, so there was a terrible quarrel and I've been supporting myself for two years." j "You have? How?" "Honestly," she -returned, with the ghost of a twinkle. "I'm build-? Ing up quite a business in Paris as guide, interpreter, and shopping expert for plutocratic American women who .don't speak fluent French. My sister's younger than I. SJie's-only seventeen, so you see she's a minor. And she's not like me. I have a hard streak in me, like father. That's "the reason I Peerless Bakery 170 NORTH COMMERCIAL STREET Our regular Prices of Bread, IVi lb. loaf, 13c, 2 for 25; 1 lb. loaf 9c, 3 for 25c Cookies, 2 dozen for -; - ' flgf Butter Horns, 6 for - Apple Turnovers for-. Cakes, all varieties Doughnuts, Cinnamon Rolls, Tea Sticks and Buns, i?.per.-dozen "r -r- ' - .- ,.. 20c PiT- -i . 10c and 25c Milk, Bread, French and Rye Bread, 3 loaves 25c : . .-- - - We Serve Coffee and launches Try Ova Krause's Candy Mews 'and could fight him. But she's tender and sweet and much too sensitive. She's crushable and he's crush ing her. I can't stand it. I won't have her life ruined!" "What' he doing to her?" "She and mother were abroad this summer. They didn't come to Paris, because I live there and they're not allowed to speak to me. I heard they were in London, though, and .went over, and managed- to see Ce to see my sister on the sly. Mother didn't know anything about it. On the steamer going over they met a young Frenchman, a mining engineer who lives in Mexico, and he and my sister fell madly in love with each other. He's a charming fel low, good family and all that, hut he hasn't any money to speak of yet. He's only . twenty-six. . Of course mother didn't do anything she never does except write to father, and he came raging over on the next steamer to lay down the law. He caught 1'ierre and my sis-J ter together and there was a ter rible scene. Pierre told me about it afterward. Father said she was a silly little fool, and no daughter of his should marry a pennyless foreigner and go to live in Mexico. She defied him, for the first time In her life, and father almost lost grateful and undutiful and unnat ural and a disgrace and remem ber he's done her thinking and choosing for her all her life, and she's sensitive and . tractable. When he had about reduced her to pulp, he threatened to kick Pierre out of the hotel, and as he's a big man he could have done it. So Pierre left. "Father brought the family home' and Pierre came on the same steamer. He wrote me about the rest of "it. He says my sister was locked in her stateroom all HJie way over. He tried to bribe rho stewards to take a note to her, but father had fixed them, so probably she never knew that Pierre was there. When they got here he lost them, but found out after a while that father had tak en them to a house he owns in New England an isolated sum mer placp off in the woods. He's luid a barbed-wire fence put all around the property and bought some savage dogs, and my sister's nevfM". allowed to be out of the house alone, not even in the gar den. That's the only way we know she's still holding out. Pierre went up there, but he could n't get word through to her and never saw hfr. Everybody has Jjecn warned against him and they're all afraid of father. And there she is!" on a Brush and.: It takes but a few minutes to clean under tHe flushing rim of the toilet bowl with FLUSH A' WAY and all foul odors and ; incrustations disappear as if by magicv ! No fuss. No muss. No waiting for an. acid to dkaotve the dirt. Harm leu to hand. At Your Dealers FLUSH-A-WAY for Toil it BdMs .15c cp to 50c Jiiasgtiiol ,lrmph! Regular, medieval; stnff." "Patriarchal! Father's an an achronism." ; "Where's the Frenchman?" "In Mexico. Something went wrong at the mine and he had to go down and straighten it .out. Anyway, he's been brought up to respect parental authority, and thinks there's nothing to do ex don't mind that part of it. She IS cept wait until she's of age. I too young to marry. What I can't stand is to have father bully her into submission and he will. She's never tried to stand, out against him before, and if she fails this time she'll never try again. At her age and with her disposition he can break her, and he's set about doing it. Ho thinks that everybody who disagrees with him ought to be broken. He's like that in business, to a rule-or-ruin sort of. person. Maybe I'miot making him convincing but he is." "He's convincing, all right. Sounds a good deal like O A." "O. A.?" "Short for God Almighty. There's a man we do business with who's like that. I never saw him myself, but the fellows in his of fice call him G. A." "Then where does the detective person come in?" "I don't know. Unless father found out somehow that I was coming." Xobody knew it. except Pierre and one other man, and neither, of them would tell him." Piggy thought that a chap who "S No Longer a Question As to what you'll have for your Sunday dinner. Just drop in at our market and look over our roasts, chops, steaks, etc. and you will easily find what you want. Nice Fat Hens Pound 35c McDowell Market "Where a Dollar Does Its Duty" 173 S. Commercial Telephone 1421 ? nror. - ' failed to- show up on bis, wedding day mightb? guilty of almost any-! thing, but he kept that -reflectloni to himself and she went on: : "I, landed at Quebec because I was afraid somebody I know; might see me on the dock here I've lived in New York all my life until two years ago and know lots of people here, but I n't trust any of them with this, you see. Father must have found out. At Mellow Magic THE COLORFUL FRUITS, famous for their flavor, arc dis tinctive products of the North west. Their steadfast quality and fame typifies another pro duct, GOLDEN WEST COFFEE which for over forty years has com pletely satisfied the taste of discrim inating coffee drinkers. The Golden VWsr Girl stands at the end of your quest for the best in coffee. She is a messenger of faith to the public guaranteeing them the finest, quality in coffee. Her picture is the signal to buy The Famous Coffee with a Famous Name FAT TJ. S. . Government Inspected Steusloff Bros. Market Corner Court and Liberty Phone 1528 Milk '25 i ... - matioini Pages h first. I thought perhaps ne-a sent you. That-wasione reason why l t was so nervous, tie. wont mir-- r atuii'nia nntos I trv to rea' ' 1 spi4 t i'ne'J l my sister, though be may tii swot? somewner ou lmnv avorvthinz I Uittnd every" where I go, unless fift slip awayl from that man. He's standing out there now, watching." 5 (To be continued.) N (Copyright by Wnwt Ct lJi RMflaswr ttironpn tfnun A FAMOUS COFFEE WITH A FAMOUS NAMS MEAT and Honey read. 2 Large Loaves iqofo WHOLE 3 Small Loaves PUMPION PIES 4 j : : fi :- 1 L m tag marked p in Two Vith the fcifher . ijeeal tomatoe 121 SOUTH COXliiERCIATi iacb.es ? . ug IBtl UT THttjajj, .: . 1 Kir ttbbtfi "t - ? t.ll