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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1927)
i H & v I . THE OREGONOTATESJl FXmr, oitEnon MjRffiYORKtKGtmfi 18, -1927 I Ueanette. Beyer CHOrlS SgvICE DtRfcRTMEWT- l - v.. Monday j B&EASrAST i -"Hhabtrb ' ISauca - Curly Baron 1 Toast Breakfast Food ' .Bverajte vote Cre mei CfcU-lcen and IMnaapp'e on Tom Peach Saaca Si-ice Cake - Milk DIKVE& ' XiTer Loaf 'breamed Potatoes Bntfred Carrot Peach and, r r.r Salad PiBafppI Tapicoa Puddiag ' Coffee Tuesday BSSAXTAST Oranges PoarfcaaV E?a Toast Breakfast Food . Beret ga X.TOCH Creaoted'Aspararii Hard Coaked Ef(i v ' Sand Tart Milk Corned Tongue Scalloped Pet sloes Spinach Cocoaout Cnatard Pi a Coffee Wednesday SgSAKTAST ea Strasifcarrtea .Breakfast Food Btdtaga Toaat ' Boeeraf XT7KCH J Jellied Vegetable Salad ' Cottage Cheat Brown Bread Bandwieh Butterscotch Pie orirXB - Tork , Tenderloin 'with Blackberry Sance Freaeh Tried Potatoes ' " ' ABrarsa Salad i. Strawberty Shortcake Coffee t , .: , Jhmdmy - U tSBAXTAST ' . Praaes Stewed :. dW Ent. - Toast U , BrsUfaat food . Beverage i , rtnrca: ...' Kraut and Weiniea Muff ma Preserrei Sfrawberry and Apple Salad Milk COMPANY PIES FOR EVERY DAY TASTES By Caroline B. Klnj? Culinary Expert and Lecturer on Household Science Prune meringue pie is a delic ious desert. Soak and stew as us ual one pound of prunes, cool, drain and remove the stones. To the pulp add two-thirds of a cup of sugar, a pinch of salt, a table spoonful of, melted butter, a table spoonful of orange juice, and the prune Juice reduced by cooking to one cupful, line a pie pan with pastry and place the prune mix ture In it, bake until the pastry begins to brown slightly, top with meringue made by whipping the whiles of two eggs to a stiff dry froth, then add-four tabiespoon rls of sugar, beat again vigorously-and finally fold in four addi--tlonal tabietpoonfuls sugar and a lablespoonful of orange juice. Ar range over the pie, and brown in a very slow oven, 250 to 300 de grees. Coconnut "Apple Pie Peel and slice thin, four large tart apples, place in a sauce pan. with one-fourth cupful of water, half a cup of sugar and a table spoonful of butter. ' Simmer gen tly, until just tender, cool, line a pie pan with flaky pastry-and fill with the cooked apples, sprinkle thickly with shredded eocoanut, cover In lattice fashion with criss cross strips of . pastry, bake in a moderately hot oven. Just before serving, dot here and there with halved maraschino cherries. Inmost Oram Pie y Cream together one-fourth cup fal butter and one cupful sugar, beat Tn a tablespoonful of corn starch and the well beaten. yolks of; three eggs.' and the grated rind General Markets - -UYZ STOCK PORTI.AXIV. June 17. (AIM Cattle, receipts ll-O; beef vtecra 1 H " 5r bijrher: steer, good lCfB."5; medium :iigt9 roixmoa S7fti tf.J5. Hogs, reveipU 95; steady to shade easier. Sheep, ret-eipt 167t I M on eon tract.) fjooks ahoat steady : linl me dium to eboire rtl itoKnda atowo $ll(t i:i; rulla and eoiemmi f Wrt 1 1 : resrlin; weth ers, nieditfui to choice S7&9.5U. PBODUCr PORTLAND. June It. AP Milk steady: raw milk per rent ). -wt. f. e. b. Portland; butterfat Oc t. o. h Portland. loultry steady; heavy hens lliftt '.!: light I'-Wiae; spriugs Bomiaal; broiler lSfei !; pekHt while dorks -t'c; colored owiuat: turkeys - alive nominal; dressed 87e tanund. , ; Onions ateady; lm-sl S3.75($7. rotatoen, 3,5s 4,o. .ack, ' ' '-t , J POBTIAKD tiBAIV , 1)KTI-ANIJ. Jane 11. Al) What l.fdsr BRB hard white June Sl.-W. Jnlr 9t tu; Auc. ll.5:HW. HS. Brt. June ti.S. July Aup. $1.33; federation. e 91.13. wuiy i.ae. Ang. sort white. Jne 1.4.1. July !.. Aux SI. "; western white, June $i.i'J, Jaly !., Ai(t. hard winter June fl.JO. July tlAi. Autf. nortUera anrtna June $1.1Z. July St.KS. Auc fl.yj; wetterir -red 'June 91.30, July Ss.a-2. Aas. 1.30, . 4.als. -No. 3. 86 fHnind tl'F June $41 -Uti4 array June 4. torn, ' No. U KY shipment June $43, Jmly 943. . ; ' CHICAGO OKAIN CHICAGO, Jun 17. AP l-r-AII rraiu , sadarwent a material etl.ark in price : (oday : Prosuerfa f rleariiis ana ware er we'stVer both inl the? M liraf harvest ' ' reiiwf 4aefhet "ahd" throwh the earn .'belt had bearish-effect. Wheat elosed '.' wea kj -1 IMt tt.2 I lt: f-t hrwer. wrtb -ern rtVi to Sc ds and 'oata Vi to i gft off. ' . ' " : HAT s 1 rt)rtTf;A't, 4m' .17.AP Tfay bairtng prri: . F-ttern trrejno - timothy ?itJUr valley, tVl'lfi ': cheat $ll..Vr; alfalfa" t'iVtg'JIY oat hay I J : straw ti.iit scr 4out 5ellits prtees r f J mote, y -V-. t .1 -7 i4 j, . j: . r ,; , r'::iAlT' ;: POrTfJAXD.i Jun5 1 ?-'- A P)-4E)a irf Kehan;e; f net jjtW;'"' Butler. - rtra - 4-! standards 9;'. prliat firit 89. firsts 37c. . i' - f ig."' extra 5rc: flrstr' 20e; aTXaft v lit; current recftit lfr.. -. -' - - ROYAL MILLING COMPANY YrRlibl Souo LfJaked Haas Hpired Pineapple Rhubarb Kaisin Tie Coffee Friday BZZAXFAST Grapefruit French Tast Syrup Breakfast Food Beverage LUNCH CgcT. Caeumber and Lettuce Salad Thousand I&land Drciisinjr Toasted Cheese Sandwicha IfUk Oatmeal Cookies DUTKEB . Breaded Veal Creamed Caulrftower with Almonda Lettace with Egg Dressing Strawberry Sundae Cocoanat Macaroons Coffee Saturday BXSAKTAST Stewed Arjrieota . Hot' Cakes Breakfast Food Syrup Beverage LtJhTCH Creamed Salmon with Mnithrooms on Toaat Tomato Salad Bananas and Cream Oingeranaps DINITEB Clear Tomato Soap Roast Baef Baked Rhubarb New Potatoes and Peat in Butter Sance Fruit Meringues Sunday BBBAKTAST Freah Strawberries Break fast Food Omelet Poporera Beverage SIVirCB Baked Chicken Mushroom Gravy Current Jelly Curiiuiltr l'inral Jelly Saliid ' Fruit Gelatine ' Ianbury Tarts Coffee 8UPFEK Apple Celery Currant Salad Egg Haiad Sandwichs Chocolate White Cake and juice of one lemon. Beat the mixture until light, then add a cupful of rich milk and finally fold in the stiffly whipped whites of three eggd. Pour into a pastry lined pan and bake in a moder ate oven. If the pie seems to brown too quickly, cover with a sheet of heavy paper. The filling should be firm in the center when the pie Is finished. tVune Cream Pie Wash, soak and cook in one and one-half pints of water a pound of prunes, cool, drain and remove pus, arrange the prunes in a pas try lined pan. Bring the pruno juice to boiling point and thicken with, two teaspoonfuls cornstarch blended with one-fourth cup of cold water, add three-fourths cup ful sugar, and a tablespoonful of butter, pour over the pie and bake in a moderate over. Cool and top with whipped cream sweetened and flavored to taste. l Coffee Not Pie Scald two cupfuls milk and pour It over half a cupful of sugar mixed with three tablespoonfuls corn-starch, one-fourth teaspoon ful salt, and add one cupful clear strong mack corree. cook over aof water till slightly thickened, then add two eggs beaten with one-fourth cupfull sugar, took five minutes longer, add half a cupful ("hopped nut meats and a teaspoon vanilla. Pour into pastry lined pie shell, scatter granulated so gar ana cnopped nuts over sur face and bake in a moderate oven HOUSEHOLD NOTES Vermicelli and Milk Soup . Three cups milk and one cup watef,' salt to taste. Add a tea spoon of butter when boiling add about a half cup of vermicel li; cook until tender, or rather soft, like macaroni or spaghetti; add pepper if desired. Fried cheese sandwiches and watercress served with vermicelli Soup make a god meatless lunch Make small sandwiches with thin slices of bread and your favorite cheese American cream or8wlsrf cheese. Toast on an iron griddle tn plenty of butter. A Hare Way or Making Cottajje Cheese Fill a five quart milk crock one-half full of skimmed or sepa rated sour milk (2H qts.) Do not disturb. Leave from 1 8 to 48 hours according to temperature until it forms a clabber. Skim off any accumulated cream. Fill crock with boiling water from the teakettle. t Leave 4 ten minutes. Strain through a cheese clbth.Ke- turn 'curds ftd crock; Pill crock with 'cold; water, Leave another ten minutes. Again-strain through cheee cloth, and 'hang to drain When drained,, cool. .- . When serving add one-third part of 'sweet t-rea m to 2-3 parts T U. R. tSvemmenl f nsprM-fetl i i iiTEUSLOFF BROS. MAtllCEt -Corner Court and Libert r : 1 ' 1 " " : ; " ' ' ' !H ' pf fcfieese. Season -with' fcepper and ialt to taste.. Garnish -with pap rika and parsley. . . WVIih Kareblt t- Z ,. caps H y pound) etrang cheese ( American) . Melt tn double boiler and add Vt cap cream, 1a -which' are dis solved ? teaspoons cornstarch When this mixture begins to thicken 'add 1 cup milk, in which are dis solved 1 teaspoon mustard teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon onion salt 1 teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce , 3 drops tabasco sauce. Cook, stirring constantly, until thick and pour over six or eight slites of toasted ; white , or rye bread. Serve hot; This rarebit CANN"OT become stringy, is digestible and any un used portion makes a tasty sand wich filling. Pineapple 'Known to King Charles IE Evelyn mentions in his famous diary having tasted pineapple at the table of King Charles II. It had been brought as an American delicacy to England by voyagers to the new world, and found such approval there that the slips and "crowns' were planted and grown under glass. The first pineapple grown In Britain was in 1712. as far as can be learned. The "Smooth Cayenne" variety, now used exclusively for canning in Hawaii was developed by nursery men in the Royal Horticultural Gardens, London. .iow Cost of Pineapple Sometimes people wonder how canned- pineapple can be sold at such a . reasonable cost. This is because in Hawaii production is on such a vast scale, the whole industry being organized. Any woman knows that it costs much legs per head for a meal for 30 people tnan ror tnree. It is sur prising when one studies the mat ter, to find how greatly quantity production reduces the price per unit. Kat and Be Beautiful As a rule one need only to ob serve the texture, color and clear ness (or the lack of it) of the skin to know the sort of food that has produced these qualities. A dry skin shows lack of fat in the diet a lumpy, muddy skin is proof of insufficient laxative food, food mar. includes wnoie grains, and a large percentage of fruit and veg etables; it may also show Irregu . . tar eating. 11 one would have a beautiful skin one must avoid the heavy starchy foods and too much meat and candy. Oranges, can ned Hawaiian pineapple, celery, lettuce, tomatoes, spinach, should be eaten freely, and foods such as dates and figs containing large amounts of natural sugar, make excellent substitutes for candy. Personality May Be Built as Business Asset, Shown While the dividing line between success and failure In business- is the public's reaction to the per sonalities of the persons connect ed with the establishment with whom they come in contact, there 1h hope for every business firm to succeed by developing pleasing contact with the public, was the message brought to the members of the Salem Lions club at the Friday luncheon by Miles F. Hoi li&ter. business engineer of Seattle and Chicago. llollister made a spec'al exam pie of an oil company which, once the most hated corporation in Am erica, has steadily built up good will by training every employe to develop a pleasing mode of greet ing ,the public, ; ' U.tts-i "Lee, (the, .undertaker, , an auto1 and died was run over by "He man 1 matte mucn on mai funeral, did tie?"' "No. In fact he went in the hole. The Pathfinder. v ' , o I Salem Markets GBAIK No. 1, wheat, white Kcd. wheat, saeked Oats, per bu. millinar 1.31 121 .94 WORK MTTTTnU AMD BEEF Tot hoea ''? 8.ws O6Hfi07 Top steers OS ft. 09 Cows .OS butts .'" " 04 0 .05 W11 tamba, under 66 lba. Top live aval . Dreaaed veal . Oressed pigs .10 .IT .15 POTXLTBT Light hens - Heavy hens Spriwira ..... Koostera BOOS. SUTTER, BtJTTEETAT t4srdw ........v .l :pssnd w. . , .. ? .13 Butterfat i - .40 Creatn butUr ... .42.43 vegetables: . . ' ire tab lea. beets, sacked Turnipa, earrota , Onions, doa. bunrbss - New eabbas .05 1.00 .SO 03 New potatoes .07 H t !elery. de. V 11.3 5 3.0O California leUuee,' crata , S.AO Ir.al apinae.h . ., -. , , .OS r- . ' v". MEATg - Phone 1523 - . .17 osrA.oa FAMOUS 'JERSEY Vive La France as She (Continued from page 1.) time she held three world's rec ords, including the highest produc tion record, any age, in the world for Jerseys. About two years ago she died. A burial ground was selected near the Plckard home, on the Pickard farm. . A nation-wide movement was started to raise funds for a suitable monument. At last the monument has been purchased and placed at the head of her grave, and now with- fit ting ceremonies this monument will be unveiled tomorrow after noon. D. O. Woodworth, Albany, .Ore gon, president or trie Oregon Jer sey Cattle club, will preside and Hon. J. K. Weatherford of ;Al- Rooming House Proprietor Picks Suspect-From Among Prisoners WINNIPEG. Man.. June 17.- (AP) Virgil Wilson, alias Ear! Nelson, charged with strangling a woman and a girl, was positively identified today by Mrs. J. L. Hill, roomirighouse proprietor, as the man who rented the room where the body of Lola Conway. 14. one of his alleged victims, was found. Mrs. Hill picked Wilson out pf a group of prisoners. Wilson was formally charged with the murder of Miss Conway and Mrs. Emily Patterson, 27, mother of two chil dren. Wilson was not asked to plead and was remanded until June 23 for a hearing. SAN FRANCISCO, June 17.--(AP) Police here today uncover ed records showing that an Earle Nelson, believed to be the man under arrest at Winnipeg, Man., as the '.'dark strangler" wanted for the murder of two women there, had been arrested here in 1921 for attacking and beating a woman and later had been sent to the state hospital &t Napa. Tha records at Napa show that the mTHlA FAAflLlAk SMlLJzhd a wave of the hand - trie--A" .C-v .. - . r ,- c QUden Wesi Qtrl t again bring! to you the message of Cbffee, ,: excellence."! ''Wrtole-heartedJy,'; he bids ; j yourdrnkhejcup o its delicious con-. , tent;' "Eagef lj?y jhe invites you to try thi " famous hevefage, that you too may learn , the delights it has been giving to count less others for almost Half a century here in the Pacific Northwest. ATso'try QoUrn Writ T4 'SUt k Ornngt Tektetnd. ' Q'rttH TO. BE HdNldRED Appeared in Life bany has been secured to deliver the principal address of the after noon at the grave side. The Pickards have one other cow which Jias achieved fame, that has npw passed her years of use fulness, and when she leaves this life she will be laid at the side of Vive La France. This cow is known as Old Man's Darling 2nd. Not only does she have a production credit that was a wejrld record, but she Is the mother of the present world rec ord cow. Darling's Jolly Lassie. The monument secured is of granite and has been suitably en graved with the name and achieve ments of the cow and also carries a picture carved in granite of the cow, and her former owner, Ovid Pickard. man escaped November 2, 1923. Nelson told Wuniptfe authorities he was born here. i Identification bureau records here showed that Nelson had de serted from the navy in 11)15, had been arrested on a larceny charge at Stockton, and was wanted on a similar charge in Los Angeles. Police today showed a photo graph of Nelson to Merton New man, nephew of Mrs. Clara New man. 63, one of the three local victims of the "dark strangler," hut Merton was unable to identify Ihe T)hotoEraDh as that ot tne man fwhoni he had seen at his aunts house about the time pf the murder. The police, however, consider ed this identification' failure as in conclusive, and continued ther check of ecords in an effort to determine definitely whether Nel son is the man who terrorized the bay district by a series of mur ders. BURLING AM E, Cal., June 17. (AP) Mrs. Harry Murray of Burlingame, today notified police that she could positively identify a newspaper photograph of Earl Nelson, arrested in Winnipeg, as "the dark strangler," as that of a man who had tried to attack her last Ncvembt r. Mrs. Murray es caped and ran to the street scream ing, while the assailant fled. Telling the Cook Customer: "Chicken croquettes, please." Waiter: "Fowl ball!!!" Am erican Boy Magazine. . e iamous name MTOBWITIES v. A ilBH 'TOTHLS 284 Persons Injured In Traf fic Accidents Which Num ber 201 9 in May Nine persons were killed and 284 persons were injured in 2019 motor vehicle accidents reported to the state traffic department dur ing the month of May. This in formation was set out in a report prepared here Friday by ' T. A. Raffetv. chief InsDector for the state motor vehicle department. Of the total accidents reported 1338 were due to carelessness, 263 were caused by failure to .give rieht-of-way and 29 were due to reckless driving. Speeding was responsible for 40 accidents, while 56 accidents were caused by failure to 'give proper signals. Fourteen accidents were due to inadequate brakes. There were a total of 255 ar rests due to the activities of state traffic officers during the month. Forty-nine of these cases are still pending in the 'courts. Twenty-nine arrests were due to the failure of drivers to secure proper license plates, while 29 arrests resulted from reckless driv ing. Speeding was responsible for 69 arrests, while 11 arrests re- ult'ed from drivers being intoxi- Ued on the highways. In 11 cases the drivers had no Itense plates, on their machines. The stater'TnrtrleotTiceTs recov Meats That Hit the Appetite Spot A Dollar Saved Is a Dollar Earned Cut Your Meat Bills! Buy Your Meat Where A Dollar Does Its Duty A Few of Our Every Day Prices: Smoked Hams ...28c Our Own Make Sugar Cured v Pork Roast, lb. I...... 18c Bacon Back, lb. ...L?.,. .A... 25c Breakfast Bacon, light and lean, lb. ...............28c Pure Lard, our own make, lb. ............16c . Come in today and buy your meat for Sunday. Once you buy here you will be one of our regular satisfied customers for you will realize the savings here. ,x "Where a Dollar Does Its Duty" - , ' -. . 173 Soutlr Commercial ' Telephone 1421 -'------ t f - - v . ASK V. .1- ' U0 A tl . m 9 - si f ' wi ered motor vehicles waving a re sale valueof $S155, and collected delinquent license fees in tho amount of $6464. Fines Imposed on violators of the traffic' laws "aggregated $4100, while 'the fines imposed for . In fractions other than motor vehicle law violations totaled $1325. Bad thecks were collected in the amount of $653.50. . The state traffic officers traveled 96,913 miles-during the month and visited 3856 towns and cities. They passed an aggregate of 94 5 days in the field. :t , , There are 34 state traffic offi cers now employed in different parts of the state. Esther White, Marquarh, Bride of Ernest Desler 'SILVERTON, Ore.. June 17- (AP) A pretty home wedding was solmenized June 14 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. G. White 2X Marquam when their daughter. Miss - Esther White, became ; the bride ot:Mr. Ernest Desler of Mil ton, Ore. The ceremony took place at one o'clock and the ring service was used. Miss Ruth White, a sister of the bride, acted 5,5 bridesmaid, with Mr. Dale Blair as best man. . Mr. and Mrs. Desler will make their home at Milton, Ore., until September when they will return to Eugene where they are mem bers of .- the junior class at the University of Oregon. BERLIN (API Max Rein- hardt, leading German producer, has returned from a trip to the United States with a bag full of American plays, which he Intends to produce in Germany during the ensuing season. jrvv. ABOUT 1 SOVIET OFFICIALS DFJfi'Jieny, ''Gross Inventions" Says News Agency or Mobiliza tion Statements ' MOSCOW,- Russia, June (AP) Tass. the official v-..j news agency, says it is authorized to deny emphatically "as gross in ventions" reports circulated in the foreign press relating to the in troduction of a state of war ia Moscow and 'Leningrad; mobiliza tion in the Ukraine, and mass re pressions rep6rted in Various cities of the soviet union. ' "Particularly," It says, "there is not the slightest truth in th reports of the execution of 23 for- mer officers in Moscow or the re- ports of massed ; executions in i Vladivostok, Chelyabinsk. Tifiis, Kharkov and other cities." The statement adds that normal conditions of life are undisturbed; that regulations for entering and leaving the country are unchanged and that no -mas departure of foreigners has been noted. MOSCOW, June 17. (AP) h vestia, organ of the soviet federal executive committee, joining the other newspapers in expressions of displeasure over the sentence on the assassin of the Russian en voy at Warsaw, says the sentence will provoke Just indignation among the public of the union ot Soviet-Socialistic republics. mt r . v ri r watcn tnis opot-i Each Saturday J Buya Where a Dol lar Does Its Duty IT aW