The, New Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, September 15, 1928 SOCIETY f Telephone All , Departments 583 ROZELLA BUNCH Society Editor i HOME INTERESTS CLUBS V. Prominent Guests r Honored With Luncheon "A N outstanding social event of tn early autumn was the charming one o'clock luncheon for which Mrs. J. H. Lauterman was hostess Thursday afternoon at the Gray Belle, complimenting a (roup of prominent women who are risitors in Salem, i; -The luncheon tables were love ly with low oblong baskets of as ters, cosmos and michaelmas dars ' ten, ran ring in shade from pale Jfoae to larendar. Slender green tapers in crystal holders complet ed the centerpieces. ,The honor guest group included Mrs. Josephine Stewart and Mrs. Charles Gray of Eugene; Mrs. F. A. Wiggins of Toppenish, Wash ington; and Miss Alice Brown or Westfield, Massachusetts, v Additional guests were: Mrs. jCharles A. Park, Mrs. Reuben P. Boise, Mrs. Frank Snedecor. Mrs. Robert J. Hendricks. Mrs. Henry Meyers. Miss Sally Bush. Miss Mabel Eobertson. Mrs. John No Nary. Miss Margaret Cosper, Mrs. Edward Stevens, Mrs. Rose Bab cock. Mrs. Mildred R. Brooks, and i'Mrs. J. H. Lautermann. U Following the luncheon the jproup enjoyed a line party at the Elsinore theater. iDallas Girls Are Guests in Salem The final meeting of the Co-Ed Bridge club of Dallas took place Thursday evening in Salem. The group was entertained with a six-thirty o'clock dinner pnrty at the Spa after which sev feral hours of bridge were enjoyed fat the home of Miss Flora Brown. 'The oriies a a result of the eve- fying's play were won by Miss 3rown and Miss Otella Friar of Dallas. J Members present Included the ?Mi3se3 Otella Friar, Marjorie fJackson. Madeline Gerlinger, Mar garet Friar. Clea Gay. Ethel Jack bbne, lone Imtoler. Barbara Chap man, Augusta Gerlinger and B- ..tytHayter, all of Dallas, and Miss Flora Brown and Miss Charlotte 30rr, both of Salem. s , If Attractive Dinner fAt Blatchford Home t " Among the many delightful af- ;7fairs given In honor of Miss Laura JHelst who after a year's vacation fin the United States will return lneit week to India was the attrac tive dinner party for which Dr. 'j and Mrs. Benjamin Blatchford fwere hosts Thursday evening In Jjthelr home on State street. ; 'Covers were placed at the din rone table, centered with a color- !$cCL arrangements of vivid autumn t- ti a K-svw vitAaf Mlfla 1st; for Mr. and Mrs. Clar- fence J. Gillette of Forest Grove, i, Mrs. W. W. Emons, Miss Lin a t Heist, Miss Adella Chapter, and f'the host and hostess. Dr. and Mrs. - Blatchford. f - :.-Mrs. B. L. Steeves i iHostess at Luncheon f ; Mrs. B. L. Steeves entertained Thursday afternoon with a de : flfsrhtful luncheon in her .home on ; C"aurt strt-et. Covers were placed at the at f ' tractlvely-appointed luncheon table, centered with a colonial .bouquet of fall blossoms lnshades A jJof roae. for Dr. Grace Young of fhe Dalles; Mrs. Dahl. Mrs. Frank ! 'Ml Erickson. Miss May Hale Miss . : Olive Dahl. Mrs. Almlra Hale. Miss .Laura V. Hale, and the hostess, i Mrs. Steeves. : i; .Motor to Saler ; To Spend Day . I Mr. and Mrs. James Pomeroy . isnd their son. Clay Pomeroy, of :(8cappoose, Oregon were guests r j yesterday at the home of Dr. and j 3ftrs. Benjamin Blatchford. Clay Pomeroy has enrolled as a fresh- maa at Willamette University and jwljll make his home with the .B&tchfords this winter i G.kE. Hannas Guests i Of Salem Relatives t t ; I fv: Mf. and Mrs. C. E. Hanna of - Clendale, California are visiting ; Mr. and Mrs. John Crawford and ; i other relatives In Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Hanna motored .'. north and expect to spend a month ft t'nr Oregon. Mr. Hanna owned a ' fruit farm west of Salem on the .Wallace road a number of years Recent Guests Here Return to Roseburg i tat I Pi ' t JiJUrs. Maud Lady and her small j m&n. Ford, of Roseburg, lect yes i iriay morning for their home In ' (he south. Mrs. Lady was called t (t Salem by the death of her moth ! er, the Icte Mrs. Helen J: PowelL JSuests This Week At Stearns" Home Ux. and Mrs. F. G. Stearns, 180 $&uth 19 th street, have as their h4use guests their son and daugh-ter-Jn-law, .Mr, and lira; J. Per il. Stearns, of Enterprise, Oregon. jvisiting in Iowa For Several Weeks v. -l Mrs. F. W. Selee and her broth- , wr.Mr. H.J.Moody, left earUer la the week for Cedar Rapids, lewa where they will remain tin- ' Ul!.the ' last of October w the trgueaU of their aisUr, Mra. WlUard SOCIAL. CALENDAR . Today Salem Garden club flower show. TTnitfkft Sttfa national bank lobby. Northwest Poetry society. Central Library. Portland. 7:- JO o'clock. Son and riir-hTr of Tl oneers. peninsula Park, Port- land. :00 o'clock. Monday ! Willamette Shrine, No. 2. Order of White Shrine of Jer- usalem. Masonic temple. 8:00 o'clock. I- fnn mt It lit Inn n Prnrram arranged by Chemeketa chap- ter, D. A. R. Commercial club auditorium. 8:00 o'clock. Public invited to attend. Tuesday Woman's Republican club. Mrs. C. P. Bishop. 765 Court street, hostess. 2:30 o'clock. Miss Laura Heist Honored at Dinner An Interesting Indoor picnic was given Wednesday evening at the home of Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Utter. 440 Oak street, compliment ing Miss Laura Heist who will leave shortly to resume her mis sionary work in India. The picnie supper was served at six-thirty o'clock and the re mainder of the evening was spent with conversation and games, t The group included the follow ing graduates and former stu dents of Willamette University; Miss Laura Heist, Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Sherman, the Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Acheson, Mr. and Mrs. Waldo O. Mills, Mr. and .'.Irs. Sheldon F. Sackett, Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Schramm. Miss Ellen Fish er. Miss Mary Eyre. Miss Ada ltoss. Miss Grace Elisabeth Smith, Miss Beryl Holt. Miss Ola Clark. Miss Una Heist and Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Utter. Return From Motor Tour in Washington Mrs. Cash Roberts and her son, Charles Roberts, have returned from a trip Into Washington. They were accompanied by Mrs Roberts' sister , Mrs. Velma Rhoades of Philomath. Oregon and her brother, Mr. George Good speed, who Is the guest of his mother Mrs. M. A. Goodspeed 1690 Mill street. Mr. Goodspeed is with the United States Naval Air forces and the past four years he has been in the Philippines and Chi Tne group visited relatives In Bayview. Olympia and Seattle Washington. Mrs. H. C Brown H LLeaVHlg for Home Mrs. H. C. Brown will leave to morrow for her home in Kiam ath Falls after spending several days in Salem. Gilbert Wrenns Leave for South Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Wrenn (Kathleen LaRaut) left Thursday by motor for Palo Alto, Califor nia. Mr. Wrenn will continue to work for his master's degree at Stanford University. i. . Poetry Society to I Meet in Portland j Tne Northwest Poetry society win meet tnls evening at seven- thirty o'clock at the Central Li brary In Portland. Spending Week-End At Beach Resorts Dr. and Mrs. B. L. Steeves and meir bouse guest. Dr. Grace Young of The Dalles, left Friday by motor tn a week-end trip around the Newport-Neskowln loop. Returns From Visit At Silverton Home After spending a fortnight with ner grandparents, Mr. and Mrs B. Tlngtostad in Silverton. Miss Helen Tlngelstad has returned to ner borne la Salem. Mrs. John W. Orr, Miss Char lotte Orr and Mrs. Samuel lOrr spent Thursday with friends in Dallas. Mrs. Clifton Mudd Returns From Visit Mrs. Clifton B. Mudd has re turned to Salem after spending tare months In the southern states and old Mexico. Mrs. Sarah Drager; Returns From South Mrs. Sarah E. Drager has re turned to her home in Salem after spending the past alt weeks with relatives in San -Francisco. Cali fornia. : - W.R.-C. Will Meet In McCornack Hall The Woman's Relief Corps will meet at two o'clock this afternoon in McCornack hall. s,. i After having their own booster publications . put into the' record in the. Itrans-state rail case, rail road attorneys should" appreciate the enforcement of truth In adver tising Ontario Argus, In Coast Meet 7 jT Edith Croat, terminated her tri umphant extent sow Is Unto to eater the California tennis tourna ment. Helen Wills Drained her work on eastern cowrts a tional and predicted she womld rate fourth la the If National Ing. . D. A. R. to Observe Constitution Day All patriotic citizens and or ganisations are lnrited and urged to cooperate with Chemeketa chap ter. Daughters of the American Revolution. In the observance of Constitution Day, Monday, Sep tember 17. A public meetlhr will he held In the Commercial club auditorium at eight o'clock in the. evening. StateSuperintendent of Schools. C. A. Howard will be the speaker of the evening. The American Le gion, Auxiliary glee club, under the direction of Miss Lena Belle Tartar, will sing. Constitution Day is one- of our national flag days and our nation's emblem should be at full mast on that day. Sons of Pioneers Will Meet Tonight Justice Charles A. Johns of the supreme court of the Philippine islands is to be the principal speaker at the annual picnic of tne sons and Daughters of Oregon Plonefers at Peninsula park this evening at six o'clock. He will be introduced by Chief Justice Rand ef the Oregon Supreme court of wnicd Justice Johns formerly was a mem ner. senna Slater Smith n win aance and Mrs. Glenn A Hun derson will sing. If rain prevents ansoutdoor pic nic me arrair will take place In me community house. TO PUN FOR YEAR wuuubukn, Ore.. Sept. 14. (special) An important mMtinr of all teachers in the Woodbum school system wiU be held Satur day at 2 p. m. in the hlah school building. Several chances In mh. jects and schedules will be dis cussed. Three new members of the hlrh school faculty will be present and two new members of the grade school faculty. Miss Helen Wash- bum of O. S. C. will fill the vanoancy left by Mrs. Enid Wolf In the Girl's Physical Education and English departments. Miss Mildred Tomlinson of Willamette university will succeed Mrs. Lucia Card Hansen in the Latin and English departments. The vacancy in the smith-Hughes department of agriculture left by Mr. George Jenner will be filled, by Mr. Ron ald Burnett of O .A. C. Mr. Jen ner has accepted a similar posl- tin in Fortuna. Cal. In the West Side grade school. Mrs. Mabel Ballard and Miss Fern Wad worth will teach the seventh grade whih was taught last year by Miss Katherlne Starr and Miss Eva Ackert. Remedial Work To Be Resumed By Polk Women INDEPENDENCE. Ore.. Sent. 14. (Special) Mrs. Georre Con- key left Thursday for Roseburg where she has a position as rem edial instructor in the city schools. This Is the second vear h ha handled that work In the Rose burg schools. She has spent the past summer taking; special work along that line at the University of Oregon. Missing Cashier Put Under Arrest KIRKSVILLE. Mo.. SeoL 14. ( AP) .Lloyd E. Thdmnson Mah ler of the Bank of Willmatsvffl. Adair county, who reported - he was kidnaped August 29, and the bank robbed of $4000, was arrest, ed today on information charging embexxlement. The 'bank - was burned the same night Thompson reported he was kidnaped. HOLLYWOOD , SATURDAY ONLY CODS OP LSCASi mm mm n a -Vi Mrs. W. C.Hawley Hostess At . Tea M' RS. W. C Hawley entertain ed a grovp of Salem War afotners Thursday afternoon in her home on Oak Street with an interesting afternoon. I Plana were discussed for the raising of fnnda for sending gifts to oar soldiers and sailors la foreign countries. - Tea was served by the hostess at the close of the afternoon. In the group were Mrs. F. Elliott. Mrs. Mark Skiff, Mrs. A. Lee. Mrs. Robert J. Hendrick ricks, Mrs. Minnie Humphreys Mrs. Jessie Crossan, Mrs. Jennie Vincent. Mrs. Ray Farmer, Mrs. Carrie 1". Fowle. Mrs.. C W. Beechler. Mrs. Oetavia Hoppes. Mrs. I. Hobson. Mrs. Mary E. Watson, Mrs. Susan Smith, Miss Edna Garfield and the hostess. Mrs W. C. Hawley. At the Theaters Today marks the closing of 'the Association vaudeville at the El sinore theatre. Headlining the bill Cloby & Mucphy with the Shan non sisters in "The Party" offer jolly, joyous round of merri ment, gay with attractive dances and delightful songs. John Vale, heralded as "The California Mc- Cormick" and with the assistance of beautiful Ila Clare presents a most pleasing program. Chas. F. Semon, "The Narrow Feller" has a style all his own. Emma O'Neill blessed with nonsense anft Stan ley ft Morton in "Laughs and Laughs" complete the bill. Petite Shirley Mason made so decided a hit In the title role of Sweet Rosle O'Grady," that she was the immediate choice for the starring role In "Sally in Our Al ey," this company's screen ro mance of an East Side waif, which omes to the Elsinore theatre to lay with the vaudeville. Miss Mason has achieved dis tinction in the portrayal of the Cinderella type of role demanded by the part of "Sallr" and was pronounced by Mr. Cohn and' other studio officials as being ideal for the character. Guiding Your Child Bj Mrs. Agnes Lrne PROPERTY RIGHTS stealing is an ugly word; the thief Is most harshly punished by society. Yet the thing we? call stealing is natural to every small cnild. Children are born with the im pulse to get what they want. To refrain from doing so is some thing which must he learned. Sooner or later most youngsters lind out that taking things which don't belong to them works out to their disadvantage. But many children go through painful and humiliating experiences before they learn the difference between mine and thine. How should the small child know that taking pennies from mother's bag Is very different from taking an apple from the bowl on the dining room table? How should he realize that taking his playmate's crayons is any worse than taking his brother's gloves when he can't find his own? In most homes the common use of food and clothes and toys is taken for granted and the sharp edge of property rights is never drawn. This situation is a source of confusion to the child who is amazed to find that his taking pennies and crayons is regarded by his mother with something like horror and is treated much more seriously than mere disobedience. For the child's sake It is beet to make property rights in the home quite clear. His toys must never be disposed of by another. They are his to give away, to lend, or to play with as he alone pleases. Some mothers in trying to teach their children to share, force them to give up their toys to a play mate. Not xnly does this forced sharing or confiscation of the child's possessions fall to achieve its purpose, but it eta a bad ex ample by diregardlng property, Last Times Today in I II Th ifip. ttt YM PuH If II Together again M . F JOWl I if u THB . . I Screen Life By Wade Werner HOLLYWOOD, Cal. No doaht many critics oz ne soana-oun will think it only natural that the dean of all the talking-picture' dl- rectors 'here W . r A I. a n I A K a graduate of Tin an Alley, the s y n e o p a tion center of Amer ica. He is Bryan Foy, whose "Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shee h a n" brought him fame as a popular song writer several Bryan Foy Tearrago. Beiore ui ne was the stage with his lamer, we min Eddie For. as one of the "seven little Foys." He still i. i-r Tonnr to be the dean of .n-rt&inr f he will be St in Decern ber) Jat having spent most of his nr os the stage, or writing ons. or making motion pictures, ne is hardly a- newcomer. And with approximately 600 talking pic fi,r to his credit so far, he is jast 500 talking movies ahead of most of the directors starting talking pictures now. Fortunate Obscurity At the time he began making talking reels, two years ago, Foy was not particularly prominent as director. He had been a gagi man and had directed some short comedies, but as yet no producer had felt inclined to entrust uim with the making of a feature length picture. Neither, however, did tne pro ducers for whom he was working then feel Inclined to waste the Prince' of Wales Is Entertained As Dinner Guest CAIRO. Egypt. Sept. 14. (AP) The Prince of Wales and his vonnrer brother, the Duke of Gloucester, were entertained last night at a dinner at which only men were present at the famous Gexira sporting club. At Wales' request the 2S0 guests wore dinner jackets and black ties with a view to avoiding over formality. tights. A child's toys must never be taken from him as a disciplin ary measure. He must learn that his broth ers' and sisters' thin must never be touched without the owner's express permission. He must not be allowed to take even an apple without first asking mother. The much desired pennfes must be re ceived as an allowance. If the child has pennies of his own he will not resort to questionable methods of getting them. This sort of training carefully carried out will do much toward making honesty a habit long" be fore the child is old enough to understand abstract right and wrong. Here Today IDA CLAIRE Association Vaudeville star who will be seen at the Elsinore Thea tre today. SUNDAY MONDAY Singer Musical Comedy Revue Call For Ah Ambulance v Featnrinr. GLEN BOZOt SINGER Columbian " .Quartet . j And a new line of DANCING IEwIiOJ J l -'iU in Hollywood time of one of their big-money di rectors on the speculative experi ments with Vitaphone. It was a very new thing. Caution suggest ed trying it oat on the dog firat. Foy, one of the lesser directors, was picked as the dog. Top of the Hiea Subsequent events have shown how fortunate he was in being relatively unimportant at that time. He was the first director io nave a xeature-iengtn all-talk' ing picture on the screen, and the theatre in which it was shown here is the only one in the Holly wood area which had to line the customers up on the! sidewalk in the middle of the hottest days. Foy Insists that "Lights of New York" is a pretty crude affair compared with the all-talking pic tures he expects to make later. but until he makes them this pio neering all-talkie will doubtless look like the laet word In motion pictures to many a film fan. Meanwhile, with mst of his life still ahead of him, Foy is the dean of a new race of movie-makers. Where is the theatre-goer who saw him as one of the "seven lit tle Foys" who could have fore seen that? Here Sunday Anita Page and William Haines. who will be seen at; the Elsinore Theatre in "Telling j the World," super-film to be shown Sunday. ME MEN KILLED NIP EXPLOSION f LOS ANGELES,! Sept. 14 i At") . Three men! were killed and seven other severely burned yesterday when a battery of crude oil stills at the Standard Oil Co. refinery at El Segundo. on the coast near here, exploded and sent biasing oil in all directions. The dead are: Foreman Thomas J. J. Davis. Lambert, Fred J. Lawndale; Charles ; E. 22, Redondo Beach; Holden, El SegundoJ - The injured were J. T. Edwards of Lawndale; O. O. Hesser of El Segundo; Harry W. Booth. 40, of IE! Segundo; Carl W. Rehfuss. 2!8, of El Se gundo; Robert G. McClelland of Redondo Beach; William L. Lane of El Segundo; Ralph Kellar, 38, of El Segundo. The three men i killed were cleaning around the etill when the explosion occurred. The blast shook several neighboring beach towns. The men injured were working at some lijttle distance from the stills. At I company- of fices it was announced all were expected to recover, although some were terribly burned. A geceral fire started by the explosion was extinguished with the aid of a special solution used in that work. Girl From Polk County Enters W. U. This Year INDEPENDENCE. Ore.. Sept. 14. (Special) Mlsk Margaret Eddy, daughter of Mri. J. B. Vio lette of the Violette Mercantile Co went to Salem Thursday where she will register; as a fresh man at Willamette university. OtfTHE STAGE TODAY f . r . ... FIVE ACTS Tt 7 ASSOCIATION VI A IT 1 DEVILL Headlined COLD Y & EIURPHY with the NON SHAN in PARTY" VALE & CLARE ?aUot Charm" CHAS. F. SEMON -rh Nantnr Feller? ; jbtifA (XNEJt :c - Blessed ; wdtii ttraense ST. LNLEY a'MOETON In '"Uinzha autt aAnshs"' FAN( ion&mAr r - , Woman Judge . j -. I MMHNSSwMSHNBSaSHMMSMMMSMa4 Women are .saining recognition the far ease Daw Hme Khin is Banna's first woman judge. She ttu boon appointed judare of the Rangoon high court. LOS ANGEL" S. Sept. 14. (AP). Youtut Lieutenant Wind- sorv of the British navy spent a day in Los Angeles being pursued by newspaper photographer;, who insisted on taking pictures of Prince George Edward Alexander Edmund, fourth son of King George, under the thin incognito of the family name. . The photographers succeeded in snapping a picture of the prince as he boarded an automobile with William Slater of Montecito, Glor ia Swaneon, Lily Damlta, and June Collier, the last three all stars of the screen. The cameras snap caught the party unawares as they were slipping into the machine. Prince George threw up his arms, then relented and graciously posed briefly for the camera. Although an officer of Lieuten ant Windsor's ship, anchored off Santa Barbara, had predicted that the only stars Prince George would see would be tbese "In the heaven and in the Stars and Stripes." he seemed to be seeing many of the stars of filmdom J according to newspapermen who dogged his heels. After a dinner at the home of Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pkkford last night, which broke up shortly before midnight. Prince George went to "a cafe with a group of his motion picture friends. Photographers waiting at the hotel despite the denials of the management that the prince was quartered there, saw the ar rival of the film actresses shortly before noon. Tney had lunch with the prince and Slater at the hoUl. Stolen Woodburn Auto Discovered GAZELLE. Calif.. Sept. 14. (AP). After looting a garage and threatening Traffic Officer George Dayley with a revolver. James Hickey. 22, an Itinerant, was arrested here Thursday on a charger of ffrst degree burglary. He was seen stealing gas for an automobile which he is alleged to have stolen at Woodburn, Ore After stealing the gas, he rifled the garage cash register of $7. Woodburn School Youths Captured DUNSMUIR. Calif.. Sept. 14 (AP). Elliott M. Johnson 17. and Frank McCol. 17, confessed escapes from the Woodburn re form school. Woodburn. Ore . were arrested here Thursday and held for authorities. They are alleged to have stolen an automo bile near Salem and driven it across the state line, ' making them liable to a federal charge of theft PKE FOLLOWED BrPHS 1 1 ... EE,nWIKlIS ONLY bf SISTEBS SUSIiAY . irnvna w HAINES IN .'TELLING THE WORLD" I Accidental Shot j pTQm 0wn Rile Fatal to Boxer EUGENE, Ore.,' Sept. 13. (AP) William' J. Wellborn. 19. f Eugene was accldently! killed y his own rifle while on a hunt. ing trip near Mapleton this morn - ng. Wellborn was a plasterer and wa known throughout Oregon as i boxer. . j He was found dead fay his friends shortly after they had heard a shot. It is believed he fell and was killed when the gun dis- harged accidentally. He was the , son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Well born. Miss Veona Elson, who was o have become Wellbom's bride this week, was a member of the hunting party at the time of the atal accident. ' i Helping the Homemaker Menu For Today ! Halibut Steak Relish Sauce Creamed Potatoes i Buttered Spinach Lemon Quarters Bread Batter Sliced Tomatoes Peach Cake Spice Hard Sauc Coffee Pickled reaches, a Delicacy (To serve with hot or cold meats peck peeled peaches, 7 cups dark brown sugar, S cups vinegar. cup whole cloves, ft cup Darx cinnamon, broken Into small pieces. t Boll the sugar and vinegar for five minntas. Add the spices. which have been loosely tied in a white muslin bag, and boll tor five minutes longer. Add a few peacn- es at a time and boll gently until well glazed and very tender. Re move and place in sterilized Jars. When all the peaches have been cooked, pour the boiling ; syrup . over the peaches packed lu the Jars. Fill "to overflowing" an seal. Store in a cool. dark, drs place. j Select firm, large peaches and cover with boiling water, long enough to loosen the skins so that they may be easily slipped off. The peaches are then ready for 'he pickling process Relish Sauce (This may be served on tomato salad). H cup stiff mayonnaise, cup chill sauce, A cup chopped sweet pickles or pickle relish, 1 table soon horseradish. 1 Mix and chill the ingredients and serve with the halibut steaks Save the lemon halves and use for cases to hold this relish.! They will be most attractive, placed around the halibut steak on the serving platter. Peach Caka lH cipi flour, 3 taspoons bale in powder, teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons fat. cup milk. Mix the flour, baking powder and salt. Cut in the tat with a knife and add the milk. Pour in to a shallow, well greased pan. Add the peaches. . Peach Mixture -1 cups sliced fresh peaches. M .cup light brown sugar, l tea- ' spoon cinnamon, 2 tablespoons butter. t Mix the ingredients and nress down Into the dough. Bake in a moaerate oven for 20 minutM Cut In squares and serve with Spice Hard Sauce. Spice Hard Sauce (This is good on aoDle. aoricot or pineapple puddings as well l. tablespoons butter. 2 table spoons hot cream, 1 teaspoon vanilla, teaspoon lemon ex tract, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1 tea spoon salt, 1 teaspoon 'cinnamon. li cups sifted powdered sugar. Mix the ineerdienta "until vrv soft and creamy. Place in a maii glass dish and serve. Store fresh vegetable . noil spinach, cairota and green beans m me ice box in ajihallow pan. They will remain firm and be much better when cooked. The 18th may not be h mnt popular amendment stitutlon but it certainly has a monopoly on- nnhiiit r, Ajuvrican. ON THE SCREEN Quick to fight! Quick to love! b if in, mischievous, womanly --a fascinating mixture of Pe ter Pan and Cinderella that's SHIRLEY MASON IN sec fi sea .3. Wis? ti,