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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1928)
The New Obegon Statesman, Salem. Oregon, Friday Morning, September 28, 1928 QUI INDICTED 1 lYliDJUBY American Bungalows Invariably Appeal Assault Against George Ed Vards, Local Officer, r Laid to Tourist Clyde Bark,- would-be "bad - man" who was accused of draw- Ins is revolver on Officer Ed . wards aa -: Edwards was es corting him up the west steps of the city hall, was In dicted by the Marion county grand Jury Saturday for assault with a " dangerous weapon. Although Bark' was wearing handcuffs at the time, he surprised Edwards by producing a gun from some where and leveled it at him. DIs- regarding the . threat. Edwards . drew his own revolver and threat ened to "kill you for that." with the result that Burk lowered his own weapon and said he was "sor - Ten other indictments wore re turned by the grand Jury Satur day, as follows: Arthur . Thayer. . for possession of Intoxicating ' linor. Edgar Bailey, Ralph Burke, WUlard Moore and Charles Odell, for larceny in a dwelling house. Two separate crimes of this classi fication are charged in two separ- ate indictments, one being in the dwelling house of Rosella Cross. : on and the other the bouse of Josenh Voertlin. Both acts are aid to hare occurred August 24 of this year. Ray Marshall, charg ed with forging a 110.82 check John Lavine and Jack Porter, charged with robbing the McDow ell meat market September 24 of this rear. William Pitts, charged with larceny of a motorcycle. Al fred Kampf, charged with contri bntlnr to the delinuency of a minor. No true bills were returned in iae cases of Kenneth Hogan, who . was up on a tentative charge in- , volvlnr larceny of an auto, and George E. Glenn, for larceny by bailee. Helping the Homemaker Mean For Diane Creole Macaroni, Buttered Spinach Bread Strawberry Preserves Vegetable Salad Baked Apples Coffee Creole Macaroni. Serving Foar 2 cups cooked macaroni 1 teaspoon salt K teaspoon paprika 3 tablespoons finely chopped green peppers 1 teaspoon salt ! . A teaspoon paprika - 2 table spoons chopped onions v 1 cups to matoes 4 strips ba- mm Ik f " THE RARITAN 1M1 v kar w v , i, w ar av a " tf A vT.T I frisk rJk n ti V , -fa 3 If I aEfti&S ; W MA idlXtWv, - I I Ml - I III! DESIGN At3 . yr MERICANIZED bungalows, after all, This is distinctly an aH - the r year-round are hard to beat when consideration bungalow, suitable to any. climate, built of catb . ntaiiv n MmvMinN mm. mmmon lrick and surDrisinzly reasonable in -M J W...VM4.-I . - - - ... fori and attractiveness. Some of the adapted foreign types ire very appealing. - They are to very different. Their lines Are sometimes much sharper and again impress one as typi cal only of an exceeding lazi ness. But rarely are the in terior arrangements more to the taste of the American housewife than are those of our own contriving.- This particular bungalow is perhaps better both in appear ance and arrangement than the average. You will admit its attractiveness at first glance. You will appreciate the great convenience of its floor plan only after you have studied it. Every avaikble inch of space has been utilized to advantage. Nothing has been wasted. And the result is one of the most compact and comfortable little homes we can offer you. As is 5 1 iSf' f -f- THUMB K 1 jj LI its cost. Its walls, as you will readily perceive, are ' not cut op, the . outline is a' rectangle, easiest and cheapest of all to erect. It is the roof lines that give it this' decidedly impres sive bungalow atmosphere. Yet the roof is plain at that; Within are a series of de lightful surprises. The living room, with its connecting sun and dining rooms, take up the entire front of the home in almost unbroken -effect. The result is an airy, light cheerful ness altogether unusual. The kitchen arrangement gives the entire rear of the home over to the sleeping apartments, com prising three bedrooms and an inclosed sleeping porch, all reached by a center hall off which is also an ample, airy bathroom. The bedrooms are all larger, than are usual in homes of this type and excel- tor, to pat it in the enlightened phrasing. She-was in Salem "book ing, for the Howard , Bohemian glass blowers, who hare "blown" in every state of the union except Washington and also in Canada. You'll never guess where the family "shows.' Almost exclusive ly at schools and colleges, or per haps to a service dob group. Sdenuoc rmtaets Scientific products blown from the glass rods include, the ther mometer, x-ray, violet ray and the glass eye. The glass eye, incident ally, la said to require the most time to learn to make. At the Chicago World's fair. 34 years ago. a . royal personage, a Spanish princess if we recall cor rectly, was presented with a bridal dress of spun glass.: The sash was too long, and ar piece of the extra length was presented to the father of the glass .blowing girL This piece of "cloth was produced for our especial benefit; and as far as we're concerned it was as mueh like, brick as 'glass. It felt like cloth. But it was all glass and that was all true, the Informant said. f ' In the . coloring of this glass, only glass minecals and metals are used. Coitt gold is used to make ruby colored glass tubes,' iron for green glass, flour spar or sine for white, and coal dust or carbon for brown glass, ' j - ; And such' are the ; curiosities which may come to the reporter making the dally rounds, seeking news for Mr. i Public's morning paper. Guiding Your By Mn. Agnes Lyne Rate reductions representing an annual saving of 190,000 to do mestic and commercial lighting customers have been made by the California-Oregon Power com pany. .. indicated here it fits admirably into a wooded lently lighted, features that are particularly background and where possible this should appealing to the average .home builder. It be provided for the best effect. is a home distinctly without disappointments. brick Brick Maaafoctarar AaMclatJoa, OrvalMd, Ohio, cms fnrsWk complete tawUn for taia amen. Leaflet Lewis a. Weaver con Mix all the ingredients. exeepU - Ing the bacon, and pour into a buttered baking dish. Place the . bacon strips on top and bake in a moderate oven for 25 minutes. Serve in the dish in which baked. Battered Mpiaach, for Four . (This contains many vitamlnes) 1 pound spinach cap water 1 teaspoon salt VI teaspoon paprika 2 tablespoons butter 2 hard cooked eggs 4 slices lemon Carefully wash the spinach and break off the roots. . Add the water and cook over a moderate fire for 16 minutes. Dtrain and chop the spinach with a knife to Lrtak it apart and make it easier to serve. Pile it in a serving dish and sprinkle with the salt aad paprika and dot wTth the butter. Garnish with the hard cooked t eggs, cut in halves, and the lemon slices. The eggs add protein to the . spinach and also give color and the lemon supplies acid, which is needed to aid in bringing out the flavors. . , Vegetable Salad, Serving Foar 1 caps shredded or chopped cabbage 14 cup, chopped celery -- ' H cup cooked diced carrots 2 tablespoons finely chopped . onions - 2 tablespoons chopped sweet , piciies- V4 teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper 1- 3 cup salad dressing " " Mix and chill the ingredients. Salad Dressing; 4 egg yolks 4 tablespoons sugar . 3 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt M teaspoon pepper - hi, teaspoon celery salt - . 14 teaspoon dry mustard v, tt cup lemon juice 2- 3 cup water i Beat the egg yolks and add the - sugar, nour, salt, pepper, celery -, salt and mustard. Blend wti anrf add the lemon Juice and water . ana cook in a doable boiler untU - thick and creamy. Stir frequently " to prevent lumping.' When the dressing is done, beat for 2 min- . uies and pour int oa Jar which has been rinsed out of cold water. Cool and cover and store in the ice-box. - " ; ' . When ready to use, this dress. ing may - be thinned with sour, , sweet or whipped cream, juice from canned pimientos orfruit juices, depending, of course; upon" the kind of salad made. GLASS BLOWING IS NEARLY LOST ART IN THESE DAYS Clever, Quiet Young Woman Reveals Her Secrets of Skill to Reporter and Tells . About Her Work By GENEVIEVE MORGAN SOME say blowing is a forgot ten art. Others wish tt were. Of course, it all depends upon the point of view. Tor instance, just the other day we met a blower who was a perfectly nice and exceedingly quiet young woman. She was, and a a rlajMt hlswr fllaaa hi Awl n w C3 " " - . u . i . " " " O is the forgotten art to which the first sentence really meant to call attention. Glass blowing, so the encyclo pedia wlU say, la something like 5.000 years old: That's whv in certain circles where minds' and pocket books are turninr to the ancients, the trinkets of the more or less nomadic glass blowers are, being gathered and carefully cher-i shea a passing whim, forrotten again tomorrow, perhaps. But it is not with the antiane seeker that we were going to tar ry. Let's back to the young woman ?lass blower and see what she has toMell about glass blowing. This glass blowing is an old, old art, she too says. It dates back to me Egyptians and the pyramids, ana nas survived thronrh tt. Greek. Roman, Venetian and Bo- nemian peoples.. Of course etfaryone who has found It necessary to pour over me pages or the ininrriai r A olutlon and the first legislation for factory hands, recall th in effects of glass blowing. But it Is not or this Industrialised and commercialised type of glas blow ing that these words am twinr driven. Not the window pane ar- ucie, ror no one standing on the inside looking out. or vice vr for that -matter would aavs that la a forgotten "art," Bohemian glass blowing la tt old, nearly forgotten art. This Bo hemian branch of the Industry, we were Informed, consists of the making of birds, animals, vases and thousands of fancy designs, as well as scientific instruments, without using tools or molds. . What the Blower Doe The blower Just blows. and blows until the tube or rod of glass has become a dog or pig or what not. A little glass pig; just an ornament like a big, round red apple that is stuffed with cotton and harbors pins and needles. But, ohf So fascinating to watel the dog grow from a rod to "ma turtty." You've probably stood fascinated while some Itinerant and picturesque glass blowei Biows, not dud Dies, dui an l man Into the air. This glass blowing young worn an; the typewriter keeps running away from her. She's one of a f am ily of glass blowers of.Bohemiar glass blowers. The .family devote: its entire time, one might say, U the lost art. They travel hither and yon, with never a permanent ad dress and always blowing curiou: glass figures into the air. The young woman is the mem ber of the family who traveh ahead the public relations diree Hawkins & Roberts, Inc. Residence Loans Straight or Monthly Payments , 205 Oregon Bldg. The broadcasting; stations that auuerea a revocation of li censes are setting up the cry that not even the air in free America is - free.- Memphis ' Commercial Appeal.; :-:x:- -J"J. The walnut outlook as most en. eouraglng. according to W. H. Bentleyr manager of the Dundee Walnut association. " . TV rr BUILDING The Best of Everything for Every Need -nHE best is none too good . . . . when you're putting it into a home that will last a lif etimer No matter for what purpose you may want it, we have it for you here, -in large or small quantities. Ma terials that have stood the test of quality and durability will stand the same test for you. ; See us for -anything you may need. . .7 REMODELING . IX s help you plan for modera honx roaves .lence. We can make yoarold home Into at a surprisingly low cost, it - . , JOHN BJANSVILLE ROOFING A Nationally ksows and reliable hlgbgrade - Asphalt aad Asbestos - Roofing. We shall be glad to help yom with yew roofing problem or anything else la the buikllag lino, 082 MBl : .IWo S44 Han 582 M31 son & Liljeqaist Phone 344 Linn county voters will vote on a 2-mill levy; to raise 160,000 with which to match state and federal fundsf or the construction of the Santiam highway to the summit of the! Cascades. W. M. Dickerson of Bend has in his garden a squash vine that has borne seven squashes whose total weight is1 103 pounds. The argest squash weighs 22 pounds. LITTLE SUCCESSES Hitching one's wagon to a star may be fine for grownups, but children should be urged to strive inly for those goals which with reasonable effort they can attain. Just as success breeds success es, so failure- breeds failure. The :hlld who Is held to standards im possible for him to reach and. who 'a given tasks at which be can make only a poor showing is like ly to develop a chronic sense of railure and discouragement. Ted sucks, his thumb. In one of ber efforts to break him of this asbit his mother promised him a beautiful express wagon if for one whole-week he would not once put his thumb In his mouth. With the wagon shining in his hopes Ted made a valiant attempt to win it. But before one day was over he had lost the battle. Ted's mother asked an impos sible thing. Ted has sucked, his thumb throughout the three years of his life. To have desisted for one whole day would have been a triumph; to do it for a week was jut Of the question. His mother would have been wise to suggest instead that if he would not do It for one whole morning she would give him his favorite des jert for dinner. He might readily have succeeded then. The reward, the -feeling of immediate achieve ment, his mother's approval," all would have contributed to a glow of pride and pleasure that would make him try next day to do even better. If Ted is often asked to do the impossible -be will come to doubt his own ability to succeed. He will not try, V in the past effort has led only to disappointment. Such a pattern of behavior fixed in early childhood may readily affect him all his life. The child's days should be a series of little successes. Only by overcoming small obstacles doe? he build up confidence in his abil ity to overcome large ones. It is wu u accumulates the; power to- cope with the difficulties of ex .stenee. ' ;v; '". When later on he has to make i living for himself, nothing will stand him in better stead than the ability to make an honest ef ford with the Inward assurance that he will win. A new 220-mtie rauroaa wui soon link existing Moroccan rail roads with the systems of Algeria and Tunis. - v - - A board of religious education to foster weekday schools of re ligious education has been chosen by the churches of Hillsboro. s f Hordes, o ducks tnd geese threaten to consume aarge part of the wheat and barleycrop of Cox Brothers at Tule lake, Klam ath county. . . ' .il tn l,.t.llJ.lllIIJr'- I a I ..t'VrHOSE DARKENED rM'r R00MS ( ITS amazins: the amount of light and cheeriness that can be inducted- into an ordinarily dark room by the proper selec tion of colorful wall paper and bright finishes to the woodwork. It's a transition almost unbe lievable until one sees the won ders we can work. Let us plan with you now on selections and cost. Presnp's Paint Shop 455 COURT STREET PHONE 485 ii I , . J j - 4 N - ' S ' fcarra I laaaaw m ".af . 1 The man who encourages his boy -to, build things is helping ;him to build stamina character, whose, worth can- nb be computed in dollars and cents.' . y. I -rsays Practy CaL LUMBER and All Building Materials . Gabriel Porder&Supply Co. Office, Yard 10 Kortit Capitol Wareh TeVphoae S34S Motiial Sanngs and Loan Association A Salem Institution Organized Is 1910 Place your savings with us Let us finance your home on weekly or monthly payments 142 South Liberty Street PHONE 1812 SALEM, ORE. Frank H. Struble ' ' i. . . Architect 512 Bank of Commerce Bli. i 'Yours for better buildings in the Salem district for a brick house looks permanent "COMEBODY said: 'It takes -'a Heap of living to make a house a home,' and a brick house always looks like it would stand all that and then a long time more. When a fellow builds of brick, you can tell he's building for a long future." We've passed the pioneer stage here in the Pacific Northwestand have begun to build for-permanence instead of putting up temporary houses. So youll notice the proportion of, brick dwellings is increasing every year. Much of the popularity of brick; is due to the soKd dignity of its appearance. ;lt not only is substantial it looks the part a trait that helps make it a good investment to keep or easier to selL If you are planning to build a new home or buy one, it will pay you to consider the advantages of brick. ' v; . Write for This Booh Today It's Free 3p ASK A GOOTMGTGR HE KNOWS There are contractors and builders in Salm who ' ' Sil IV aaal ala - - f ' ' rrs a - UI V .cuu. vye wiu gladly assist v K in ivutu wiin mee men wno will be able to you any. information as 16 the eonstrucUon of a posed; builduig.-w,,.. '-trX. ' ; r, pe-you gire pro- 5 ,uk J."".l V AaaSBa. a. i -1 r ASS0aK UV swast -;.-V i :a;; ' K' ' 913 AitUe Bid, Seattle : In aSalem: Salem Bricli & Tile Coi Tile Road Telephcao 917