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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1949)
Looking Ahead Spaghetti On Menu Called Wintertime By Maxlne Borea Statesman Woman' Editor Usually about Fairtime we jet pretty hungry' for food winter time foods and find ourselves looking longingly at pictures of filling dishes such as well regu lated households serve after school starts. Here we find several dishes of fered by the makers of durum wheat (which goes into such pro ducts as spaghetti, macaroni and the like) we always take a chance that the fellow who makes cer tain products puts out only recipes that are good, so here are several offerings. Spaghetti Vegetable Medley 4 Medium tomatoes f 1 cup fresh corn, cutfrom cob -' teaspoon salt t 2 frankfurters 4 ounces long spaghetti 2 tablespoons enriched flour 4 cup cold water Peel tomatoes and cut in eights. Add corn and teaspoon salt and simmer 15 minutes. Cut frank furters in V inch slices and add to tomatoes and corn. Simmer 15 minutes more. White tomato mix ture simmers, cook spaghetti in boiling salted water until tender (about 12 minutes). Mix flour and cold water to make a paste. Add to tomato mixture, cook unui wicx ened, stirring constantly. Drain and rinse spaghetti. Fold into to mato mixture. Makes 4 servings. Another good main dish which makes happ, use of one of those nutritious gi -den vegetables is Savory doodles in Baked Squash. The noodles are rst cooked until tender then mixea with crumbled fork sausage and seasonings and eaped into baked squash halves. The dish then goes into the oven for 15 minutes baking so that all the good ingredients are blended skillfully into a delicious main dish. Savory Noodles In Baked Squash 2 medium acorn squash cup water 3 ounces medium noodles Vi pound ground pork sausago i'4 teaspoon salt V, teaspoon dry mustard i cup brown sugar Cut squash in halves. Remove seeds. Place cut side down in bak ing pan and add V4 cup water. Bake in moderate oven (350 F.) 30 minutes. While squash is bak ing, cook noodles in boiling salted water until tender (about 5 min utes). Drain and rinse. Brown pork sausage lightly, stirring it with fork to makejt crumbly. Mix with noodles. Brush inside of squash with sausage drippings. Sprinkle with 4 teaspoon salt Mix mustard and sugar. Sprinkle half over squash. Heap noodles and pork sausage into squash. Sprinkle top with remaining brown sugar mixture. Put squash Into oven and bake 15 minutes. Serve immediately. Makes 4 serv ings. Main dish macaroni salads art another place to use those good vegetables to extremely tasty ad vantage. Chopped cucumber, to matoes, celery, green pepper and enion join slivered braunschwei ger and macaroni to 'make a de lightful concoction. You may cook the macaroni in the morning, store it in the refrigerator until Just before time to serve, then "fresh en" it by running cold water through it. Mrs. Ralph Heln was hostess for members of the TPM club at her home on Lancaster drive Thurs day night. Dinner was served to Mrs. Nadine Hocker, Mrs. Louis Newman, Mrs. Laura Pangle, Mrs. Charles Botor'ff. Mrs. Elmer A. Terrill, Mrs. William McKlnney, Mrs. John Verstegg. Mrs. William .Hartley, Mrs. E. E, Brandt, Mrs. Sara Woodburn, Mrs. Fred Arls man. Miss Helen Hiller, Mrs. Wil liam Damery and the hostess. Re ceiving birthday honors were Mrs. Neuman and Mrs. Pangle. The evening was spent Informally., CLUB CALENDAR MONDAY Marlon uxUlery. Veternne of Foreign Wan. S pm. VFW hall. fTESDAT Son of Union Veteran and auxil iary, at Eufene Preeoott noma. 1064 Oak ttraet, 9.30 p m. BPW dinner meeting. Salem Wom an's clubhouse. 1:30 pm. WEDNESDAY Nebraska club auxiliary, with Mr. Nella Otborn rout 8. box loa-B. cov ered dlh luncheon at 12 30 p m. Royal Neighbor of America. 12 30 covered dun luncheon with Mrsi Ger trude Olaen. SIS South ZOth street. On Etiquette By Roberta Lee Q. In i restaurant, when your Bapkin falls from your lap to the Irlobr, do you pick it up and us it again? A. No: the waiter should give you a fresh napkin and pick up the fallen one. Q. Is It proper for a married woman to send a gift, in her name only, to bride-to-be? . A. No; she should always in clude her husband's- name. Q. Should a woman who has fust moved into a new neighbor hood extend the first invitation to some neighbor? A. No; it Is the privilege and duty of the established neighbor to make the first move? 01 Vine'. EUctric" 157 8. Uberty Vacuum Cleaner SALES SCXVICK XZTA1X& RENTALS Oa All Types Household or Commercial ' Also Wax era ALL 1T01E FTLLT CDAJtANTCED Free rtek-rj sae! DeUvery PHONE 3-9239 n't;;; r.jr - A i : i b . r .. " f " ' i ' ' 'i ) 'i . I f 1 1L r It i . " si . . - . e . a Mr. and Mrs. Frank Charles Rock. jr. (Pauline?. Morse) who jwer married on August 7 at St. Paul's Episcopal churdh The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Paul W. Morse and the groom's parents are the Frank C. Rocks. The couple will live tn Lcs Angeles. (McEwan photo). - f 4 Afternoon: Wedding Sunday ; Miss Patsy Kerber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Kerber, and Jackson) C. Grenz. son of Mr. and Mrs. William Grenz, of Albany wero married Sunday, at 2 o'clock in the St Joseph Catholic church. The afternoon ceremony was per formed by Father T. J, Bernards. Wayne Meusey was i soloist The bride was given away by her father. She wore a whito satin dress, fashioned with lace yoke trimmed with seed pearls and full court train. For something bor rowed She wore the illusion veil held with lace trimmed heart shaped i coronet of Mrs. Willard Hulbert. She carried a fan shaped bouquet of American Beauty roses centered with a white orchid. Mrs. Bernard Grindje was mat of honbr. She wore ' a lavender marquisette dress wlthi bertha col lar and tight fitting bodice. She carried: a crescent shaped bouquet of green carnation. The bridesmaid was Mirgit Grenz, who wort a green marquisette dress and car ried a bouquet of lavender carna tions, i Acting as best man was William Grenz, brother of the groom. Ush ers were Darwin Kerber, brother of the bride, James Amman, cousin of the groom. Mrs. Kerber chose- for her daughter's wedding a gown of lav ender trep. Mrs. Grenz wore a dress of plum colored crepe and both had corsages of r)iubrum lil ies. - ) , :. Following the ceremony the cou ple greeted their friends at a re ception! held in the Veteran of For eign Wars hall. Mrs. James Am man poured and Mrs. Paul Shafer, aunt of the bride, cut the cake. As sisting were Miss Beverly McMil lan, Miss Beverly Marr, Mrs. Charles Whittlemore iand Mrs. Newell Williams. For her going away the bride wore a; navy blue suit, with white hat and navy accessories. They will be at home in Albany.! Truman Ends Yaicht Cruise I U. a C T7Txt-"t--ixt ; a . , . 1 nu. it tJT7- President Truman ended h( wMk. end cruise on the Potomac river this afternoon. " The presidential yacltf the "Wil liamsburg" returned : to Its dock at the; naval gun factory at 3:30 P nr. eastern standard time. Mr. t Truman drove at once to Blair House. temDoranr nrwaidm. tial residence while f the White House la undergoing repairs. our nay-cnp A Personal, yee get eaak kkly becaBse lUte TXS MAN alone makes the de etsJea. Ho says "yes" te 4 etrt ef i prenptly. Am yea select the peysaeat pUa snest isattiltst rheee or visit Ue YES MAM today. H ' ' j LOANS $U WiH oa Asto FlMANa ' i fit SUte ' Km. US ! Phone t-UU CJK. Allesw Mgr. Lie. S-122-M-m I I 2eiwLr kMtfl ca n m 1 a- r I ' 1 j J . Cadet Invites Millions to June Wedding NEW YORK. Aug. 21-0P-Quiz shows are wonderful, but what do you do with a thousand wed ding guests? That was today's problem for West Point Cadet Ralph Stephen son and his 24-year-old fiancee. Miss June McFarland of Yonkers. They stepped up to the micro phone Friday on ABCs "Break the Bank" program and won S4, 10. Overcome by a rash impulse of delight. Cadet Stephenson invited the audience all several mil lions of it to his wedding next June in the cadet chapeL Stephen son, a hospitable southerner, comes from Jena, La. The chapel holds 1,500, and by noon today 1,000 had wired or phoned their acceptances. Ralph and June are shuddering now waiting for Mondays mail. "Are. we in a spotf giggled the happy Miss McFarland. "I hope some of them have short mem ories." Even so. Miss McFarland thinks quiz shows are just wonderful even if the federal communica tions commission has banned them effective October 1. GIs Injured in Japan Wreck YOKOHAMA, Aug. 21 -UP)-Two Japanese were killed and three U. S. enlisted men were injured today In a train-truck collision which derailed four cars and a locomotive. A special eight-car train was taking 160 Americans from Yoko hama on an excursion to Nikko, a scenic city of temples and tombs 73 miles north of Tokyo. The train hit the truck, driven by the two Japanese, about 23 miles from Nikko. The Americans' Injuries were slight Their nam and home ad dresses were not available im mediately. DO YOU LIKE tin a unci fiTT::3f;n:mf::3STcrj Made by the Sakers of Master Bread 0 fi's ll!li3 Four Senatoi Denounce U.S. j By Oliver M. DeWelf WASHINGTON. Au. 21 -JPh Four; ranking senators bitterly de nounced today the state depart ment's white paper on China as a "white wash of a wishful, do nothing policy." They demanded "immediate ana adequate military aid" for the Chinese government which the white paper assailed. The four. Senators Bridges (R- NH), McCarran (D-Nev). Wherry (R-Neb) and Knowland R-Caur), said in a Joint statement that "in stead of facing facts in China and admitting its error, the state de partment still buries its bead in the sand and issues a white paper. They directed strong personal cri ticism at Secretary of State Ache- son. ' "China still has not succumb ed." j the four senators declared. adding: Lacks Weapons j The Chinese government still i holds a greater area of the coun-: try than it did after the first year of war with Jagbn. What the Chi nese army iacss more inan any thing else are the weapons which the state department dangerously advises be withheld from its armies. "Against the government troops, deprived of arms and equipment by this shortsighted state depart ment policy, the communists fight with a wealth of weapons. Diverted from Lend -Lease "Most of these as the white paper points out were surrend ered by the Japanese to the Rus sians. What the white paper has neglected to state, however, is that reports indicate that some of the communists' U. S.-manufactured weapons have been diverted to them out of the United States' wartime $11,000,000,000 lend-lease to Soviet Russia. For propaganda purposes, communists have claim ed to have captured it all from the nationalist government" The protesting senators also said that "the white paper says China lost huge quantities of mu nitions sent from the United States. Suffered from Embargo "What it does not say," they commented, "is that China has suffered from an embargo on United States military aid." The joint statement criticized Acheson for "vacillating when the situation cries aloud for decisive forthright action to retrieve losses already sustained." The statement added: "There is no publicly revealed evidence that Secretary Acheson is making any forthright efforts for unifying China's neighbors against the oncoming red armies. "His efforts to make Chiang Kai-shek a scapegoat for the blunders of present and past ad ministrations in Washington ' is shallow. It has been rejected by every' competent observer of the tragic record of betrayal of China running back years." Housekeeper Said Brains' In Theft Ring WICHITA. Kan., Aug. 21 -(&)- A widowed rooming house keeper was charged today with being the mastermind behind a wave of bur glaries with loot worth thousands of dollars. Two young boarders at her house said she was so keen she would figure out burglaries they engineered without her knowledge from newspaper accounts. Then hhe'd put out her palm to them an demand her cut, they said. The graying woman said it wasn't so. "I absolutely did not know the boys were doing anything like that," said Mrs. Frances E. 11c Call, 59, as she was arrainged be fore City Judge Al Blase. Jr. "I had nothing to do with it." She furnished bail of $2,000 on burglary charges. r I 'Z GCT? SAVE S ! UP TO Now Reduced Rates On Your Auto Insurance! IfO AGE, MILEAGE OR BUSINESS USE VTCBAXG UA1IUTT INSUIAMCI StrOetS.MOf BeeHy laiary (MM Property Pessaee SlMDar Savlaqs a ! fen-a Cell!.!! litaTaiet Thm Wfr Lmmdlad FARMERS INSURANCQ EXCHANGE BILL OSHO j iSS Court St. Phone 3-5 31 Paid $50 for 5-Minutrflah SEATTLE, Aug. 2WVT0mmy Murphy got SSfrfor about j five minutes of paintmg Saturday but figured he was underpaid.-. He painted the flagpolelatop the 42-story Smith tower, j The pole extends beyond a glass fball atop Seattle's tallest building, "The climb up the glass baU scared me more than getting out on the pole," the 28-year-od fa talist commented. "I wouldn't have taken the job if times weren't getting tough." Investigator j Queries Ailing Freezer Donor By Marvia L. Arrowsmith WASHINGTON, Aug. 21H5V Boring into the motive for the gift of home freezers to Washing ton higher-ups, senate investiga tors today studied new information obtained from the head of the per fume firm which footed the bill. The special senate subcommittee conducting the i-.'quiry sent a man to Chicago, it was learned, to question ailing David Bennett, wealthy president of the Albert Verley Co. j The questioning of Bennett, a committee source said, took place last week, a few day after the senate probers quizzed Harry Hoff man, Milwaukee advertising man, behind closed doors in Washington. The investigators declined to dis cuss what Bennett had to say. Named 'as Donors Bennett and Hoffman have been named as the donors of the freezers by .Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan President Truman's agjE aide. Vaughan- said they gave the units to him in 1945 out of friendship, and that he in turn had them sent to prominent Washing .onians. One went to the summer White House in Independence, Mo. Hoffman whose- firm handles the Verley ad vertising, said he obtained the freezers for Bennett's company. The committee expects to con-' elude this week its public inquiry into whether improper influence has figured m the handling of gov ernment business. Hearings will be resumed Tuesday. Beside Vaughan, who is expect ed to testify Wednesday br Thurs day, the committee plans to call: Maj. Gen. Herman Feldman, sus pended quartermaster general of the army. To Summon Mar ax on John Maragon, fast-talking far mer shoeshiner who once had a pass to the White House. And, health permitting, James V. Hunt, Washington management counsellor who collects big fees for help in getting government con tracts for others, ti Hunt is un able to take the stand, he probably win submit an affidavit, commit tee members said. Other witnesses have testified that Hunt boasted of ; an inside track to the White House through friendship with Vaughan. Tourist Loses Wife,Daughter VANCOUVER. B.'C. Aug. 21- GP)-A bewildered Scottish tourist who "lost" his wife and daughter on a trip here from Scenic, Wash., has gone to Bradner, B. C, to find them. David Mathieson, of Ayrt, was given the address after he was unable to traoe James Watson here. Watson was the man with whom his family left the top of a mountain at Scenic when Ma thieson said he was afraid to de scend' by automobile. He followed by train, was to meet them here Saturday, but could not find the man. Police told him Mathieson lives in Bradner. 12 70 Carreer tares Cca Meets TfcssetS rh.PeJtef See "On the Spot" Claim. Service National Standard Policy Amm Im Yugoslavia Tells of Soviet 4Doublecross' Br The Associated Pre LONDON. Aug. 21 -(X- Yugo slavia renewed the word battle with ner big Russian antagonist today despite the threats of Mos tow. Marshall T 1 1 o' s government published a note replying to the Soviet note of Augustll which declared Yugoslavia's regime is now considered an enemr of the Soviet Union. The new Yugoslav note said Russia is a doublecrosser because ' she abandoned on the sly the support of Yugoslavia claims against Austria. Tito had not yet replied to the note, even more bitter in tone, broadcast from Moscow Saturday night. This called his regime Fascist and threatened "more ef fective, measures" for protection of Soviet citizens from alleged mistreatment in Yugoslavia. Sought Big 4 Concessions Belgrade's latest note, broadcast by the official Yugoslav news agency Tan jug, charged that the r Kremlin sold out Yugoslav inter ests in Slovene Crainthia (south ern Austria) to assure "agreement on its own claims to German as sets in Austria" from other mem bers of the Big Four. It bristeled with such terms as "lies and slanders." "distortions of the truth" and "unworthy insinu ations" in replying to Moscow's charges. Today's note was the sixth in an increasingly bitter exchange which seemed to foreshadow some show down, diplomatic or otherwise. Even Stronger Note Saturday night, the Moscow radio broadcast the text of a note which was even stronger. It com pared Tito's government to that of Generalissimo Franco of Spain and the "Monarcho-Fascists" of Greece in its alleged forture of Soviet citizens in Yugoslavia. The Moscow note defended the Cominform resolution of June, 1948, which urged the Yugoslav communist party to "renovate" its leadership, as entirely constitu tional and legal. But Moscow de nied the Cominform urged an overthrow of the Yugoslav gov ernment by force. Nevertheless Marshall Tito has been reported shifting his troops in Macedonia between two Cominform allies, Bulgaria and Albania and he has publicly warned that his army was pre pared to fight any invader. HOT KNIFE PROCESS NEW YORK -(INS)- The old trick of cutting butter with a hot knife has been borrowed to chop steel in warehousing operations. Steelways Magazine reports that the outside edgo of a spinning steel saw generates so much heat the material simply melts at the contact point. In Mexico, Brazil and other parts of the American tropics, fire flies grow to one to two inches in. length. OY ft. C O t 10 O A fl The Statesman, Salem, Oregon. Monday Angus IX U4-y Farm Lad Free From Infection GASTON. Ore Aug. 21 -4P-Farm Lad Harry Forquer has won his fight against tetanus infection and will be home tomorrow for his 14th birthday. He stepped on a rusty nail early last month and had been stricken with lockjaw. On the menu list tomorrow is fresh corn on the cob. Harry wants to prove to his family he really can chew away after weeks of in travenus feeding. GOP Senator Sees Politics in FarraBiiraf WASHINGTON, Aug: 2WiPPA republican senator. Young of North Dakota, today jumped into a boil ing senate argument about next year's farm program with a charge that democrats are playing politics. "I deplore the inaction of the democratic administration on the farm price-support legislation," Young told a reporter. "It Is due entirely to politics." Pointing out that democrats won control of congress last year, Young said "they promised farmers a bet ter price-support bill and It is up to them to deliver." Promises Cooperation ; "Democrats have an 8 to 5 ra tio on the senate agriculture com mittee and they still lack any a greement on the program," he said. "I will cooperate with them even as far as reporting a bill to the senate though I may not agree with sill of it" ' Young is a member of a subcom mittee under Senator Anderson (D-NM), former-secretary of. agri culture which worked out a com promise farm measure. It would keep price props for major crops at about present levels next year and permit declines later If sur pluses arose. Bailds Opposition ' Chairman Elmer Thomas (D Okla) of the senate agriculture committee has been building up opposition to the Anderson com promise, and advocating the house approved plan for another year's extensfon of rigid, high-level gov ernment farm price props. Secretary of Agriculture Bran nan, who succeeded Anderson as the Truman farm cabinet member. has been criticizing both the An- ! derson compromise and the house approved price supports. At the same time he continued to plug for the Brannan farm subsidy plan re jected so far by congress. " A showdown between Chairman Thomas and Senator Anderson on their conflicting Ideas may come Monday afternoon. Thomas called the 13 -member committee Into closed session to their a report from Anderson on the 7-member subcommittee that drafted the compromise bllL c . r- ' i" ' er A " Y tYes, you can plan your own future security. Open a savings account here at The United States National Bank and then save a definite amount each month. 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Order your tickets by mailt Take advantage el thie oppertuaitf te order reaervatioaa now for thia ape' tacular event bifftr and mere 4ieraW fted thaa ever. Even in t performance S.00 P.M. daily Matinee 2;M P.M. Eifjkr eveninf perfermeKCe 4r Sunday Meriaee price folio we: Bet Seert S1.C0 Neit 7 et I1.4A firs 4 Retrt S J 00 Le.t 2 Rew j Popular Priced Matinees , October 8Hi, 1 4th, 1 5H f AH Seen Unreserved . . $l .0 - Met me e Soiet $IM : AN tnke include Federol To GMterol Admission to Entire Expo..xi !. 4-H and FFA Show-Oct. 7.1 2 j Dog Show Oct. 14 and 15 Reservations accepted now. Mall order early, enclosing self-addressed, etewpej) envelope, and check or money erdee to address below ftel t North PortUweJ, Ore Ass. Mae, o i o o A t to S3M oe Salary. FnrBitore