I'., k. fi Miss Phyllis Nancy Brewster, daughter o Mr. and Mrs. Gordon "L. Brewster, who recently- announced her betrothal to Ronald S. Blume, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Blume. No wedding date has been set ; f ! i c Easy Does It Fruit, Nut Breads Good Food For Entertaining; Made Ahead ;.v - ' '., 1 - - . j1 -I -j It,, '-: t ' Br. MjucIb Beren Statesman Womn's Editor Fruity breads, which can be made a day or mort ahead, are treat aids to the hostess who is entertaining witth the sort of af fair where sandwichey are the main refreshment. : One or more kinds of bread, merely spread with butter, makes e satisfactory substitute for Open faced sandwiches, are much : simpler to prepare. The family will like the leftovers, too. A plain nutbread Is food: . NUTBUAD egg - ' ;,!:! X cup sugsr 4 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder Beateggs, add milk and sifted dry ingredient. Add nuts which have been moistened and flouted, mix. This makes e stiff dough. Let stand half hour In two small loaf pahs. When reedy to belie, 1 teaspoon salt X cup milk 1 cup nuts, chopped! push up Into corners, bake at 132S degrees for about an Orange bread's usually a safe bet:, 1! OSANOI atftXAD' X Z teaspoons baking powder cups flour cup sugar -. .- '- teaspoon salt hour. X eup milk ' 1 cup nuts i X cup fresh candied orange peel Sift dry ingredient, add orange peel and nuts, then milk. Bake eee hour starting arS23 and Increasing heat to 150 last II mla- mes ms.mM.wm a veu ami sxmm smv suhh tenus. CIANBIXtT NUT BUAD " 1 cup cranberries 1 cup sugar S cups sifted flour , 4 teaspoons baking powder X teaspoonsalt Qhop cranberries and mix eup chopped walnuts grated rind 1 orange i 1 egg I ; X cup mfflc ; 1 tablespoons melted butter with cup sugar. Sift remaieini sugar with flour, baking powder ! and salt, and add nuts and range rind. Beat egg slightly! and combine with milk and melted ' butter; add to first mixture. Fold in cranberries. Bake In greased bread pan in a moderate oven (150. degrees F.) X hour. Chiircli Group Holds Meeting At Gervais lUtMau Nawi Snrtc GERVAIS The annual con gregational meeting of the Pres byterian church members was held following the monthly family supper Wednesday In the church parlors.' ! Mrs. Buford Brown. Miss Lu zerne Hanes and Glen Trussell. accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brown to Seattle where Brown will complete his studies in theo logy. - Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Henning were hosts for a dinner Wednes day. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Mexvin Ringo. Mr. and Mrs. George Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Pat McLaughlin. Mr. and Mrs. Phil LaBarr, all of Wood burn, and Mr. and Mrs. Antoine ; DeJardin: Ca nasta was played with high scores awarded to Mr. and Mrs. Pat Mc Laughlin and second to Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Ringo.! An old-time dance and auction sale will be given tor the benefit of the local PTA all the Firemen's hall Wednesday night, January IS. The first meeting of the new year of Gervais chapter lis. Or der of the .Eastern Star, will be held Friday night, . January with Mrs. Oscar Evans, worthy matron, and Oscar Evans, worthy patron, presiding, I Valley; Oriefo UUaua Notts Service Fedee The Polk county Far mers union's quarterly meeting will be held January 11 st Buena Vista, opening at 10 am. A no host dinner will be served at noon. Pedee David Crupper, eight-month-old son of i Mr. and. Mrs. Neil Crupper, underwent surgery recently for removal of an open safety pin which he swollowed. ' .- : ! -'( . ! Pioneer Mrs. John Calavan, local teacher, is recovering in a Portland hospital i following a major operation. Mrs. G. C Dorn hecker of Dallas is substituting at the school for Mrs. Calavan. Fieaeer Mrs. R. E. Smith re ceived word here that her grand mother, Mrs. Mollie Tucker, died la Texas. She was 92 years old and the mother of C. L. Tucker of Rosedale. Fieaeer R. E. Smith ' re ceived word that his mother, Mrs. R. A. Smith, suffered a stroke in San Angelo, Texas. P Dallas The legislative meet ing of the Dallas WCTU will be held at the Evangelical Mennon lte Brethern church January 10, beginning with a covered dish dinner at 6:30. Mrs. R. W. Mc Cormick, vice president will pre side. - Taraer Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wheeler left for Los Angeles this week and will visit la Arizona be fore returning home. Taraer Mrs.; Marrois Peter sen, who is ill In a Salem .hospi tal, is reportedly! improving and expects to come home this week. Sflverten Janice Johnson, a student at Pacific Lutheran col lege at Parkland, i Washington, re turned to her studies there Mon day. Her brother Keith, who at tends the university of Washing ton at Seattle, returned earlier. Both spent their holidays with their parents, Mr. and . Mrs. Os wald Johnson of Waldo Kills. gUvertea Lawrence Palmer, superintendent ef the Silverton city disposal plant, returned to CdNNIENCE j 1 Hll V Q CLEANLINESS i fuVidy If oa havent used this. 1 ccenoreesed fad trv lre-to-lots- now! Yon will be amazed at the intense last 1 ins heat these five von. No amoks cankers no toot or fames less than a shovel of ashes to a ton. The tfrretttion of the "Pres-te-logs com pressing machine pro-' rides us with the finest, deaneit solid fuel the world keews.Tres-to-kgs" make caring for Jires pleasure they cwr ummw ImI ' fii r aaxlean and con- i m titr i i i ventent. ...-0';;: r affSMti 1 f. Thkikelit aTONofPree tO'lofs" eses less then 2i cubic feet of etorage space a ment isn't needed simply store them In the kitchen, hatf or pantry. No trash or dirt. Highly concentrated. Xconomical to use. Order a supply today. SOLD DY Gapilol Lnmbcr Zo. " North Ckerry Avenne Phcme C82 or 24431 TFTIT n U ; i - in , V w COLDEN WIDDINC IN B A V A R I A-. Jakeb Berstager and his wife, Anna. rUe le tha ehmrch far a renewal of their Yews ea their SOth wtddmg aJuUrersary bt Altwtesee, Geraaay. Pedee District Receiving New Phone Lines Itatesawa Ntwt Servks i FEDEX Telephones have been Installed ,in many homes from Ma ple Groye to the Pedee school house and the remaining homes on the highway will receive theirs this week. Work on the lines on county roads is progressing rapidly and the job is expected to be com pleted late In January. This com munity has been without tele phone service with the exception of the private line along the Val ley and SHetz railroad since Camp Adair was established during World War IL Prior 4o that time the line ex tended to the Pedee store. The first line to Kings Valley was built about 43 years ago with Alrile as the central office. This service was discontinued In 1923. Hazel Green ScouU on Mt. Hood Ski Jaunt StaUcatsa Nsws St rvks HAZEL GREEN Explorer Scouts ef the Hazel Green troop went sking at Government Camp near Mt Hood Sunday. Going were BUlie Rossow, Donald and George j Bowlsby, ?ob Johnson, Ray Rfcksxd, Otis Phillips and Dickie Haury. They were accom panied by Paul Rlckard and Roy and JIn Vibbert , S Gregory Dennis Manning, first baby born in Salem in 1950, is the grandson of Mrs., Dorothy Zle linixi of Hazel Green. work Tuesday -following several months lay-off because of a frac tured spine. A. M. Lewis substi tuted for Palmer during the let ter's illness. I Orchard lulrhai Th rwk. ard Heights Women's Social club meeting ichedt-sd for Thursday niahL Januarr L has been mtMi. led due to the weather. SUvertea Tfce SJlerton Vol unteer! lire depal.Seot was caUed out Tuesday nlf; i to cneck a chimney fire at t I XJHian Fowl er home at 119 I Jj street Amity Couple Hosts At New Years Party News Service AMITY Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson entertained with a watch night party Saturday. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Tharold Robison and Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Peterson. J. A. Cronin, Amity high school agriculture teacher, traveled to Burns over the week end for a visit with his parents. Poultry Man Says 'A Hen Is a Lady' -Treat Her Gently OMAHA-vfVA hen is a lady and you'd better treat her like one, according to Clarence Touts, Omaha poultry store manager. Knock before entering a lady chicken's quarters Just as you would knock before entering any other lady's room, he recommends. Pouts said that's the way to avoid trouble when dealing with hens. His comment was in reply to a woman newspaper reader who complained, In a letter to the "Omaha World-Herald." about the noisiness and bad behavior of her hens. As Touts puts it: "If you were a lady and someone walked into your room without knocking, what would you do? You'd prob ably fly into the air. flap your anna and tell the intruder to leave." DENMARK CALL MADE SILVERTON John Bertel sen, foreman for the Noble Fix ture company and resident of 211 North James ave., enjoyed a six minute conversation Sunday with his brother William and two sis ters, Mrs. Katrine Christehsen and Mrs. Anna Hendrickson of Herning, Denmark. The Danish folk reported that their families were in good health and that con ditions in their country were nor mal again. IfEXTXNO POITPONED SILVERTON Stormy wea ther necessitated the calling off of the January meeting of the Sil verton Business and Professional Women's club. The meeting was to have been held Tuesday night at the Eugene Field auditorium. Displaced families who have come to the Silverton community to live were to have been guests. The meeting will now be combined Art Students Begin Studying At All Ages WESTPORT, Conn. (INS) There la no ae limit on aspiring artists according to noted Illus trator Albert Dorne, president of the Institute of Commercial Art Dome, whose associates Include such world famous artists as Nor man Rockwell, Steve Dohanos, Jon Whltcomb, Fred Ludekens, Al Parker, Robert Fawcett and many others, said an eighty-four year old woman was among the school's first pupils. Eighty-three per cent of the stu dents are over 21 and over 40 per cent j are women. Most of the pupils work In other jobs, such as office workers, factory hands, clerks and executives. Dorne is a paradoxical excep tion, to the old axiom that artists are supposed to be poor business men. Dorne, born on New York's East Side, achieved success as a lead ing magazine illustrator by the sweat of his brow end of his hands. His career has been eventful, tumultuous, gilded with highs and spotted with lows. Now on top, Dorne has long. been aware how the proper aid to art talent may well spell the difference between accomplishment and failure for Incipient artists. It was Dome's Idea to group to gether America's top Illustrators into a faculty for a correspond ence school. Over a period of years he has been besieged by requests from thousands of persons seek ing advice, help and Job in the field of art . In the short year It has been in operation, hundreds of unsolicit ed testimonials have come Into the Institute, especially as regards the methods of correcting the work of students. Dome, Rockwell, Dohanos and the other professors not only per sonally criticize advanced pupil' work but make many drawings to demonstrate how the pupil may improve himself. with the February meeting. Mrs. F, J. Roubal, club president, reports. I70C9 - f FRESHLY GROUND naniurgcr Jb. 35c FRESH COUNTRY Sansago TENPER SUNLESS Uioners u jb 35 c YOUNG TENDER Pork Liver Mttl r 35c 13 HAM, 13 POBX 13 VEAL Ham Loaf 4Sc LEAK MEATY Short Dibs jb. Salmon Sfeoli 55c Oalibiil Sfcali EASTERN ORE. HEREFORD Dec! Boas! Jb. 45c Arm Cuta Blade Cats Ramp EASTERN ORE. HEREFORD Dcof Slcalrs Bonada T-looos We Make Our Own Every Day! Fresh Linli Sansago jb. HormelTa No. 1 Top Qualirf CaredFull Clice Sliced Bacoii Special ' - Jb. FreeJh--FuIly Dressed and Drawn Largo Colored Fryers USEES IS Eastern Ore. Hereford Lean, Young The Statesman, Salem, Oregon. Thursday. Tannccry 3. 195ft 9 'Tall Tales' in Alaska Dwarf Texas Stories KODIAK. Alaska, (INS) r-r Texaas who talk about their un common commonwealth are out classed outdistanced and outdone by atffcjf;, That, at least 1 the conclusion et Capt, I J. Dew, new comman der el the naval air station at Kedtakl ; Two veers service la Texas and twe weeks la Alaska prompted him te say: - "They tell la Texas of the Tex an and the California who each had $11 to buy shoes. Ok, These Texaas The Texan, they say, would buy a $10 pair of boots and braj about bow good they were. . The Calif oralan would buy 10 $1 pairs of shoes and braf about how many shoes he had. T "But, In Alaska, a fellow with $10 would start beefing ' about having to bounce $10 more to buy the other shoe.1 t ; Captain Dow, former command ing oficer of the naval air station at Dallas (a town in Texas), Con tinued his contention that Alaska puts even Texas In the shade, say ing: "A Texan thinks his state's 26249$ square miles is a big piece of land. But Alaska has. 588.400 square miles more than twice as big with mora than twice as much to talk about, Mag-Shod Bovine "Texas boasts about It bo vines, claiming If all were rolled into one, the front feet ' of that ' one would be in the Gulf of Mexico; the hind feet la Hudson Bay. the horns in the moon and the tail swishing the Aurora Boreelis. ' "But, If that composite row ever met up with the rub ef a Kodiak bear, sourdoughs would bo prospecting for steaks all over Captain Dow says: m "I want to become an Alaskan. I hope I can stay long enough to meet all the qualifications, one of which la telling off Texaa." And, to the stand taken by a' Texas congressman against state hood for Alaska,: Captain Dow' aays: "This Texas congressman wants Alaska divided into four states. That's proof that at least one Tex an knows Alaska will be the big gest state In the Union." fs ' On the great day Alaska gets statehood, says Captain Dow, all the tall tales in Texas wont buy a abort snort in Sitka! I THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO EVERY HOUSE O 0 o o DuJSDGDG 0 On The Outside . . . were you You can fix tiidte leaks whsk h?$ talalaj with Wct-PcHJa, the tough, durable, aihe siye 'riisgCTffk i fist tcUt surfaces. Simpij spread it over firebreak or leaky place am! pr reat further tiirase to interiors. Keep at cava htndy it all times for emergency use. 72c Overt A' aart wUt .weatfcerpreef Che average ehlmaey. On The Inside BCfltoV- TO . . are you thsi&tt thfit dries in an hourl ft V Qiooee Texolite for qual ity, for color This fart ap plying, fast drying paint covers most Interior surfaces and wallpapers In one coat Styled by experts,, enJorseci jby famous interior decora toes. To help you decorate, get your copy of the new book, "Color, Keynote of Interior Decoration " tius.o.a.rM.oii I painted right oyer aid wallpaper today! n n "i o q oi M - - v-vZ. mm a V i I RrQualiy-RrOJo L c J "Txolite 3.79 1 - DITSOXT STOKE SOLD DETROIT Raymond Sophy ; , has bought the stock belonging to the Santlam Food Mart and has moved It te the Detroit Market. t He has leased the building which has "been used by the operators et the. Food Market Mrs. Nola Rat nick and Mrs. Delmar Nelson, for mer operators of the Saatiam Food Mart, wul remain la De troit Jb. . I