I 1b EbrAwmnwrn. Sclwa, Oregon, Friday. JJt lh US? P00 Two Salads in Cool Category Use Gelatine Here is an aspic which will be a refreshing addition to your sum mer menus. The summer varieties of Calavos are in the market now and make a wonderful salad in gredient. Aspics are more than welcome on torrid days, and this one is tops. AVOCADO ASPIC t (10-ounce) cans condens ed consomme 1 envelope plain gelatine I tablespoon cold water 1 tablespoon cidar vinegar 1 tablespoon prepared mustard Vt cup mayonnaise 1 cup cubed avocado cup ripe olives 4 hard-cooked eggs Salt Lettuce Heat consomme. Soften gelatine In cold water and dissolve in hot consomme. Stir in vinegar and mustard. Chill until thick but not firm. Beat mayonnaise into gela tine mixture. To prepare avocado, cut into halves and remove seed and skin. Cut into cubes. Cut tives from pits. Slice eggs. Sprinkle Calavo and egg lightly with salt and add to gelatin-mayonnaise mixture with ripe olives. Blend lightly. Pour into oiled pan or mold, and chill until firm. Un mcld. Slice and serve on lettuce. Serves 8 or more. , j Cool as a sea breeze, this lime salad perks up a summer meal. There's something about fresh lime juice that is like a refreshing tonic and in combination with Slices of canned cling peaches, it Inakes salad history. PEACH LIME SALAD 1 envelope (1 tablespoon) plain gelatine V cup lime juice Vi cup granulated sugar teaspoon salt 1 cup hot water cup syrup from canned cling peaches jT teaspoon grated lime rind 1 cup canned cling peach slices k cup coarsely grated carrot to cup chopped celery 1 tablespoon chopped green sweet pepper Salad greens Soften gelatine in lime juice. Dissolve sugar, salt and softened gelatine in hot water. Stir in peach syrup and rind, and cool until slightly thickened. Fold in drained peaches, carrot, celery and pepper. Turn into individual molds or pan (about 6x8 inches) and chill until firm. Unmold or cut into squares and serve on salad Keens. Serve with desired dress f. Serves 8. Swedish Woman Expert on Washington D. C. Designer I V7 1 ri ?4us-a ..... - . x y-.---- I I Or v'A -?hA .ji,- '2X: ' ' : 1 7--f-z.' ruJZFJ ' f-f t'f Rolled out cookies, made Into balls and rolled in crisp rice cereal make good afternoon snacks. Press balls down to make a depression and fill with jam. Home Made Sundae Your children will love an ice cream sundae made this way. Put a canned peach half in the bottom of a sherbet dish and fill with a scoop of hard vanilla ice cream. Cover with crushed sweetened strawberries. ADD TO MIX July is Picnic Month and at time of year when cookies are most popular. You can make such good ones with packaged mixes these days. Additions of chopped wal nuts and plump seedless raisins make them better than ever. .u III Here's nuking the most of a good plum teaming up with raspber ri for jelly . . . using the pulp lor spicy butter. vk red wnDitted alwms 3 cwp rpbTri 1 cwp water Cook covered, each washed fruit in Vt cup water: plums 12 minutes, raspberries 5 minutes. Extract each juice separate ly? let drip from dampened jelly nag. When dripping slows, proae bag against side of bowl with poon. Measure 3 cups plum Jatee (save pulp for Butter) ; 1 Cups raspberry juice. A Easy way luitk one of the most impressive of all detterts! Fill 9 in. baked pastry shell with 1 pt. vanilla ice cream. Top with 1 14 cups beriiea or sliced peaches, sweetened with Vz cup Beet Sugar. Cover to pastry edge (to insulate) with meringue made of 3 egg whites. V tap. cream of tartar, cup Beet Sugar. Place V-in folded newspaper (to insu late) between pie pan and cookie sheet. Bake in very hot oven (450 F.) about 4 min. or until light golden brown. Cut and serve at once. Serves 6. (Save last min ute rush! Sweeten fruit and beat meringue ahead. They'll keep 1 hour, if refrigerated. Assemble and bake as above.) i juices in preserving ket Os. Stir in 9 cups Beet Sugar. te boil on high beat; boil 1 . Remove from neat; sttr in wU cup liquid fruit pectin. Skam. Peur into hot, sterilised leHy glasses; parafia at once. Makes about 9 (8-ounce) gli TEASPOONS Nature has a sugar factory uurids every green leaf of growing plants. The sugar beet stores sugar in its long root and, on the average, produces 14 tspa. of pure sugar. In all the world there i$ mo betterf purer, sweeter emftar than U.S.' grown Beet SttXr. 'IP"' -!l!fl:' Frees pulp trough colander. In preaerrasf kettle stir into each 4 cups pulp, tcaps Beet Sugar. H tap. ground cinnamon. V tsp. each salt, ground mace. Bring to boiL Turn down heat, cook till thick, about ft minutes (or until two thick, heavy drops run together off dean metal spoon), stirring often, Remove from beat; pour into hot. Sterilized jars; seal at once. Makes ftfiout 4 half pint. -Well Preserved" 30 pages of grand recipes, including unusual treats of uncooked jellies and frozen jama "Answers By The Canning Doctor 56-page guide on home-canning and freezing. COSSBSIt SItVKf wisnxi gar sua! pteeecias, isc M.ts X9H,SeaffKfclV Socond Profession For Women Listed Home economics now ranks sec ond to teaching among professions in which women are engaged. The graduation of 80,000 home economists from U. S. colleges In the last 10 years alone has brought about a revolution in homemaking and a virtually new science of "kltcheneering," says Dr. Helen Judy-Bond, who is head of the Home Economics Department at Teachers College, Columbia Uni versity. This year nearly 9,000 mora graduates will start their main task teaching householders how to raise standards of health, com fort and efficiency. Many will go into industry. Some will join the farm extension teaching services. Many will join women's magazines. Still others will become consultants in the food processing field. WAFFLE SANDWICH Use your waffle iron for this quick hot sandwich. Cut a canned luncheon loaf into individual serv ing slices and make into sand wiches. Place them in your iron and heat until a golden brown. By JANE EADS WASHINGTON (IF) A young Swedish woman, Harriet Waern, probably knows more about Maj. Pierre L'Enfant, who drew up the plans for the nation s capital city, than most Americans. Miss Waern who is working for a Ph.D, in fine arts at the University of Stock holm, says she's mainly interested in the French-born soldier, engin eer and architect as an artist. She was deep in research on the L'En fant plan in the map division of the Library of Congress when I met her. "The literature on L'Enfant is extensive in this country," she said. "But at home and even in France, for that matter, the man and his work are little known. L'Enfant, who came to this coun try at 23, and volunteered as a private in the American Revolu tion, first won Washington s at tention with his design for the in signia of the Society of Cincinnati. At the war's close he remodeled the New York city hall to serv e as a temporary seat for the federal government. Washington asked him to submit plans for the cap ital at Washington in 1789. "He had no city to start from, first created the capital on pa per, drawing his ideas from Eu ropean cities, mostly from Versail les, Miss Waern said. "He was the only artist at the time in Washington. His contemporaries seemed quite satisfied, but he was dismissed after a year. L'Enfant presented his plans in 1791 but antagonized Congress by what President Washington de scribed as his "untoward disposi tion" and was opposed by Thomas Jefferson. He was forced to re sign in 1792. However, in 1889 the plans were brought from the fed eral archives, and in 1801 the city was developed along the lines he laid down. Miss Waern got interested In L'Enfant during her first visit to America in 1946 on an honorary fellowship provided by the Amer ican Scandinavian Foundation. She studied for two years at Harvard's Fogg Museum. Slender, blue-eyed and with fresh, rose-petal coloring. Miss Waern is the daughter of a Swed ish shipping official and has a brother, Borpje Waern, in the shipping business in New York. She expects to spend the summer in France and West Germany, continuing her research project. Eventually she wants to get into museum work with the National Museum in Stockholm. In fact Miss Waern spends all her spare time in our museums and has collected many ideas to take home with her. QUICK SALAD Here's an easy summer salad to make with canned foods. Canned shrimp, crab and ripe olives. Cut the olives from pits into large pieces and combine with the shrimp and crab. Add some sliced celery and toss lightly with may onnaise, accented with a generous squirt or two of fresh lemon juice. Incidentally, this is good hot or cold. HOT WEATHER SPCCIAL) On a hot day, fix yourself a luncheon tray and take It to a shady porch or lawn to eat. For the main plate make an arrange ment ofunstemmed cherries, fresh halved apricots, plump cooked prunes and 1-inch chunks of wat ermelon. Place the fruits on salad greens and center with a large scoop t creamy cottage cheesa. Iced tea and a roll complete the meaL RICH FILLING Soften a package of cream cheese with enough orange juice to give a thick spreading consist ency. Stir in y cup chopped roasted almonds and spread be tween thick slices of fruit nut bread. Cut into fingers and serve with a summer luncheon salad. Flavor ike Mere Make JAM and JELLY with SURE-JELL pectin today! Yoi jet fitter, real fresh-fnrit flavor wrti Sart-Jefl. Bert's f krt Oae-mtaate be4 saves precious Juice and flavor 1 Codas' far freihasss you know Sure-Jell is fresh! SO kHchtw tested reriees for perfect results follow recipe cxsctrjrt Kignfy csacsetratew a natural bruit pectin product 1 HOMEMADE JAMS AND JELLIES- Taste best . . . Cost less! 1233 Sfslt St Fkssa 34)127 P5 Specials Fresh Potato Sala Jutt th thing for )(n)C IK that Pienie Lunchl WY IU Kecdy-Yo-Eat Picnics Rath7 Black Hawk Packed With Flavor! rflC lb. SErinmed Mams Rath's Black Hawk Half or Whole O Sliced lisicoEu Moriwll's Yorkshire Eastern Cured ALSO A LARGE SELECTION OP COLD CUTS -LUNCH MEATS FRYERS -RAD CITS -FISH Ml IX. (s v'SkA ht L,nonade Tinil WMhmK Lemonade Base Q 5c V 'fr.'Otr-4 Exchange Brand S-os. Can for -l Spaghetti nTm"1 2 for 25 Baby Food Garbar'a Do. JP - AH White Maot sow Bisquick Pdaiocs iui?n(? Youn, -77 Shoftaf Jl ClVr)) andfrwahllll. LJ GDEEII WW' beaiis io lbs. unch Heas 58c 2 lbs. ISc 69c BaIor denies 5- flfc Golden 1af I Rlpa rUL COUNTRY STYLE PORK 2 lbs. 2 for SSKSOSSlgie HboG 33c 19c 5. ' WW LKJ ( ji li U ISui c 33S3 Forilacd Iload QUANTTTT LZMXTEO 325 Eduewsler Sired