Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, July 21, 1933, Image 1

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LANE COUNTVS HOME NEWSPAPER.
EUGENE, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1933,
PKICE;ON STREETS 80 NEWS STANDS Bo
NO. 21
" TODAI'B NEWS TODAI
ES FiB KlMY
IS! BALLOTS
Slow Business as
Day Goes On .
Vs ARE CONFIDENT
ral Interest is Low
fever State; Tax,
Repeal Lead
r -
THEY'LL MARRY SATURDA'.
(IRfhDN ANj TiC&xm J0lh
returns from Eugene's 18
ids indicated a vevy light vote
il; 1061 ballots cast up to j.:ou
Friday in tlie state's special
la. The vote was espectetl to
ranidlv. however, during the
'ternoon and evening, the polls
men to 8 p. m. Forecasts were
10 per cent vote would .be cast
Lane county's ot.uuu registered
Precinct N"o. 0 led in early re-
with 159 votes cast.
Intinit boards in the local pre
sent to work at 1 p. m. Fri-
feiection officials will be going
If distant parts of the county
Iriday night to bring in the bal-
1.
interest was expressed lip
own the city's street Fridny in
15 from the state on the sales
hd the repeal of the prohibition
meat.
DRYS CLAIM CHANCE
BiTLAXD, Ore., July 21. (Pi
rn voters who for IS years have
either state or federul prohibi-
in the statute books, showed no
haste to get to the polls today
.nge the laws or vote for their
lion.
'son was the 20th state to vote
'PMl of the IStll amendment,
prohibition laws, likewise, were
s ballot, and a 2 per cent sales
fas proposed,
frially outside of Portland was
lion lieht in the morning hnurR,
ma there was a gam toward
Delegates Bound
the first 50 voters who nppear-
two JlarshfieM precincts, 34
reporters they had voted for re-
ami 16 said they had voted dry.
t leaders expected two to one
E ELECTION DAY STORY
PAGE 2
iather News:
f maiimura crawled back into the
again Thursday, advancing to
fflws for the day. The mini-
mnained in the forties. The
bas reached n in
ft season, bemir down to minus
foot at the gauge Fridnv
m The forecast:
FEG0N: Fog on the const, oth-
- ""r ionium, Saturday, and
T; no rhnnzB in tnmnnr.lnr.-
f e north and northwest winds
FAL STATISTICS: Mn,imm
'Mure Thnrsdnv. fa H..,...-
f for Friday. 4S degrees; stnge
v ""uieiie nrer. m ,,. ft f
ind. from
"SLAW TIDES: Saturday, high.
1 P. IB., l-l'i - - 1 .. -.
r - i. m.; iow, o:ni o.
- n. m
1,;,. '".'', uifcn,
Monday. hiirht 12:r,7 fl.
- P- a.; low, 7:56 a. m., 7:oS
STOCKS STAGE
WILD DAY AS
VALUES DROP
Issues Plunge Downward
As Selling Frenzy
Reaches Peak
EXCHANGE STAYS OPEN
Grain Pits Shut to Give
"Rest" After Severe
Drop Thursday
BURLINGTON, Iowa, July 21. VP) Elliott Roosevelt, son of the
president, and Miss Ruth Cooglns of Fort Worth, Texas, will be
married here tomorrow under present arrangements, the Associated
Press learned from an unimpeachable source today.
Young Roosevelt will arrive here by plane today, accompanied
by his sister, Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dall. Mrs, Dall will be Miss
Coogln's only attendant.
Only Immediate members of the two families will be present at
the wedding in the home of George C. Swiler, brother of Mrs. J. B.
Cooglns, mother of the bride to be.
The hour for the wedding has not yet been set, the Associated
Press was told. No formal statement will be Issued until after the
wedding and the couple has departed for a honeymoon "In the west,"
It was asserted. ,
Acreage Cut
Plan Blocked
By Australia
LONDON, July 21. UP) Stanley
M. Bruce, Australian delegate, .told
the world economic conference today
that his country certainly would not
associate itself with any scheme for
the restriction of wheat production as
a solution for world difficulties.
"Australia has not at this moment
subscribed to any such scheme," Bruce
declared.
This declaration appeared to make
more remote the chances for con
clusion of an ngreement for restric
tion of wheat production, which lias
been sought by representatives of the
United States, Canada, Argentina and
Australia.
Bruce was making an attack upon
all sorts of projects for restricting
production of commodities but what
lie said appeared particularly applic
able to wheat for control of which ne
gotiations had been going on by the
big four producers for more than two
months.
The Auustralian spokesman was
considered in some quarters to have
left the door open for further treat
ment nf the wheat question however,
when he said that lie recognized that
in some cases because of extraordin
ary surpluses and other conditions,
limitation as a remedy might improve
conditions.
Bridge Dedication
Will Be August 3
JEFFF.ItSOX, July 2t. W The
nw Pacific highway bridge here
spanning the Santiam river will be
dedicated August 3, announced Mrs.
Karl Steiwer. general chairman.
Leslie M. Scott, chairman of the
state highway commission, will be the
principal espeaker.
Pcue Flight Most Thrilling
Of All, Says Jimmy Mattern
"E. Alaska
' Matt. .""7
K tlif, round-the-V..T:
"""i late in,, i1,t ,
he h.ard that I.,t had
h plan. t p,
b"t "lost" seven
'CkVT !e sf.
"'fortune," Mattern
5 "nothing I on J rn
iobh-.i.- . up can ormt
H from "I"""""' J"n bad
t 3 s""l. i .
the .ft
'-npiftne. Ink . . .
n Ut.J , n fnn' flown
..r, ZT'- " flight was
. '!. arnvinr st l-in
i :10
E S.T.I.
, . .
n"f. i . ' n"r Anadvr.
M.ti.4 J' ""' ot """mis.
"T y "lief eipedi-
tkr:i!. ';y'" Dan, a, filled1?,"
'T..nJ:'l",i'" that th.y h.d "m 1
T"i uli tk " Tne Ana-1
of attempts before being nble to get
off the bay at Anadyr, that they had
to return to St. Lawrence) Island
after once pnsslng that point and
that finally they ran out of gas as
they finally nenred the Alaskan
shore.
"I thought my flight from New
York to where my plane crashed
wan full of thrills.' be said, "but
this last flight had them all stopped."
The start was made on edensdny,
ho said, but landing bnd to be made
on St. Lawrence Island and they
spent the night there In their sleep,
ins? bags, "just like Eskimo."
Aft.r running out of gas as they
neared the Alaskan coast, a tugboat
found them and towed them Into
Nome hnrbor, he stid.
"My plane, when I crashed, was
stranded so far away from the beach
that I gave up any hopes of getting
it out.
"There fci one thing I will say
nbout my stay in Anadyr and that
the Russians certainly took won-
care of me and 1 wish at this
o thsnk the entire crew of the
IN REPEAL VOTE
Tennessee Dry Leader Says
Big City Machines
Backed Wets
the
NASHVILLE, Tcnu., July 21. VP)
Chnrging that "the grossest pos
sible fraud" was perpetrated in Mem
phis and Nashville in yesterday's ref
erendum on the eighteenth amend
ment, Jolin F. Bnggctt, chairman of
the prohibition campaign, said in a
statement today that the vote is being
"very carefully studied with a view to
contesting the election."
Baggett said "all right-thinking
people, regardless of whether they
were for or against repeal. Know we
deserve and have won" and added:
"We have the city machines of
Nashville and Memphis to thnnk for
the very narrow margin which the
wets are claiming.
Pointing to the fact a number of
precincts arc unreported, he snid tt
was possible the rcpenlists' margin
will lie overcome when complete re
ports are in.
Returns from 201S out of
state's 2252 precincts gave:
For repeal, 1 23.1)31.
Against repeal 114, UT2.
NINETEEN IN LINE
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tennessee became today the 10th
state to annrove repenl of the lHIb
amendment as Oregon proceeded, to
ballot on the problem.
The margin of victory for antl
prohibitionists in Tennessee was
smaller than In any of the other
states which have held popular elefr
lions on the proposed constitutional
change.
As returns from yesterday's elec
tion nenred completion todny, the re
peal lead was approjtimately 0,500.
Tennessee, the third southern state
to vote on and approve repeal, had
been dry for years, the legislature
having passed a dry law in 1IKU1. Ihis
year 3.2 beer was legalized.
In Oregon today, leaders of the re
peal movement predicted 2 to 1 vic
tory. Pry leaders seemed agreed that
they had no more than a "fighting
chance."
FARLEY SATISFIED
WASHINGTON, July 21. UP)
Commenting today on the Tennessee
repenl vote, Tostninster General Far
ley said:
"It's close, but It's O. K.
NEW YORK, July 21. VP)
Stocks crashed downward today in the
wildest market since 11)20. Extreme
losses generally ranged from $3 to
more than $12 a share for shares, of
the country's largest corporations.
Trading in many issues was de
moralized due to the absence of sup
porting orders. Pools liquidated
stocks In enormous volume and there
was tremendous selling from specu
lative margin accounts that had collapsed.
Reports that the New York stock
exchange planned to close were de
nied by the exchange, which also said
that denlings had not been suspended
in any issue, despite the chaotic con
dition of the market. The tnpe at
one- time fell hnlf an hour behind
floor transactions.
Ticker Falls Behind
The turnover exceeded 9,000,000
shares.
At 3 o'clock, the usual closing hour,
the tnpe was half an hour late.
Not since the frenzied early stages
of the decline four years ago had the
market witnessed such a q.rstio de
flation of values as occurred 1his aft
ernoon. Stocks were offered for wnnt
they would bring and buyers, for a
time, were scarce at any price.
An upswing started shortly before
3 o'clock, apparently duo to heavy
short covering as well as purchases
by traders who were trying for
turn" on the theory that a rebound
was due.
The break coincided with a tumble
nf $0 a bale in cotton not long after
1 o'clock. Until then the market had
Boundary Board
, Sets Next Meet
SEE MATTERN. NOME STORY
The county boundary board at Its
meeting Thursday set its next session
for Aug. 14.
The group favored the formation of
a union high school at ( resweii. if no
remonstrances are filed befors Aug,
14, the next meeting time, the board
will declare the school formed.
If remonstrances are filed before
then, however, an election will have
tn he called. The new union high school
would take In six districts.
SHIP REPAIHED. CALL COMES
POST RESUMES Vf. FOR UNITED ;
WORLD FLIGHT l& DRIVE HERE
REACHES FAIRBANKS 4 x-
Lumber Wages
Are To Low,
Objects Green
WASHINGTON, July 21. OP)
William Green, president of the Amer
ican Federation of Lnbor, today de
nounced the wage code proposed by
tbe lumber industry us insufficient.
"The wages imposed in this code do
not conform with tho spirit or letter
of the recovery net," he protested, at
the hearing on the code.
The lumber industry must organ
ize ns the law permits it to organize
and as a result receive a decent price
for its product so that it can pay a
decent wage and put its hours of
work at a point at which it can ab
sorb its idle workers."
Wages proposed, by the code range
from $10.80 in the south to $20.40 per
week in the northwest, with hours
from 40 to 48,
Green objected that such wages
would not provide the purchasing
power which is the purpose of the law
and contended the hours were much
too long.
Green objected to the differentials.
NEW MOVE AT MEET
American. In Last Minute
- Act to Save Principle
Of Truce, Speaks
Aviator Gets Needed Rest
When Plane Tips
Over at Flat
Plans Short Stop for Fuel
At Edmonton; To Hit
N. Y. Saturday
FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 21.
OP) Wiley Post, Oklahoma flier, cir
cling the world by air, landed here at
10:42 a. m. today (3:42 p. m. E. S,
T.) it wall raining and there was poor
visibility.
Guided by Joe Crosson, pioneer
Alaska flier. Post left Flat, 375 miles
nway at 7:28 a. m. (12:28 p. m. K.
S. T.) The flight took three hours
and 14 minutes. .
President of Chamber Gets
First Orders From
Gen. Johnson
PLANS ARE OUTLINED
Morris Flashed Back Word
That Cooperation Can
Be Counted On
SEE STOCK MARKET STORY
PAGE 2
Many Apply .For
Hop Picking Here;
Start August 25
Hop picking for the early hops is
expected to start in this section some
time around Aug. 25 to 30, local
growers report.
Already numerous applications have
been made by those wishing to get
employment in picking hops. Salem
has reported its registration of pick
ers completed, one of the larger ynrds
usually taking three weeks to reg
ister workers having completed the
job in three days. The local growers
will not be advertising for workers
until a little later.
The outlook is for a fine crop in
this section this year and of course
growers ore getting n fine price this
year with the legalized beer returned.
The Lane county section has quite an
increased acreage of hops tins year.
Growers are now busy spraying
their bops. It is said the locnl section
is not losing ns henvily from mould
as some other sections in the state.
LONDON. July 21. OP) In ft last
minute effort to save the principle of
a truce in economic warfare, Cordell
Hull, American secretnry of Btate,
introduced a new resolution in the
world economic conference today un
der which the United States might
take such action as would be neces
sitated by the raising of wages and
shortening- of hours of labor.'
Hull's proposal, presented in a state
ment designed chiefly as a basis for
study during the recess of the parley
which will begin next Thursday, was
presented to the economic commis
sion after extensive exchange of views
with Washington.
"The government represented at tbe
world economic conference," it sajd,
"being desirous of abandoning econo
mic conflict and collaborating in seek-,
ing general economic improvement
through mutually possible exchange
of goods, undertake to reai;h an
agreement, first in a negative way of
ceasing to erect new burners, and
then iu a positive wny of progressive
reduction of existing barriers."
In an accompanying letter the
American chief delegate said that bis
document advocated the immediate
undertaking of reductions of existing
barriers by the encourogement of bil
ateral and of practical multilateral
agreements.
"I contemplate," the letter sum,
that this truce agreement might be
carried into effect when and as the
conference truce which I understand
remains in effect among adhering
stntes during the recess may end..
"This further truce may carry
through a longer period required for
carrying out the general aim of re
ducing exixting barriers. The terms
suggested are more precise than those
of the conference truce."
E, R. Morris, president of the
Eugene chamber of commerce, who
Friday received Instructions from
Washington regarding details of
swinging Eugene into line under
the National Recovery act. Mr.
Morris wired Washington that
Eugene would give all possible co
operation In the national program.
FLAT. Alaska, July 21. OP)
Wiley Post, Oklabomnn flier, resumed
his aerial jaunt around the world to
day ot 7:28 a. m., Fairbanks time,
(12:28 p. m., E.S.T.)
Joe Crosson, who brought a new
propeller for Post's plane from Fair
banks, circled over tho field here ot
7:25 n. m., and three minutes later
Post joined him in the air. Both
planes headed east for Fairbanks
where Post will refuel for his flight
la Edmonton.
The weather was good.
Post was due in Fairbanks in less
than three hours ns it is only B7H
miles away. He still has a chance to
set a new -globe-girdling record,
eclipsing thnt he and Horold Gntty
set in 1031, This year ho is tiying
olono,
Gots Bit of Rest
Post was exhausted and extremely
nervous when he nosed his piano
over in a cross wind and damaged
its landing gear nnd propeller yes
terday afternoon after o 3000-mile
flight from Khabarovsk, Siberia.
He had become lost In tbe fog
over interior Alaska and had been
following one river and then another
PLAN INTO ACTION
Lumbermen Meet at
Osburn On Friday
Lumbermen of the Willninette val
ley will unthcr at the Ojburn hotel
Friday evening at fl:H0 o'clock for the
meeting of the Willamette Valley
Lumbermen's association when they
will hear discussed the proposal to
build the Oregon coast highway
bridges of lumber.
The principal speaker will be C.
C. Crowe, of Portland, who will out
line the policies of the Oregon Htate
Lumbermen's Institute, an organisa
tion formed to promote the interest
of lumber generally and In the cosst
bridges particularly. J. S. Mnglndry,
president of the association, will pre
side at the meeting.
Ex-Sheriff to
Ask New Trial
MEDFORD, July 21. VP) Attor
neys for Gordon I Schermerhorn, for
mer sheriff who was conrictcd Sunday
of complicity in the hnllnt theft case
here, late yesterday filed motion for
s new trial.
The lawyers alleged the jury was
drawn in an illegal manner, that evf
denre was Insufficient tn warrant I
conviction, that the verdict was con
trary to law and that certain Jurors
had expressed the opinion before they
were drnwn as jurors, thst Hcber
nierhoro ss guilty.
Lindberghs Off
For Greenland
On Chart Trip
HALIFAX. N. S., July 21. VP)
filighlly more than two hours after
Ihey had taken off from Lurtwnght,
Labrador, for Juliane-IIaab, Green
land, Col. and Mrs. Charles Lind
bergh landed their plane at Hope
dale, about 100 miles from Cart
wright. A wireless from Hello Island
to the marine department here said
they turned back because ot fog.
Nation - Wide Cooperation
Asked in Drive For
Re-employment
CARTYVRIGHT, Ijibrador. July 21.
P) Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh
snd Mrs. Lindbergh took off from
here todny for Greenland on their
aerial map-making expedition.
Lindbergh was piloting the ship
and his wife served as wireless oper
ator. They arrived In Cnrtwright a week
ago from St. John's, Newfoundland.
At Csrtwright they awaited for bet
ter weather. Meauwhile the supply
ship Jelling wss en route to their
Greenland base.
Symptoms
USSteel Production
(DAILY AVERAGE OUTPUT)
ff!'0'jg9 19V) I9SI H 91f
81
o I 1 I I LJ
SOURCE: F.W.DOOGE
SEE POST FLIGHT STORY
PAGE 7
Balbo, Fliers
Given Typical
N. Y. Greetings
' NEW YOKK, July 21 O?) To
the cheers of on enthusiastic throng
described by police as the greatest
since the welcome to Col. Charles A.
Lindbergh six years ago, New York
City todny gave its official reception
to General Italo l.albo ond his 00
gallant Italian fliers.
Police estimated that nt least 00,
000 jammed Broadway and City Hill
park crying "Viva Balbo!" and "Viva
Italia.'
Ticker tope, confetti and torn lenvos
from the telephone books fell like
rain and nt times it seemed the vision
of the drivers of the dozens of auto
mobiles in which tho fliers rode might
be impaired.
The procession was led by an es-1
cort of honor bended by Col. Joseph
A. Mnrmnn. regimntal commander "f
the 101 h V. S. infantry.
General Hnlbn greeted tbe cheers
of the thousands with n smile nnd n
o,uirk salute nnd appeared to lie thor
oughly enjoying the continuous ova
tion. Mayor O'Brien welcomed the
Tiiiliiins to what he described as "The
largest Italian city in tbe world." Jin
presented a mednl to each flier.
Grocers to Form
Code Here Monday
Retail ernrers of Lane county will
meet ot the chamber of commprce
Monday. July 21, at 8 o'clock, ff.r
the purpose of forming n county
grocers' rode to be submitted to
Woshington for approval under the
nntionnl industrial recovery act.
Grocers of the county ore urged
to attend this meeting and those who
are unable to be present nre oked
to send a written proxy and lift of
all full time employes. The meeting
Is being sponsored by tho Eugene
Hetail Grocers nwoeiation.
WASHINGTON, July 21. OP)
Hugh S.-Johnson, recovery admlnts
trator, set swiftly In motion today the
nation-wide campaign to swing ovory
employer into the wage raising move
ment.
He telegraphed to chamber of com
merce presidents In all cilies of over
ten thousand, asking them to create
local committees which will run the
community end of the re-employment
drive.
While Johnson acted, President
Roosevelt kept close watch on the
movement, alert for public reaction
to the program he approved only lost
night.
Meantime, deputies pushed ahead
hearings on four separate industries
which have stepped forward with
codes for self regula t Ion and labor
betterment.
These were the shipbuilding, him
Eugene must mobilize Its civic an!
business leadership to banish depres
sion nnd unemployment, just as it
was organized to float Liberty lolni
nnd back up the men who did the
front line fighting in wartime.
Hits is tho sum and substance of a
telegraphic message from General
Hugh Johnson, recovery administra
tor at Washington to Edward R. Mof
ris, president of the Eugene Chanw
bcr of Commerce Friday.
Wants Action at Once
Morris is asked hy General John4
son to get busy at once with the mom
bilization of civic and business lead'
era into an effective working unit to
campnign for application of the re
covery net here.
"We're ready!" was the substanc
of tho reply which Mr. Morris sent
back to General Johnson immedi
ately, pending more detailed orders,
Tho appeol from Washington fol-.
lows closely on the action of Preal
dent Roosevelt giving his npproval to
the decree establishing new working
hours ond wages for all American
industry pending the. working out, of
voluntary agreements within each In
dun try.
Carry Out President's Plan
Presumably the group which Mr,
Morris Is asked to mobilize wilt bo
called upon to see to.it that the pres
ident's edict is followed to the letter
throughout the community, although;
its powers may be those of moral su
SEE EUGENE ACTS STORY
PAGE 2
TIME EXTENSION
SEE JOHNSON SPEEDS STORY
PAGE 5
Husky Manager
Asked to Resign
SEATTLE. July 21. (P) Earl F.
Campbell, graduate mnnager of the
University of Washington since IH2H,
today confirmed a report that he
had been asked to resign by Charles
F. Fninklatid, named director of ath
letics snyeral months ago.
Campbell said he would not leave
until "fired." Prior to 1!2S ho had
been manager of the university book
store for six years.
"I hove nothing to say," Frnnkland
declared when asked for comment on
a report that Campbell's term nt the
university would expire nt the end
of this month.
An order was received from Judge
G. F. Nkipworth late Thursday grant
ing Llewellyn A. Bonks, convicted
slayer held in the Lnne comity jail,
HO days additional time to tender and
file a bill of exceptions.
Judge Sltipworth Is In Klnmathi
Falls conducting the Jackson county
ballot theft coses transferred to
Klamath county, but telegraphed the
order to bo entered In circuit court
here.
Banks Attorneys, led by Frank X
Lonergan of Portland ns chief conn
sel, filed for n new trial on June 21
after being given extensions of time.
Banks Is still In jail here. For ser
eral weeks following his conviction of
second degree murder on May 21 for
the slaying of George J. Prescottf
Medfdrd constable, he was in the hos
pital, liRving undergone n major op
eration. He has been in the jail fotf
some time since, however.
"Fruit Meringues99 Win Recipe
Contest Prize For Mrs. Lott
TRIAL RECESSED
SALEM. July 21. fP With ten.
timony oil in, the trial of O. H.
(Joss for vagrancy in conneclion with
1'nomploypd Council activities here
will be resumed tomorrow, today be
ing ll legal holiday.
VETS TO BANQUET
SALEM. July 21. (P) An open
air banquet Monday evening will be
served Spanish War veterans as thy
begin their annual enonmpment here.
The committee in charge le planning
j for 1000 delegates, ,
By MARIAN LOWRY
Her suggestion on "Fruit Merin
pues" won for Mrs. John H. I)lt, 751
Fourteenth uvenue east, first prize in
the Register Guard's housewives
forum contest for the pat week on
the topic of summer desserts, She re
ceives ? I in cash.
The ether eight winuers.teach to
receive (! ceuts, are!
.Mrs. T. F, Ksbler, rr. 1, Creswell.
Mrs. William Maddoitgh. Veneto,
Mrs. Millie Stroud, 120IJ Patterson
street, Eugene,
Mrs. R. 14. Hewitt, 102'i Nineteenth
avenue east, Eugene,
Mrs. II. C. Griffin, 41.1 Twelfth
avenue eot, Eugene,
Mr?. F, C. Scott, box 71, Lakeside,
Ore.
Mis. Chester L. 8t;ienson, 80it
Twentieth nvenue east,
Mrs. K.jii Stewart, IPX) Willamette
street, Eugene,
Mis. Iott terms her de-sert, "sim
ple, ir.etpenMve," different, and deli
cious." Following Is the reclie:
Fruit Meringues
0 egg whites,
ii teaspoon cream of torter.
2 cups sugar.
1 teaspoon vnnillit.
11 eat the egg whites to a stiff froth,
add cream of tarter and con timid
heating until stiff and dry. Add ono
cup sugar and beat until tho mixture)
holds its sb-ipe. Add gradually another
cup of sugiir, beating lightly this!
time. Add vanilla. Spread on two largo
layer cake tins but lured and dredgeil
with flour. Bake in slow oven, 2701
degrees, for 0 or (10 minutes, Thef
should dry rather than bake. Whei(
done remove carefully from pons with)
spatula nnd cool. They may be mad
a day or two Ix'foro they are to b
used as they keep nicely. Cover with
crushed, sweetened berries, or peach
es, penis or baked apples. Top with a
spoonful of whipped cream or ico
cream, or to he really economical
serve' with custard sauce mode witbj
three of the egg yolks. Serves ten.
The contest for the coming woels1
has for its topic, "Summer Wgetablrt
Menus." For this contest, suggestion
are to be made on a menu for eithef
a dinner or luncheon, using not lessl
than four vegetables.
Besides making out the menu for
this vegetable meal contestants should
write out directions for preparing and
cooking the vegetables.
This s going to be an easy contest
for Frfine county women because of
the abundance of fresli vegetables at
hand.
TAGE (