P IB .Weglster-Ciinirg', Kugene, Or., Sun., Nov, 21. 1948 j f 0gs Presented
I To Lowe Schoo
!fiy VFW Group
Retired Engineers
To Be Honored
At Special Dinner
Illahee Division, auxiliary to
the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers, will have its annual
Thanksgiving dinner Saturday
evening at Knights of Phythias
Hall. Dinner will be at six-thirty
o'clock, and honored guests
'will be the retired engineers,
who number between thirty and
thirty-five.
All members of the division j
and their families are invited to
attend.
The committees will be: Gen
eral, Mrs. B. B. Bridges, Mrs.
C. W. Bullivant, Mis. A. D.
Sickafoose, and Mrs. F. L. Jost;
decorating, Mrs. F. L. Weich
lein, Mrs. W. J. Conier, and
Mrs. William Petersen; enter
tainment, Mrs. E. C. McPherson
and Mrs. G. A. Gillmorc.
HBOOKS1 :
THIS CHRISTmflS
New Books
Children'! Books
Importation!
Modern Gift!
We Special Order
Books Not In Stock
Jlie (Colonial Sko,
MR. AND MRS ROBERT W. POTTER
75 West Broadway Phone 5845-1
f
A
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828 Willnnipllci
Phone 3 128
Presentation of several flags
to tHe Lowell Grade School
from the Springfield auxiliary
to Veterans of Foreign Wars
was made during November by
Mrs. Martha McCorkle, presi
dent; Mrs. Ida McDonald, Am
ericanism chairman, Mrs. Sid
ney Duncan and Mrs. Anna Kid
der. A group from the chapter also
visited the US Veterans Hospital
at Roseburg, taking many gifts,
games and favors. Those mak
ing the trip were Mrs. McCor
kle, Mrs. Stanley Holdridge, hos
pital chairman, Mrs. Walter
Bennett, Mrs. C. R. Duncan,
Mrs. Alvin Brown, Mrs. Orville
Rhoadcs, Mrs. Isaac N.- Endicott,
and Mrs. Sidney Duncan.
At the November meeting of
the auxiliary, Mrs. Lester W.
Hill, department president, Mrs.
Walter Burkhardt, presidential
secretary, and Mrs. William
Wise of Eugene paid a visit.
New members accepted at that
meeting were Mrs. Ray Beckett,
Mrs. Gordon Smith, Mrs. Sadie
Perkins and Mrs. Clarence
Hartman.
Mrs. Endicott announced that
the annual Christmas party will
be December IS, and at that
time the post and auxiliary will
entertain the members of the
Scout troops which they spon
sor, as well as the children of
veterans.
Mrs. Jack Hartman is chair
man of the committee in charge
of a card party which will be
given December 1. Serving with
her are Mrs. Irving J. Darr,
Mrs. Claude Shields, Mrs. Ben
nett and Mrs. Holdridge.
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of
Christian Service of First Meth
odist Church will meet in the
church parlors Tuesday after
noon at one-fifteen o'clock.
Theme for study will be, "Chil
dren of the Sunday School,"
with the program in charge of
Mrs. Henry Howard. Mrs. L. O.
Griffith will lead devotions.
Members of Circle Seven will be
hostesses.
WOMEN OF THE- MOOSE
card party will be Monday
afternoon, at the Moose Hall, It
will start at two o'clock with the
library chairman, Mrs. Wilbur
B. Hugus, as hostess.
At chapter night lodge Friday
evening at eight o'clock, a class
of candidates will be initiated.
Mrs. Hugus also will be in
charge of this program, and Mrs.
Marvin Fear will be refresh
ment chairman.
Uranium Ore Plant
Built in Belgian Congo
LEOPOLDVILLE, Belgian Con
go (P) Belgian Congo authori
ties said Friday a plant to treat
uranium ore is being built in the
extreme southern Belgian Congo
near the northern Rhodesian
border.
The area is a uranium mining
center. The plant will be situated
at Shinkolobwe near Jadotville.
It will be completed by the end of
1950 and employ about 250 white
men in addition to native workers.
Almost all uranium ore ex
tracted In the Belgian Congo thus
far has been reported to the
United States.
Boycott Ordered
MADRID (IP) Arriba, news
paper of Generalissimo Franco's
ruling Fnianite Party, said Friday
Communist leaders have ordered
Communists to boycott Sunday's
municipal elections.
The elections, Spain's first In
12 years, will be by heads of fam
ilies, to select a third of Spain's
municipal council memberships.
The other two-thirds will be
chosen Inter by the government
controlled syndicates of labor and
employers and the elected coun
cillors themselves.
York County, Pa., commission
ers repealed an occupation tax,
agreeing unanimously that "It
was more bother than It was
worth."
Keeping ; '
House
By NORMA CRANE , "
'' Famous Home Eonomist
A Little of This and That: The
discriminating hostess will be
delighted with t gift of glassware
designed to serve seafood or fruit
cocktail. These short-stemmed
glasses made In the shape of an
inverted bell, have a small re-1
movable cup inside, which holds
fruit or seafood. It's kept frosty
cold by Ice surrounding it in the
outer glass . . . Pan Handler, an
other new kitchen item for grip
ing hot pots or platters, elimi
nating both burns and pot holders.
Once you own one, you'll wonder
how you ever got along before
without this handy household aid
. . . Have you seen the new plas
tic balls, designed to hold a ball
of knitting wool? It keeps the
wool clean, prevents tangling,
and feeds freely besides being
attractive and compact. . . , Now
your telephone can blend or har
monize with the colors of your
room by donning a plastic shell
which Is tailor-made .to fit French
style phones. Comes in several
popular colors, is inexpensive,
and can be slipped over your
phone In less than s minute.
Did You Know:
. . . that dates can be chopped
and added to filling before baking
custard pie? Yummy!
, . . that cream cheese and
ginger snaps make a very delic
ious combination. Good tor bridge
parties, lunchboxes, or just
snacKs.
, . . you can keep your cookies,
cakes and bread moist and fresh
by putting half an apple into the
bread box or cookie jar?
. . , that you can test your over,
quite accurately even without a
thermometer if you put a sheet
of white tissue paper or a little
Hour on a pan and place, it in
the oven for 5 minutes? As the
paper or flour changes color, you
can judge the heat as follows::
Delicate brown means a slow
oven, 250 degrees F. to: 325 de
crees F .
Medium gold means a moder
ate oven, 325 degrees F. to 400
degrees F.
Deep dark brown means a hot
oven, 400 -degrees F. to 450 de
grees. F.
Deep dark brown in 3 minutes'
time means very hot oven, 450
degrees F. to 500 degrees F.
Food for Thought: 1
"Life is thick-sown with thorns,
and I know no other remedy but
to pass quickly through them"
. . . Voltaire.
RECIFE. OF THE WEEK
One, two, three that's all it
takes to make one of the grandest
desserts you have ever tasted:
Jiffy Chocolate Mousse
1 egg v
1V4 cups Tootsie Chocolate
Fudge Mix
Vt pint heavy sweet cream
Beat the egg and the Tootsie
Fudge Mix, combining thorough
ly. Whip the cream and fold it
into the chocolate mixture. Freeze
in the ice tray of the refrigerator
until firm. Serves 8.
Helpful Hints
Now that winter is approach
ing, you can give your plants
added nourishment by allowing
them, too, a few minutes under
the sunlamp with you. You'll
find the results will be . well
worth the effort of gathering
them together from all parts of
the house. . . . Shut-ins who must
stay in bed, may find that their
heels are apt to rub raw against
the sheet. Plump rings of gauze
wrapped cotton will cushion the
heel, thus preventing irritation
and alleviating the condition if it
has already occurred .... Keep
your curtains, especially the lace
or openwork type, hanging evenly
on the windows by putting them
up while still damp, and fastening
the hem to the edge of the win
dow sill with thumb tacks. This
will enable you to make pleats if
desired. When the curtain is
dried, remove the thumb tacks
and you'll have a lovely looking
window without the fuss of set
ting up curtain stretchers or iron
ing. , , Two or three rows of
machine stitching along the sel
vedge or outside edge of your
curtains will help prevent ripping
or stretching eut ef shape In
laundering . . A great boon to
the housewife is an automatic
timer which can be set for any
length of cooking time up to 60
minutes. Its sharp, clear ring can
be heard in any part of the house
so that it really isn't necessary to
hover near the stove peeking
from time to time to catch the
vegetables, cake, etc. before they
burn. ,.
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American Flyer Elec. Freight Trains 25.15
Gilbert Chemistry, Erector and Tool Chest Sets
Jim Prentice Dec. Football and Baseball
Seta 2.95 a.
Doll Bugcys 5.95
Play Skool Educational Toys from 1.00 up
Plui llte (white) Blackboards 1.00 up
Smith-Miller Trucks from 3.95
Construction Toys Exact Models of Road
Scrapers. Derricks, etc.
Use Dairy Products
To Save Expenses
Before Holidays
Where, oh where, is the cash to
come from for this year's holiday
spending? That's a paramount
question in many homes right
now. And a partial answer, may
come from better menu planning,
says Borden's Consumer Services.
Plan to use more dairy products,
they advise, because considering
price for value received, you can't
do better. Then, too, they hold al
most endless possibilities for pre
paring foods which are top-notch
for taste and appearance.
When you take a look at your
menu for ways and means to save
money, resolve that you will cling
to one rule: Don't skimp on food
values or food appeal. Instead find
less expensive but appetizing
ways to keep nutritive values
high. There are ways to do this.
"Cheese Tomato Puff" is a new
recipe developed in the kitchen of
Consumer Services of the Borden
Company, and it will help you ful
fil this goal. Both in taste appeal
and nutritional value, it s a step-ped-up
version of the popular
macaroni luncheon recipes. In it
you will find evaporated milk,
cheese and eggs, all excellent
foods to use in main dishes be
cause of their high quality protein
as well as other nutrients. When
you try the new recipe, your fam
ily won't be thinking about your
economy drive. Instead, they will
compliment you on your new aisn,
Here Is the rec'pe:
Cheese Tomato Puff
(Makes 8 Servings)
Vt cup 1 - inch pieces uncooked
macaroni
2 tablespoons butter
, 1 tablespoon onion .
2 tablespoons flour .
1 teaspoon salt
Few grains pepper
Vt teaspoon celery salt
'4 teaspoon dry mustard
Vi cup evaporated milk
1 cup drained, cooked or canned
tomatoes
y lb. (1 cup) processed cheese
food, grated .
3 eggs, separated .
. Cook macaroni in boiling salted
water until tender. Drain and
rinse with warm water. Cook
onion in butter until tender but
not brown; remove from heat.
Mix flour, salt, pepper, celery salt
and ' mustard; stir into butter
onion mixture. Slowly add evapo
rated milk while stirring. Stir in
tomato pulp. Cook over low heat,
stirring constantly, until thicken
ed, Add cheese and stir until it
melts; remove from heat. Add
cooked macaroni and blend well.
Beat egg whites until stiff but not
dry; gently fold in cheese-tomato
mixture. Pour into U4-quart cas
serole. Set casserole in a baking
pan and put on rack in oven. Fill
baking pan with hot water to
depth of 1 inch. Bake in moderate
oven (350 F.) 40 minutes or until
golden brown. Serve at once.
:
AT SHEDD
SHEDD A group of girls met
Monday evening, Nov. 15, at the
home of JoAnn Roberts and or
ganized 4-H Clubs in health,
home-making, sewing, and knit
ting, with JoAnn Roberts leader,
and a cooking club with Margaret
Starnes leader. Meetings will be
held at the homes of members.
Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Rohrbaugh
left last week for San Antonio,
Texas, where they will visit their
son. While they are away Clay
ton is staying in Newberg with his
sister, Mrs. John Meynink.
The younger women of Shedd
Methodist Church have organized
a new WSCS Circle.
It Is the larvae of moths not
the adult miller which eats cloth.
They come from eggs which the
moth lays in clothing and use the
cloth as their food. .
US Broadcasts
Carry Sting
WASHINGTON (Ph- Assist
ant secretary of state George V.
cies which perform vital work 1 Allen said Friday that Soviet
every month of the year and their 1 efforts to jam the Voice of Amer
good deeds are made possible byjica demonstrate that the State
funds raised through Community Department's foreign broadcasts
Community Chest
Helps Mrs. Loar
Mother Children
SALEM (Special) The red
feather services are those agen-
"m ef ir
Chests. ' Now is the time when
Community Chest campaigns are
being held in practically every
community of the State of Ore
gon. The majority 01 tne people
are interested in helping tne neeay
and dependent children and all
can help by making ample contributions.'
It's a red feather in your cap
when you can start a chain reac
tion of good deeds! That s what
one motherly woman did. Let's
call her Mrs. Lola Loar. You see,
she loves babies loves taking care
of them even other people's
babies" and even after she
brought up three children of her
own! Red feather services like
the child caring agencies of the
Oregon Chest are always looking
for good foster mothers women
who will give loving care and af
fection to children made tempor-
arily homeless by some family
emergency. The cost of room,
board and medical attention is
taken care of by these child car
ing agencies from funds received
through the Oregon Chest. But
something more is needed. Mother
love real or foster kind is one
of the things that science hasn't
been able to replace with a gad'
get. This affectionate attention
helps children feel that they "be
long" to someone at an age when
it is very important for them to
feel secure. It isn't every woman
who can make a "business" out of
loving other people's babies! It's
a job that has to be thoroughly
enjoyed, and Mrs. Loar is one of
those rare women who enjoys it
so much that she has inspired her
daughter . . . and now her grand
daughter to open their homes to
homeless babies, too. Some of
these babies will go back to their
own homes when conditions there
are right again and some will be
adopted into new homes . . . after
a period of study for health rea
sons. Meantime ' these Oregon
child caring agencies are responsi
ble for these little lives, oversees
every detail of their living in the
temporary ifoster home, and goes
about the business of talking with
would-be adoptive parents, try
ing to solve family problems in the
babies' own homes, and gives the
children medical and psychiatric
care. It all costs money, too . . .
anywhere from $800 to $1,000 per
child sometimes. That's where
some of your Community Chest
pledge goes! These baby lives are
worth every penny, of the care
they get . . so give . . . and give
generously for these red leather
services through your local Com
munity Chest.
carry a painful sting to Moscow.
He said that lo Soviet transmit
ters have been found to be taking
part in an effort to drown out
American official broadcasts In
the Russian language.
The Russians, Allen said, "cer
tainly would not devote valuable
A"en, in n .-.-.r1.
Department',,
lhe are sevJ
Russ an li
objections.
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649 Willamette Wr"
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871 OMVE
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PHOM5 S9S3-J
NEXT TO THE REX
PHONE 1937-J