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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1917)
TWELVE PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. SATURDAY, JANUARY 6. 1917. PAGE FOUR MAY FIGHT SHIPPING BQARD NOMINEES SPECIAL SATU Daily Chats With the Housewife EDAY Aim CSY ILL llolSKIIOI.lt HINTS. f A lHrte loofah fin intn two r thtvc jnoom nmke cxc-dlrm 'h washers. A longer one can le kijn for cleaning i'gs I.o.ifah is very ay to kel .wret ami clian and. linK rough in tixturc. it Joes the work easily anil well When the finer d.x.r mat has been thaken and beaten face downwards, nnd still l"ok muddy and dull rub it all over the way of the fiber with thick cloth, or loofah, dipped in hot or cold water, rinsinp out the cloth constantly. It will make the mat look ouite fresh and clean. Add a little vinegar to the enamel when cleaning gas stoves. The polish will be better. Nothing will make the front door cleaner than a rub all over with a wet chamois leather. It takes all the not spots off without smearins, and does not injured the paint. No soap need be. used. This applies to any painted surface. A polish for silver and plated arti cles can be made by taking half a pound each of w hitine. soda and com mon yellow soap. Cut the soap up into verv small pieces, put all into an eld saaoep&n and let it stand on th fire till all is dissolved and smooth: Hit into jars or tins. Apply with a reft cloth and wash in hot water. M'hen short of egTRs for cakes. 1 tablespoonful of vinegar may be sub stituted for 1 egir. After using the carpet sweeper, or trush, a loofah cut in two and wrung b out very dry, rubbed lightly over the carpet or rug. will freshen and cleanse it. A pail of water must be wi and the water freQuently chang ed, as the loofah takes up a great deal of dirt. For ttlr carpets, this method is invaluable. A NICE WAY TO COOK TRIPE. Tripe as it comes from the market Is usually cooked and sometimes pickled. More cooking is generally needed to make it perfectly tender and, if pickled, to remove some of the vinegar. Cut the tripe in pieces suit able for serving and boil. In either milk or water, or equal parts of each until tender. This will require about a half hour. Remove from the water, drv. and dip in a battel1 made by beat. In t eggs until light, adding to them 1-J cup of milk, 1 tablespoon of melt ed butter, and 1 cup of flour sifted with 1-4 teaspoon of salt and J tea spoons of sugar, beat the whole mix ture together until smooth and light When the trip is dipped In the bat ter, drain off as much as possible and fry the pieces in deep fat. MAITRE 'HOTEL BITTER. Cream 1-4 cup of butter by rubbing against side of dish with fork or spoon add 1-2 teaspoon of salt. 1-2 teaspoon of pepper. 1-1 teaspoon of finely chop ped parsley, and S-4 of a teaspoon of lemon Juice. These ingredients should be added very slowly, especi ally the lemon Juice. Serve with fish of meats. EVENING SCARFS CAl'GHT AT THE WRIST. The scarf of tulle, worn In the eve ning, has a habit of slipping from the shoulders unless held in some way. In order that it may remain in place, yet appear floating and light, loops are formed at the ends through which the hands are slipped. This catches the scarf to the wrists and keeps it in place, while leaving the hands free. White, palest blue. rose, lavender, sil ver and cold tissue are loveliest for these mist scarfs. JAPANESE EGGS. One and one-half cups of hoiled rice piled on a platter Cut hard boiled eggs into fourths, put them in the center of the rice-mound, and pour over them a white sauce flavor ed with 1 teaspoon of onion juice. 1 teaspoon of parsley, and one teaspoon of soy or Worcestershire sauce. CnoCOITE NIT PIDDING. Pour 2 cup of scalded milk over 1 cup of soft bread crumbs, add 1 cut of chopped pecan meat. 1-2 tea spoon of salt, the yolks of 2 egg' slightly beaten. 1-4 of a cup of sugar mtx-d with 2 squares of melted cho lolate. and the Juice and grated rind of 1 lemon. Mix well, then fold In the slightly beaten whites of 2 eggs. Turn Into buttered individual molds ud bak 15 minutes in a moderate ov n. Serve hot w ith sw eetened and flavored cream, or with fruit sauce. KKJX;EliEK, Take the skin and bone from any cold fish, boil sufficient rice to have nearly eiUal quantity to the fish, and dry rice well: add 1 or 2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped fine, I cup good white sauce, and season to taste. Put all together in a saucepan to heat, and rve very hot. ANCHOVY PASTE. Rub the yolk of a hard boiled etrs through a sieve, add 1 tablespoon of butter; mix all together with a tea- spoontui of anchovy essence Spread heiween thin slices of bread or use on toast triangle for canapes. THE PERFECT BAKEI POTATO. Occasionally a restaurant or a sys tem of railroad dining cars hecomes 1 yj f - ' ! i 0? , " j u A U : I V .... j i .r : ) ifr? j OSBURN'S EDUCATED 5 DOGS 5 20 Minutes of Vaudeville in addition A BIG COMEDY PROGRAM Also "The Girl From Frisco" ft MW in AdmiSSJoa If Ifs Good You Will See It at The Cosy BERNARD N BAKER Bernard X. Baker, of and John Barber White Baltimore, of Kansas famous for its baked potatoes. At j City have nominated by Prest the San Francisco Exposition, several college girls oierated an establish ment at which the baked potato si the piec de resistance and cost SJ cents. All these successes have been based on a simple little trick, says the New York Sun. A potato should be larded before being baked so as to fill up the poms .kin and retain the full flavor. It s necessary to cover only the skin with a little lard, bacon grease or butter to accomplish this end. A potato so treated and baked just the proper length of time usually three quarters of an hour, will sur pass a potato cooked In any ther way. It must always he broken open Im mediately upon being taken from the oven, so that the steam mav escape. CASTLE OR SPONGE PCDDING. Two eggs, their weight in butter, sugar and flour, pinch of salt, grated rind of half a lemon. Beat butter to a cream, add well beaten eggs, sugar, flour, etc., stir all well and lightly to. gether and pour mixture into w;ell greased cups. Bake in moderate oven 2 or SO minutes. Serve with swept sauce. A WORD TO THE SOl"P MAKER. Soups made from bones and meat require prolonged cooking. For this process, the simmering burner on the gas atove is Just right. It Is best to start such soups In cold water, heat slowly over a regular burner, and simmer for several hours. dent Wilson as members of the fed- JOHH BAEBER VHITB. ernl shipping board to build up the United States mercantile marine. It is said the senate may refuse to con firm the nominations. "MAD MONK" FLAYS THE CZAR, County Library NEWSINOTES HOURS 10:00 to 5:30 N1CHTS 7 tl 9.--S1JX0AYS 2 to S f tho j and MOTHER SUPERIOR WAS ..INTERNED BY ROUMANIA Adams Charles Francis Adams. idler World Crisis and its Mean ing. , Albaugh Oardenette. Aaderson Pictorial Landscape Pho tography. Armstrong Western Wild Flowers. Bangs From Pillar to Post. Barr Three Score and Ten. Baynes Wild Bird Guests. Benson Escape and Other Essays. Birney Childhood. Black Real United States and Ca nada. Bloomfield Reading In Vocational Guidance. Bloomfield Youth, school and Vo cation. BrewerCarburation in Theory and Practice. Boardman Under the Red Cross Frag. Bullock Mothers' Pensions. Bullock Agricultural Credit. Bullock Short Ballot. Burns How to Play Tennis. Head of Deaconesses' Home for More Than Sixty Years' Only Released After Germans Occupied Capital. BERLIN. Jan. 4. (Via Sayville.) Charges that a German mother su perior in the deaconesses' home at Bucharest for more than sixty years, waslnterned by the Roumanians and only delivered after the German oc cupation of the capital, is charged by the press bureau. WEDS TRAINED NURSE HE WOOED WHEN ILL Cope Religious Education In Family. Fosdick Meaning of Prayer. Fuller Designing, heating Ventilating Systems. Gullck Fight for Peace. Hall Untroubled Mind. Henderson Citizens In Industry. Hodge Historical Geography of Bible Lands. Hough Out of Doors. Houghton Telling Bible Stories. Richards Julia Ward Howe, 2 v. Kenn Animal Experimentation and Medical Progress. McCormlck Fishers of Boys, Moulton Modern Study of Litera ture. Noyes Lord of Misrule. Paul Heart of Blackstone. Palmer Kipling Parsons How to Write for the Movies. Patterson Happy Art of Catching Men. Peabody Lives worth Living. Ponular Mechanics Mission Furni ture and How to Make it. 2 v. Rth First Book of Forestry. Slattery Talks With the Training Class. . Stelner Introducing the American Spirit. Trudeau Autobiography. WeiUi Ears, Brains and Fingers. Toiing New American Govern ment and Its Work. i ji i s t ,v U I fscAw M TROFANOfPki Rasputin brought on the war, and Is now, for personal reasons, trying to force the czar into a separate peace with Germany. Rasputin, he says, has full control over the ciarina, and through her controls the family. hoersterbaeumer. The funeral will be Friday, with services at SS. Peter & Paul's church. The "Mad Monk," or Sergius Michaelow Trufanoff, whose articles on Russia were bought by a New York magazine two months ago, but were suppressed, says the Imperial family of Russia is in absolute con trol of the priest Rasputin. He says RICH GHUi A NURSE. KANSAS CITY, Ho., Jan. 6 Miss Letltia Curtis, owner of valuable oil lands, descendant of a United state Osnge chieftain and relative of Sen ator Charles Curtis of Kansas, has given up a life of luxury to help tho poor. She is a nurse at St. Mar" hospital. Instead of a luxurious apartment to which she had been used, Miss Curtis rooms with another nurse, both sleep ing in one bed. No more dances nor social affairs for her. "I haven't seen my motor car for a'ween," says miss uurus. -i gi care. I love this new life. It Is fine to be doing something. It Is better than Just spending money and hunt ing fun." IIAD liONGEST FAMILY NAME. ST. LOUIS, Jan. 4. Mrs. Gertrude Ahrenhoersterbaeumer, 84 yeat old. of 810 Geyer avenue, widow of Ber nard Ahrenhoersterbaeumer, died of old age at her home yesterday. Her family has the longest name In St. Louis. Some of it members have had the name legally changed to Ahren. Mrs. Ahrenhoersterbaeumer's chil dren are Mrs. Anna Stevens, Gertrude Henry, Bernard and Fank Ahren- DALE KOTIIWKLL Optometrist and Optician Glasses greund and fitted. Lenses duplicated. American National Bank Building. Pendleton. ww mm of Watches and Jeweliy SATISFACTION CUTO I'ffl. IB0I1 THE Jeweler Now if ever come perfects days for the oyster. FIGHT PR0M0T0RS BESIEGE LES DARCY - - . T.y.jflH 3VAUDEVILLEC NEW YORK. Jan. 4. A romance of the sick room which had its in- ! ception two years ago, resulted two I months ago, it became known yester- I day, in the marriage of Craig C. Colt j of Babylon, L. I. and Muss Margaret McDonald of Manhattan, his nurse. Mr. Colt is a member of many New York clubs and a prominent figure In the social, life of the South Shore of Long Island. The ceremony was performed !n New Brunswick. N. J , but by whom was not revealed. The couple are in southern CfcUfor nit, where they will spend the win ter. Mr. Colt Is fifty-five, his brido about twenty years younger. A close friend was with the bride groom at the ceremony. He promised he would say nothing of the marriage for two months, and that period of time expired yesterday. He said Mr. Colt became engaged to the nurse shortly after she was called In. Among Mr. Coifs clubs are th Tuxedo and Union. He Is a member of everal organizations In London and Palsr. Ui It Jw t. k uv r I r ' i 1 ' t : - ?! : LES DARCY TEX R1CKARD. TEMPLE THEATRE LAST TIME TODAY IT Les Darcy is still fighting fight ing off fight promoters! And he has a hard Job to keep them away, too He is guarded like a czar, and only certain favored ones have admission to his rooms, among them "Tex" Rickard, whom every one will admit is some promoter. Rickard and about twenty other matchmakers met Darcy on his arrival. The picture shows Rickard and Darcy shaking hands on the deck of the steamer on which Darcy came Into New York harbor. PICTURE PROGRAM William A. Brady prwenU House Peters In a gripping railroad story The Rider" BIWOOQ VAUDEVILLE MgAvov & Comedy Chatter and Soirg. Waif Trio Three Kids Full of Comedy. Note the AFTERNOONS, ADULTS 15c. CHILDREN 5c EVENINGS " 25c " 10c 3VAUDEVILLEC i 1 - "" ,n,";1 ummHnmHHiiiMiiuin IMluniuimiiinntiHinniHt.niniiMiiMiinmHii""" mmm. 0f mmmmmmm 1 A T - ' t 1 1 L.J I rff- fr ' i'' , 4 4 , .m. i 1 Sunday Clara Kimliall Young as U Beautiful Young Hiliilisl Iff nnn JVL Greater Vitagraph Presents CI 1 Monday ni a i uncc 1UIHL yvin f See ite Blowing Up t( the Yacht J u 1 p a- 6 ACTS Rose Tapley Mary Anderson 6 ACTS L. Rogers Lytton Eulalie Jensen E;3 CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG. and an all Star Cait in "MY OFFICIAL WIFE" to Kimball Young, Earfc Williams, Harry T. Morey, . ' - . . nnivtn A T T r . T ATI STUPENDOUS! REMAKKAbLb! A STORY OF RUSSIAN Ut t AND ini niniuioi cff fiui kimrui vihinc in THFRfllE OF A RUSSIAN PESANT GIRL Scenes of Sum ULL vLnim iiii iinui. ivvmw . ..- - THEN AS A FASHIONABLE SOCIETY LtADtK Beautiful Ballroom Scenes With Beautiful ail 1 FOR THE KIDDIES: A KRAZY KATS CARXOON COMEDY Adults 15c the m Rossiati Music Has In Arranged far Oft m m M Usrrnorc Will Us It a the $5000.00 Plwtcplaycr Psp: Orp. Come Afternoons If Possible "n i i Children 5c CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG. and an all Star Cait in "MY OFFICIAL WIFE" V A U D E V I L L E i limns Itwiilbi !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!l UlilllllllUlllillH