Auxiliary Plans for Food Booth Plans for their food booth to be maintained at trie annual dog show of the Salem Lions club, April 1 and 2, were discussed by members of the Lions auxiliary when they met last evening at the home of Mrs. Walter Dry. Mrs. Denver Youi g is general chairman for the booth and on the committee are Mrs. Wayne Doughton, auxiliary president Mrs. John Ramage, Mrs. Rollin Lewis, Mrs. Robert Davidson, Mrs. Monroe Cheek, Mrs. Evert Glvens, Mrs. L. J. Stewart, Mrs. Lawrence Moore. Among other items, members are supplying even dozen homemade apple pies for the booth. Officers Entertained Several state auxiliary officers were guests at the meeting, in cluding Mrs. H. Ruben Kuratli, president; Mrs. Earle Bowman, secretary, and Mrs. Russel Ide, treasurer, all of Hillsboro; and Mrs. A, J. Crose of Salem, who is second vice president of the state organization. Other guests at the meeting were Mrs. Glenn Hoar, Mrs. Everett Wilcox and Mrs. Paul Ronniger. For the program, the Debon- aires of Leslie junior high school Misses Sidney Kromer, Carol Lee and Laurel Herr sang, ac companied by Mrs. Victor Palm ason. The April meeting of the aux iliary will be at the home of Mrs. Arthur Erickson. SALEM WRITERS' club held its March meeting with Prof, and Mrs. Morton Peck as hosts in their Court street home. The president, Mrs. Flora Enders, presided. Original work in prose and poetry were given by Miss Renska Swart, Mrs." Flora Enders, Mrs. Jessie Singleton, Mrs. E. M. White, Perry Reigle- man and Mrs. Edith Covey. Others present were Mrs. Blanche Jones and Mr. and Mrs. N. F, Anderson, Dessert Ideas Raspberry Charlotte 1 package raspberry gelatin 1 Vi cups hot water Vt teaspoon salt cup red raspberry jam Vt cup cream, whipped Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Add salt. Chill until slightly thickened. Place in bowl of cracked ice or ice water and whip with rotary egg beater un til fluffy and thick like whipped cream. Fold in jam and cream. Turn into mold. Chill until firm. Unmold. Makes 6 to 8 servings Banana Peach Mold 1 package orange gelatin 1V4 cups hot water cup peach syrup . Vi cup canned sliced peaches 1 or 2 bananas, sliced Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Add peach syrup. Chill until slightly thickened. Then fold in fruit and turn into molds. Chill until firm. Unmold. Garnish with sliced bananas and mint leaves if desired. Makes 4 or 5 servings. Apricot Upside-Down Cake 1 Vi cups sifted cake flour 1 Yf teaspoons double-acting baking powder , Yt teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butter or other shortening ',i cup granulated sugar 1 egg, unbeaten Vi cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 tablespoons butter '' cup brown sugar, firmly packed 12 cooked apricots Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, salt, and sugar and sift together three times. Cream butter, add dry ingre dients, egg, milk and vanilla Stir until all flour is dampened Then beat vigorously, 1 minute Melt 4 tablespoons butter in 8 inch iron skillet, or in cake pan 8x8x2 inches. Add brown su gar. Stir until thoroughly mix ed. On this arrange apricots, cut-side up. Pour-batter over Bake in moderate oven (350 de grees F.) for 30 minutes, or un- t." done. Loosen cake from sides and bottom of pan with spatula Serve upside-down on dish with apricots on top. 1 A combination sewing and home laundry room off the kit chen may be a housewife's dream come true. Often it is not prac tical tij have the laundry in the kitchen. A washer, dryer and ironer in separate space, togeth er with a small sink, cabinet space and equipment for mend ing and repairing clothing is ideal for saving steps and labor. Free-Westinghouse SEWING MACHINES Compltt stock, port i, occotior t'erollmok. TAL 3-4311 YEATER APPLIANCE CO. 375 ChemekeU nra K Play at Highland School First graders recently staged a Cochran as a robin; Marjorie Gookin and Sandra Stewart as parents and school patrons attended the performance. Cos tumes and stage settings were particularly effective. One of the groups in the play is pictured here, left to right: Suzanne Cochran as a robin; Marjorie Cookin and Sandra Stewart as the rabbits; Rodney Johnson as a deer; Roger Zumwalt in the roll of a beaver; Patrick Loy as Hiawatha; Kenneth Story, a squirrel; Lynn Dorman, a firefly; Ivan Phillips portraying a woodpecker;' Christiannie Patton, a rabbit; Elaine Standish as Nokomis; Nancy Van Houten as a .bluebird. Campus Clippings By GERI BOWLES WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY With Freshman Glee, Willamette's renowned songfest, only a week away, practice sessions are being increased by every class, including the seniors, who have"swum" the milllstream twice out of three tries. The freshmen formally challenged the other classes this week, and immediately class spirit reached a new high. According , to current talk on campus, each class is certain to win depending, of course, on to whom one is talking. Added to the week's busy schedule were the tryouts last night for the May Weekend play, which will be announced at a later date. Willamette students also pooled their efforts in aiding the Red Cross Bloodmobile on Willamette Day," when 83 pints of blood to be used in the Salem area were donated by students. Six dances and party affairs have been scheduled for the week end, and because of the holiday, shamrocks and their counterparts apparently will dominate the decoration schemes, "Shamrock Record Shopi' is the theme for the Sigma Alpha Ep- silon pledge dance this evening to which all members were for mally invited via telephone calls at 3 a. m The Independent organization on campus has planned a semi' formal dance for this evening also, and the main center of at traction promises to be the uni que wishing well which will serve as a punch container. Bax ter Lounge will abound in an ar ray of shamrocks and the pro grams, with the couples' names written in silver will be pres ented to all who enter into the spirit of the party by wearing a "bit o the green." "Shamrock Inn," alias the Lausanne hall dining room, is the setting for the annual Beta Alpha Gamma-Sigma Alpha Epsilon, sophomore service honoraries, and alums will dine at tables de corated with green place mats, and candles, and a smorgasbord is the promised bill-of-iare. Wil lamette's popular Irish tenor, Larry O'Dell, will occupy a pro minent place in the evening's entertainment. Saturday evening the Delta Gammas and Chi Omegas will entertain. The DG "Shamrock Shananigans" will be a sports affair and the pledge class has concocted entertainment for the evening. Shamrocks bearing couples names and a tree with St. Patrick's Day favors for all guests will carry out the holiday theme. The Chi O annual, formal "White Carnation Ball" in honor of the graduating seniors will carry out a white and green color scheme, with trellises, ivy and an FOfUUPLICATING Our enlarged Duplicator De partment offers the complete Heyer line of duplicating ma chines, as well as every sup ply need for any make or model duplicator. Whether you use stencil, gel atin or spirit process .... we have supplies for all ma chines. . Utfcrgraph Dirt Mimeograph Hektoflraall Morr Vivid Niagara Standard Spced-o-print Rtx-a-fraph Shop personally or phone for quick delivery. If it's a Heyer product, you can depend on the quality. If it's service you can depend on Needham's Book Store archway decorating the dance floor. Silhouettes of the four seniors, who with their dates will be feted at a dinner party before the ball, .will grace the band stand, and the souvenier pro grams will be green with a white carnation on the cover. Sunday the Delta Gammas will hold "open house" for all stu dents, faculty, alumni, and friends, who will be given the opportunity of viewing the re cently enlarged and redecorated chapter house. Miss Lorena Jack Mrs. Grace Marquam, house mother, Mrs. Robert Gregg, and president Joan Klindworth will stand in the receiving line. Sunday evening a formal ban quet, honoring the new initiates of Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholastic honoraries, will be held at Lau sanne hall. SILVERTON Mrs. Irene Roubal, president, is announc ing the postponement of the Ap ril meeting of the Business and Professional Women's club in deference to the Oregon Educa tional association meeting Ap ril 3-4, which many members of the club who are teachers, will attend. For a children's party dessert fold quartered marshmallows and small peanut brittle pieces into whipped cream and layer in between vanilla wafers. Ar range in attractive containers and garnish with cherries. Miss McAfee Is Speaker for Club Silverton Miss Lucy ' Mc Afee, executive director of San- tiam area of Girl Scouts, spoke to the members of the Silver ton Woman's club Monday af ternoon at the meeting at the First Christian church social rooms. Her topic was instructive on "Duties of a Sponsoring G r o u p," with supplemental showing of films taken at Smith Creek camp near Silverton park areas. Mrs. Larry Ernst, district Girl Scout chairman, was in charge of troop 30, sponsored by the Silverton Woman's club, and di rected them'in songs and enter tainment for the program. The girls were tea guests of the club when hostesses were Mrs. Ethel Brown, Mrs. Lowell Brown, Mrs. S. A. Gay, Mrs. Charles Hoyt and Mrs. V. E. Pettit. Mrs. P. A. Loar, president, an nounced the club will serve during the five-day visit of the mobile X-ray chest unit to Sil verton, beginning work April 10. A speaker from Salem will talk to the helpers the after noon of March 23. On April 1 a rummage sale is planned to be directed by the club with Mrs. Chester Berger son as chairman. The Legion hall will be secured for the sale if possible. Guest night Is to be observed at the dinner at Immanuel Lu theran church Monday, April .10 when Art Kirkham of radio fame will be the speaker on the subject: "Twenty - seven Years Behind the Mike." The president, Mrs. P. A. Loar named as her garden tea com mittee the affair to be jointly at the gardens of the Earl J. Adams and Lowell Browns kitchen chairman, Mrs. E. A. F 1 n 1 a y; refreshments, Mrs. Glenn Briedwell; serving, Mrs. Errol Ross; decoration, Mrs. Ethel Brown; publications, Mrs. F. Glenn McDonald. In frying chicken many cooks have excellent results when they keep the skillet fat very hot when the chicken is dropped in, then cover the pan and lower the heat to steam. The cover may be removed for the last five or- 10 minutes of cooking and the chicken recrisped. Pianist Due As Soloist Salem concert-goers will hear one of the Pacific Northwest's foremost young pianists when 22-year-old Grace Harrington per forms the Edvard Grieg con certo with the Portland Sym phony orchestra at the local senior high school auditorium next Tuesday night The pro gram's overture is scheduled for 8:15. Miss Harrington is one of the two 1950 winners in the third annual Portland Symphony so ciety's young artists auditions and will present the Grieg con certo with the orchestra in Port land the evening before her Sa lem appearance. James Sample, conductor of the 75-member en semble, reportedly expressed himself as "tremendously pleas ed" with the selection of Miss Harrington and the other con test finalist, Irene Horvath, 20- year-old Corvallis soprano The woman pianist in private life is Mrs. Calvin Heusser wife of an Oregon State student who is seeking his Ph. D in botany at the Corvallis institution The Heussers make their home at Adair Village where Mrs Heus ser enjoys such duties as cook ing, washing, knitting and cro cheting. She still finds a great deal of time to spend at her grand piano and to teach at the. Portland School of Music. Grace once boomed as a child prodigy was introduced to the keyboard at the age of 4. She hated the pros pect so much that she kicked and screamed. But, only five years later, she made her New Jaycee-Ettes At Style Show Several members of the Sa lem Jaycee-Ettes were in Port land Wednesday to attend the dessert party and style show sponsored by the Portland Jaycee-Ettes at the Cosmopolitan club. Proceeds from the show go to the benefit of the Port land Symphony orchestra fund. Going to the event' from Sa lem were Mrs. Don Judson, Mrs. Melvin Bedsaul, Mrs. Lawrence Moore, Mrs. G. I. Patterson Mrs. C. A. Schaefer, Mrs. Mau rice Cohn, Mrs. Milan Boniface Mrs. Tom Pomeroy, all mem bers of the local group, and Mrs. F. C. French, a guest. In Portland they joined Mrs. Schaefer's sister, Mrs. Harry Roisom. LYONS Due to other activ ities the Woman's club will hold its meeting Thursday afternoon, March 30, instead of March 23, as planned. Mrs. Nina Westen house of Scio will be the speak er of the afternoon, and will tell the ways and means of or ganizing a garden club. Every one is invited to attend. York debut and was tendered a Curtis scholarship by Joseph Hoffman. At the age of 11, she entered the Juilliard School of Music, and from then on hon ors, awards, scholarships and prizes literally flowed into her life. She won both of Juilliard's highest awards in 1948 when she worked as a post graduate stu dent. Her honors include a third place prize in the Rachmaninoff Fund finals at Carnegie hall. I NOW! ANOTHER TRIUMPH IN TOILETRIES RY KINGS MEN I CRYSTAL First to put its cool, virile fragrances in gleaming gold containersKings Men now introduces another innovation in men's toiletries 'Toiletries in Crystal." In these superbly fashioned, lustrous crystal containers, brilliantly set off in a variety of rich color tones, are toiletries that bear the char acter and tradition of the finest British imports Truly for the man who com mtndi life's 6nesr! Packaged in thest glowing colors: tOBINHOOD CD I IN OYAL rutPLI COIOWATION tID CATHIDIAl AMUR IMPf RIAL LUSTIt tWOROStllt BtUfl 2.50 Spiking Ai Itlfi Im tin ISOVIII HAIMI IAZAAJ UfDfCl CfNTFf IffANCN 1621, -j N. Commercial You walking up over paint store Hello friends. thU U Yee flint talkinr to you In thU writing. I am telling you about my ayatem for taking out Chinese food for eating In your own place of living. Do not mate me a mistake, I am liking to have you here at my place on North Commercial street but may be you havlni private party at home with one person or lota of persona and you like Chinese food to make party more better. Al right you call me up on telephone and telling mt how many peo ples and what you are desiring to eat, what kind Chinese dish you like, then you hang receiver on hook and come down my place, when you get here you are finding your food all ready for you to talct home. This service not costing any more, I am liking to Io it for you, very much; you see when you come I will be smiling very much, oh yes very very happy to do this for you. You tell lots of your friends too X do for them like X do for you. It I make dish to take out tor lots and lots people j make a llttlt American money too, this make me smile more and more. YEE SING ' (that's my name, sure) T.B. Capifal Journal. Salem, Oregon, Friday, March 17, 1950 11 Legion Post Meets Friday The Friday evening meeting lor Pioneer post No 149 Amer ican Legion, the all-woman post, will be the last one lor Miss Susan M. Faherty to preside as commander. Miss Faherty is re signing the ofice preparatory to leaving for Tucson Arizona, where she is to be assistant ad ministrator for the southern Arizona blood center ol the American Red Cross Succeeding Miss Faherty in ihe office of commander will be Mrs. Sylvia Kraps. The meeting is to be at 8 o'clock in the Salem Woman's club house. ; Celery salt may be used in many dishes soups, salad dress ings, stuffing, egg dishes. To make this flavoring celery seed is ground very fine 1. PUASANT TAIT1NO 2. ORANCI FIAVORID 3. NO NEED TO CUT OR BREAK TABLETS 4. ACCURATE. DOSAOI Mothwi Art Aiklng Per ST.JOSfPH ASPIRIB FOR CNIIOREI 3 FOR Insured Savings First Federal Savings First Current Dividend 2V4 1st Federal Savings and Loan Ass'n. 142 South Liberty Another iMfelscoopi v ' GOLDIES CUD ENTIRE STOCK STARTING FRIDAY Drastic Reductions On ALL ITEMS SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Here are just some Examples SOX BLOUSES SLIPS Size3'2to8 4 f 1 00 Sanforized, white C)C) 9re French crepe $159 r. . .. ,, ,. broadcloth shirt. Jf white lace trim. 32-40. I Sizes 8'2 to 1 1 3 for $1.00 PANTIES BRIEFS I SLIPS Brief, small, medium, large. ... ,,. tni J Outsizes, 44 to 50 lacelt QQ 3 4 tf Nylon, small, medium, lllll trim, satin and crepe Jp Jjj ,e' UU "org.. 7 7 .rand fitting. Rea. 5.00 J BABY SHIRTS BABY DRESSES BABY ROMPERS Fine knit, easy- A Genuine Hand made Qfl Fin knit Durene 4 OQ on-shoulder, side UmW Maderia. M Mit hand embroidered 177 ie. Reg. 69e Reg .3.98 " trim Yes, We Have Many Easter Dresses Reduced, Too! ALL SALES FINAL GOG-DIE'S DURESS SHOP IN THE KEIZER DISTRICT 465 Store Ph. 2-2485 sua etiAj mm