Troncos
MARK
Quirk Breads for Every Meal
• Many housewives do nqt have
time or do not dare to make yeast
breads frequently,.but desire hot
breads of sopqe kind for lunch,
dinner or supper, therefor« the
so-called quick breads come to
take the place of hot yeast breads
when> the busy housewife is
rushed.
Quick breads are easily made
and when prope/ly prepared and
baked are very appetizing inrf ac
ceptable.
Many people have the idea that'
quick breads are difficult to di-
'gest, but if they?'are not swallow
ed too hurriedly and thoroughly
masticated they are not hard to
digest. It is very Important that
they be light and proper^ baked.
You never
fail with
Crescent -
the Double
Acting
Baking ,
Powder i
The qncoees tn making quick
bread Ilea In having the beat In
gredients apd working with quick
manipulation. For Instance It
when Aakthg biscuits you work
and knead the dough very much
you are going to have a heavy,
soggy product. The same is true
when making muffles; toe much
beating develops the gluten In the
bread flour which la heavy and
coarse -in texture.
When you realise how quickly
and easily these breads are made
you will runt to Include them in
your menu every day.
,
Be sure your o>en Is hot
Tnough to bake your breads more
quickly than when baking yeast
breads.
Once you have formed the hab
it of making quick breads, you
will find no end to the variations.
There Is no necessity for a same
ness In serving them. Secure one
good basic-recipe then make your
own variations.
For Instance,
cheese, fruits, such as raisins,
dates, entrants, or nuts may be
added to plaip biscuit dough. By
using yogr regular biscuit recipe
you can have cinnamon or pecan
rolls, which greatly please t h e
thil<|fen of the family.
From your original muffin rec
ipe you can have fruit or n u t
muffins, whole wheat or corn, a
little bacon or horn left o v e r
from a previous meal la good stir,
red into plain muffin hater.
Epidemic la
Under Control
? Says Ambrose
Successful Actors Must Be Bundles
Of Highly-Charged Emotion, Unstable
At The Congregational Church
Sunday school at 9:45.‘Classes
for all ages.
Morning service at 11 o’clock.
Sermon theme:
"Imagination
and Religion."
Y. P. S. C. E. meets at 7:00.
Evening service'at 8 p, m. Ser
mon theme: “The Winds of Doc
trine.”
8 8 8
• Trinity Episcopal (Viuivh
Vicar, the Rev. P. K. Hammond
Holy Communion at a. m.
Sunday school at 9:45. r
Mornfng. service and sermon
at 11.
Everyone cordially welcome.
8 8 8
Church ofr the Nazarene
Sunday School at 9 :4 5 . a. m.
Mr. T. S. Wiley, Supt.
i
At II o’clock, morning worship
with sermon from the subject,
"The Fiery Furnace.”
At 8:80* p. m. Young Peoples
Meeting.
•
At 7:30 p. m. praise service
fcllowed with sermon on the sub
ject, “Influence.”
The regular mid-week prayer
meeting will be held on Wednes
day venlng at 7:30 p. m.
A hearty welcome to all.
P. C. Thatcher, Pastor.
8 8 8
Baptist Church
M. 8. "WOodworth, Pastor
Sabbath School, 9:45.
Preaching, lljOO.
Preaching, 7:30 p. m. *
Remember the prayer meetings
each evening from 7:30 to 8:30.
Do you know of a more scriptur
al or a safer way to carry on the
affairs of the church or of your
own life Help make these to be
real prayer and ’praise services.
You are welcome.
Statistics regarding the Infan
tile .paralysis epidemic In Klam
ath county are announced by
Keith Ambrose, chief of police
of that city as follows:
: Nineteen cases are under quar
antine at the present time, seven
of these cases recovered,' and
awaiting fumigation before the
quarantine is removed. Forty- First fttarrh o f Christ, Scientist
eight cases have been reported
Pioneer Ave., South
Sunday morning service at 11
in the county since, the epidemic
first started
new cases
have been reported during the
last 48 hours,
o’clock. Snblect "Matter." ?
Sunday school at ,9:45 o’clock.
Wednesday evening service at I '
p. in . Heading room open daily
from 2 to 5 except. Sundays and
NEW YORK. Sept. 1«.—(U>>—
holidays. The public Is lovingly
Why do so many- girls, all as
welcomed.
beuutiful as the average movie
nun
•tur, fall completely when they
• Methodist Episcopal Chuwch
$ry to crash the gates to the
H. .F Pemberton, Pastor
Morning worship at M o’clock. studios and fame?
Sermon subject: "The Men of
Science, represented by Dr.
Burning Hearts.
Louis Blsch, noted neuro-psychl-
Evening worship at 8. Subject: atrlst of New York Polyclinic
“Time, Time, Moire Tl'm^”
Medical School, has found an
Sunday schotg at 9:45. Bible answer—and it apples equally
study wljh a purpose.
to the handsome youths who
Epworth League
at 5:46. look like John Gilbert, but who
Young people's hour.
will never get nearer film star
Prayer meeting Wednesday dom than an orchestra seat.
evening at 7:30.
"Briefly, they are psychologic
You are cordially Invited to at ally unfit. They are extroverts
tend all the meetings of >t h 1 a ■—and all successful actors are
church. Strangers and visitors
Introverts," says Dr. Blsch In
especially welcome. You will fsel
an
article published in Photoplay
at home in this homelike church?
magazine
for October.
Come as you are.
Then he explains that all of
« 8 8
First Presbyterian Church * us fall into one of those two
psychological classes. *
With Illuminated Bulletin
North Main and Hetman Sts.
. "The extroverts are the types
Sunday morning 11 o’clock, the that succeed lu business," he
pastor. Rev. Hugh T. Mitchel more says. “They are the practical'
will speak upon “ My Responsi people. They don’t dream; they
bility.” At the 8 o’clock worship do things. They depend upon
hour the theme wllL be, "Three reason rather than upon feel
Temptations as Tests.” The choir ing. e i t her they possess a scant
will present special music, having amount of emotion In their make
had their first practice of the fall up to start with, or what emotion
this past week. Miss Florence they do have is put behind actual
Allen, -director; Miss Imogene matter-of-fact accomplishment.
Wallace, organist.
"The introverts are exactly the
Bible School, 9:45. Wirt M.
opposite.
They are all feeling,
Wright, superintendent.
Christian Endeavor, 7:00 p. m. bundles of highly charged emo
Lawrence Mitchelmore, leader.
This will be the last meeting be
fore a number of young , people
go away to school. The theme
will be "What is wrong and what
la right with the movies.”
MELLO-GLO is a wonderful new
8. P. Off trials ' In M e d f o r d -
shade—youth color. Perspiration
John M. Scott, assistant traf hardly affects it and It will not
fic passenger manager of t h e leave the skin dry and drawn.
Southern Pacific,
accompanied Try this new French Process
by J. H. Mule hay,
assistant Face Powder and enjoy Its mar
freight manager, of Portland. velous
beautifying
qualltjea..
Oregon, were among the peop) Sticks well, stays on longer and
who helped Medford celebrat does not clog the pores. You
their Jubilee of Visions Realise? will surely love MELLO-GLO.
•AIRY
tion. They are sensitive and more
or less unstable. They feel more
than they think. Practical results
do not Interest them. What
they glory in is a state of stir-
red-up emotion, a rousing of
what they would call their soul.
It'Is the lutroverts who become
the start». The extroverts mar
ket the pictures.”
Tobacco King
Builds Great
School Project
this month.
fabric manufacture,
Constructif will start on thé
new huildiitgs of Duke -Univer
sity, the seat of learning made
possible through the will of
James B. Duke, the tobacco king.
FOR THE
Over 120,000,000 vyill be ex
TOILET
AND BATH
pended. The project will take
years to complete and when fin
ished one of the most beautiful
college campuses In America
will nestle in this Carolina twon.
The new buildings will cover
over 100 acres, centering In the
5,000 acre forest and Held area
7 ounce cake
owned by the university. Forty
buildings will be constructed to
Each 10c; 3 for 25c
house schools of engineering,
medicine, chemistry, forestry and
religion.
The main group will be the
school of medicine, which It Is
estimated will cost $4,000,000 (Ixxatcd in the Lithia Springs
and which will be eudowed for
Hotel BnUtHng)
$10,000,000.
“TODCO”
Cocoa Almond
Soap
Lithia Springs
Pharmacy
SALEM. N. C.. Sept. 16.—(U>)
—Thç metamorphosis of millions
made from tobacco Into one of
the finest educational plants In
Salem — Oregon Linen Mills
the country Is due to start here here will Investigate airplane
Phone 190
7 1 N. Main S t
LAST DAY
New Face
Powder Popular
B A R G A IN S
Dried Prunes, 40’s to 50’s, per lb
Red Diamond Noodles, 3 pkgs.
Creamettes (quick cooking macaroni) 3 pkgs. 25c
v
Calumet Baking Powder, 1 lb. c a n ................ 27c
Newport— $11,980 contract let
for Taqutna Beach seawall.
Sunbrite Cleanser, 4 c a n s ............................. ... 19c
W orld’s Quickest Hot Breakfast
Royal Baking Powder, 12 oz, c a n ................. 37c
Kelloggs Bran Flakes, 3 pkgs.........................25c
Kelloggs Corn Flakes, 3 pkgs. . . . . . . . . 25c
O ats
Post Toasties, 3 pkgs..............
Milk bottles show
Thin milk below
Their cream is all
on top. *
Del Monte Sugar Peas, per can, 18c? 2 cans 35c
Amaizo Corn Starch, 3 pkgs............................. 25c
t
X T O B O D Y likes the milk at the bottom o f a bottle because
A w there's little or no cream left in it. •
.« .
■
* i
■■■'-!
But A lpine is different. There’s just as much cream in the
last spoonful as in the first. That's because it's homogenized.
19 E. MAIN
PHONE 59
Apples, pound .
.
Potatoes, pound . . .
Italian Prunes, pound
This process breaks up the large coarse globules o f milk f it ,
which form the cream, into countless tiny ones. A s a result
they remain evenly distributed throughout instead o f rising to
the top as cream does in ordinary milk. T h at's w h y there's
cream in every drop o f Alpine.
A double supply o f cream, too. For A lpine is pure, rich milk’z
w ith the cream retained but more than half the water removed.
Use Alpine in your coffee and in every recipe that calls for
milk. You 11 get a richer flavor, a smoother, creamier consistency.
Costs less than ordinary milk— keeps pufe and sweet indef
initely in its sterilized air tight container. G et A lp in e today.
Golden Bantam Sweet Corn, per can . . .
15c
Schillings Coffee, 1 lb. can-....................
50c
Folgers Coffee, 1 lb. can ...........................
50c
Palm Olive Soap, 4 bars . . . . . . . . . . .
25c
(Limit—1 Deal to a Customer)
W e cow s retort
Each Alpine quart
Has cream in
every drop/ *
Celery, per bunch..15c Cucumbers, 3 f o r .. .10c
Cabbage, per pound ..........................................4c
a.
•
Bartlett Pears (for canning) per l b . ..............4c
* For your next layer cake try this ’
smooth, rich Chocolate Icing
CANTALOUPES, 3 POR .
WATERMELLON, POUND
I
f cup Alpine M ilk , i cup mgar, 4 squares choc
olate, 1 tap. vanilla. Cook Alpine M g k and choc
olate together until smooth, stirring constantly.
A dd s u p r and cook t ill mixture thickens. Take
from fire and, when coal, add vanilla. Spread be-
tween layers and on top o f cake.
ALL ORDERS AMOUNTING TO $3 OR OVER DELIVERED TREE,
4
TOMORROW IS OUR LAST DAY
ARGO STARCH
anil wo wish to extend to all 6f our friends ottr sincere thanks
for their liberal patronage while we have been operating a
grocery in Ashland and bespeak for the new owner the same
courteous treatment?
CORN OR GLOSS
3 for. . . . 25c
WE DELIVER
«
P. and G. Naptha Soap, 20 b a r s ...................... 75c
That wonderful QUAKER flavor — quicker
than toast! Ready in 2V& to 5 minutes!
Herbert’s Grocery
...................25c
Thos.H. HilL
cream ut