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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1927)
Page 2 EAST CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY, JUN’E 23, 19 Z H O P E FO R T IT A N IC S H A F T IN 2 YEARS TREE RINGS CLEWS TO HISTORY AND WEATHER SUNSHINE CAKE IS DELICATE IN COLOR THRIFT IN BUYING FOOD FOR FAMILY Sponsors in Washington Seek More Funds in Congress. Contains Large Proportion Life Story Is R evealed in of Eggs, but No Butter. O w n Cross-Section. Know What Is Liked, Buy Carefully and Don’t Waste W ashington.—O bstacles which for fifteen years have blocked the erec tion In W ashington of a sta tu e com m em orating the 1,500 victims of the T itanic disaster are slowly being cleared away. Members of the Wom a n ’s T itanic Memorial association hope th at their objective will be reached in another two years. Organized shortly a fte r the disaster In 1912, the association promptly raised more than $40,000 for the me morial, but It was not until 1917 that a bill authorizing use of public grounds for the purpose got through the legislative Jam In congress. Then the site which had been selected was denied. A new site was chosen, on the Po tom ac near the ground dedicated to the Lincoln memorial, and Mrs. Harry Payne W hitney of New York went ahead with completion of the statue from a design approved by the Fine A rts commission several years ear lier. The new site was under w ater, but plans had been made for construction of a sea wall as part of the program for linking Potomac and Hock parks. Appropriations for the wall were hard to get, however, and work on It had to be suspended In f922, a fte r only part of the riprap foundation had been put In. The last congress grant ed $25,000 for resum ption of the work, but th at was enough to provide for little more than repairs on the old foundation. Knglneers estim ated that another $175,000 would be needed. Mrs. William Howard T aft Is Inter ested In the plan, which Is under the guidance of Mrs. John Hays Ham mond, first secretary of the associa tion, and Mrs. Robert S. Chew. These women are confident that the necessary appropriation will be g ran t ed by the next congress and th at soon afterw ard they will be able to com plete their task. Colds in H ead Prove Im pervious to V accine Mnncliester, England.—A cold In the head Is still a cold In the head at tho M anchester university,, where for sev en m onths experim ents have been go ing on to determ ine the value of vac- clnntlon. Two hundred and eighty- six persons took part In the test. The conclusion that vaccination against colds has no preventive value wng suggested hy the results of an experiment carried on by Dr. A. F. C. Davey, Dr. F. K. Ferguson and Dr. W. W. a Topley. Students und members of the uni versity start offered their services for the experiment. Of these 13S were Inoculnted with a stock vaccine con taining eight different kinds of mi crobes, and ITS were not Inoculated R esults showed that the 138 Inocu lated persons had 203 colds, tho 148 uninoculated subjects had 103 colds during the period of the test and that the average duration of the colds among the Inoculnted was 13 days and among the others ten and one- half days. The Investigators, however, con cluded that the evidence does not Jus tify with certainty any conclusion that vaccine caused nny harm. O ne-M an T ugboats Now Being Used on W est Coast Anuoortes, Wash.—Man power Is too valuable these days for duplication, so one-man tugboats for towing have gained favor. Towing conditions on the B ritish Columbia coast and In Vuget sound are causing the cbnngo In methods. Navigation laws require te n t s of over 32 feet length and nine feet beam to carry certified captains. T here is no limit to the power equip ment. Thus 30 foot boats ore’ being fitted with 45 to 100 horsepower oil engines and one man does the tend ing. steering, planting the tow Hues und stands watch. Have Sweet Tooth A tlantic City, N. J .—Americans seem to have a sweet tooth. They eat 825,000 tons of candy u year, but t i n t ’s not enough for members of the National Confectioners’ association. 0 0 < H 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 < H K H 3 < K I< J O C apital “ B eauty” P lan t jjj Prove Aid to P arking W ashington. — Some decided contrasts between the old and the new are being furnished ns the capital gets down to the actual work of beautifying the downtown section, parts of which for years have been n constant irritan t to those artistically In dined. In the block adjoining the massive Post Office department building, whose foundations In close labyrinths of cellars below the ground, an entire city block occupied by stores and other business houses was razed, and not a single basement was dis closed. When the brickwork and other walls were removed, a Job re qnlritjg a very short time, the ground beneath was found to he so smooth that It was Immedl ately pre erupted by m otorists as a place where automobiles might be left Indefinitely without the d re a l of finding them ticketed p for parking too long. 5 x O § <j 6<HKH500<J00<JIKJ0<H50CKKKHKKJ<TO ( P r e p a r e d by t h e U n ite d S t a t e s D e p a r t m ent of A griculture.) BUSINESS AND (P repared by t h e m erit of United S t a t e « A g ric u ltu re.) PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Depart’ Wushliigton.—Announcement by Or. Being th rifty In buying and using Sunshine cuke is one of the sponge A. K. Douglass of the University of food need not aiean going without group, containing a large proportion of Arizona thut the study of the sequence everything the fam ily likes. It may of tree rings la likely to be of vulue eggs and no b u tte r or other f a t Some not mean having a lower food bill of the egg yolks a re used, hut not ull In long-time w eather forecasting re than your next-door neighbor, for the of them, lienee It has the delicate yel calls that tree rings ulreudy have fur food needs of her family may bo alto nished vuluable clews to dating pre low color th at gives It its name, hut gether different from those of your differs In texture som ewhat from ptuln Columbian history of Americu. household. You will be th rifty If you This method wus used In conjunc sponge enke. know w hat constitutes the right kind Farm ers’ Bulletin 1450-F, “Home tion with pottery types In fixing the of food for each person In your home, time when Pueblo Bonito, New Mex Baking," which may be obtained by If you buy carefully, and allow noth ico, nourished us the m etropolis of anyone on application to the United tutes Deportm ent of A griculture, con Ing to be wasted. America In the years before 1402. tains the following recipe for sunshine Do you know how many pounds of Trees Our Oldest Inhabitants. cake: sugar, butter, flour, coffee, and other Dr. Nell M. Judd, leader of the Na Sunshine Cake. much-used foods your family requires tional Geographic society expeditions 8 e g g w h i t e s 1 cupful elf te d each week? How m any dozen eggs to Pueblo Bonito, with whom Doctor S e g g y o l k s s o f t w h e a t or when eggs are plentiful—how few you pastry dour Douglass collaborated In upplying bis l t e a s p o o n f u l d a - enn m anage w ith when they are Y orlng 1 cupful s u g a r method to the Pueblo Bonito ruins, scarce? How much of a given kind ol 1 t e a s p o o n f u l H teaapoonful w rites: cream of t a r t a r salt meat to buy for a single dinner, for “The oldest living things In Amer two dinners, or for a dinner and lunch B eat the yolks and w hites of the ica ure Its big trees, the sequoias of eggs separately, adding half the salt next day? How many slices of pine the Sierra Nevada. T he pines and to the egg w hites so th a t they will apple there are In a can—In other Junipers of Arizona and New Mexico beat np very stiff. Add the sugar to words, how many It will serve? How are much younger than the sequoias; the beuten egg yolks and begin adding many m akings of breakfast cereal but, like the latter, they are older the flour which has been sifted with there are In a box of each kind? than any other living thing In their the cream of ta rta r and the re st of the Definite knowledge on such points own neighborhood. Some of these up salt. This m ixture will be so stiff th at as these, together with a good system land trees ure between four hundred you will have to add some of the beat of planning m eals and buying for there and five hundred years of age, and it en egg w hites for m oisture before ull will go a long way tow-ard thrifty Is not ut all lmprobublo thut still old m anagem ent of tho food supply. Some er ones may be found. housekeepers who keep accounts go “The life history of alm ost every over the preceding m onth’s food bills, tree is revealed by Its own-cross sec and not only discover some of the fuctj tion, this y ear’s growth being record of this kind th a t they need to know, ed by u new ring. If any given year but also arriv e a t an estim ate of how bus been one of scanty ruinfall, the much the food per day averages, or, In particular ring for th a t year will be some cases, the food per person per relatively th in ; und, conversely, if the day. The advantage of having some rulufull has been abundant, there will such figure as this to guide one Is that be a corresponding Increase in the it helps one to plan for the next week thickness of the annual ring. or month and to buy more exactly. II “Periods of drought or excessive you know Just w hat use Is to be made moisture, It has been learned, tend to of every pound of food m aterial you repeut them selves ut fairly regular In purchase, there will be few er discon tervals, resulting thus in a more or Sunshine Cake. certlng left-overs to use up, and the less orderly sequence of thick and thin tendency to use m aterials too lavishly annual rings which do not vary, to the flour Is mixed In. Fold the egg will also be checked. In small faml any marked degree, In all the trees whites In very carefully so as not to lies, It may prove most economical to release any of the a ir which you have of any one d is tric t buy perishables In day-to-day am ounts “C ertain of these ring series pos been so cureful to beat In. T he a ir Is ra th e r than to lose p art through spoil sesses individual features th a t quick the only leavening In this kind of cake. ag e; but as a rule, buying In very ly Identify them, no m atter In what Last of all add the flavoring. Vanilla, small quantities Is expensive, either locality they may he found, and these lemon <*r orange ex tract may be pre because of the uneven division of the are naturally utilized by the Investi ferred. Pour the b a tte r as soon as It selling price for halves or quarters, or gator as 'keys’ to the problem he Is Is mixed Into a smooth, ungreased because the denier charges a higher seeking to solve. And w hat Is true of tube pan. T his type of pan Is best to rate. It takes him four tim es as long living trees Is likewise true of dead use for baking a cake of the sponge for Instance, to handle and w rap four trees, and beams or roofing timbers type because the center opening allow s q u arter pounds of b u tte r as Is r e the m ixture to heat evenly. The oven from prehistoric ruins, like Pueblo quired for one pound of butter. should be ready for the cake as soon Bonito. Staple groceries and canned goods as It Is ndxed and In the pan, hut be “From the foregoing It will be ob are often sold a t a lower ru te In dozen careful not to have the oven too hot. vious that If any overlapping series or half dozen lots, and consequently of annual rings can be discovered— may be wisely purchased th a t way that Is, If a given sequence of rings Secret of Custard Pie Time ns well as money Is saved by can l>e found both In u beam from for such articles In quantity With Crtep Undercrust shopping Pueblo Bonito and In a tree still liv a t Intervals of several weeks or more H ere’s the secret of a custard pie ing—it will be possible to dute the Clubbing w ith neighbors Is often a with a crisp undercrust—a prehuked form er with reasonable exactness. m eans of buying perishables at whole shell—according to the bureau of sale rates. Tree Calendar's “ Missing Link." “ Such a direct connection, however, home economics. Foods In season are cheaper thnn C ustard Pie. with no Intervening links In our time those out of season, but locally pro 3 eggs chain from the beams of prehistoric 1H c u p f u l s m ilk duced foods may sell higher thnn those H t e a s p o o n f u l s a l t 14 c u p f u l s u g a r Pueblo Bonito to the living trees of 1 t e a s p o o n f u l v a brought from a distance, because ol northern New Mexico, Is ra th e r be freshness, according to the United n illa Put the milk and the sugar in a dou S tates D epartm ent of Agriculture. yond the range of possibilities; the explorer’s task Is rarely quite so easy ble boiler and bring to the scalding Buy by weight when you can. Es point. Add the well-beaten eggs, salt as that. tim ate the pound ra te on package “It seems necessary, therefore, In and the flavoring. In the m eantim e goods and com pare one kind w ith an the present case, to find a ‘connecting bake a pie crust In a deep pie pan un other. Foods In packages a re often til the crust Is golden brown. Pour link’ In this time chain, and th a t was preferred to those sold In bulk because the especlul object of a subsidiary ex the custard Into the baked pie crust, of the sanitary protection given by the and place In a moderately hot oven. pedition authorized by the research sealed carton. committee of the National Geographic A fter a few m inutes reduce the heat, Selling services a re paid for by the and allow the pie to bake at this low society In connection with the explora customer. Stores run on the ‘‘cash- tem perature until the custard Is set tlon of I’uehlo Bonito. and-enrry” plan have elim inated the “Cross-sections from 49 tim bers un In the center of the pie. cost of delivery and credit. If your earthed during the explorations of two tim e Is valuable, however, It may be S p rin g O n io n s seasons were examined hy Doctor b e tte r for you to buy in quantity Douglass with very Instructive re w here delivery Is furnished, even If T ry cooking spring onions whole sults. These beams, taken from the with about 3 or 4 Inches of stalk left you have to pay more. T rue thrift sees all the needs of the home as a eastern portion of Pueblo Bonito, all on them. They will he done In from whole and finds, sometimes, th at the seem to have been cut within a period 15-to 20 m inutes. Lift them out care lowest dollars-and-eents cost may not of 12 years. fully and pour a w hite sauce over be the th riftiest m anagement. them. They may be served on to a s t “Some tim bers exposed In the north western q u a rte r of the ruin, however, were cut several years earlier, thus corroborating the archeological evi BEEF CROQUETTES FOR FAMILY OR GUEST dence previously presented." Cem etery C enturies O ld Found, H istory U nknow n Chester, 1’a.—Curiosity-seekers have discovered an abandoned burying ground near here, said to be the oldest tn the seetion. as dales of 11»OS. 17(44 and 173.1 are declphe-nble on the few remaining stones, which also show the family names of Ford und Smith. The two-century-old cemetery Is lo ented In two states, Pennsylvania and Delaware, ns the Mason nnd Dixon line runs directly through the prop erty, located In the most southern part of Lnwncroft cemetery, on the Wilmington pike. A cluster of trees Made of A n y Cooked Left-Over L ean M eat stnnd guard at the rapidly vanishing plot, which Is on a hill, overlooking (Prepared b y t h e U n ite d S t a t e s D epart beaten egg which has been well mixed the valley between the two states ment of A g r i c u l t u r e . ) with one tahlespoonful of w ater. Roll Inquiry falls to find anyone to relate Good croquette* can he made of nny In finely sifted bread crumbs and place Its history. cooked left-over lean meat. Beef on a pan or board, and let stnnd for m akes particularly tasty croquettes, an hoar or longer for the egg coating suitable for a family dinner or for a to dry. O rigin of S h o em ak irg guest luncheon. The proportions In n e a t In an Iron kettle any desired T raced Back to Egypt the following recipe arc given by the fat until hot enough to brown a brend New Tork.—It may boot little t< United States L>eparttuent of Agricul crumb in forty seconds. Then careful ly place the croquettes In a wire bas yon that the origin of shoes has beet tu re : Beef Croquettes, ket, lower them slowly In the fat. and traced to Egypt, through the fool cook until a golden brown. As the wear taken from mummies In publh t p o u n d u p p e r I eg g * ro u n d steak, or I t e a s p o o nful croquettes are removed put them on a museums, hut in the days when "worn o t h e r le a n b e e f p a r s l e y , paper to absorb th e excess fat and an bangled her arms, blngled her hah t te a a p o o n f u l s a l t ehnpped and bungled her face," as Hom er oi (4 m e d 1 urn -sized S t a t s b re a d, flne- keep warm In the oven nntll all are on lo n , g r a t e d 1 j g r a t e d Into prepared. Serve with garnished pars Herodotus put It, she nlwuys was cart ashed crum bs ley and tom ato sance. ful to "tlttlvnte her toes," asserts Dr t p o c t u a p t o f u , l s e m asoned, Frank H. Vlzetelly. Or for an oven-browned Instead of a o r 1 cupful thick The Israelites wore sandals. Th< cre am sauce fried croquette, use 1H Instead of 1 Simmer the meat In a small amount cupful of cream sauce In the m ixture early Chaldeans wore neither sandal’ if w ater until tender and then grind, T his Is a little more difficult to mold. nor shoes, but shoes were not nn known to the Assyrians even tn th< using the fine knife of the grinder. Shape the croquettes In the way de earliest period, for they were Indl Add the other Ingredients, bnt reserve scribed, dip them In egg and crumbs, eated on the feet of foreign trtbuh one egg for dipping. Mix well. Form and place them on a greased pan to benrers as early as the Black Ohellsl the m eat Into balls, or mold Into oh- brown In a hot oven. Serv* as de iong or cone shapes. Dip Into the scribed shove. king, Shalmaneser. E A R L LA F O R G E “The Square Deal Barber” Estacada’s Leading Tonsorial Artist Popular Prices — Bobbing a Specialty Baths Shop on Broadway Estacada, Ore. R. G. M A R C H B A N K CONFECTIONERY ANO, LIGHT LUNCH INTERNATIONAL MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHES BOB’S BARBER SHOP <m J M ARCEL SALON STRICTLY BANIT AB Y SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Haircutting 35a Shave 15« MASONIC BLDG, ESTACADA ART 8M ITII. Prop. ESTACADA TRUCK LINE DAILY T R IPS FROM ESTACADA TO PORTLAND LEAVE ALL FREIGH T AT WAREHOUSE In ordering your freight sent through us you receive personal eorvlce both In E stacada and Portland th at will save time and money ^ JL JOSSY PHONE 19-U Call and Deliver Service PORTLAND-CARVER- ESTACADA STAGES M unicipal Term inal, Sixth and Salmon Sta.—Phone Mata 77JA LINN’S INN. E stacada, Oregon.—DAILY (A> P.M. •AM . M. P.M. P ortland 8:20 Lv. E stacada 8:00 8:80 Clackam as 8:50 Eagle Creek 8 : IS 8:48 Carver 7:00 B arton 8:25 8:58 B arton 7:28 Carver 8:45 8:18 E agle Creak T : 35 Clackam as 8:85 8:28 E stacada 7:60 Ar. Portland 8:30 10 :00 •D ally except Sunday (A) S aturday Only. SUNDAY—Leave Portland 10 a. m. Leave E stacada 4: SO p. m. A. M. 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