THE SHERMAN
PAGE 4
RECIPES FOR APRICOTS
■ INTERESTING TO HOUSEWIFE
Few of the seasonable fruits now
available have a more universal ap
petite appeal than fresh apricots
Apricots have a delicious flavor and
contain both the minerals and the
vitamins As fresh fruit, or canned
or dried, they are relatively inexpen
sive and their wider use should be
acceptable. Apricots are perishable
and should be purchased only for im
mediate use. They may be kept,
however, for several days in a cool,
dry and well ventilated place.
Apricots are delicious sliced and
served with sugar and cream- They
may be eaten alone at the beginning
or end of a meal, or combined with
breakfast cereals A favorite salad
is made with halved or triced apri
cots with a generous sprinkling of
grated cheese and nuts for garnish-
For variety they may ba used with
cottage or cream cheese and with
either French or fruit dressing.
Fresh apricot sundae always meets
with approval. The sauce is made by
cooking for five minutes, the sliced
fruit with a half cup of sugar and a
half cup of water for each cup of
fruit used. Apricot and chocolate are
delightful combinations in flavor, as
you will discover by trying the recipe
given this week Tor Dutch Apricot
Cake To tempt the appetites of your
family try the Apricot Marshmallow
Pudding or. since this is the season
for frozen deserts, the Fresh Apri-
cot Ice Cream-
Chocolate Sauce.
3 squares bitter chocolate
*4 cup hot water
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
H cup white corn syrup
1 cup coffee cream
Melt the chocolate- Add water slow-
ly. stirring until smooth. Add sugar
and syrup and boil to a very soft ball
stage.
Add cream and flavoring.
Serve hot or cold-
Apricot Marshmallow Pudding
1 cup coarse bread crumbs
1 cup apricot pulp
2 teaspoons lemon juice
2 cups milk
3 egg yolks
U teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 cup sugar
6 marshmallows
Put the crumbs into a buttered
baking dish and sprinkle with cinna-
mon. Add apricots and lemon juice-
Add finely cut marshmallows. Mix
remaining materials as f°r custard
and add to pudding. Bake slowly
(300 degrees) for about an hour. Top
with meringue and brown in oven or
with whipped cream
Apricot Ice Cream (2 qts )
11/2 cups sugar
3 cups apricot juice and pulp
Iki teaspoons vanilla
3 cups rich milk
1 cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon lemon juice* •
% teaspoon salt
Mix apricots with sugar and stir un
onl dissolved. When ready to frees«
add remaining ingredients and mix
thoroughly. Freese using 3 parts
crushed ice to 1 of salt. When very
stiff remove paddle and pack in salt
andice 3 hours before serving.
Dutch Apricot Cake-
2 cups flour
H teaspoon salt
3 teaspoon baking powder
*4 cup sugar
% cup butter
1 egg
% cup milk
Halves of apricots
2 tablespoons sugar mixed with
2 tablespoons melted butter
Mix and sift dry materials together.
Rub the butter into tne flour mixture
until appearance is like coarse corn
meal. Beat the egg and add milk to
it- Stir liquid quickly ’fnio the dry.
Turn into a buttered pan^ spreading
to one inch thickness. Lay apricots
in rows over the dough, gently push
ing each piec<* a llllle way into the
dough- Sprinkle with sugar and but
ter mixture- Bake in hot oven about
15 minutes. Serve warm with choc-
colate sauce.
I
Wasco
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Wilde spent
Sunday in Portland.
I Mrs F R. Fortner returned Sun-
। day from Portland where she has
spent some time visiting relatives.
I
Walter Laymen of the National
Warehouse Corporation Inc- fo Port
land was in Wasco en business Tues
day.
Glen Mauerer of Portland spent
Sunday in Wasco visitinfl friends,
Mr. Mauerer formerly lived here
Douglas Tuel and Stanley Jones
are spending several days at the Boy
1 scout camp near Bend.
Mr- and Mrs. Ross Andrews of
The Dalles spent the week end in
Wasco with Mr. Andrews father and
mother
This week shows a large number
of the farmers into harvest in full
swing The yield is proving to be a
little better than some anticipated
but the quality is very light-
E. E- Kaseberg motored to Port
land for the week end. He is spend
ing harvest on the ranch of his son,
L. E- Kaseberg
Miss Erma Ferrell of The Dalles
spent the week end with her parents-
Mrs. Floyd Root and ’Rc^brnday
Walker spent the week end in Port
land.
Make It Snappy In Harvest
When break-downs occur we are
prepared to
REPAIR ANY BREAK
in jig time
Headquarters for any kind of
MACHINE WORK, REPAIR WORK
Motor Reconditioning
Sherman Garage & Machine Co
F. L. MORROW. Mgr.
Wasco. Ore.
B ank of C ommerce
WASCO, OREGON
SAFE - CONSERVATIVE
COURTEOUS
Capital and Surplus
$66,000.00
DEPENDABLE BANKING SERVICE
Liberal Interest Paid on Time Deposits
&
COUNTY JOURNAL,
OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY .29,
MORO,
1932.
enough to compete with the intra
state railrate on which members of
the cooperative can have th^r wheat
hauled to market this year*
Those attending the meeting from
Sherman county were J. W. Shepard
and Herman Schilling of Grass Val
Mr. and &Lr8- Vic Smith had as
ley and J* B Adams, W T. Balsiger
Obeyed
guests over the week end Mr. and
Mis Francis Groehong of Portland.
Mother: “You have been told not and G. L. French of Moro.
Mias Retta Burress returned from to pick Daddy's flowers without
L< Grande where she has attended
CHINESE WHEAT
Jack:
Mummy. but all these
the normal school summer session.
1 «
_ Paannm.
Continued from page one.
Mias Margaret McKee entertained
i i?’
i,
at bridge Wednesday afternoon.
nose National Government has been *
made
upon supposition that the obli
RATE MEETING
gations
would not be paid and that
Parting of Friendships
th«
wheat
and flour would go into the
First actor: “The last time I
regular channels of trade and inter
played in this part the people could rates applies more heavily on the
be heard applauding ten blocks branch linee and a comparitively fere with the regular movement of
northwestern wheat into that terri
small amount of the wheat of the tory. The above report indicates that
• Second actor: “Is that so? What northwest is shipped from there. It
the wheat was used according to the
was going on there?**
will be possible for the Farmers provisions of the contract for famine
National to divert thio wheat to Ore releif- The sale was of particular
For those who wish to keep inform gon buyers and give the branch line interest to the Pacific Northwest as
ed about county matters the Sherman
it materially reduced the surplus jof
County Journal is indispensible.
wheat in this area and that it has hn-
the meeting by H. E. Loops bury, proved the price ratio, as compared
tralflc manager, sMte atatad tliat the wjth world levels, has not been ques-
More Howlers
compromite mtM w<mH .malt in V Uonod- According to the terms of
Here are a few definitions given considerably lower income for the
sale the wheat was to be paid in
by some school children:
rail roads because a large proportion three equal payments,the first coming
“Ete- is a sign used to make be- of the whbat wpa shipped for inter-
A world-famous author who frankly admits bls seventeen y<h»r wld son
due Ml December 31, 1934 and sub
outshine« him Is Hal G. Evarts, shown here With his son, Hal G„ Jr., as they j Heve you know more than you do-’*
state U ms . On« rate, ha said, would sequent payments December 31, 1935
silled on the City of I»s Angeles for the boy’s graduation present—a four I * **Tkè equator is a menagerie Hoir reduce confusion among shippers and
months’ trip to Hawaii, New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. The youngster running around the center of the farmers and would reduc4 expenses and 1936 with interest at 4 per cent.
U m interest is payable in Decem
graduated as student bodyv president of 1 am Angeles high school; as a mem- earth.”
ber
and June of each year. According
ber of every honorary society; as an Epheblan Society member; as having
“The zebra is like a horse only
A delegation of boat and truck men tS James C. Stone, chairman of the
played In every quarter of every football game the school played; as a mem striped and used to illustrate the let
consulted with the farmers committee Federal Farm Board, interest pay
ber of the senior council; with n grade of “A” In every subject; and as edi
ter Z,’*
and
offered a proposition for hauling
tor of the school paper.
“The vacuum is nothing shut up in wheat directly from the field, but ments of December, 1931 and Juhe
1932, were promptly made.
a box”—Christian Observer. -
their price was .pot adjudged low
Mrs- Andrew Shearer has been con- I LeRoy Grady of The Dailes is
Choice
fined to her home with a very bad spdhding the week with relatives.
He was a new boarder, but when
bruised knee which she received in an ' Scott Fortner of Portland spent
prunes were served for breakfast for
auto accident some time ago
several days in Wasco last week with
the third morning in succession, he
Mrs. A- C. Kaseberg and daughtez relatives-
felt he was entitled to say some
and Mrs. L. E. Kaseberg motored to 1
.
thing
The Dalles last Saturday.
I Mi“ V,¥“n Tr,ounM re‘urMd t0
‘T am not very fond of prunes,’
Wasco Saturday after spending some
he said. “Have I no choice?”
Jack Sheets who is a patient at the time in Portland.
“Yes.” replied the lady of the
VeUrana hospital in Portland ia re- ; B H Grady and famKy 8pent Sun. I
house,
sweetly, “you may take ’em or
ported as very aiek. Mra. Sheet, left day jn Gold<,ndale the gue8ts of Mr.
Sherman County news are com
leave ’em.”—New Outlook.
Saturday to be with him-
1 Grady’s mother and sister.
piled each week for readers of the
Mrs- Estrelle Hailey and Mrs.
Mr- and Mrs. Dick Schunke spent
- Even
Lloyd Hennigan shopped at The 1 Sunday motoring around the Mtr
“What are you doing, dear?”
Dalles Tuesday.
Hood loop.
•
asked
a mother of her little daughter,
Miss Norma and Opal Feldman re
Mr- and Mrs Dwight Wilson and
who
was making scrawls and
turned from .Portland where they family of ^Berkley, California, were j
scratches
on a piece of paper.
spent the last three weeks.
1 guests of Olive and Johnay Bobison
“I’m writing a letter to Betty ”
Miss Elda FerreE returned the first l»st Sunday
“But. my dear, you don’t know how
In it is information about people,
of the week from Arlington where | Mrg Austin Colbert of Portland
to write”
crops, weather and other matters
“Oh that doesn’e ruatter, Betty
she spent several 'days with friends, visited in Wasco the first of the week
doesn’t know how to read, either- ’
Schunke
went
to,
Portland
with
Bn<1
f™
“
«
1
»-
Mr
»;
from all parts of the county.
Dick
Wednesday with stock and returned Colbert is the daughter of Mr- ami
It is a nscessity that is cheaper
Thursday with a load of mer Mrs. Vic Smith.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
Mrs. Robert Wangeman . left for
chandise
Watch Your Words «
She: “Wehre been waiting a long
Mrs Lloyd Hennagin entertained time for my mother-**
He: “Hours, I should Bay ”
Tuesday night in honor of Mrs. Aus
She (rapturously): “Oh, George!’’
tin Colbert of Portland-
Portland Friday after spending sev
eral days at the Chas Everett home.
Author Outshone
a
wim
SHERMAN COUNTY
JOURNAL
than ever. A few y ears ago a sub
scription to the papers cost $5.50
per year. Now the same news,
and more, is brought to you reg
ularity every week for
The Red & White Store
WAaCO, OREGON
W e R eserve T he R ight to L imit Q uantities
i
i
i
$1.50
I
SPECIALS FOR JULY 29, 30, August 1,
Crisco, 3-lb................................................
White King Granulated Soap, large size
. 10 bars for
Crystal White Soap........................ .
Camay Soap .............................:. ------- .. .4 bars for
Red & White Mayonnaise, pints .........
.... 2 for
“ Corn Flakes
...........
... .2 for
“ .Tuna Fish, l-2s..................
4 lbs for
California Small White Beans .
2 for
Red & White Pears, 2 1 2s............
’• “
“ Asparagus, 2s ..................
tin
................ Kraut, 2 1 2s....................
Cake Flour, 2 1-4 lb pkg... ,t..,.........
Corn or Gloss Starch, Lib pkg - • • • • 2 for
Catsup, large size bottle
'......... .......
8 for
Wadhams, Punch, assorted flavors
f
, 1 gal glass jug
Small Sour Pickles .....................
Red & White Macaroni, Spaghetti Noodle«.- >i.8 for
Try cut Macaroni for Salads
Red & White Coffee, Mb pkg - - • • • * • ' m B
Blue & White Coffee, 14b pkg................ i .
Big Bargain Blend Coffee, 1-lb pkg...........J"
Blue & White Cocoa, 1-fo pkg................
Blue & White Shrimp, 1-lb tins................ h;
2 for
51c
23c
15c
35c
19c
45c
10c
17c
17c •
90c
19c
That Feed Problem
We have let our stock of feed grains run down
because of the low price of ^jheat. We have
• 4
rolled some of the shriveled grain that has been
82c'
23c
19c
14c
25c
Red & White Prices Are Lower
threshed this year and find it to be an excellent
feed for horses or dairy cattle. It is not as rich
as ordinary wheat when rolled and is therefore
a safer feed.
Wheat at a low price per ton can be rolled in
to a good feed and can te usid io feed live
— - -------- -
1 '
New Perkins Hotel
Bth and Washington Stroota
Portland Ore.
M. NELSON, Owntr
ARTRUDEEN, M-nsgrr
- RATÉS:
Room with Rath. $2.00 and |l.50
Without Hath, 3LW «nd H 00
Permanent rates as low as $12.50 per
month.
’
A A A - Firoproof— Insured
FREU GARAGE
stock more profitably than prepared feeds
OUR FEED MILL IS PREPARED
to take care of you in making thia
low grade wheat into something
useful.
, Sherman Cooperative Grain Growers
WASCO. OREGON
In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for the County of Sherman-
The Oregon - Washington Joint
Stock Land Bank of Portland. Ore
gon a corporation. Plaintiff, vs Louis
Schadewitz and Mary Ann Schade-
witz, C. L- Chamberlain and Emma
Chamberlain, Maude Driscoll, Bank
of Moro, a corporation, Moro State
Bank, a corporation, and A. A-
Schramm, Superintendent of Banks of
the State of Oregon, Defendants.
By virtue of the writ of execution
and order of sale duly issued out of
the Circuit Court of the State of Ore
gon for the County of Sherman, on
the 26th day of July, 1932, pursuant
to a decree entered in said court, July
26th, 1932. in a suit wherein The Ore
gon-Washington Joint Stock Land
Bank of Portland, Oregon, a corpora
tion is plaintiff, and Louis Schade-
wita, Mary Ann Schadewitz. C L
Chamberlain. Emma Chamberlain,
Maude Driscoll, Bank of Moro, a cor
poration, Moro State Bank, a corpor
ation, and A. A. Schramm, superin
tendent of Banks of the State of Ore
gon are defendants, said writ be
ing directed to me to make sale of
the real property hereinafter describ,
ed, I will on Saturdaf, the 27th day
of August, 1932, at 1:00 o'clock p. m.,
at the front door of the Court house
of Sherman County, in the City of
Moro, State of Oregon, offer for sale
and proceed to sell to the highest
bidder for cash in ha?!d the following
described real property, situate in
Sherman County. State of Oregon,
to-wit:
South Half (S%) of Section
Twenty Three (23), and the west
Half (WH) of Section Twenty-
six (26), all in Township Four
(4) South of Range Sixteen (16)
East of the Willameite Meridian,
M
containing six hundred forty
((’>40) acres more or less,
to satisfy the sum of Eight Thousand
One Hundred Sixty-four and 10-100
Dollars (^H,164 10) with interest
thereon from July 26th. 1932, at the
rate of six per cent (6 per cent) per
annum; and the further sum of Four
1 Hundred Sixty and 80-100 Dollars
($460 80) with interest thereon from
July 26th. 1932, at the rate of eight
per cent (8 per cent) per annum, and
$400 00 as attorney’s fees, together
with costs of said suit taxed at Seven
teen and 80-100 Dollars ($17.80) and
the costa of and upon this writ.
Hugh Chrisman
Sheriff of Sherman County. Oregon.