Central Point star. (Gold Hill, Or.) 192?-19??, August 22, 1930, Image 2

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    THE CENTRAL POINT STAR
FRIDAY, AUGUST 22. IMO
CENTRAL PO IN T STAR
Ity Albert T. Keid
Published by Mac’s Printing Co.t Gold Hill, Oregon
C. J. SHORE, Editor
An Independent Newspaper published in the Interests of
Central Point Oregon and vicinity
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Entered as second class m atter. October 26, 1928 at the
post oiiiee at Gold Hill, Oregon under the act of March
1879.
Subscription 82.00 year in advance. Ad rate on application
t—-=------------ ------------------------------- ------- ----- -----
Office With Al Hermonson
Joyce Cooper, English
woman
iwimming chimpion. whb has come
to America to compete with woman
swimmers lie.
AN IMPORTANT ITEM
There is one portion of the ballot at almost every
elect! n which the general public does .not study enough.
In fact there are probably few people who realize that
at the November election there will be at least thirteen
f Q r th e
measures and constitutional amendments for the people
to vote upon.
These measures are very important to
the people ol the state of Oregon.
There are some
» b y Mancy Hart »
which are b a d a n d s o m e w h i c h a r e g o o d a n d
others which might be either good or bad.
They deal
SARDINE CANAPES
with everything from the closing of the Rogue to com­
mercial fishing to the prohibition of the sale of cigar­ Prepare circular slices of toast.
Have ready a paste made from
ettes or the makings of a cigarette even to the importa­ picked
up sardines which have
tion or giving away of the cigarettes or the makings been separated from bones. This
witniiTTae state. Among the other measures are an In­ paste should be moistened w ith sof­
butter and seasoned w ith
come Tax measure, an amendment to provide for the tened
Worcestershire sauce and cayenne
election of Lieutenant Governor, the Cabinet form of In the center of each round of
place a stuffed olive. A r­
government amendment and various and sundry others. toast
range a layer of sardine paste
From a careful perusal of the acts we feel that the around the stuffed olives and sur-
’•ound each canape with a bonier
people of our state have some food for though between of
finely chopped egg whites. In
now and the date of the election.
Besides choosing a preparing
canapes one should be
candidate who will properly fill each vacancy in our be very careful not to have (Item
state government we must place ourselves on record on too large. They should lite ra 'l,’ be
the measures and amendments which will be found a t­ small enough to be held daintily
w ith the fingers, making a knife
tached to the ballots.
ome
For the convenience of our readers we will attempt
to place at their disposal, in the columns of this paper
between now and the Fall elections a summary of the
different measures and we may take occasion to express
our own opinion on some of them editorially. We will
entertain any constructive communications pertaining to
these measures from our readers during the next two
months.
NOT SO LONG
UNTIL SCHOOL BELLS RING
“It won t be long now,” is an appropriate expression
as applied to the opening of the county schools. Within
two weeks most of the county schools will be in opera­
tion and within three weeks ail will be in operation with
the possibe exception of some extreme cases.
The summer’s vacation has faded fast and the bogie
of school days again faces the younger folks, but they
will be ready to go back to the routine and discipline
which the schools exact for they have had an opportunity
to enjoy the pleasures and joys of the great outdoors.
Their minds may be a little slow and their memory a
trifle rusty at first but a few days and everything will
assume their normal state and the teachers will then
divide time with the parents in the care of the district’s
children.
AIMEE AND MOTHER
QUARREL
' ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ «
It has been some time since Aimee McPherson or
Ma Kennedy has made the first page so they staged a
bout down in Los Angeles from which they both emerged
with more or less mutilation. Aimee was said to be
blind in one eye which report was refuted but her phy­
sicians claim she is suffering from a nervous breakdown.
Ma is nursing a broken nose as a result of the fisticuffs.
\\ hat a host of sins are committed in the name of
Christianity.
\ \ hat are the followers of these women
going to think of their display of brotherlyi love.
\\ ith all their claim of inspiration they still follow
the brute instincts of the profane.
and fork uneecessarv. Their p ur­
pose is to serve merely as an ap­
petizer, and therefore, each canape
is not expected to provide more
than two or three mouthfuls.
OMELETS _
Never was any emergency dish
better than an omelet. Almost al­
ways there are eggs in the house
and if there are not it is not d if­
ficult to buy them at the last m in­
ute. And your omelet can be
quickly made.
Once having mastered the essen­
tials of omelet cooking it is not d if
ficult to vary them in a great va­
riety of ways. Moreover, there are
sweet omelets as well as unsweet­
ened omelets so that an omelet
may be made to fill in the gap in
any part of any meal. You can
use omelets as users-up of incon­
siderable trifles left over from yes­
terday's dinner. A few vegetables
may be chopped and added to an
omelet to give it flavor and va­
riety. A few vegetables may be
chopped and added to an omelet
to give it flavor and variety. A
few mushrooms go a long way in
an omelet. A slice or so of can­
ned pineapple, that could not be
possibly divided among several,
may be cut up and addded to the
middle of an omelet before it is
turned to form a delightful des­
sert or luncheon dish.
Here are some suggestions for
omelets that are a little unsuaual:
DANISH OMELET
A Danish omelet has a founda­
tion crea msauce of three table­
spoons of butter, three of flour
and two cups of milk. In the mean
time break macaroni in inch len­
gths and boil it in salted water un­
til it it tender; then drain it.
When the cream sauce is cool add
six egg yolks, two at a time, beat­
ing ¡he mixture five minutes after
whites stiff, fold them into the yolk
¿ach yolk addition. Beat six egg
mixture, sprinkle with pepper and
salt and pour the omelet over the
macaroni, which has been arran­
ged in the bottom of a buttered
baking dish. Bake the omelet In
a steady hot oven for th irty min­
utes and serve at once. Beaten
butter is used in Denmark with
this omelet, which is simply butter
cream with a fork or spoon and
blended w ith a taste of sugar.
-------- o--------
1
Washing and
Greasing
IVasA/ng Free
GREASING VERY REASONABLE
B ■ ■ ■ ■ B ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ .■ ■ ■
J*,*'«
A n c ie n t G o th ic S tru c tu re
Rutitliw-ark cathedral la the uldaat
Gothic b u lld liii In i^mdon, much of It
fcotnit 40 yaara older (Into W eatm li
abbey.
Had half Impaired the nameless
grace
Which waves in every raven trees
Or softly lightens o'er her face;
Where thoughts serenely sweet ex­
press
How pure, bow dear their dwel­
ling place.
Relieve« a Headache or Neuralgia in
30 minute«, ch‘‘cka a Cold the flrat
“ SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY"
And (in that cheek, and o'er that day, and checka Malaria In three
day«.
brow
Sn
soft,
so
calm,
yet
eloquent,
666 also in Tablets
By Lord Byron
She walks in beauty, like thenight The sniiles that win. the tints thut
glow
Of cloudless climes and starry
But
tell of days in goodness
skies;
spent,
And all that’s beset of dark and
A mind at peace with all below,
bright
A heart whose love is innocent 1
Meet in her aspect and her eyes
Thus mellowed to that tender light
Which heaven to gotid> day de­
Classified Ads Get Results
nies.
666
vmiBnsffl1
“Oregon State”
A National und Stale College
maintained, as described by
Senator M orrill, founder of the
Land-Grant Colleges, “ to offer
opportunity . . for a liberal and
und practical education . . for
the world's business for the in ­
dustrial pursuits and profes­
sions of life "—
Oregon’s Land-Grant College
now in its 03rd year, affords
training in 10 degree -granting
schools and departments.
AGRICULTURE (B.S..M.S.
degrees
you
Ventilation, Heating, Gas,
Refrigeration, Aeronautical)
Agricultural Economics, Ag-
ricutural Education, Anim­
al Husbandry, Dairy Hus­
bandry, Farm Crops, Earm
Management,
Horticulture
(Pomology, Vegetable Gar­
dening), Poultry Husband­
ry, Soils; Agricultural En­
gineering,
Horticul t u r a i
Products, Landscape -Archi­
tecture, Sciences Battle to
Agriculture (6 majors).
COMMERCE (B.S. degree; M.
S. in Agricultural Econo­
mics, Hural Sociology)
Accounting and M anage­
ment, Advertising and Sel­
ling, Banking and Finance,
General Business, Beai E
I-.s-
tate. Secretarial Training,
Marketing, etc.
ENGINEERING (B.S..M.S. de-
grees)
Civil (Structural, Highway
Sanitary, Hydraulic, Jlall-
road, Construction); Elec­
trical
(Power, Railways,
Lighting, High Voltage, Tel­
ephony-; Mechanical .Ma­
chine Design, Heal Power,
In d u s tria l
tion.
Shop
FORESTRY (B.S., MS. de­
grees)
Logging Engineering, Lum­
ber Manufacture, Technic­
al Forestry.
HOME ECONOMICS (B.S.,
M.S. degrees)
Clothing, Textiles, and Be­
lated Arts; Foods and Nu­
tritio n ; Household Admin­
istration; Institutional Man­
agement.
MILITARY SCIENCE AND
TACTICS (B.S. degree)
Field A rtillery, Engineers,
Infrantry.
MINES (B.S., M.S. degrees)
Geology, Mining Engineer­
ing, Metallurgy.
PHARMACY (Ph.C., B.S., M.S.
degrees)
Pharmacology, Pharmaceu­
tical Analysis, Phurmucogs-
nosy.
Freshman Weeks begins
For Catalogue and Other
leave the strain
of getting there
to someone else
A d m in is tra ­
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
(B.S., M.S. degrees)
Administration, Supervision
and leaching of Agricul­
ture, Commerce, Home Ec­
onomics, Iudustrial Arts.
The School of llasic Arts and Sciences, the School of
Health and Physical Education, Industrial Journalism, LI-
brary Practice and Music service departments not leading
to degrees togetblr with a privately supported department
of Religion, afford additional training supplementary ,0 the
major curricula.
Built Upon M aize
Archaeological
excavation«
dav»
•hown that the most elaborate o f the
curly civilizations developed 1« tke
western hemisphere were all «up
ported by maize. Doctor Morley of the
Smithsonian Instltutloa lhoved how
the decline and fall of the civilization
of (he Mayan empire wan caused la
pint by the decline In the productlor
of maize. The high coet of llvtcg, at
he called It, n n operating then w
now.
One shade the more, one ruy the
less,
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
(B.S., M.S. degrees)
■ ■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■ ■
■
Nip &_ Sip Service Station ■
now doing
4ur«c^'riK
September
Information
22
M
When you go to California by
train, you leave the job of "get­
ting there" to someone else.
Ry train, your vacation need
not be limited to just one place.
A Southern Pacific vacation
ticket invites you to sec the full
sweep of California's charm­
ing playgrounds.
Travel the scenic Shasta
Route, through miles of hreath-
h s mountain scenery. For only
$10.40 more, you can include
the famous tour through the
Redwood Empire.
CALIFORNIA VACATION
r o u n d t r ip s
tor 16 days)
SAN FRANSISCO .. $20.50
LOS ANGELES ....... 30.00
DEL MONTE .......... 20.50
SAN DIEGO .............. 40 00
YOSEMITE ............. 33.25
LAKE TAHOE .......... 21.50
A ticket to any one of these des­
tinations includes stopovers .nut
permits sidetrips to many other
places you'll want to visit.
Address
THE REGISTRAR
OREGON STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
CORVALLIS
„
»
(Authorized by the State Board of Higher Education
... ..........................
O. c . PURKEP1LE Agt.