Image provided by: Beaverton City Library; Beaverton, OR
About The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1927)
Wholesome ,CoaH>i;u.i.on«. For School Lunch Üox t School days arc is worrying about pul in the lunch I should include a a refreshing drink of the following here ami tmdhci what she should box l ath lunch "niraiy” sandwich and a sweet; any witji a glass ui ,in Ik or a cup of hot cocoa makes a BT ROSITA. F O R B E S THE STORY CH APTKR l.-n u « m arr Trofton l o v e l y K i i k II h I i g i r l . la vl ai t l i i K ( l ie « u v • r n o r • p a live» In Ke*. M o r o i c o , w i l t l i a r a u n t , L a t l y T r m a r U n A t . - mU. - ono F r e n c h m a n . H e Vi l e » , 1» a t t r a c t e d by h e r b e a u t y a n d m a k e « a r d e n t l o v e On» e v r n l n K , a f t e r a r u n v e r s a l i n n «l eal l bv c h i e f l y w i t h a m y a t e r l o u s per anum?- k n o w n o n l y a» t h e K a l d . In t h e n e r v i n e o f t h e a u l t a n o f M n r o e e n , A bit el K r l - I r a V r i e s « r o w * I m p o r t u n a t e In bi s l o v a m a k l i i K a n d 1« r e p u l s e d Neal m o r n i n g H o a a n i a r y i l d e » o u t e a r l y In o r d e r t o f o r g e t h e r d i s q u i e t , a n d hei liurse th ro w » her, ren d erin g her un ••naoloua. C l i A K l T . i t I I — A l l n l e p a r t y o f Itlfl t r i b e s m e n e u n i e s u p o n h e i a ni l , u n wl l l l r i K t o a b a n d u n h e r ( l u r e , t a k e s her with the caravan t h r o u t r h _ t lie f a m o u s p a s s b e h i n d W h i c h A b d el K r l r n a n d h l a g a l l a n t m e n a t e h l dl i i K H e r e Itoaernary meets the KngTlahnuin a b o u t w h o m s h e h a s h e a r d »" m u c h — t h e g e n i u s b e h i n d t h e w h o l e Itlff c a m p a i g n — t h e I. a i d , a a u t i b u r n e d . w a r - a b ao rb ad soldier She voi«*<s«t tier curiosity. “ How <li I you get mixed up with ilicse pooplc? “ M.v life history for yours, eh? Well. It’s simple I've col no people to wor ry shout me. The war upset things mnde life pretty tint. Hunting and ■hooting were no sport after the Ypres an I lent, so I got Into the foreign le Ition— did n hit of desert work. It gels hold of you, you know, hut my sym putliy was genernlly on tlie side of the enemy. So I bought my discharge and went shooting In ilie mountains. I met Alai el Krlm hy chance, n good fellow hut not up lo dale enough for the •Hint lie's running lie asked me If I'd like to organise Mils show for him: he has topping lighting material, only wants a little modern strategy." “ Which you supply," Inicrposcd the girl “ Um yes. Pm going to see It through There’s an awful hunch ot dagoes round headquarters. It's rath er sport upsetting their game. They’d sell its all and their own mothers. It they weren't so frightened for their skins. The ItlfT's never been con quered, and It Isn't going to he now If I can help It.” " I Nee. You'd sacrifice everything for that.’’ “ Not much sacrifice— It's a great game.” “ For you," said Rosemary, nnd re pented the words a little forlornly, though that was the last thing she wished to appear. The man looked at her sharply. For the first time It dawned on Idm tluit she was young and a girl In a rotten hole, ns lie |iut It. lie was struck, not by the firmness and fineness of line which had characterised Rose niury for P c Vries, hut hy her help leasnesa. She »shivered In the rising wind, und her companion wanted suddenly, to wrap something, any thing, round her. “ 1 say. It's rotten luck on you.” ” lt Is I Your fault!" retorted Rose niary, obdurate. "I wish It was You wouldn't he here long If I could help It.” “ Can't .von?" The girl made a last appeal, clinging to Ids arm, alums' «linking It In her vehemence. “ You know I can't." In slleuce they climbed down to the r:\ v ea. 'Look here, I’ll give vou pete," said the KHld, feeling, like his one-time or derly. the need of making so pie ohla tlon. "You cun slnri for Hie village tomorrow I’ve sent a messenger ill reMilv to get hold of a house Pete'll go with you and see you’ re all right I'oii can trust him up to the hilt." Roaetnary’a eves widened. "Aren’ t you going hack?" "Not for a hit. I V got a lob In an other direction." lie dropped the cur tain and Rosemary, listening to hla retreating footsteps, felt (hat her last link with the old commonplace life was severed. T w o days later Rosemary and Pete, with a guard o f a dozen saturnine mountaineer«, approached (he village o f Telehdt It was a collection of twi»- atorled square hut», hardly large enough to he celled houses though some o f them had -ever:’ l rooms \ number o f women and children ran to thetr doors a« the eavalmde clattered through the «Ingle »treet \ few men. dark skinned with hawk features turned to look after them. “ ttlamlllah. has the Kald brought a w ife at last?" smiled a stalwart youth, shlfiing the sling of Ids rifle. " I t la time." returned Mctichhhe. the village headman "1>ut hla mind Is full o f war and politics. There la not place In If for women " "She I* white, and o f his own race.**' ejaculated a third “ lie t> is never cared for our women " At that moment a tall, loose Jointed figure came swlnw'lng down the afreet “ Th e Spaniard’" muttered the vil lagers, and were silent aa tlie man greeted them "Salaam nlelktim." There was a frown, for no Moslem likes to rei-elve this religious greeting from a Christian Juan Marten go wgy g piisque from tes copv»iííHrBy b o j! I — i c u fS > W.t¡.U«»V;UÍ light but adequate lunch: I >aic bread sandwiches spread with blitter or cream cheese, pea nut cookies, orange. 2 Biscuit sandwiches •v'ith chop ped chicken cup custard, tilled cool, ics. 3. -Graham biscilit sandwiches wiih -’hopped in at tilling, cinnamon bun. baked apples. 4. — Brown bread, and butler sand niches, custard, cup of baked beans, > whole tomato, raisin drop cake. 5. —Whole wheat bread sandwiches, cream etieese tilling, molasses cook - ies, banana. Hie daintiest lunch in the world ' i may be spoiled in the packing. The main thing is to keep the food-, eparated and so packed that they 1 will not become unwrapped on their , i way to school. (Jut sandwiches thin and wrap ] each in waxed paper. A covered ' jelly glass or a paper cup nicely J holds a baked apple. A custard or , chocolate pudding may be packed in ' the cup in which it is baked. \ 1 the Pyrenes, hut. for thirty yenra. lie had culled no country home. Ills dual rods were inioey and women, lie hud the typical courage o f the Latin hot In realization, cold In anticipation At momenta, when he could forget the passions nnd the failures of years, he ivns charming. Ills smile Ironed out the lines graven hy raw pleasure, and still cruder labor, and In spite of every kind o f tight with life, with sense, with what little he had once known o f honor, he could s|mak with •onvletlon on such subjects as rides and horses us well, o f course, as of SUGAR COO KI E BALLS love alTiiira! t This was the Individual who arrived Sugar C o o k i e Balls Make the at the door of the Raid's guest house, usual rolled sugar cookie dough -curcely half an hour after Rosemary, I Make the dough into small round reluctuntly, had entered It. She was seated on a rope couch, | shapes about the size of a walnut hy roiling the dough, then quickly covered with the headman’s hast cur ! dip each ball into milk and then roll pet. She had taken off her hat and I in finely chopped nut meats. Bake milled her hair Into a mop. Duller It these cookie balls about 10 minutes her eyes were sun gilt pools, relied ; in a moderate oven. ng a gamut of bewilderment. Another way in which the plain The Spaniard caught Ids breath on sugar cookies can be varied is to the threshold This was not ut all the take them from the oven just be “ I lore they arc thoroughly baked anil 1 sort of woman lie hud expected beg your pardon. I heard there was in the center of each cookie place ' I'ut the cookies H stranger licit;. I cumc lo to offer offer m my v 1 a . , marshmallow. into the oven to finish baking services in the absence of Westwyn." ,aV lo let the marshmallow melt "Who is Westwyn?" u.ski'd Rose aI1(, li({htly brown When browning tunny, Ignoring I be rest. the marshmallow, watch them care “ Don’t you know the K >i I<1 ? I fully so that they will not burn or thought lie sent you here." get too hot and melt to run off the w V W V w V > V ,W W V W .W A ñ ^ W W .W W y V W W W W ,P W V % % s v ^ ^ ^ ANNOUNCEMENT OF «h. Electric Rate Reductions Applicable t<» its Tualatin Valley Division, the Portland Electric Power Company announces in rate schedules of all classes of service, subject to the approval of the Public Service Commission of Oregon to be made effective September 1, 19_/. These reductions are due in a large degree to the generous use of its service by the people of Washington C o u n t y. The new rates are designed to permit further use of electricity in the homes and industries at especially low rates. Your electric company further acknowledges its duty in continuing to ex tend its service to all communities and farms in the 1 ualatin Valley. The Portland Electric Power Company desires to con tinue to merit the confidence and patronage of its customers. Portland Electric Power Co. Tualatin Valley Division “ Oil, I see," Rosemary wasn't giv sides of the cookies. ing anything away. She remembered And did you ever try making filled the Englishman’* remark about tlie cookies by taking two plain sugar cookies a n d holding them together dagos at headquarters. "A t least you will let me do any v’ith a jam or a fruit filling? A jam thing I can for you. Who Is looking can be mixed with finely chopped nut meats to make a filling, or a after you?" fruit marmalade or preserve can be A faint smile curved the girl’s lips. drained of most of its syrup and The apparent pliability of her visitor used as the filling. The chopped was encouraging after her escort's fruit and nut pastes also make ap- \ grunts und Westwyn’s unapproach peti/ing cookie filling. ablciicss. "Thank you,” she replied. I ’ete— I don't know his other name .■.V.V.V.V.V .V.V.V.V.V .Vi’.V .V .V .V .V .V A ’.V .W /.V .V A V .V .V J ’A V .V A N W .V /A ’^.V.Wi’,’ •VANILI.A W A F E R S " — has gone to procure food and water, chiefly the latter, I haven't lupl a Vanilla Wafers— yt cup butter, 1-3 hath for ages, I can't remember how cup sugar, 1 well-beaten egg, 1 to many days or years It Is since I left 1 Y> cups flour, Yt teaspoon vanilla, Fez.” 1 citron, nuts or raisins. ‘‘Dios! You come from F e z! Par Cream the butter and add the don m.v curiosity, hut it Is an an sugar gradually, then add the egg, usual rou te" < flour and the vanilla. Drop the "Yes," said Rosemary, and re dough in small portions from the tip of a spoon onto a buttered codk- inttlned mute. sheet about two inchi^ apart, Juan was too wire to press the te point. " A t least I can lend you n spread thinly with a knife that has bath,” lie suld and laughed “ What a first been dipped into cold water. Then decorate in any manner that gift to offer n lady " lie hit hack the vou wish. Use one cup of flour, if compliment on Ids tongue. you want the dough to spread out “ I should he grateful." said Rose a little and make a flat wafer; use mary. " I ’ete seemed to douhl there l 1« cups of flour if you want the being nny suitable receptacle It dough a little more stiff and the Wafer to be rounding. The oven seems most people use the stream." “ Not I," exclaimed Marteugo "I go' temperature used is about 350 de I run I But I shall return lit » min grees F for about 10 minutes. .How ever, these cookies should be care- ule." iully watched, as they scorch easily. In truth fie did hurry, most unusual The nut meats, raisins and bits of ly, hut then for years lie had not seen citron can be used to decorate the anything so lovely as the vision In , tops of these little wafers the leather coat and muddy riding hoots. When he returned with s shab i by canvas luilh. a pillow and various other objects he had caught up at Nickel Pincher» Not random, he found I'ete In po--«e-shat “ Nothing doing." snhl the Attstra Exponents of Thrift Ran. blocking the doorway hut Rose I have never known a stliigv person inary’s voice came from within who vvmn nice, who was one o f those "Don’t he absurd." She pushed persons (he thought of whom makes past the Kald's henchman and « iii II im I your heart e\pum| with warmth hii - on Juan when she saw his burden affection. I am not inveighing «gains: "A thousand thanks. I am so grate those vv Ini are sensibly economical ami fill - thrifty. When a man or woman m i j s . “ lluf you must need so many thing« "No, I can't afford that. IF» only » Tell me. what ran I do?" It wii * Im dollar, hut * dollai la Important ti possible to enter the two roomed stone me." that la all right. The quality ol house IhiHcnetl against the hillside, for being unashamed transfigure» almost the Australian hulked In the yard anything Into something all right,even "Tomorrow." said Rosemary at ln«t charming In answer lo the Basque's multiple But a stingy person tries to pretend offer* of assistance “ I am final now that the expense la n oth in«; that Isn't I must re«?." She was uncomfortable what Interests him Oh. no I Yet his under I’ete'* eves and even the Rltllan worry over the »lipping away of tiiek woman seemed to glance d'«approving els la ao Intense In him that It makes ly at Marteugo She lopked up at the your flesh creep When there I* a res dark, heavily lined fa -«• There was taurunt check to he paid, when yon menace In the oveahold expression hut Invite a tightwad to have a mala with the voice was kind and voluble Sym you. click, click you Intuitively feel pathy Impregnated It the cerebralluiia going on In his nnx When Juan left the Impression of ions brain as to which of you will considerate friendship he had tried so have to give up the niazuiua for the hard to establish was not wholly re Indulgence. predated hy Roaemary. "I don't want to emharrass them hv I’ete bestirred hi ms,-If on her ha ’ »king them to the Itlix," the very rich half. Finally, having clumsily, hut girl rationalize» her economy, "so I effectively, arranged everything neces will Just take them down to Unit Inter snry to her comfort, he set a hurricane eating little place under the elevated, lamp on the solitary table, propped a with the sawdust on the floor." pebble under Its shortest leg and In " I don’t want persona to get to rare formed Rosemary In a minimum of for me only for my money," sava the word*, that Zarlfn the Itlff girl would very rich snoh who as often as not !» sleep on her threshold and that he the richest debutante of the season himself was going to enmp In tlie So she always make* It a point to "go gatehouse, a etthhy-hole above th ’ Dutch."— Kllznhoih Barbour lu tlie wall "Y o u ’ re sure safe," he added Saturday Kv ruing I’ost. and went out. Rosemary was «till sitting on the People lehlvati improve when they eoueh. contemplating the pre;taratlon" o f Znrlfa. who was removing one of have no other nasici than them- the coverings from her head before '«Ives to Copy alter. Gold-urnth rolling up on a mat to sleep, when Pete’s head renp|e'«red round the door If you were busy being true “ That Marteugo Is a wrong n n h e T o what you know you ought to do, »aid. ” l*on't yon have anything to do Y > 'U il be so busy you'd forget with Mm. Keep elenr I s e v " and The blunders of the folks youve met with a Anal grunt he dlaanp- -ml Rebecca Forcsnian By R. R. EASTER, Division M anner EVERY READER of this paper has something that he, or she does not need. SELL IT ! SOME WOULD ACCEPT SOMETHING ELSE FOR WHAT THEY NOW HAVE SWAP A Little Want A d Will Do The Work. TRY 2 lines — one time — one dime Want Ads 5c per line (To HI GpcguaJMV