Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, February 28, 1957
Page 3
n
444 4
The high mounain in Oregon's
financial range is education. The
joint ways and means committee
is surveying it first. When they
have finished, which will be
sometime around St. Patrick's
Day, they will know how much
money will be needed for. the
state to function through' the
next biennium, which ends June
30, 1959.
At the beginning of this the
seventh week of the current legis.
lative session 1027 bills, memor
ials and resolutions have been in.
troduced, 410 in the Senate and
617 in the House The Senate has
passed 36 of the acts and the
House, with an earlier start of
six days, has passed 73.
Bills now in the legislature call
for appropriations of $98,000,000
more than the 1955-57 general
fund appropriations of $221,846,
968.05. The deadline for introduction
of legislative bills has passed.
Now all bills must be presented
through the Rules or Ways and
Means committees. The five days
grace for bills in the hands of the
Legislative Counsel also has ex
pired. THE SENATE SPEAKS UP
The Senate is buying itself a
loud speaker system of the latest
type for $3,214.
The House of Representatives
has had one for two sessions and
everybody likes it.
Louis de Buy, sound engineer
in the House tunes the voice of
members whenever they arise to
speak.
You might not recognize the
voice of your representative when
de Buy has tuned it with the
acoustic properties of the large
hall with its 40-foot-hlgh ceiling.
Those with a modulated low
voice sometimes seem to have
the voice of an old time deck
hand for them. Those who have
a trend for heavy and powerful
expostulations are given a per
suasive purr.
SPRING HISTORY FORUM
The 1957 Spring Forum of the
Oregon Historical Society has
Avocado and Tuna Lenten Salad
Tel ""
The two layers of this avocado and tuna gel-loaf are made
separately and can be served separately. However, for a Lenten
main dish salad combine the fish and salad courses in one layered
loaf.
Tuna fish, celery and pimiento are combined for the bottom
layer of the loaf. Unflavored gelatine does the molding trick.
Avocado, sour cream and mayonnaise are featured with unflavored
gelatine for a creamy smooth top layer.
Molded Avocado and Tuna Loaf
Tuna Layert
1 envelope unflavored
gelatine
cup cold water
cup boiling water
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon salt
1 can (7 ounces) tuna fish,
flaked
1 cup diced celery
Vi cup diced pimiento
Sprinkle gelatine on cold water to soften. Add boiling water and
stir until gelatine is dissolvad. Add lemon juice and salt. Chill until
mixture is the consistency of unbeaten egg white. Fold in flaked
tuna fish, celery and pimiento. Turn into a 9 x 5 x 3-inch loaf pan;
chill until almost firm.
Avocado Layert
1 envelope unflavored gelatine
cup cold water
1 teaspoon sugar
2 tablespoons lemon juice
V teaspoon Tabasco
Sprinkle gelatine on cold water to soften. Place over boiling
water and stir until gelatine is dissolved. Add sugar and 1 table
spoon of the lemon juice. Chill until mixture is the consistency of
unbeaten egg white. Immediately after mashing avocado, add
remaining tablespoon lemon juice, sour cream, mayonnaise, salt
and Tabasco. Fold in gelatine mixture. Turn on top of almost firm
first layer; chill until firm. Unmold; if desired, garnish with addi
tional avocado slices, ripe and stuffed olives. YIELD: 8 servings.
1 cup mashed avocado (1 large)
cup sour cream
!2 cup mayonnaise
1 teaspoon salt
been dated for Friday and Satur
day, March 22 and 23 at the Port
land Public Library.
There will be three four-panel
sessions, a Friday luncheon and
a Saturday dinner; both at the
Congress Hotel. The principal
speakers will be John H. Jenkins,
chief of the museum division of
the western division of the Na
tional Park Service and Mrs. Roe-
fire in an old peoples home where
71 perished, would prohibit smok.
ing in hospitals and nursing
homes except in specially ar
langed fireproof rooms and when
an attendant is present. Hospi
tal fires are more prevelant than
the public is aware of, many phy.
sicians, nurses and former pa
tients declare. Hospital mana
gers also realize the problem and
most Of them would gladly ac
cept the provisions of such a law
that covered all hospitals and
was enforced simultaneously,
without discrimination. Many
fires in public places are extin
guished and not reported to news
papers. Such fires in hospitals
often take toll from shock or
check the turning point towards
recovery.
PRORATING INSURANCE
Now that every other letter,
phone call and doorbell ringer is
from an out-of-state insurance
agent a bill would be welcomed
that would prohibit insurance
companies from prorating insur
ance payments when a person is
insured in more than one com
pany, unless written in the pol
icy and the insured is asked to
sign a waiver when the policy
is delivered. (That sentence is
long enough to go into one of
those self-confusing "foreign"
policies.)
JUST FOR THE KIDS
Some law enforcement officers,
who start looking for flying sau
cers whenever they see a boy
popping around with an air rifle,
think the things should be regis
tered. Plenty of other folks think
so too.
If you have any pro or con
ideas about the above sugges
tions send a note to the writer
of this column, addressed State
house, Salem, Oregon. We will
segregate the letters and deliver
them to interested legislators.
Legislation by mail has done
some surprising things.
o
USE GAZETTE TIMES
CLASSIFIED ADS
OUR READERS
ARE NOT-
k TRAINED SEALS .
-f BUT THEy RESPOND H,
TO AD SUGGESTIONS T
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Cloud, noted Indian lecturer who
was named American Mother
four years ago. ,
Some of the bills that are not
out of the talking stage are. ex-1
pected to be introduced certainly,
are packed with human inter-'
est.
A proposal that meets with al
most unanimous approval, be
cause of the recently reported
Standard tries a flood of fire to make
worn out oil fields produce again
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Wins NASCAR Grand National Championship Race Against All Cars
Regardless of Size, Power or Price-Setting New Track
Record in Biggest Stock Car Event of Year Following Clean
Sweep of Its Class in Flying Mile and Acceleration Runs.
Here's why it's important to you You can buy the same model
Pontiac right here in town with the same ruggedness, safety and
precision-handling that outclassed all the others at Daytonal Re
member, this was a strictly production model Chieftain Pontiac
powered by the spectacular 317 h.p. Strato-Streak engine -and
introducing Pontiac's revolutionary Tri-Powet Caiburetion, a great
new advance, optional at extra cost on any Pontiac model. This
amazing carburetion system literally gives you 2 engines tor the
price of J . . . tame or terrific at a touch of your toel For normal
driving the engine operates on a standard two-jet carburetor (the
same type that won the economy tests last year). A little extra
pressure aufomaficaJy cuts in four more carburetor jets for instant
response when you need more power. Come on in and drive
America's Number One Road Car. You can easily afford it-prices
actually start below 30 models of the low-price three!
NOW IT'S OFFICIAL
Pontiac is America's
Number 1 Road Car!
NUMBER 1 1N PERFORMANCE!
NUMBER 1 1N ROADABILITY!
NUMBER 1 1N HANDLING!
NUMBER 1 1N SAFETY!
SEE YOUR PONTIAC DEALER DRIVE THE SURPRISE CAR OF THE VEARI
Fire flooding produce heat and pressure to boil out previously un
recoverable oil, driving it underground io nearby producing mils.
MANY INACTIVE WELLS STILL HAVE LOTS
OF OIL left underground in spite of the industry s
great advances in oil recovery. Our country must have
this oil to meet the growing power requirements of
industry, the Armed Forces and motorists. That s why
Standard is trying a new conservation experiment
called "fire flooding."
We ignite some of the oil in a pool . . . control burning
by regulating the air supply. Heat and pressure drive
the oil to surrounding wells for pumping. It will take
more than a year's time and a million dollars to see
if fire flooding works. We think it's worth the effort
because it could add more to U.S. underground oil
reserves than the discovery of an entire new oil held.
Helping find new sources
to supply the oil U.S.
will need in 1966
1956
8,827,000
barrels per day
1966
13,000,000
barrels per day
Standard's petroleum engi
neers say, "Back in 1925 the
industry could predict only
about 20 recovery from a
new field. Modern secondary
recovery methods, of which
fire flooding is one of the
latest, could more than
double recovery."
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA
plant ahead to ttrv you betttr
Fay Licenses Tills Month
-AFTER MARCH 1 ST A $2 PENALTY WILL BE LEVI ED
NO W-$ 1.00 for each Male or Spayed Ftmale
NOW-$2.00 for each Female
March 1, $3.00 for each Male or Spayed Female
March 1, $4.00 for each Female
Chapter 564, Oregon Laws, 1949, require that license
plates be displayed on dogs at all times.
C. J. D. BAUMAN,
Sheriff and Tax Collector