Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1937)
Thursday, March 25, 1937 /loißeUoM • • Question, Rugs should be turned around •very six months. Frequent turn ing causes them to wear evenly. • • • Coddled Apples—Two cups boil ing water, one or two cups sugar, eight apples. Make a syrup of sugar and water, boiling five min utes. Core and pare apples; cook slowly in the syrup; cover closely and watch carefully. When tender, lift out the apples, add a little lemon juice to syrup and pour over apples. The cavities in the apples may be filled with jelly or raisins. • • • Clear boiling water will remove tea stains from table linen. • • * Cretonne slip covers will retain their color better if washed in bran water. • • • To make perfect muffins com bine all dry ingredients, then add liquids quickly, stirring but not beating. Do not stir after ingredi ents are moistened. Fill muffin pans two-thirds full and if mix ture looks lumpy it will smooth out during baking. • • • Keep the top on the milk bottle so the milk does not absorb ice box or refrigerator odors from other foods. • • • Home Made Crackers—Sift to gether one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and one cup of pastry flour. With a knife or tips of the fingers work to a dough with water, sweet milk, or thin cream (the last is preferable). Knead slightly —just enough to get into shape—then roll into a very thin sheet, stamp out with cutters, or cut into rectangular pieces with a sharp knife, prick with a fork, and bake a delicate brown. • • • Agateware is easily chipped, so don’t scrape out food that be comes stuck in it. • • • A little salt added to an egg before beating makes it light and easier to beat. • • • Sweet Prunes—A very delicious as well as unusual way of serving prunes for breakfast is to soak them in fruit juices. Whenever a jar of fruit is opened save the juices and put a few prunes in the jar. When they have become swollen they are ready to be eaten. THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. SrirS.b. Golden Gate Bridge Is Nearing Completion Kaanaa Ask Me Another A General Quia • — • Bell Syndicale.—WNU Service. about: uus Windsor’s Finances. CANTA MONICA, CALIF. — — By latest reports, the duke of Windsor must start life as a married man reduced to a per sonal estate of only about $600,- 000, plus guaranteed annual re mittances amounting to but a beggarly $100,000 more. To be sure, as the old saying is, two can live as cheaply as one—if one of the two hap- . pens to be a gold- Piii fish or even a ca- nary—but otherwise a the notion hasn’t a worked out under modern conditions, wives these days being what wives are these days. Still, they do say iahe Mrs. Simpson is BY pretty handy with a — — skillet, which, on Irvin s. Cobb the cook’s Thurs days off, ought to save getting In extra kitchen help; and what with there being no crown jewels to keep Heralding the approaching completion of the Golden Gate bridge, world’s longest single span, the work ol polished and installment houses just stripping away the catwalk construction on the west cable was undertaken. This photograph, taken from crying to help all young honeymoon the San Francisco side, shows a portion of the catwalk that had already been removed. ers out—you furnish the bird, we furnish the nest!—Well, by scrimp ing, the couple should get by, don’t Wife Joins Search Return of the Touring Roosevelts you think? • • • for Paul Redfern Washington Rumors. in South America IT OW rumors do float about—es- - - pecially in the neighborhood of Mrs. Gertrude Redfern, of Pitts Washington. Well, Washington al ways has been kind of a windy burgh, Pa., wife of Paul Redfern, long-lost aviator, who will accom place. First we hear a boom is to be pany an expedition leaving New started for Mrs. Roosevelt to suc ceed the President at the conclu sion of his term. This is promptly denied and the question arises—how is that loyal soul, Uncle Jim Farley, going to stand the strain of waiting until Sistie Dahl gets old Pre enough to run? Uncontradicted as yet is the other report that the White House craves to revive the NRA, under another set of initials and—let us hope—with a better-looking Blue Eagle than ' » ' A that first one was. • • • “Sweeping” inquiries. FTER every major disaster -- which conceivably was pre aas li ventable, we have a “sweeping in quiry” or a "searching probe’’—it depends on which phrase the re porters like best—to fix the blame. Rarely does anything come of this, but it must indeed be a great con ils © Associated Newspapers.—WNU Service. i «i th : i; • solation to the widows and the or ir phans of the victims. Seemingly, it never occurs to any York for South America, to attempt one to make the said investigation to solve the mystery of her hus before the tragedy occurs, with a band’s disappearance. Redfern dis Col. and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt shown as they arrived in New view of searching out defective appeared on August 25, 1927, on an mechanism or imperfect construc attempted non-stop flight from York recently aboard the S. S. Washington, after an extensive European Brunswick, Ga., to Rio De Janeiro. tour, which included visits to Important capitals on the continent. tion then. We are a great people for shut ting the stable door after the horse INTERNATIONAL BANKER is gone—shutting it good and tight Five Generations of Family Meet so the probers may have leisure Lost Virtues for their probing. Virtues lose themselves in self- • * • Interest, as streams lose them Defying a Glacier. selves in the sea.—Rochefoucauld. fi N ALASKA, the Revell family are defying Black Rapids glacier which, without seeming provocation and after remaining perfectly calm for several million years, suddenly Rid of Acid started coming down upon them, rumbling and roaring and acting up generally as it advances. Its icy snout is only about a mile away fail from their roadhouse now, but they’re still serving ye olde blue Burning, plate special—choice of jello or stewed prunes—as usual. The Revells couldn’t be New York people. In New York, everybody strives to move at least once every two years, whether there’s reason for it or not. A lady flat dweller there likes the scriptural promise of a house of many mansions because it gives her such a warm glow to think of spending eternity shifting Sir Otto Niemeyer, a director of from one mansion to another, re Five generations of one family gathered in Chicago when this pic the Bank of England, whom the decorating as she goes. ture was taken. Left to right are shown Mrs. Lillian Lapp, thirty-seven, board of directors of the Bank for grandmother; Mrs. Elmer Wendt, seventeen, the mother; Great-great International Settlements elected to Crime and Punishment. grandfather Samuel Field, eighty, holding baby Elizabeth Ann Wendt, fill for three years the new post of T A recent trial in New York five months old; and John Bagley, sixty-two, great grandfather. Baby chairman of the board that it is cre for a hideous murder, the law Elizabeth was christened on the day this unusual picture was made. ating. yer for the killer—who, incidentally, had confessed—wound up his plea with this old and reliable and beau tifully logical standby: "Putting this man in the electric chair will never bring back the SLEEP SOUNDLY woman he slew—remember that, Lack of exercise and injudicious eating Gentlemen of the jury." But putting a brutal killer in the make stomachs acid. You must neu electric chair will never bring him - tralize stomach acids if you would sleep back either, which, after all, is the soundly all night and wake up feeling main idea, isn’t it, Gentlemen of refreshed and really fit. any rational jury? IRVIN S. COBB. 2299 Fa I “ FiA lovet Iwa * | 1.10 Bact B F F 4 ‘gl I I i A I s. • ’ i i i f sig —s' r "A / i" ad e Ait vale 1. Is a spider an insect? 2. In what country were peas ants called “serfs”? 3. What do stage people mean by a “prop”? 4. What is a catamaran? 5. Who was Samuel Johnson? 8. Near what sea was Jericho? 7. What is a more common name for a trefoil? 8. What famous English poet helped the Greeks against the Turks? 9. What is an isobar? 10. In what mythology was Isis a goddess? 11. Of what system is the highest mountain in the world a part? 12. What is sarsenet? Answers 1. The spider is not an insect but a member of the class Arach- nida which includes also mites, scorpions etc. Insects have three body divisions and four wings, while spiders have two body divi sions and no wings. Insects have three pairs of walking legs; spiders four. 2. Russia. 3. An article used in a play. 4. A long narrow raft. 5. An English lexicographer (1709-1784). 6. The Dead Sea. 7. The clover. 8. Lord Byron. 9. A line connecting points hav ing the same barometric pres sure. 10. The Egyptian. 11. The Himalaya (Mount Ever est). 12. A thin fine silk. Creative Amusement When men are rightly occupied their amusement grows out of their work, as the color petals out of a beautiful flower; when they are faithfully helpful and com passionate, all their emotions are steady, deep, perpetual and vivi fying to the soul as is the natural pulse to the body.—John Ruskin. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets made of May Apple are effective in removing accumulated body waste.—Adv. Talent and Genius Talent is that which is in a man’s power! Genius is that in whose power a man is.—Lowell. 198/ »ltk SEEDS YOU CAN TRUST Ie’s fun—it‘s fascinating 68 plant seeds—both flowers and ChooH SEEDS YOU CAN TRUST Tbit taty way at atarby storti FKESHI Dattd Peitti we : i FERRY-MORSE SEED CO. FREE GARDEN HELPS • Ferry-Morse 1937 Garden Book O Succeed Phillips with Seed ’ by Martha Mail coupon to 497, Paul Ave., San Francisco L FOR 80 YEARS IMPROVING SEEDS Litfan for tho Ball MARTHA PHILLIPS GARDEN CLASS 9.15 A.M. SUNDAYS NIPS!! ATTENTION! Outdoor Men and Women Keep your feet dry by waterproofing your shoes with New Deal Shoe Grease. Send thirty-five cents for five ounce can prepaid. NEW DEAL SHOE GREASE CO. P.O. Box 1032, San Francisco, Calif. A Society Belles "Sweep" the Polo Matches ALL COMFORTS AT RATES ALL CAN AFFORD • Western Newspaper Union. TAKE MILNESIAS Milnesia, the original milk of magnesia in wafer form, neutralizes stomi ch acid. Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk of magnesia. Thin, crunchy, mint-flavor, tasty. 20c, 35c & 60e at drag stores. Selecting Indian Chiefs In some tribes, such as the Iro quois and some Pueblo tribes, cer tain chieftaincies were always se lected from a particular clan. While there were hereditary chieftaincies among certain other groups, as a matter of practice such offices were usually elective. It is possible that the political system of the Iroquois influenced the democratic style of government of the United States. Probably the only example in North America of a power analogous to that of a despot was to be found among the Natchez and neighbor- ng tribes of the lower Mississippi. In this instance submission to the will of the chief was for the most part voluntary and based on reli gion. He 7 BROADWAY & SALMON SALMON & PARK HAM? I HEATHMAN MGR, View during a recent “gymkana" at Pinehurst, N. C., for society folks. The women are shown sweeping very cleanly to put the men at a losa. Phyllis Steven son, of Glen Cove, L. I., is shown on the ball. a .