The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, July 22, 1937, Image 9

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    Thursday, July 22, 1937
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
New Streamliner Speeds British Train Travel
G O O D TASTE
TO DAY
EMILY ROST'
W orld'« Foremost Authority
on Etiquette
© E m ily Post.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••«
Buy Gift Only If You
W ant to and Are Able
I ) EAR Mrs. Post: Does an
Invi­
tation to the wedding reception
or to the wedding at the house al­
ways necessitate sending a present
to the bride? I know it is a rule but
1 wondered just how hard and fast
it was. The question of buying pres
ents constantly is becoming a seri
ous handicap to our already rather
strained income. In some cases we
hardly know the bride and groom
and in others we don’t know the
young people at all.
land and sintti^h
d *
k , the ^°n^on to Glasgow journey in six and a half hours, the London Mid-
Answer: The giving of presents is
travel The hi Jh Jneid Y S ReW .stre.amllned traln- tha Coronation, has set a new speed record for British much more a matter of personal
travel. The high-speed express is shown getting into its stride near Watford, England, on a recent test run. feeling, and of your ability to buy
them, than of rule. Although it is
always rather expected that you
FALSELY IMPRISONED
send a present when you accept an
“Puppy Love” Uncovers Old Art
invitation to the house, this is really
not an obligation to the extent of
preventing one who can not afford
to send a present, from going to the
wedding. On the other hand, if the
bride (or groom) is a personal
friend or their families are very
intimate friends you would certainly
try to send a present even though
her wedding was so small that you
could not be invited.
Ernest Mattice, thirty-three-year-
old candy salesman of Denver who
was freed after serving six months
of two sentences of life imprison­
ment for the kidnaping and assault
of Mrs. Margaret Cykosz, twenty-
two-year-old waitress. Gov. Teller
Ammons of Colorado signed the par­
don after Frank Neill, twenty-six
years old, and Arthur Parker, twen­
ty-one years old, confessed to the
assault charge. They denied the
charge of kidnaping.
EAR Mrs. Post: How should a
girl answer a man when he
asks whether he might send her
home alone in a cab instead of go­
ing home with her? This happened
to me when I spent the evening re­
cently with a friend and his family
at their house.
Answer: I think the only answer
you could make is, "Don’t think of
coming.” Of course, if the hour
were late, then someone should
have gone with you.
• • •
When Not to Tip
Forgotten pictures, gathering dust for years in an old attic, brought
the hope of new life to Mrs. Alida Clark, seventy-nine years old, of May-
wood, 111., a suburb of Chicago. She swapped one of the pictures
with Arthur Lloyd, Jr., of Oak Park, an antique dealer, for a cocker
spaniel, shown in the picture here. When the dealer cleaned it up he
was told by an art authority that it was the work of an old French mas­
ter, Jean Baptiste Greuze.
Dr. Ward Elected Head of Osteopaths
Screen Star’s
Tiny Son Plans
Athletic Career
Emblazoned on the front of his
sweat shirt are the letters of the
future alma mater of two and
one-half year old Norman Scott
Barnes, son of Joan Blondell, screen
EAR Mrs. Post: I have gone for
years to a very expensive hair­
dressing establishment and have al­
ways left a tip for those who take
care of me. In discussing the ques­
tion with a friend, she believes that
their prices are exorbitant enough
so that no tip is necessary. To sub­
stantiate her side of the argument
she gave me for example some of
the better restaurants in which no
tips are expected.
Answer: Unless the restaurant or
the hairdressers have signs plainly
explaining that no tipping is per­
mitted, you would be expected to
tip at the usual rates. And unless
your total bill is very high your
percentage would, if anything, be
slightly higher than in similar
places having cheaper rates.
• • •
D
to the Housewife
Browning Biscuits.—Biscuits can
be given rich brown tops by
brushing the tops with a pastry
brush dipped in milk before plac­
ing them in the oven.
• • •
Storing Brown Sugar.—B r o w n
sugar will not become lumpy if
stored in an airtight jar.
* • •
Turnips Au Gratin__For t h i s
tasty dish half-cook turnips in boil­
ing salted water, then cut into
fairly thin slices and drain well.
Arrange in layers in a buttered
Baskets of Lace
For Chair Set
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He Should Escort Girl
Home If Hour Is Late
Items of Interest
AROUND
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Pattern 1437.
Isn’t it exciting to think that
with your own crochet hook you
can fashion a chair or buffet set
as lovely and practical as this
basket design? A bit of string
helps do the trick, giving it dura­
bility beyond compare. Even a
beginner can do this simple filet
crochet, the design set off in open
stitch.
Pattern 1437 contains
charts and directions for making
the set shown; material require­
ments, an illustration of all
stitches used.
Send 15 cents in stamps or coins
(coins preferred) for this pattern
to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft
Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Please write your name, ad­
dress and pattern number plainly.
fireproof dish, and cover each lay­
er of turnip with grated cheese,
a seasoning of pepper, and sorr*
little dabs of butter. The last lay­
ers should consist of breadcrumbs
sprinkled with grated cheese and
dotted with butter. Bake in a mod­
erate oven until well browned.
• • •
When Drawers Stick.—B l a c k
lead or black lead pencil rubbed
on the edges of a drawer which
has become swollen from heat will
enable it to be opened and shut
quite easily.
• • •
Heating the Oven.—Open t h e
oven door for a minute soon after
the gas has been lit and you will
find that the oven Will get hot
much quicker. By doing so you
let out the moisture that always
collects when the oven is not in
Meat Pinwheels.—Biscuit dough,
left-over meat chopped with onion,
carrot and parsley. Spiced toma­
to grav^. Make your favorite bis­
cuit dough and roll out fairly thick.
Spread the meat mixture over the
surface, leaving an inch margin
of dough uncovered. Then roll up
dough and meat together, a n d
slice off pinwheels. Grease a
shallow pan and lay in the pin­
wheels. Bake in moderately hot
oven until done, about 30 minutes.
• * •
Disagreeable Odor__The smell
of new paint has a very bad effect
on some people. To minimize it,
fill a pail of water and sprinkle
in it some hay and one or two
onions, freshly sliced. Stand this in
a room newly painted, and much
of the smell will be neutralized.
• • •
Cooking Cabbage. — Cabbage
should be cooked only until tender
when tested with a fork. Too much
cooking results in changed color
and an indigestible product.
W N U Service.
MAKES
10 M
GLASSES
AT GROCERS
ROLLS DEVELOPED
8 print« 8 double w e lf htenl&rgem ente.
o r jo u r choloe o f 18 print« w ith o u t
enlarrem enta^bo coin. Reprint« So en.
H O R T M W B T PHOTO S O W IC R
Use o f Monograms.
ear Mrs. Post: What is the
proper arrangement of initials
in a monogram? I am thinking now
of the monogram that has a taller
initial in the center. Also, is a
monogram ever carried out on the
envelopes, and if not, may a return
address be put on the flaps of en­
Ifyour dealer cannot
velopes to be used with paper
marked with a monogram?
with your dealer’s
Answer: When the initial in the
center is larger it is always the ini­
JAR RUBBERS Package of 48 genu-
tial of the surname. It is proper,
. yssj .
ine Pe-Ko Jar Rings;
if you like it, to have the address
sentprepaid
sent prepaid.
stamped on the flap of the envelope
y
l
United
States
Rubber
Company
[77’
for paper marked with a mono­
gram, although strictly speaking
formal notes are sent without any
return address. Paper marked with
You Stand Alone
a monogram is more formal than
Squeezed From Her
As you start upward in your ca­
paper stamped with an address but
Many a girl on receiving a pro­
of course you can use it for any reer you get slaps on the back; at posal is hard pressed for an an
the top, you get none.
personal letters.
swer.
PE-KO EDGE supplyyou’send20t
Dr. Edward A. Ward (right), of Saginaw, Mich., was elected president
of the American Osteopathic association representing 10,000 physicians,
surgeons and specialists at the association’s annual convention in Chi­
cago recently. With him is Dr. Arthur E. Allen (left), of Minneapolis,
Minn., who was chosen president-elect, to take office at the 1938 conven­
tion, which will be held about mid-year. The office of president-elect
is a new one.
W omen in Night Clubs
EAR Mrs. Post: I was much
star, by her former husband. When
interested in your article in
Norman reaches college age, the which you said that women should
University of California, Los An­ not go to a night club unaccompa­
geles, will be his choice.
nied by a man. Won't you please
tell me whether this also applies to
the early dinner hour? I sometimes
go to New York accompanied by
my mother, or other oider woman
relative, and instead of having din­
ner in a quiet restaurant we like
to go to one that has Broadway at­
mosphere with music and show.
Answer: A young woman dining
no matter where and staying for
awhile with her mother or other
older woman relative is quite a dif­
ferent situation from that of two
young women going late to a night
club without a man!
• • •
Soviets Establish Post on Top of the World
r)
CHEW LONG BILL NAVY TOBACCO
LIFE’S LIKE THAT
B y Fred Neher
Use Logical Form
EAR Mrs. Post: la there a
* 7 proper answer to make when
someone expresses thanks for a
birthday card or other slight re­
membrance? If I say, "I’m glad
you liked it,” then I feel that
I am assuming they liked the card
when all the person may have said
was “Thank,you.” I always find
the situation awkward and wonder
whether there la some suitable re­
ply to be used at such times.
If they admire the card
This photograph, brought back by returning members of the Soviet aerial expedition to the North pole, or Answer:
think it amusing, then you say,
shows the camp established at the pole by the expedition. Parts of the planes, first to land on top of ths "I’m glad you like it,” and it they
world, may be seen in background. Four members of the expedition will remain at the pole for a year, study­ merely thank you tor having sent
ing conditions and atmospheric phenomena. It is planned to establish a base there for a regular Soviet air it then you say, "You’re very we'
service between Moscow and the United States.
come.”
..- - ■ - _i|— m in ma w wmi mi
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WNU
”1 always look . . .
there might be an old maid there.'