MfiT)FOT?D MATL TTUTVTTXK rF-DFORD, OIJF.OOX. FRF HAY. DF.CKMT.Kn 12. W.'!0.
PAflF, TTTTTITEEN
OUROO.V RTATR COLLKfaR,
Corvallis, Doc. 12. fSp) Five
hundred Orofion pouUrymen, three
of whom, Mrs. J. R. McCracken,
Stanley Pace! and H. S. Goodinx.
aro In Aahlnnd, are going to col
lege by radio this winter, being
Anvnllail In ihd Inptroat nnil mnol
" .
successful radio home study course '
. ever conducted over kual:, the
slate college station.
When I ro feasor A. O. Limn,
head of the poultry department,
calls the roll over the microphone
every Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock
he can visualize actual registered
"students" extending from Canada
to Utah and in 27 counties of Ore
gon. i Marion county leads in Oregon
with 79; Linn is second with fiO,
Multnomah has 53, Lane 50,
Clackamas 45-and Douglas 2fi. Ten
have enrolled from Washington,
six In California, two each In Idaho
and Utah, and one in Canada.
Four-H club members hove be
come interested and in Portland
the poultry club of the Joseph Kel
logg school has. enrolled as a body.
The course consists of 20 les
sons, covering principal phases of
poultry management sueh as breed
ing,, culling, brooding,, feeding,
housing nnd disease control. Text
assignments are given as well as
supplementary reading In college
bulletins.
Though the course has been
going for several weeks, new en
1 rollments are being received at the
rate-of 10 to 20 a week.
GOLD HILL WOMEN
ENTERTAIN HUSBANDS
GOLD HILL. Dec. 12. (Spl)
TiiiIIau nt tlin Kcu'lnir cnlcr.
tatned- their husbands Saturday I
evening at the home of Mr. and ,
Mrs. s Earl Moore.
Those present were Mr. and Mrs. i
Paul; Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
mond Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. H.
D. Force, Mr. nnd Mrs. George
Meisinger, ; Mr. nnd Mrs. C. J.
Shorn, Mr. nnd M rs. Paul Ang
stead, Mr. find Mrs. A. A. Walker,
M r. nnd M rs. Huh Ha yes, M r.
.and Mrs. George Hammersley, Mr.
and Mrs. Merrltt Merriman, Mr.
nnd Mrs. Wilmott, Mr. nnd Mrs.
Ktier Davis, Mr. nnd Mrs. Clyde
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. William Fer
guson, Mr. and Mrs. Aurele Mu
nier, Mr nnd Mrs. Charles Gray,
Mrs. Kuth Lewis nnd Miss Hanky.
BLACK LACE GOWN ,
HAS GOLD LACE PANELS
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6. )
Mrs. James K. Ament, wife of the
president of National Park semi
nary, has an evening gown of
black lace made over gold metal
cloth. Insert panels of gold lace
are embroidered In colored che
nille of coral and blue.
The color motif is carried out
In a large bow of coral, blue and
gold at the waist. The shoes are of
gold embroidered In the two other
predominant colors.
Wth this she occasionally wears
a white Husslan ermine cape with
a high rolling collar. .
FRILLY BLOUSES APPEAR
IN FIRST SPRING STYLES
PARIS, , Dec. 6. VP) Frilly
blouses, made feminine with rows
of gathered lace on sheer materials
like chiffon nnd organdy are an
advance spring trend easily dis
cernible here.
I At 'present n select few dress
makers are showing such blouses
(or wear with black broadtail
"cloth or flarlt velvet suits for af
ternoon wear.
L-WUSE THENrwrrl
SAFEGUARDED
Doubly lich in cream, Carnation Milk
makes every dish richly delicious. And
how it cuts your cream and butter
billil Use this pure, dependable milk
for all cooking. Carnation Milk, through
the constant activity of Carnation
"field men," is safeguarded at the
source, by clean housing of every herd
and clean 1 andling of all the milk. And
this protection continues until Carna
tion Milk leaches you in its hermet
ically sealed containers.
Write for Cook Book and Baby B ook
CARNATION COMPANY
Alber, Bldr Front nd Lo)r
Portland
t!M.CCo. "
Tlie Wesson
SNOWDRIFT'S creaminess gives all your
baking a light, even texture . . . because
Snowdrift comes to you already creamed. It
is smooth, spoonable and ready to mix. The
Wesson Oil people make it of oil as pure and
delicious and good-to-eat as a fine salad oil.
Special Recipes
For (ho Hot Plum Pudding:
y cup butter
1 cup confectioners' sugar
1 egg
2 tablespoons cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream butter and add sugar
gradually. dd beaten egg and
cream and mix well. Add vanilla
and beat over hot water until
creamy and you have a "golden
pudding sailco" to' servo hot with
plum pudding. By Sarah Field
Splint in McCall's for December,.
Kggrf an Grim tin Timely Dish
Eggs 'nil grautln constitute not
only a tasty luncheon or dinner
dish, but one easy and Inexpensive
to prepare. Furthermore, because
the eggs, milk nnd nutter compris
ing the ingredients are rich in vita
min A, the dish serves to build up
the resistance of the body against
winter coughs and colds.
The dish is prepared as follows:
2 lahtespoons flour
2 tablespoons butler
1 cup milk
6 egps
1 cup grated cheese
tablespoon salt
Make white sauce of flour, but-
ter. Kilt nnd milk P.resk crrs
lit iL'i u iij in iu pi u lit-1 eii tttt nuiK
dish. Cover with white sauce and
then with grated cheese. Bake 15
minutes in moderate oven. Six
servings,
Apple nnd celery salad is
cellent with eggs nu grautln.
Scrambled F-ggs nnd Bacon
Beat the eggs lightly with one
tablespoon of crenm or top milk
for each egg, nnd season with salt
nnd pepper. Pour the mixture Into
a pan containing one tablespoon
of melted butter. Cook over hot
wntpr, stirring constantly until
thickened, Remove nnd serve at
once with crisp bacon.
ILK
Oil peopl
people maKe
for the people
apiii Akin MnnnAA
HOnLMIIU NlffllTIAL "
school ark tOTyvw
i SOUTHERN OREOON STATE
NORMAL SCHOOL. Ashland, Dec,
12. (Spl) The student body of
the Southern Oregon State Normal
school Mondny was presented tho
pen with which Walter Pierce,
while governor in 1926, signed the
hill reestablishing the Southern
Oregon State Normal school at
Ashland. The pen has been in the
keeping of O. II. Johnson, mayor
of Ashland, since the pussage of
the bill.
It had been his hope to person
ally present the pen, but due to ill
ness which recently proved fatal,
the pen was presented by his son,
Otis Johnson, n former student of
the Southern Oregon State Normal
school.
The pen was received on behalf
of the student body by Wyatt Pad
gett, president of the Associated
HtU(l0nt8. It bo
in the custody
of Sigma Epsilon Pi, (he women's
nop0rn
scholarship
which Is tho oldest honorary or
gnnlatlon on the campus.
PUNCH WORK SMART
ON DAYTIME SHOES
PA RIS, Dec. 6. (fP) Punch
work figures conspicuously on the
new daytime shoes and cut-out
embroidery plays a part In orna
mentation of evening slippers.
The cut-out work is limited to
small designs and is executed in
fabrics like crepe do chine or faille
with Insets oi brocade or lace.
SPRING STYLES HINT
OF LINGERIE COLLARS
PARIS, Dec. 12. iA) Advance
V ' " . .. ' """
IU niIU UUIIl'l'MMIIH, IIIIIIUUIH 1L 1UI-
.... r lH ...... ..I ..a
... i. o.n.o
lo"ch: , , . ,
Cushion lace, both white and
colored, In aeen at one Important
nouKe, imen nn eiiKinB lor siiKnuy
atarched linen collara and Jubota.
DEBUTANTE WEARS
OUTFIT OF BLUE
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 OP) -
Miss Marnene Musser. a debutante
of the season, wro at the first
debutante ball a long dress of
French blue chiffon with a large
taffeta bow at the high waistline.
Long blue crystal ear rings, blue
satin slippers and hose, long blue
suede gloves nnd n short wrap of
blue carried out the color scheme
to the hint detail.
NERVY FUGITIVE AT
Ofl irCMCM'O nAPiJPC
POLICEMEN S UAlVLt
I
nOCJIKHTKK, N. V IPC. 12.
HiivinK ha.l the nerve to no to
the pnlicenien'a annual ball, Wal
ter Wiley of itorhesKT, a fugitive,
in loeked up. He had em-aped from
the Wyoming atato lnlltute. A
policeman recognized him at the
door.'
' Vilr! .NeckrlblMinl
PARIS. Dec. 6. V Neck rib
bons nre ba.-k after decade of ob
livion. Parisians put a white (rroa
grain rlblM.n In the nerk of dark
daytime dresseM. Many sport dress
es have Velvet ribbon bound neck
lines. Whllf you nre Kivlnc, Rive health
n
OW"
Weather does not affect it. In cold weather
it doesn't get hard and in warm weather it
doesn't get soft. It's just as friendly and
smooth in December as it is in June. Sealed
pails bring it to you as sweet and fresh as the
day it was made.
r.- To-Day
InTheFe
4 fct4;vKfe.
Colorful Undies
By EMMA
JJKrtS at tho Home and 1'nshlon
Institute we have been won-
dsrlng Just whut that old naylng
meant w hich sulci: "Children Bhoiilil
Mnm nl.l nlnhi... r it.
WftV
children "looked" In the
day
whiph mv, flan In ttit.t at.l..
' " 7"t
i nodded that It waan't fair. No
ione should be prohibited in doln?
, a norn,m lh,nK ,sllch , bcr
heard) If the alternative permitted
la ii(ty, awkward, and unnatural
And certainly most of the children
I I j
In these old pictures wen all ofi"op"'n at lne n0"ct th romera
that even admitting that our sense
of tho beautiful In clothes change..
several times with
tlon.
every genera-'
Homo people think the world ia
nt a long way from being clviliz-
rd. but certainly children ore be-1
ing given a bettor break. II must
have been pretty awful to have to
stand silently outside a circle of
conversation, and at the same time
look like a bedraggled little cook
In an apron: or like any on-j of the
things which most of thse old-time
pictures reminded us.
TodflV flitmh nMnnllrin I. !-..(..
"y chn,im.r. w...r d-,i;r.
ueauty-pnu-iirartleablllty. No
tl.lld noed look uKly. awkward or
linilHtural. Moreover, that nntnml
niriiaife or children hrltrht and
pr t;y irolom in beln 1 fllberately
nd Intelligently cultivated for
I youthful wear.
REDS PLOTTING DEATH
OF CHINESE PRESIDENT
KH'KIA.V'l "hlim Df-p 12 (Pinm, iMifrlitnd. owing to IncreunpJ
irpafrpnt t'hlnriK Kai-Shek ll,lj
hrn nn-xjcPtPdly today for Nn-
king IntP.id nf ftnlnx to Hankow !
L V1-'!"''-"! '"M't llif. CMVf-n
f5 fc .---
fyp '-4 .
vis. - mw . i)
U e
i an m
an
who want the
nicest things to
To-morrow
imnme wot:
for Little Folk
LOC FETTA
This trend has gone as far as tho
underwear field. We have been in
fl porting1 during the past few days
some delightful new durene cotton
"undies" for yourigit:rs. They
have a sparkle, a smart linns and a
"color consciousness" till tltulr
own.
This "Infant lingerie" was so gay
that we us k i-d two qulto young
ladies to put some ou and potto for
a photograph. They were delight
ed, despite the fai l that the young
person on the left got frightfully
clicked. That liocvr was later
explained by the fact that the
""u"1 '""J smmemy occurred io
jher that 'p'haps" we didn't "tend"
to give her the little panties and
1 T! ' . W haU ,nlrlKUIid
I.h?Jl Vn- ' . .
L J.V . ? 1 U, ffI,"n ntae , found
particularly practical. The duren-
cd rolton In, rm you probably know,
a fine poroun threuJ made under
ntandardlzed mercerliliiK condi
tions and almokt on durable aa Iron.
Moreover It ban a fine, nennlble
lunter not ajl sophlsllcuted an silk,
but delleatu and most appropriate
for ehlldren.
The little panties, and ahlrts,
nlRhtles, union aulta, vests and
bands which we saw were nil In
dHieute and appealing pa.tel
shades Inllnltely morn apiealliiK
and child. like ihnn dull whlf. We
thSiiBht you d like to h'nr about
them
nielli's rnmpalKn aulnnt coniimiu
ists nt.d buiiflllH.
Hankow advices snld nulliorit Ion
there had uurovered an alleged
i
mmunh'.t jtlot o aHsassinate the
resident upon his arrival In (hat
city
Btrwt rnrn drnrdd in Chath-j
il,o traffic In thp trit, aro be-;
Cr I""" 125 for
up nn limits low. nport pnvlllnns
tji-;.i rh r-lrn hfn
PROVOLT PUNS
YULE PROGRAM
- WILLIAMS CRF.EK, Ore,. Dec.
12. (Bpl.) r Pupilss of l'rovolt
Hchool on tho ' honor roll for the
lust Hlx vveekH nro Vonup lA.lteken,
Uoso Mlirlo l.uellen, Constance.
Hminett. and Clinton Hchollenburir.
Those. hnvlnR ion per cent spoil
ing for the last six weeka aro
Venus Lottekim nnd Kreddle 1-1-chen.
The ChrtHtmuH program will be
given at tho community halt De
cember IS.
CaK for tho three-act play,
"Chrlstmaa UetectlveM," Ih I.Ho
Stone, Lyn Stone, Iloyal flcnnett,
Hose Marie L,lc)lon and lolitj
Klelils.
Characters for tho corned y
"Feminine Bravery," nro Lylo
Stone, Alta I,owman, Patricia Hcn
nett, Marian lioborts, Velma Hhol
lenhurR, Venus Letteken. Char
nclcrs In "fllvlnu Aunt Jane a
Shock," are Mnxino Hill, Venus
I-ottoken, Patricia llennett, Velma
Bhollenhurr?.
"MiiiE n SonK fur ChrlHtmna'
will bo given , by ltoyal Honnolt.
KuReno Kielde. I.yle Stone. Lyn
Htono and Mervln HhollenburR,
"flood Santa clans" will be Riven
by Hose Mnrlo l.lehen, Marian
Roberts and lola Klolds. Recita
tions will be by l-ui-y Roberts,
Clinton ShollenbiirR, Constance
Hennett, Carol Richardson, Jerry
Htiine. Pnlrleln Hennett nnd Ixils
Heaton. "Christmas Time" will
bo siiiiK by the third nnd fourth
Riado pupils. "lMHhln Thrnuith
the snow" will bo sunR by six
Rlrls, and "Cradle Hymn" by
Alia l.ewman nnd Marlon Roberts.
Kenneth Johnson will play nn the
harp. Venus l.etteken will Rive
tho closlnR address.
TO START SERVICE
8 AT. KM, Ore, lice. 12. (A)
Th Natural (inn cnrpiiratlon of
OrcKon. which hoIdH franchlHPH
In 2U (inKin Htlt'i and which If
to nl, i it HLMVlcit imnnMllatfly In
I-a Crandn, Hrnd, (.tifiutllo, Tot
tav flrovn and Klamath raltf.
flkd It iM'lwiluIn n( Mprvlco raten
today ulth th' public Hfirvlec com
nitnsion. lialfH tn 1m rffKtlv In Klam
ath Kails nrr: rirat 300 foet piT
month, Jl.r.O; noxl 1 700 fnt, 1 7.5
pr 100; noxt 2000 foot, 12.5 PT
100; all ovpr 4000 fcl, 10 orntN
per 100.
HOOt'B niVKIl, Orp., Urc. 12.
(Hpt.) A Itofti3 Hlvor rhnoi but,
driven by Mr. Ilonwlck, collided
wOih n (rnntn Iann ,'rennipry truck
at thp Intprwctlon hy tho I'lonppr
hotid Monday pvpnlnc.
Thr truck, loaded with rrpam
;ind huttpr, v:m tiirnrd nn Itn ldc.
A frndnr wan bnt on tho bun.
An Aurtrlnti-PiitWh aqroompnt
pnrvldPA for a court of orhttra-
tion f thrpe mpmbpm to Pttlc
air traffic d Inputs not iHttpornhlc
throiiKh ordinary (Mplomattr chan-
ffp?.
eat
s i'f,yy
f s I
Your
Druggist or
Confectioner
Sells Krause's
-x- I
iswaii
hTH El REAL TEST..
for
baking powder
is the
Bakinq Po
you bake and judge its quality by
results. You will find Inert is none belter
purer or more efficient.
you save In buying and lave In iiiing
K C Baking Powder.
IT'S DOUBLE ACTING
i rvw 25 ouncei
earrTL
A5
one s a
iff a
Jewel"
You've said It often and thought
it oftener. You enjoy every min
ute of her company. It's exhilar
ating! Makes you wish the court-'
ship might last forever. Show
your appreciation give
Chocolates
for (Christmas
Each package is an adventure in
Candy making bringing to the tongue
Krause's choicest creations in choc
olate fl.00 to f7J0
or X2C
affia
BAKING
POWDER
ounces t
I 1