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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1955)
IIERALO AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE TWENTY-FIVE WINNERS at the Roberts Hardware old Wear-Ever utensil contest last Saturday posed for Don KeHler's camera. From left in the picture are: Mrs. T. A. Blake, 1313 Lookout Street; Mrs. Priscilla Yadon, Stewart-Lennox Addition; Mrs. Floy Morton, Route 3, Box 82, top prixe winner, and Innis Roberts, who sponsored the contest in Klamath Falls and increased the prize list so everybody won. The women are holding pieces of the new Hallite ware which were awarded for having the oldest and most interesting Wear-Ever utensils still in use In heir homes. i: NOW IN PROGRESS! Rickys Jewelers and The International Silver Company's Qpoiitic Silver THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1955 Sal RICHARD .HUDNUT introduces a new End Curl Permanent designed to pick up wisps, neckline stragglers and bangs be tween permanent!. It is also ideal for a partial wave in any hair style that requires end curls only. Exclusive features of the Hudnut End Curl are a special waving lotion that can be recapped and used again; 22 time saving curlers, no pre shampooing and a rinse eliminator so there's no need to dis turb the hair not being curled. Best of all, there's enough of everything for two betweon-wave permanents of 1 1 curls each. j " M I End Curl Pick Up Fifty Old Par Could Tell Much Of Owners' Lives Evervbodv won and everybody i contest was Mrs. Eulatie B. Wood- had tuu op. October 8 at Roberts I ward, lllT j Walnut, who brought IF OVERBLOUSES and waist hugging sweaters are your fashion favorites this fall, you'll be tempted by this Rudley sheathkirt which ac cents the hip line with a but-tonjd-up horizontal tuck. But tons are spaced to match contour darts that start at waistline. Made of wool flannel in a variety of bright colors, the skirt carries the Sanforlan label which means it can be washed without any danger of its shrinkage out of fit. Ensemble here with a turtle neck Sanforlan wool sweater, the sweater features deep waist ribbing borrowed from the newest Italian styles. HONEY Don't overlook the advantages of honey as a salad dressing. Use It plain, or temper Its seetnesa with an equal amount of lemon Juice to do wonders for fruit salads. Give a little sweet flavor to a glass of mild by adding teaspoon of honey and watch your children drink It up. Sweeten meringues with honey by adding teaspoonful as you beat the egg whites. Blend honey with an equal amount of butter and keep It in the refrigerator it's handy to use as a spread for bread, hot bis cuits and waffles. Add honey to the cavity of acorn squash the last IS minutes for bake it for taste Improvement. Bake fall ap ples with a honey coating and revel in their glosy appearance and delicious taste. Honey Topping Ice cream sundaes at home can be given a delightfully different flavor bv topping them with honey. Decorate with chopped nuts and possibly a cherry for a profes alonal looking Job. Chances are that ' your last home permanent is still pretty neat looking but the neckline hair is starting to go. Or maybe you're trying to grow your hair Just a little bit to blend with the new- fashions. At any rate, these strag gling ends are probably becoming a nuisance the. neckline wisps and dropping bangs 'won't conform with the rest of your hair-do. So if you're not ready for a complete permanent, but feel you want to pick up some languish ing ends, you will want to try the new Richard Hudnut End Curl Permpnent. Quick and easy. It has been cre ated for the ousy giri-on-the-go to py. up wisps and stragglers and blend in smooth new curls with a minimum of luss and bother. Be cause it requires no pre-shampoo- inr and contains and exclusive rinse eliminator, there's no rins ing necessary. You need never dis turb the hair not being curled. In a matter of minutes, vou can do any wave touch-up- necessary ana go aoout your business. Then, too, 22 time saving end curlers are included in this kit. They are especially designed for speed and ease in handling those hard-to-get-at wisps at the nape of the neck and at the temples. The special new waving lotion has no disagreeable after-smell. The bottle can be recapped and used again. Most Dermanent wave lotions, you know, lose the'ir ef- lectlveness once they're opened. Still another pljs there's enough of everything In the kit for two between-wave pick-ups of 11 curls each. Hardware, 3890 South Sixth, when Mrs. Floy Morton was presented with a Hallite Honeymoon set for entering a little Wear-Ever pan she had purchased as a bride in Dillon, Montana. She related lha: she and Mrs. 'Fred Kerr answered advertisements in a magazine which offered a saucepan for 20 cents. The year was 1907. As a surprise. Innis Roberts awarded two more prizes of Hal lite ware. One went to Mrs. Pris cilla Yadon who had entered a big Wear-Ever coffee percolator with all of its Intricate insides com plete and in good condition. It carries the Wear-Ever patent mark handed down through three gen erations of daughters-in-law. "It Is at least 4f years old and still good to the last drop," the history of the percolator read. A little Wear-Ever stove, onlv one of Its kind entered, won Hallite saucepan for Mrs. T. A. Blake1, she recounted that it war. the first electrical equipment she ever owned and that it had come mighty handy in the summer time when I was using a wooa stove." The little stove has been used "for popping corn to fryins doughnuts as well as cooking &Kt T fronmt- essv's pairi pishes w By Bessy, the Basin Bossy October 16-22 is National Do-nut and Milk week. And it's a natural, isn't it? Combining two of Amer ica's favorite foods together. There are lots of tricks for serving do-nuts like dropping thpm iinciicarfri Into paper bag I A: ".' with a little gran ulated or confec doner's sugar, Shake well. mm Dr. J. W. LOWE CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICIAN Complate Spinal Adjustment Phone Office 2-1131 Residence 20182 111 So. 4tn St. la Sta.ani Hotel lldf. Or, dip them Into t warm, ' glaze, then Into V a mivtxr- - r - one - half cup jS! i,Ji.i''J-f nuts ana one-nan cup sugar, plus a teaspoon of cinnamon. Or. Just plain glaze them by adding a third of a cup of boil ing water gradually to one cup of confectioner's sugar. Mix well, and dip the do-nuts into the warm glaze. Here's a little Interesting his tory on the do-nut (or doughnut, as it is more often spelled : It was known as early as 1538 In England (then called "Import ed daughty cakes), and was brought to America by Dutch and English colonists. The Amer icans, though, invented the hole In the doughnut. Prior to this In novation, they were balls or "nuts'1 of yeast dough. Recipes for making doughnuts for do-nuts) are ea.Mly a dime dozen. To be really practical about It, one can purchase 'good doughnuts at a bakery or pastry shop for little more expense than it takes to make them. But who wants to be practical with doughnuts. They are tun to make comparable to popcorn making and In this do-it-yourself age, even the man of the house Is liable to get himself into the act. e But take it from me, whenever you serve them, whether they be doughnuts or do-nuts, they'll taste beit with tall, refreshing glasses of fresh milk to accompany thorn. I Bessy, in a seven-piece set of Wear-Ever which she and her nusoana pur chased shortly after their mar riage. S:ie said the set was used during all the yews she raised ner tamuy ana recalls "many sen timental memories." . One pie pan, purchased in 1921, saw use in the only hotel at Alius, Arkansas, then came to Klamnth Falls in 1929, went through a fire lit the Oregon Rooms and is still ui use at the Lake Hotel. A Wear-Ever cookie sheet start ed its useful life at Jeinison, Ala bama, and had been used in 111 states and Old Mexico before com ing to Klamath Falls. A roaster brought In from Dor ris has been used for cooking 'tor crowds for 35 years, the top see ing duty in baking rolls, cookies and biscuits- A fiyine pan in a kitchen set was bought in 1919 at Sailes, North Dakpiu. and has been "used to iry everything from spuds to bear meat Wear-Ever which moved with a1 minister's family from Tennessee : to North Carolina to the Hawaiian' Islands and finally to Klamath Falls. ' One pan. guaranteed by the agent for 20 years, has been in constant use for 40 years and "is good for another 40," accord ing to its owner. A 42-year-old pie pan had an in teresting history: "A friend ot ours was a salesman for Wear Ever and gave- us his commission on a set for a wedding present," Uie history read. It wns nearly lost to the family back in the early days, when there were only about 5,000 peo ple in Klamatn Falls, when it car ried a pie to a benefit food sale end went home with the man who bought the pie. The woman in charge of the food sale finally iound the man, whose name Bhe did not knew, standing In a bank line end told him the pan should not have gone with the pie be cause it was "a good Wear-Ever nan." He returned the pie pan and it has been in use in the Bert C. Thomas family ever since Another old skillet was entered bv Mrs. Axel Olson who said she bought It "in 1901 or 1908 tn Cass Lake, Minnesota, and It has been in use ever since." The Judges found the reading of the histories of the utensils A roaster purchased in 1930 is jascinatliigr as fiction, meanwhile good for another 25 years,' ac-1 rea.llzlnir thev were as authentic as autobiographies cordinj to its fend owner. Two utensils entered together were part of a mess kit issued by the government during World War Because the winning entry was to be Judged on age of the uten sil and interesting history. 11 mecls.' she said. i to the late Dr. E. M. Brown j ,, hnrrt , ..h . derision. Innia Alter making these awards, Rob- who wns a medical officer at- Roberts helocd the Judges immeas- ..w. , juh.i icu "e fiuoyimi u "i;urai)ly bv adding prizes not aa the store's staff, presented a half- used on board the Mauritania en ,,..j .ho rnntest rules pint Jar of Wright's silver polish The contest drew more than 5u entries of utensils which were more than 25 years old and still in use. The day of the award, crowds " started" gathering before 11 a.m. and the store was filled with people by 1 p.m. when the awards were made. The first person to enter the route to duty with the AEF at Chaumont, France. They were j "discharged" at Camp Dix, New-, Jersey, on July 9, 1919, and re-j tired to home use ever since. ! A Fort Klamath entry ' was a ; griddle pan bought from a travel-j lug salesman. It has been In usci for more than 30 years. I One entry consisted of pieces of' MclNTYRE TRAVEL SERVICE Yeur Experienced Agent WILLARD HOTEL Phona 3011 Enjoy GUARANTEED SAVINGS on nationally advertised Hems. The greatest lec tion at the greatest savings. S&H green stamps plus our budget accounts. But HURRY! Offer ends October 22nd. The United States National Bank OF PORTLAND RESOURCES Cash on Hand and Due from Banks $151,972,420.55 United States Government Bonds 295,599,006.19 Municipal and Other Bonds 73,916,374.76 leans and Discounts Net 292,505,416.88 Stack in Federal Reserve Bank 1,080,000.00 Bank Premises (Including Branches) (,572,652.62 Customers' Liability on Acceptances 149,244.50 . 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