Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About The Polk County post. (Independence, Or.) 1918-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1918)
NERVY GIRL MAKES DIES PRISONED I FORTUNE IN YEAR Helping the Neat and Nilk Supply AFTER 64 YEARS LAID HIM OUT HUSBAND SHOOTS RICH INTRUDER (Special Information Service, United States Department o f Agriculture.) Cleveland Oil Promoter Kills Man Found in Attic of His House. BUTTER-M AKING IT GOOD AND SAFE F0R*Y0U. STAYED WITH CAPTORS DAUGHTER IS WITNESS White Horse Became One o f Moat Be loved M em b'ri of Her Adopted People — Outlived Two Cheyenne Husbands. Tragedy Occurs When Man Changes His Plans and Returns Home Without Informing W ife of His Early Arrival. Cleveland.— A formal charge o f mur Prisoner— We Just had an argument. der hus been lodged against Elmer air. Hupp, wealthy oil promoter of Cleve Magistrate— Did you use violence? land, O., who shot and killed Charles Prisoner— No ; I used my fist. L. Joyce, also wealthy and connected with a leading clothing tlriu In New York city, when he found Joyce in the Hupp home at Lakewood, u fashionable Cleveland suburb. Immediately after the shooting Hupp informed the police and surrendered. H e is at liberty under $35,000 bail pend ing the trial, in which his w ife and thir- teen-year-old daughter, who witnessed the tragedy, will be important factors. In a statement after his release Hupp s a id : “ Everybody makes mis- ! takes. I guess we have made ours. I am now going back to my w ife and daughter.” Joyce, according to the Cleveland po lice, was thirty-five years o f age and lived at Bratenthal, a district known in Cleveland as the “ millionaire colony,” which, although located within the city limits o f Cleveland, Is a separate mu- ! nicipality. Hupp Changed His Mind. According to the story related to the police by Hupp, he left home several Quiz— Why is the suburbanite's little days before the tragedy on a business patch called a Garden of Eden? trip to Chicago and Kansas City. A f Whiz— Give it up. ter reaching Chicago he changed his Quiz— Because there's so much eve plans and started for home without in work about It. forming his wife. On the evening o f the tragedy he heard a strange noise soon after entering his house and rushed to his w ife’s apartments. There, Hupp informed the police, he found Mrs. Hupp and asked If she was alone. She said she was. Hupp told the officers that he heard a noise in the attic and started up the stairs to Investigate, when he met WHAT DO YOU KNOW? ONE COMING It May Takp $100,000 Worth of Creamery Equipment to Produce Your Pound of Butter. BUTTER MAKING IS EXPERT WORK Process Is Just as Technical as Manufacture of Piece of Cotton Cloth. MILK IS SKIMMED ON FARM Cream Is Tested, Pasteurized, Cooled and “ Ripened” Before Churning— • Disease Germs and Bac te r ia Destroyed. — fc- W aiter— Your check, sir. Poet (absently)— Not for mine; haven’t hud one in six months. ( I • J • 2 • 2 • 2 • £ • • • £ 2 This Is the story o f creamery butter— tile steps in tile inanu- facture 6f the high-grade prod- uct which Comes to your table each week.. Taking this food fo r granted, you probably have not realized the rather intricate and technical process through which it passes from milk to the finished product. I f this story w ill inspire a sympathy which lends to a more careful and con- servative u ->• o f butter it w ill have served its purpose. i. H e opened fire immediately, bullets taking effect in Joyce's ; n<! . using fnslant (] aih. IIupp Is au unusually attractive hus IfU R U i 'C v jn • I'd mnrry Miss Years • J • 2 • £ • £ • £ • • • * if manufacturing a modern factory Is s the manufacture cloth. Ip most in- s skimmed ou the fiund-operated cen- which extracts the L'lliciently than the stem. The creiiin ie creamery by the Opened Fire Immediately. Joy thn Cigar Stand Clerk Takes Home stead and War Prices Bring Pawnee Woman Was Captured Her Riches. by the Cheyennes When but Vlrgelle, Mont.— Father Tim e has ' Two Years Old. Bim Miss Cutting—ThatiWOUld be your ily chance. If you gave her a,couple minutes to think it mqjr slic'd turn u down. . I hnifi in am arrive they : tiled In order to tor butterraaki poured into hi O, or more gullo ? a coil, or simi pacity o f 1,000 or more pounds o f but ter. Although commonly culled churns, they really are combined churns and workers, because, unlike home butter- j making, the butter is both churned | and worked in the machine. • The churn is filled only one-third or one-half full, so that when revolved the cream which is carried up by the motion o f the churn has plenty of room to fall. The concussion thus pro duced causes the minute globules of butterfat to gather into granules of butter. When the churn is stopped after having been run fo r about an hour granules of butter about the size of grains o f wheat or corn w ill be (touting on the surface o f the butter milk. Then the buttermilk is drawn off through a hole in the bottom o f the Churn and the butter granules washed with pure, cold water. A fte r draining, salt is added to the granular butter which is still in the churn. The big wooden rollers nre then put into geur, the churn started and the butter worked in the churn until the salt is nil dissolved and tlie butter has a waxy body. The butter is removed and packed into tubs or made into pound prints and put into cartons in tlie form in which it goes to the con sumer. Many Scientific Tests Made. Jinny creameries have well-equipped laboratories in which the numerous scientific tests that are a part o f the creamery business are made. A sam ple o f every can o f cream that is re ceived is tested by means of.th e Bab cock test in order to determine tli-» per cent o f butterfat. By tills means MO pi i to be farm e The * or ml anoth Clinton, Okla.— Captured by a hostile band o f Cheyennes sixty-four years ago. W hite Horse, a Pawnee Indian woman, hus just died here, still a pris oner, although recognized us a member o f the Cheyenne tribe. No effort was ever made at a form al exchunge o f prisoners between the two tribes. She outlived two Cheyenne husbands. A t the time o f the capture the Chey ennes were on the wnrputh, roving the plains near Omaha, Neb. They met a band o f Pawnees who were out on a buffalo hunt and a battle followed. The Cheyennes were victorious. Among the dead the Cheyenne war riors found a little Pawnee girl. Two o f the braves were about to kill her when Chief Ueup-of-Birds intervened. “ Wait, let me look at her,” tribal tradi tion quotes him. The Indians laid down their tomahawks and permitted Uead- : of-Birds to examine the child. “ Don’t i kill her, she has teeth, she can eut,” the chief continued. “ She is two years old.” So tlie Cheyenne chief adopted the child. Sang Song o f Victory. When the Indians bad gone a long distance from the bnttlefleld Curly Hair, a brother o f Heap-of-” 'ivis, sung the song o f victory with bis mighty voice, and while he sang he made u necklace. “ This necklace shull be for my little sister,” he sang. Curly H air’s sweetheart was a Sioux woman. She had a beautiful white horse. Curly H a ir said. “ I will name my little sister after my sweet heart's horse.” So the child wus called White Horse. When W hite Horse grew up she mar ried Old-ln-the-Middle. H er first hus band died and she married She-Wolf. mwA'i / «.r fM »' Jff clicked off just one little year since Miss Beda Berggren o f Duluth, Minn., stepped from behind the cigar counter o f a- hotel in that city. This year, however, has been time enough for the girl to gather u neat little fortune and gain independence fo r the rest o f her life. One year ago Miss Berggren wus- working fo r $15 a week. Now shw owns 493 acres o f fine land near here, has a comfortable home, and wouldn't be cooped up behind a cigar stand fo r “ all the money on earth.” The best part o f the whole thing is that she Now Owns 493 Acres o f Fine Land. “ didn’t have to marry a rich bachelor, or fall heir to the fortune o f a rela tive. Miss Berggren heard a salesman tell ing o f the opportunities in homesteads In the West. Immediately she wrote to friends In Montana, asking them how to take a claim. They told her, and she filed on 160 acres, which cost her $24. Enter She took 160 acres more, then bought 13 acres and finally took another 160-acre tract. This made a total o f 493 ucres in her pos session, and now It can be sold fo r $50 nn acre. W ar prices o f farm products came to tin* aid o f Miss Berggren. She put up her shack and made the necessury Improvements around the homestead. She did most o f the plowing and plant ing herself, although neighbors helped her some. Then tier crop began to ripen, and she soon wus in a position to travel back to Duluth as a wealthy land owner. The trip back to Duluth, however, was fo r only a short vacation. Miss Berggren hurried again (o her home stead in Montana and expects to stay “ out where there’s room to breathe.” » ' FIND SKELET \ oi bin • ‘• P • r ~ • Boy Scouts Diggi Unearth Or t, Let Me Look at Her.” died a little more than a so White Horse was again ow. Although a member o f -Tint the • O o i f O Ö o -8» 3 • © • MAI E TH E À ID 3Y “ DAD,” 92 - -- —* $ \ * rn' t and Battery SAME OLD BLUFF r>f it Jim he w i it htu Arother v. Ostrich Sbfs*ano, WI?.—When *uvgeoj ;eoas per formed an opei a on il cs Fop- pendorf, a feebl« I rfpd rr sent here 1 that his "H e told her that he would gladly stomaeh, among other things, contain- j ^ {o f b p r. ed a glH*»s tube from a thermom 'e i, T h e gamc oW b|uflf . a pipe stem and a buttonl ok over ____ . . six inches long. The point o f this lud 11 ca.ch her? hook had protruded through the walls "b o . She told him she would gladly let him." o f the stomach. •for trectment, tuey dl 1 dei lr fle A Starter Produces Flavor. fe Yo By running cold watvr through the bio bUs In the vat the cream is cooled to / 2 should be supplied. court, I uro o t between 60 and 70 • a temj • j ther and » • • • • • • • o • o t « • • • • • o • • • • • * • 1 naturally he pur , and then n quantity of id believe starter is added to province the flavor. te ^ n lc a l apparatus used In a creamery- ne, Judge, he h:i u left.” The starter is a culture containing I the operator o f the factory must neces- j Betrayed by Money, many millions o f Inctlc-scld bacteria warily be u technically trnined rnnn, Eau Claire, Wls.— When Thomas Me- grown in pasteurized rklin milk until and in fact many-are graduates o f si>c- the milk has soured ami curdled. The , "la! courses at the state agricultural QuilJnn, a .ed twi rrv, ".-to C.i i cigar lactic-acid bact< ria produce the desir colleges. On account o f tie large and ' store and tendered a blood-stained able flavor In ripened-cream butter. expensive machinery required the quarter in payment fo r a package of When the cream is sufficiently ripened I creamery business demands the invest cigarettes be was arrested on the or soured It Is cooled to a temperature ment o f considerable capital. The small charge o f burglarizing (he establish H e admitted the charge and o f between 0 and 00 degree F. and country creamery mgy possibly !>•■ ment. held at that temperature fo r two hours built and equipped for less than $10,- said he had cut his hand while break or more, a 'te r which It Is run into c ,• ! "XIO, bat many of Ihe larger plants cost ing a window in the building In order to effect an entrance. o f the huge churns which have a ca- more than $100,000. San Francisco.— Deeply humiliated When Policewoman Katherine Km n* hart attempted to arrest them for che ating u disturbance, Madost and Frank McDonald, bi'oibcr-. decided to (i. it. They finally landed in u hospital cud later In jail. Both nr" char-mu v (It | assault with intent to commit murder. Although hr illy mauled, Officer Eld on hart succeeded In bagging both pris oners unassisted. W hat has becom e o f the o. t. wo- i ust<l to use h er thum b m an w ho nail to m a k e . ound pretty etchings on prints o f butter, thou sold the prints for nine cents a pound.— St. P a u l Dispatch.