KlTGHEN PIGS FEET. IX the fftll, wheu pork Is at Us best. thon la the time to secure teudei young plit' feet There are several ways of serving them. Rertpea for some of the most popular methods are given here: An IneKpensive Food. Tickled IMg'a Keot.-The piss feet should be allowed to stand In cold water for about twelve hours or oer ill.-lit. Then the toes should be taken off and the feet well scraped. Place on the are aud boll them till they are lender, salting the water Just before they are done. Then they should be placed In a larjre Jar or crock and covered with hot vlneirar which has been spiced with whole cloves, pep per and allspice. They may be serv ed without further cooking or may be rut In two. rolled in flour and fried In hot fat until brown. A Nov.l Ralith. Tig's Feet Salad. -The pig's feet should be cooked In salted water and cleaned the day before they are need ed. When boiled until tender drop them In vinegar Next day pick out the nieutl shred It finely and chop, sing the bits of Jelly sticking to It. Chop the white and tender stalks of celery to make a large teacupful aud mis this with the meat. Chopped white cabbage or cold boiled pota toes may be used Instead of the eel ery if you prefer. Use a French dress ing on the salad. Pork and Beans. Pig's Feet With He:tns.-Take two Bice pig's feet, cook for an hour and scrape and clean well. Put the feet Into a covered vessel and stew gently lor two hours. Just covered with wa ter and seasoued with iiepper and Bait .Add a quart of hot parboiled beans and see that all are well covered by adding more water and put back Into the oven. Let the contents of the ves sel cook very slowly for three hours and serve hot Halved and Broiled. Grilled Pig's Feet-Scrape the pig's feet and wash them. Then soak in cold water two hours and wash and scrape again. Split each in half length vise. Tie the halves In pieces of cheese cloth. Place In a deep sauce pan, cover with boiling water, add one tablespoonful of salt and simmer slowly until the feet are tender. Take tbem from the liquor and set aside until cold. Remove the cloths. Into two tablespoonfuls of thick cream stir veil one tablespoonful of lemon Juice, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-half tablespoonful of finely chopped pars lej and a dash of tabasco sauce. Hav ing removed the cloths from the pig's feet brush each piece with good olive oil and dust lightly with salt and pepper, using one-half teaspoouful of salt and one-half saltspoonfnl of pep per for all the pieces. Broil over a clear fire for several minutes Serve on a hot platter and spread the pre pared butter. FiKlTGHEN Cupboard FRIED MUSH. SERVED for breakfast with chops, fried mush is a tempting dish. The mush may be made with tornmeal or graham flour. Mush for frying should be prepared Just as for ordiuary serving, but it should be poured Into a deep oblong dish to cool. When it Is to be used It should be turned out of the dibh and sliced for frying. Breakfast Appetizers. Fried Mush. Slice well cooked mush about one-quarter of an Inch thick. Cut in squares or oblongs. Drop In smoking hot fat as you would French fried potatoes. When a delicate arown lay on a paper a few minutes. Mush Croquettes. For this use corn meal mush. Take about a pint of the hot mush and stir into a table spoonful of butter and let it cool until lukewarm. Then add two well beaten ggs and a saltspoonfnl of salt. Shape Into croquettes about three inches long atid fry in hot fat until golden brown. Novel and Nutritious, Fried Graham Mush.-The day be fore you wish to serve the mush mix a cupful of graham flour and a level teaspoonful of salt. Make this into a paste with two pints of cold water. Stir this, a little at a time, into a half pint of boiling water and cook for fifteen minutes, stirring It frequently. Then turn Into a buttered tin or dish and set it aside. The next morning turn the mush out of the mould, cut in slices and place in a frying pan in which a teasooiiful of butter has been Welted. Fry the mush till it Is a light brown. This may be served wlt'j Maple Rlrup. A Tempting Dish. Fried Mush and liacon. Fry thin slices of breakfast bacon In a hot frying pan and then lift out and set aside where It will keep warm until ttie mush te ready. Cold comment mus'ti should then be sliced and dipped alternately In cracker or breadcrumbs and beaten egg. Fry In the bacon gravy and serve with the slices of bacon laid on top of each slice of mush. JLlsK J. HEALTH HINTF0R TODAY. Acid In the System. The remedy fur .uric acid disor ders is, first of all, the cutting off of all sources of supply: sec ond, the adoption of measures whereby the acid in the system may be destroyed and Its elimi nation encouraged. Ut hatha destroy the uric acid by Increasing oxidation, thus burning up the poison, For this purple baths must bo hot euough to produce an elevation in the teinHniture of the blood and should be continued twenty to thirty minutes. Cold baths also Increase oxidation aud thus contribute to the destruction of uric acid. But cold baths are generally very badly borne by persons suffering from uric acid disorders and can only be tol erated when combined with hot baths, the hot bath being admin istered first to prepare the sys tem to react promptly, quickly and completely after the cold ap plication. Exercise is another measure of the highest Importance In deal ing with uric acid disorders. The exercise must be large In amount, but very moderate In character. Violent exercises eas ily overtax the heart, which Is likely to lie weak In these con ditions. The free use of fresh fruits, esecla!!y Juicy fruits, is highly useful. The Idea that the use of acid fruits is Injuri ous In uric acid diseases Is en tirely erroneous. The effect of acid fruits differs entirely from that of mineral acids. The lat ter diminish the alkalinity of the blood, ami thus they aggravate uric acid disorders, whereas fruit acids increase alkalinity. Copi ous water drinking is to be commended. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Falling Hair. The falling of the hair, with consequent thinness, lack of shine, etc., is due to a condition of local anaemia of the scalp. For this use a good quinine and cantharides hair tonic. Rub well luto the roots of the hair each morning after giving the scalp a thorough massage with the finger tips till the skin glows. Wash the hair only once every three weeks, using a good sham poo mixture Instead of soap. Let your hair have an airing once a day if possible by going out into the garden with It loose and letting Uie wind and sun play on it. HEALTH HINTF0R TODAY. Avoid All Stimulants. Spring and summer drinks sjiould not Include stimulants, alcoholic or otherwise. Beer, wines, champagne and ale all Increase the surface heat of the body and make heat less endur able and the body less able to withstand heat and fatigue. Lemonade, fruit punches and carbonated waters are the best drinks for hot weather. Tea and coffee should be iced. It Is a mistake to think that Impure wa ter can be made drinkable by the addition of a little tea or coffee. This water can be made pure by boiling It for a short time. This kills bacteria, and the Impurities settle to the bottom. These may be removed by pouring off the water and leaving the settlings. Of course tea and coffee when boiled or made with boiling wa ter are sterile also and therefore drinkable. As to drinking iced water, If It is taken in moderate quantities and not on coming In from the hot sun it can do no harm. A great many think that It cools the stomach and prevents di gestion. In reality experiment has shown that the stomach Is at a higher temperature' than the outside air and when cold water or food enters it within two min utes it is warmed to the temper ature of the body, thus having little effect on digestion. How ever, it does have considerable effect in cooling the body and increasing perspiration. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. The White Plague. Avoid badly ventilated, badly lighted, dusty, dirty, overheated, crowded or damp rooms. Avoid breathing bouse dust. Have no carpets or mattings. Use rugs and clean them fre quently In the open air. Drink pure water. Shun pub lic drinking cups. When in doubt boll the water. Take a tub or sponge bath dally. Use soap freely. Clean your teeth morning and evening. Don't ent raw food which has been exposed to files or dust Wash fruit and vegetables be fore eating. Slec. eight hours with the bed room windows open. The Russian Thistle Pest It would seem safe to say that no weed is more harmful at th present titno to the agriculture of the northwestern states than jtho Kussian thistle. It harms the crop by crowding it In some ; instances to such an extent as to ; render it not worth harvesting. 1 Its presence also adds greatly to i the labor of harvesting, especially I when the growth made has been 'strong. It also gives much trouble in summer fallowed lands and cultivated crops" by the strong and rapid growth which the plants make on these lands i in the latter part of the growing j season. i The farmer is in a sense do I fenceless against invasion from 'this plant. That is one of Its worst features. It Is almost Im possible to fence ngslnst tho thistle owing to the ease with i which it is carried with the wind. I A demonstration farm at Klgin, , X. D., is surrounded with a iwoven wire fence five feet high. In the summer of 1012 a part of the bud was summer-fallowed and kept quite clean. At this date (April 27. UH.'i) the young Russian thistles are abundant on I this land and are from one to two j inches high, growing from seed that was scattered during the j winter. More than onco during I the winter the thistles were piled up outside of the fence until they with snow that drifted in, formed an inclined plane as high as the fence, over which the thistles i that came later rolled with ease, scattering semis as they went I In other instances the dried ' thistles would bo caught up into the air by gusts of wind and car j ried right over the fence without 'touching it. The regretful fea Itureis, that land which maybe imade clear by the farmer one season may be again re-seeded l with thistles before any crop is ; planted on it. Until the farmers i make common cause, therefore, .against the weed.it will not be exterminated. j What then can be done? The : best that can be done at present is to manage the newly sown grain so that the thistles may be ' prevented from doing it any seri ous harm. This can only be 'done by the judicious use of the 'harrow and weeder until the 'grain has reached the stage ; when it will overshadow any i thistles that may germinate later. :In dry seasons especially the j thistles will be greatly harmful j to the grain unless they are in some way checked. The use of the harrow alone may suffice to do this, and the same is true of the weeder. But, t usually, the two in combination will give batter results than either alone. Tho procedure in many instances will be, in out line, as follows: First, the bar j row should he run over the 'ground as soon as the grain bo gins to appear, giving the teeth ja backward slant during the I operation. This will stir the en 5 tire surface of the ground and destroy the thistles that are just 'starting. Second, when the grain is 2 or 3 inches high the weeder should be used instead of : the harrow, to avoid burying the gram, third, use the harrow again when the grain is 5 or 0 inches high. The idea is to pre vent the thistles from getting a start until the grain overshadows them. In some instances the above precedure for various reasons must be modified. The thistles can also be pre vented from doing harm to al falfa. On the Elgin demonstra tion farm the disc was run twice over the alfalfa crop on April 28. The jiecond time it was driven across the rows. The discs cut fully 2J inches deep and stirred the whole surface of the ground. The young thistles just starting, in myriads, were thus uprooted. On May 1 the crop was har rowed. Before the weeds come on again the alfalfa plants, that were practically unharmed by the discing, will overshadow tho next growth of thistles. After the first cutting of tho alfalfa the crop may again b similarly treated. ,In this way tho thistle? may be prevented from doing any harm in alfalfa except dur ng its first year. The harm done the first year may be mini mixed by sowing the crop lato rather than early. The time to fight Kussian thistles is jusV when they are starting. If unmolested, In a short time the roots will have such a hold that the harrow, tho weeder, the disc, or any other cultivator will not ho able to dis lodge them. Tho editors and others who are advising farmers to encour ago the growth of Kussian thistles to provide food for live stock are making a serious mis take. Thomas Shaw. In Kastclicster, N. V.. Is a tree trunk mure than 200 years old which Is aald In have been un-d by olllccrs of George Washington's nriny as a whipping post for refractory soldiers Though this Use may Ih deprecated by many er sons. the tree has historical value, and the town-qicople have taken great care to preserve the old trunk. No WAstmtoTOM'i wmrrma roar. horse has ever been hitched to It, nor has any poster been displayed on It. The tree trunk la In a good state of preservation. Not every town has or desires a Washington whipping post, but every town may profit by following the ex ample of Kastchester and preserving old trees that ornament streets. Too many fine old trees nre disfigured by advertising signs or gnawed by horses. A tree Is too valuublo for such uses. Summons. In the county court of the state of Oregon for Crook county. Jack Hrogan, plaintiff, vs. Philip Hrogan, defendant. To I'hlllp Hrogan, the above named defendant : In the naiiie of the state of Oregon, You are hereby reuulred to appear and nnswer the complaint of plnin- 11 11 niea against you In the above en titled action within ten day from the date of the aervlce of thlSHiim monn iipon yon, If served within Crook county, statu of Oregon, or, If served within any other comity In this state, then within twenty d'avs from the date of the service of till summons upon you, or, If served by publication thereof as provided by law, then on or before the 9th i,j of Aafinl, 1913, and you nre hereby notified that If you mo 10 so appear or answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will take Judgment against, you for the sum of 11111.12, with Intereat on I1H6 00 tuereoi at the rate of six per cent per annum from the 31st day ot May, 11)13, and for the costs anil disburse ment: of this action. This summons is published In the Crook County Journal for six full weeks In seven consecutive and suc cessive Issues thereof, commenclmr with tlm twite of Juno 26l.h, 1H1I1, by order ot the lion. (i. Springer, judge of the above entitled court, made and entered on the 2lli diiy of June, 11113. Dated and published first time June 2Sth, 11113. M. E. ISKINK, Attorney for plaintiff. Notice for Publication (Department of tho Interior) I!. 8. Iand Olllce at The Dalles, Ore. May 11), 1913. Notice Is hereby (riven that John I,. Walsh of Imperial, Oregon, who on April tilth, 1911, made homestead No. 0Mi17, for hw, section 28, and nw, section 33, township 21), south, range 18 cast Willamette meridian, baa filed notice of Intention to make final three-year proot to establish claim to the land above described, before A. S. l'oiur. II. S. Commissioner, at his office at Hampton, Oregon, on the 14th dav of July, 1913. Claimant names as witnesses: To bias. Jvursen, Martin Johnson and William I'Vasor, of Imperial. Oregon. and Joseph .Steukamp, of Uend, Ore. 6 12p C.W. MootiH, Register. LM-jW ;?:fr'f ml i'i i Mici'ltt'a Sata on Attachment I m cuUoa. Whereas, on the 2lt day of May, 1913, by consideration of I he circuit court it the suite of Orvuoii, lor (rook county, tho First National liMiik of llctid, n corporation, recov ered N judgment nirulimt I). V. Mack intosh for the sum of ftl7l OOnnd In terest, thereon from the 2It day of May, 1913, nt the rate of Id per cent per annum aud the sum of fHo.iK) nt tortier's fees ami I17.UO cost and disbursement, In which Judgment It was further ordered liy the court that the property nt Inched In said action be sold for tlm siitlsfac tlon of said Judgment, In the milliner provided by law, which Judgment was enrolled mid docketed la the clerk's office of said court on the 22J day of May, I HI II, commnndliiK me to sell the following described real priqierty to-wit : The iirt of net of Mrtlcti .TO. town- hip 17, S. H. 12 i:. W. M , ,,nd Uie W ot the ewj of aectlou 29. township 17, S K. IS K. W. in., and the m , the cj ot section 80, township 17, 8. It. ID K. W. M , all In i rook county, Oregon. Notice la hereby (riven that 1 will, 0. SelrV. Ike 2tt el Jely, nt the hour of 2 o'clock In the alter- noon, nt the front door of the court house, In rrlnevllle, Oregon, sell to tho highest bidder fur cash.'nll the right, I It It- niiil luti-rciit the mild II. . Mackintosh liiul In Mini to the above descrllied real property on the :ix( uny ot .May, Itll.l, to sutli.lv the Judgment, costs mid neoriiliig costs, fviiii sole subject to rode motion as provided by law, Hrat publication, June 'ill, I'JKl. KHAN I)! KISS, Sheriff of Crook County, Oregon. Mid Ill's Sale on I ccullon In I ore- closure. j liy virtue of nil etccutloii mid order of stile Issucil out of the circuit court for Crook county, state of Oregon.! upon a Judgment rendered In mild court on the fit h ilny of May, P.U:t. In Hit wherein K C. t itlilwcll wnai plaintiff mid John W.I slier was de-1 fetiilmit. III favor of the above uamcd plaintiff and against the above' mimed ileleiulaul, for the sum of i5 !. w ith Intercut- i hereon from I he auth day of March, ll:, at the rate of 10 per rent ior milium, and JiO.OO attorney' fee mid the further sum of $12 00 cost, which I Judgment w its enrolled ami docketed ) In the clerk olllce of mild court In i siibl county," on the U'th day of May. ! luiii, mul coiiiuimidliiK me t sell.m; me milliner proviiied liy nw, the lol lowing descrllH'd real property, to wn: Lots 4 8, blk 1; lot 12 20. blk 2: lot 1 .'(), Ink 3; lot 6 12. blk 4: lot blk A: lot is. blk li: lot 4 -1.1. blk 7; lot 4 11, blk 8: lot 4 11 blk H: lol 6 12, blk 10; lot 1 2. blk 11: lot 114, blk 12. lota H 14 blk 1: lot la 14 blk 14; lot 7 1:1, blk 15, of the town of Harper In Crook county. Oregon Notice I hereby irlven thiit 1 bv levied upon and I will on Ssleretr, Ike 261 k i.j ef J.ly, 1913, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon nt the front door of the courthouse In Rrlnevllle, Oregon, sell to the high est bidder for cash, all tlm rlulit. title and Interest the iletemliint . John W. I'slier. hud In ami to the above descrllied real property on the 6lh day of May, 1U13. to satisfy said judgment, interest, cost nnd accru ing cost. Said sale ublect to re- den ptloii its provided by In. I'ate ot first I u i rut on June 2mh. 11)1.1. KlIANK Kl.KINH, Sheriff of Crunk county, Oregon. Notice (or Publication I'epartnient of the Interior. I'. 8. Land Outcast The Dalles. Oregon. Msy 27, 1913. Notice la hereby given that Walter T. Morris. ol Post, Oregon, who on Novomlier 11, Pa), made homestead No. l57Hd, serial No. 042,V), for sej, section Sii, townahip 17 south, range 21 et, Willamette merid ian, has filed notice ol intention to make final live-year proof to ctahlinh claim to the land above described, be fore I.. M. Miller, li, 8. commissioner, at her office, at Paulina, Oregon, on the 5th day ot July, 191,1. Claimant names si witnesses: L. W, Bennett and John O. Morris, of Barnes, Oregon, snd W.A.Carson and 11,8. Morris, of Post, Oregon. H-5 V. W. Moohk, ltegiatcr. Sheriff Sale of Heal Istatc Under I icciition In Foreclosure. In the circuit court of the tato of Orejron for the county of Crook, J. W. Iloone, plaintiff, vs. I'M H. Mlnkler, defendant. By virtue of mi execution Issued out of the above entitled court on (lie eth day Of May, 1913, In tavor of the above named plaintiff, J. W. Boone, and agaliiHt. the above named defendant, Drl H. Mlnkler, tip on a Judgment against t he defendant for the sum of 1709 Wj with Interest thereon from the 01 h day of May, 1913, at the rate of 10 per cent per annum, and 1S0 attorney' fi-oa, and the further sum of $25 costs, which Judgment wu enrolled and docketed lit t he clerk's olllce of said court on the 12th day of May, 1913, and whereas. It was further ordered and decreed by the court that Lots two and three aud the east half of the southwest quarter of. section eighteen, towDHltlp fifteen south, range seventeen east of the Willam ette Meridian In Crook county, state of Oregon, be sold In the manner prescribed by law, notice I hereby given that I have levied upon and I will, on the Silurdijr, July 19, 1913, at the north front door of the court house in Prineville, Oregon, at the hour of 2 o'clock In the afternoon of said day, sell all the right, title anil Interest tho said defendant, I'rl H. Mlnkler, had In and to the above de scribed real property to the highest bidder, to satisfy said Judgment, In terest, costs and accruing cost, sub ject to rederipllon according to law. First publication June 19, 1913. Frank Ki.kinh, Hherlff of Crook county, Oregon. Ity W. K. Van Allen, deputy. Strayed A chestnut sorrel mare branded S- on left hip. Leave word with Journal or Jas. Forrester. 0-5 irofestttiial Cards, W. I', MvkMs N. U. WsiXAta MYERS & WALLACE Lawyers Kemttrs Bid's, Prlne.ille, Ore Abstract. Insurance" The J. H. Haner Abstract Co. Iiu-fH,!relt rrlnevllle, ore. Farm Loan. Ilonds. Prof. A. W. Grater, Divine Me.l.r Office In Morris lluildlng throe south of Journal olllce. Prineville, Oregon loore D. H. PEOPLES Civil and Irrigation Engineer His. m AiUtiiMin Itld'g Prineville, Ore. Dr. Howard (Jove Dentiat. Crook County Bank Building a, j. Prm eevVs. S. mmr. JfT. P. 33.... tX t'UI.ITH) el knap dc 6 a war da (County l'h) l. lii.) Srm,H,. Or,, T. I'. J. 1)171 I V Allorney'-tt-Law (Nuccruor I" W. A. IMI) I'BIXSVIl.t.l Olo-oos C C. SriM Sitmt Ct.f Cornett lliilldllig, Itoom A 7r.. CilM ui I'eonrriT tut oa Siest U""' Poos son at tnioiri Pain smut. Hoih ultli-e ea roe). deooe telephones. W. A. HELL l-awycr t he Dalles Oregon Si. Citt.ti, Ortf.m. Willard II. Wirtz Attorney.nt.I.nw, Office In M. It. Itlggs' olllce. I'lUNKVll.l.K Oiikijon . Sirink J. Trendies 1'ox M. It. 0. H. Hug: sad ! H. A. I.ondn; I.icmicre Oregon State Medics! board. KpM-iallst la Margery; Hygiene; All meiiUiry Canal; women and children'! dlieseei. elo. OHIi snd renldsnr Tlllnt utreet nnar Court IIoiimi, Tel.: I'lmmer, I'ulH ner4 lroiniuy. nla-lil oritur. Chsmea modumle .NherlfpH Sul.. By virtue of an execution, decree and order of sale, Issued out ol the circuit court ot the time of Oregon for the county of Crook, and lioarinK the aeal of said court, to me directed and dated tho 23rd day of May, 1913, upon a decrea of foreclosure ol a curtain inortaie. and judRiiient rendered, anil f ntered In said court on the fith dav of May, 1913, In a case where Samuel tl, Davia waa plain tiff and Martha J; Hartwig and L. L. Hartwlg were defendants; said decree and judgment lieinu in favor ot the nliiiutiff and agalmtt the dolendantl herein named as Judgment debtors in the sum of six thousand lNI,()00 001 dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of aeveu per cent per annum from the 10th day of January, 1911, and three hundreil, (300 00) dollais attorn ey'! fees, and the further sum of 110.00 dollars coals incident to and accruing upon the service of the writ of execu tion, and commanding me to make tale of the real property embraced in laid decree of forecloaure and hereinafter described, 1 will on Saturday, the 28th D.t of Jun, 1913, at the hour of two o'clock in the after noon of said day, from the nortn steps of the county court house at Prineville, Crook county, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder far cash in hand, all the right, title and Intorent which the defendants, Martha J, Hart wig and L. 10. Hartwig, or either of them had on the Ath day of May, 1913, or liny interest that all or either of said defendants may have acquired since that date, or now have, to the following described real property, to-wit: The ioutliweBt quarter of suction eight, in township tll'teen, south of range eleven, cast of Willametto meridian, in Crook county, Oregon. Or ao much of said property as will satisfy isuid decree and judgment with the coats and accruing cont, said sale to be made subject to confirmation and redemption as by law provided. Dated at Prineville, Orugon, this the 21th day of May, 1913. FlUNK Kl.KINH, Sheriff of Crook County, Oregon, By D. 11. l'Eoi'LKS, Deputy. 5 29 5t