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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1916)
TEN PAGES WW a n MM, V V ir7 (3 ip CVERY cent you spend for PENDLETON MEAT COMPANY'S L "PEMECO PRODUCTS" brings both to your home. What you sow, you reap. Pendleton first, means your home first THE livestock from which Pemeco Products are derived is raised on bunch grass, wheat and corn, in this county, under the healthiest grazing conditions known to the industry. The money we pay to Umatilla county stockmen flows into Pendleton and eventually reaches your pocket book. ; ' HTHE Pendleton Meat Company's Pemeco Products are carefully selected, prepared in a modern, clean, concrete abbatoir. Pemeco Products are not subject to the risk of shipping but are distributed to the public of Pendleton from the cleanest and the best equipped markets to be found in the Inland Empire. INSIST ON GETTING PEMECO MEATS AND LARDS, SOLD BY THESE MODERN MARKETS. . 1 - Empire Meat Met 607 Main Street Frank Greulich, Pres. P. De Young, V-Pres. Telephone 18 J. H. Loeding, Sec. t H. W. Schwarz, Treas. Ihe Mai Met 108 East Alt Street Chas. Tullis, Jr., Sec.-Treas. Telephone 455 Ross E. Carney, Pres. Pendleton Cash (Met 303 Eat Court Street Telephone 101 L B. RamBdell, Pres. H. P. Whitman, Mgr. H. R. Richardson, V-Pres. Mrs. Nellie Horton, Sec.-Treas. Hams, Bacon, Lard, Steaks, Chops, Cutlets, Sausage, Hamburger, Fish, Poultry, Etc. 1 H- ' r ' " - - I , in melted butter. Cream In a and weigh it ywMwi ivmwi . '"' '"' UL1I1 1111 IIII'IUIII III n i nri ii nnii i ii ll lllLnu tuw iiuuiiulu : r u ill i GOiM STORE FOR SALE Owner wants to retire and will sell good paying business cheap. lo cated In good stock raising section, close to Pendleton. Whole thing goes; store building, 8 room dwelling, 5 lota, stock runs about $4000. Prise for all 1(000.00. Cash or bankable notes. Must be sold at once. UATLOCX-LAATZ I.IVESTEIE.IT CO. INSURANCE 30E 111 East Court St. REAL ESTATE loxaoe IOOOI 30BOE LOANS iftr-t Hlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillliu -NOW. is the - Time to Order j I Your I Winter I COAL 1 Supply 5 Don't wait until the last minute, until the real winter weather sets in, when the E streets areffilled with snow, when delJverlea are uncertain. Place, jiur orders NOW and with us you will be safe.j. ' OUKICOAL NEVER DISAPPOINTS that's be- cause it! THOROUGHLY SCREENED, free from slate anendirt It's all coal get the best 'phone us YOUR OR- DER today. See u for ' I ROCK HB COAL 5 Lump or nut j Good dry fir, yellow and black pine. Dry Slabwood that it dry. ' S All wood comes cither four foot or sawed. S B. L. BURROUGHS ) S Telephone 5 StlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIiil STUFFED FROM GOLD PAPKS VOW COMPOUND ENDS A COLD OR GRflPPE IX A FEW HOLRS. Tour cold will break and all grippe misery end after taking a dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" every two! hours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens clogged-up nos- trllg and air passages in the head, . stops nasty discharge or nose runnng, relieves sick headache, dullness, fe-' verlshness, sore throat, sneestng, sore-1 ness and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blow-1 ing and snuffling! Ease your throb bing head nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's ; Cold Compound," which costs only J 26 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice and causes no Inconvenience. Accept no substitute. Daily Chats With the Housewife RISKING IN THE DARK IS CRIME IN rHILADEIiPHIA Youthful PUr Arretted In street, but Lenient Judjre, Hiding MM Smiles, Remits Their Fine. PHILADELPHIA,' Deo. 14.-A kiss In the dark last night, on Tenth street, near Green, was considered by vice investigators so serious an offense that they arrested the osuc lator Catherine Haines, twenty, and Thomas Winning, twenty-four, both of respectable families. Winning in court today said they had been visiting friends and were watting on a step for another young man and woman, who had been with them. The arresting officers declar ed the klRS was of the kind the mov Is censor eliminates from the screen. "Why did you break the law on the highway," asked the magistrate, holding a blotter before his face to conceal his laughter. The situation struck the spectators, too, ns humorous, and they lnughed heartily. A fine of (5 and costs was" remitted. FISH FILETS. Fish should always be fried like doughnuts, in deep fat Bacon drip pings are perhaps as good a material as any. Butter should not be use! for frying fish. It should be cooked until well browned, and then removed and al lowed to drain, but not grow cold, be fore serving. If the fillets prepared as above are cut into individual por tions before being cooked, the house wife has no crumpled mass of fish as the result of her labors, but firm, well cooked squares of a delicious food, BLACKING BROWN SHOES. The blacking you put on your brown shoes when they get too shab by looking will never show If you do it this way. Mix a bit of ordinary am monia with a half pint of water. Sponge your boots with this. Next cover them with shoe ink. Let them dry thoroughly. Then polish wth good black shoe dressing. This keeps the black from wearing off right away, but the boots must be polished frequently, of course. THE HOLIDAY PI CM PUDDING. An eicentionallv rich rlum nud- dlng may be made according to the following formula: Take 1-2 dozen 3-pound lard pails which have been lined with white paper previously dip- allowing ponnd large bowl, thoroughly, 2 cups of su-j pound of sugar and .'ruit. Cut into, gar and 1 cup of butter, and into this . small bits. Make a sirup of a cup of. beat 10 eggs, 1 cup of milk, alternat. ing with 3 cups of flour, 1-2 teaspoon of salt. Chop and add 1-2 citron, 1 candied lemon peel, 2 or 3 pieces of candled orange peel, 1-2 pound of English walnuts. 1-2 pound of al- water to two pounds of sugar; melt and heat to a boil. Heat the chopped pipeapple in a double boiler or a ves sel set within one of boiling water, covering it closely to keep In the fla vor. When it is smoking hot ail : monds, l small bottle of preserve ! through, and begins to look clt-ar, add , cherries, 2 pounds of well-cleaned to Hhe sirup. Boil together half an . currants, 2 pounds of seeded raisins, hour, stirring all the white, or until it Mix all together with another cup of is a clear, bright paste. Pour in Jare. flour. Add the grated rind of l or-! ange, the juice of 1 lemon and a cup ' of cider, when ail is ready to pour' SWEDISH ROLLS. Mix and sift 2 cups of flo'ir, a half Walking Across me country i-' 'vl "J SS s i f ! -AP rr1 'H i' JT -ti 5 BODY ClT IN FOOT LENGTHS 9 8 PEORIA, 111.. Dec. 15. The police of Canton, It., yesterday made a grue-. some discovery when they rnide.l a ; bake shop and found portions of tt human body which had been cut an'l : .wid Into foot lengths and thrown) Into the baker'B furnace and partly ' hurned. As a result ofl the raid James Letjas is being held as the. us pro td murderer of George Mania who dlsnpepared from Panton, NY' 1J. I'n'nilM'ncliHMi' If you were to so." the unequalled volume of unlmpeach-j nlile testimony In favor of Hood'i Snrsaparilla, you would upbraid your self for so long delaying to take thl effective medlclneor that blood dls. case which you are suffering. Adv. into the pails, add 1 level teaspoon ot teaspoon of salt. 3 1-2 teeToons of soda dissolved in 1 tablespoon of hot baking powder, l tab1espooa of sugar water, and mix again. Fill the pails and 1-2 teaspoon of cinainon. Cut two thirds full, cover tightly, and j with two knives, or with the tipi boll ', or g hours, serve with hot of the fingers work in s tablespoons sauce or hard sauce. of buter. Beat 1 egg, add about J-4 A simpler plum pudding uses a m cup of rich milk, and add gradually dlum sized loaf of dry bread, crum- to the flour mixture. If the dough bled. 1 pound of raisins, l pound of is too stiff, add more milk. Toss en currants, 1 scant pound of suet, 10 to a floured board, roll and pat out eggs. 1-4 pound of orange peel, l cup into a rectangular sheet 1-4 Inch of New Orleans molasses, 1-2 tea- thiik. Spread with 2 tuhlfenooiM of spoon of salt, a half pound of sugar, softened bcter, sprinkle with a quar- one cup of cider. Beat all together ter-cup of sugar, teaspoons of ein thoroughly, and steam $ hours. namon. and 1-2 cup of raisins or eur- .an irisn pium puaaing, "as maae rants. Roll up like a Jelly roll anJ on a great Irish estate for more than 100 years." is give by another au thority. One and one-half pints of soft bread crumbs, l pint of chopped suet. 2 pounds of curants, l pound of raisins. 1-2 cup of citron, l scant cup of sugar, l teaspoon of salt, 1-2 tea spoonful of salt, 1-2 teaspoon of nut meg, 1-2 teaspoon of cinnamon, a lit tle ginger, allspice and cloves, 5 eggs, 2 tablespoons of flour. Stake Into a batter with a cup of cider and steam i or 7 hours, PINEAPPLE MARMALADE. Pare, slice, and core the pineapple, cut into pieces about an inch thick. Bake on a greased tin for- 18 minute Brush over with a little sugnr dissolv ed in milk and return to the oven t brown. Making a dash after B'j!hi;rest was the easiest bit of punctuating the Teutonic allies have dnn for quite a while. By this time the Turk is b ginning to believe that after all he will not have to learn either Rnglish or Russian. Potato Doughnuts (Write for Recipe) retain the moisture several days. An excellent wholesome food when made with the pure IS Baking Powder CI T 4r Always sure to please. Try a can today at our risk. VIVIAN MARTIN, PAULAS 8TAR, IN PARAMOUNT PICTURES. To walk from Los Angeles to New York City was th duty imposed c Vivian Martin In the scenario recently accepted fur her to enact. When tl task was put to her, she remarked, "Sure. 1 II do it." Herewith is pictures Utls.stacafter.she bad covered the first five miles. ii! A Handy Book containing 10 Cook ing Lessons and 54 TrMfd Recipes will be mailed you FREK if you will send your name nd address to JAQUES MFG. CO, CHICAGO SolJby all Crocert