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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1918)
THK iiknd BDIiURlN, lAll.Y KOITION, HKNl), ohkuon, Tiii'Rsn.w. FEBRUARY 21, 1II8 MOB I The Bend Bulletin DAISY KIHTION rublihrd Kvrry Afternoon Kicfpt Sn.l IIKND. OKKCON Enti'rcl R Second Claim nmtU'r. January 8. 117, ill loo Van Office Hi Band, Orrmm. under Act of March 3. 1S7'.'. C.EOROK PALMER PUTNAM I'uWUhcr nOIII'.HT V. SAWYER Edilor.MnnBB.r I.UCI1.E E. SAUNDERS Associate Editor E R CORNWEL1 Advertising Mauawcr EI.OYD C. WKS1ERI1EED Assistant Mk-r. KAl.l'H Sl'ENCER Mcclmnunl Sui't. An Independent Newnnaner. lUndlMI for tile aquarc deal, clean business, clean politics anil the best interests of llend and Central Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES II) V.ail One Year '--m Six Months JJ-J; Three Months Ily Carrier One Year jj2 Si Months '"0 One Month All subscriptions are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notices of expiration are mailed subscribers and if renewal is not made within reasonable time the paper will be discontinued. Please notify us promptly of any change of address, or of failure to receive the paper retru larlv. Otherwise we will not be reeinmaible for copies missed. Make all checks and orders payable to The Bend Bulletin. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1918 "It has turned out that the forces that fjght for freedom, the freedom of men all over the world as well as our own, de pend upon us in an extraordi nary and unexpected degree Hr sustenance, for the supply of the materials by which men arc to live and to fight and it will be our glory when the war is over that we have supplied these materials, and supplied them abundantly, and it will be all the more glory because in supplying them we have made our su preme effort and sacrifice." President Wilson. BEXD A FACTOR. (Timbermen.) The decision of the Western Pine Manufacturers' Association to remove its office to Portland from Spokane, where the headquarters has been maintained since its inception, indi cates the unselfish attitude of the members of that association who were more deeply interested in re sults than in the mere location of its headquarters. Men who can waive their personal feelings are big men. To Laird. Humbird, McGoldrick, Ross, Hart and other stalwarts it was like parting with an old friend to see the headquarters of the association they had built up moved from its old home, but they yielded without a tinge of resentment. May the move prove all its sponsors hope it may be. In a few years the opening of the one hundred and fifty mile'timbered unit, connecting Bend and Klamath Falls, will be accomplished, and the linking up of the line from Klamath Falls to Westwood is only a question of a few years, developing a very large virgin timber belt. of western white pine. The development of the East-rn Oregon and Southern Idaho belt, with its billions of feet of undeveloped timber, will place Portland as the natural geographical center for the dissemination of information regard ing the great pine industry of the west. California on the south is be coming more closely allied to Central and Eastern Oregon. Before Bend and Klamath Falls became factors, the country lying to the south of the Siskiyous in California was separated from Eastern Oregon and the Inland Empire and felt it had little in com mon from a competitive standpoint with its neighbors to the north. This situation has passed. All pine pro ducing sections in the west are be coming more closely associated, and the time is not far distant when the pine territory from Arizona to Mon tana, including Eastern British Co lumbia, will find itself operating on a common basis of grades and terms of sales. This is not a far cry. It is here today. Advertising Idaho white pine, western white pine and Cali fornia sugar pine should emanate from a common appropriation. Each of these woods has more or less com mon use. They should be advertised collectively. They come from the Great West. Their merits are hut lit tle understood or appreciated by eith er the great American or the world's markets. WAR EXCHANGE WhmtlcM cUy arc Monday am) Wednesday. Meatless day U Tuesday, rwihltai day is Saturday. One meatless and one whealles meal each day. At all tlmca MVt aa much augar. wheat, meat and fat aa possible. MANY AT BANQUET OF PRINEVILLE LODGE .Knights of Pythias From Bend Take Part In Anniversary Celebra tion Joint Meeting, Twenty - five members of the Knights of Pythias lodge last night motored to Prineville, where they took part in the big celebration of the 54th anniversary . of the found ing of the order. The meeting was held jointly with Redmond, Prine ville and Deschutes and was attend ed by 150 men in all. Four new members were initiated and the names of five lodge b-oth-ers now In the service of the United States were placed on the honor roll of the Prineville branch. A big ban fluet was served late In the evening. skim Milk In Cooking, The uses of skim milk arc many, In cooking It adds to quality as well as to food value. If used 111 bread in place of water It adds about as much protein to one pound of bread as there Is in an egg. Skim milk used in place of the usual half milk and half water, of course. Increases the quantity of protein In a loaf by the amount that Is contained In half an egg. The saviiug Involved In the use of skim milk in bread, however. Is small compared with that Involved in its use in the preparation of cer eals, for, while In bread the milk Is only about one-third of the flour. In the preparation of cereals the volume of milk is usually three or four times that of the cereal. To cook a. cupful of cereal in :'. cupfuls of skim milk instead of 3 of water adds as much protein as that contained in 1! eggs. In Vegetable Milk Soups. There are many dishes which may be de scribed as vegetable milk soups, us ually made by combining milk and the Juice and pulp of vegetables. This mixture is then thickened with flour and starch and enriched with butter or other fat. If a fire is kept all the time and the cost of fuel need not be taken into consideration, the follow ing method is recommended as a means of utilizing skim milk: Chop the raw vegetable or cut it into small pieces. Put it with the skim milk into a double boiler and cook till tin vegetable is tender. The mixture can then be thickened and enriched as described above. By this method no part of the vegetable is thrown away and the liquid of the soup. In stead of being part milk and part water, is all milk. A soup so made, therefore, usually has about twice as much protein as that made in the other way. and has the additional ad vantage of a particularly good com- i bination of mineral substance, for milk is rich in calcium and phosphor us, and the vegetables are rich In iron. In making these soups use is made of many of the parts of the vegetable that are ordinarily thrown away, namely, the outer and tougher leaves of lettuce, which has a higher iron content than most other vegetables; the tops of celery; and even the tops of young onions. Small quantities of cooked vegetables left over from oth er meals may be utilized in these and in other kinds of soup. If in making these soups the veg etable is chopped finely in the meat grinder, they need not be strained be fore being served. If the vegetables that are ordinarily thrown away; namely, the outer and strainer, or such vegetables as carrots or potatoes may be cut into slices and left In the liquid, in which case the dish resem bles a vegetable chowder. Those soups may be thickened with stale bread. Soupe Recipe qt. spinach (4unces). 1 thin slice onion. 2 slices stale bread (2 ounces). 1 qt. skim milk. Put the spinach and onion through the meat chopper, following them by the bread in order that there may he no waste. Put into a double boiler with the milk and cook until the spinach is tender. Cereal Milk Pudding. There is a class of extremely valu able dishes which are sometimes called "cereal milk puddings," usual ly made by cooking equal volumes of a cereal (usually rice) and sugar in 12 times the volume of milk for ex ample, '4 cupful of rice, cupful of sugar, and 3 cupfuls of milk. When a fire is kept constantly and the cost of fuel need not be considered, such a dish may be made with skim milk, and very much more than 3 cupfuls of the milk used. As the water evap orates, the dish becomes richer and richer in protein. Oatmeal may he substituted for rice in the above-described pudding and adds somewhat to the protein value, though the quantity of cereal used is so small that this is not im portant. Thin cereal-milk puddings, made by slowly cooking down until thick 10 or 12 parts of skim milk and 1 of rice, oatmeal, or similar cereal, may be used in place of cream with stewed fresh fruits o; cooked dried fruits or baked apples. - Cream soups because of the large amount of milk, may form the main dish of the meal and offer splendid opportunity for using the odds and ends of vegetables, cereals and fish or meat. Thin White Sauce The following is the foundation for all cream soups: 1 tablespoon fat. 1 tablespoon flour. 1 cup milk. 1i) teaspoon salt. Make paste of flour and small amount Ot milk. Heat re ill 11 ill do i- 01 1 milk, add paste, cook In double boiler; or over hot water SO minutes. Add butter just before serving. Cream of Salmon Soup 8 nips milk, 3 tablespoons flour. 2 tablespoons butter or drippings. Speck salt and popper. Vi cup canned salmon or any left over fish. Mako white sauce of milk, flour, butter, salt and pepper. Break salmon In small pieces, add to white sauce; I reheat, stir well, and serve. Cream of Pea, Bean, or Vetch Soup 3 cups thin white sauce. 1 tj cups peas or cooked beans or cooked vetch. 3 cups water. Crush beans, peas, or vetch to pulp, add to hot white sauce. Reheat, beat and serve. REED-SMITH MERCANTILE CO. UKSCIIUTKS COUNTY'S LARGEST STORE. 1 Why Sujfer With Cold, Wet Feet fy wnen you can uuy iuuuvn m (y Pet. less than present wholesale cost 25 One cent a word is all a little Want Ad will cost you. UNION PACIFIC WILL DISCONTINUE OFFICE Truffle Department to Have No Head quarters in Bend Traveling Agents Will Alternate. The local office of the traffic de partment of the Union Pacific lines in the O'Kane building has been closed, owing to war conditions. II C. Oliver and II W. Hicks, traveling freight and passenger agents for the O. W. R. Al- . will continue to come In here alternate weeks and handle tho entire Central Oregon territory in addition to their work on the main line. Mr. Oliver went out to East-rn Oregon on the morning train. lb was accompanied on this trip by Mrs. Oliver, who had never visited De schutes county before. According to Mr. Oliver, the Ore gon Trunk traveling agent. J. T Har dy, has had Ills territory extended so that he now works In the Willamette valley in addition to the Deschutes. Mr. Hardy is out of town just at pres ent. The movement to rut down in the traffic department is one of tho re For Women Women's Splits Priced at $1.25 Women's Spats, in light and dark grey, just the thing for this change able weather, priced at $1.25 Women's storm rubbers Attractively priced at 90c Women's heavy hose at 75c Beautiful New Spring 1'etticoats White sateen from $1 u $1.75 Silks in all colors from $5 $7.50 New cretonne in the latest colors ami com binations from 25c 1 85c The newest colors in Palm Beach cloth, yd $1.25 Men and Boys Men's Overshoes at $1 Men's Hall Band I buckle fell lined solid rubber overshoes $4.00 Men's Hall Hand 1 buckle artics $3.50 Hoy's Hall Band 1 buckle artics Hall Band knit gaitors $3 1 $3.50 Honor Your Hoy at t be Front by hanging up B New Service King. Sec M AQ our Nice Large Kings. 22x80 inches, at -- pi.vv Tailored Suits at 1-2 We still have a few nicely tailored suits at 1-2 the regular price Sewing Machine Needles We are prepared to furnish sew ing machine needles in all sizes for any make of machine . ' : : "u suits of the Federal Railroad AO Dansnuauu. ministration. In the State 0. Wash- j ' " " ,ton lines heretofore competing j '-f ,;.,,;, , r;.r. ... ,OH u r, aro now employing joint reprcsciita- I j,,,,.,.,,,, nm or,,.r ,,f Sale Issued out Hv(.g of the above entitled court, and to me directed, dated the 3Ulh day of imnffli no ui mi l 's HAUL i January. lillS. upon a decree made In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for chutes. H. A. Millar, plaintiff tho County of Ib'H- VS. Jessie 1. In Keeping With the Big Thought of Today The daily press reflects a sentiment throughout the nation which Clearl indicates a new condition. Men are wanted everywhere. Tho work of til's war Is be ing carrnd on largely by those who never before have been in nublic office or in public work. Men who have been too busy, too engrossed with their own tasks, are leaving their work to others and giving their time and ability to tho cause which is ours, yours, everybody's. It Is time when politics in the ordinary sense must not be considered. It calls tor all the ability that can be mustered. Oregon to be a succofinful part In this unit plan for the defense of Democracy, must likewise place the thought of tho times before everything. In another part of this paper appears the announcement of Li. J. SimpBon as a candidate for the nomination for Gov ernor on the Ilepuhlican ticket. Mr. Simpson was urged to be come a candidate by his many friends In every part of the state, because of his business record, his understanding and knowledge of Oregon's resources, Industries and needs; be cause of his public-spirited nous, which of recent years has led him to tasks which have been more important to him than his own affairs. L. J. Simpson is clearly the man who can give Oregon the administration necessary to this plan of National Efficiency. His campaign will tie directed straight to you as voters, lis individuals who do your own thinking. We are firmly convinced that you will not. allow politics to influence your decision, and that you will vote for the man who Is best fit to help the people of Oregon, develop the state's vast resources, and to prepare, for, and participate in, the great reconstruction that Is to follow. We believe you will weigh issues more closely than ever before, and that L. J. Simpson will be your choice. What You Can Do First Talk over his can didacy with your friend. Second If you believe that It. J. Simpson Is worthy of your support write a letter to this committee. Suggest how his cause may be advanced. We, In turn, will tell you how you can help. Paid AdverMMmttit IhhuiiI by "SIMPSON POR nOVFRNOU" LEAGUE Plttock Hlock, Portland and angered In said court on the llttd day of December, mi 7. in favor of the plaintiff, for the inn) of 1700.86 with Interesi tbereon from the ISrd day of June. 11117. at the rate of olshl per cent per annum, mid the farther sum of f 7 r. 00 attorney tew, I .. t .. .' m.I. ,.,l rflkknpu. menta taxed at 117.00, and accruing " P.110""'! """l"' ,"r " " numbered twenty lire (18), ol Bend, Deaehiatoe County. Oregon, accord ing to the recorded plat ttoereot 1 win. in compliance with the com mamis of c ! - execution and forecloi lire, on Friday, the Klral day of March. 191 S. ot the hour of 1" o'clock. A M . at tb" front door of the Court HoueC! in Bondi Desohutos County. Oregon, sol! at public sui Hon to the hlglO'St bidder for ceih, tfbjeoi t" redemption, ail of the right, tlllc and Interest which the above named defendants, or either of them, bad In or to mild preiDlSOS on tlir 2:inl day of June, 1917, Hi" costs, and against the pri'inlrti'S here Inafter deacrlbed, ami for the fore closure of plaintiffs moriffscjo against the said premlaoi to satisfy said decree, which writ of execution and order of sab- commands no- to make sab' of the following described rt'iil property, to-wlt: i.ot numbered eight (g), of Block lib or of said iii-fi-niiuuiH iinvi' Quired since Hint oetei to eattsty said decree ami Judgment 8. K. ROBERTA, BhertM of Deschutes county, Oregon, Dated ami first published on the 31 si day of January, till, 4 7 - r. t No question about honest weights in this butcher shop. We Rive you your money's worth. Our business repu tation is worth a lot to us, and you can be positive of getting full weight. You also get high quality and low price. Ask our pleased customers. CASH MARKET 148 OREGON STREET STORAGE BAGGAGE HOUSEHOLD GOODS MOVED COUNTRY TRIPS TEAMS Phone Black 4,rl TRUCKS Bend Hauling Co. THE RACK BONE OF BEND IS LUMBER MANUFACTURING OUR PAYROLLS MAKE YOUR PROFITS BY BUYING LOCAL PRODUCTS YOU ARE HELPING SENT). The Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co. T,ocnl Sales Agent MILLER LUMBER CO. Complete Slock of Lumber Lulh, SumIi and Doors