Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19??, May 30, 1914, Page 4, Image 4

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Tnr‘ F*u#
ff EN
PBOÂRD
WHOLESOME
HOT BREADS.
L U N C H E O N M EN U .
Coniwimm*.
Hamburg Steak
Fried P o t a t o «
Franeh Kolia
BaWad A p r lea W ith R atal aa
IKE CUBED OF
THE CONSUMER
Sit ol Principles Worthy ot
Practice.
Taa or I'h o m la w
E L IC IO l'S and wholesome hot
breads may bo made according
to the following recipes;
Cornnieal Puffs.—Taka one cupful of
corumenl, one cupful o f flour, one tea­
spoonful o f sugar, one-half teaspoonful
o f soda and one o f cream of tartar (or
one and one-half teaspoonfuls o f bak­
ing |iowderi. one egg. one cupful of
milk and one teaaBoonfUi of melted
butter.
Mix the dry ingredients to­
gether and sift. The milk is added to
the beaten egg and stirred Into the
other. Hake fifteen or twenty minutes
In a hot oven.
D
Mads W ith Csld Rica.
Illce Muftins.eTake one quart o f
milk, three beaten eggs, one tablespoon­
ful melted butter, one teaspoonful of
sugar and two cups o f flour, with
which sift two rounding teaspoonfuls
o f baking powder and one scant one of
salt. Make into a batter nnd beat In a
cupful cold bolted rice. Beat well and
bake In a hot oven.
Wbeut Irems.—Take one pint o f milk,
scald it and add to it one tableepoonful
o f butter. Let stand until lukiwvarm
Theu add oue-balf cake o f yeaet dis
solved In a quarter cupful o f warm
water, three cupfuls of flour aod one
teaspoonful o f salt. Beat well, cover
and let stand in a warm place until
morning
A half hour before break­
fast beat tw o eggs, yokes and whites,
separately and add first the yolks, then
the whites, to the risen mixture Beat
and bake In gem pans in a quick oven
For Lunchaon or Toa.
French Rolls.—Cream one-Bburtb of
a cupful of butter and one-fourth cup­
ful o f sugar together and gradually
beat into a pint o f light sponge. Add
tw o eggs, whites and yolks beaten sep­
arately, and flour enough to make the
same thickness as before. Cover and
stand in a warm place until It begins
to rise, then add flour to make the soft
dough and knead well. Bet aside again
until it doubles In size, then shape like
Parker House rolls. Sprinkle granu­
lated sugar over the top. Bake fifteen
minutes.
When done lay a napkin
over the rolls In the pan for five min­
utes, which makes a tender crust
t7~ 7< y
Z ^ K it o h e n
BOARD!
RHUBARB COMBINATIONS.
H U B A R B is delicious cooked with
other fruits. Some desserts o f
that kind are made as follows:
Rhubarb Tapioca.—Soak two-thirds
o f a cupful o f pearl tapioca overnight
In cold water. Brain, put in double boil­
er. Add one and one-fourth cupfula of
boiling water and two-thirds o f a tea-
spoonful o f salt. Cook until tapioca
has absorbed the water. Peel rhubarb
and cut in pieces to make three cup­
fuls. Sprinkle with one and one-third
cupfuls of sugar. Add to tapioca and
cook.
With Dried Fruits.
Rhubarb
and Dates.—Wash one
pound good dates, add boiling water to
cover and cook until the water Is near­
ly absorbed. Then remove the stones.
Skin and cut a pound o f rhubarb in
one Inch pieces, put a layer in the bot­
tom o f a buttered pudding dish, sprin­
kle with sugar, add a layer o f dates
and repeat until all are used, having
last layer o f dates. Put In one-fourtb
cupful o f water and bake until rhubarb
Is done
Rhubarb and Prunes.—A combination
for the spring is that of prunes with
rhubarb.
In any household where
prunes are much used they are usually
stewed In large quantities and kept on
hand In Juice. Take enough for a dish,
draining the Juice, and pour over rhu­
barb already stewed and to which very
little sugar has been added.
R
Jam and Jelly.
Rhubarb and Orange Jam.—Take one
qnart o f rhubarb cut In small pieces,
six oranges and three cupfuls o f
sugar
Remove the rind from the
ornnges and scrape off the white pith.
W ith a pair o f scissors cut the rind
Into thin strips. Remove the seeds and
fibrous parts from the oranges and put
Info a preserving kettle with the rhu­
barb. sugar and rinds. Bring to the
tollin g point and skim. Cook until the
Jam stiffens when tested on a cold
saucer.
Pour into Jars, cover with
paraffin and set away to cool and then
cover.
Rhubarb nnd Apple Jelly.—Wash
well the rhubarb stalks and cut them
up into small pieces without peeling,
rejecting any defective sections. To
every three cupfuls o f the rhubarb add
one well wnsbed Baldwin or greening
apple, cut up In small pieces without
paring or coring.
Cover the whole
with boiling water nnd cook until apple
is done. Pour in Jelly bag and when
Juice is drained out add to It equal
measure o f sugar or a little less, ac­
cording to the tartness o f the rhubarb.
Ftlr till dissolved and cook.
%
HOME PATRON'S PHILOSOPHY
Founded on Facto and Should Bo Lived
Up to by the Amorioon People— Not
Religious Creed— People of NoHh,
South, East and West Can Unit# For
Good.
(Copyrighted. I9H. by Thomaa J. Sulllvan l
Every failure Is a step to success;
every detection of what ts false directs
us to wbat Is true; every trial ex ­
hausts some tempting form o f error.
Not ouly so. but scarcely any attempt
Is entirely a failure; scarcely any theo­
ry. the result o f steady thought, la al­
together false. No tempting form of
error is without some latent charm de­
rived from truth. With these thoughts
In mind I have prepared what I call
the consumer’s creed.
A Gate to tha City.
It Is not a religious creed. I f it were
1 would not be writing IL as 1 am
afraid 1 might get my metaphors
crossed
This is a business creed,
something like the people o f New Eng
land unconsciously adopted when Lord
North undertook to tax them Thereto­
fore they had always been accustomed
to divide on points. It so happened,
fortunately, that their opposition to
Lord North was a point ou which they
were all united
It was a business
point
I have written a creed upon which
the people of the north, south, east
and west can all unite for their own
good
A good creed ts a gate to the city
which has golden foundations; a mis
leading creed may be a road to de­
struction. or If both misleading and
alluring It may become wbat Shake­
speare calls a primrose path to the
eternal bonfire.
Perhaps my creed is nothing more
than a set o f principles which It wonld
be well for every consumer to practice.
Read them and then adopt them as
your very own;
A Business Creed.
First.—I do not patronize the mall
order system because it Is selfish and
greedy and for the reason that 1 buy
at borne, where my Interests are.
(t
It
Second.—I f this community is good
enough for my family and I to live In
It ought to be good enough for my fam
lly and I to buy our necessaries in.
*
It
Third.—I w ill not take the word of
the mall order house for Its goods, as
I want to see wbat I am buying, and 1
want to get what I pay for.
It
It
Fourth.—I do not patronize the mall j
order houses because they demand 1
cash In advance, and when I am
“ broke” and sick and need supplies my
home dealer Is willing to “ carry” me.
C ity N
ew s ,
R EAL ESTATE CORSALE
professional Cart's
» Lots 1, 2, 3. 4, 13, 14, block K.
rn y s h ’ ia n
J Two tine building lots in block
G, Hast View add.
J For rent, house, barn, 1$ lots, Id;
Kills street. Property for sale.
< For Sale. 2 good lots, ou Pine
street in block K, cultivated.
9 Lota 13. 14, 15, 10, block O, at a
bargain; #100 cash, bal. on ternia
at 0 0-
6 Two lots, 0-r. house; fruit, ber­
ries, city water, electric light; cl >*e
in, bargain.
R
R
Ninth.—I spend my money with my
borne merchant In preference to some
mall order bouse In a distant city be­
cause the local merchants help to sup­
port the public schools where I send
my children, the churches and the de­
pendent poor In my vicinity.
It
It
Tenth.—I patronize the local mer­
chant because be does not try to trick
me Into buying "cheap” goods, which
because o f their defectiveness prove
to be expensive, and. further, because
should ill luck or bereavement come
my way ray local dealer would not
only prove that he was a neighbor
and a friend, but a man, with a man's
heart and a man's Inclination to do
good; not a soulless corporation like
the mall order system, whose only In
stlnct Is greed and a further desire for
* For sale — 51 acres, partially im­
proved; bouse, timber; spring nnd
living stream; near western city
limits; price, #1000, hall cash.
9 For sale, one acre, cultivated,
fruit, berries; 0-r. house insured
for #1100; elec, light, city water,
cesspool; pi ice #1050; all cash, or
#700 cash, terms on balance,
it' For sale, 7 lots (all of block A)
in Montgomery's addition to Falls
City ; good garden ground, fenced ;
city waUr; price #1100 if bought
within the next 30 diva,
OBI,, uy . i Ttiompaoli', tirila .tor*. Mu
luel phou* Ml rtion . Nlghl I '. l l m i
1‘ HYSU'IAN
F. M. H E L L W A R T H
PH YSICIAN AND 8URUEON
O ffice in Toller Bldg.,
Kaattlaui’O I I'OIIO HbH
1’ For sale, lots 7, 8, 14, 2B bloik K,
and lota 11 and 12 block K. Will
trade for Portland property,
19 To rent, 12 r bouse,
Orvgoii
D E N T IS T
The first «ale of town lot* occurred in 1889, though donation
land-claim «eitler« otine here many year« b e f o r e that data. In
1900 tln> population was 369; in 1910, 9(19; 1914, about 1,260.
D E N T IS T
Phana 1031
Th e Location
Falla City. Or.
F U N E R A L D IR E C T O R
R. L CHAPMAN
Funeral Dì recto»
We altead la all warb promptly.
Della, aad FalU City. Or
Business Cart's
HOTEL
jfallsCitYilbotcl
S a m p le R e a m e
Boat A oe e m m e d a tlo n e
F. Oroaga, Proprietor
HARDER 81101*8
19 Six lots, no improvements; cheap
Bohle’ s Barber Shops
Falla City, Oragan
Where you eaa |et i Skive, lair Cal. Balk
or Shine■
Agent far Dallas Steam Laundry
Hand]«;, lo r w .r d e d lu ca d a y even in g
F. K. Hubbard Realty Company
Now* office, F a lls Cily
M A 3 R J fW l
Th e Nam e
The city dttrive* it* nnifie from the fall* of the Little Lucki»-
mute River, which flow« through the city from the Weat.
20 Lot 5 and 20 ft. of lot 4 blk I), 70
feet front, on North Main street, is
for sale at a bargain; lest building
lot in town. See F. K. Hubbard.
Stop at Ellis’ Confectionery Store
Manufacturers and HoiAearekeri who want to know the facU con­
cerning Falla City and its |H>aaibilitea for future development are
requested to read the information given in theae two columna. For
further and more particular Information, addreaa The Newa.
S a le m . Oregon
Dr. A.G. Atwood
i* Five acres, in city.
All persons owing the Falls City
Electric Light Co. for service prior
to April 1, 1914, will please pay
the amount to C. \V. Lee at The
News office.
\V. E. N e w s o m .
BUILDINO CONTRACTOR
Saul Ouderkirk
Building C o n tra cto r.
Made.
Phone 194
Repalre
Falla City, Ore.
CONTRACTORS AND HI ILDEHH
Fall« City in situated in tin* «outh central part of Polk County
Oregon, in «eclion 21, township 8, H., rang# 8,W.. Willamette mer­
idian, 27 rail m il«« southwest of Salem, anti 73 rail mile« south-
west of Portland, in the narrow western end of the Littla Lucki-
smote River valley, surrounded on the north, south, and west by
the foot hi I la of the Coast Range mountains. Elevation, 886.83 It
above sen levtl. Transportation— Salem, Fall* City A Western
Railroad, which extends from Salem to Black Rock, a rail
distance of 30 miles, with P. P. mam line connections at Dallas,
Gerlinger, aud Salem, and with the OrsRon Electric at Salem.
Falls City is incorporated as a city, and contains 768 33 aorta,
valuation for taxation #2(18,897. The city adminiatration ia com­
posed of mayor, seven councilman, auditor and police judge, mar­
shal, treasurer, engineer, health officer.
Salaries: Marshal and
water superintendent, #90; auditor. #25; attorney, #25.
W ater and W ood
The city of Falls City owns the gravity water system. Its first
cost was #80,000. Pure mountain water is piped from snrings on
Judge Teal's ranch, 8 miles away, at an elevation ol about300
feet above city level.
Oak and fir tire wood is plentiful and cheap.
Lum ber, Fruit, Vegetables and B srrlss
Electric-power planing and saw mill, log pond, dry kiln nnd
lumber yard in thu city, lumlier flume, logging roads and logging
outfits, all owned and o|»rated by the Falla City Lumbar Co.
The surrounding bench and hill lands are as well adapted to
the production of fruits and berries us any other section of tha
Pacific Northwest, and development on these lines is going on.
Vegetables and berries of many kinds grow to perfection in
and adjoining Kalla City, and many acres are planted to straw-
berries nnd lognnberries. Market conditions are improving stead,
ily, as production is increased.
•
E lle & E lle
Schools, Churches, Societies, Clubs
Contractors and Builders
See us before you build.
We may save you money.
Phone 1411
Falls City lias a 12-grade school with a four-year high school
course, with principal, assistant, and eight grade teachers. It l
diplomas are accepted by the higher schools in lieu of examina-
utions. The entire community is justly proud of the school.
MONUMENTO
'I he Religious organizations are: Adventist, Catholic, Christian,
Free Methodist, Methodist Episcopal, German Lutheran.
G . L. H A W K IN S
M ARB LE A N D G R A N IT E
M ONUM ENTS
D a lla s , O regon
The Fraternal societies: Ind. Order of Oddfellows, Rebeknhs,
Masons, Knighlsof Pythias, Pythian Bisters, Modern Woodmen of
America, Royal Neighbors of America, Woodmen of tht World,
Women of Woodcraft.
Free reading room.
ar.d get a dish of the famous Mt.Hood
IC E CR EAM and a package of
Russell & Gilbert,
C A N D IE S
best made
P
Independence
Ice Cream
Salem Laundry
Agency
Zhe
© re g o tt
C. W.
Proprietor
paoiti iar
Bundles sent Tuesday evenings.
H A R R I N G T O N ’S
OVER e s Y E A R S '
CXPERICNCC
P atents
Zhc
Iffc a b o
C H A O . M IX , P
r u f r ib t o r
TRADC IYIAHH»
D e s ig n s
C o p y W ig h t a Ac.
Anyone sending a sketrh «nd description msy
quickly ^certain our opinion free whether an
Invention Is probftbly natantabla. ( omrounlca-
tlons strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on F'etenU
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patent« taken through Munn & Co. receive
pedal notice, without charge. In th «
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. largest efr-
culatlon o f any scientific Journal. Terms, $3 a
year: four months,
Sold by
all newaoeaiera.
newsdealers.
year;
montos, $L esoia
nyali
.3a,8ro-d—7 New Tort
IHIUNN & Co
Branch Offlce, 436 F 8t.« Washington, D. C. ,
Gem theatre, photoplay.
Hydro-electric light generated by the power of the falls; owned
by the Falls City Electric Co , W. B. Stevens president, H. C.
Brown vice-president ami manager, A. W. Stevens secretary and
treasurer.
Ol
borb
Harrington’s
for
OF ------------------------------------
C o -O p e ra tive Cannery
C o -O p e ra tive C ream ery
W ood-w orking Factories
Fruit and Berry O rchards
P r e d ic o In *11 tha Stale cou rt»
17 Three acres, adjoining city,
Notice to Electric Light Users
—
Suita II Huah Hrvyman B l.l, . phone « 6
16 Two acres, cultivated, fruit, ber­
ries; 0-r. house, sheds; water, elec­
tric light; will divide.
In Th e
---------------------
JAB. G. H E L T Z E L ,
Attorney at Law
ll For sale, lot 2 block M, M. ad.
M For sale, 80 a. 1 j mi. north of city
20 a. improved; 25 a. good timber;
plenty of pasture and water.
fa ll. fit ».
ATTORNEY
ll For sale, tine home in city, with
25 acres, 10 cultivated.
galD.
"Do Unto Othera."
Let all citizens follow this creed
and they will be blessed with happy
homes and a happy life. They will
prosper financially nnd at the same
time Improve their moral standard I)o
for your neighbor what you would like
him to do for you; then you are doing
your full duty to yourself and to all
mankind.
Moral —Buy and sell st home.
e h , s i a l a * • » < Surgaa..
OAoa *ii,| , , , __ „
FALLS C I T Y , O R E G O N
Offers exceptionally tine opportunities for the e taldishment
W . B. Officer, M. D.
7 For sale, One acre, adjoining city
limits, with 5-room bouse. A bsr-
gain at #425, terms. House to rent.
*
It
Fifth.—I patronize the home dealer
because be stands back o f his goods
and In case o f error Is willing to rec­
tify.
it
R
Sixth.—I patronize the home mer
chant because 1 believe a man ought to
spend his money In the community in
which he earns It.
It
It
Seventh.—I patronize the home mer- |
chant because I believe the man who
sells what be produces and buys what
he needs at home cannot be Injured
by deceptive catalogue pictures or al­
leged bargains.
It
It
Eighth.—I do not patronize the mall
order houses because they frequently
sell damaged and Inferior goods, which
it avails a man nothing to attempt to
exchange. But the man I patronize—
the home merchant, the man who helps
to pay the town, county aod state tax
—w ill exchange any article I buy from
him which Is unsatisfactory.
BO. 1914
M ay
Notice to News Subscribers
A blue-pencil eroae mark on thla
notice maana that your eubaerlp-
tlen te The News hae expired end
needs fixing Do It new.
Telephone system, with loug-distance connections. C. J. Pugh
local manager.
Business Enterprises
Falls C'ty in well provided with the usual business enterprises.
The News contains the announcements of the following business
and professional men of the city :
Bakery, D. Toller,
Bank of Falls City, W. F. Nichols cashier.
Barber shops, Wm. Bohle.
Carpenters and Builders, Elle A Elle, S. Ouderkirk.
Clothier, Tailor and gents’ furnisher, Chas. Harlung.
Confectionery stores: B. L. Ellis, R. B. Harrington.
Drug store, M. L. Thompson.
Dentist, Dr. A. G. Atwood.
Department Rtore, N. Selig,
Funeral director, R. L. Chapman.
Furniture, J. C. Talbott A Co.
General stores. N. Selig, F. C. Lumber Co., F. C. Merc. Co.
Hardware store, J. C. Tall ott A Co.
Hotels: Falls City Hotel, Fritz Droege, owner aod manager;
The Madena, Mrs. Mae Nichols, Mrs. Dennis, managers
Jewelry store. W. A. I'ersey.
Newspaper, the Falls City News, C. W. Lee.
Photoplay tneatre, the Gem, C. J. Pugh.
Physicians, Dr. W. B. Officer; Dr F. M. Hellwarth.
Pressing ami cleaning parlor, I, A. Johnston.
Railroads, balem, Falls City A Western, Southern Pacific.
Real estate agent, F. K. Hubbard Realty Co,
Restaurant, The Madena; Wm. Finley, owner.
Saloons: Trie Oregon, C. W. Matthews; The Idaho, Chas. Mix.
Boost for a Gymnasium for the School