f EIOH7 THE lNDEPENDBNOH ENTERPHI3K INDHI'ENDENCE, OREGON fags five. r jhalf-gane." - - - htm "the halfback," likely to oiu back W. J. CLARK, Publisher Entered at the postoffice at Inde prudence, Oregon, M 10000(1 eless No wonder pxine men are always suspicious of others. Tlicy know themselvts. POLITICAL WIRING RURAL CREDITS. PUBLISHED EVERT FRIDAY SUBSCRIPTION RAXES One year In advance $1.50 Blx months la ad 'ance . .T5 Three months In advance JO MEMBER OF THE STATE EDITOR IAL ASSOCIATION. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23TH A SIMPLE LESSON IN ARITHMETIC. IF you Spend YOUR MONEY out 0' town, Aad your neighbor spend HIS MONEY out of town, Aad EVERYBODY spends his mon ey out of town, What will become of this town. THINK IT OVER TRADE AT HOME. ! Woolen mill la to operate jaiploy 20 men at Bandoa. and Mt. (Rood R. R. will build two-mile extensdon toward Lost Lake. Grants iPass will experiment with N;w Zealand flax In that district. Put as much energy Into your vo cation as you put into your vacation. Lincoln county plans buying porta ble sawmill, to cutlumbei for planked roads. j Easter capitalists lease 3200 acred t land near Roseburg: to drill ex perimental wells for oil. Ship yards at Portland are hum vamg. Big steam schooner to be built, owned and operated by Port land men. Beet growing is becom'ng the pop ular Industry at Grants Pass. The land cajn be made to produce from 75 to $100 per acre under correct treatment. The scythe that mows men down doesn't keet the grass cropped on their graves. . No fluctuations, however, have been noted in the market quotations ou postage j au.p' Kings and queens were Involved and to it was that a family Jar be came an earthquake in (Europe. When your husband begins to treat you with unusual considera tion it's time to go through bis coat pockets. The speed-limit signs are posted al ng the publia highway, bo that all who run may read. The average au toist. however, runs to fas too read. There are a lot of good bookkeep. ers abroad In the land, as any man who has been so foolish as to loan his favorite volume la in a posl tion to attest. THE REACTION AT EVEFL7T. WASHINGTON A goiod way to insure taxation on money would be to make it unneces sary for a person to pay interest on borrowed money unless it can be shown that It has been taxed during tha time the borrower has had use of ; With the danger of war hanging over the country, we are brought fac to face 'with the value of our indus- The best evidence that our coun try beJloves in law and order and not In violence is shown by the re action cf public sentiment at Everett. The shooting up of the town over attempt of a steamboat load of I. V. .W. terrorists to. end the shingle weaver's strike by force has weak ened the cause of industrial revolu tion by force. Thf oigutilzation that resorts to VIolence,ls doomed in our country .and Is not mectu:t; w'lbiniKh support in Ita struggle f j relief In courts, mo derate socialists and labor union men 110' backing It up. Wages 00 Paelf'o Coast are uni formly high and working conditions are far above average, and the only chance for those who resort to force is to pose as victims of perae- cutlonf ir tree apt e h, -- The advocates of loafing on the Jot breaking up tools, spoiling materials, ruining machinery, destroying proepr tT, and applying the torch as a rem edy for social injustice, are not Am et leans. GET BUSY AT ONCE. The dispatches say President Wil- t-ialj plants and railroads to the gov- n asks early passage of workable ernment. Conservative legislation for their protection should be the or der of the day. ex- Southern Pacific at its own p:-ns?t is maintaining complete pa trol system for tunnels and bridges a well as its stores of supplies, anight be destroyed and hamper op eration cfj road when needed for ra pid tramnjortation of troops and sup plies. i Suburban residents are seeking 'extension of carline but President Griffith of P. R. L. & IP. Company, laid it was impossible', "until Port land treats the street car company s, little more generously." We would suggest that the residents ask the jitney drivers union to put autos en the run at 5 centa fares. $260,000 is ti ha spent U The Dal les this year cm building Yittenberg Kingk Ccmp .ny's new plant to coa $00,000. Catho'ic beys school will be erested at cost of $12,300, Libby, Mc (Nefil'I & Libby to construct dormi jtoiies for employes, new garage- to bei worth $35,000 to go up and addi tion of another is started. Aside from the direct interest to Che farmers, many benefits are de rived from a sugar factory. It em ploys from 400 to 600 men from Octo Jier until February, turning the un productive time of 600 men into pro ductive time and at low estimate of j$50 per month would mean an in preafce of wealth to the extent of $25,000 a month.1 And now a bill is before congress to, prevent launching any vessels for foreign owners. This act should kill American shipbuilding as success fully as La Follett's Seaman's act has killed American shipping and both Industries would then be dead xnugh to satisfy the most radical pt ltlolan and labor agitator. Of course cur workmen can go to a foreign legislation permitting development of westarn waterpowers on public land. Theorists and vote hunting pol-i tcilana have held up such legisla tion for years on the fake cry of "conservation." It is rank -waste to allow a stream to run unused to the ocean and call "conservation" of resources. Just legislation has long been be foie congress, properly safeguarding the public's right in these water powters and preventing monopoly In any one hand. The time Is here to do something definite. If steps are not taken to make it possible for private capital to de velop our own waterpowers, we will see our money pouring In a golden tAream into development of similar undertakings In foreign countries. Our shipping industry is in the same situation. Our own laws offer no inducement to American capital to develop oversea shipping. Unless ! this is changed, the American flag will be a minus quantity on the seas after the war is over. Our Taw " makers should take ad vantage of present opportunities at once and pass legislation to encour age these great industries. Ill the Rural Credits Law provide for appraUera, or other ageaits.work. fug on the commission basis. It will e wired fr r! polUtU'al effectiveness In the hands of machine politi cians. The method of political con trol and manipulation by which this law will become siseh an agency in that event Is not difficult to explain and is even le& difficult to under stand. Loais are desired. Appraisers transacting the business for the state, work on a commission basis The largn the hwx the larger the commission The more certan the loan the- more certain the com Densatlon. The more loans the more money. All these are condl tlons that lead to collusion of per sonal and political interests. The man who Is accompanied with loan becomes a friend, and the big gcr the loan) on given security the limer the frlends-hlp. When such friendships may be of state-wide ex tent between private citizens and state officials under the control of a tlncle administrative board, we shall hafve all the material and con ditions requisite to build one of the strongest political machines that hue ever existed! In Oregon.. CAPITAL NOT GOING INTO AMERICAN 8HIPS. A BIBLICAL LESSON 1 Do our zealous prohibitionists and Other holler than thou folk, who are at ways trying to abolish sin by the de cree, "thou shalt not," overlook the fact that It was that very decree It self that Introduced sin into the world? When the notice was hung upon the tree In the Garden of Eden, "thou shalt not sat of this fruit," we know what effect St had upon our dear old mothor Ere. Had It not been for the Ism and the deoree, the chances are that she would have had no desire to partake of the fruit, aid the world would be without sin, oven unto this day. British Columbia lederationlst. The Examiner says San Francis. co will neve attain maritime supre macy so long as we permit the stranger to own and operate the great bulk of overseas shipping. It says the Bay has now great Shipbuilding plants that can turn out a 10,000 ton (Jilp in sixteen days but they are building them, all for foreign shipping firms. It asks why are not American cap italists arranging to carry our flag and our commerce overseas, and why; they are not alive to the oppor tunltles of overseas commerce. It shows how Japanese are grabb ling the trade between the Pacific Coast end the Orient, and how San Francisco Chinese are maintain ing the American flag on the Paci flc. It shows how not a merchant ves sel sails from the Philippines under the American flag, and how Holland Shipping has taken the trade from oiul ports that formerly went to the East Indies. There was never a better demon tratlon of the value to our country of direct steamship communication to say nothing of money paid for freight going and coming Is paid to foreigners'. The1 Examiner says It is complain- ted that our laws do not favor up- bulldlng.of an American merchant ma rlne, and that our laws are less fair 'and that we are farbehlnd even lit tle New Zealand. Capital is here in great abundance tor Investment, but it will not go In to building Amerlcan-owend ships be cause they cannot compete with shipping of other countries under our laws. The LaFollette law drawn up by President Fureseth of the Seamens unions, and president Gompers of th Labor unlonsi, and put over for the purpose of catching the labor vote for Congress is doing the trick What show will our country stand gaining its share of commerce of the (world against countries where gov ernment encourages capital to go Into ownership of overseas shipping. We are nobly trying to lift by legis- flation the standards! of wages and employment of men to man our ship And regulate capital htat goes into them, but the rest of the world will be slow to accept. In the meantime, American busi ness men would be foolish to put their money into shipping enterprises in open competit'on they are not per mitted to meet by the laws of their ownj country, and we will have no overseas shipping to speak of, and the American flag will disappear fior the seven seas and is not even re-pacted by all labor unions. PREVENT DEVELOPMENT. Them is no extt uMoii of callings or develt uinont of suburbs In any cltj with Jitney At Los Angeles certain suburbs feiiked extensions and five. iit faro" but all wro refused by tlu PubU Service Commission, The Commission says If txt'!i sdons ami roilu- tlons wont muli, tb Pacific Kluctrlc Traction Company, would further lo"e $.r00,000 a year. Oulv because the S. P. Co., owns the Paclfio Electric has It boon able tq support the losses caused by Jit ney competition. Thl amount added to $821,731 "fihe actual loss sumtalned In 1916 woulf crcte an annual deficit In ex cents of $1,000,000, It was docldod. The commission found Income of pacific Electric has been decreased between $:I0,000 end $40,000 a month as a result of jitney competition. The people cannot have duplica tion of street and Interurban trans Ions of cnrllnes and building up of po utat Ion and Iho secure exteii suburbs. The same condition exists In Tort land .Seattle and many other coast Cities. AUTO 8ALOONS IN COLORADO. Electric Toast is Perfect Toast Electrically made toiU differ? from t!ie averse kind os fresh coffee from sl;:le. It neHs but a irjal to tori' vioee. Equip your bri.'ikf: r tiiMe wi'.i n G E Radiant Toiler Krid l.'ti (hr dflifltit of en; .iistMii y;m want it, fresh, hv Lei ui lhv y us tlieit tOMtrr inn onr ci.nl tc mukt Un tliri '.t (noojh tor tlx fifr-ij (! AM kit- .I'd" ;qv .' i'"ve Co. f? and 1 1. 4. 7 The Desver Tomt tells, la the follow ing fashion, of the difficulty Colorado Is having in enforcing her prohibition lit: From oas end of Colorado to the oth er there are more than a thousand sa loons, eaoh doing a lively business, not only every week, but on Sunday also. They pay no license, either govern ment, state or city, and every cent they charge over the cost of the rot ten whisky they sell is clear profit, so- oording to Robert H. Kane, deputy dis trict attorney, who Is designated by District Attorney Rush to try liquor cssss in the county oourt. 1,000 aleene en Wheels. According to Kane, these saloons are automobiles, but saloons, nevertheless. They are operating in all parts of the state, " said Kane. "In most counties the authorities are doing all they can to suppress the business, but are not able to do so. These automobiles brine boose from Wyoming, Nebraska, New Mexico and Utah, whichever state happens to be the neareit. Some of them operate as common carriers and make a pretense of obeying the prohi bition law, but none of them that I have heard of do obey the law. "It Is only a pretense. They take orders from their customers, then cross the border, buy the liquor and return with it and deliver It to their patrons, charging a large profit os each package. The charge Is ostensi bly a oharge for hauling. "The customer will order, say two quarts of whisky. The saloon on wheels will take that order and many others and go to Cheyenne, for In stance, buy the two quarts of whisky for $3, bring it to Denver, where the customer lives, and charge him $4 for It, making a profit of $1 on the deal. If officers attempt to arrest the owner of the saloon on wheels he will ssv that he charged the $1 for hauling the liquor to Denver. Violate the Law. The law which requires that an affi davit shall be sworn to by each pur chaser of liquor which is imported Into this state that the stuff Is for his own personal use Is constantly violated by tnese automobile saloons. Also th tax of 25 cents on each package of whisky imported into the state is sel dom paid. "The profits from this business are enormous. One wholesale bootlegger whom I tried and convicted in the 1 j a. l-i-aF ..A. ... .1 ill 1 s .1 1 m 1 - .v. .1 sW :p lWPI IBT lLLjlei.illilJiii t1 IT Tr " Good Travel Insurance Ml Every foot of the Union Pacific System between Portland and u Chicago is protected byAutomatic Electric "Safety" Signals. g Go EAST via the famous Columbia River Route and enjoy the security from delay .h and annoyance these sentinels assure. ju h WM. McMURRAY, General Passenger Agctt, PORTLAND Is V4aJ L-J.J L,J t-.'J fe stl Ik Practical Baking Lessor PAPER BAG COOKERY P Cooking In Paper Bags, for maat, vegtuhie pastrire U becoming so popultr that rtcipetee method art graaily In demaad. Many ardclci art, Improved by uaing paper bags. One can buy tl clally prepared bK at all grocers in sorted th very email coat. Below I will give) you few which I have found ara much finer in tbe ba baked In the open oven, t Applt Dumpllngi 2 cups sifted pantry flour l toaimoonful salt level loanpoonlula K U linking l'owrinr About H to 1 cup milk H cup ahortanlng Cinnamon or nutmcs Hunr Bift together, threa tlmee, the flour, bak ing; powdttr and aalt: work in tha rhnrtnriing and mix to a dough with milk aa needed J roil into s equars aht ooe-third ineh t'Uck and cut into four pincm. Lay a cored and pared apple on each plnoe, fill tha centra with sugar and ciiinamoj, then draw up the dough to cover the apple; maka ernootk and place in a well-buttred paper bag, giving plenty of apace in the bag for the dumpling to riae. Iu lining the bag, oil the entirn inner surface, have the acam aide up and pin mouth of the bag aecurcly. linen the Dag on a en allow pan. Have a alow oven when tbe bag la plared in the oven and increase heat later. I find the znoet fre Quent mistake in uslna- ban In oven too not. it takes much luaa heat to bake in a B&Der baa than in the rnn nvn To determine wsen the apple dumpling in - I I . . I tl L t 7.1 . " . uinw m biiiou noie m me lop 01 the uag ana veai win a lorlc. Xou will find apple dumplinga baked in bagn are drliciuua, the pastry being very light and soft. Ho often apple dumplings baked in the old way in the open oven have a very hard cruit. Serve dumplings with cream or hard Bauoe. tiac Drwen Ctny w 3 titUeepoonfull of butter, mWj of bwf eitntct; brown thia withs apoonfulof flour, add IH eupioff A eaJt and pepper to taate and eookU -y, 2 tallrpoonfule of bef frying inatead of the butter for gravioSt use cold water to avoid lumping, (ay Beat half Hard Sauet cup of butter to Lift CW SauMCft, D,H 2 rnpi lifted flour M teaeponol Milk or water Cooked n 2 level teaapoonfule K C liakln. v 3 to 4 tableepoonfula thorutnn Pift toarthor. thrrn tlniM. 1 . baking powder and aalt: work la ' ening and add milk or weM i T1 dough. Roll into a thin aheH r&i aijuarwi or roundi according tr aaueage. Lay the aaueage on1 M of dough, bruh the edgea with ( gr and fold to cover aaunage. P! paper baga tha lame as apple I cr fjwvs hot with gravy, mado bdd flour In (Miaago fryinga inatead o boef frying aa in brown gravy. me i . i i r' " ui oi eugar ana prenai ,.,. nto dom nhape on s slam or china tilt. i Bec"r'y. , ,, . . , . ut.vio uuvmcg over me lop. General Rules for Paper 1. Use only bass eaneciallvi Br cooking. fn 2. Always (rrrime the entire' en f ace of tho bag for meats and pt 3. LftV linff nn I Tt Tinn mnain 4. Always pia the mouth r BtifRotttn Paptt Bagt S em pi flour 1 teoapoonful aalt M cup ihortonlcg Bweet milk 2 beaten eggs Grating of onion 8 level teaspoonfuls K C Baking Powder 1 cup each, chopped cooked !! snd ham 1 teaapoonful mixed muntnrd K teoapoonful each, aalt and popper Uroth or water . Mix a biscuit dough Of tlin Ann. ..It baking powder, shortening and milk, and" roll into a sheet half an inch thick, having by themsnlvee, using liquid as nended in make pasto. Kprcad the paste over tho dough and roll like a jolly roll. Other cooked meota may be used In tho Mine way. Often we have sovoral different kinds of cold moats loft, with not enough of 11 Pftrt "ular purpr,,e. Ono u ,l , """""m "Jnaa nutting them through the food chopper, ualng two cups f)l trim rnnnnoH m , . iv. i.i,: jZ ' m",o"'"K s acsired. per bag prepare tho iplings and bake by c 5. In a bom oven nlace the ! Kratfl of the hroilrr pan, p broiler pan in tho upper oven, j 6. Above all don't hnvo sf it burns tho bag tnd makos it ii easily broken. Have a slows for Img cooking. Jlememhrr fr te m biigf) will cook more quiokhoo less heat. 7. All kinds of mnnf fljli nt pxcr-llont cooked in bngs, all t flavor and juices being retair. ' t ho meat, fish or fowl in tho wcTO De UHinK tho own directions obctwo ' ttimiltna -nl. 1 8. For all kinds of pantry mend the use of K C Ilakiif . especially where slow baking. Ll K C is really a blend of two b111 i dors, ono of which arts as soc'Thesi turo la addrxl; the other is ins heat is applied: the two tofffttb a siiHtained ruiso until tho dLa ouglily cooked, insuring light88 For baking in the paper bag prepare h bag as for annlia ilnmr, nM V " - u uuu UnlH nv ame rules, borve with a brown gravy, sT2rMMwWni fata 7- M " NOTICE Bo mmnv reonaata . . we have had the oomnl.T. r"-?.""" or '?"on hare been ml on request. " " ",wo" aurabiy bound an se p tUred hiHMJlfn nnntrv and fttchsi j eliminating all dunger of fallinf y0ui county court paid a fine of $280 and costs. In addition he paid hi. lawyer , K C BAKING POWDER MFCS t Z $150, making a total of 300. He boast- tK MFGS- 16h and Canal ed afterward that he had made $10,000 ad will srl'S-OO jr ml or woald like to have thj0nditl venlent form ( ' . . esson mi, aropua a postal and a bound 7iiT.r "a A wnom 'n "w jj.uuipny maiiea kck. " " w Sts. by supplying- small bootleggers with whisky. He has quit the business, as far as I know. A second conviction would mean a penitentiary sentence for him, but he made more money bootlegging in a few months than he could In a year with a legitimate sa loon la a wet state." .. ei. i FLETCHER & BARRICK, ATTORNEY'S, door south of Farmers State Bank, In Hotel Basver. gtf 4'M44MlH44a,4,4 Marshnll 98. Work Guaranteed. A 3363 Prices Reasonable DR. LORAN BOGAN Dentist 45-469 Mo gan Bi g. PORTLAND, Wahln; ton at Broadway. ORB. OFFICIALS H. HIRSCMBBRO, iPrreliUmt R. R. DeARMOND. D. W. SEARS, V: CiiBhler. I- 10 THE INDEPENDENT NATIONAL BANK Incorporated 1889. i P I TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. H. HIRSCHBfflRO I. A. ALUm. DIRECTORS W. H. WALKER, D. OTIg D. BUTTLEB.