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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1927)
TIU nSDAY. DECEMBER 8, 1927 THE MAUPIN TIMES Keep"Ybur Butter Uniionn and HoldYourCustomers Don't wait for your customer! to complain about the variable color ol your butter. Keep your butter that golden June color everybody likes by putting a few drops of Dandelion Butter Color into the churn. It is purely vegetable, wholesome and ab solutely tasteless. It meets all State and National Food laws. All large creameries have used Dandelion butter Color for years. It does not col or buttermilk. You can C-,j net the laree bottles "WKl lor 33c from oil drug for or gocery Btwes. Jr ppr Nornore Nausea 'Osa, heartburn, tick headache, nausea, over-adelty and other dl geetlve disorders quickly and sura ly relieved. Safe. Pleasant. Not laxative. 8nd for frea samples to Sail Co., Inc., Orangeburg, N.Y. . tformmlizu Dig f Hon and wtnt tht Brtalh 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ELL-AIMS FOR INDIGESTION 23 AND lit PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Hrlm. a.r.lf MMfaUt, Week aad CWene't tqaktw, tetania aa WT UUi CeeraHue1 M-eenetft, m-ilnWk. r&w&snrs stnu? He Uoate' CaileWt Beielelaf Children inw healthy aM ffw from roUc arrhm. rUtuUnry, atxutlpatioa and ether treuble If K n It at teelhh-ur time, fa, plmant-elware lainr re naruow ana gram s w OraggMs M SaUafyUif standby for ever slsty years la thousands of bo.es. HALL A RUCKU. la. 147 Waratlr PUca New Yarfc Aerial Signposts For some time punt the British air ministry tins been considering the question of providing Identification murks ut points nil over the country for the convenience of airplane pilots. The llnst of these novel "signposts" Is shortly to ho established near Wey- down common, Iliiwlemere, where the ministry hits rented a piece ot ground sufficiently large to enable the name "Hnricincrc" to bo outlined against the turf In large white letters. Ud till now only aerodromes hate been Indicated by this method, but It Is Intended to develop the Identlnca tlon scheme until every town and vll Inge will have Its name Inscribed at a coavenleut spot Airmen will then have bo need to carry maps, sines the whole of Great Britain, seen from ebove, will be one vast niup. London Answers. Let a man talk about himself and nothing els If he wants to; and learn to dodge him. Fault '.a one tiling thut may be found where It Is not. 24 Honrs Ends cm A "mmmnn rnlrl" mnvresult In GFriODe or flu. At the very first sign, go to a drug store and get a box ot hill a. i ano promptly. HILL'S breaks up a cold in tA k... k-iio. It Jom the four vital things at once stops the cold, checks the fever, opens the dowcis ana wuca the system. Red box, su cents. HILL'S Cascara - Bromide - Qnlnlna mmm feKS M3 BT ROS1TA STORY FROM THE 8TART Rosemary Crofton ll vlsltlnt tha governor's pslace la Fes, Morocco, with her aunt. Lady Tregarten. A Frenchman, Da Vrles, makea lova to beg. Ha tails bar of tha Kald. a niyitartoua person In tha aervlca ot tha ultan. Iloeemary repulses Da Vrlaa' lova. Nest morning, whlls riding-, aha la thrown from bar horia and rendared unconacloua. Hha Is rescued by It Iff tribes man and meets tha Kald, who turns out to bs an Englishman. Tha Kald says It would Jeopar due his causa to return her to Tes. I'eta, an Australian, and Zorlfa, a servant, ara aaeianed to care (or her. Hha learns the Kald's name Is Westwyn. Mar tango, a Spaniard, Is attracted by her beauty, lis subtly sets about gaining her favor by pre tending to help her to escape. Westwyn offers to do 'anything ha can for her. CHAPTER IV Continued Ilosemary stared at him, hope wa vering against hor resentment. Kite did not want to plead with this man, but the words broke from her against her will. "I can't bear It You'll have to let me go." Westwyn was silent "You suld yon didn't understand wlmt It meant to me" The man Interrupted "1 didn't when I sent you here. I do now." "And you won't help me?" Westwyn shook his head. "It's Im- possible," he snld. and Ilosemary was too angry to realize the weight of re gret In his voice. "I'm off to Abd-el Krim now ril consult him, but rra afruld there's no way out" He hesi tated on the top of the mud stairway, wishing he could say something to . . -. ( U encourage Uie mute ngure, wmcu would not even look at him. The words didn't come, so he stamped down Uie flight and gave Pete direc tions about enough food to feed a regiment. Heavy with a sudden re sponsibility, he rode off. He would talk to Abd-el Krim. Terhaps some thing better could be arranged. That night Rosemary and the Span- lard settled their plans. They climbed to the snme rock above the village, and for the first time the sunset brought no echo of closing bars to the girl. Kxclted and tense, she listened to Martengo's Instructions. "You'd better begin wearing native dress at once. Don't let Zarlfa sleep In your room. You must accustom every one to leaving you alone after sunset I'll have to leave It to you to slip out somehow, unobserved. You must come straight to my house. I'll leave the door ajar." "And then?" asked Rosemary, dis trust swept away on the tide of ex citement "I'll have horses ready, but I don't know If It would be safe to ride over the paws. Do you think you could climb It If I had the animals waiting on the other side?" "Yes, yes," breathed the girl. "Any thing to get away." She looked so vital, so flamullke in the blaze around her. that Martengo had difficulty in steadying his voice. It was a little rough as he told her: "We'll have to make a dash for it while VTestwyn's away." Rosemary's mind raced ahead. "Your servants?" she asked. "Won't they give us away?" "There are none In the house," he answered. "Don't worry. If you can give Tete the slip your part Is done." A few nights later a blur of indigo, scarcely more opaque than the sur rounding night, crept round the wall of the guest house. Rosemary's heart was In her throat, pounding so that It nearly choked her, but her feet, In their nutlve sandals, were steady. With scarcely a sound she padded up the path. As she nenred her destination the girl's spirits rose. Excitement tingled In her blood. She , went more care lessly and, round a corner, almost bumped Into a figure descending si lently In the soft leather sanduls of the mountaineers. It was Heinz, a stolid, shy, little Gorman . who had lent her month-old papers from the fatherland. An exclamation was stifled on the fugitive's lips, and the man stared as he stepped aside for her to pass. Rosemary dared not American Idea Abroad Emigrants returning to their native towns In Europe after having made their "fortunes" in the United States, carry back with them American Ideas and the American language, which has supplanted French and German as the International tongue among the Euro pean masses. In hundreds of villages In southeastern Europe there are two districts one the "native," built of stone and rubble, with the chickens roosting In the dining and bedroom; the other the "Amerlcun," with houses FORBES WaiffilfeViCi look back, but she felt that Heinz still stood at the corner watching her. After this encounter, the quadrangle looming above her was sanctury. Bhe ran the last hundred yards, slipped through the unlocked door and shut It silently behind her. While she leaned agnlnst the wall, breathless, a figure stepied out of the darkness. "Well done," whispered Martengo, "You're all right now." He piloted her Into the bouse. There was no light In the front room, but Juan guided bis guest Into a small back apartment where charcoal smoldered on an open hearth and a hurricane lamp bung from the roof. Rosemary dropped onto the nearest seat, still panting, her eyes blazing In a face bereft of color, "I thought 1 should never get out," she said. "1 had to send Pete down to the village, and Zarlfa was as sleepless as an owl. What's the next move?" "I sent the horses out as soon as It was dark, but Unfortunately, the head miin's son, young Mohamed el Me- nebbhe, Is coming to see me tonight about a rifle. He ought to be here any moment" Rosemary started. "But hell delay us we ought to be off." "He' won't keep me long, and It Isn't a bad thing, really, because when your flight Is discovered In the morn ing, he will be my alibi." They talked in desultory fashion for a few min utes. Then Martengo went out to prepare for bis visitor, and Rosemary found time to study her nurround lngs. It was a small, mud-walled room. with no furniture but a table, a chair, a row of cqfTee pots, and the couch on which she sat The onlylndow was sauare aperture, nngtazed and barred, Just under the celling. "Rath er like a cell," thought Rosemary, and then her blood raced!, for she beard voices and footsteps crossing the court. Automatically she crushed her gelf into the corner furthest from the door, hardly daring to move. That was one of the worst hours of the girl's life. The drone of Arabic In the next room was like a wheel on which her nerves were spun Thoughts whirled through her brain and were gone before she could catch the full sense of them. She pictured failure in every guise, the ignominy oil a forced return. In that hour she had suffered every possible disap pointment been defeated by every obstacle. At the end of it her head felt taut, as if stretched on wires. Martengo had no place in her thoughts until, just as she felt she must go mad if she had to wait any longer, he entered the room. She had been so oppressed by her myriad ap prehensions that she had not noticed the departure of Menebhhe. "Has he gone?" she asked, but the words were scarcely audible. The Spaniard nodded. "Yes. I'm sorry for the delay. You look a bit played out What about a drink?' Before she could refuse he had pro duced from the outer room a bottle and two glasses. "I can't have you fainting on the way," he said. "This will do you good." Perhaps his voice was less carefully tutored than usual. There was a note in it which was like a cold douche on Rosemary's Im patience. It steadied her and she was alert as she took the glass and put her lips to It The taste was un pleasant "What Is It?" she asked with a grimace. "Our local poison, leghbi.' It won't do you any harm." His voice sounded muffled and he seemed to -be very busy with a refractory cork. Suspicion flashed across Rosemary's horizon. "I'd rather have water," she said. "Do get me some," and made a pretense of drinking. Juan left the room without com ment and the girl whirled, the glass In her hand, vainly searching a recep tacle. She had Just emptied the stuff behind the cushions when Martengo returned. Guiltily she faced him, a flush burning so deeply that it was like a hand throttling her. (TO BBS CONTINUED.) Reason Enough "Do you believe in the survival of the fittest?" "I don't believe in the survival of anybody. I am an under taker." Boston Transcript of white plaster and a special barn yard for the live stock, says a corre spondent of the New York Sun. Compass on Japanese Beds A Japanese will never sleep with his head toward the north, for the reason that the dead are alway burled In that direction. In sleeping rooms of private houses In Jupan and In nearly all of the hotels a diagram of the points of the compass is pasted upon the celling for the beueflt of timid guests. Ohe KITCHEN CABINET (A 12T. Weatern Newepaper tlaloa.) "If all tha world were appls pie And all tha aea were Ink. And all tha trees were bread and cheeea Wbat should wa here to drink?" FOODS FOR OCCASIONS On special occasions when we en tertain our friends we find nothing too much trouble nor too dainty to make the re past one to be remem bered with pleasure. A dish almost universal!; well liked Is sweet breads creamed and served In tlmbat cases or In patty shells. To add a few mushrooms to the creamed mixture en hances the flavor and The patty shells may be food value. prepared at home, but they are quite bit of work for an amateur, so buy them from some good bake shop. The tlmbal cases are simple to make if one has a tlmbal iron. The batter makes a case that is much easier on the digestion than the rich puff paste of the patty shell. Suprsmg of Duckling. Take the uncooked Joints and breast of a duck ling, remove the meat and chop very fine. Add four eggs, one at a time. stirring until the mixture Is smooth. Add one and one-hulf cupfuls of thick cream, salt, pepper and a little onion Juice to season. Turn into buttered molds, cover with buttered paper. place In a pan of hot water and bake about thirty minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with: Bechamel Sauce. Melt two table- spoonfuls of butter, add three table- spoonful of flour, onefourth tea- spoonful of salt a few grains of pep per, one-half cupful of chicken stock well seasoned and one-halJ cupful of tbln cream. Stir and cook until smooth and well cooked. Gelatin of Capon. Bone a capon and nse only the white meat cat the breast into halves lengthwise, push the wing and leg skin inside. Cover the skin from which the dark meat has been removed with the breast meat Fill with forcemeat draw the skin over and tie with a double thickness of cheesecloth and steam over the bones and dark meat covered with boiling water. Remove to a pan an cover with a weight over night Take the cloth from the capon remove the skin and cover with Chaudfrold sauce. When stiff and firm, garnish with truffles cut Into fancy shapes and coat with aspic Jelly. Chaudfrold Sauce. Make a white sauce of two tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour and three-fourths of a cupful of white stock, one egg yolk lightly beaten, one tablespoonful of cream and onc-balf tablespoonful of lemon Juice. Dissolve a teaspoonful of gelatin In a little cold water, then In hot ; add to the first mixture. Sea son to taste and serve with the capoa Food That Is Different Here is Queen Victoria's favorite soup and It is good enough for any body: Chicken Soup. Chop one cupful of roast chicken, to It add one pint of chicken broth, one cupful of sweet cream, salt and pepper to taste and just before serving add the rlced yolks of three hard-cooked eggs. Bohemian Buns. These are called "kolaches" and are well worth the trouble of preparation. Take two ta blespoonfuls of butter, add one cupful of scalded milk and when cool add a compressed yeast cake dissolved in one-talf cupful of water, two well beaten eggs and a teaspoonful of salt Mix with three or four cupfuls of flour, kneading to an elastic ball. Set to rise overnight In the morning on a floured board knead and roll to one half Inch thick. Cut with a small biscuit cutter and place on a buttered sheet Brush with batter and In the venter of each place a spoonful of stewed prunes. Let rise again and bake in a hot oven, Ham Loaf. Put through the meat chopper one and one-half pounds each of smoked ham and fresh pork, mix with a cupful of bread crumbs, add three well-beaten eggs, salt and pep per to season and milk to make the mixture moist enough to mix. Place In a deep bread pan and bake until brown, basting orten. An hour or two In a moderate oven will be needed. Green Pepper Omelet Wash six green peppers, remove the seeds and white fiber, break into small pieces and fry in four tablespoonfuls of but ter until tender. Beat, two eggs and add one-fourth of a cupful of milk, three-fourths of a cupful of grated cheese, salt and pepper to taste. Cook over a slow fire until the omelet Is a golden brown on the bottom. Cut and fold as usual, or set Into a hot oven a minute or two before folding, Buttered Apples. Take even-sized apples, core and peel. Arrange In a deep baking dish, each apple on a round f bread which has fried lightly In butter on both sides. Fill the ap ples with sugar, bits of butter, a little flavoring of spice. Buke In a very hot oven. Serve hot with clotted cream. I Demand The whole world knows Aspirin st3 an effective antidote for pain. But ifs just u important to know that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on every tablet, and on the box If it says Bayer, it's genuine; and if it doesn't, it is not I Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds, and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Bayer at any drugstore with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect tie heart Xspttta to the bad mark at Bayer Uunfactan of Maaeaestlcscldetter of SalleyUcaeU His Decision H oo raw I Hooraw P suddenly Shouted Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. "Glory hallelooyer!" "New what's the matter with yonr asked his wife. "I was reading along and didn't find anything Interesting for quite a spell and was about to CIng the paper down when I ran onto the account of a last chance sale of Shakespeare's books if I dont buy 'em now I'll never get another chance!" " "Well, what about it?" "I hain't a-golng to buy 'em; that's alL" Kansas City Star. Drugs Excite the Kidneys, Drink Water Take Salts at First Sign of Bladder Irritation er Backache The American men and women must guard constantly against kidney trouble because we often eat too much rich food. Our blood is filled with acids which the kidneys strive to filter out: thef weaken from over work, become sluggish, the ellmlna- tlve tissues clog and the result Is kid ney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline In health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead ; your back hurts or the urine Is cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; If you suffer with sick headache, or dizzy, nervous soells. acid stomach, or If you have rheumatism when the weather Is bad, begin drinking lots of good soft water and get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a tablespoonful In a glass of water be fore breakfast for a few days and vour kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of sxanes and lemon juice, com blned with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to neutralize the acids In the system so they no longer are a source of irritation, thus often rellevlne bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive, cannot In jure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink and belongs in every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time. " The Bass' Chance Help But I haven't asked you for more salarv before. Boss Of course not and I never had reason to fire you. Resin from the almaclga tree is uped in making fine varnish and pat ent-leather and by natives for driv ing away mosquitoes. 1 c) , -..- i ... v m w- a "J . . V A ,.v a W , Mi aU4;vii19V.4j J U UvjU CORNS Ends pain at once In one mimtte pain from corns is ended. Dr. Scboll's Zino-pads do this eaey by removing tha cause pressing and robbing of shoe. They are thin, medi cated, antiseptic, healing. At all draf and shoe stores. Cost bat a trifle, DXSchoWs XiiiO'pads Put one en tne pout is tontl For Old Sores Harford's Balsam of Myrrh AI SHlen are laaerbte te rehaJ rear auaer lar Ike fintkatllaiiMteiilat . , Rr Doet treat sore. Inflamed C IO Smarting eree wltn power Kl ZWP -'foldra-! "dropped" to , P t ' by hand. Aaootaing eSeetlTe,ealereDiedy .jr." Is best eeua-aU draraiAta. BALL & RtJCKRL , New York Uiy Christmas Present? 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Thirty-nine states, Porto Rico and Hawaii now have forestry depart ments or other agencies to look after their forestry Interests. No Disfiguring Blemishes to Hide If Cuticara Soap is used daily, assisted by Cutlctira Ointment when necessary. They do much to prevent blackheads, pim ples and other unsightly eruptions, and to promote permanent skin health. Bono 2Cc. Ointment 28 end S0. Tsleom !n. Bold rmy where Sample ohA tree. AddraMl "Outtcare Uta torlM DP. Bl, MJdn, lUu. Cuticura Sharing Stick 25c