THE MAUE1N TIMES HZS T " ,' I.., . i.uwuHniiimnnmmimimimiiiu muMnTim,m,ttT1 TKurday, lUj 15, Cm.' EXTRA SPECIAL inltyj CLOSING OUT ALL SHORT LINES Our stock is too lae, and prompt and drastic action is iweet-sary to bring it down to where it should be at this season of the year. The result is all to the advantage of the buyer of shoes, for the following prices are again proof that when Wemm;ark put on a sale it is a real one. Don't fail to take advantage of this opportunity to buy fine merchandise at a fraction of its value. 150 Pairs of Women's Shoes Broken lines, odd sizes, but (JJO or 2 pr ' $C (( good shoes in spike heels Oo for pD.UU mmmam urn m , .... Brown velvet spike pump, Regular $8.50, now ... $1.95 Patent pump, spike hecL Regular $5.50,- row .... $3.35 Patent Tie Spike Pump. , Regular $5.50, now .. $3.35 Black kid "strap, arch, Cuban heel Regular $8.00, now ..: $4.85 Brown Oxford, double sole, low heel, regular $5.85, now . $3.95 Black and Brown oxford, low heel. Regular $5.50, now $3.15 Men's fine oxfords, formerly $6.50, now $3.90 Men's fine oxfords, formerely $7.50 now .. $4.90 Men's English Brogues, : formerely $8.50, now $5.85 One lot of Children's (Jl A O u One lot of Children's 1 QQ Shoes marked at . . . $1.40 Shoes marked at . . . tLvO Sale Continues Balance of This Month This sale is for cash only, and there will be no lay aways and no refunds. To be sure of geeting what you want, at these prices, be there early. WEIR N M AlRlk'. 204 East Second St (- n nLt nMH o : : . FARM REMINDERS Measured . by carlot shipments alone, the Oregon " commercial egg production business has increased 300 per cent since 1925. by brushing the top of the Die care fully with milk or water before putting in the oven. I The Europenan of Du.ty .Vein walnut aphis which has appeared in a certain sections of Oregon and feeds on the. midrib and veins of the leaves of walnut trees, can be con trolled by dusting with a 2 per cent nicotine dust applied with a powder duster, says the Oregon Experi ment ttafion Early morning appli cations is necessary to avoid air current which lessen the effectiveness.- Befre the potato improvement campaign was started by the coun ty agent staff of Oregon State col lege, nearly all fields of potatoes in the tate carried large amounts of disease. Now, in the principal po tato producing counties, it is diffi cult to find f kids carrying a high percentage of diseased plants. In most counties, at present, nearly every potato field traces back to certified seed. As a means of protection against thieves, more than 400 poultrymen in Oregon have had their poultry tattoed and the brand registered through county agents' offices. Most of these have been turkey growers. . A meringue will be less likely to fall if one-fourth teacpoon of bak ing powder is mixed into it Careful regulations of heat also plays a large part in keeping a meringue tender and fluffy. Fewer tears will be shed in ex tracting the juice from an onion if j Eugene 4400,000 big auxiliary power plant will be constructed here, j La Grande Tranchell and Pare- hus received contract for building new $160,000 railroad depot here. Pine Grove Items Mx. and Mrs. Roy Woodside from Portland are visiting at the Laugh Hn home this week. The fronds of little Leonard Cox re glad to know that he is improv ing in health, he being a very sick boy when taken to The Dalles hoc pital about two weeks ago. He has trouble with his heart and kidneys, cawed by the after effects of scarletina. , Fran Richardson and wife and the letter's small sister, Hope, spent Monday and Tuesday last at Clack amas lake, trying their luck at firh ing. . John Maroney of Sandy was a visitor on the upper Flat last Sun day. He sold his homestead here 22 years ago and left for tha valley, last Sunday being his first visit here since then. He had his friend. Mr. Baker, with him. Reuben Walters hod the misfort une of breaking hi arm last Wed nesday. He was riding a road graders on a timber hillside, when the grader struck a root and threw mm to the ground, breaking both bones near his left wrist. Pr. El- wood was called to the act the break. The dance at Linns was well at tended last Saturday night. It wa olmost broken up by a bunch of roujrh necks, but they were put out, the dance going on smoothly the resi ol the night. Dorothy and Alice Davis will not be hum during vacation. Thoy plan i;n retting work at Eagle Point dur h the summer months and enter High school there again next year. Neat Cans' hi Neat Kitchens 1 vi Wapinitia Jottings Mr. and Mrs. Walmcr and sons, Lonnie and Anton,' and daughter, Fordine, from Portland were guests of Miss Velma Teschncr at her home in Wapinitia last week. Ma e De Lore and Anton Walmer were dinner guests at Mrs. G. R. Bell's home Sunday, Tony Allen visited at the G. R, Bell home on Friday last. Anton Welmer, Misses Velma and Zelma Teschner ai.d Lou Delco were guests at the home of Mrs. M. DcLore Sunday. "VIITH the new movement for XJhesuty in industrial design, the New York Art tenter hit been kept busy stylizing products every, thing from automobiles to cemeiit sacks. Women, especially, are de manding beauty in utilitarian thing. Rockwell Kent's name on the mar. gin of wallpaper makes American designed papers compete, for the lint time, with imported paperi. Winold Reiss, brilliant Viennese designer, produce beautiful accessories for milady's dressing table. The kitchen, too, is coming in for Its ihire of beauty. Not the luxuri ous betuty of the drawing-room, or the exotic beauty of the boudoir, but beauty that lies in limplicity and orderliness. Cam, for example, wear their neatest labels to appear on the shelves of modern Polly Prim. When jhe dons her polka-dot apron to harmonize with her pojki-dot cur tains and shell covers,' the opens the door of her kitchen eaMnet to gaze on i row of earn that art far more modern than those of her mother'i day. An Artiide Array Thtre art low oval tut of sat mon, tall stately cant of aiparigua, flat golden cant of tardinea, and a flock of others which are modern in form. Their iabelt art color ful without being gaudy, and irtiiri cally designed to catch the m of the beauty-loving housewife. Many of them are luggettive of their contend. That tall gulden-brown can, for example, holds a treature of golden-brown ginger-inapt, and that smaller ereamy-mied container is filled with rich creamy milk. And beholding this beauty in Oieful tilings, what housewife it not eager to terve more attractive meiU pleasing to the eye at well at tha paUtei ' UNITY OF ACTION VITAL NEED Farmers Mutt Organize if Dclra to Proper They ! The Wheat Grower. Journal of Kansas in analyzing the financial Ills of the farmer concludes: "No other manufacturer but the farmer thinks of letting others carry hi products, to the consumer. Th? farmer produces blindly and sell his ttuff the same way. He doer.n't know what it cost him to rni.ie a crop; he doesn't ask anything for n; consequently he receives fre- qucntly a price that Is far below "' of efficient production. That will continue to bt tht way of farm ts until they organize. Th busl nvm cn never be on a permanently itiercsKfu! bnsis without ibmt unity of action. Say what you willbut the grower whose ao-cali.d indt pendenco keepa him from supportlnf he farm board is a menace to hit) industry and a brake on tht wheefc of rrogress. It cannot ba at A strongly upon growers that tht 'independent farmer la following the way of destruction to himself and lo his industry." VETERANS' GRAVES MARKED World War Soldiers' Craves Re cciva Markers if ; ... j- v i j , 1 p"- J me American juegton tlT -f three veteran, of the lemon squeeser that if it it done by the usual method of grating. Like all dried foods, cocoanut is better if the moisture that has been removed by evaporation is returned to it before it is used in cooking. A good way to do this is to pour enough sweet milk over the cocoanut to cover it and let is stand in a cool place for an hour or more. Then drain it in a wire strainer, pressing as dry as nocsible. Tha mria nut will be nearly as delicious as when newly grated. The milk may be sav ed to cook with. OREGON NEWS NOTES Effective results in cpraying de pend to a large extent on use of Troper methods in preparing and combining sprays, and on correctly timing their application. A spray program for Oregon, issued in a bulletin form by the Oregon Ex periment station at CorvallU gives detailed instructions. The bulletin may be had from county agents, or by writing to the experiment station. HOME POINTERS When blanching fruits or vege tables, time and. trouble can be sav ed by placing them in a wire bas ket, plunging the basket into boiling water for the required number of minutes and lifting out again by the handle. Amore flaky pie crust will mult If. the fat is cut into the flour and left in fairly large particles. ' It is well to fold and roll the dough sev eral times to form separate layers wil.h air held between them. An. at tractive appearance can be obtained West Linn Bids received for the construction of $16,000 sanitary sewer system. Oregon Caves Bids will be opened May 31 for installing lighting sys tem m Oregon Caves. Hood River Construction of $16, 000 Yausi Bros, building progressing steadily. ' Eitacada Portion of market road No. 2 will be paved soon two miles east of this town. Klamath Fall: Klamath Business college moved to Odd Fellows build ing. New train service established for handling of logs between Chiachalo, the logging camp of Kestcrson Lum ber company, and Klamath Falls. Klamath Falls Stroud's Bootery formally opened. Union Farmers' Cooperative Creamery company will build cream ery plant here. Bids received for surfacing Baker-Pleasant Valley section of Old Oregon Trail. Bend Construction of new addi tion to Pilot Butte Inn here will be completed and ready for business by Decoration Day. Klamath Fall; Raluh structing two-story apartment house at Eighth and Walnut. " , Marshfield Plana nronosd fnr construction of new St Monica's church edifice. Through the efforts of the local post of the American Legion the late war were marked with suitable monuments recently. The monu ments were given by the national government and have been placed at the head of the graves of Delbert McCoy at Kelly cemetery; Sidney G. Mulvansy and Alfred Nice, both buried in the Wamic cemetery. Other deceased veterans will receive recog nition in the form of monuments at a later time. TEACHERS' EXAMINATION Notice ia hereby given that the County Superintendent of Wasco county, Oregon, will hold the regular examination of applicants for state certificates at the donrt house, The Daller, as follows: Commencing Wednesday, June 11th, 1030, at 9 o'clock a. m. and continuing until Saturday, June 14, 1030, at 4 o'clock p. m. A ST. PATRICK'S DAY DINNER CALL FOR PUBLIC MEETING All persons owning or paying taxes on "NON-TILLABLE," com monly called grazing lands, in Wasco county east of the Deschutes river. are requested to meet at Shaniko at 1:30 p. m. on Saturday, June 4th, next. Object: To determine the real average of such lands, to discusc. the rate of which they are and should be assessed for taxablo pur poses and to take action as may seem sdvkable in th premises. J. W. Fisher, A. M. Bennett, J. J. Brogan, E. E. McGreer, H. C. Rooper, , 28-12 and many others. 1HY not "o!ff inirW" tliia i at. i-atneks JJay? This it an Free to Public Tka Mk plan ia th U. S. wht catalot sad uvttttraf manor coming utjilin of huilneu ot product caa ks nbuioad Fr. and Wlihaul QMsatiaBw tha Aasetican Indurtrial Library. Wna lor RunaaM Advartinna Matter you ara iotcrattsd in: tama will bapromptly forwarded. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY llwiM Bail dial, CUeaio.UUatoU m old Irish Ynrecinn iir j...,.,- ing one'i neighbori in for roast pig aim icsuvmei on uie;r beloved March 17and for real innntan. ous fun we have yet to find a better nonoay ior entertaining. Anything goes at a St. Patricks dinner. Your living room will take on an Emerald Isle atmosphere with the lights softened by green iham rock shades and the bowls rilled with green carnations. A rack full of clay pipei beside the fire place will provide after-dinner smokes when the guesti sit before the blaze and tell their best Pat-and-Mike ttories. Games if your guestt are the gsme sort may be as un-grown-up as you please. Men like an ex cuse to play marbles, and lince thii is a typical Irish street-gamin game, you might supply each guest with a green net bag of marbles and or ganize the guests into groups to play marbles "for keeps." The heaviest-winner should be to elated with his tueccss that he will be willing to do a "ttunt" for the losers like ihooting an exhibition game. Table Decorations By all meant buy tome green- .and-white checkered gingham cloth and make a cover for your dining table. You will find it U most decorative and also givei the key note of informality. And since no one ever quite outgrowt a love for castles, why not build an Irish castle for a center-piece? can be limply constructed with oard. and covered with crepe- j paper which comes in stone-wall design. Vari-colorrH lirrliu trimm ing from wax-paper windows give a fascinating color-effect which may be supplemented for actual lighting requirements by green candles in potato nomers. The filaee-eanlt mav V iinrrtA to tiny pots ot growing shamrocks, t...a t. - , " . ' uui oc sure 10 icave space above the name for earh cnirsi tn tvi-it uc own limerick, the last lines of which must rnyme witn his name whether oe jones or .rauerewski, And now a In iii 1iii,- .11 - " wvuuav ail Sons of St. rat Vinvn 9 tnft nnt in their hearts or stomachs or some where lor food. Doesn t this green menu .strike you as good to eat ti well as to look at? Cream of Asparagus Soup Crouimts Baked Spinach Souffle ' Broiled Smtah flu Tnn tl Potato Croquettes with Mint Jelly uressea waier Lress Shamrock Rolls Radishes Olives Tipperary Tarts Sailed Pistachio Kuls Green Bon Dons It't a menu that in rr.iltv n'mnln to prepare and if you'll don your Dublin anron in the. mominc vnti can have things almost ready pre pared to there'll just be finishing touchet when the guests arrive. You ean tine the rannrr! oinirimn soup because it is most delicate in flavor, and it may be party-ficd by simply topping with whipped cream and aprvinr with rrrmtnn Whin the cream beforehand, of course, and place next to the ice. Baked Spmach Soufit h mad by preparing a white lauce with five melted tablespooni of butter blended with five and one-half table spooni flour, adding two cup milk and cooking until imooth and creamy. Four cupi of boiled or canned ipinach ihould be finely chopped and added to the white sauce with three tableipoont but. ter and four eggs which have been beaten until light. Season with i.lt and a little paprika. Pour into but. tered moldi and tet in a pan of hot water. Bake for one hour fa an oven 350 degrees F, Other Irish Foodt Mint Jelly; Dissolve three and one-half tablespoons gelatin in one. naif cup cold water and pour over the gelatin a syrup made of two cups of water and one and one-half curs sugar. Steep fresh, washed mint leaves in a cup of boiling water for an hour. Squeeze through a piece of cheese-cloth and preit out all of the moisture. Add ti.i. . - " Kill mint to the gelatin and sugar mix ture ana sua atso a tablespoon of lemon juice. Tipperary Tarts my be made in the morninff and t-rv.M 1.. dessert. Combine a No. 2 can ol aDOle laUCe With nn.-h! ... sugar, the juice and grated rind ol one lemon and four well-beaten egg yolks. Fold In the four ttiflly beatcn esir whites. l ine imti or muffin tins with pastry; fill with the mixture nd halt, hivtnn oven hot at first until the crust it well tet, then reducing the heat When done remove from the oven, sorinkle a littln m-.-itd rh-... All each tart while jt it still hot