Thursday, June 1i, 1930" ' RSNOVATE THE KITCHEN AND MAKE WIFE HAPPY il !! Conveniences Raduca Labor Moat Utd Part of rrT Raaidcnc ', Sc-mo women ihow their kitchens fHh pride, while others admit visi tors with an apology. The woman whoat "kitchen is light, colorful and iterating is pleased to have others if 'ft But if it is dark and drab the V apt to spend as little time as possible there herself and to avoid taring visitors enter it. j If your kitchen is not now to your liking you can make it the fahow place" of the house, and fraatly reduce the work of cooking, by having it modernized. colors, applied on. wood, attain a softness and warmth unusual with other foundations. A breakfast cabinet in the kitchen is one practical means of attaining the charm desired by modern women in the service rooms. This feature provides a center of decoration tit the kitchen about which other Vaili-in units may be attractively cnanged. Local retail lumber dealers and milmork manufacturers can supply suggestions for modernizing kitcaens and can recommended home design ers and builders competent to do the work. "INSIDE- INFORMATION TOCO SLIPS BOQUET TO THE FOREST LOG Sneak to Woodthad Lika Coavict t Parana Coataata and Tboa Wri Story An invisible pocket in the seam By tak-;0f a little girl's dress similiar to a boy's trouser pocket is useful when she has to carry some money. fag advantage of the ideas worked out by modern designers, you can lav your kitchen remodeled so ef fectively that it will have the ap- jf flour gacka are soaked in cold pemrmnce and convenience of a thor-; watr, spread on a smooth surface oughly up-to-date kitchen. J and soaped well and then rooitened Nothing wili help an old kitchen i with coal oil, rolled as tighly as pos- r much as the installation of suit- ble cabinets, drawers, bins and cup boards for the storing of food, dishes and cooking utensils. All of tbese may easily be built of wood to Suit the space available and individ ual tattes. No other material affords such an infinite variety of decorative ef fects as wood. In its natural ap pearance or with transparent finish es, the range of tones, colors and (rain is a constant source of de light to the eye. Moreover, all the painted enameled and lacquered sible and scalded, all the lettering can usually be removed with the first washing. In choosing a gas stove consider where it is to be installed and how the window light will fall on it The choice of a left-hand or right hand oven is not so much a matter of left or right-handednesu as it is provision of good light on the open burners when one is cooking, clean ing. When the oven is between the window and the burners it casts a shadow on them. "Togo." In The Forest Log. the State Board of Forestry publication published at Salem, tells below his reaction at reading a copy of the paper. Togo is original in his language, yet conveys a real compli ment to the editor of the booklet in the following letter: Dear Haze): Last Toosdy after rehorsel of Jap boy Ukelaylee Club, I arc happy as slick neck clam to find dilishua souprise in store. Forest Log are a corkley good sheet horrorzontule purpledickler, ' convexly and kitty cornled. It are snuggest much fod der for kindly attenshun of tub marine mind. Let us be excited about sumthinar elslv but story of amusing murders and doctor book. I unravels without dangerous rith- matic that song Bird which nekleck twitter are subject to deposit of lar) in basement of brain. .Whiskerish joke column which are called Duffel Bag are howling. So I forgot all unportant engagements to rlav nosei of jounce baby or bathing dishes and approach shly to woodshed like konvict on Oregon boots, to make soberly perucual Since you are flit from cook shack life are simply slum gullyum. Please to give flickerish thought to spend vacation here. Maybe bull ! cook dispenshun nuts from dough Serving Maiw EBusinesses Experience of large fleet owners remote the unusual reliability and economy of the new Ford A SIGNIFICANT TRIBUTE to the valoe of the new Ford is found in its increas ing use by Federal, state and city gov ernments and by large industrial com panies which keep careful day-by-day cost records. In most instances, the Ford has been chosen only after exhaustive tests of every factor that contributes to good performance -speed, power, safety,com fort, low cost of operation and Bp-keep, reliability and long life. Prominent among the companies using the Ford are the Associated Companies of the Bell System, Armour and Com pany, The Borden Company, Continental Baking Corporation, Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, General Electric Com pany, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Com pany, Kellogg Company, Knickerbocker Ice Company, Morton Salt Company, Pillsbury Flour Mills Company, The Procter and Gamble Company, and Swift & Company. Each of these companies uses a large number of Ford cars and trucks. The Associated Companies of the Bell System use more than eight thousand. Modern business moves at a fast pace and it needs the Ford. Daily, in count less ways and places, it helps to speed the production and delivery of the world's goods and extend the useful ser vice of men and companies. Constant, steady operation over many thousands of miles emphasizes the ad vantages of the sound design of the Ford car, its high quality of materials, and unusual accuracy in manufacturing. Beneath its graceful lines and beautiful colors there is a high degree of me chanical excellence. An example of the value built into the Ford is the use of more than twenty ball and roller bearings. They are hidden, within the car and you may never see them. Yet they play an important part in satisfactory, economical performance. Their function is similar to the jewels ofi a fine watch. Throughout the Ford chassis, a ball or roller bearing is used at every place where it is needed to reduce friction! and wear and give smooth, reliable me chanical operation. At many points, as on the transmission, counter-shaft, clutch release, fan and pump shaft, and front drive shaft, these ball and roller bearings are used where less costly types of bearings might be ' considered adequate. Additional instances of the high quality built into the Ford are the ex tensive use of steel forgings, fully enclosed four-wheel brakes, Rustless Steel, four Houdaille double-acting hy draulic shock absorbers, aluminum pis tons, chrome silicon alloy valves, torque-tube drive, three-quarter floating rear axle, and the Triplex shatter-proofl glass windshield. The Ford policy has always been to use the best possible material for each part and then, through large produc tion, give it to the public at low cost. NEW LOW FOBD PBICES Standard Cap 8prt Caapa DaLsxa Coup ........ S4t Tadr Sedan SM Thraarindaw Fafdar Sadan . . . SMO baLua Sadan 0 Tawa Sadan Cabriolet .......... S63S Baaditar Phaetan ,... ..... 40 Plek-ap Cloud Cab ..... . Model A ChiMb . Model AA Track QuiU, lSltt-taeh wheel bM Model AA Track ChiuU, lS74en wheel bite , Model AA Fuel Deliver .... fTM Att prteat . a. 6. Detrmit, pint retfl m itUtTf. Sanpert and aaar eaSra at Iom eart Ford Motor Company A new "City Convenience" for homes O Jnywhere o The drudgrey of cutting and hauling ice, of trotting up and down the cellar stairs or out to the spring house can be banished forever from rural homes by the use of a Superflex Refrigerator, which creates twontv-fnnr t.n thirtv-sijc hours of modem refrigeration from a small bottle of oil, costing but a few cents. Those old-fashioned makeshift "coolers" never were satisfactory, never provided the constant waste preventing and health-protecting temperatures possible with modern refrigeration. No matter how far you arc from power lines or ice houses, you may now keep food and supplies, always at the proper degree, right in the house where they belong. Superfex oil-burning refri gerators have no belts, gears or moving parts; no noise, no odor, no electrical connections necessary. Once a day at your convenience, you light the burners then leave it Superfex does the rest. The refrigerating cycle is completed automatically when the fuel is consumed, and the temperature in the food compartment remains al ways at the same protective level. In addition to its economies and simplicity, you will find delight in the many delicious and healthful new dishes you can prepare because modern refrigeration means something more than merely chilling food. Ask for a personal demonstration of this device which will bring the finest city convenience to your home wherever you are. Continuous Refrigeration from Oil Heat. J. R. DOCHERTY FURNITURE COMPANY WE Deliver Use Your Credit f'MD- and fierce apple liker, or perhapely sum tanlack or wild horses root bit ters, who could evaporate T Fetish days and merry nites are pusstble. Plesse to remove mind from honor able greet or calm ncrvusnas of Duffel Bag and cum. We are over buddy alonesomeness for your mel low iah voice and feverish smile. Hoping you are just alike, TOGO. P. S. Please to cum or get off kettle. i ... Pine Grove Items T. W. Linn has moved his family into their new home at the milL A few of the Pine Grove people attended the dance at the Dodge place last Saturday night Mr. and Mrs. Sam Appling from Bend were recent visitors at the Ed. Davis home. Mrs. Appling is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Davis. The picnic held by the American Legion at Richardson's park last Sunday was well attended and en joyed by all. Leonard Weberg and wife trans acted business at The Dalles Satur day latt. T. W. Linn and daughter, Gene, were in Maupin on business Monday morning. Ted. and Phyllis Endersby and family visited folks at Linn's mill Sunday afterno'on last.- 0. S. Walters and sons and L. E. Walters chipped a carload of cattle to the Portland stockyards,; last Saturday night. Little Leonard Cox has returned to his home here after ' spending some time at a Dalles hospital, Miss Irene Linn spent the , Wt week end with the George Claymier family. ' Frank Richardson and wife were at Clackamas Lake Sunday night and Monday. Walter Sharp has been cutting wood for Bill Forman. John Powell and Dick Olmstead are cutting fence posts in the moun tains. A. B. Linn, who has been work ing with his brother here, expects to return to his home near Mil waukie this week. Ruth Walters was among those who attended the Sunday ; school picnic at Dufur last Sunday. Ben Richardson returned from a visit to his ranch near Prineville last Friday. , r Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gray of Port land were guests at the Birchard and Bronner homoo Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. 0. Bronner has been on the sick list the past few days, being a sufferer from after effects of having her teeth extracted. I he Linns have installed a planer and are now turning out a good grade of dressed lumber. Wapinitia Jottings Mr. and Mrs. M. PcLore had a dinner guests last Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gray, daughter, Lelah. and Son Harold, Don f 'rnctt of Tor'. Und, Mrs. 0. Dronner, Grandma Raines, Mrs. fcirchs rd and family and Mose De'.ore, Jr., G. R. Doil and family. Mrs. G. R, Bell and daughters, Velma and Zelma, are conking for the Hunt shearing crew at Manpin. Misu Velma has been compelled to cease her work on account of illness. G. R. Bell, wife and daughter, Wilma, were in The Dalles a short time last Saturday. Mote DeLore, Jr., has decided to keep cool this summer and to do so hj recently Installed a Tlamo tapen" gas range. ' Wm. Sturglg and wife made a business trip to Portland last week. Should a child wander out of sight or beyond his depth hli ab nonce will be more promply noticed if he wears a bright-colored suit which makes it easy to locate him cu'ckly. Buy bright-colored bathing suits and caps for children. Orange, yellow, red, vivid, blue, green or violet are colors that can be seen readily from a distance along the shore. Neutral-colored suits blend jwith the background of trees or rocks and the shades of the water. Rral-estate dealers say that good, dry, light cellar adds $500 to $1,000 to the value of a dwelling. Of first importance b th, site for , bulldinf the U. S. Bureau f Public Roads. Choose a site mod erately elevated so that there is a fall in at least one direction. The soil snd subsoil rhould be open and porus co that air and water an ad mitted readily. Sands, gravels and loams are good soils. There shoild he good, deep, natural drainage, so thnt during the wet ceason of the year the ground water will be at least 10 feet below the ground surface. Free to Public Tha lh alaea la tla U. & aiakta a4 iaitinn maltnr aovarina any Una of hmktm nrodtKt can ba M"K rraa aaa Wkbavt QbHtatioa it lha American In4umal Unary. Writ for BiuImh AdvarlUIni Mattat r a Intarattea ins aama will ba promptly lui mi daa. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL UUAIT Knllaaarlal Batldtat, CMnaio, Illlaata ' Recipes for the Bachelor Girl L- I I t" Tip ""--i I AlbanyJack Hammel, contract or, will construct new $10,000 Tex aco oil station on Washington street. I7THE bachelor girl who likes to VJi-cook her own meals and occa sionally have a gust has difli cultiei confronting her which may be tummed up in the phrase ; How to buy little enough food to avoid waste. But several agencies have com bined to help her. Canncrs put out fruits and vegetables in etam-ounce cans which hold a cup and cost ten cents. Evaporated milk solves her milk problem, for it obviates the nuisance of attending to milk bottles and milk tickets and the problem of storing milk. Evaporated milk will keep well after being opened, if it is not all used at once, and the un opened cans cah stand on the kitchen shelf ready at all times for use. ' Recipes for Two Some recipes which serve two and include this time-saving milk are: Slufed Tomatoea Cut off stem and remove pulp of two large toma toes. JViix two tabkipuuu chopped, canned okra with one tablespoon bread crumbs and season with salt and pepper. Fill tomatoes with mix ture. Hake in a hot oven (450) for fifteen minutes, then reduce heat to medium, 350', for fifteen minutes. Make a cheese sauce by melting one tablespoon butter in a pin; add three tablespoons grated cheese and heat slowly until melted. Add one fourth cup evaporated milk and beat until well blended. Pour over to matoes and serve. Salman Pattiet; Remove bones and skin from a half-pound can of salmon. Add one and one-half tea spoons lemon juice, cayenne pepper, one-half teaspoon salt, one egg, one half cup bread crumbs, one-fourth teaspoon baking powder and one fourth cup evaporated milk diluted with one-fourth cup water. Mold into four patties. Place on an oiled tin and bake m a hot oven (425 F.) for five minutes, then reduce heat to 375' until krowpei