The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918, November 22, 1917, Image 4

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    WE SELL
L
C
: o
R
um ber
em ent
n in g ie s
o o fin g
*
We Buy
for Cash
and Soli
\
C-H-E-A-P ;
m ber Y ard i
Copeland & McCready
;
; The Main Street | n
:
friends when so many thousands tatocs, l ' i cups of soft, stale
of hungering women and children bread crumb», 2 tablespoons of
in the lands of our allies will butter, ’ -¿cup of chopped celery,
*— »itH-Kuge o r tw o G t-rm uu a irp la n e s an il bm llen o f th e p ilo ts, hrm nclit ilow ii on ilio w e st fro n t. 2- tie n . S ir
I starve unless America can send 1 •_> cup of walnut meats and 1 egg
K ihnunii A llenliy, eom niunilor o f th e B ritis h fo rc e s in P a le stin e , w ho h a s ta k e n H ee rsh e h a unii G uzu. » C a p tu re d
¡them food. Patriotic housewives well beaten. Add enough hot
G erm a n tla in n io n w e rfe r o r liq u id tire p o jo cto r. 4— llr ltls h e n g in e e rs laylntt a w ire rouil a c ro s s th e S in ai d e s e rt for
th e ad v a n c e on G aza anil J e ru s a le m .
j will take pleasure in confining the water to make of the right con-
i national feast to “made in Ann r- sistency and season with salt, pep-
humani'y than by neglecting our ica” foods, nor will they m ike the per and sage.
mistake of crowding the table with
Make the brownbread of 1 cup
usual Thanksgiving gorging.
Published every Thursday at Forest Grove, Oregon.
Thank God and treat your moredelicac.es than can possib'y each of rye (lour, cornmeal and
W. C. Benfer, Editor and Publisher.
stomach as if it wi re a sane part : I k * eaten at one meal. A u.’ges- graham (lour, 1 teaspoon of salt
and 1 rounded teaspoon of soda
«iven hm>:
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 12, 1916. at the postoffice at Forest Grove, of you, on Thanksgiving Day - Itive m,‘nu
Baked Chicken
PoUto Stuffing Sift together and add l* cup of
Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1879
Port land News.
Boston Brownbread
molasses and 2 CUp-t of sour milk.
Subscription Rates
WHAT STARTED
Candied Sweet Potato«-» Mashed I uniips Stir until Well mixed, then pour
Paid in advance
On Credit
Pickles
THE WAR
i A a n n i i e N Salad
o a l , t u Jelly
,l! l ***
the batter into buttered molds
1 t t h n u i/ i* and
a n d Apple
$1.00
One year
One year ...................
$1.50
Cabbage
In the first place a Servian So
clean
baking powder cans are ex-
Six months ............
..........50
Six months
.75
Pumpkin Pudding
Coffee
.25
Three months
Three Months
.40 cialist got drunk and killed an
'cellent—put
on th».* covers and
Austrian Nobleman and his es­ This dinner comes near to >e-
THURSDAY, NOV. 22, 1917
cort ior maybe it was his consort, j ing a wheatless one, and yet none st,*am
lf one do'*H not cart* for the
anyway it was some sort. Aus­ of the guests will be likely to miss pumpkin
“ 1 am sorry that you do not wear a flag every
pudding, a cornmeal
day and I can only ask you if you lose the physical
tria then got hot under the collar that grain so badly n<s*ded in pudding suggested by the Depart­
- . . ► emblem to be "fcure that you wear it IN YOllK
over the incident and said to Europe. Pumpkin pudding is ment of Agrieulture will Is* found
HEART ; the heart of America shall interpret the
heart of the world.” President Wilson.
Servia: “See here, we don’t want really only the time honored delicious. Cook 1 cup of corn-
any of that rough stuff I want pumpkin pie of early New Eng­ meal in 1 cups of milk in a double
to be a father to you. Come into land dinners with the crust boiler until the mixture is thick,
the woodshed.” Russia was peep­ omitted so as to save wheat then add 1 cup finely chopped
She Draws the Line
to recover a lost dollar, but re-
ing thru the fence when she heard Make it as you do the filling for figs or 1 pint of finely chopped
I laughed when you called me “Dari- fused to give even a dollar to the
the conversation, and seeing what pie, baking it in buttered molds sweet apples, as preferred, 1 cup
T l"g;
.
Army V. M. C. A. fund, to be
was going on said to Austria: set in a pan of hot water in the
I smiled when you said “ My Pet,
. . . . .
.
...
I’ve fallen for “ Dearie” and “ Dimples, ” USkJ 10 ^ « . n g American soldier ‘Don’t you dare touch that child. oven- an,t serve coId * ',h s,i*htly
m<da* p an.‘l 1 ,eBKP°i,n of HaU;
And everything else. But you bet
boy- from Europe a-clean as they He’s my kid and, anyhow, you’d 1 sweetened and flavored whipped VVIJe" ,he m,xluri*
a' '* ~
There is one thing that’s got to differ left home. If there i-n’t a hell,
i i i t
,
, | ■ i , i » » cream toDoed
bv a bit of red olum
oca en eggs, pour into <t hut-
topped
make a hell of a looking daddy. c^ am loppc<I
a 1,11 01 r,(J plum
pudding dish
and bake
bake in a -
From now till this great war is done.
........
” “ and
there ought to be.
“You’ve got another think com-
Unless you’re prepared for a riot
moderate oven 3 hours or more,
What has become of the old ing” an-wered Austria
‘I don’t
Recipes for potato stuffing and When partly cooked add 2 more
You’ve got to quit calling me “ Hun. ”
fashioned merchant who used to like the color of your eyes, any- Boston hrownbr -ad come from cufis of milk without stirring the
Do the people of Forest , Grove
/ 0Ve ‘ throw in” a pair of socks when how, and your feet don’t track be- Miss C. Ruch of University Place, pudding. Serve with cream or
realize that the high school
1 ° ° '’ you bought a pair of shoes? M ay- 1 sides, and I can lick you with one, Neb For the stuffing, place 1-4 saui’t*- M,' soun ^ allt*y 1‘armer.
ball team has won the only
. ' ‘ret‘ be he has moved over into the hand tied.” “ Bully Boy,” says cup of finely chopped salt pork in
You can get the Portland Ore-
games played this year—all shut­
I block with the other dealer, who Wilhelm of Germany./ “ If you a small frying pan, add 1 sma gontan six »lays a week, by mail,
outs? Some team, that.
used to “ throw in” a pair of sus- can’t lick him, I can, and bygosh, sliced onion and fry for 10 min-
* year* if^'.dT n
When the members of the late penders with a suit of clothes.
I’ll do it. I can lick anybody; I i utes Strain and add to the advance For Oregonian
y ’ P seven
congress voted to exempt their
The way some of the moneyed can lick eve ybody. We’ll take grease 2 cups of hot mashed po- days a week, add $2.00.
salaries from war taxes they put men of the nation act towards the h,m on together.” So Germany
themselves on record as financial Red Cross and Army “Y” leads ¡slips on to France when she ain’t
slackers, unfit to say what the the writer to hope that Uncle looking and lands with both feet
rest of us should do.
Sam will, before long, take steps *n the middle of Belgium. “Get
mY Belly” says Belgium, “or
Congress has taxed nearly ev­ to make >ome of the tight wads
erybody and everything to carry give up. But he may have to i ’ll bite your leg off." “Ouch,”
on the war, but they were sure . tart with some of the congress- says Germany, I’ll get ofT when
I get ready......... I’hat’s not fair’.’
not to tax their own saiaries. And men.
says
Fiance.” “Take that you
it was a nervy and unpatriotic
SAFE
AND
SANE
snob,” handing G rmany a hot
piece of business in exempting
THANKSGIVING
one in the snoot. “ I hate a scrap”
their own salaries, especially in
And maybe war will give us a says England, “but I can smash
this trying hour.
safe and sane Thankgiving.
the jaw of the guy that slaps my
Wives, poor things, have little
There has been much extra- frienrj ” “You don’t hate it
enough fun in the world. So, af- ordinary stuffing o f ourselves worse than I do,” says Japan as
To all Southern Pacific Stations in
ter you have laboriously obtained mixed up with our thanking of she squares off
a for
hand in the
Oregon, sale dates Nov. 28 and 29.
her consent to stay down town God, on Thanksgiving Day. We game> “ w elli I gUess you started
Return limit December 3, 1917.
until 11 o’clock, and the game is will have, on the coming national ¡t anyhow,” says William to Nick,
called off and you get home before day, more than ever to be gen- j ust then everybody begins to
9, you can’t blame her for laugh­ uine'y thankful to God for, and y(,||j “ You start'd it yourself;”
To all Southern Pacific Stations
ing at you.
nw ivlhan ever will it be sinful and'each one sticks out hi. tongue
and senseless to stuff ourselves. at the other fellow and they
in California, sale dates No­
Mr. Hoover has directed that
If we continue our u-ual gastro­ clinch and the little fellows begin
vember 24, 25, 20 and 27. Re­
no turkeys be killed for Thanks
nomic policy,
we are likely to to dance around watching for a
.
turn
limit Dec. 15, 1917.
giving this year. We really hadn’t
waste
more
in
one
day
than
all
chance
to
get
in
a
punch
and
run,
expected to kill any, recalling how
the campaigning for food conser- and there you are.—N. Y. Sun.
many storage turkeys the house­
a h
.
wives refused to buy last year, vation can save in a week.
ASK YOUR FOCAL AGENT FOR INFORMATION
President
Wilson,
in
his
procla-
HOOVCriZBil
and knowing the same turkeys
would be waiting this year.
V K :
Thanksgiving Dinner
John M. Scott,
“Shall we be more tender with world. The world as a whole is
Remember your Food Admin-
General Passenger Agent,
our dollars than with our sons?” going to be almighty hungry on j istration pledge card when you
Portland
asks President Wi l s o n .
We Thanksgiving Day, with frightful p|an the Thanksgiving dinner. It
shouldn’t be, but the editor of the shortage of food in very many would not be in keeping'with the
Express knows an old tight-wad parts. There is no better way o f. spirit of the day to serve a need­
in this city who would tear up ten arriving at such unity and per I lessly bountiful and extravagant
blocks of our Warrenite pavement forming such service to hungry feast to our o w n families and
¡Tit? jF itrrst (Srmtr S x p r e s a
NOTES AND COMMENTS
T h a n k s g iv in g park s
to all Stations in
Oregon and California
Oregon
California
A
Southern Pacific Lines