T H E BEAVERTON R E V IE W Friday, June 7. 1929 EGG SALAD WILL MEET ALL EMERGENCIES ñ K IT C M tN , C A B IN tT L s J FLASH l ' o r lia b y ' a ïV in lir S k i n C u t ic u r a LEAD DOG TA LC U M llt l W aatarn Nawapap«« Wa hop«, wa raoolvo, wa asplrs. w. pray And wa think that wa mount th« air 'n wlasa Bayomt Iha recall ot aanaual things, Whiis our fast «rill clln» to tha heavy clay Wins* for ih# angels, but feat for ment Wa may borrow tha wtnsa to and tha way — Wa m il hops, and raaolvo, und aaplra, and pray. But our feat must rtaa, or wa tall asatn. —J O Holland. SA LAD Egg Salad Ssrvss Many Knotty Probi am«. IfrtpArtd kr th* Sintra » p t i in m l o f A g r i c u l tu ie ) "W hat »hall we have for refresh­ ment»?” After the usual debate has taken place, whether the occasion la a luncheon, a card party, or a Sun­ day supper, some one generally solve« the knotty problem by suggesting. "W hy not have egg salad?” O f course. In the springtime, when eggs are abundant and gay colorings are in favor at mealtime, egg salad is the ▼ery thing. Without concerning one­ self entirely with the fact that any eggs on the menu add to the day's supply o f Iron, phosphorous and vita- mines, we all know that a hard-cooked salad is hearty enough for a main dish at luncheon or supper snd at­ tractive enough to appear before any company. Then, too, almost everybody is sure to like It. An egg salad Is particu­ larly good as basis for a Juvenile menu. The business woman who wants to entertain in the evening and serve refreshments, can hard-cook her eggs in the morning without in- terruptlng her preparations for leav­ ing the house early, and If she keeps mayonnaise and lettuce on hand her salad materials are ready to assemble quickly. The photograph from the bureau of home economics shows one o f the simplest and most effective ways of arranging egg salad on Individual plates. Kach hard-cooked egg is cut Into six lengthwise sections, which are set In a circle, giving the effect o f a daisy when the yellow mayon­ naise Is put In the center. Some­ times people like to cut the eggs In half lengthwise, take out the yolks and “ devil” them by mixing them with seasonings to taste— mustard, rayenne, or tabasco, sale vinegar, and some o f the mayonnaise. Then the mixture is neatly packed into the whites and served ou lettuce with dressing. To accompany an egg salad, cheese crackers or cheese biscuits are excel­ lent. or saltines or simple sandwiches may be served. COOK ASPARAGUS ! STRAWBERRY JAM DIFFERENT WAYS MOST DELICIOUS Cook Quickly to Avoid De­ Addition of Lemon Juice Adds Flavor to Dish. stroying Delicious Flavor. «* * ■ H U p salt I t ba b u t t e r F ew drops tabasco Cook the asparagus In a small amount o f water until almost tender. Beat the eggs slightly, add the milk and aeasoning. and then the cooked asparagus and the water In which cooked If not more than one-half cup. Grease a casserole and pour In the mtxtnre. bake In a pan surrounded by water In a moderate oven until set In the center. Serve at once. Spaghetti and Asparagus. S cups cooked spaghetti f cu ps asparagus. c u t In In ch p i e c e s 1 c u p rich m ilk o r cream 1 cup asparagus w ater 1 tbs butter t tbs flour H t sp s a l t % c u p fine b u t - t e r e d bread crum bs I o r 4 drops ta- basco The spaghetti must be thoroughly cooked In salted boiling water and then drained. Cook the asparagus for ten minutes. Prepare a sauce of the flour, butter, milk, and asparagus water, and add the tabasco and salt Grease a casserole and put in a layer o f the cooked spaghetti and then one o f asparagus. Cover with the cream sauce, continue until all Ingredients are used. Cover the top with the buttered bread crumbs. Place In an oven until the crumbs are golden brown. Asparagus Timbales. pound fresh as- paragus, abou t a dozen good-sized stalks S eggs 2 3 I H tbs . f bs. cup tsp. butter flour m ilk salt Wash the asparagus »well and cut the tender portion from the stems. (The stems are good for soup.) Cook the tips In a small amount of salted water for five or ten minutes or until soft. Force through a strainer or chop very fine. Prepare a cream sance o f the flour, butter and the milk. Add the very lightly beaten eggs and the asparagus and senson with salt and a little pepper. Fill buttered timbale molds, set In n pan o f hot wnter, and bake about 15 or 20 minutes or until set. Making Strawberry Jam. stir until the sugar is dissolved and a thick syrup Is formed. Add the re malnder o f the fruit and continue the rapid cooking, stirring frequently to prevent scorching. An asbestos mat should he placed under the pan ns a precaution. Cook from 30 to 45 minutes until fairly thick, then add the lemon Juice. The Jam should then have a brilliant red color, and some o f the fresh flavor o f the fruit. The Jam thickens when cold, and should not be cooked down too much. Place the Jam In sterilized Jars, seal and store. Sauce With Strawberry Flavor for Pudding* A hard sauce with strawberry flavor Is Just the thing for puddings while these delicious berries are In season. It Is good on plain cake or baked cot­ tage pudding. The recipe Is from the bureau o f home economics. Vi c u p b u t t e r cup powdered sugar 44 1 cu p f r e « h straw - berrlea H tsp. salt W hite o f 1 e g g Cream the butter, and add the sugar and sale When thoroughly mixed, add the stiffly beaten white o f egg, and the strawberries which have been crushed. The acidity o f the berries causes the sauce to separate some­ what, and to overcome this, warm It slightly over hot water and stir It until It Is smooth. Serve at once, or chill If a thicker sauce is desired. HINTS As salad Is one of the dishes which should be as common as the dally bread. It Is wise to have a list o f combinations at hand, so one may use available material wisely. Here are a few com­ binations of flsb snd meat that make good salads. During the sum­ mer such a salad can take th* place o f hot or cold meats making a much more seasonable dish. With chicken, ripe olives, celery, salted almonds and lettuce. Salmon, hard-cooked eggs, celery, sour pickle, a dash o f onion Julc« and watercress. Chicken, #green peas, celery, rice, pimento, green olives and any salad green. Minced ham, cottage cheese, pickled onions and lettuce. Hat» with chopped seasoned beets, a pink salad dressing and lettuce nests, and chopped chives. Veal, lamb or chicken, celery, cu­ cumber, lettuce. Crisp bacon, shredded onion and lettuce with hot bacon fat for the dressing. Tuna fish, celery, pi men toe* and lettuce or cress. Salmon, with fresh grated coconut, finely chopped olives and lettuce. * Lobster, crabmeat. halibut, green peppers, cabbage and a bit o f fresh ptnesi-pu. Lamb or tougwa s i^ d , celery, cab bage. peas and some salsa Finnan lladdle, hard-cooked egg. pt memo, green pepper, celery. Shrimps, celery, cucumbers, stuffed olives, lettuce with a dash o f Wor­ cestershire sauce. Corned beef minced, cooked minced beets, deviled eggs and head lettuce. A well-seasoned boiled salad dress­ ing. or one made with the vegetable oils will he best with meats. Roast pork or veal, minced pepper, celery, cucumber, tomato and cress. Oysters, celery, horseradish, red pepper, lettuce. Diced ham, celery, cabbage, cucum­ ber, tomatoes, and lettuce or endive Good Eating. Here Is something that will he un usual to serve on special occasions. Stuffed C o r n Fritter.— Prepare corn fritters as usual, cook In fat and drain so that they will ont he greasy. Cool to handle and split Dip thin slices of chicken Into mayonnaise, place In a small Inner leaf o f lettuce and Insert In the fritter. Serve on leaves of let tuce. Garnish with stalks of celery, sliced tomato or cucumbers. Rhubarb Conssrvs.— While rhubarb may he cooked with Its peeling try preparing a good Jelly or conserve for fall and winter. Take tender rhubarb unpeeled. cut Into half-inch lengths and cook with the Juice of an orange to a pound of the rhubarb and an equal weight o f sugar. Add a cupful o f raisins to two pounds c f the fruit If desired and a half cupful o f shredded blanched al tnonds. Cook until thick. Seal for winter. Rhubarb Jelly.—Cook one-half cup ful of seeded raisins In boiling water until tender and the water nearly ab sorbed. Skim out the raisins, add two cupfuls of unpeeled rhubarb and one cupful of sugar, a pinch of salt, the Juice and grated rind of an orange and cook very slow ly; shake the pan but do not stir to break the fruit Add one fourth of a package of gelnt • dia solved hi cold water, add boiling water to make two cupful« ('hill, place In layers with the raisins In a ring mold t'hlll and serve unroolded with whipped cream. Stuffed Peeled Apricots.— Fill the seed cavities of apricots, canned or fresh with chopped almonds and or­ ange marmalade. Fur together In pairs and arrange iu nests o f whipped creum In shallow sherbet glasses. Top wllh a rim of cream piped around the glass, using a pastry tube. Serve with a spoonful of preserved cherries or Bar le Due currants. Angel Food Cake.— Take one cupful o f egg whites, treat until foamy then add one-fourth teaspoonful o f cream o f tartar, finish heating until stiff, add one and one-fourth cupfuls o f finely sifted granulated sugar (add very slowly), then one cupful o f pastry flour sifted with one-fourth teaspoon- ful of cream o f tartar. Add the flour to the egg and sugar mixture very carefully so as not to break down the egg, flavor with vanilla and almond— one-half teaspoonful each. Bake In a tube pan In a very slow oven for one and three-fourths hours. Brown the last fifteen minutes. " K l L L l * Trust’ s O pportunit y AROUND THE HOUSE A fork creams butter more quickly than a spoon. • a a The best mnf’ ress will lose Its shape on uneven sagging snrlngs. a • • A few chopped date* In the dish of rereal may make It twice as attrac­ tive. • a • The tougher cuts of meat properly prepared uiay be as delicious as the expensive cuts. Plenty of heat, and moisture, and slow cooking will do the trick. a • a A child should drink half a cup of water liefore breakfast to start hi* day right, a a a To roll a Jelly roll without crack­ ing turn out of the baking tin upon a cloth wrung out o f cold water. Then spread with Jelly, and as it Is rolled the steam from the wet cloih will pro­ ven! the cracking of the roll. An oceanographer suggests that the world's weather might be stabilized hy keeping the polar Ice constantly on the move. What a chance, that, for the power trusts to sign up some serv­ ice contracts.—New Orleans Tim e» i’lcayune. With a Bump It makes no difference whether one follows the teachings of Klnsteln or of Newton; when the stock market hreaka, a lot o f people come down P earth.—Kalamazoo Gazette. G E O R G E M A R SH by THE PENN PUBLISHING C O . W. N. U- 9m*m •YNOPSI8 I’ p th « w ild o f t h « un* k n o w n Yatlow -T .«*. on * winter*« h u n t . J o u r n e y H r o o h M e C a ln a n d G a a p n rG L « c r o I * . h i » P r o n c h - C r o « conuade. w ith Flash, IIrock • p u p p y a n d t h « l r dog: t « a m I t r o o k 'a f a t h e r had w a rn e d him o f t h « d a n « « r o f hi« trip A ft« r aeveral Hatt ie « w i t h t h « s t o r m y w a t « r « t h e y a r r i v e at a f o r k tn t h e Y e l ­ l o w - L e * . B r o c k 1« « e v « r « l y in* |ur«d tn m a k i n g a p o r t a « « a n d F l a s h l e a d « O a * p a r d t o t h « un - co n a c to u « youth. T h « trapp«ra race d «sp«ra tety to r«ach th«lr d e s t i n a t i o n befv*re w i n t e r * « t a In F l a s h e n g a g e s In a d e « p « r » t e fight w it h a w o l f and k ills hhu G a spard tell» B rock o f hi« d e ­ t e r m i n a t i o n t o find o u t w h o k i l l e d ht« f a t h e r . T r a c k « a r e d t o c o v t r o d and th « t w o b oy» «e p a ra t« for •couttng purposes. B rock 1« Jumped by t w o Indians and a w h it « m an and k n o c k e d u n c o n - • c l o u s . H « la hs ld p r i s o n e r . G a a - p a r d r e s c u e s h i m w h t l a h»« c a p - to r» sleep G aspard b «ll« v e a th e»« m e n k i l l e d hi s f a t h e r a n d 1« p r e ­ vented from k illin g them by B r o o k . W h i l e ou t a l o n e G a s p a r d Is s h o t f r o m a m b u s h b y a n I n ­ dian a n d kills his w o u ld - b e «la yer. W h i l e o u t o n hie t r a p l i n e s B r o c k 4s c a u g h t In a h e a v y e n o w s t o r m >1« is l o s t a n d hi s f o o d g i v e s o u t 111« h o p e s a r e ra i s e d w h e n he d i s c o v e r « a m o o se trail H e kills a m o o s « a n d finds G a s p a r d ’ s tra il. Oaspard finds another Indian t r a ilin g him and w o u n d « him. CHAPTER IX — Continued — 1 $— Then the youth drew his skinning knife. His glittering eyes drew due« to the ash-gray fnce of the muu who lay by the Are under the blankets. “ Were you here— last long snows—In this country?” he asked, hoarse with passion. The pinched face nodded. “There was a man—from the south —ambushed. In the month of the melt­ ing snow. Is he silver* tn the eyes of the Indian fear gave » a y to a look of bewilderment, of agony, > . i.„ sin-d: ” 1 am very rick.” “ Yon saw this hunter?" pressed tn« Inexorable sou of I’lerre Lecrolx. The Indian feebly nodded. “ Is he s i lv e r There was no answer. Gaspard glanced at the distorted face, blood­ less. still; then fumbled under the Indian's capote for the heart beau There was none. Rising, the batiled son ot I’ lerre Le- crols shook his flats at the Insensate spruce. In his heart was no pity fur this man at his feet, who had tracked him that day to shoot him through the back. These men had taken fnxu him the father he loved—were rulh lessly bunting down Brock and hiui self. At that moment, bis missing partner mlgh* lie somewhere, stiff In the snow, as thla assassin lay here, al his feeL It was war to the death, now. b* tween Guspard l-ecroli and the men who had taken from him father and his friend. Through the winter lie would hunt them as one hunts the wolverine who robs the trapline#. Be­ fore the March crust they would leam that od their trails followed a tracker merciless as the carcajou, ontirlng as the timber wolf. The war was on I Leaving the body o f the fr e e to the toothed and clawed mercies of the wood-folk, who would shortly And If under the heap o f »now wllh which Gaspard covered It, be continued on Ills wide circle north of the big luke. Heartsick with thoughts of his miss log partner, be approached the camp Eighteen days now, be thoughL With the country full of game Brock couldn't have starved, even If lost. And If lost. In time he was hound to find the lakes or the river. No. they had taken or killed him—the friend he loved. The dogs, ravenous with hunger, greeted him with a chorus of yelps. Then he saw. standing In the anow. Brock's trapping sled. His heart bounded. Brock was safe— had come home! Brock was alive— his partner — was alive! “ Kekwny!" he shouted In Ms Joy, running to the tent “ Hal You Bsock!” But the tent was empty. Ue had gone again I Where? Circling the camp, Gnspard found his own trail of three days before, followed by the well known tracks of Brock’s wider webs. “ By Oar! He go to And Gnspard!" cried the excited hunter. Then, In his emotion, he hugged each o f the clam orlng huskies. With Brock alive, the situation was changed. Ue now had some one to live for—to take care of. ills promise to Angus McCain, made at Hungry House, to bring Brock back, bound Mm. He could not ask Ms partner to go north with Mm and throw bis life a « ay In a mad attempt at ven geance. He would slay wllh ilrock anal eea cross dog, dat Flash!” “ Hla heart's all iron, and the way he traveled on an empty stomach wus a caution. He bsdn t eaten for days when he tackled thnl moose. Gas mini. If anything happened to that pup, f'U waul in quit.” The leun features »> (|,e other lighted In understanding. Il wus liru .» McCain's way, to love Ms friend, bis dog. with all the capacity of his big heart. There were no reservallons In Brock a a a a a a a Hitching the dugs to the long, haul Ing sled which hud cuine un the euuoe loud all the wuy from Hungry House, with Flash In the rear, behind Hilt Far, to separate Mm from Ihe teud er. Yellow Kye, the hoys started nexi dny over Brock's trap tin* trull, bur led under the new allow Gnspard led the team, trumping the hew snow dow n to the Ire hard Irull beneuth. now frozen solid to the ground hy the cuustatil traveling of Brock uud Flash with the trapping sled With (he tangible warnings Gas pard and Brock already hud hud. to uttempt to flnlsli the whiter on Yel low-l.eg lakes meant a life of con stunt vigilance. Otice their enemies from Ihe north worked south of the big lake and found the trap line trails, they might be ambushed ir taken In Iheir sleep, for the dogs could be poisoned or shut. Bul never, fur an Inst uni, did the two hunters consider a retreat. The heart of Gaspard Le croIx knew but one desire—desire for knowledge o f how his father died ami for vengeance on llun'« respons llile for Ms death. And little as Brock relished llie Idea o f leaving Ms bones In the wilderness uf the Yellow l-eg Ills loyalty tn tils friend and Ms fight Ing spirit admitted no ilinughl of avoiding whut the long snows held for them Alreudy they had given the strangers g o o d proof of what nii.n hunters might ex|iect In Iht. forests ol the south. Two hud gone out, nr ver to return. And Inter, on the March crust, when the go'ng wus good, the hunted ones would turn hunters. Ho ran the thoughts of Hie friends ar, they made rump on the eve of the hunt on the big barren. L’ nder stars still bright In a purple sky. Brock and GaspurU cooked break fast. I.envlng Hie wliini|>erlng dogs— begging to be taken —wired to trees the partners stiowshoed to the flank of the barren and waited for d a w , Two days liefore, Gaspan had counted a hundred caribou, but now. as Hie blue east grayed, nn 1 Hie froaty stars puled and fa led. they wondered wlielh er ghostly patrols of Ihe phantom wanderers o f the north were out there In Hie shadows digging with round pied hoofs for the reindeer moss of the bu.ren At last Hie hitter dawn slashed through Hie ashen east with rose and pearl and nmher slits of light. Th* Ideal powder for his doily toilet and for assuring Impersunslvumfott lYshuily medusted snd uneivellrd in purity, il pre­ venís i listing snd imtstion, snd soothes, cools snd comfdtls fender skins, luid everywhere. Tthuia lie. 2"*t> li<- 4 lut lincili DC. Look Lik » Small Hard to Set Limit to Height of Buildings One hundred story skyscrapers will lie as common In Hi* city o f th* future as Hie twenty-story building Is today, according to Dr. George A. Ilol# of Ohio State university. Ills prophecy Is based partly oji Hie development of a new kind o f brick, says Popular Me­ chanics Magazine. It weighs only one- sixth us much as the usual varieties, hut la sold to have greater strength and Are resisting qualities. Ordinary brick weighs 120 pounds to th* cubic foot. The Improved form weighs but 20 pounds to tit* ruble foot. The new tllu will defy a temperature o f 8,200 degrees for 10 hours, according to re­ ports. Because o f Its lightness and strength this material will permit higher buildings wllh more pyramid­ ing. thinner walls and therefor* less bulk, to that spare will lie saved for prartlcal uses. Many And Russ Ball Blue good tonle for chickens. Imrge package at Gro­ cers.—Adv. To Trap B om bing Plana* Captive balloon«, hearing nets o f piano wlr* that hang down as Invisible hnrriers for night traveling airplanes, have been proposed as a means of curbing bomb attarks under darkness, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. Aflozt at an altitude o f 1,000 feet or so, a number o f these trap hearing balloons would form a serious ohstarle to the bombing planes, which must fly comparatively low and are operated chiefly on very dark nights when they arc not to likely to be seen. Illg flns, holding gas, keep Ihe hallpont afloat, and what appears to he a huge ey* In each hag. Is th* valv* for the gas. W h a le W a , M o n ,te r The enormous skeleton o f a 5,(XXi year old Greenland whale has been found al Kistlnge, near Hnlinslud Sweden, by workmen digging a ditch neur Hie seashore. A monstrous Jaw hone, mensiirlrig iitiout thirteen feet In length, has already been unearthed, tin account o f Its size It was first taken hy the workmen (o lie n part of the hull o f an ancient vessel. The hone has been examined hy archeologists, who estimate the whale to have lived at Hie end of the Ice age, about 5,(XX> years ago.— Kansas City Star. Need Change ot P a ,tu re We are apt lo groe stale and ihln mentally If kept loo long In the sunn pasture.—Sir Wllllutu Datei DR. CALDWELL’S THREE RULES Dr. Csklsr»tl watched Uis results of constipâtlua fur 4? ysert. snd b»l»v»d that no matter how careful people ar* of th»lr health, disk end «sarei»». ooe- stlpalioe will occur from tim« to Mm». Of n*st importane*, thso, is how to tr**k It when It roe»»». Dr. Caldwell slway* was is favor of gvttlng a» clou* to nature as poaaiblv, bene» his rvmmly for ennsU- palion is a mild vegvtabU oompouad It ran »ot barm the m«wl deliaaU system and I* not habit forming. The Itoctor never did spprov« of dras­ tic physirs and purge« 11« did not believe they were good l e human twinge to put Into their •reteñí. Use Hvrup P«p«ln for yoararlf and members of tb» family I» constipation.biltouane»»,»our and rrampv stomach, had breath, no appetite, h»«d sebes, sad to break up fevers aad colds. Get a botti» Malay, at any drugstore ssd obaervs these (hr*« rala» of health K*«p th« head Pool, the feet warm. Ih# how»la own For a fre* trial (mule, )u»t wrli# “ Hvrup Pepalo.“ Kept, li H. MouUcalloi. Illinois. ■ i- .1" .. Juriata All C o lla g i« » « All o f Hie Juatlcc» o f the (Tilted State* Supreme court are college grad unte» and Hie majority o f them have advanced or honorary degrees from several universities. Th# colleges from which they first graduated are as fol­ low s: Taft, Y'nle; Holmes. Harvard; Y'an Devsnter, I>* Psuw and Cincin­ n ali; Mclfeynolds, Vanderbilt univer­ sity; Braudels, Harvard; Sutherland. University o f Michigan; Ilutler. Carle- ton eollege, Minnesota; Hanford, Uni versify o f Tennessee and Harvard; Stone, Amherst rollcf* and Columbia. S»«l»tjr’ s High Aims “ Toe 1!“ was a sign on a soldier's restroom back o f the trenches uf Ypres. “T oe" wni the British sol­ diers’ nickname for “ ten" snd “ II" was tli* abbreviation for "house," It was In this teahouse that a society known ns “Toe 11“ originated. It Is a young men’s movement with the following Ideals; To consecrate humanity; tn ronquer hate; to crest* harumny. It Is s protest against the old evil tradi­ tions which make a world war pos­ sible. Accidentally an Arkansas Indy cured fits In a valuable dog with Buss Bull Blue. Many others now use It. Nev­ er falls, she soys.—Adv. What Hie world also suffered from 100 years ago was bad Jokes. Bead the old almanacs. Bilious ? ■M« Nt - N avcses Ratranv—«e- nkrM. You’ll b« "Aland ins" by momla# — tongu« rlraz. nradrh« pm* «ptwtit» hack, bow*la «clin* pUsrantly. blltoua «U tek forsotun. Far constipation, loo. Bat­ ter than «nv n sn Iszstlr«. Weak After Operation "A bou t five months ago, following an operation tox appendicitis I did not gain strength enough to be up and about. M y mother and lister advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com ­ pound. I have taken five bottlca and it haa helped me to get strong to 1 can do my own housework now. I have recom­ mended it to several friends who have been weak and run­ down.’'— Mr*. Oicar Ottum, Box 474, Thief River Falb, Minn. Lydia E. Pinkham's Valetaille Compound I . I , I I V , M r I I ., I ...... M .,| Idea far Ckaaaat Tuanal Th* latest Idea for Hi* Knglleh chan­ nel tunnel la (hat th* tunnel would begin II mil*» from (he sea at Monks Horton with nn exit nine miles front Hi* French coast. Trains would b* pulled hy electric engines, at t>2 miles an hour. Safe, m lid, partly vegetable— P A R K E R 'S H A IR B A L S A M tOTMUMMlruff «Ir Emilia« R a stofM Cola* aw l B «*«rty »** G ray an«i Kaiiafi Hair —e and It no at !*««»<•<•■ Hlorc.g Wk> ru e h o g ’i* W 1 FLOR EATON SHAMPOO-M-»! tor aro la * larkff'» H»lp Balaam Mah oath« eoo nor lion with ! hair «nd fluff flu ii yr. _ AOernU , _____ Ik Atr soft »oft and bjr inail nr __ «I t r . «laU. Iliac«i < bamieal Work«, l ’suh ofu», N. A t Druggists — only 25« ( T O B R C O N T IN U E D .) thy lot shall be my lot, ‘nor shame, nor loss, nor prison liars shall move me from thy side’.” —Chicago Post ik legs When » man hn» come lo Hi* Mira­ tine» o f Night, nil Ihe rreeda In Hie world seen) to litiu wonderfully alike and colorless. — Kipling. Natural Ga* Wait# The problem o f what to do with large quantities o f natural gna which are going tn waste Is troubling th* S a if D e fe a * « bureau o f mines. “ If a man smashed a cluck, could h* In many areas the gat cannot h* be convicted o f killing tlifle?” trau»i»..««.t for fuel and local condi­ "Not if the clock atrurk Ural." tions hsvs prevented Its being re­ — ■ *■ ................"i turned to the oil sum!» to form new ■ oil. The result has been a tremendous waste. The bureau It seeking some mentis o f ronvertlng It Into products such ns methanol, ammonia, formal­ dehyde and other such things which uiay lie *cotionilcfllly transported to markets. NECO Makes A Car Look Like New Dog’s Claim as Man’s Most Faithful Friend Most boys and many girls, snd lO.OUtl times lO.OUU men and women, love dogs. We don’t know when thla loyal, unfailing friend of man first met him. first learned to defend Ills Hocks, his dwelling. Ills person and the lives of those dear to him. bul wherever we have till* creature we call man, there we have found Ms faithful friend and companion, the dog, always willing to billow him through thick and then, never seem Ing to care for an Instant whether Ills master was rich or poor, wise oi Ignorant, saint or sinner, alas even when beaten, starved, cruelly treated ready to lick the hand Hint has hurt him. A good man once suld, "When my father nod mother forsake me then the Lord will take me up." Might not one say that, when a man might feel forsaken o f every earthly friend there would still he looking up Into his face the gentle, trustli g eyes of his devoted dog, saying by every look und sign, “ Where thou goest 1 will go, Ss uuile « i h lise. .iJ J im i: "C u lli ars." Delie- Ha. Melile». Mass ^ GLENN’S S ulphur S o a p (onfiina « . * >r* Sulphar Nitll eruption». •»«•••I t « purvptmtlom, lr»*m bit*«, rnll«*Tw 4 stone* bf thla rs- frwuhlnir. tiAsntifylnt toil tat and bmtb iotp. Heat for Soft, Clear Skin W rit* at on« * (bf pa rticu lar« pxj can |rt FREE ■ quart i»n n| NECO, th* amrv 1er fui lupini (hat malipa old «nt! faded cara Inali llk« pew by mtorlni tha original reim and htatra Writ» today to Mira L W NEEDHAM 8 CO.. 1 000 Garrtmtwin Avenu« Portland. Oregon SC H O O L FOR M EN Tratafla« far BUSIMKJS ft ADCS « PROFUSIONS E n roll a n y tim e. Mend for litera tu ra O R E G O N IN S T IT U T E O P T E C H N O L O G Y V I L V . A 141*1« P o r tla n d O r S o h la n d a H typtl* 1-,t u ,n . Vm w . N. U., PORTLAND, NO. 22-192«. W hoW antstobeBald? N o t m a n y , and w h e n y o u a re g e t t in g th a t w a y a n d lo o s in g Hair, w h ic h e n d s in b a ld n e s s , y o u w a n t a £ o o d r e m e d y th a t w ill s to p fa llin g h a ir, d a n d r u ff an d g r o w h a ir o n th e b a ld h ea d B A R E -T O -H A IR is w h a t y o u w a n t. r<* Sale st An DraWrs la TsIM Artfelra W. H. Forat. Mfgr. Ä .'S . Scottdala. Penna,