The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942, January 19, 1917, Image 2

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    PERILS COME WHEN FORTUNE SMILES
When about to make a choice,
X hear In tone of Ire
A stern God's tremendous voice
"Be counseled and retire."
Many a men Is Just a good, honest,
worthy felhrtr If he hasn't a dollar In
his pocket and
tan i.
1 J
I.: "
must toll hard to
earn hli dally
bread. Be thlnki
himself most for
tunate of men if
a nice young wom
an, .employed as
he U, looks with
favor upon his
suit, giving him
reason to hope
she will not say
nay when be Is
ready to propose
marriage.
Hard toll makes
a man thrifty,
careful of his
money and saving
If anything can.
He stops smoking yheft he counts the
cost, walks to and from his work and
Is exceedingly careful of his clothes.
' He Is termed a model young man.
Let a change of fortune come to any
man and who can tell what he will de
velop Into through the Influence of
money? If he suddenly become pos
sessed of a fortune left by an old
uncle or aunt of whom he barely
knew the existence the good or bad
qualities with which he Is possessed
assert themselves with astonishing
rapidity. Though he may not have
been noticed In office or shop to any
extent before, he suddenly finds him
self the center of attraction. A host
of flattering friends spring up about
him. The larger the fortune to which
he has fallen heir the higher up the
class of men who seek him out, make
his acquaintance and show their de
sire to chunk with him. Education and
manners might bar him from some
homes, but, Independent of this, he Is
welcomed In the majority of others.
If he has become a millionaire over
night, he finds himself all at once lit
tie less than a god. Great business
opportunities are offered him by well'
known men. Brokers full over each
other to show him the menagerie at
the stock market. Keal estate men
are anxious to sell him mansions.
Automobile plutocrats Invito him out
for a spin reminding him that a man
In his position cannot possibly do
without a motor. The most beautiful
of women Insist upon their fathers,
ancles or brothers Introducing him not
only to their exclusive clubs, but to
them.
It would make poor old uncle or
aunt who had hoarded that wealth
so carefully turn over in their graves
to see the gct-rlcli-qulck relative make
ducks and drakes of that fortune. In
story books, the young mnn weds the
girl who loved him and whom he loved
In poverty. In renl life, the new and
wonderful Influences brought to bear
upon him crowd her out of his
thoughts and his heart. Newer fan
cies take nossesslon of him. Ilia
wealth files like chaff before the wind.
He Is dosed with power and pleasure.
His attorneys cry "Halt I" In vain. He
does not heed. lie Is sure he could
never spend a million of money dur
ing the rest of his lifetime. Such
cases always end In the same old way
-the fool and his wealth are soon
parted. Friends and acquaintances
By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY.
drop off like leaves In autumn and the
fair women close their doors against
him. Only the girl who loved him In
the other days proves steadfast and
true. We may board, deny ourselves
the plain comforts of life, but who
knows how the money is to go at the
end?
(Copyright, 1914.)
Younger Brother Held Down
By Attitude of His Elders
If a younger brother ever amounts
to, anything It is in spite of his older
brothers. The treatment he receives
at their bands while he is young
makes It almost impossible for him to
meet and talk to people when be is
grown. They find fault with every
thing he does, and bring their com
bined Influence to bear in an effort
to get him to run away from home.
The result Is that he keeps out of
their presence, and since they are so
down on him he presumes that other
people are also down on him, says a
writer.
He gets to looking and acting like
a homeless hound that is hated by
everybody in the neighborhood. The
poor hound has had so many rocks
thrown at him by men, women and
children that he has quit looking for
a friend. When he sees anyone com
ing he goes off at full speed, and gives
a yelp, as If be had already been bit
When the younger brother sees one or
more of his older brothers he turns
off and goes in another direction.
The oldest boy in the family de
serves little credit even If he wins
wealth and fame, but If the younger
brother ever reaches the point where
be can earn a dollar a day, he should
be crowned with bays.
Plans to Make Waves Supply
the Power to Propel Boats
A system of driving a vessel by
means of wave motors is covered In
a recent patent granted to Benjamin
P. Roach of Berkeley, Cal., who pro.
poses to make use of the motion of the
waves as well as the rocking of the
boat to store up the necessary power
to drive the craft through the water.
This accumulation of power Is accom
plished mainly by the means of a false
bow pivoted to the main part of the
ship's structure, and a somewhat simi
lar arrangement In the stern of the
vessel.
The bow and stern form loose por
tions which are actuated by every
plunge of the vessel and with each
movement of these parts air compress
ing pistons are operated, and a quan
tity of compressed air is forced Into
tanks, and subsequently drawn upon
for the propulsion of the vessel.
Why Rubber Is Scarce.
It Is only 27 years since the first
pneumatic tlrasr were made those, of
course, being for bicycles, but today
"the pneumatic tire business of the
world Is estimated at the enormous
sum of $650,000,000."
TO WASH BLANKETS
OPERATION TAKES TIME IF GOOD
WORK 18 WANTED.
"BLUE MONDAY" AND ITS REAL CAUSE
By DR. SAMUEL O. DIXON.
Commissioner of Health of Pennsylvania.
nlng of the next week's labor and
take up their business on Monday
morning exhausted and overtired in
stead of refreshed by the "day of rest."
The other class goes to extremes by
overeating and" underexercislng and
the result Is equally unhappy.
Try to strike a happy medium. He
member that the cheerfulness which al
most Invariably begets its like Is well
nigh impossible to one who is fagged
out or dulled by overeating.
Is it a habit of yours to get out of
bed on the wrong foot on Monday
morning? Do you
start for the olflce
with a frown on
your face and a
look In your eye
that Bets the of
flee boy bunting
for an errand out
side and starts
the whole force
with a grouch
that lasts for the
better part of the
day?
Salesman who
make use of psychology in their bust'
ness are very apt to postpone their
Monday calls until after lunch. By
that time the atmosphere has cleared
a little.
When you come to think of It the
week's work too often slips off the
ways with considerable friction. In
olflce, school and household. If this Is
not the rule It is of sufficiently fr
quent occurrence to make the picture
familiar to all.
With many people It Is not because
their dally tasks are distasteful or that
their real attitude toward their asso
ciates Is aggressive; It is more a mat
ter of rather ill-concclved Ideas of
what constitutes rest or diversion.
It Isn't possible In a few words to
describe the Snturday-until-Monday
habits of everyone. The majority of
people, however, are apt to fall into
two general divisions. One class tries
to crowd too much into the time be
tween one week's end and the begin-
Floating Gardens of China, Immune
Alike to Drought or Flood, Often
Avert Famine
The first point of Interest to the
traveler In China Is the boat town of
Canton. The Chookenng, or Pearl riv
er, for a distance of miles, Is covered
with boats, which form the residences
of a numerous population. Land Is
valuable In China, and It Is presumed
that tho rent of the river Is merely
nominal.
The Chinese not only live on the riv
er:), but they also use them for gar
dening purposes. In the month of
April a bamboo raft, ten to twelve feet
long and about half as wide, is pre
pared. Tho poles are lashed together, with
Interstices of an Inch between each.
Over this a layer of straw an Inch
thick Is spread, and then a coating two
Inches thick of adhesive mud, tuken
from the bottom of a canal or pond,
which receives the seed.
The raft is moored to the bank In
still water, and requires no further
attention, The straw soon gives away
and the soil also, the roots-; dru wing
support from the water ulon.
In about 20 duys the ray becomes
covered with the creeper . ' omoa rep
tans), and Its stems f ' roots are
gathered for cooking
small white '
autumn its
uud yellow
t the round
. retty nppvar-
jver, is to raise
. ncr'a family, and,
with half a dozen of these rafts, a
Chinaman will have enough and to
spare, says an exchange.
In the lower Yang-tse-Klang and the
Hoang-Ho rivers, extensive rice fields
are cultivated In this manner. Upon
rafts constructed as above, weeds und
udhereut mud are placed as a flooring,
and when the rice shoots are ready
for transplanting, they are placed In
the floating soil, which, being adhesive
and held in place by weed roots, the
plants are maintained in position
throughout the season, the rice ripen
ing In from 00 to 70 days.
The rafts are fastened to the shore
by cables, and these floating fields
have served to avert famine, whether
by draught r flood. When other
fields wero submerged and their crops
sodden or rotten, these floated and
flourished, and when a drought pre
vailed, they subsided with the falling
waters, and, while the soil around was
arid, advanced to maturity.
Where She'd Suit
The bride who tried to kill herself
when her husband stuyed away from
home a few hours would make a
dandy wife for a rich Invalid. Brand
Kuplds News.
' Perverse Ways.
As n general thing, It Is the women
who wear tho veils and the men who
can't fuee the music Galveston News.
MOTHER'S
COOKBOOK
Nothing Is easier than fault-finding, no
ielf-dental, no brains, no character are re
quired to set up In the grumbling busi
ness. Robert West
. Pork Cake.
Take one cupful each of fat chopped
salt pork, boiling water, molasses,
dried apple and sugar.- Add the boil
ing water to the pork; cook the mo
lasses and a cupful of dried apple
which has been soaked over night, a
teaspoonful of cinnamon and a half a
teaspoonful each of cloves and nut
meg with a half cupful of raisins,
three hours ; add the other Ingredients,
two eggs, one teaspoonful of soda and
two of cream of tartar, flour to make
a soft dough. Bake slowly one hour.
Crumb Cake.
Mix well together one-half a cupful
of butter, one and a half cupfuls of
sugar, two cupfuls of flour. Add two
teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two
eggs, a cupful of milk and a teaspoon
ful of flavoring. Mix the sugar, but
ter and flour together; when well
blended take out a cupful of the mix-
turo and add the eggs, well beaten.
the milk and flavoring to the remain
der. Put Into the cake pan and sprinkle
with the reserved cupful of the mix
ture. Bake In a moderate oven.
Cinnamon Bun.
Cream a half cupful of butter, add
a cupful of sugar gradually, then the
yolks of two eggs beaten lightly, two
cupfuls of flour sifted with two tea-
spoonfuls of baking powder and a -tea
spoonful of cinnamon, add a half cup
ful of milk alternately with the flour,
then add a half cupful of raisins and
fold In the whites of the eggs. Bake
In a sheet and, while hot, spread gen
erously with butter, and sprinkle with
powdered sugar and cinnamon mixed
together.
Lunch Cake.
Soften, but do not melt, a third of a
cupful of butter, add a cupful and a
third of brown sugar, two eggs, a half
cupful of milk, three teaspoonfuls of
baking powder, a half teaspoonful each
of cinnamon and nutmeg grated, one
and three-fourths cupfuls of flour. Beat
all together threo minutes, add a half
cupful of raisins, and bake 40 minutes
In a moderate oven.
Warm Water, Ammonia, and White
8oap Is Recommended Articles
. Mutt on No Account Be Sub
I . jected to Rubbing.
Housecleanlng means many weary
ing tasks, but the worst of them all is
washing blankets. It takes a good
ly amount of money from the house
keeper's allowance to send these to
the cleaner's, especially where there
is a large family. So the woman who
decides to "do" ber own blankets
should learn the very easiest way to
manage them. -
Here Is one system guaranteed by
an experienced housekeeper : Put
half pint of ammonia into a tub and
stretch the blankets over it, not al
lowing them to slip down Into the fluid,
This should then be covered with luke
warm water. This process allows the
fumes of the ammonia to rise through
the blanket and loosens the dirt. Good,
vigorous squeezing will do the rest
Blnse In a tub of clear warm water
and run lightly through the wringer,
Here Is another and more compli
cated method, designed for use on
very soiled blankets: Air, beat and
brush the blankets out on the line be
fore washing, so that every possible
piece of fluff and down is removed,
Then shave a couple of bars of good
wool soap Into a basin, add It to a
pan of boiling water and allow it to
"Jell" for a few minutes. -fow have
a tub dr stationary washtub half full
of warm water with a half cupful of
ammonia In It. Mix the soap In with
this, then put In your blankets. Stir
them around with a stick, but do not
rub them squeeze and souse them up
and down. When the top of the water
begins to become scummed with dirt
the water should be changed. The
second water, should be like the first,
The sousing process must be repented
until all the dirt Is removed. Knse
In clear water. Then put them through
the wringer the jaws of which should
be very wide apart or they will make
your blankets look stringy and hang
out on the line.
Blankets should be hung lengthwise
on the line, using plenty of pins, so
that they have, no chance to i
Shade is better than sun for drying
them. When they are quite dry go
over them well with a clean whisk
broom, brushing with the nap. This
makes them delightfully fluffy. Fold
away with camphor balls or In moth
proof bags.
and Otherwise.
j.ery man can be wrong, but not
every man can be president
No man ever does as much today as
he Is going to. do tomorrow.
No man i'u expect to be happily
married uutess he's a good listener.
A UMia may pocket his pride, but a
woman always has to conceal It else
where. After hearing some men speak we
are surprised at the small bats they
wear.
Whining children and women are
bad enough, but please deliver us from
whining men.
After getting an education It Is up
to a young niau to do things with the
knowledge he acquires.
boinehow a woman never teems to
tire of her efforts to get an article
worth all of a dime for 12 cents.
Our Idea of a credulous man li one
who actually believes that one woman
can treat another with silent contempt
There are more ways than one of
looking for trouble. A Texas man ad
vertised for mother-in-law. who
wm missing -
Some Things That Are New
One of the now electric toastorg Is
inclosed to retain the heat and save
current.
A patent for cutlery made of bam
boo bus been grunted n Japanese resi
dent of Seattle.
An Instrument that measures the
glare of light reflected from paper baa
been Invented.
Within the heel of a recently patent
ed shoe for women It contained a com
plete vanity case.
Around the handle of a new um
brella is a soft rubber ring that holds
tne ends of the ribs firmly and neatly
when the umbrella Is closed.
For overpowering refractory prison
ers an inventor has patented a police
man's club that emits a noxious gat
when a button is pressed.
A Collforntan Is the owner ot what
Is said to be the only watch of the
kind in the world. In which a lever
oscillates and winds the spring with
every step that he takes.
New airbrakes that have been adopt
ed hv a lanra eaatem mlTi-mul Milnna
J by 000 feet or more the) distance) In
which a heavy train runulug at 60
miles an hour can be stopped.
Keeping the air In rooms moist Is
the purpose of a new humidifier, con
sisting of a small electric fan to be
hung on a wall and blow Its breezes
across a shallow dish filled with water.
An aviator's hands may be kept
warm by a glove of English invention
into which are woven wires heated by
electricity obtained by contact with
the steering wheel of an airplane.
Electric massaging apparatus which
emanatea violet rays has been Invent
ed for Imparting a general tonic ef
fect to the scalp and face.
The United States Is estimated to
use more than 100,000 elaborate elec
tric protective systems against crime,
about 300,000 smaller systems, and
more than 2,000,000 minor devices.
George O. D. Soule, aged seventy
two, ot Portland, It the oldest mall
carrier In active service In New Eng
land. He has been In the mail service
since Immediately after the Civil war,
and he figures be bat walked 108,000
Billet In that time.
Fruit Loaf.
Put one pint milk In double boiler,
add pinch of salt and bring to scalding
point. Dissolve 1 tablespoonfuls
cornstarch In a little cold milk, beat the
yolks of two eggs and four tablespoon
fuls granulnted sugar together and
pour all Into boiling milk, stirring till
smooth and thick. Cover and cook 20
minutes. Beat the egg whites very
stiff and mix lightly with the pudding.
Itemove from stove and stir In one-half
cupful macaroons crumbled, two table-
spoonfuls maraschino cherries, two ta
blespoonfuls walnut meats, broken, and
a teaspoonful of sherry. Turn into a
mold and set In lee. When very cold
turn out and serve with crenin, whip
ped or plain.
English Chicken Pie.
Pare six medium-sized potatoes, cut
In small pieces ; cook until tender, but
not broken, and then add two cupfuls
chicken meat and half a cupful fresh
pork cooked and cut In small pieces;
cover with a crust made as follows:
Sift three teaspoonfuls baking powder
with two cupfuls flour, add two table-
spoonfuls shortening and half tea
spoonful salt. Rub thoroughly togeth
er and mix with one small cupful
milk. Put on floured board nnd press
out with the hands to size required to
cover chicken pie. Bake twenty min
utes, and serve hot.
Econ-Tilcal Fruit Jelly.
Save all the rinds and pulp of
lemons nnd oranges left from lemon
ade or fruit punch. Put them Into a
saucepan und cover with boiling wa
ter. Boll ten minutes, strain half the
liquid and add sugar to taste a small
cupful of sugar to one dozen lemon
skins gives a tnrt, refreshing Jelly
Lustly stir In a half package of gela
tin that has been dissolved In a little
cold water. Pour Into a mold nnd
cool. One dozen lemon or orange rinds
should make a quart of Jelly, and It Is
better flavor anil more fruity, than
when made with the Juice alone.
Bacon and Egg Hash.
Sometimes a few slices of bacon and
a cold fried egg are left over from
breakfast and It Is a problem to make
use of them. Try chopping them fine
with an equal quantity of boiled or
mashed potatoes, then fry like an ordi
nary hash In a little butter, letting It
brown nicely before taking from the
pan. Serve with a parsley garnish and
chili sauce or catsup und you will think
you have some brand-new epicurean
dish. It you prefer, you may make the
mixture Into little cakes and fry them
brown In butter or bacon fat
- Cream of Onion Pure.
Put two or three large onions
through the food chopper and cook
the Juice and pulp In two tablespoon
fuls of butter until a golden brown.
Add a pinch of soda dissolved in a
tnblespoonful of water. Hnve ready
a quart of milk scalded In a double
boiler; add the onions nnd cook until
creamy. Season with salt pepper and
paprika and thicken with cracker
crumbs. Sprinkle grated cheese over
the top when served. Send buttered
toast bars to the table with this soup.
Rice Balls.
Sweeten plain boiled rice to taste
and add, while hot, butter the site of
walnut and the beaten yolk of an
egg to make sweet rice balls. Form In
to little balls end put Into the center
of each a tnblespoonful ot rich pre
served strawberries, peaches or pine
apple, first draining off the sirup. Roll
In white of egg and bread crumb and
serve with lemon sauce.
PUDDINGS ALL WILL ENJOY
English Recipe, of Course, la Well
Known Plain or Steamed Fruit
Confection Excellent
English Pudding. Half cupful but
ter, one cupful molasses, half cupful
seeded raisins, three-quarters cupful
milk, three and one-half cupfuls flour,
one teaspoonful soda, one-half tea
spoonful cloves, one-half teaspoonful
cinnamon, one-half teaspoonful mace.
Beat the butter to a cream, add the
molasses, raisins and milk. Sift to
gether the flour, soda and spices, 'add
these to first mixture, turn Into a
greased mold, cover closely and steam
three hours. Serve with wine sauce
or foamy sauce. , -
Plain Fruit Pudding. Two cupful
flour, one-half cupful chopped beef
suet, two teaspoonfuls baking powder,
one teaspoenf ul mixed spices, one
third of a cupful of candled peel, one
half teaspoonful salt, one-half cupful
currants, one egg, one-half cupful
seeded raisins, three-quarters cupful
milk. Sift the flour, salt, baking pow
der and spices. Add the suet and
fruit, and mix to a soft dough with
the egg and milk. Turn into a well
greased pudding mold, cover closely
and steam three hours. Turn out and
serve with hard or lemon sauce.
Steamed Fresh Fruit Pudding. Two
cupfuls flour, three teaspoonfuls bak
ing powder,, half teaspoonful salt, two
eggs, two tablespoonfuls sugar, one
cupful milk, three tablespoonfuls melt
ed butter, one cupful fresh fruit, any
thing one likes. Sift together the
flour, baking powder, salt and sugar
and mix to a batter with the eggs and
milk. Pour In the melted butter and
fill small greased cups one-third full
of the batter. Drop In a little fresh
fruit and cover with more batter.
Steam about half an hour.
Date Pudding. Half-pound stoned
dates, quarter pound beef suet, one
cupful flour, half cupful sugar, one
teaspoonful ground ginger, one tea
spoonful ground cinnamon, one tea
spoonful salt, one teaspoonful baking
powder, one cupful bread crumbs, two
eggs, two-thirds cupful milk. Chop
the dates and suet fine or run them
through a meat chopper. Add all the
dry Ingredients and moisten with the
eggs and milk. Turn into greased
molds and steam ; if in one large mold
four hours, If in small molds, two
hours.
TO-PREPARE THE PUMPKIN
Three Splendid Ways of Making the
Yellow Globes a Welcome Ad
junct of the Feast
Pumpkin-Date Pie. One pint pump
kin pulp, one-half cupful sugar, one-
half cupful chopped dates, one-halt
teaspoonful cinnamon, one-half tea
spoonful allspice, one cupful cream or
rich milk, one-half teaspoonful salt,
two eggs, one-half teaspoonful glnggr,
one-fourth teaspoonful nutmeg. Blend
all the. Ingredients to a cream. Beat
up the yolks and whites of eggs
separately and fold In the whites the
last thing. Pour Into crusts and bake.
Serve cold with a layer of whipped
cream on top flavored with a little
vanilla and dotted, If liked, with a few
crystallized cherries. These pies can
be made In the form of patties.
Pumpkin Fritters. Pumpkin or
squash, salt, fritter batter, hot fat Cut
the squash or pumpkin in long, square
pieces. Make the pieces as thin as
possible. Sprinkle with salt and let
stand awhile ; then dip Into the fritter
batter end fry In deep fat until the
pumpkin Is tender. When nicely brown,
dust them with sugar and serve hot.
Escalloped Pumpkin. Pumpkin,
breadcrumbs, three tablespoonfuls but
ter, cheese, salt and pepper. After
the pumpkin has been peeled, cut It up
Into small squares. Place the butter
In a saucepan; when It is melted add
the pumpkin nnd cook until tender!
season to taste with salt and pepper
and a little sugar. Place a layer In a
buttered baking dish ; cover with grat
ed cheese and buttered breadcrumbs;
add another layer and top off with the
cneese and crumbs.
Chicken. Souffle.
Two cupfuls scalded milk, two table
spoonfuls butter, two tablespoonfuls
Hour, one teaspoonful salt, one-eighth
teaspoonful pepper, one-half cupful
stale bread crumbs; two cupfuls
cooked chicken, finely chopped; yolks
of three eggs, well beaten ; one table
spoon finely chopped parsley, whites of
three eggs beaten until stiff nnd dry.
Make sauce of first Ingredients. Add
bread crumbs and cook two minutes.
Remove from fire, add chicken, yolk of
beaten eggs and parsley. Then fold In
whites of eggs. Turn Into a buttered
dish and bake 85 minutes in a slow
oven or steam In cup 35 minutes.
New Hampshire Carrots.
One Quart of carrots, one nunrt nf
water, one tensnnonfnl anlt nna.haie
cupful cider vinegar, three-quarters
cuprui sugur, one tablespoonful butter.
Scrane the Carrots and cut In aortlnna
one and one-half Inches long, then
slice them lengthwise, one-quarter of
an Inch thick and then in string nf
same thickness. -Add water and salt
and boil, until tender. Drain off water,
add the vinegar, suenr and hntror unit
cook until the carrots have a clear,
transparent appearance. Then serve.
This will serve five persons.
Mathed-Potato Rusks.
One-half cake of com Dressed venst.
one-half cupful mashed potatoes, one-
natr cuprui sugar. Mix at noon and let
stand in a warm nlaee until heHtimo
Then add one-half cupful melted but
ter, two eggs (beaten light), pinch of
salt and flour enough to stiffen (but
not as stiff as bread dough). Let rise
until morning, roll and cut with a hia.
cult cutter nnd let rise again. Bake,
not naving tne oven very hot when
ihey first go In.
Stuffed Potatoes.
Select fine large notatoes ami hairs
until tender. Cut off the enria ann
out the contents with the handle of t
spoon, and work toft with butter, hot
milk. Dinner and suit, and laiu
. - - . . ,,ur
ed cheese. Return the mixture to the
skins, mounting It ud on the nnon and
and with these uppermost set the po
tatoes in tne oven five nilnutea. l&at
from Ota skins. Delicious.
FOSS-WINSHIP HARDWARE
COMPANY
0. V. B. Cutlery
HARDWARE
Universal Ranges
Big 3 Washers. All O. V. B. Goods Guaranteed
Barrett Building, Athena, Oregon
ESTABLISHED 1865
Preston-Shaffer Milling Co.
AMERICAN BBVUTY
FLOUR
Is made in Athena, by Athena Labor, in one of the
very best equipped Mills in the Northwest, of -the
best selected Bluestem wheat grown anywhere.
Patronize home industry. Your grocer sells the
famous American Beauty Flour.
The Flour Your Mother Uses
Merchant Millers and Grain Buyers
Athena, Oregon. Waitsburg, Washington.
vJPk Home of
3sP Groceries
Good Groceries go to the Right Spot
Every Time
This is the Right Spot
To go to Every Time for Groceries.
Try These They'll Please!
ONE BEST
THE MONOPOLE
Monopole Vegetables
Monopole Fruits
Monopole Salmon
Monopole Oysters
DELL BROS., Athena, Or.
Caterer! to the Publk in Good Thing to EaL
Athena Meat Market
We carry the belt
MEATS
That money buys.
Onr Market b CLEAN AND COOL
Injuring Wholesome Meats
READ & MEYER
Main Street, Athena, Ore.