The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, May 02, 1918, Page PAGE 2, Image 2

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    It
Till SPlUHOrmD NttWS
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1018,
AG 2
v.
Third Liberty
Loan Negotiable
lend Art Transferable or D
5 MveraWa In Frct Pot
sU)l Mannar
Sosae laap$rheasloa regarding
thVword '"coBve-AibHKy," used to con
Beetles "with Third liberty Ixon
Bonds, seems to have arisen In tho
fainds of the public, according to les
tera received at State Liberty Loan
'Headquarters, some persona confua
las the tern with negotiability.
Edward Cooklngham, state execu
tive chairman, gave out the following
statement Saturday, regarding th
meaning of the. words:
1 "1 would ilka to make It plain to
all purchasers of bonds that the Thiul
Liberty Loan Beads are both nego
tiable and transferable and In that
respect do not differ at all from tho
".First and Second Issues of Libert
Boeds.
"The word 'convertibility' has no
reference whatever to the a equabil
ity ot'the hefids. This particular la
ws ts hot 'convertible' into any other
heads which may be Issued later ia
the war, but that does not mean that
the beads are not negotiable or trans
ferable or deliverable In the freest
possible manner at any time vaad' to
any person who may purchase the
bonds or to whom the holder may de
Biro to transfer them."
Official pamphlets containing de
tailed information regarding Third
Liberty Loan Bonds may bo had from
State Liberty Loan Headquarters. 222
Northwestern Bank Building, Portland
for the asking.
Nephew Wounded In Francs
Troy A. BreBBlor, nophew of M. C.
Brosslor of this city, has been sor
lously wounded at the front In France
according to word received here. The
young man, whose home is In Sioux
City, Iowa, is listed as bugler in Bat
talion E, company 17, Amerlman field
artillery.
sJbHN B. BELL
for Senator, Linn and Lane Counties
EDITORIAL PROM EUGENE DAILY GUARD OP
APRIL 23, 1918.
THE CENTRAL OREGON ENTERPRISE, of
Prineville, speaking of the candidacy of John B. Bell
for senator from the joint district of Lane and Linn
counties, states:
"If John is as popular in Lane county as he was in
Crook county, he might as well take a trip down to the
state house and select his seat for the next session."
This is a creditable tribute to a man who was for
merly associated with the business and interests of the
Prineville community. Men may aspire to public office
and go down to defeat and Jfeel that they have, lost
nothing so long as they know1 their old friends and
neighbors with whom it had been their pleasure to be
associated honor them. It is a great distinction to be
selected to serve the people of the state in the senate,
but it is infinitely greater to have made a record in life
in which the testimony of old acquaintances is to the
effect that as a man you have been tried and found to
be true to every 'trust.
It has been a good many years since John Bell lived
in Prineville, but, across the space of time, comes the
word to his new home: "He is a good man, you may
well honor him".
John Bell needs no endorsement from outside of
Lane county. His works here place him near the top
of the column of the names of the county's good citi
zens. It is a pleasure, however, to read such a tribute
to one you know. The time will come when he will be '
making a trip down to Salem and selecting his seat,
just as the Prineville editor suggests.
The guard has previously announced .its belief
that the people should disregard party and look to men
who promise the greatest service in winning the war.
To the people of Lane and Linn counties, regardless of
party, it commends the candidacy of John B. Bell, re
publican, for the position of state senator, because it
knows that he is 100 per cent American and a man
whose plain business sense will make his service of val
ue to his country, state and county.
John Bell is a steady going fellow. His business
interests which are associated with those of both Lane
and Linn counties are not large, but sufficient to mark
him a successful man. Ho has never made a practice
of forcing himself into the limelishl or seeking notor
iety through the newspapers by playing to sensational
ism. He has, however, taken an active part in public
affairs in Eugene and Lane county. Since the declara
tion of war, he has participated in activities of vital in
terest to the nation. He has worked quietly and well.
Where he has gone, results have followed and there
has been no bellowing or blowing over accomplishment.
He is moving about as a candidate for senator in the
sairie effective way. He finds no occasion to assert
that if he is elected he will save the state a million dol
lars. He knows that no man single-handed is going to
perform such a feat in the senate of the state of Oregon
lie has stated his platform briefly. It may be sum- .
med up in the single paragraph as follows:
"I stand for Bane and businesslike legislative ses
sions, fewer and more effective laws, and for a vigor
ous and straight out policy in everything pertaining to
the prosecution of the war."
That ia platform enough for John B. Bell. The
vote that he will receive In Eugene, Ills home city, on
the day of the primary election, will attest 'that it is
sufficient
Advertisement paid for by John B, Belli campaign committee
Eugeno, Oregon, B. o, Immel, Secy.
POTATO RECIPES --r
Potato 8eup: 2. cups hot rleed or mash la with gratsdh.$llUJeinr
ed potatoes l Repeat uatll dkh Is full. Pour
1 tjuart milk.
2 slices onion
S tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour (rice, or core
flour)
1H teaspoons salt
celery salt
pepper
cayenne 1
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
Scald tho milk with the onion; re
movo the onion; add tho milk slowly
to the potatoes. Molt the butter; sdd
to it tho dry ingredients; stir tho
mixture until well blended and add to
the liquid mixture, stirring it constant
ly. Boll the soup for one minute.
Strain It If necessary, add the pars
ley and serve it. Water saved from
cooking celery Is a good addition to
milk over the whole, about one-halt
cup to every three potatoes. Skim
milk Is coed. Make lit a moderate
oven until dene. The length of time
required depends upoa. whether the
potatoes are raw or boiled and wheth
er the baktag dish is deep or shallow'.
Raw potatoes in a deep dish may take
as much as one and one-half hours.
Potato Corn-Meal Muffins:
2. tablespoons tat '
1 tablespoon sugar.
1 egg, well-beaten.
1 cup milk
1 cup mashed potatoes. . - ?
1 cup corn-meal '
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt.
Mix in tho order given. Bake 40
minutes in hot oven. This makes 12
potato soup. Two cups of tomato- muffins. They are delicious.
Juice and MS teaspoon of soda may be Potatoes Are Geed In' Cake: (If peo
substituted for two cups of milk. p0 muat use cake with wheat flour)
Baked Potatoes: Select potatoes of Potatoes are often used In this way to
uniform slse, scrub them with a Tege-'keep tho cake from drying. out quickly,
table brush, and bake them for 45 Mesh the potatoes and beat up with
(minutes, or until they aro tender all m)c untn very light. You can use
( through when tested with a fork. If yoBr U8Utti cav8 recipe, substituting
they aro overcooked tnoy win De sog- ono cup 0f mBihed potatoes for one
gy rather than mealy. Crack and akin half cup of mm aaA ono.halt cup of
or pierce it m soon as tho potatoes fiour. ,
are done, to let out the steam and , D . , , v,,.. nut,. p.
prevent sogglnesa. It tho potatoes
toes, left over or fresh, may be com-
1 bined with cheese or nuts or moat or
oomg put m tno oven wis win prevent . other mtfttMt oftcn t0 mako tho man
dish of a meal.
Potato Sausages:
dryness of tho skins, and thoy will
bo moro mealy if taken out fen mln- J
utca or so before they are done, and
squeeced in the hand after wrapping
I them in a towel.
Boiled Potatoes: Select potatoes of
I' uniform sizo, scrub (hem with a vege
table brush, and dropXhcm into boll
I ing saltod water. Cook them with ttu
. cover of tho kettlo ajar Just until they
I are tender, about 20 or 30 minutes.
Drain off the water immediately, slip
off tho skins with a sharp paring knife.
If tho potatoes are not to bo served
immediately, cover them with a cloth
which will absorb moisture, and placo
them where they will keep warm.
Overcooking and standing in water
1 cup ground nuts, fish or moat,
1 cup mashed potatoes
1 egg .well beaten
VA teaspoons salt -
H teaspoon popper
Salt pork, bacon, or othor fat
Mix Uie mashed potatoes and season
Ings with the ground nuts, fish or meat
Add the beaten egg. Form into little
cakes or sausages, roll In flour and
place in greased pan with a small
piece' of fat or salt pork on each Bau
sage. Bake In a fairly hot oven.
A Shepherd's Pie:
Grease a baking dish; cover the
bottom with mashed potatoos. Add a
manes a sorry. unnaiataDie DOiaio. i
Mashed Potatoes: Peel the potatoes arer r cooked racat or tieh minced ;-
and boll them until tender all the,way i seasoning same well with mixed stock
through.uslng hot water to start them ur
; boiling, and Baiting them when about ' toe8- DaKo ,onK enough to heat through
half done. Mash w'th maBher and
whip with same or fork until very
light, adding butter or oleomargarine
and hot milk a half cup of milk to
six potatoes, if dinner 1b not yet
ready to serve, pile lightly in a pan
and set In the oven to brown.
Stuffed Potatoes: Cut baked pota
toes in half, remove the pulp, maBh It
and add enough milk for the usual con
sistency of mashed potatoes, and sea
son with butter, salt and pepper. Fill
the cases with this mixture, dot the
tops with butter or brush them 'with
milk and bako them for 8 or 10 min
utes in hot oven. Potatoes may be
stuffed in the morning and reheated
at noon or in the evening for dinner.
Variations: To the mashed potatoeR
before the cases are filled, may bo '
added any one of a combination of the
following:
a. Beaten white of egg (one egg to
3 medium-sized potatoes) ,
b. Grated cheese cupp to 3' medium-sized
potatoes)
bread making,
mado for a large
20 to 30 minutes
If We Must Use Raised Breads With
Some Wheat, Try The Following.
Yeast Bread: If potato is used for
allowance should be
amount of water
which it contains, and loss, additional
liquid must bo used for this reason.
PoUto Bread:
1 cup mashed potato
1 teaspon salt
2 cups flour (moro If necessary)
4 tablespoons water
2 to 4 tablespoons liquid yeast, or
ono half cake dry yeast, or one
sixth to one hnlf cako compress
ed yeast.
Short Process: Mix tho salt with
tho mnBlied potatoos, which must bo
free from lumps and c.ooled until ltiko
warm. Add one-sixth to ono-half cako
compressed yeast softened In 4 tablo
sroons warm water, or 2 to 4 table
spoons liquid yeast, or ono-half cako
dry yeast. When liquid yeast Is used,
no additional water must ho added.
c. Chopped moat ( cup to 3 med- Blond with this potato and yoast mix-ium-slzcd
potatoes) ture ono cup of flour. Stir until smooth
d. Chopped parsley (1 tablespoon to then cover and Bet to raise. When this
3 medium-sized potatoes)
Scalloped Potatoes: Itcmovo tho
skin from boiled or steamed potatoes,
and cut them In slices one-fourth Inch
thick. Arrange tho slices In layors In
a buttered baklng-dlsh, covering each
sponge Is light and soft, kucad In
enough flour to mako rather a stiff
dough, but elastic. Be euro that It is
stlffer than ordinary dough. Cover
and lot rise again until very light.
Knead down, mould and placo In light-
layer with milk. Season with butterfly greased pan. Let raise In pan until
salt and popper. Sprlnlilo the top wjth ' as high as ordinary whlto bread, and
buttorod crumbs and bako the potatoes , then bake In a modorately hot oven
for about 20 minutes. nt loast. ono hour. Bako very thorough
Scalloped Potatoctr (raw) Pare po- ly. This makes ono loaf,
tatces carefully tp prevent waste ns jf ueBtred an amount of grated raw
much as possible. Slice them, about potato equal to tho amount of mashod
V, jnch thick, and arrange the! slices , potnto called for may bo used, but tho
in a buttorod baking dish In layers, roaultlng bread Is darkor and has a
sprinkling each layer with flour, but-moro marked potato flavor than when
ter, salt and pepper. Pour over the t COokcd jioiatoos aro used.
top enough milk Just to bo seen
through the top layer. Bako In u mod
erate oven until tho potatoos aro ten
der, from 4! to CO minutes. r
Creamed Potatoes: Boiled or steam
cd potatoes may bo sliced, dlded, or
Proper Food for Weak 8tomach
Tho proper food for ono man may
bo all wrong for anothor, Every ono
should adopt a diet suited to his ago
nnil nnnllnfltlnn Tlinin Wlin llUVO
. ...IV UVVl.J'l.V.U.tl .auHW ...aw " "
if small left wholo and servo wltlj weak stomachs noed to bo especial!'
whlto sauce,
Potatoes AU Gratln: Put creamed
potatoes into a buttered baklng-dlsh,
careful and Rhould oat slowly 'and
nmstlcato tlielr food thoroughly. It
Is also irabortant that they kpep their
cover tho top with buttered crumbs bowels regular. . When they becomo
and grated chcoso, and bako in a mod-1 constipated or when they feel dull and
oralo ovon until checso is melted and stupid after eating, they should take
top is brown, about 25 minutes' ' Chamberlain's Tablets to strengthen
Scalloped Potatoes and Cheece: Ar- Uio etomach and movo tho bowels,
range a layer of sliced raw or boiled They aro easy to tako and pleasant in
potatoes in a greased dlBh and sprink- effect. adv.
i
" i -7 "&atv '
FOR' QOVKRNOR .
... .... ..! .
GUS G.MOSER
Rieubllean
President Oregon Stata
Serrate
American
A NATIVE OF WISCONSIN.
AGE, 47. j r
FOR 27 YEARS A RESIDENT
OF OREGON.
A VIGOROUS CHAMPION
OF THE RIGHTS OF THE
PEOPLE.
.,
For a vigorous proBccu
- tlon of the war to a victor
ious conclusion.
For strict business prin
ciples In management of
stato affairs.
For Rural Credits extension, Irrigation, Drainage
and Development of all our resources.
For assistance by Portland capital and business to
every section of our great stato.
For tho rights of both Labor and Capital under a
scherno of mutual co-oporafton. 7 v ' r-
For Good Roads, Jbut Fighting
the Paving Trust
Wo are paying about $5000 moro per 1G foot mlo
o.f Bitullthlc Pavement in Oregon than Is being paid
in Washington. Let ub build good roads in every coun
ty in tho state GIVE EVERY COUNTY A SQUARE
DEAL.
Elect MOSIIER and you will forever banlBh the
subtlo Influence- of tho Paving Trust from Oregon Poll
tics. -
AGGRESSIVELY INDEPENDENT.
(Paid adv.)
L. J. SIMNSON
"A GOOD MAN TO WORK FOR IS A GOOD MAN TO VOTE FOR"
A SLOGAN Chosen by the many
men who have worked for : :
"Your Tho Highest possible endorsement. Tho most rigid tost
Kind that his policies, practiced ovor a porlod of twenty years,
of aro SOUND, JUST and EFFICIENT. .
a THE BEST POSSIBLE PROOF 'that his pledges to tho
Man citizens of Orogon are not morp. "words," but "WORDS
for BACKED BY WORKS."
Governor" Those who know blm bollovo IN him, bollovo IN his ABIL
ITY, beliovo IN his POLICIES. Thoy know ho will glvo
Orogon a CLEAN, IMPARTIAL, BUSINESSLIKE admin
istration. Thoy know it to bo true, AD80LUTELY.
WHY?
Because-
In nineteen years ho has omployod 21,000 men.
Ho has always paid good wages.
Ho never had a strike or a personal Injury suit.
Ho' built many homes "on time," novcr foreclosed a mart
gago or sued on a promissory note
Ho has holped muny laboring mon to acquire their homes,
their business and tholr livelihood.
Thoso workers, who know him best, havo endorsed him to
a man, havo adopted tho nhove slogan and that's "WHY"
he Is "Your kind of a man for Governor,"
L. J. SIMPSON
Primary (Republican
Friday" 1 Paid Ad, Issued by "Simpson for Governor Lenguo,"
May 17th 411 Solllug BIdg., Portland, Oregon
rsv- " :
Are YOU
Going to Do Yotar Part?
UNCLE SAM NEEDS YOUR QUARTERS, HALF
DOLLARS AND DOLLARS in the biggest Job ho ever
tackled to keep this' country free.
HE DOESN'T ASK YOU TO GIVE. HE WANTS
YOU TO SAVE and lend to tho governmnot- to save
and invest
ALL YOU NEED IS 25 CENTS TO BEGIN. Buy
, your first Wpr Stamp today. Buy more as fast as you
can.
ALL' YOUR MONEY WILL BE PAID BACK to you
in five years with a good, sure profit better than 21
on your Investment.
- INVEST IN WAR STAMPS. THEY ARE'ON SALE
AT OUR OFFICEan authorized agency of the Unl-
t, ted States Treasury Department.
OREGON POWER Go.
Springfield
r
44 J
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