THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1921. PACK EIGHT o - B 4& iTt 0 Q is & 0 A WEEK WILL DO In less than a year $2.00 saved every week will amount to over .$100 and by that time vou're on the sure road to successful, profit able saving. Qfart NOW As lillle as a dollar op(i"s tJPLQl I llvTT a savings account at this Lank. A welcome awaits you. We want yoou to regard this bank as YOUR bank to meet its officers, and to feel that we have s our every interest at heart. There is 110 red-tape here. We believe in the "Service" idea and that means cheerful, helpful accommodation, always. Farmers & Stockgrowers National Bank HEPPNER, OREGON. THE KITCHEN CABINET P 'rit.-fi 1 SI2L THEATRI i 45 B. G. SIGSBEE, Sole Owner WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, JANUARY 26th and 27th Wanda Hawley -IN- "Miss Hobbs" From the play by the same name, by Jerome K. Jerome. FRIDAY, JAN. 28TII King W. Vidor's "&fe Turn in the Road" SATURDAY, JANUARY 29th Special Hem? fit Matinee in the afternoon (see mention elsewhere in this issue of the Herald). In the evening l.y ik. - Moran in "EVERYTHING BUT THE TUUTll." and a Star comedy. "Belle and Bill." 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Look to your health, and If you have It praise Ood and value It next to a good conscience; for health ts the sec ond blesHtng that mortals are capable of a bleaHing that money cannot buy. Isaar- Walton FOOD FOR A FOUR.Y EAR-OLD. As growing children need fond to supply the waste going on In their active little oodles, be cause they are consiantly in motion, and to supply building -material to build those bodies it Is absolutely necessary that every mother should have an intelligent knowledge of the kind ot food her child needs. With the world full of literature o" the subject there is no excuse fur ignorance. The mother who is In- i formed should tee to it that her neigh ! bor knows as well, for we know to be safe from all the evils of poor food and ignorance ourselves, we must help other people to be as wise. In many homes the price of milk keeps the poor mother from buying what her children really need. Other foods for a child from Infancy through the school age may be slight ed but milk should be a constant food. Strong bones and teeth depend on calcium ; in combination with phos phorus It is their chief mineral ele ment. Milk is the most valuable food to supply these compounds. Calcium Is also obtained from the outer coats of grains, hence whole wheat, bran foods, oatmeal and corn are all most wholesome and necessary. A generous supply of vegetables and fruit is also necessary as they furnish iron in large proportions as well as other necessary minerals. For breakfast a tablespoonfnl or two of prune pulp, one-half cupful of well cooked oatmeal with three table spoonfuls of top milk, one slice of buttered toast and a glass of milk or three-fourths of a cupful. At ten thirty another glass of milk and a cracker. Dinner Cream of spinach soup, a half cupful : one egg, one medium-sized baked potato, one slice of bread with a tcnspoonful of buttrand n small cupful (one-fourth of a measuring cupful) of junket. For supper One-fourth of a cupful of cream of wheat, two tablespoonfuls of top milk, a glass of mirk to drink and one slice of bread, with butter. A baked apple or three-eighths of a cupful of apple sauce. - v ' IXX'AL NKWS ITEMS Mrs. Logan, of Rhea Siding, was a visitor in Heppner Saturday. Tom O'Brien, Butter creek sheep man, "was a business visitor here on Saturday. John Kilkenny -was in town, Sat urday on his way to Portland on a business trip. Mrs. Miller arrived from Portland Saturday evening for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. C. L. Freeman. Fred Tash went to Portland Mon day to be present at the Oregon hardware dealers' convention. E. O. Neill, well known sheepman of Butter creek, was a business vis itor in Heppner Saturday afternoon. LEASE FOR SALE I a 1 have for sale lease on 9U) acres, including all necessary slock and machinery. u) acres good wheat land, of which 50 acres are in crop this year. This Offered at a Bargain if Taken at Once. The KITCAEft Sr1 citizen and business man of Arlisg ton, was a visitor here Saturday and Sunday. He was a guest at the Shurte home. Sam Van Vactor. jr., entertained his comrades of the Boy Scouts at dinner Saturday evening at the Van Vactor orae. Help the starving peoples of Eu rope by attending the benelt. show at the Star theatre Saturday afternoon atinee. Johnny McEntire, who has a big ranch in the banana belt some miles south of Heppner, was a visitor here Saturday. Charlie Sperry is reported im proving at his lone hom. air. Sperry has been seriously ill for a couple of weeks. Saturday matinee at the Star. Ben fit European relief fund. Entire pro ceeds donated to the starving. Make it a full house. Mrs. Walter Duncan, who recently underwent a serious operation at the Moore hospital, is again in that in stitution suffering from gall stones. Frank Engelnian well known busi ness man of lone, is in Portland un der the care of physicians, and is not IS Roy V. WHITEIS REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE ST. PATRICK HOTEL M, and Mrs 0. lavbeo iy the veek in Portland, where their daughter, Miss mvendolyn. WusliiiiKtono hi: graduates from school. i Frank Gilliam is spending his an muil vacation In Portland taking u the hardware convention with, per haps an occasional peep at M;soiu doings. , r, : ! (). 180, WMUrn Nowippr Untoll.) "Give no mora to each g-ust than he's abl to digest. Give him lways of the prima and but little at a time." HUNGARIAN STEAK. Chip one pound of round steak, add one egK. one-half cupful of rice. Scnld large sIjkhI cabbuge leuves, roll a portion of the meat mixture for one serving In each, fas ten with toothpicks un til five portions are made. Put In a kettle, cover with water and cook one hour. Season with paprika, thicken the gravy and serve. Spiced Steak. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, fry one large onion minced In it until a rich brown : take out the onion. Cut one flank steak in pieces, dredge with flour, frv In the butter, take out the meat, add two cupfuls of hot water, three tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one teuspoonful of mustard, one tenspoon- ful of salt and one-half teaspoonful of pepper. Thicken the gravy, put In a casserole and cook one hour. This will serve six people. Nut Balls. Take one cupful of chopped cold veal, add 12 chopped al monds, one egg, one-half teaspoonful of salt, popper to taste. Mix and roll Into halls, place In a baking pan mid pour over one cupful of rich, high ly seasoned tomato sauce. Serve on a platter garnished with water cress. Tomato Aspic Take two cupfuls of tomato boiled with one slice of onion. one teaspoonful of salt, one-eighth of n tensooonfol of innwr. boll 'JO minutes and strain. Add two table spoonfuls of gelatin, dissolve In one- half cupful of cold water, celery salt; salt and bay leaf may be added to the first mixture before boiling. Strain and pour into a mold and cool. Celerv With Cheese. Cut the coarser stalks of celery and cook tin ill tender In boiling united water. Place n layer of the cooked celery In a buttered baking dish, cover with lavr of rich, well seasoned white sauce, sprinkle generously with grated cheese and repeat with another layer of each. Finish the top with but tered crumbs and bake until the crumhs are brown. Fruit Punch. Shred four orange and two lemons. Add two cupfuls of water for each cupful of pulp, and sweeten to taste, flavor with a small bottle of grape Juice. improving as rapidly as his friends could wish. Nine members of the Pilot Rock basket ball team registered at the St. Patrick Saturday afternoon, com ing over for a game with t e Heppner team. Mrs. Clark Morris and her daugh ter Ruthella and Mrs. Gilmore, of John Day, were the guests of Mrs, Frank Turner and other Heppner friends last week. A social meeting of the Episcopal Guild will be held at the home of Mrs. W. R. Irwin Thursday after noon, January 27th. All members are expected. The Ladies Aid Society of the Federated church will hold a cooked food sale at Case Furniture Co. store Saturday, January 29th. Better drop in and buy something extra for dinner. The film companies donate the films; the Star theatre donates tl service; the newspapers the adver tising; the hungry people in Europe get 100 per cent of the proceeds. Do your part. Make it a full house at the Saturday matinee. V Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cronk, wh have both been on the sick list for the past week, are reported ing. Mr. Cronk suffered from a se vere attack of pleurisy some time ago, and when partly recovered suf fered, from a relapse which was somewhat worse than the original at tack. A committee of the Parent-Teach er Association selected furnishings for the rest room at the school house Saturday afternoon, whic will add much to the comfort of any pupil or teacher who may become indis posed during school hours. Emmett Cochran is enjoying a va cation in the hills of the John Da- country just riding around and bucking snow drifts for the fun of it. Mr. Cochran had to travel 250 miles by rail and otherwise to reach his destination, which is fifty-four miles from Heppner as the crow flies. Jim Cowin, the ice man, is nursing a very sore hand this week as the result of an accident at the depot the other day. Mr. Cowin was car rying a 100-pound block of ice when he slipped, and in falling his hand was crushed between the ice block and the platform. B. F. Swaggart, proprietor of the Oregon Jack Farm, north of Lexing ton, was in town Monday for a short visit. Mr. Swaggart has rtcentlv been notified by Wm. E. Morton, sec retary of the Standard JacK and Jennett Registry of America, of Kan sas City Mo., that he has been chos en as an honorary vice-president of that organization. A Victim of Circumstances.-' Some newspapers are born some achieve lateness because JLt laziness, and some have lateness thrust upon them by poor gasoline or lack of electric current. Certain it is that no reputable newspaper was, ever late because of any fault on the part of the office force, unless tt might be the devil who stayed our. too late at a ball .tame or wrestling mat'j'ii and failed to gef the office cat fed and the office swept, out at an earl hour. Any fellow who lacks sufficient imagination to estab lish an aubi when n .ed has no business in a count.v newspaper of fice. In cases like this the Herald force are in the same boat with all of their broke and near-broke friends and neighbors victims of circumstances. ' NOTICTT. fk Deputy Collectors of Internal Rev enue H. O. Payne and M. E. Gaffney, who will assist the people of Morrow county in making and Cling their in come tax returns for the year 1920, will be at Heppner court house Feb. 7 to 10 inclusive, and at lone Feb. 11 to 12 inclusive. 38-39 J. A. WATERS, ' County Clsrk. I. NOTICE OF SALE OF ESTBAYS. Notice is hereby given that on Jan uary 5, 1921, I took up the following described horses and the same will be sold at public auction at my place on section 14, south east of the city of Boardman at 2 o'clock p. m., Feb ruary 10, 1921, unless redeemed be fore that date by their owner or own ers or their legal representatives: One brown filly coming three years old, branded on right stifle but undis tinguishable. One bay gelding, coming three, same brand as brown filly. RAY L. BROWN, 38-40. Boardman, Oregon. 1920 IS GONE And with it has gone our profits, as well as yours. The past year has been a hard one for everyone alike. The farmer and stock grower had to take immense losses and so did we. WE HAVE TAKEN OURS Our inventory has been taken and the losses crossed off. We are not going to say how great they have been they were enough. WE ARE GLAD IT IS OVER. Kvery article in this store has been reduced regardless of its first cost, and marked right down to and below its present worth on the markets of the world. Let's forget 1920 and get together and push for a successful and prosperous 1921. We cannot do it all. and neither can you. But if we all get to gether and push, and push hard, things will come out all right. COME IN SEE WHAT WE ARE DOING TO MAKE 1921 PROSPEROUS FOR YOU I MINORS CO. "GOOD GOODS" Heppner, Oregon II I ( II I