TUESDAY, MARCH 8, MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S. DEVIL HomeTown tfelpsA MAKING BEST USE OF PAINT Coloring Mutt Be Selected According to the Material on Which It li ; to Be Used. ' Paints and painting cost less than repairs necessitated by decay or dis integration. There Is no such thing as an all service paint. Paint should be se lected according to the material to be painted and the conditions under which It must give service. The wear on a floor Is more severe than on a wall, hence the floor calls for a tough er, more elastic paint. Painting should not be done when the temperature Is lower than 50 degrees Fahrenheit, as the paint will not flow well. It is Impractical to paint a hot surface. The old painting maxim is: In spring and fall follow the sun; in summer, follow the shade. Outside painting should be done in dry weather. Surfaces should not be -painted when wet Surfaces to be painted should be gotten as smooth and. clean as possi ble. They should be free from grease. If painting new wood, knots and sappy surfaces should be shellacked first. If painting over previously painted sur faces, all blisters and loose or peeled 6pots should be scraped or burned clean. A brushing with a stiff wire brush followed by sandpaper Is good .practice. A priming coat usually pays for its cost. A firm base for the final coats Is very essential to Insure long serv ice. The primer should be thin enough "to penetrate the lumber. It should 1e well brushed in. Only pure Unseed oil or pure tur pentine should be used to thin paint TOWN AS PART OF COUNTRY Southern Magazine Haa the Right Idea That Communities Must Stand er Fall Together. The country town Is a part of the country. It la one of the encourag ing signs of the time that country town business men are coming to realize this fact It has not been so long ago that every little town thought that its business was to grow into a City just as soon as possible. Some towns and many town people still think so. Many small-town people, too, still think that their chief rela tions and interests are with the cities' rather than the country. The most far-seeing business men have come to --.know better. They are seeing more i ftt?' more c'ear'y that the town, the mall city, is an Integral part of the country, that it prospers only as the country prospers, and that It has its place in the schene of things to be the life center of the country about It. The town merchant who opposes co-operative buying or selling by the farmers of his territory, the town banker who would hinder the estab lishment of farm loan associations In his county, the town editor who neg lects the interests of the back-country districts, are becoming more and more out of date. Not until the country and the country town learn that they are yoke fellows and must pull to gether can either make the progress it should. And both are learning. Southern Agriculturist. Easier to Build Homes Now. A well-known building authority jites Hint the average man is better Wi),, to build and own a home today ffian five years ago. "Money values," lie says, "have been batted about, and the condition has been aggravated by ill-advised buying by workers with sud denly acquired wa;e increases. These wage Increases have gone largely Into the purchase of luxuries, resultiug in a shortnge of necessities. The reuc tion, however, has started In. Through all this period of extravagance and recklessness the solid, substantial ele ment of our people have kept their heads. They have stived money. Prices are on a downward trend and will reach a normal level in three or four years. In spite of the high cost of labor and materials prices can be maintained at a fairly reasonable level. Homes an he built now mid the t.ao'.is are willing to lo-'p." New Vurk Sun. Heppner Herald Want Ads bring home the bjcon. iqai HpW t RFfaM- ooRur raff Need of Home Ownership. Robert E. Simon told the convention of the Heal Estate association of the state of New York held at Roches ter, that every effort should be made to encourage home ownership, wheth er in the single or two-family house, or by co-operative ownership in the multi-family house. , "The large percentage of tenantry is one of the dangers in our country today," said Mr. Simon. "While France has 80 per cent of home own ers, the United States census of 1890 showed 48 per cent, and 1910 only 38 per cent; in 1920 it probably will be still less. This tide must be stopped and turned in the opposite direction." All Forma of Public Wealth. The shade trees and ornamental plantings of parks - and streets, grounds of health and pleasure re sorts, public institutions and of city, suburban, country and farm homes, represent a form of wealth which the people realize in health, recreation, enjoyment of the home, and the in creased value of property. , 1921, Western Newspaper Union.) In these days of Indigestion It is oftentimes a question, As to what to eat and what to lot alone; For each microbe and bacillus Has a different way to kill us And in time they always claim us for their own. Wonalancet Way. EVERYDAY FOOD6. A good breakfast dish which is sus taining may be prepared from ah in expensive cut of beef from, the shank, the mar row adding much to Its food value. Take two pounds of beef cooked with the chopped marrow, cover meat and bone with boiling wafer and cook until ten der. Let the meat stand after cook ing until the next day, then chop fine. There should be three or four cupfuls of broth in which there should be cooked three cupfuls of oatmeal, to make a mush much like the ordinary breakfast food not at all soft be cause tt must mold. When the oat meal is cooked, stir In the chopped meat, celery salt, onion juice and any desired seasoning. When well cooked turn into well greased pans to cool. Cut in slices and fry. To serve for a main dish at luncheon or dinner serve with boiled onions, turnips or parsnips and a green salad. Scalloped Potatoes. Cut a peeled onion In very thin slices and cut in quarters. Melt three tnblespoonfuls of fat, add the onion and cook very slowly on the back part of the range until softened, stirring occasionally. Slice a layer of potatoes Into a but tered baking dish holding a quart. Sprinkle with the onion, with salt, pep per and chopped parsley ; continue the layers until the dish Is full ; ndd milk or broth from leftover ronsts until It ca,u be seen through the potatoes. Let bake one-half hour. If uncooked po tatoes are to be used, parboil them for five minutes and Increase the time of baking to one hour or longer, A New Salad. Cook three tnble spoonfuls of rice in boiling salted wa ter to cover; after boiling ten minutes, drain and add one cupful of orange Juice and cook In a double boiler until the rice is tender; cool, odd one-half cupful of finely-chopped kdnnched al monds, sprinkle with salt. Arrange with balls of cream cheese on lettuce and serve with French dressing. Takes Sail Behind Halibut Cncle George Butler of Ellsworth. Me., now In his eightieth year, hooked a halibut while fishing off Sisters Ledge, and casting off his anchor rope, which he had fastened with n toggle, he enjoyed a sail about the bay, with the halibut for power. After u while the halibut got tired and Cncle Coorge hauled it in. It weighed 20 pounds. Ancient Perfume. It seems strange to us today to read of saffron as a perfume ; one of the romances about it lies in V- story by Ilakluyt of a pilgrim smuggling, at the risk of his life, from the Levant a head of saffron in a hollow made In bis stuff. i - THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER. OREGON 1 1 - . . Uncle Dili's Siorify MATCHMAKING t"VT,OW that Miss Favorite Is com aN ing to spend a few days with us, I think I'll invite Charles Augustus Terwilllger to dinner," said Mrs. Jamesworthy. "I have always thought they were Intended for each other, and they should be better a c quainted." "I never could understand why married women are always match ing up the young people of their ac quaintance," re marked James worthy. "M o s t wives insist at least to their hus bands that mat rimony is a pro nounced failure. Every time you see an old maid you turn green with envy, and you have told me a million times that a woman sacrifices her liberty and Independ ence the minute she inveigles a man to the altar, and vows to love, cherish and protect him. You have said in my presence that the spinster is the only woman who Is her own boss. "It doesn't take the ingenuity of a Sherlock Holmes to deduce from your remarks that you consider matrimony a total loss. Why, then, Mrs. James worthy, are you (forever trying to be guile your friends into that condition of misery? Qf course, yoa can't ex plain ; neither can any woman explain. Matchmaking Just comes natural to all of you. "When I am looking for all kinds of plain ami fancy trouble, I'll begin matching up the young men and wom en of my acquaintance. But not until I am suffering for an Invoice of grief. I might persuade my friends to Invest in a western sliver mine, or buy patent rights In a revolving churn, but you'll never Bee Elijah Jamesworthy boost ing matrimony in your Indiscriminate way. If two young people got married through your ring generalship, and they found that each had drawn a gold brick, they would hate yon as long as they lived, and would always speak of you as an old busybody with a nose too long for legitimate purposes, and they'd make faces at you whenever you met them on the street. "Do you ever think of your respon sibility when you try to boom the or ange blossom market? Does It ever occur to you, at such times, that you are rushing in where angels fear to tread? "Now, Just consider Sarah Jane Fa vorite and Charles Augustus Terwil llger, who will be railroaded to the altar if you have your way. I admit that they make a handsome pair. Sarah is a blonde with a pug nose, and Charles Augustus Is a brunette with a nose like a Roman senator. They afford a pleasing contrast. But appearances count for little, Mrs. Jamesworthy, when the real business of married life begins. "Sarah has basked in the lap of lux ury all her days, and she has the Idea that money grows on vines like cu cumbers. I don't suppose she ever knew what It means to need fifty cents or a dollar. When she wants anything she goes to the store and gets It, and has it charged to her father. If there Is one word In the dictionary she Isn't familiar with, that word is retrench ment. "Charles Augustus on the other hand, had bard Hledding all through bis boyhood. As a result of his ex perience he has an exaggerated Idea of the value of a kopeck. He is the sort of man who will walk eight miles through a thunderstorm rather than cough up carfare. Whenever he parts with a nickel he has to take a brotno-gi-ltzer to steady hl9 nerves. His rev erence for money Increases every day, and It will keep on Increasing as long as he lives. "Yet you, Mrs. Jamesworthy, In your feeble-minded matchmaking enthusi asm, would use your vote and Influ ence to Join these two people In the holy bonds. Just take the advice of your gwaybacked husband, and let su h people work nut their own des tinies, and everybody concerned will be happier." By Charles Sughroe I fc'tni Nwapar Union ! I . A A . CHVRCH NOTICES A A I 'h -I ! A A A A ! 4 The First Christian Church. The usual services of the Church will be held on Sunday, consisting of the Bible School at ten o'clock, fol lowed by Communion Service and Preaching at eleven o'clock. The evening Services will consist of the Christian Endeavor Service at seven o'clock and song Service and Preaching at eight o'clock. Everey one is cordially Invited to attend these services. W. O. Livingstone, Minister. Christian Science Christian Science services are held every Sunday morning at 11:00 o'clock in I. O. O. F. hall. Sunday Sshool at 9:45 a. m. Testimony meetings are held every Wednesday evening at 8:00 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Eugene Slocum. All inter ested are cordially invited to attend these meetings. Heart Trouble Not Fatal. Ileart disease Is not the barrier to an active life of usefulness as has al ways been supposed, said Dr. Freder ick Brush to the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy. Nothing Is gained nnd much lost by telling cardiac patients not to work, not to carry, not to play, and 60 on. Cnder proper supervision the person with heart trouble can take a large part in active life. , A A A A A A A A A A A A $ FROFESSIOXAt; CARDS J - DR. R. J. VAUGHAN DENTIST Permanently located in Odd fellow's Building HEPPNER. OREGON DR. A. D. MoMURDO , PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Telephone 122 Offlfce Patterson's Drug Store . HEPPNER, OREGON F. A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Office Phone Main 643 Residence Phone Main 665 Roberts Building HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Court House HEPPNER, OREGON WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORX EYS-AT-LAW Masonic Building HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORN EY-AT-LAW First National Bank Bidg. HEPPNER, OREGON WATERS & ANDERSON FfltE I.VSL'KAXCE Successors to C. C. Patterson HEPPNER, OREGON MATERNITY HOME I am prepared to take a limited number of maternity cases at my home in east Heppner and assure tK-Kt attention to all patients. Write or piione, MRS. G. C. AIKEN, Hepp ner, Or.. Box 142. Phone 3H6. 23tf FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING Remodeling and Ladies' Tailoring Mis. Curren, Church street. 2 7 tT It's Easy to Chase 'Em New Use for Wood Pulp Waste. By earrylng a step further the proc ess of recovering sulphite spirit from the waste of wood pulp factories, by evaporation. It has been discovered that a new and vnluable fuel may be produced, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. The process precipitates the organic contents of the lye in tho form of powdered coal. i Take a glance at our windows NOTE THE TINE DISPLAY Or ALUMINUM WARE, PYREX WARE, THERMOS BOTTLES 15 PER CENT Peoples Hardware Company "Just Between You and Me" says the Good Judge W-B CUT is a long fine RIGHT Fresh Pure Lard We render fresh, pure lard three times a week and have reduced the price to 25C A POUND Order a Strictly First-Class, Heppner-made Product Central Market McNAMER & SORENSON, Props. PAGE THREE ' When -They're Running WANT ADS FOR SALE Two extra good Bel gian stallions, one three years old, tho other two years old, both reg istered and homo bred. Also ona roan Shorthorn bull calf,, register ed. Call on, phono or writ(j W, I. Ebbert, Condon, Oregon. J 5 FOUND Shell hair ornament. Call at this office. 42t. A on These LINES - t Here's genuine chewingi satisfaction for you, hook-' ed up with real economy! A small chew of this class of tobacco lasts much Iong er than a big chew of the ordinary kind that's be cause the full, rich, real tobacco taste lasts so long,)' Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in two styles - cut tobacco CUT is a short-cut tobacco