Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, July 05, 1921, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    PAGE THREE
Tuesday, July 5, 1921:
Jubilee Singers in Oid-Time Concert
THOUSANDS WILL GO
THE BRICK.
Virginians Close Chautauqua.
ack Las!
This Summer Because of the
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER OREGON
'1
O
o
McAtee (EL AiKen. Props.
We Are Exclusive Agents in Heppner for
Norman's Ice Cream
WATCH THIS SPACE FOR SUNDAY
SPECIAL
Special for Sunday July 10
Peach. Tortoni
The Finest Product on The Market
SPECIALS EVERY WEEK
TWO RANCH SNAPS
50 acres allin alfalfa. Good water right, good new house. One
and one half miles from school tt,O0O. Easy terms.
180 acres 4 miles from town. 50 acres in alfalfa, balance farm
and grazing land. Good Improvements. Stock, machinery,
and euipnieut Included at only $10,000. Easy terms.
Better See Me At Once About These Fine Bargains
ROY V. WHITE1S
1 i . V' - it I it u
6
r.i - - mi...,
Give Us a Fair
Rate of Return
is a good slogan for any industry. But it is a
very timely one right now for the electrical
industry.
Everyone wants good electrical service and every
one will get good electrical service, but they must
be shown that unless a central station or lighting
company is allowed to earn on a full and proper
value and not on a depreciated value that central
station or lighting company cannot continue to
serve in a proper and efficient manner.
Let every man who has a stake in the industry
take this fact to heart and convince his neighbors
and friends. . . Put your shoulder to the wheel and
then get every one to do likewise.
Heppner Light
& Water Co.
Two Of The
Outstanding Reasons
For success in business are courteous
ness and the exercise of sound business prin
ciples. These have made many successes
with the aid of good banking1 connections.
We render our customers the best service
possible.
Their success is our success.
parmers & Stockgrowerg
National Bank
HEPPNER, OREGON.
Two Drosrams of old plantation
6ongs, camp meeting shouts and "ne-
aro spirituals" will be given by tne
Virginians, well known Jubilee sing-
era on the last day or tne coming
riiautauaua. The Virginians are a
company of highly trained, cultured
and refined colored singers wno nave
made friends .all over the country
with their pubilee programs. It Is
not their aim to give high brow
music, but rather to present the beau
tiful old melodies of the Old South
before the Civil War, the shouts 'of
joy from the old fashioned camp
mooHnas where the darkies "got re
ligion" and the spontaneous hilarity
2?
that characterized their simple social
gatherings.
Such tunes as "Good News," "Go
down Moses," "Bake Dat Chicken
Pie" "Live a Humble," "Swing Low
Sweet Chariot," "Old Time Religion"
and "lnchin Along" will he included
in their programs.
There is no more fascinating music
known than that of the American
colored people nor Is there any other
race with such natural aptilude for
harmony and tone color and musical
feeling. Negro music Is gaing each
year in its hold on the public and the
Virginians are doing much to estab
lish it in high favor.
SEARCH FOR MUSICAL THIEF
Peculiar and Clever Crook Is Just
Now Engaging the Attention of
London Police.
Detectives are searching for an ac
complished thief who plays the piano
and sings for his victim before going
away with the valuables.
Although known to the police, he has
been "operating" In St. John's Wood,
Loudon, for more than a month and
his two latest coups have been car
ried out within a few minutes' walk
of each other.
He returned a fortnight ago to a
house In St. George's terrnce. Prim
rose Hill, where he bad taken apart
ments, while the other boarders were
at dinner. Inquiries resulted in the
discovery that the lodger had gone
with jewelry including four gold rings
set with diamonds, worth $2,000.
A woman in King Henry's road, Lon
don, Is the latest victim. On Monday
the man rang up and In a short time
arrived in a taxieub. He stated that
he would fetch his luggage later.
Insisting in paying in advance he
made out a check for a week's board
und made himself agreeable by his
musical accomplishments, but a -prolonged
absence In the bathroom excited
suspicion, and it was found that a
trunk had been forced and $1,000 worth
of jewelry stolen. A finely-cased gold
watch, vnlued at $500, was among the
articles stolen, and the check was dis
honored. From the Continental Edi
tion of the London Mall.
One Way to Attract Customers.
In a small New England town I met
a druggist who makes a specialty of
selling postage stamps. He says that to
retail 2-cent stamps for 2 cents each
Is the most profitable line in his store.
These sales would be extremely un
provable, If he handled stamps
groiichily or grudgingly, saying by his
maimer: "Whatta you mean by both
ering me to sell you postage stamps?
Hut he has signs in his window tell
ing that he hns plenty of stamps, and
makes a special effort to he more
pleasant and accommodating and gra
cious about a stamp sale than at any
other time. Ho has attracted thou
sands of permanent customers in that
way." "A new customer is worth many
dollars a year," he observes, "whether
the thing that first brought him In Ig
postage stamps, cigars or whatnot.
So having enticed him In, why should
I do anything to make him sorry he
came?" Fred Kelly In The Nation's
Business.
Low
Round Trip
Fares
offered by the big cross-continent railroad 1
Union Pacific System
Serving the transportation needs of the
Great Pacific Northwest
and giving through service via the- popular direct routes to
Salt Lake City Omaha, Kansas CUy. St I:ul, Minneapolis and
Chicago on those two strictly first, class trains.
Oregon-Washington Limited and
Continental Limited
Tickets on Sale Daily
Until and including August 15th.
Return limit HO nays, but not later than October 31st
Chicago $106.80 Memphis $111.60 Pueblo $77.40
Denver 77.40 Minneapolis 87.60 St. Paul 87.60
Kansas City 87.60 Omaha 87.60 St. Louis 101.40
8 War Tax to bo Added .
Proportionate, reductions to many points East. Stop-overs at
pleasure. Side trips may bo arranged for Yellowstone,
Won and Koclty Mimn'.Biu National Parks
For complete details as to routings, train schedules, side trips,
sleeping car rates and reservations, and other travel informa
tion desired, call on or telephone
C. DARBEE, AGENT, HEPPNER.OREGON
Will. iMcMuirny, lienoial I'asseii!;r Audit Portland, Oreuoiu
FITS THF
I I IL
a V 1 TC HFK1 vm
CaCABlNL I Iro
(x). 1!t?l. Western Newpaper l'nl"n.)
QUIT TELLING FUNNY STORIES
Why Congressman Kelly Sacrificed
Humor on the Altar of Serious
Statesmanship.
Patrick Kelly, a representative In
congress from Michigan, says that he
used to tell many stories In going
about In his political campaigns. The
audiences always lilted them and went
away pleased. Telling them looked
like good politics.
Years later Kelly would meet a
man and he would say:
"I have met you before. I remem
ber very well a certain story you
told."
Then he would repeat the anecdote.
Kelly would ask him what else he re
membered that had been said, and he
would be unable to remember a thing.
The congressman began to wonder if the
telling of stories prevented more fieri
ous matters from finding lodgement
in the hearer's mind.
. He became fearful. He was not
sure, but he decided to lay off the
funny story. So wus the possibility
of a multitude of good laughs sacri
ficed at the altar of serious states
manship. New York Sun.
Chief Suffragette.
A friend who had known Thomas
Riley Marshall for a great many years
saw him after the cares of office had
been removed from his shoulders, Just
as he was about to board a Washing
ton street car. He stopped and asked
him : m
"Tell me, Mr. Marshall, what can toa
done to make the oltlce of vice presi
dent a great office 1"
"I'll tell you in one minute, and
won't even have to mlfis this car," nald
Mr. Marshall. "There Isn't anything
you can do. The vice president will
always be chambermaid to the king.'
Something Just as Good.
"Have you 'Twenty Thousand
Leagues Cnder the Sen?"
"No, maum," naid the facetious
clerk, 'but I own forty acres mid
ater Unit wns uld to me as good
farming land."
THE HEPPNER HERALD, ONLY $2.00 A YEAR
Too Industrious.
"Who Ik the inystrriows ftrnti'TT
"Some kind of Invfsiigut'rr."
"Wurklnii for 'he govriiini'M 1"
l (loul t It. lie kT,s urelty Iiukj.
There are netile3 everywhere,
Liut smooth gretMi grasses are more
common still.
The blue ot heaven Is larger ttian the
cloud. E. U Jirownlnif.
WHAT TO EAT.
When planning the meals for the
week, the following may prove sugges
tive:
Timbales of Chicken.-
Take one-half cupful of
crenm, whiles of four
eggs, one-half table
spoonful of t rallies, fine
ly chopped, two cupful
.of cooked white meat of
chicken, with salt and
pepper to taste. Chop
the meat very line, and pound It to a
smooth paste. Add the cream gmd
ually. When well mixed, season and
add the truffles. Then add, one at a
time, the unbeaten whites of two of
the eggs, mixing the first with the
paste until It bus disappeared hefnrn
(Hiding the second. Heat the remain
lug whites to a stiff froth and stir
them carefully Into the mixture. Kill
greased tlmbnle molds half full of the
mixture, place in a pun of water the
water should come up as high as thei
mixture In the llmbalo and bake thlr-!
ty minutes In a moderate oven. Serve;
with mushroom sauce.
Cabbage Imperial. Trim and fold
back three or four of the oulslde leaves i
of a firm head of cabbage. With n j
shnrp knife remove the center, lenv- j
lug only a thick wall. Take imp cap- i
fill of cold meat well seasoned, one
cupful of sliced potatoes, one cupfril
of sliced carrots and enough of the
cabbage to fill the head. Add salt
and pepper to taste and a few table
spoonfuls of butter. Press the mix
ture well Into the cavity. Tie In H
piece of cheese cloth and steam or
cook In a small amount of water un
til the cabbage Is tender Cut In pie
shaped pieces and serve on a platter.
Reliable Marshmallow Frosting. !
This hss appeared before, but Is so j
good that It bears repetition. Put the i
unbeaten white of an egg. seven- i
eighths of a rnp of sugar, three table
spoonfuls of water In the upper part!
of the double boiler. Have the water I
underneath rapidly boiling, et the,
sugar mixture over the water and
wiUi a I (over egg beater, begin to
beat; after seven minutes add twelve
mar-limallows, remove from the heal
and beat with a spoon ur.til the mix
tore Is smooth and 'oo enough d
hold Its etmpe, L'e to frost littl
mkes and cookie,'.
Florence Oil Stove
Asbestos Wick
Bakes Boils
Roasts Toasts
Cook in a cool kitchen
Peoples
Hardware Co.
in
Fresh Pure Lard
We render fresh, pure lard three times a week and
have reduced the price to 20C A POUND
Order a Strictly First-Class, Heppner-made Product
Central Market
McNAMER & SORENSON, Props.
Jud Tunkins. CUm , Arr,erca,
.I nd Tunkim sos a successful or- America Is full of middle class folk
Itor Is a man who can attract hh h! ,o feel upper clast. tt-(I luwer cms
i crowd as oes to see l,al K,tr,m fl)lk n0 ,,,,, clu b(a
lad who cn say something ,nt wM re n ,,)Wpr (.1Si i) u,h(j
l:t as much applause as a home run. clui-.it.- ilalllmoie buu.