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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 31, 1918)
hl'o Six THE UAZETTE-TIMES, HETPNEK, OREGON; THURSDAY, JANUARY 31. 1918. LIVE CECIL NEWS ITEMS Mrs. L. Turner visited the Cecil school Thursday. Hazel Dean and Roy Stender were Cecil visitors Tuesday. Geo. B. Whitromb of Morgan was a (Veil visitor Sunday. Mrs. Bauernflend and son of lone visited Peter Bauernfiend Sunday. Jack Hynd was shipping hay for the Willamette Valley on Tuesday. J. H. Franklin returned to Cecil af ter spending the past week in Pen dleton. . Coke Ewtng boarded the train at Cecil Tuesday to spend a few days at Heppner. Walter Pope, accompanied by Mis Georgia Summers, spent Saturday In Arlington. i Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Van Schoiack and Willie Lowe left on the local for! Heppner Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lindstrom of Morgan pent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lun dell at Rhea Siding. Bob Montague from Toppenlsh, ac companied by Sox Morgan, was In Ce cil Friday trying to buy horses. Mesdames Combest, Miller and Bennett and Miss Easton callsd on Grandma Melton Sunday, who Is till very ill. J. H. Miller and Walter Pope vis ited friends in the Eight Mile country Sunday. Wralter boasts of having the best Ford In Cecil. Nirtju Winnard, son of Dr. N. E. Winnard of Heppner, returned home Saturday after spending a few days on Butterby Flats. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nash accom panied by J. H. Miller took in the party Tuesday night at Lundell's, re porting a fine time. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bristow and fan on his way to Condon to have his questionnaire papers fixed. John thought Cecil district looked Que, An application for recognition of an auxiliary of a Chapter of the American Red Cross has been sent in from Cecil to the A. R. C, Heppner, Chairman. Mrs. T. H. Lowe; treasur er, Mrs. Roxy Bennett; secretary Miss Inei Easton. J. C. Hawkins and W. B. Oldham gave a series of illustrated lectures in the Cecil hall on wheat production the sack question, etc., which were largely attended. They were aecom panied by Mrs. Lena Snell Shurte, county school superintendent IRRIGON NEWS ITEMS Guy Corey Is spending a few days In Irrlgoa. Mr. Brownell of Umatilla, was In town last Saturday. Mr. Miller, the Umatilla butcher, was in town last Saturday. H. Stockard was an lone visitor a few days last week.' He went over to transact business. Mrs. Suddarth was sick the first of the week so we had no school. She is able now, to resume ber school duties. Two new pupils were enrolled In school last week. They were Vlrllng and Frank Stleghter, recently of Kel logg Idaho. Mesdames A. W. Walpole, N. Sea man, J. Dawson and W. W. Caldwell were visiting the girls' sewing club Friday afternoon. The two former are on the advisory committee and their help and instructions are great ly appreciated by the club. H. H. Weston and Mr. Hendrix of Board man were in Irrigon last Tues day. Mr. Weston was the first East ern Oregon citizen we got acquainted with when we landed In Morrow county and it seems like old times to ily, accompanied by W. G. Hynd of i have him among us- They were get Rose Lawn, Sand Hollow, spent Sun day in Cecil amongst their friends. . Jerni O'Connor and Mike Whitney broueht another bn the Hager place to Cecil on Thursday. : sum 0UIUB wu,lu ul w,u lu ting young poplars and locusts for wind breaks and shade trees for their ranches Fat, the young corn king of Irri- Jerm stayed over Friday to do some cattle branding. Farmer Smith last week, and is very enthusiastic over his deal. Farmer Smith will use the corn on his exner- A nice birthday surprise party was . Imental farm at this nlnce Fat is given in honor of Miss Lucille Huffs' impatient to try his luck again this birthday at the Lundell place Tues- j summer on a better scale than ever day night, which was well attended ' and he wants Irrigon to be first next by quite a host of friends. T. R. May and party from Wasco, were at Cecil and Moragn Thursday looking over some wheat land. Mr. May intends to start In farming in this part of the country before long. Loy M. Turner of Heppner, county surveyor, accompanied by Mrs. Tui ner, arrived in Cecil Wednesday. Loy is doing some surveying for H. S. Ewing and Jack Hynd and for J. W. Osborne. John Kelley of Sand Hollow took Fall at the Spokane Corn Show. Picked Up On Bootlegging Charge, Through the instructions of Sheriff George McDuffee, Dave Lightner, who says Portland is his home, was picked up at Boardman last week by Deputy Sheriff Gibbons and brought to Hepp ner Friday, on a charge of bootleg ging. However, a warrant from Gil liam county had a prior right, and the young man was taken to Arling- quite a jump Wednesday morning to ton, where the district attorney from catch the train with Nick M. Volneag, Condon took him in charge. ALBERT WILLIAMS WOOD AND COAL I have taken over the fuel businesses of both the Hepp ner Wood Yard and C. H. Goldsmith, and can furnish fuel of all kinds in any quantity desired. Leave orders with A. Z. Barnard or phone Main 393 YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED. HEPPNER FARMERS ELEVATOR CO. Manufacturers and Distributers of White Star Hour and Dealers in Flour, Feed, Grain, Stock and Poultry Supplies FACE the FACTS LET us face the facts. The war situation is critical. Unless the Allies fight as they never yet have fought, defeat threatens. Hungry men cannot fight at their best; nor hungry nations. France, England, and Italy are going hungry unless we feed them. Wheat Sarinf They must have wheat. It la the best food to fight on. It is the easiest to ship. We alone can spare it to them. By saving just a little less than a quarter of what we ate last year we can support those who are fighting our battles. And we can do it without stinting ourselves. We have only to substitute another food just as good. Th Com of Plenty Corn la that ftod. There's a surplus of it Providence has been generous in the hour of our need. It has givem com in such bounty as was never known before. Tons of corn. Train . loads of cora. Five hundred million bushels over and above our regular needs. AO we have to do is to learn to appreciate it Was ever patriotic duty made so easy? And so clear? America's Own Food Com I It Is the true American food. The Indians, hardiest of races, lived on it Our forefathers adopted the. diet and conquered a continent For a great section of our country it has blong een the staff of life. How well the South fought on it, history tells. Now it can help America win a world war. Learn Something Corn ! It isn't one food. It's a dozen. It's a cereal. It's a vegetable. It's a bread. It's a dessert. It's nutritious; more food value in it, dollar for dollar, than meat or eggs or most other vegetables. It's good to eat; how good you don't know until you've had corn-bread properly cooked. Best of all, it's plentiful and it's patriotic. Corn's Infinite Variety How much do you know about corn? About how good it is? About the many delicious ways of cooking it? And what you miss by not knowing more about it? Here are a few of its uses : There are at least fifty ways to use corn meal to make good dishes for dinner, supper, lunch or break fast. Here are some suggestions: DESSERTS Corn-meal molasses cake. Apple corn bread. Dumplings. Gingerbread. Fruit gems. . HOT BREADS Boston brown bread. Hoecake. Muffins. Biscuits. Griddle cakes. Waffles. HEARTY DISHES Corn-meal croquettes. Corn-meal fish balls. Meat and corn-meal dumplings. Italian polenta. Tamales. The recipes are in Farmers' Bulletin 565, "Corn Meal as a Food and Ways of Using It," free from the Department of Agriculture. WHEATI.ESS BISCUITS. Parched cornmeal In the feature of these excellent wheatless biscuits. First, the cornmeal one-half a cup Is put In a shallow nnn placed in the oven and stirred frequently until it is a delicate brown. The other ingre dients are a teaspoon of salt, a cup of peanut butter and one and a half cups of water. Mix the peanut but ter, water and salt and heat While this mixture Is hot stir In the meal which should also be hot Beat thor oughly. The dough should be of such consistency that It can be dropped from a spoon. Bake in small cakes In an ungreased pan. This makes 16 biscuits, each of whjch coptalns one sixth of an ounce of protein. DELICIOUS CORN MUFFINS. Here's an old fashioned recipe for corn muffins that lias recently been revived and used with unusual success In several of the larger New York ho tels : To make three and a half dozen muffins take one quart milk, six ounces butter substitute, twelve ounces of light syrup or honey, four eggs, pinch of suit, two ounces baking powder, one and a half pounds cornmeal and one and a half pounds rye flour. The butter and syrup Bhould be thoroughly mixed ; then ndd the eggs gradually. Pour in the milk and ndd the rye flour mixed with cornmeal and baking powder. GILLIAM & BISBEE are prepared to furnish the farmers and stockgrowers with all kinds of machinery and extras for their 1918 equipment. There is going to be a shortage of extras and we would advise go ing over all machinery NOW and ordering all the extras you will need this season and have all machinery adjusted and ready for use when the time comes to use it Take our word for it, if you wait until the extras are needed you may not be able to get them. There will be no time to waste in 1918 ,! lift I lumber Moulding Screen Doors Shingles f ALL KINDS OF BUILD ING MATERIAL GET MY FIGURES BEFORE PLACING YOUR ORDER ELSEWHERE H. C. GITHENS LUMBER YARD MAIN STREET, HEPPNER. OREGON use more cora use morejish & beans use jusi enough J use syrups and serve he cause of freedom ITS mnn rM I M I JTIJ ATI ON A 6000-MILE TIRE THE LANCASTER WIREGRIP The Tire With a Thousand Claws Insures greater mileage and costs but little more than ordinary tires. L. E. HILL, Agent Willow Street, Heppner, Ore. "Peninsular" Thats the Name: PENINSULAR High Oven Range The Prettiest and Best Range Made TASH & AKERS SUCCESSORS TO VAUGHN & SONS EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE