ta,k i.uarr
THK O AZETTE-TIMKS, HKTPXER, OKK.. Till IISDAY, SEPT. lfl. 1920.
LOCAL AKD PERSONAL
Harry Dingps of L- iington was a
W finest ay visitor l,tri'.
U. J. Carsmr, Uul stockman, Is
her ud busi!ifs this ncok.
Anson Wright, expensive youth end
hpnihn, a a business caller in
llopimir on VVdnesday.
Mr. MrFtvters of TLe Dalles is a
guent at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R.
E. Crego in Hoppner this week.
Three furnished housekeeping
rooms, J17.P0 and one furnished
housekeeping room, $10. Inquire G.
T. office.
Miss Ava Creighton of The Dalles,
a sister of Mrs. R. E. Crego, is a
guest at the Crego home in this city
for the week.
An 8i pound son arrived at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Bowling,
in Boise, Idaho, on September 13th.
Mrs. Bowling was formerly Miss
Edith Thorley, of this city.
Mr. and Mrs Harley Wright of
Hardtnan left this morning for Port
land where they will spend a few
days before going on to Pasadena,
California, for the winter.
vim SALE Two houses on the
place and the rolling mill, all for
$6000. $4000 down and the balance
1 to 2 years at 6 per cent interest.
Phone 735 or call on Geo. Schempp.
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Livingstone
visited lone on Wednesday, where
they took part in the program of the
County Sunday School convention In
session there. They report the at
tendance as being light, due largely
to the fact that the same had not
been as well advertised as it should
have been.
When men and women and chil
dren are dying of exposure in a frigii
climate the most despised, out-of-date,
ungraceful garment is price
less to them it becomes the deciding
factor m a ctance to live. Any
clothes old clothes, new clothes
that America can produce are wanted
wanted now by Near East Relief.
Have your stuff ready by the 1st of
October.
Spray Wool Taken at 53 Cents.
Earl S. Richards and Bales Broth
ers contracted their wool to Miles
Lee of Baker, for 55 cents per pound
last Spring, wool to be delivered at
Condon, Oregon. For some time they
could not hear from their contractors
so they began to hink the five thou
sand dollars paid down on the wool
at the time was forfeited. Mr. Rich
ards informed us that Mr. Lee took
the wool according to contract at the
contract price, though he was rather
late in doing so. The entire clip of
wool sold by Mr. Richards and Bales
Brothers was in the neighborhood of
50,000 pounds. Spray Courier.
DAIRY
HINTS
CAMPAIGN FOR BETTER SIRES
Owner of Purebred Animals Take
Generous Pride in Progress of
the Movement
Every rtniil received by the bureau
of animal industry, United States de
partment of agriculture, shows the
readiness with which farmers and ani
mal breeders in general are co-operating
In currying out the "Better Sires
Better Snx-k" cnmpulin.
The letters show that the owners of
purebred sires take a generous and
proper pride In the progress of the
campaign in thfelr community. One
letter recently received contained the
following iidvertluent clipped from
a county newspaper published in Penn
sylvania :
"Don't breed to scrubs fetch your
big cows to Victory farms service
free.
"For milk: Breed to De Kol Pietje
Charles Dickens. Sire: Woodcrest
t'nna I'ietje. Dam: Daisy Le Polke
De Kol III (Ilolstein-Frieslun).
"For beef: Bre.d to Cardlngton
Bob Bill Sykes. Sire: Canlington
K) ' -
Rapid Improvement in Herds Is Seen
Where Purebred Sire Is at Its Head.
Blackjack. Dam : Jennie of Olen
jrangy (Aberdeen-Angus).
"Will pay $25 for five-day-old heifer
calves lued by either one of these sires
when delivered at Victory farms.
" 1 Owner."
The owner of this farm explains by
letter that he also maintains purebred
oars and Hint the service of these ani
mals Is free to neighboring farms.
This Is but one Instance In which the
owner of better sires has offered their
advantages to his neighbors free of
charge. The fact that the owner of
the sires Is willing to buy the heifer
-tilves bred from bis purebred bulls Is
an Indication of the Increased profits
that may be realized by Oie owner of
a scrub or grade herd when he has put
a purebred sire at Its head. It ahowt
that the value of the progeny of a
f
pnrel.rv.) -!re mil a grade dam Is so
well :a!Vhl In the minds of the
hest informed among breeders that
they are willing to pay a much higher
rate for this progeny than for a calf
with grade parents in both the sirv
and the dam. It further illustrates
the rapidity of Improvement In a herd
which has a purebred sire at Its head.
FLAVOR OF BIG IMPORTANCE
If in Making Butter Desirable Quality
l Spoiled Price on Market
Mutt Be Reduced.
Butter is valued over lard and tal
low mainly for the reason that It has
a more desirable flavor. If, In the
making and handling of butter, this
desirable quality Is spoiled, the price
of the product on the general market
must be reduced accordingly. The
consumer eats butter mainly as a rel
ish, and If It has a bad flavor it ceases
to be a desirable relish.
VALUABLE HELP TO BREEDER
Dairy Improvement Association En
deavors to Improve Herds by
Hiring General Overseer.
The dairy improvement association
is a valuable aid to the breeder and en
deavors to Improve the herds by hir
ing a man to spend his entire time vis
iting the farms of an organized group
of farmers In order to weigh theli
milk, test it for butterfat and calcu
late the. records of production and cost
DAIRY NOTES
Regularity in feeding dairy stock i?
Important.
'
Keep the cans of cream in a cooling
tank until time of delivery.
Skim the milk as soon after making
as possible and cool the cream at
once.
A cow must have a certain amount
or food nutriments to keep op the
Sow of milk.
Protect the cans of cream from the
6un by covering with canvas or with
a wet sack while en route.
Overfeeding ts not the part of wis
dom. What Is too much for one cow
may not be enough for another.
Aircraft Conditions.
Several American commissions have
recently made an Investigation Into
the aircraft conditions In different
parts of the world, and they agree that
this country has the opportunity to lead
the world In civilian aeronautical ac
tivities and as a market for aircraft
in 1920. It was the Joint opinion of
these commissions that the United
States is ahead of all other countries
In number of planes actually ordered
and bought for civilian purposes, num
ber of aerial transportation lines be
ing organized, actual dally pertorm
ance of the aerial mall service, and
volume of mall carried, and possibili
ties for the use of aircraft for com
mercial purposes, and that the fact
that the post office has proved that
military planes can be converted Into
mall carriers makes possible the utili
zation of service planes to meet the im
mediate demand which manufacturers
are unable to meet.
Destroyed the Illusion.
Into the restaurant she came with
the air of a princess, a truly regal fig
ure, clnd In brown from top to toe and
looking as If she had Just visited a
Parisian modiste and a beauty parlor
a perfectly groomed, handsome wom
an. There was an air of refinement
about her. She looked expensively
turned out In the simple, deceptive
way.
She seated herself at a table and
there were little exclamations of ad
miration from other diners near. A
waitress approached; every one
hushed to listen to the beautiful crea
ture speak.
In a high-pitched, East side voice
Rhe ordered: "Bring me a onion
omlette." It was brought, and she
played it goifishly speaking, with her
knife. New York Evening Post.
Youthful Cattle Raiser.
Little Edwin, age seven, lives on a
farm in Grant county. It has been
for some time his father's custom to
sell calves to a neighboring farmer
when they were about three days old.
The other day JIttle Edwin was In
structed to go to the home of the
neighbor, and tell him that a calf
would be ready for him the following
day, and that it was a "bull calf."
With an air of great Importance the
young farmer delivered the following
message: "My father told me to tell
you that our bull has a new calf, and
you can have It tomorrow I" Indlan
opoils News.
JOKE ON BOTH "CHAPPIES"
Some Particulars About Their English
Raiment With Which They Were
Not Acquainted.
It Isn't exactly their swell brand of
golf that entitles them to be so de
cidedly English In their apparel, but
they've a "fawncy" for the English
raiment Jitot the same.
"How do you like my English cap,
old chapr one of them asked.
"It' a turtle, old dear, but It Isn't
quite so English as mine," the other
said.
"Oh, mine Is, quite."
"No, not nearly."
And so they compared caps. But
when they looked at the names of the
makers It wee discovered by the "de
cidedly English" follower that his cap
had been made In New York. The
other bore a London label and, of
course, yon understand, old chap, It
was quite a "lawf."
And the funny feature of It all Is
that the New York cap was made to
appeal to the English trade, while the
London cap was designed to catch the
fancy of the Yank.
DO NOT THROW AWAY
PARTLY STALE BREAD
Different Ways of Making
It
Quite Appetizing.
Good Plan to Cut Off What Is Needi'
at Meal and Place Slices in Hot
Oven Croutons Are Made of
Odds and Ends.
Toasting Is the most common
method for inakiiu' stale or partly-
stale bread attractive, but It Is by no
means the only one. If partly stale
bread Is put Into a very hot oven for
a few minutes It grows softer, prob
ably because the heat tends to drive
the water from the crust back Into the
crumb, food specialists of the United
States department of agriculture say.
Such warmed-over bread is not as soft
and springy as fresh, but most persons
find it very appetizing. A good plan,
therefore, when breud has lost Its
freslmesss. is to cut off what will be
needed at a meal and place the slices
In a hot oven for a few minutes Just
before serving. In this way bread can
be used on the table which would or
dinarily be considered too stale.
"Twice-baked bread," which is cut
bread placed in the wanning'oven or
In a pun en the back of the stove and
allowed to dry out slowly until It Is
slightly brown and crisp throughout,
offers still another way of making
stale bread attractive. If desired, this
twice-baked bread mav be crushed
with a rolling-pin and used like the
roady-to-eat breakfast cereats. In
some localities this dish has long been
known under the name of rusks.
The little fried tubes of bread called
croutons, which are served with soup,
mav be made of odds und ends of
bread. To save time, breud simply
broken Into small pieces may be fried
either In deep fat or in a pan (sauteed)
and used for the same purpose. Some
times bread crumbs fried In a pan are
used as a seasoning or sauce for meat.
French cooks frequently put pieces of
stale breail In soups just long enough
before serving for them to soften ; the
v ell-known one, "crust In the pot,"
(croute au pot). Is simply a thin soup
with bread In It.
There are many ways of using stale
bread In cooking. Almost every good
cookbook gives directions for prepar
ing soft and dry crumbs for use In
scalloped dishes, bread puddings, etc.
The soft parts of bread may be used
In place 7if flour or cornstarch for
thickening soups, sauces, gravies,
stewed tomatoes (either fresh or
canned), etc. Bakers often use stale
bread and dried, finely ground cake
In place of i art of the flour. In making
fancy breads, cakes and cookies. The
housekeeper can often avoid waste by
using them in this way in griddlecakcs,
cakes, cookies, etc.
MOPS FOR POLISHED FLOORS
One May Ee Made of Old Stocking
or Any Discarded Woolen or
Flannelette Material.
For oiled or polished floors an oiled
tloor mop Is almost a necessity. Sev
eral makes can be found on the mar
'set, or one tuny be made of old stock-
Star Theater
D. W. GRIFFITH, The Master Producer
Presents
"TRUE HEART SUSIE"
Featuring LILLIAN GISH
THIS IS ANOTHER GRIFFITH MASTERPIECE DON'T FAIL TO SEE IT.
FRIDAY September 17th FRIDAY
MAX UNDER IS COMING BACK!
Don't you remember May Jollyboy of former years. He went through, the war,
fighting for France. Now he is back in N
"THE LITTLE CAFE"
Saturday' Sept. 18th Saturday
Dorothy Gish in "Peppy Polly"
A Paramount Picture
She deliberately went to jail to "clean up the place" and save a friend.
While she was there the only friend who knew of her scheme died. What was
she to do? How could she get out?. Leave it to Dorothy Gish. She knows how! . Its
a riot!
SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 19 SUNDAY
JACK DEMPSEY, WORLD'S CHAMPION HEAVYWEIGHT PRIZE FIGHTER.
"WOMAN," Maurice Tourneur's epic, tracing the development of woman through
the centuries.
Harold Bell Wright's "Shepherd of the Hills."
tugs or any dlseai.li 1 woolen or tl.ai
itflette material. In a Farmers' Bul
letin on "Farm Homo Conveniences."
obtainable free from the United States
department of agriculture, the follow
ing directions for making such a mop
are given:
The material Is cut Into 1-lnch wide
strips, which are sewed across the
middle to a foundation of heavy cloth.
This la fastened to an old broom han
dle or used In a clamp mop handle.
The mop, when finished, Is dipped
Into a solution nuide of one-half cup
ful cf melted paraffin and one cupful
of kerosene, and then allowed to dry
To keep It moist it Is rolled tightly
and kept in a paper bag away from
stoves or lamps.
CHEMICAL EFFECTS OF FOOD
It May Be Literally True That "One
Man's Meat Is Another Man's
Poleon" People Differ.
Different persons are differently con
stituted with respect to the chemi
cal changes which their food under
goes and the effect produced, so that
It may be Uteri. My true that "one
man's meat is ano:her man's poison."
Every man must learn from his own
experience whut food agrees with him
and what does not. United States de
partment of agriculture.
Keep large paper bag III the kitchen
for rags.
' Minced walnuts may be added to
salmon salad.
Cakes to be eaten while fresh re
quire little fat.
Apricot tapioca can be made exactly
as peach tapioca Is.
Grated lemon ieei adds a delicious
flavor to baked upples.
A few breud crumbs added to scram
bled pggs tmproc 'lain.
Wet the cut end of ham with vin
egar to keep from moulding.
MAYOR NOT LIGHTLY CHOSEN
Chief Executive of City of London Is
Called Upon to Fulfill Many
Requirements.
Sir William Treloar, In his ricently
published hook, "A Lord Mayor's
Diary," points out that the chief mag
istrate of the city of London Is chosen
In quite a different manner from that
adopted by nny other municipality in
the kingdom, remarks London An
swers. Instead of being elected by the mem
bers of the corporation, or council,
who may, and often do, for political
party reasons, choose someone who
has never done suit or' services to the
town, London's lord mayor can be
chosen only from those who have
served an apprenticeship of some yearg
to the corporation.
He must first be elected an alder
man by the ratepayers of his ward.
M Aouni SI
he House m
COMING SOON :
Watch for Dates
and accepted and sworn In by the
court of aldermen ; then he must have
served the office of sheriff, to which
position he has to be elected by the
liverymen, and afterward approved
by the sovereign.
Th. n, and not till then, Is he eligible
to ask the liverymen to elect him as
lord mayor; the court of aldermen aft
erward aaln having the power to re
fuse him, the approval of the sovereign
being also again necessary before he
can take office.
RESEMBLE ACRES OF LILIES
Visitor's Beautiful Description of the
American Cemeteries In Franc
Exquisite In Uniformity.
Though American relatives usually
waut to plant flowers on the graves
of their sous or brothers In the Amer
ican army cemeteries In France, an
army ruling forbidding this has been
adhered to. The cemeteries, a uni
form stretch of green grass with white
crosses, look like "acres of white lil
ies," according to Miss Elsie Goddard,
a Wellesley graduate who has returned
to this country after having had super
vision of the Y. W. C, A. rest huts
built for the comfort of relatives vis
iting the graves In four of the Ameri
can cemeteries in Fmnee. "At first
every one wants to plant flowers on
the grave they love," says Miss God
dard, "but they soon see that the army
ruling keeps the cemeteries most beaiK
tlful and impressive because of the
uniformity. Cut flowers can be placed
on graves and tlowers cuu be planted
In the flower beds near by, but not
on the graves. The French people
who are eager to decorate the graves
In some pnrts are often surprised at
this ruling, but our cemeteries, as cared
for, are wonderfully Impressive. Aft
ter visiting them few Americans want
to tnke the bodies of their boys home,
though they have been determined to
do It before they came." The Y, W. C.
A. and Bed Cross combine In main
taining rest huts at Romngne, Bony
Kelleau Woods and Fere-en-Tardenols.
"No matter how prepared a mother
and fullier are for what they expect
to see, the first sight of the field of
American graves overwhelms them"
says Miss Goddard.
MATERNITY HOWS
I have arranged to tak a limited
number of maternity cases at my
home in east Heppner and assure the
very best attention and care to all fa
tients. For full information write or
phone MRS. O. C. AIKEN, Hepiner,
Oregon. Box 143. Phone 1SS.
LIVE STOCK FOR SALE
Registered Hereford bulls and heif
ers. Best breeding and quality.
Raised on our farm In southern
Idaho. Herd comprises 400 head,
which must be reduced at once to
give us more room. Now is the
time to buy. Can sell in carload
lots. Prices reasonable. Satisfac
tion guaranteed. Write or come
and see them. Farm close to
Nampa, Ida., on main line of Ore
gon Short Line. L. L. Young &
Sons.
Morrow County Creamery
Company
Manufacturers of WILLOW BRAND Buttenr and
Ice Cream. The kind that has that appetizing taste.
Phone your orders for ICE that is
made from pure city water.
uwuuutttunttmt:tfflitunt;mn;;Kn:;mtt;t!i:t:::tttti!;nti:i;i:a;:!nt
Highest Prices Always Paid for Butter Fat
W. C. COX, Manager
Holsum Bread
Made Clean -:- Sold Clean
Delivered Clean
1-lb. Loaf 10 Cents
From the wheat in the field to the
bread on your table comes this
delicious product untouched
by human hands.. The en
tire process of making
Holsum Bread
is by machinery.
SAM HUGHES
COMPANY
L. MONTERESTELLI
Marble and Granite
Works
PENDLETON, OREGON
Fine Monument and Cemetery Work
All parties interested in getting work in my line
should get my prices and estimates before
placing their orders
All Work Guaranteed
BmjtttKttttaamuHtmtnmmat
The
"Red Crown"
sign stands for
an all'refinery
gasoline.
STANDARD OIL CO, '
(California)
GasoUm