HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 31, 1929.
PAGE THREE
Ttofe
or th9
by Nancu fart
Have you noticed, of late, the vogue
for gay quilts and comfortables?
For years, In the artificiality of an
other age, the decorative possibil
ities of these pieces have seemed
half-forgotten. Now suddenly en
couraged by today's demand for de
sign and contrasting color they
have come back into fashion again.
And so Important is the subject that
it has broken Into print to tell its
own fascinating story through the
pages of a thick new book "Old
Patchwork Quilts and the Women
Who Made Them" in which the
author gives not only a complete
history of the quilt, but also de
scribes 310 different patterns and
illustrates many of them.
It is a book to intrigue every
girl and woman who dreams of a
beautiful home. And the story
seems particularly apropos, since
the gay, colorful patchwork theme
with its geometric patterns is so
thoroughly in harmony with the
modern trend in home-furnishings.
Menu for Meatless Night
Vegetable Chowder
Stuffed Baked Sauaah
Cream Turnips and Onions
Hot pickled beets
Custard Pie
Coffee
Ever Try Cucumber Soup?
For a soup that is different, try
the recipe for cucumber soup: Peel
3 large cucumbers, slice and remove
seeds. Cook in 2 tbls. butter for 10
minutes; then add 3 tbls. flour and
3 cups white soup stock.- Scald 1
cup milk with 1 slice onion. Com
bine mixtures and rub through a
sieve. Reheat to boiling point and
add 1-2 cup cream and yolks of 2
eggs. Season with salt and pepper.
Serve with cheese chips.
Chicken Loaf
1-2 cup cooked chicken, chopped,
1-2 cup chopped cooked veal, 1-2 cup
soft bread crumbs, 1-2 ts salt, dash
celery saH, 1 ts. chopped parsley, 1
egg, 1-2 cup milk. Mix all ingred
ients. Add seasoning, egg and milk.
Bake in well-buttered pan for 30
minutes.
Piccadilly Salad
Peel and cut a large orange in
dice; add sufficient chopped celery
to make 1 cup and set on ice until
wanted. Halve large pecan meats,
using 2 cups nuts to the amount of
fruit given. Mix, arrange on crisp
lettuce and top with whipped cream
mayonnaise. Garnsih with strips of
pimiento.
Quick Plum Pudding
Soak 1-2 lb. stale crumbs In 1 cup
scalded milk, let stand until cool;
add 1-4 lb. sugar, beaten yolks of 4
eggs, 1-2 lb. raisins seeded, chopped
and floured, 1-4 lb. chopped figs and
2 oz. finely cut citron. Chop 1-2 lb.
suet, combine all ingredients, adding
1-4 cup grape juice, 1-3 ts. each of
cloves, ginger, mace and nutmeg, 1
ts. cinnamon and 1 1-2 ts. salt Add
beaten whites of the 4 eggs last and
turn into buttered mold. Steam for
6 hours.
For Indoor Plants
Whitewashing the inside of wood
en window boxes before filling them
with Boil will do much to preserve
the boxes and keep out Insects.
Novel Bait for Mice
Instead of the conventional piece
of cheese, bait your traps with
pumpkin seeds. Mice are very fond
of them.
New Board Asks U. S. to
Make Education Survey
The Impartial survey of Oregon's
Institutions of higher learning, pro
vided for in the law creating the
joint board of higher education, will
doubtless be made by the United
States bureau of education as a re
sult of action taken by the board
at Its first meeting at Oregon State
college.
The board voted to open negotia
tions with the federal bureau at
once, which under normal condi
tions would get the survey started
early in 1930. The board also grant
ed permission to the college to lease
additional land for the experiment
station farms and to add two lots
to the campus.
Br E.n howe
7h& Sefe ofPohhttlT
Stubborness.
Amateur Writing.
Drunkards.
A reader asks: "What actuates a
stubborn man?". . . Answer Mean
ness: Scare him sufficiently, and he
will come out of It
I find satisfaction and value in
the writing of amateurs. Their halt
ing fear of an audience, appeals to
me, and I am more readily disposed
to approve than when I pick up a
book of an old professional like
Bernard Shaw or H. G. Wells. Both
these men (and most of the noted)
display contempt for us readers too
frequently, whereas by reason of
our great number, we have accom
plished more than the few authors
with all their skill manipulating the
make-up box. ... I find very good
things in amateur writing. I have
before me a modest book by Alfred
Hitch, published by the author In
the usual amateurish style, from
which I quote samples: Virtue is its
own reward; anything else Is a
bribe. . . . Not to fear is not cour
age, but Insensibility. Courage Is
to fear and still attempt . . . The
possible always happens sooner or
later. . . . The less people have In
themselves the more they seek the
society of others. - . . The Rubaiyat
of Omar Khayyam celebrates that
disgusting trait In man to get drunk
when anything goes wrong (where
as adversity is the precise time one
should remain sober). It is not
strange that In the custom of "treat
ing" a friend, the custom is to offer
him poison that should go to an
enemy? . . . Dogs are dogs whether
they are under or on top. . . . The
only Immortality of which man is
worthy would be that of preserva
tion in alcohol with other reptiles
and Insects; and two or three speci
mens would be enough. . . . Give me
facts, and I will not ask for truth.
. . . The Russians and Germans
cheerfully followed their sovereigns
through pillage and murder, and
turned from them only when they
failed.
I have never been able to under
stand a drunkard. Every man may
be pardoned for making a fool of
himself occasionally; and, if a man
is behaving when we hear of his
folly, it helps with the public. But
the folly of the drunkard Is con
tinuous; he punishes himself every
week or every day, and knows the
loss is greater than the profit; not
one drunk in the many he has en
gaged in has paid him. Therefore
how does such a man satisfy his
conscience? An old drunkard tells
me the exhilaration of a good stiff
drink of whisky lasts forty minutes.
For such exhilaration one pays with
busthead lasting several hours; In
the case of a drunkard, he pays
witn the contempt of everybody.
Unless heir to a fortune, he accepts
the unnecessary disgrace of failure
and poverty and even If born with
a silver spoon In his mouth, he soon
spews it out, and substitutes pewter.
What is the philosophy of the
drunkard? Or of the idler, the
bore, the dead beat or other per
sistent violator of rules of human
society? They have excuses, but
usually these are merely exercise in
the trade of a liar, wherein one In
sults himself with further Injury.
Family Will Like Them
if You Fix Them Right
Do you have to thrust vegetables
upon your family, insisting that
they eat them "because they are
good for you" or do you make them
so attractive that the family de
mands them? It's all in the man
ner of preparation, says the home
economics department of Oregon
State college.
For instance, it is essential to
keep the vegetables whole or in uni
form attractive pieces, and to pre
serve the natural color as much as
Would You buy a car
WITHOUT
4 -WHEEL DRAKES
BALLOON TIDES.?
A SELF STARTER.
SCI"2 EEN-QPI D s
THE LATEST AND GREATEST
DEVELOPMENT IN RADIO.
ftasr worn naovso amoowbmsw" ;
ATWATER KENT
SCREEN-GRID
RAD
ATWATCB KENT IS SClfflV GRID- XKCN 6R1D IS ATWATtB KENT.
MORE DISTANCE .
GREATER SELECTIVITY.
RICHER TONE.
SE IT.
HEAR IT.
AND
YOU WILL
B-UV IT.
Phone 172 CITY GARAGE Heppner, Ore.
Call for free demonstration in your home
possible. And cook them the short
est time possible till they are bare
ly tender. Longer cooking detracts
from color and flavor, and Injures
the vitamin and mineral content so
that little Johnny has to eat twice
as much spinach to get the neces
sary amount of food value.
Allowing many vegetables to
stand after cooking before being
served also often causes them to
become strong In flavor and unat
tractive in appearance. If all these
points are observed, and care is tak
en to vary both the kind served and
the manner of serving them, the
family will soon begin to enjoy their
vegetables.
DRINK MORE MILK
Wise old Mother Nature made milk
for children. Into it she put every
thing needed for sustenance, and in
the most easily assimilated form.
So, Drink More Milk. Let the
children have plenty. It is the
cheapest food you can buy.
A If If T
airaira Lawn
WIOHTMAN BROS, Prop.
Phont SOFS
Dairy
Leonard Schwarz and Raymond
Ferguson left early Sunday morn
ing ror Portland, taking down a
truck load of fat hogs which they
disposal or In the city. They re-
turneo nome Tuesday.
YOU GET BOTH
fitand
satisfactory
wear
when you buy
LEVI STRAUSS
Bib or Waist
Overalls
theLeadind Brand
for over 56years
A. NEW
PAIR.
FREE
IFTHEY
RIP
Ask for Levi's
kliabkMerchandiiesmcel855
For Sale in Heppner by WILSON'S
iimiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii
rll k itlr
HALLOWE'EN
Says William Deri "Boys win dots,
Indulging nl destructive J 0711
Toa'r not the only on la town
To Sad 7 our fenoas all torn down!"
O-O-O
Will you be one of the unfor
tunates to awake tomorrow
morning to find your gate miss
ing and the pickets knocked off
your fence? We sympathize
with you, but there is only one
thing to do about it order the
lumber you need to make the
necessary repairs. Of course we
have it! Sudden service at rea
sonable prices, too!
Heppner Planing Mill
and Lumber Yard
Phone 1123
The Home of Friendly Service
iiiiiiiiiimiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
More food buyers every day place their 0. K. on MacMarr's clean, cool, in
viting food stores. Over the entire West they are winning public favor
through their many advantages; Fresh foods, brands of known quality,
courteous salespeople, improved service and economical prices. Visit your
nearest MacMarr Store and you, too, will see why these stores, day-by-day
are winning greater favor with keen, discriminating buyers.
Oranges
SUNKIST BRAND
3 DOZEN
59c
A Real Juicy Orange
TREE TEA
AM. J. B. PRODUCT, GREEN Lb.
69c
SNOWDRIFT
3 LBS.
79c
FIGS IN WINE
CAN
19c
PINEAPPLE TdISct 4 Cans 89c
THOMPSON Chocolate Malt - Mb. Cans - 59C
Walnuts
Large Size Oregon
Nuts
3 LBS.
98c
SOFT SHELL
FLOUR
MAC UABB BRAND -A
Fore Hard Wheat
SACK
$1.69
A SPEBKY PRODUCT
Money Back Gnarante
COFFEE
Supreme Blend
1 LB 49c
3 LBS $1.45
Special Blend
1 LB 39c
3 LBS $1.10
Why buy a can each
time?
SHRIMP Fancy Pack Dunbar Brand 5 Cans 89C
TAMATA CAIID CAMPBELL'S
DELICIOUS
3 Cans 29c
Peanut Butter Ar
2 LBS.
RICE
FANCY BLUE ROSE 10 Lbs.
T
69c
RED
MEXICAN
BEANS
10 LBS.
79c
CELERY
Large Bunches Well
Bleached
2 BUNCHES
19c
Phone 1082
STONE'S DIVISION Hotel Heppner Bldg.