HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1931. PAGE THREE Warmest TOO FAST When I was a student in Am herst College, and my father was preaching In Chicago, I used to go home for Christmas on the Erie Railroad. The trip consumed two nights and a day; but this was the golden age when some kind hearted rail roads were allowed to present free passes to clergymen and their fam ilies. Now the Erie makes fast time and there are no passes; but the memory of those old slow trips is pleasant. My mother would pack a shoe-box full of sandwiches and hard boiled eggs and bananas, and I had a glorious time; never think ing' that it was any hardship to travel slowly, but thanking my lucky stars that I was able to get home at all. On one of the days preceding last Christmas, so I am told, eight sec tions of America's swellest trains were required to leave New York to hurry the youngsters home from school. It hurried them home for what? So that they could bestow a run ning kiss on their parents, shed their day clothes and change into evening clothes, and be off on a series of parties. This is the world we live in. This is the tempo of modern life. Any of us old folks who decry it are merely dating ourselves as belong ing to a passing generation. Yet, I personally feel a little sor ry for these headlong youngsters. COURAGE Some surprise has been expressed that young men wealthy enough to own seagoing yachts should have the courage to sail their own craft in the ocean race from Newport, R. I., to Plymouth, England, especially over the dangerous northern route. This surprise is voiced by newspa pers and individuals who regard courage as an attribute solely of the so-called "working class." That is a peculiarly American point of view. We have come to regard the man who does no useful work, but lives on Inherited wealth, as a feminized sort of person, unfit to associate with "he-men." The fact is that courage has nothing to do with wealth, occupa tion or social status. Brave men are to be found everywhere. GOLD The great gold reef in South Af rica, known as The Rand, is still producing as proliflcally as ever, ac cording to a recent report of the company which operates this, the world's largest gold mine. Since gold was discovered in the valley which the Boers called "Witwaters rand," in 1886, more than five bil lion dollars of the precious metal has been taken out of this one group of mines. Two hundred thousand native workers and 22,000 whites are employed in the mines, which are now down 7,000 feet be low the surface and show no sign of petering out So long as the world's trade Is carried on with money which rep resents gold and no other kind of money Is of value in international commerce there is need for a con stant fresh supply of the metal. SERVICE The suggestion that Atlee Pom erenc, former United States Senator from Ohio, shall run for Congress in the Cleveland district where he lives, where there is a vacancy to STDCKBRIME 1 World's Largest Dirigible Nearly Ready for Air III I v !vHtl Mfe WttniHHffiiWtf"' ''''''"''''rf'r'fl Tmniin ifpni m iiimiihii '" ' fl'1 ''V Finishing touches are being put on the Akron, which will be formally named on August 8. The photograph how the three fin in place and the outer covering being applied to the chip's tail Each tin is forty feet wide and 105 feet in length. The Akron is 785 feet long and weighs 221,000 pounds. It can lift 182,000 pounds of "pay load" besides (ti own weight Mrs. Hoover will christen the airslhip by liberating a flock of doves. Somehow it seems to me that in traveling so fast they miss an awful lot I remember the Christmas when my father presented me my first watch a big silver affair that he himself had carried for long years. I was ten years old, and the gift amazed me. It had never occurred to me that I should ever own a watch until I was twenty-one. I remember how my wife and I saved up patiently to buy our first car a second-hand Ford. I re member our first antique, whjch we loved for months before we could finally acquire it. And the joy of seeing a savings account grow slowly; and the thrill of building a library, one book at a time. Now the kids smash up a dozen watches before they are six. And they start life with cars, and with furniture; and at twenty they have rushed through all the emotional experiences that lasted us leisurely through forty years. Don't mistake me. I'm a booster for the new generation. They are healthy, direct, and fine. Only sometimes I wonder I wonder when, on my way home at night, I pass a big house in which lives one of New York's famous neurologists. It's an expensive house, paid for by nerves. Limou sines are always stacked up in front of it It would seem almost as If the prize of life in America is to own a limousine and park it in front of a nerve specialist's door. Every one seems to be racing to get there. be filled, brings up one difference between public life in this country and Europe. On the other side, when a man embarks on a career of public service he usually remains in it, regardless of whether he keeps on climbing the ladder from one office to a higher one. If he loses his seat in the British Cabinet he is content to continue as an or dinary Member of Parliament. Thus at the present time there are two former Prime Ministers in the House of Commons, Lloyd-George and Stanley Baldwin. Two men who had been Presi dent of the United States served la ter in Congress; John Qunicy Ad ams in the House of Reprsentatives and Andrew Johnson in the, Sen ate. Theodore Burton of Ohio, af ter being a Senator went beak to the House, to be elected Senator again later. But the usual Ameri can custom is to retire from public life rather than take a "lower" of fice than the one last held. HAPPINESS Dr. C. E. K. Mees, research di rector of the Eastman Kodak com pany, thinks people were happier as a rule when they had fewer mod ern Improvements. " Of course, Dr. Mees is right. Hap piness has nothing to do with mon ey, possessions or comfort No body can confer happiness; it must come from within one's self. These things which we lump under the general term of "improvements'' merely give the individual more time in which to pursue happiness. All of those things do not make happiness, however. The only source of happiness is in fitting one's self into the social scheme in such a way as neither to interfere with the lives of others nor to be interfered with by others, and to find something congenial with which to occupy one's leisure time. And that is, I am convinced, easier to do now than it ever was before. JEFFERSON Thomas Jefferson's home, Monti cello, at Charlottesville, Va., has been bought by the Thomas Jeffer son Memorial Foundation and re stored to Its original condition. It is one of the most beautiful build ings surviving from our nation's early days, and gains additional in terest because Jefferson himself was Its architect and it was built of brick made on his own estate. Few people today realize what a many-sided man Thomas Jefferson was. He was a successful farmer, a leader in scientific reasearch, an accomplished musician and linguist, and the Inventor of the first scien tifically-designed plowshare, of the swivel chair and the folding buggy top, among other things. His great est achievement, however, was the drafting of the Declaration of In dependence and his devotion of the remaining fifty years of his life to the effort to establish the principles of Individual liberty which that great document promulgated. The Jefferson Foundation is now raising a national endowment fund to provide an income for the main tenance of Monticello as a shrine of liberty. I can think of no cause more worthy of the contributions of every liberty-loving American. TnTMs AM by Aancu fart Coffee Ice Cream One quart of cream, half pound of pulverized sugar, four ounces of Mocha or three ounces of Java. Have the coffee ground coarsely; put it in a double boiler with one pint of cream, and steep for ten minutes, then strain it through a fine muslin, pressing it hard to get out the strength; add the sugar, stir until it is dissolved, add the re maining pint of cream, and when cold, freeze. Frozen Coffee Custard This recipe for coffee ice cream calls for less cream. The richness is provided by the eggs. Four eggs, half pint of cream, half pound of sugar, one pint of milk, half pint of strong coffee. Put the milk into a double boiler to scald. Beat the eggs and sugar to gether until very light, add them to the hot milk, cook an instant, take from the fire, add the cream and coffee. When cold, freeze. Fruit Sherbet Here is a delicious fruit sherbet that is a welcome change from the usual creams: Boil together for five minutes one pound of sugar and one quart of water. Beat the yolks of six eggs and add to the boiling syrup. Stir just a minute, then take from the fire and beat until cold. Have in readiness one cup mixed fruit which has been soaked in a half cup of grape juice. When the mix ture is cold turn into the freezer and freeze. Remove the beater, stir in the fruit with a wooden spoon and serve i punch glasses. Nut Ice Cream Here is nut ice cream, suitable for a cooler summer day: Beat together the yolks of seven eggs and a cup and a half of sugar. Add two cups of hot milk, and va nilla to flavor. Add a cup of cream and a cup of, nutmeats chopped very fine. Freeze. Potato Croquettes Mix together 1 pint hot mashed potatoes, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-2 tea spoon pepper, 1 teaspoon onion juice, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 table spoon chopped parsley, yolks of 2 beaten eggs. Stir over the fire until mixture leaves sides of sauce pan. When cool, shape into croquettes, dip in beaten egg, roll In crumbs, and fry brown in deep kettle and smoking-hot fat. Potato Souffit 2 cups of potatoes, mashed, 2 tablespoons of melted butter, 6 ta- A recently discovered portrait of Alexander Hamilton, hidden for 127 years, has come into the possession "of Andrew Mellon, the present secretary. Firsr U. S. Treasurer : Mm California Girl WejjQnooner of Ditties t" ' " ' T . ,..:.V ....... .. , , . "ZpCl ' : ' f AWfj te '"jfcsiw -""IrtriMf , . n i iiniiiiMiiiniiiiii miiivi i Rudy Vallee. idol of flappers, broke a agent, when he secretly married Fay jersey recently. blespoons of cream, 2 eggs, salt and pepper. Beat the potatoes and butter un til smooth and light, add the cream, yolks of eggs and salt. Beat the whites to a stiff froth and stir them in. Heap upon a tin in a rough un even mound (neat, but jagged, so that the tips and edges, when browned, will look nicely), and set in the oven until well browned. Housewives Advised to Pack Eggs for Winter Not so many years ago packing the winter's supply of eggs for family use in water glass was in cluded along with the canning of fruits and vegetables in prepara tion for winter. While this practice is no longer general, it would be an economical one for many housewives to prac tice this year, believes A. G. Lunn, chief in poultry husbandry at the Oregon State College Experiment station. Eggs are lower this season than for many yeras, Lunn says, and it will cost less than 2 cents a dozen to preserve them. His first advice is to get good eggs the fresher the better. Preserved eggs are good, YOUR5AV1N6S WILL BUY YOU A HOME Reputation is a large part of your collateral . for credit. The man with a hunk account enjoys them both. It is mighty easy to gave mon ey, once you get the habit Pay something Into your sav ings account every week BE FORE you pay anything else and the way your account will pyramid will surprise you. Most all of our rich mon started with a small amount Ford only had an idea. The Farmers is here to help you. Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank There Is No Substitute for Safety Made from PURE Artesian Water Morrow County Creamery Co. Mill U0L 1 mmmummm 58 DCE million hearts, according to his press Webb, of Santa Barbara, CaL, in New ' if the original agg was good. In fertile eggs are desirable, but not necessary. A five-gallon crock or wooden container is the most satisfactory for packing the eggs, according to Professor Lunn. They are packed to within three inches of the top. The next step is to pour over them one quart of water glass mixed with 10 to 12 quarts of water that has been boiled and cooled. The container is then covered with a lid or oiled paper to prevent evap oration and kept in a cool place, such as a basement or cellar. Eggs preserved in this manner will keep for six to eight months, and some times longer. Another method, known as the dry treatment, consists in coating the eggs with a material resembl ing cold cream, after which they are packed in cases and stored. Material for either method may or dinarily be obtained from the local druggists. HEADACHES NEURITIS NEURALGIA, COLDS Whenever you have some nagging ache or pain, take some tablets of Bayer Aspirin. Relief is immediate! There's scarcely ever an ache or pain that Bayer Aspirin won't relieve and never a time when you can't take k. The tablets wkh the Bayer cross are always safe. They don't depress the heart, or otherwise harm you. Use them just as often as they can spare you any pain or discomfort. Just be sure to buy the genuine. Examine the package. Beware of imitations. Aspirin is the trade-mark of Bayer manufacture of moooaceticacidester of salicylicacid. i leauce the Acid SICK stomachs, sour stomachs and indigestion usually mean excess acid. The stomach nerves are over-stimulated. Too much arid makes the stomach and intestines sour. Alkali kills acid instantly. The best form is Phillips Milk of Magnesia, because one harm less dose neutralises many times its volume in acid. For 50 years the stan dard with physicians everywhere. Take a spoonful in water and your unhappy condition will probably end in five minutes. Then you will always know what to do. Crude and harmful methods will never appeal to you. Go prove this for your own sake. It may save a great many disagreeable hours. He sure to get the genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians iu correcting excess acids. i $ 'V For Troubles . due to A. id , - - J I ACIO STOMACH 1 I HEARTBURN I HEADACHE.. "Siij Foreign Trade Shifts Affect Oregon Farmers Material changes in the foreign trade of the United States in farm commodities in 1930 as they affect Oregon farmers are discussed In the latest report on the agricultur al situation issued by the Oregon State college extensfbn service. In dustries particularly involved in the changes include dairy, poultry, fruit and vegetables. Exports of foodstuffs declined In value approximately one-third and imports fell off over one-fourth, ac cording to figures given in the re port. The decrease was due both to lower prices and decreased vol ume. Most of the exports consist of grain products, animal fats and oils, canned goods and fresh and dried fruits. The Canadian market took about $160,000,000 worth of fruits and vegetables from this country last year, most of which was canned and dried fruit, but this situation may be affected by a new reciprocal trade agreement be tween Canada and Australia. Dairy and poultry products of this country have met less competi tion from foreign supplies during the first half of 1931. Imports of all dairy products except canned milk have been substantially less than during the first half of 1930. Imports of eggs and egg products fell off very substantially, and the tariff rates on dried eggs have now HUSTON'S iiiiiiiiiiititiiiHtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintifiiiiiimitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiniiniiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiinnnii GROCERY IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIItllfllllllllllllllflllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllMlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllini E. R. HUSTON, PROPRIETOR IIIIIIIIIIMllltlllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllillllllMIMHIIIIIIIIIflllllllltlllllllllllllllMlllllltllllMIIIIH FOR THAT PICNIC y YOU SAVE! We are not here to knock or antagonize. We don't believe in It, It is not good business. We earnestly respect everey one of oar fellow merchants and are here to save our customers every cent possible In these drastlo times. We earnestly ask you to compare these few prices with the prices on the same items a few months ago, then you will understand our real purpose oi mercnanrtiswg is to neip Prices Effective SAT. SUGAR iowS. $5.2S lously low. MILK Vase $3.19 Product. W-M 1 m HEPPNER'S FAVORITE f"V HPUR 49-ib. sack 99c CHEESE Oregon full cream loaf. A A 5 POUNDS tJiJC MACARONI Fresh shipment, elbo cut f f 5 POUNDS AuC PICNICS Shoulders, exceptionally fine qual ity, medium size. 4 f n PER POUND XV C CRACKERS Tru Blu salted or plain. AA. 3-lb. Box, Per BoxdtlC BANANAS Fancy ripe, golden fruit A f 4 POUNDS AW CORN PEAS 4 NO. 2 TINS 49c STRING BEANS PER CASE $2.89 Hotel Heppner Bldg. - i TNiaEPAUGtf SAYS WHEW ir GOT N -THE PAPER THAT HED WON A PRIZE THE IfclSH LOTTW rl HEARD EPA4 REJLAToAtf THAT HAPNT WfclTW foil, YtARS- been increased 50 per cent The principal foodstuffs Import ed into this country "consist of cof--fee, cocoa, tea. spices, sugar, fresh J fruits, nuts, vegetables, dairy pro ducts, eggs and fish. In summarizing the fruit situa tion, the report said that "the Eu ropean apple prospect is for a mod erate crop." Export of apples from the Pacific northwest to Europe has been increasing and this out let may be especially Important this year in view of the large crop In prospect in eastern states. Being out of doors stirs a hearty appe tite. Satisfy the folks with Monarch CANNED DELIGHTS YOU SAVE! & MON., AUG. 1 & 3 COFFEE MacMarr's best blend. 3 LBS 99C RICE Fancy long grain head. 10 LBS. . 69c OATS Sperry's Quick Oats In 9- PER BAG .. 49c BEANS Small whites, excellent 10 LBS. . 59c JAMS Or Jellies, assorted flavors, Strawberry excepted. Each .... $1.29 Phone 1082 - We Deliver