Pennsylvania’s Contribution to the Sesqui g ¡£ '%<<■> * ‘i •£ fiÁk Thursday, November 4, 1926 EAGLE VERNONIA which cannot be removed. Clothes wash easily if soaked over (O. A. C. Home Economics Dept.) night in cold, soft water into which Salt rubbed on black spots on a tablespoon of ammonia to each dishes removes them, or placed over, bucket of water has been added. a fresh stain on the tablt linen helps Oilcloths or linoletftn are preserv­ it to disappear when washed. ed by washing with luke warm wa­ Glasses used for milk are not put into hot water until first rinsed in ter and wiping with a cloth dampen- cold water, The heat dries the milk ed »“ equal parts of cold milk and in and gives a cloudy appearance water. HOME POINTERS held in the school house Saturday afternoon, Mr. Burris was elected the new director, taking Ed Mi Mul­ lins place, who moved away a short time ago. Mary Beckman spent a little while with the McMullin children Sunday. Mr. Duke called at the Holding’s home one day last week. Mr. Hueimler from Scappoose called on Miss Schooley Sunday. houses A FAIR COLORIST COLLECTIONS NO COLLECTION—NO CHARGE CATTLE (Seara-Koebuek KNIGHT ALcUSiiv.ENT CO. 514% Aert,ullur«U We Get Results. FiHUMtaU») Our hay crop furnishes one of the largest cafeteria services In existence, according to the Sears-Roebuck Agri­ cultural Foundation. Seventy-eight million tons, it Is expected, will be produced in 1920, a large part of which will be consumed by cattle. According to figures put out by the Department of Agriculture, 51.4% of this amount will be eaten by cattle, 44.0% by horses und rhe remaining 3.8% by sheep. The amount of hay eaten by hogs is very slight, only a small fraetiou of one per cent of the alfalfa crop. As In the case of other feed crops, most of this hay Is con­ sumed right on the farm where It Is grown.___________ ____ Offices at McMinnville, Hillsboro and 502 Board of Trade build­ ing, Portland. WANTED—RESPONSIBLE REPRESENTATIVES EARN PLENTY OF CHRISTMAS MONEY AT HOME.—Sell Christmas Cards to your friends and neighbors. Beautifully embossed cards in sets of 10 and 15, all with tissup lined envelopes and pack­ ed in handsome lithographed holiday box. Sets re­ tail at 75c—$1.25 and $1.50. Each set different. Send money order for one or all sets and our prop­ osition to you as our representative. The Recod Ex­ change Stores, 428 Wash., St., Portland, Oregon. ÌEat Way Through Corn Acre« J Here Is the Keystone State's building at the great Sesqui Centennial Inter­ national Exposition at Philadelphia, celebrating 150 years of American Inde­ pendence In this huge structure Pennsylvania Is displaying her progress from the arrival of Penn to the present day. The building Is one of the handsomest on the big exposition grounds and has proved a rendezvous tor « hundreds of thousands of people who-have come from near and far to see the magnificent exhibits established by forty-three of the leading nations of the world. The Exposition continues until December L camp spent Sunday in Cedar C'rove visiting some of their relatives. ' This young woman ascends a giddy Mr. and Mrs. Never have been ladder every day to put finishing very busy digging their potatoes, touches to the “Rainbow City”--the Mrs. Holding sp nt a couple of They have them all out now. The Sesqui Centennial International I xpo- Bvrris and Holding families have sltlon, opening in Philadelphia June 1 days in Poit’md last week. and continuing until December 1, to Mr. Burris is preparing for a long their potatoes dug also. celebrate the 150tb anniversary of the cold winter this ye .r as he has been i The Halloween program and party Declaration of American Inde) end- hauling hay for his stock from L. A. given by the Natal school and grange ence. She is one of an army of ymng was enjoyed by quite a number. artists who are making the Sescui a Peterson’s place ti is week. colorful success. Mrs. McMullin« had a little sur­ Pumpkin pics, doughnuts and sweet cider for refreshments were served. prise when her two cousins, Bill Jac- Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Fenner .vere The next grange meeting will be visitors in Longview Sunday. obs and Charles Fountain front Washington drove in to see her. he’d on Sunday, November 14. Don’t They exr.ect to strv for 'ome : time. . fo -get the date. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Savage are Mr. and Mrs. O burn spent Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Warren Smith were receiving congratulations on the ■ day with Mr. and Mrs. Never. visiting around our neighborhood birth of a daughter October 23. Mr. gnd Mrs. Holding and __ son last week. were Vernonia shoppers Saturday, i Mr. Lincoln of Poitland visited Mrs. A. L. Fenner was in ’’ort- Mr. and Mrs. Grover Divine and L. A. Peterson Sunday. | land to visit her mother Tuesday children from the Holdings Pole The Natal school meeting was and Wednesday. Week-End SPECIALS CATTLE 90.9% AT PEOPLES STORE CIGARETTES, Camels, Chesterfields, Lucky NATAL (Hears-Roebuck Agricultural k'ouudatloa) Eating their way through almost four million acres of canned corn In the form of silage Is the Job American cattle, mostly dairy cows, accomplish every year, according to the Seara- ltoebuck Agricultural Foundation. It has been estimated that they eat 96.6% of the vast amount of silage while of the nnall amount left, swine con­ sume 222%, horses, 1.7% and sheep 1.1%. Very little silage Is fed to poultry. All silage made on the farm is consumed on the farm because it Is not u product that can be handled successfully through commercial chan­ nels. The King of November Business Strikes, 2 for ......... 25c FLOUR, Crown, Drifted Snow, White Down Per 49-pound sack........ $2.15 SUGAR, per cwt.......................................... $6.59 $4.39 BORDENS MILK, per case $1.00 Eleven cans ..................... 15c SODA CRACKERS, per pound BULK COFFEE, per pound ............. 48c M. J. B., Golden West, Schillings, per lb....55c BJULK TEA, green or black, per pound_____ 69c Lipton’s, per lb 95c, per >/2 pound............... 48c 15c PEAS, Bocanso, ..................................... MACARONI, per lb 10c, 3 pounds for 25c 10c RICE, extra fancy Jap rice, per pound 25c CHOCOLATE, bulk, 3pounds for....... 48c BUTTER, per pound .......................... 39c BACON BACKS, per pound ............... The Peoples Store M. Murray, Mgr. Vernonia, Ore Offers a Wonder fui Chance To sell merchandise to the people of this community—-but to get their trade you must tell them how you are prepared to serve them. The columns of the EAGLE are both economical and productive. VERNONIA EAGLE