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About The Polk County post. (Independence, Or.) 1918-19?? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 9, 1921)
Oregon Historical Society * Auditorium P olk C ounty P ost ih e LARGEST CIRCULATION IN SOUTH POLK COUNTY VOLUAJE IV. INDEPENDENCE, OREGON, DECEMBER 9, 1921. REED DELIVERS API SPEECH PUTTNG MORE MIL« IN FOOD OF FA Ml I M The Tree of Love Numerous Dishes Are Eniirru ated by Home Specialists. The parent teachers associa tion held a very interesting Milk Toast, Cream Soups, Crean. d meeting Tuesday afternoon. Ed Vegetables, Fish and Scalloped Dishes Are Favored— Recipe win T, Reed of C.A.C. delivered tor White Sauce. a lecture on what shall we p ay Milk toast, cream soups, cream i and sing. Miss Benita Stroud, vegetables, creamed tisli and scallop d state public health demonstrator islies are nil good ways of putting was-also an instructral speaker. more milk Into the daily food of i i CULT SLAYS ENEMIES Revelations in Raid on Society Astound Tokyo. Templ«JUf the Secret Organization Hid the Bodies of Foe» of World ' Dominion Movement. fntnlly, say home tn onmnlcs special!- - In the United States Department if Agriculture. The milk for all of the a Is thickened Into a sauce, thick or th u To make the sauces, melt the f :t stir In the flour, add the milk gradu ally, and cook until thickened, stlrrlm: constantly unless n double boiler is used. All measurements are level in these recipes. Thin White Sauce. I cup milk • tablespoon flour I tablespoon fat 14 teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper Medium White Sauce. Tokyo.— Revelations ot lire work 1 cup milk \s teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper carried oir by the "Ouietokyo" cult, 2 tablespoons flour which begun when the police raided “ tablespoons rm the headquarters ol the organization Thick White Sauce. at Ay a be, near here, continue to as ■ L cup milk H teaspoon salt touud the people of the empire. News i tablespoons flour ¡4 teaspoon pepper '! tablespoons fat papers accuse leaders of the cult ot aspiring to set up an “Omotokyo" For milk toast and with vegetables dynasty, to which all Japanese would use the thin sauce. For scalloped or flock with the hope of attaining creamed vegetable and meat dishes use world dominion. the medium sauce. The chief use for In the secret passage leading from the thick sauce Is as a binding ma the temple of the organization at terial (n croquettes and loaves. Ayabe to the residence of VVanisaburo Deguchi, leader of the society, the po lice declare they discovered a portrait BALANCED RATIONS FOR MAN of Deguchi wearing a costume resem bling that usually seen on the Image Fruits, Vegetables. Whole Grains, of Ama-Terasu, tiie sun goddess, the Milk, Eggs, Butter and Nuts Are traditional grand ancestress of the Most Healthful. Japanese imperial family. It is alleged that iu the temple were How many human beings eat bal found crypts iu which were placed anced rations? The best foods fiv tiie bodies of those who were slain for health and strength are fruits, veg- betraying tiie secrets of tiie organic j tables, whole grains, milk, eggs, but tlon. ter and nuts, with meat in moderation. It is declared that “unspeakable Heavy meat eating, artificial sugars, crimes" were committed against wom white flour, polished rice, peeled pota en by members of the cult, who are toes—these are said to create acidos s said to have bordered on fnnatlcism which is tiie forerunner of many seri in their zeal. Cartloads of alleged ous diseases. seditious literature has been seized, including a famous volume bearing the AT HOME AND ABROAD title of “Fire.” This volume is inter preted as embodying projects for a France lias lóti women physician*. social upheaval of a “dreadful nuture" aud Incompatible with the present gov Italy imports American-made spa- eminent of Japan. ghetti. It is suid that the follow ers of “Omo tokyo” numbered .'¡ 00 , 000 . Polnnd lias begun to use motor- When the police seized the collec driven plows. tion of pebbles representing the divin ity of the organization, a band of the Ten per cent of the married women faithful clinched their fists in fury, of Boston are employed. declaring the act of the officers to be sacrilegious. Leaders made addresses, There are 10,200 posts of the Amer urging forbearance and long suffering ican Legion and 2.150 auxiliary units. In the presence of the desecration of their deity by the “heathen.” The normal schools and colleges of An Osaka newspaper otvned by Argentina now provide courses In Deguchi lias issued an extra edition denying reports that bombs were dis English. covered In the temple and explaining There are 740 officers and men anil that swords found there had been 4,734 reservists in the Royal Cana given to the temple. The newspaper declares that followers of “Omotokyo” dian navy. have committed no crime. Do your Christmas shopping early. N U M B E R 28. if if m tf ii i W The Bazaar season is on and V T h e T r e e Of L o v e £» ti Long List of Beverages and Desserts every one is taking advantage ot In Which Juice Can Be Used, as the beautiful hand made articles Well as in Number of Sauces on sale at such reasonable prices. for Fish and MeaL I am the light' That Christmas-tide Brings. I am ever green My limbs are yearning to Bear the burden of gifts of Noel. I live in the high, open Spaces where God smiles bright est on the world, where his light Keeps the memory of Christ’s birth Refreshed. Years ago men fought and Knew no time to think of the Gentle One who spoke of Love. And then one Night a star beamed in the east and filled Me with a sweet grace. My soul quivered, And I was bom again. And now I come With the Christmas time to remind you of Love— Love, that fades, but lives again. I am But a dream unless you know m e. I wish To ache under the b u rd en o f love g'fts. Yes, I am ever gre tt; 1 live for ver, but You do not know me always. I ask You to rememb r the ’ittle ones ^ W Horn Love ha passed when som e Forget me. I p: ay the light that Never dies sha 1 ’’ame out again In your heart. For this Hive. For this I ask. I wish To live and serve. I am Love Hope Life I am the Tree of Love. Our Institutions of Higher Learning M In the olden times sailors who took had a beautiful array of hand long trips and ate no fresh vegetables made gifts which were soon dis ind fruits for weeks or months were likely to fall victims to scurvy. Finally posed of. An enjoyable program was rendered in the evening. %1 i cure or a partial cure for It was ound in lemon Juice. An especially interesting enter h Of late years scientists have been tainer was Victor Morse, a dra unking a study of scurvy. Its cause h ind its cure and of the conditions matic reader and member of the hat make the body proof against this high school corps. The ladies disease. They have discovered a sub- are highly pleased with the re tance called vitnmlne C, which seems o prevent and even to cure this dis- ceipts. ase. It Is found In many foods, Last Saturday the ladies of the uuong them tomatoes and such cit Needlecraft dis rus fruits as oranges, grapefruit and Presbyterian emons. played their wares to a number Lemons, therefore, have a new Im of delighted pureme rs. The portance in tiie diet, according to food art cle8 w ere pretty and w ent pecialists In tiie United Statps De pnrtment of Agriculture, ollice of fast. home economics. They are no longer * > to be valued simply for their flavor, u pit also as a source of one of these Owing to the large amount o f 4^ necessary substances. advertising and printing given to Lemons can be prepared In all sorts •f ways in the preparation of meals the Post at the eleventh hour, There Is a long list of hevernges and we are unable to handle it all. desserts In which lemon juice is used, As a result considerable adver a» well as a number of delicious 4* sauces that expert cooks have Invent tising and news matter must be 5 ed to serve on fish and meat Many omitted from this issue. if of these sauces the busy housekeeper has no time to make, hut she can cut y a lemon in two nnd put It on the table An attachment for water met to serve with fish, oysters, or meat. ers enables them to be read at Some people think that a little lemon ! Juice odds just the zest needed to a distance by telephone, the nu- make eggs on tonst a tasteful dish. ! md<rot clicking sounds heard Lemon Juice Is also good on spinach representing the passage of and other green vegetables, on many know quantities of water. kinds of salads, and also as flavoring or pudding sauces and cakes. y y y ¥ y y y y y y y lî Provincial AboutVthe Others By JA M ES R. ANGELI What better gift is there than an Overcoat, Suit, Hat, Shirt or pair of shoe« It you d o n ’t w.idi D pay so much there’s Neckties, Etc. Trepidi nt Yf.le University I t is Interesting how very provincial our Amerieau institutions of high learning are about other American institutions, and how little they know what is going on outside their own sphere of activity. It is certainly necessary that we should take a reasonably intelligent outlook of those things which are being done about us; the matter of the preoeptorial system at Princeton and how it is working out; how our friends at Amherst are succeeding in their attempt to revive interest in the classical studies and how Harvard is succeeding in its endeavor to in troduce a type of general examination. It is a matter of interest that we should know how in the Middle West the great institutions are endeavoring to work out some combination of the professional with the classical edu cation. These are all things that any man who is interested in higher edu cation should have some knowledge of and some interest in. I feel that there is a considerable opportunity of improving our rela tions among American institutions of higher learning by some more self- conscious examination of the educational movement as it goes on in cen ters other than our own. Buy your Ch istmi presents at this store and you’ll have something worth while. O. A. Kreamer INDEPENDENCE, OREGON 'Hie very necessity of her situation w ill compel Germany to organize her industries on the most efficient possible basis, which means low pro duction costs. It is up to us to meet German efficiency with equal or greater efficiency, not for the purp .se of killing off German foreign trade, but simply to maintain our position. Our foreign trade policy should be live and let live, recognizing that in the rare of both England and (I rmnny, their existence as great nations depends upon their ability to export great quantities of goods. Their ex port trade is vital to them. With us foreign trade is important but not vital. There had been developed over a period of many years a machine of the greatest intricacy and delicacy for the exchange of goods among na tions. The war smashed this machine into bits. It will require time,, great intelligence and much patience to put it together again. THIiuE MACHINES IN O .2. Home laundry work in it:- . tirety includes not only washing a ! wringing the clothes, but ironi : them, too, and that is regarded as no light task by many housekeepers. Therefore a new type of washing machine, described with illustration in Popular Mechanics Magazine is made unusually interesting by the fact that it perforins all three op erations, using electric power. The ironer is less than two feet long, and it« roller may be heated either elec trically or by gaa. It is pivoted at a comer of the washing machine, alongside the wrmirer. Last Friday the Methodist ladies y y By FRANK A. VANDERLIP, New York Financier Santa Claus w ll ! *’ l you that. Have New Importance m Diet, Say Specialists. B W SUB - IS FMI Am ' United States’ Foreign Trade Policy Should Be Live and Let Live The Best Gif! Of All Is Clothing LEMONS CONDUCE TO HEALTH AND PLEASE The man who Is in con stunt four of dentil belittles the very life he hutes to lose. SOME SHIPPING FACTS The first steamboat, the Comet, plied on tiie Clyde iu 1812. Three years later the first steam vessel was seen on the Thames, while iu 1818, the Atlantic was crossed hy a Cana dian steamer for the first time. An ice breaking vessel was first em ployed In 1870, dally weather chart* being Issued for the first time two years later. Twin »crews were first used In 1863. and the first turbine steamer wa* luuncbed in 18M4. RESTING PLACES FOR BIRDS Agricultural Department Point» Out Necessity for the Preservation of Marsh Areas. I f migratory birds are to be in creased or their present numbers maintained, it is necessary to con serve water and marsh areas, say specialists of the biological survey of the United States Department of Agriculture. Small lakes, swamps along coasts or inland or marsh areas ure used by these water fowl for feeding, resting and rearing their young, and it is absolutely es sential that during their migration and in winter the birds have these necessary places in which to live. Reports received by the biological j survey during the last few months ! from all parts of the country agree ! that the former alarming decrease j in migratory* wild fowl, which pre ceded the treaty and the act of con gress for the protection of migra tory birds, has changed to a marked increase. This successful outcome of a gTeat conservation measure has become apparent even more prompt ly than was anticipated. Thus the first important step toward insur ing the perpetuation of wild fowl — without question a great national asset— has been achieved. Another step of almost equally vital impor tance, the specialists say, consists in the conservation of lakes and marsh areas. QREGOM Theatre S A L E M B eebe D a n ie ls in "The Spfludy Girl” Thurs. Friday Saturday Dec. 8,-9, 10 COMING SUNDAY For Four D»yS Z a n e G r e y ’s „ Celebrated Story “The Last Trail” Investigate Then Invest We have small tracts, large tracts, small houses, large houses. Let us show you the property you are looking for. If you waut to sell list your holdings with us. Independence Realty Co. Beaver Hotel Building Phone M 1811