HUT WAVE TOD
GREJITFORBEST
Fl
Weather Man Somewhat
Overdoes Things but
Many Crops Prosper
Under Sun's Rays This
Week.
Boise, August 18.—The past week
was exceptionally warm, especially
during the latter half when excess
ively high temperatures were record
ed. Rain occurred only in small
widely scattered areas and mostly in
small amounts, although the rainfall
in portions of the Panhandle was
sufficiently heavy to be of benefit to
crops and to pastures and range*.
There was little cloudiness and the
percentage of sunshine was high. In
the Boise-Payette valley there was
little wind movement but in the up
per Snake river valley and over the
Twin Falls region hot drying wind*
occurred.
It was too hot and dry for the best
progress of crop* generally, but it
was ideal corn weather and in irri
gated districts that crop made splen
did progress. The heat and drying
winds carried away soil moisture with
great rapidity and it wa^ necessary to
make liberal applications of irriga
tion water to keep crops growing.
Dry farm crops are suffering from
lack of moisture', although the bulk
of dry farm grain was well on the
wajf to maturity before the drought
became damaging. Late sown spring
wheat and the beet seed crop in some
fields were damaged to some extent
by hot winds. Hay cured rapidly
and the bulk of the second crop of
alfalfa is now in the stack. Timothy
harvest is pretty well over. A plenti
ful Crop of fine quality has been se
cured in the be*t of condition.
Garden and truck crops made good
progress; potatoes are maturing in
good shape; sugar beets made satis
factory advances; the beet seed crop
i* being harvested. Fruit is doing
well generally but prunes are drop
ping too freely in. some commercial
districts. Although pastures and
ranges are in need of rain and dry
ing badly in some localities range
feed ia still adequate and range stock
continue to thrive. Heavy shipments
of beef cattle and la nibs are being
made from Adams county and tifey
are coming off the range in fine
condition.
Notes From the Field.
Lava Hot Springs, Bannock county
—Barley, wheat, oats and potatoes
are fair to good; range fair but dry
' n t
Prichard, Shoshone county—Ex
ceptionally hot week with drying
winds; timothy all cut; pastures and
ranges still green.
McCall, Valley county—All. crops
are in fair to good condition.
Geneva, Bear Lake county—Pas
tures and ranges getting very dry;
barley, wheat, rye, and oats ripening
fast; oats very short in straw but
fairly well filled.
Bliss, Gooding county—Dry, hot
winds making crops ripen early; tak
ing an unusually liberal amount of
moisture to keep crops growing;
prune* dropping. I
Moscow, Latah county—Winter
wheat all cut and thrashing begun;
spring wheat ripening fast and some
cut; ideal corn weather and the crop
is making rapid growth.
Pocateilo, Bannock county—Fire
hazard greatly increased by continued
hot, dry weather; pastures and
ranges drying but fed still adequate;
cattle in fine condition.
Lewiston, Nezperce county—Corn
and potatoes fine but beginning to
need rain; peaches and plums being
harvested; peaches practically no
crop except down Snake river.
Rathdrum, Kootani county—Corn,
potatoes, and all fruits doing well;
meadows, pastures and ranges greatly
improved by rain of the 9th; light
crop of oats being harvested.
Idaho Falls, Bonneville county—
Warm weather a^nd severe winds dam
aged some çrain and beet seed fields;
crops growing well; cutting of beet
seed begun; sugar beet crop making
satisfactory progress.
Caldwell, Canyon county—Warm,
dry, calm—not one dust storm;
thrashing full swing; corn maturing
excellently; all garden truck good
condition; prunes dropping more free
ly than desired; apples doing well.
New Meadows, Adams county—
Weather continued favorable for
completing hay harvest and ripening
grain; barley ready for cutting; pas
tures and ranges need rain; heavy
khioments beef cattle and lambs go
ing out in fine condition.
Twin Falls, Twin Falls county-
Hot and dry; high wind on 10th de
layed stacking but about half of the
second cutting of alfalfa is up; wheat
nearly all cut and thrashing begun;
most alsike thrashed with good yield;
spuds and apples advancing fast
POLE FOR CLOTHES CLOSET
Cat a clothes' pole to fit length
wise in your clothes doset; on this
arrange several hangers for your bet
ter garments, hanging others on the
hooks next to the wall This keeps
your clothes neat and unwrinkled,
easy to find and yon can get ever so
much more in your closet without
crowding. Also » board stretched
from one base molding to another
makes a much more tidy place than
the floor for your shoes.
CALDWELL THIRTY YEARS AGO
Caldwell is the home of freaks.
Not long since, The Tribune dis
covered a man who never asked, "It
this hot enough for you?" and last
Wednesday a reporter found a man
7 years of age who was not a crack
ball player in his younger days. We
are now earnestly seeking for a man
who was not a "devil" in a printing
office at some stage of his life.
Rice, Reed, Thorp, Smithson, Dun
bar, Kelleher and Tukey returned
from the mountains last Sunday.
They went to Payette lakes and had
a good time—if hard traveling over
mountain roads for 10 days and four
days in camp can be called a good
time. Contrary to all expectations,
the party brought no deer or bear
home and their friends who were
expecting to eat venison or bear are
somewhat disappointed. This is eas
ily accounted for, however, when the
facts are known, all hard feelings
will disappear and the boys will be
be held up as shining examples of
law abiding citizens. Some vulgar
minds will jump at the conclusion
that there are no hunters in the party
but this merely shows the narrow
minds of some people. It was not
through a lack of ability that the
party returned empty handed but
through a superior knowledge of the
law. Rice and Reed, both being law
yers, called the attention of the baser
minds to the fact that it is unlawful
to kill deer in Idaho until September
and thereby undoubtedly saved the
lives of countless numbers of deer.
And bear—well, that is' different.
Rev. Anderson of this city looks
as though he could fight as well as
preach, should the circumstances
warrant. The other day as he was
walking along the street, he observed
two drunks who were quarreling and
'ust as he got opposite one of them
cnocked the Other down and began
kicking him. The reverend gentle
man quietly grabbed the pugnacious
and boisterous one by the collar,
marched him around the corner, turn
ed him over to the marshal and con
tinued on his way as though nothing
had happened.
The railroad has at last respected
Kimball street crossing and the agent
has orders to keep it open. The
shoes is now on the other foot, for
the crossing below the depot is
blocked up with impunity and freight
trains. This lower road is being
traveled a great deal and the other
day five freight wagons on çne side
of the track and one on the other
were compelled to wait half an hour.
The railroad needs about twice as
much side trackage as they have here
but there is no probability of them
laying it.
Payette has the only three-story
building on the O. S. L. in Idaho. It
Presents a fine appearance and is a
itting monument to the enterprise
of our bustling sisterd town.
Next Monday morning another
party of pleasure and recreation
seekers will start for the mountains
of Drybuck, to spend a couple of
months courting nature and incident
ally, each other. This party is the
"largest and noblest of them all" and
embraces many mighty men skilled
in the arts of war, and ladies fair
enough to die for without a strug
gle. The expedition is to be under
the immediate command of Captain
Come in and
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Mr. Edison's
RealUmïerî
It shows you what to ex
pect of a New Edisaa ia
Îour homo—whttbr it
li-Cnàni Basis with
such perfect nsliai that
roa reel the prxwM mt
ths living artut.
GRE ENLUND
DRUG STORE
Hank Dorman, an old, experienced
frontiersman and guide. The culinary
department will be under the control
of experienced cooks, while drivers
who made themselves famous on the
Overland trail will pull the ribbons
over the frisky steeds. Saddle horses
for the entire party, under a real
cowboy, drill bring up the rear. The
personnel of the party is as follows:
Gen. William Dorman and wife,
Captain H. W. Dorman, Miss Lillie
Dorman, Lieut William McKenzie
and mother. Miss Alice McKenzie,
Miss Ida Frost, Major Frank Olm
stead and wife, Miss Jennie Maxey,
Post Surgeon W. C. Maxey, Miss
Belle Bishop, Conitnodore S. S. Foote
and Privates S. W. Dee, Ernest
Boone, Charles Blessenger and Jim
Haynes. *
Dunbar took a big cheese knife
with him to the mountains to slaugh
ter a bear. But the bear refused to
be .slaughtered.
W. W. Dryden brought into The
Tribune office this week some
samples of Reynolds creek wheat
raised by Charlie Share. It is claimed
to go 100 bushels to the acre and
after a careful examination, our ag
ricultural editor says he believes it
will do it. Mr. Dryden says he did
not bring over the beat samples as
his axe was dull and he was hardly
strong enough to work his way into
the field where the "best grain was
growing.
Several Piute bucks and squaws
with a sprinkling of papooses have
been enjoying the freedom of the
town this week. There are also four
bucks languishing in jail for getting
boisterous on boose Saturday night.
Verily the noble Redmen follows in
the footsteps of his paleface brother
Ugly but powerful.
Weiser signal
At an early hour Monday morning
we began to think that the office was
haunted. Things .were running along
quite smoothly when all of a sudden
a lot of type "pied" without visible
cause and (lies began to leave in haste
via the window route. The job press
refused to budge and the paste pot
began to give forth an unusual and
unbearable odor. Our hair stood on
end. Upon looking around we real
ized the- cause when we beheld a
powerful but ugly mug projecting in
side the door jam. We rushed quick
ly around, turned down his collar,
looked at the strawberry mark on
his left shoulder and grasped the
paw of Al Steunénberg, first degree
liar, with The Caldwell Tribune.
About the biggest baseball joke
ever pernetrstea on the baseball
community emanated last week from
Montpeliar, a hamlet in the south
eastern part of the state, in the shape
of a challenge issued by the baseball
club of that place to cross bats with
any town in Idaho for $500 the side
and the championship of the etste.
The editor of the paper there is en
titled to no little credit for this pro
duction of his preponderence of brain
and a situation on any comic page is
open for him at any time. Fer a
team that has never won a gall game
in its life, except it be from a kid
team of its own town, to throw the
whole state into spasms by issuing
such a challenge was a happy hit—
in fact, the first "hit" that the club
has made during its career.
\ RECIPES. *
* +
Sandwich Filling.
As this is the season for picnics
reunions, sandwiches seem to be
the main item in planning a picnic
1 dinner.
The following is very economical,
easily prepared and a very palatable
sandwich filling:
Six hard-boiled
• J .t ««»ru-Douea eggs, six small
pickles (sweet preferred), one small
bottle of stuffed olives (all chopped
very fine).
Delicious Apple Pie.
Fill rather deep pie plate with
sliced, sour apples. Sweeten and
spice to taste (I use a shake of nut
P«t on top crust and bake.
When done loose^ nedges of crust
from plate and turn pie top side
down on another plate. Pile sweet
ened, t whipped cream on top and
serve while warm. There won't be
any left. You will notice there is
no under crust used.
Stuffed Eggs.
_ Six hard-boiled eggs, cut in halves.
Take out yojks and mix with equal
amount of minced ham. Season with
salt, pepper, one tablespoon butter,
and parsley, if liked. Fill the eggs,
place in buttered dish and pour over
one cup white sauce. Sprinkle with
one cup buttered bread crumbs and
bake IS minutes.
Cabbage Soup.
_ Chop 1-4 small head cabbage very
fine and cook in just enough salted
water to cover it. When tender add
milk, butter, pepper aod salt. Serve.
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Simply a Matter of the Maker 9 8 Policies
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All men know Brunswick stand
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Formulas, fabrics and standards
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matter of expense. And these vari
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to give.
For there are no secrets nor pat
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To ascertain what each maker
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Then it is a matter of combining
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Once you try a Brunswick you
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money. -
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Snl* Lake City Headqoartersi 85-59 Wast South Tempi* Street
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ES
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4
Battery Service Station
Arthur Street, Caldwell
: . frra> '
v
vwrçfc.
Laek U»a
PULLER
niLLERl
paints
71 YEAR
LEADERS
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FULLER Paint in GOOD Plkk
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vest in FULLER Paint riflht
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Nmrthmmat Branch— mt
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