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1 r Wood & SpaaMing ,r£ r rr T~ m i' *V\ 3)j & gssBffigga •AS v7 6 * I r * iLl % J /( HI p mm li mm If" ! :l ; ! f ?,, 'î!Sj| u 'TÎJILïFSf 45*1x2! I • B . : T'T l li! A K BB t Cnt Shows Model No. 8A Nickel Base It's Quicker—It's Better It's Far More Economical Y kitchen is warm and cheery when I to get breakfast. No fires to build- no time lost chopping kindling—no ice cold "rips to the wood shed for fuel— just open the draft and in a jiffy breakfast is steaming on the table. Oven always ready for perfect baking — no stooping as oven is shoulder hi b h. It responds instantly to the easily controlled fuel-saving drafts. You cut your fuel bills in half with— « M C' me Cole's High Oven Range (Patentctf) No. 4i6 #Hcots—Cooks —Bakes with k one lire A It saves cost of extra heater ÆJ& THE TRUTH ABOUT CANDY »❖»■» » »»»»»»»♦ How Much Candy Should We Eai? Where Shall We Stop to Stay Within the Bounds of Patriotism?" , if « That's a question which puzzles many of us. We all know that we must "go easy" on sugar, ns it is our duty to conserve. And candy contains some sugar. So how can we know how much to eat? In the first place, we must not forget that our system needs some sugar, and tills the Food Administration recognizes. We coffee, f the forn Mon permits; a certain share Is yours—one pound per month. Tlie Food Administration Is keeping in close touch with tlie sugar situation and allotting the candy manufacturers as much as It can see Its way clear to allot. Everyone is being asked to save on sugar; the candy manufac turers have been asked to save half of all they formerly used. But that which is being given them is being given them because the Food Administration recognizes candy as a food and Is willing to permit it to lie made and sold. It also knows that the candy making industry Is a btg national industry, and that It is the duty of everyone to help keep industries going at home at tlie same time that we are winning the war. So the candv manufacturers are permitted to make a certain amount of candy and offer il for sale to you. But the Food Admin istration says how much that shall he. When tlie sugar allotted tlie manufacturers Is used up no more cun he had. So you may know that the candy you see on sale is there with the permission und the sanction of the Fond Administration. And you can enjoy that candy to the fullest. While you eat It or send It away to a soldier (if you prefer), you will know that every pound ts high In food value—good, wholesome food, supplying the system with carbohydrates (fuel for the body). 1 must remember, too, that some people like their sugar in «mie in fruit, and some In other ways, i of candy, cat some candy—as much us the Fi ; If you like yours In 1 Admlnlstru Ï X x ♦ || [ I" £ 5 f ! —In sugar consumed per amount has been cut squarely in two. I time a the candy industry pita in thin only 8% of the w this ntry. Right i £ ► \ ► I The Candy Manufacturers of Utah and Idaho. J. A . Lauer & Brother UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMER e GLENN C. LAN DON, Funeral Director and License embalmer. Lady Assistant When Desired WOMEN AND THE WAR By MRS. HENRY P. DAVISON YWCA Treasurer War Work Council National Board Y. W. C. A. Y In an Illinois prairie town lives widow who launders seventeen bas kets of wash 3 week and every I night thanks God ! for having put pity ! hearts of women. To her came one day a letter from her only son. He Wi was then at Camp I Funston, Kansas, <; learning to be a j soldier. The let i Jj ter begged her to Hi come and 8ee - i before he was sent to France. The mother opened the tin bank in which «he had been hoarding her dimes and quarters against this day. The money was scarcely enough. Nevertheless she started. She walked the first slghteen miles. Then her strength gave out, and she took a train. She did not know that visitors to Camp Funston stay in Junction City, eleven miles away. So sho got off tlfe train at Fort Riley. An officer set her right and she reached Junc tion City after dark. Somehow she [ound a rooming-house. Some ont, there stole five dollars from her— five of the precious dollars she had earned over the wash tub and saved by walking. Terror-stricken, she crept out of the house when no one was looking. Later in the night a soldier found her trembling in the street, and toolr her to the rooms of the Young Wom en's Christian Association, rooms which the War Work Council had ppened as a clearing-house for trou bles. The poor frightened woman was put to bed, but she was too (niserâble to sleep. The matron get up at daybreak, built a fire, and com forted her. The son's commanding pfficer was reached by telephone early in the morning, and the boy Came to his mother on the first trol ley-car he could catch. The two spent long, low-voiced hours together, perhaps the last hours they will have this side of heaven. Every moment was as pre cious as a month had been last year. The old lady had still one present worry. The boy's bad cold might turn Into pneumonia if she left him. But «he had not money enough to stay another night and buy a ticket home. When the matron told her that her bed was free, she broke down and cried and cried. ''I did not know there was so much pity left in the world," she sobbed. She stayed till her boy's cold was better. Then she went back to her leventeen washings and her memo ries. Because of the certainty of just luoh cases as this was Governmental lanction given to the activities of the War Work Council of the Y. W. C. A. From the Pacific to the Alantic its Held extends. Union has its members. peals for help are into the 4 f - Mrs. Davison Every state In the _ Urgent' ap Its cause and its • WOMEN AND THE WAR By MRS. HENRY P. DAVISON YWCA Treasurer War Work Council National Board Y. W. C. A. Y Hostess Houses in the military camps all over the country are one phase of the Y. W. C. A. War Work Council's activities. These houses placed at the the reception are entrance to cantonments f o r the use of women & visiting their sol dier relatives. So have) necessary these proved that tents and bor rowed rooms were S pressed into use ™ until houses could Ofter. rooms in the near est town were! turned temporär extra cot." re-1 i ported one -western secretary, who re i turned to tell the War Work Coun I cil the special needs of her, commun 1 Ity, "for an old Lithuanian mother I who came a hundred miles to see her She cannot speak a I be built. KssssaJsi the Association Mrs. Davison lly into hostess houses. "We put up an i boy in camp. word of English and she has to have her old black pipe every hour. But her boy loves her. "Another charge bestowed upon us Is the girl-wife of a 'bootlegger' ar rested for selling whisky to soldiers, He was wild with anxiety about hdr till we said we would look after her. "A thlrteen-year-old imp has just been turned over to our care. She ran away fiom a convent, and, be ing adventurous, made straight lor camp." Any hostess can tell you heart breaking storieE of times when the Get Butter inspiration. Women of every and creed are its wards. of the War Work Council is tremend ous. race The task When the United States entered the great war the Young Women's Christian Association was, as always, With the working among women, call to new duties its members did not abandon their old responsibilities. The War Work Council was formed to take us an emergency measure care of the women who were caught In some of the mazes of war, just as the parent organization has taken care of them through many years of The varied activities decided peace. upon by the War Work Council fol low closely the needs of the differ ent communities of the country. Sec retaries trained in the methods of the organization were sent out broadcast. They were instructed to report to the National Board of the Young Women's Christian Associa tions in New York the lines of work which could be best followed in the These secretaries various localities, work in close cooperation with min isters, women's clubs, chambers of commeroe, churches, military officials, and charitable societies, ord of a day's doings of a secretary reads like a novel, an economic treatise, and a psychological essay all compressed into a llne-a-day entry. A secretary sent out by the War Work Council must be equal to any Miss Lillian Hull at Chll The rec emergency, licothe, close by Camp Sherman, hut rying along the street it nightfall came upon a forlorn couple, nish soldier had found a job for his wife, so that she might come on from Cleveland, she was refused the place because Their money A Fin* When she arrived she spoke no English, had been all spent on the railroad fare, and the soldier was due back The situation was bad.' Thanks to Miss Hull a Chillicotliian has an industrious at Camp. housewife now and grateful domestic, a soldier is happy, and a soldier's wife Is safe. A Any folks often benefit even more directly from the secretaries' work. In Bremerton, Washington, a secre tary was accosted on the street by a She was a slender woman, sailor. and he had mistaken her for a girl. "May I walk along with you?" he asked. "Surely," she replied with mature understanding and intuition. Are you homesick?" The lad's story came out with a Yes. he was homesick, so "What is the matter? rush. hopelessly, despairingly heartsick that on the verge of deserting. he was But this woman gave him genuine sympathy and encouragement, saved him to his country. From north, south, east and west secretaries sent in She these 'pioneer their reports, the undertaking was revealed to the War Work Council, of the work was the first step, of the multitudinous phases certai* lines of work were revealed. The appalling size of Systematization Out (Continued-) | hostess house has been the refuge of stricken women. She can tell you also of Incidents when the hostess , house has brought about a happy end ing. t Prayers of gratitude for s the Host I ess House are murmured every night i in many towns by women who are of ! no particular importance to any one except to some man in the army— and to God. The commandants of the camps are as appreciative of the hostess houses as is the most forlorn woman, .house is erected except at the direct request of the commanding officer. Fifty-four houses are now in U6e, others are being built as fast as lum ,ber and carpenters can be secured. Each house has its individuality, The plans for the building at Camp Gordon, Atlanta. Georgia, were re ,} rawn by Mias Fay Kellogg in order to save three magnificent oak trees, A fj ne 0 id Southern mansion secured fol . t p e Young Women's Christian As relation headquarters at Petersburg, Virginia, is as popular with the sol ,i; erB from Camp Lee as Is the official hostess house. T ho hostess houses serve the entire No na tj 0 n. T he work with girls is one of the most important functions of the War work Council. It deals with all kinds of vvith girls. Girls in small towns. In cities, in country villages, an(1 jn t j, e grea t manufacturing cen ters are al j torched by the unusual con( ittions of a country in a state of war preparation. • Their patriotism may , lr g e them toward unexpected pit {a ij g Their very enthusiasm leads them into danger. (Continued_) Wrappers Here i II Deering Mowers Buckeye Mowers Deering Rakes Buckeye V AND ALL KINDS OF EXTRAS \ J. A. LAUER & I Furniture Undertaking Hardware $ r h£) Hay and Grain Burning in tin Stack. You cannot afford to carry your own risk of fire to your hay and grain when in stack. We write insurance on buildings, hay and grain in stack and buildings, also on automobiles. Let us protect you before it is too late and your hard earned crops burn. We are advertising constantly and putting out high class literature oi boiled down facts of Southern Idaho and Eastern Oregon, to get buyers for your lands you desire to sell. Come and see us. PAYETTE VALLEY REAL ESTATE AGENCY. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. U. S. Land Office at Vale, Oregon. August 17, 1918. Notice is hereby given that Mrs. Charlotte Howland, of Ontario, Ore who on November 21 st 1914 gon, matfe Homestead Entry, No. 03559, for SW quarter NW quarter. Sec. S half NW quarter, 8 half NE quarter. Lots 2, 3, Sec. 4; SB quart* NE quarter, Section 6, Township 17 South, Range 46 East, Willamette has. filed notice of lnten 3; Meridian, tion to make Final Three Year Proof, to establlish claim to the above described, before Register and! Receiver, U. S. Land Office, at Vale Oregon, on the 24th day of 1 Sep tember, 1918. . Claimantl names as witnesses: Alternant Sutton, of Payette, Idaho Blaine May, of Ontariio, Oregon. Hazell Witbeck, of Ontario, Oregon George Harper, of Ontario, Oregon. THOS. JONES, land Register. By W. J. OF NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION TIME APPOINTED FOR PROV ING WILL, ETC In The Probate Court of Payette County, State of Rteho. In the Matter of the Estate of Ulysses S. Davis, Deceased. Pursuant to an. order of said Court, made on the 14th day of September, 1918, notice is hereby given Saturday the 6th day of October, 19H at 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, at the Court Room of saidl Court, at the Court House in the Oity of Pay that ette, County of Payette, bas been ap pointed as the time andi place for proving the Will of said Ulysses S. Daviis, deceased, and for hearing the application of Edna K. McWilliams, formerly Edna K. Davis, for the Issu ance to her of letters Testamentary when and where any person interest ed may appear and contest the same. Dated September 14tb, 1918. MARTIN O. LUTHER, Clerk. Sapt. 19, 26, Oct. 3. PIANO AT SACRIFICE. I For quick business we will aacrl flee n strictly high grade piano k> Liberal terms to If Interested cated at Pavettc. responsible party, make application at ones to THE DENVER MUSIC CO. Denver, Colo. 44t6 CASH PAID FOR YOUR APPLES Our packing "house at Payeitte 1 b open and* we will pay you ca»h on delivery for your'apples, have all kind« of packing material for sale at bed) rock prices. See ' us.— Idfeuho Products Co., E. E. Dean, Manager. Phone 66. We als* t2. i cw zur»; Auctioneerin' Is Our Busint ss We Both Work For Your In erests on the Day of Your Sale J. M. Swanson & Son LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEER Payette, Idaho Phone 118-M E. B. HOLME« Dentist Offics over Stanton Bros. Store. ' *F. H. LYON Attorney-at-Law Office in Lyon Block Payette, Idaho J H NORRIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law Over First Nat'I Bank Dr. J. W. EASTER Dentist ROOMS 8 and 9 Office.-JUpstairs in Thurston Building Di 1 . W. B. SIMS Chiropractor Office, Crighton Block PAYETTE, IDAHO B. J. Hetherington & Co Electric Supply House We are especially equipped for Armature and Motor Repairing of all Kinds. Licensed Contractors for all Classes of Electrical Work 805 North Eigth Street Idaho Boise Walter Watts Transfer AH Kinds of Light and Heavy Hauling done. Prices Right Satisfaction Guaranteed Automobile Trucks House Phone 88-j Quick Service a DR. H. B. CATRON Osteopath Over Stanton Bros. Store Ask the Barber at the STAR BARBER SHOP ABOUT R. D. X. «• for Dandruff Cure or your Money Back Guaranteed by the Koken Barber Supply Co. J. L. SMITH, Prop At the Party. Dorothy was invited to n party where nil the other girls were a ftn years older than she. Ot? tiome she said to her mother: "Moth I had nn awfully good time, and I was the bahiest one the^."