Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1914)
POULTRY ' ' —...... and Dairy Produce ul all kinds wanted. Writ« fur our CASH OFFER Pearson-Page Co. nJKtov’ SECOND-HAND MACHINERY I’ought. «0*1 •a<hana«(l. uniflnuu. bullura. •awmill«, eta. Hurvl for Slorli l.lat aiwt I’rlrae. Till J. K. MARTIN CO. W UtNt. Portland. Or. I OPPORTUNITY IS HERE TO HARM CHIROPRACTIC. Gi«b« «* 8*«^* t«,* Oaw>»* IA.JIII»— Too Good to Be True. A woman, wearing an anxious ex pression, ciilhal ut un insurance office one morning. "I understand," ahw said, "that for lu I cun ln*ur>. my hou*« for >1000 In your company." "Yea," replied th» »Rent, "that I* right. If your hou*o burn* down wo puy you 11000." "And," continued thn woman mix loiinly, "do you niako nny Inquiries a* to th« origin of the fire?” "Certainly," win th« prompt reply: "we make th« most cureful Inquiries, inndiim.” "Oh!"- «nd ahn turned to leave th« office -"1 thought there wai u catch lu It somewhere." A Long View. Ted Brown, an American, was tour ing Hcothind and one afternoon mounted a high hill In company with a Hcot who begun bragging of the ex Literal Turin« Wilts fur uur Ptopualtlon. tensive view. b.vurythin« f«e tha Orchard, Farm. <.ar«laa "I suppowe you can see America and lewa. YAKIMA AMO COIN MH A MIVIM ROIICIV CO. from here on a fine day," *ald the ROOTN YAKIMA. WAIH. American Jocosely. "oh. ay, farther than that,” replied YUIM* CIOWN ■ lb ILST GUARAN1H the other. 'Farther than that?" "Ay! On a fine nlcht wo can see Juno may ba on« of the shortest the inune." month* In the year, but u lot of fol low* get Ilf.- auntnnc« before It [>***■■*. Both Cause and Cure. Vice President Marshall has said Nature Is with th« men the*» days. That kissing'* a cur« for divorce— Th« sunshine la bright, th« women don their transparent raiment, and there The thought has Jus’ entered our head That kissing Is also the source. Isn't a bit of dust to get In anybody's eyes. Th« Panama canal will save 8000 I tom retie servant* are employed In miles between New York and Han mor» than M0.000 homes in England Francisco. The distance to th« Phil ippin« Island* Is not reduced material and Wales. ly. however. SALESMEN WANTED Tricycle taxicabs hnve been Intro duced into Oeriuuny with great suc cès*. 1* no more necessary than Smallpox Aim* ewparlaaca h.i drm.Aialf.im th« ||MC* mlta.uloua «HI- cat r, and h«rml...n.«>. ut AaUtrahaM Vac.laaUao. *« v«<cinat«4 NOW ur yvu. shr.ulaa, you a»4 your family. It I. mor* vital I han houta In.uranra. A«h your pbraltlan. dru^yl«. or .rrul tar "Hava y<*i h*4 Ty*hol4f" t.llln* of Typhoid Vaeclaa, rr.ulta from ut*. and dany.r from Typhoid Carrier», Improvement* now progressing on the Sue» canal, for which the com pany ha* power to raise 130,000,000 through bond*, urn expected to be completed In 1918 1!» The latest I tat tut its lABovAtosY srsnnrv, cal scheme makes provision for a depth raoavoaa vacerat. a M««*« «.Hi a • •«. uciaii of to feet throughout and for widen Ing up to ion feet S Inches In the* south section and cutting un appro ' Th« Philippine assembly is consid pib.io number of siding* tn the north, ering thn offering of u substantial and central section*. prize for a mean* of destroying the tobucco ln*oct pest without Injuring '■ "■ ■ ■ * 1 the tobacco. "X Make Your Boy Happy Let him play in overs!!» with never ■ care in the world snd you will make him a healthy, happy buy. lie sure to buy him VVhv l^e Imping merchants ’’ *'J of Portland and th« North west call upon BEHNKE-WALKER BUSINESS COLLEGE for thor oughly competent, well-trained help? 843 firm* have called on us for one or more stenographer* or book keep ers since Aug. 1, 1913. Over 2<M) of our students ar« holding lucrative positions in Portland alone. Let u* prepare you and furnish you a po sition when competent. Writs- no trouble to answer. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Portland, Oregon > 8mokeless Powder Visible. An Important discovery has been made by the bureau of ordnance of the navy department as a result of a series of experiments and Investiga tions, which have been conducted by order of Bear Admiral Strauss. A certain color of glass has been found to "servo th« purpo»M of rendering vis Ible th« sinoke from tho "smokeless" powder discharges of a rifle.—Army and Navy Register. A Plunge. Hicks—I’ve just taken a plunge In the stock market. Wicks—I always heard that there wus a lot of water there. Obliging. "Havo you obliging neighbors?" "We have. They aro obliging us to move by the infernal racket they keep up nights " Effective. "Do you think criminal tendenclee can be overcome by a surgical opera tlon ?" "I am certain of it.” "You think that, say. a pickpocket, for instance, can be cured of the do Blre to pick pockets by an operation?" "No, not on his brain. Amputate hl* bands."—Houston Post Territory around Punta Arenas, at 1 th« extreme Routh of Chile, has a healthful climate. Much cattle and sheep raising Is done, and the district is rapidly building up. A rancher hns applied for rental of 1 320 acres of the Pike national forest, I Colorado, to be used In connection | with private land for raising elk as a commercial venture. RAPID- CALCULATION forms a part of the Business Cours« taught at the Beutel school, and th« young man or woman who masters it w ith other studies can command a gooc Two-Horse Brand salary. Overalls Learn Bookkeeping. Penmanship, The number of persons killed by lightning In the United States during Commercial Law, Correspondence, Rap The kind that ii made a year averages nearly 600; about 400 id Calculation and Office practice at fur comfort and l<»n^ wear. cattle are killed and annual damage BEUTEL BUSINESS COLLEGE by lightning Is 23,000,000. FREE Tacoma, Washington. Catalog Free. A position guaranteed. For signaling between aeroplanes ! there has been Invented apparatus for blowing fine black dust from a reser Disturbing Elements. voir lu such u way as to form dot* and "A sailor bold I'd like to be,” M.J. Ay dashes. I hoard tha farmer roar; ^LEVI STRAUSS a CO., L. Frssrar*y "For 1 would like to plow the sea A public pest we all despise. And then raise cain on shore." Ills actions make us groan— —Cincinnati Enquirer. He guesscH the wrong number "I wish I was the Prince of Wales," Th« Pacific Steamship company, And rings our telephone! Declared a country swain. running a line of steamers from tho "In answer to my people's 'hails,' United States to Alaska, has announc I'd turn around and reign.” ed a passenger rut« from Portland. —New York Mail. Ore. to Aluska, the same ns those DAISY FLY KILLER "I'd like to be the president. A.aa. hi»at.«lran.or- applying from Puget Hound points. .e c « v • ni e nt- To save the land I'd burn; Laiti all Tho schedule of rates from Portland tea «on. M»i»el Then flood ft all with eloquence— Is: First-class to Juneau. 125; second pietwl. can'ttpul or tip The smouldering hate to spurn!" . - • t . w 1.1 U i » !<• class, |16, and 122 and 114 to Ketchi |ti| uru inr th inf. (. i*ran?«ed efle»t'vu. kan. f«!4 If Realera, o« Dr. Grace Feder Thompson’s Korek- A »«nt I y eapr«Mp*^ pa. 1 for fl. 4 tonik for men and women relieve« limiLn soma*. )H DUUIB Av« . SrwXly*. S. X. nervous exhaustion and debility. On« month’s treatn ent for $1. Address 948 Post street, San Francisco, Cal. The fellows who have stock to sell In the new oil fields are unanimous English papers announce that th« that It Is "oil right." LJxMnjia Qusrsnlesd fur Tw* Y»U world's biggest ocean liner is to b< Mal» to y«»ur intitv.>lnal ntraauru frtwn unr uulectino uf « ••th. in any built nt Belfast. It will be of 60,00( atyluariff Btiuruntuud tu Al jrm» It's a long, hot Sabbath that knows tons, whereas the Vaterland is of 59, fur ti y < Fur suif* ' no militant In England these days. la prier, vsrtei» 000 gross tons, the Imperator 52,171 usât« nefe.trtn.uuras anp »»ther h>«t*r V» the Britannic 50,000, the Aquitania 47. «su any fbthsS yxMi U-IP Thcro may bo a few new spots on ooo and tho Olympic 46,369 tons. Con Amazing the sun, but h« can still generate ca sul Sharp reports that the Britannic loric powers that are quite adequate. was launched at Belfast on Februnrv 26. For safety it will have 48 of th« After attempting to decipher the largest lifeboats yet made, two ol j hnndwrltlng of some business men n them fitted with powerful engines. 1 fellow appreciates the wonders of i even an old typewriter. Acid Stomach, heartburn and nausea quickly disappear with the use of Wright'« Indian Vegetable Pills. Send for trial box to j;x Pearl St., New York. Adv. to a h hi Easy to Misjudge Remedy You Need In Overcoming Blood Trouble Do Not Be Fooled It was a mean thief who stole u preacher's sermons the day befor« Sunday and no time to prepare new ones. The state education department ha« adopted denatured spelling and we'l have to try to learn to spell all ovet again. Here's a new paradox: The Atlantic senboard Is burning, nithough It Isn't board, but sand, and is flooded with water. The garden contest will be showr In moving pictures. The promoter« seem determined to keep the thins moving. It renlly sounds quite superfluous tc hold a housewarming at a fire station Study •'he (lame and You V in Understand Why Some Thing* Are Deceptive. ?n treating r it blood disorder the funda mental f*ct ini it be obaerveil that th« nla) and object of t..e medicine med I* to permit a hit, n home run and * sure, *ato bit ever» time. Now the pronulrlvo effect of 8. 8. R. la to regulate the blood formation, to a*al*t In development of tissue and to have a decided bearing upon tho lymphatic Influence, all of which la In the promotion of blood health. And this propulsive effect will be similar to the straight ball pitched to Insure a S»fe hit and not the deceptive gyrations wilgned to fool the batter. H S R. la a plain, atralght blood purifier. It I* not a fanciful mixture to move the bowels and thux falsely play upon susceptible mind*. It I* not a nerve excitant to exhilarate for the moment and then die awav. It con- Jalna none of tho«« mineral drug* which ry up the tlasuea. In other word«. It does not play to th« bleacher* nor to the ••fans." It la just a Wholesome, powerful, searching blood remedy, on* lagrudlsut ut which serves tho nctlv« purpose of arousing each cellular part of the tissues to select from tho blood the nutriment or materials re quired for renewal of health. N H. 8 Is prepared from nature's own materials, not an ounce of drugs being used. And yet It I" more potent, more powerful, more searching enu nufte prmhictlv* of restoratlvo results than from ths most active of all the minerals employed In medicine. It* action by elimination of the Irritating poisons thst Infect the blood. Is one of tho very Important things to know. You can get S. 8. S. at any drug store, but take no other so-called blood purifier falsely claimed "Just as good "* R. S 8. la prepared by The Rwlft Rpeclfle Co., 000 Rwlft Bldg. Atlanta. Os., and If you have anv deep seated or obstinate blood trouble, write to their Medical Pept. for tree advice. It Will be worth your while to du so, The boy. who stood guard for candy thieves, realizes now what Miltor meant when he said: "They also serve who only stnnd and wait.” Snturday wns Decorntlon day; the streets were brilliantly illuminated anc so were a number of the spectators. The plunge had a busy day for It« season's opening, but, after all, Satur day is tub dny for a lot of people any way. Putnam Fadeless Dyes are thi easiest o use. A railroad official says we should sit down in cars, but they keep right on putting in straps and ordering u« up front PREPARING THE SHAD DELICIOU8 FISH MAY BE SERVED IN MANY WAYS. Planked Is, of Course, the Most Pop ular, and Probably th* Best—Never 8hould Be Fried—Salad* to Go With It There Is no mor« tempting or deli cious dish than shad. Hhad may be prepared In many ways; probably the most popular la planked shad. Many housewives think such a dish out of the question, but all that one need* Is a good hot Are and a plank. Be sure, however, to sea son and garnish your fish before it Is placed on the table, or it will not be a success. You ask how can I get a plank? A carpenter will make you one of oak about two inches thick for the small sum of 50 cents. It can be used In definitely for the constant charring of the wood, only adds to the flavor of the fish. To plank shad first wash and wipe the whole fish thoroughly. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, then fill It with this stuffing: Two cupfuls of bread crumbs or mashed potatoes, a grating of onion, a tablespoonful of parsley, batter the size of an egg. With a sharp knife cut three or four silt* in the upper side of the fish, and put a thin slice of bacon in each open ing. It should be baked in a mod erate oven for 30 minutes. It you cook with gas bake it for part of the time in the oven, then brown and fin ish under the flame. The proper salads to serve with shad are watercress and tomato, cu cumbers and onions, or a salad of radishes cut thin and laid on lettuce leaves. Broiled shad may be accomplished with the ordinary broiler, but great care should be taken lest the fish Is seared. If It Is cooked over the open coaJa. Wise housewives never fry shad, as It Is apt to absorb the grease and it loses much of Its dainty flavor, if prepared In this manner. An unusual recipe for shad Is to put It In a sour pickle, and let It remain there for a day or so. then serve for a light supper. The shad should be cut In squares about three inches square, then boiled for 20 minutes. Beal some vinegar, season with pep per and salt, and crush some allspice In IL Pour this hot over the fish and keep it tightly covered for several hours before serving. It Is delicious, bs the bones are softened, and the tleBh tender and juicy from the vine gar In which It has lain. Halibut a La Flamanade. Cover the bottom of a baking-dish with two tablespoonfuls each of minct-d onion and celery and one of parsley. Place on this the fish, after dusting it with salt and pepper to taste and brushing with melted butter. Bake in a quick oven. Put two ta blespoonfuls of butter in a pan, add two of flour and mix; add one pint of cooked strained tomatoes and stir un til boiling; add one-half teaspoonful t ach of mace and white pepper. Strain this around the fish and serve with boiled potato balls basted with melted butter and dusted with minced pars ley.—Woman's Home Companion. EARLY METHOD OF CLEANING Use Sawdust for Glasswar*—Mixture of Salt and Vinegar the Best for Decanters, Etc. If you would get the nearest carpen ter to give you a panful of sawdust you could make your cut glass dishes, and even your flue pressed glass, daz zling bright. First wash each dish thoroughly with warm soapsuds and then, with out drying it, bury the dish in the saw dust Leave each piece until ft I* per fectly dry and then brush it with a soft brush, taking care to reach all the crevices You can clean decanters, canif es. vinegar cruet*, etc., by using a mix ture of salt and vinegar. To a wine- glassful of vinegar allow a handful of salt. Put some of this in the bottles, shake It about well and the stains will disappear. If you have pudding or meat pie dishes that have become brown, burnt and generally disgraceful looking by baking in the oven, you can almost always remove the stains by soaking them for several hours in strong borax and warm water. Greasy pots and kettles, that bete noir of the woman who does her own cooking, can be cleaned with little diffi culty by letting them get warmed through on the *tove. then removing them to the sink and throwing in a handful of corn meal and rubbing them well with this. BURLAP AS A DECORATION Can Be Put to Almost Innumerable Uses in the Making of a Tasteful Home. Th« woman who is eager to have a tasteful home at small cost should re member the many uses of burlap for Interior decoration. A couch that has become worn and faded, but does not require re-upbo)stering. may have its defects covered by a throw of burlap, using the widest obtainable In a tan or other good shade, and cutting this suf ficiently long to hang entirely over the couch ends. The ends may be fin ished by a wide hem caught In place with green briar stitching and the cover further omsm«nted by stencil ing. If a tan or brown burlap has been selected a pretty stencil design Is a border of pine trees done In greens and browns. Burlap also makes beau tiful portieres, and Is excellent for up holstering chairs, making boat or porch pillows and may even be used as a floor covering. Rhubarb Pie. Cut the large stalks of? where the leaves commence, strip of? the out side skin, then cut the stalks In pieces half an inch long; line a pie dish with paste rolled rather thicker than a dollar piece, put a layer of the rhubarb nearly an inch deep; to a quart bowl of cut rhubarb put a large teacupful of sugar; strew it over with a saltspconful of salt and a little nutmeg grated: shake over a little flour; cover with a rich pie crust, cut a slit in the center, trim off the edge with a sharp knife and bake in a quick oven until the pie loosens from the dish. Rhubarb pies made in this way are altogether superior to those made of the fruit stewed. I ^¡A real I^ ■ DUTY [■ I Y I I HOSTETTER’S I Stomach Bitters I of every person to try and maintain the high est possible standard of health. This plan can be helped along won derfully by the use of It tones, strengthens, invigorates the digestive organs, the liver and bowels and thus pro motes good health. World's Greatest Bank. With its recent acquisition of the Wilts and Dorset Banking company, Lloyds bank of I-ondon becomes prob ably the greatest financial corporation of its kind, as its deposit and current account now aggregates more than 1500,000,000. Lloyds bank ha* a history extending over a long period of years, as the private bank out of which it was form ed was established in 1765, and the present banking corporation was formed in 1865. including its latest acquisition, the bank has absorbed no less than 48 other banking houses since 1865, one of these dating back to 1677. The bank is represented in 45 out of 52 counties in England and Wales, and a subsidiary company was formed in 1911 to open a branch in Paris, an old French private banking house being taken over. In all, Lloyds bank now has 880 separate offices. While an incorpor ated bank, the traditions of the pri vate banking days yet remain, and practically every official of the bank and its branch managers was educat ed in private banking houses, and preference is always given to men so educated in taking on new employes. —Wall Street Journal. Free to Our Briders Write Murine Eye Rrmrdy Co . Chicago, for U-page idu-tratrU Eye Book Free. Write all about Your Eye Trouble an<l they will adxlao ! a. v the Proper Application of the Murlno Eye Remedies in Your Special Case. Your I>ruggirt will tell -ou that Murine ReHevea Sore Eyes, Strengthens Weak Eyes. Doesn't Smart, Soothes Eye Pain, and sells for 50c. Try It in i our Eyes and In Baby's Eyes fa* Scaly Eyelids and Granulation. The law placing a prohibitive tax on the manufacture and sale in the United States of matches containing white phosphorus becomes effective July 1. Modern romance—M. Caillaux came through a duel unscathed and was then all mussed up by an automobile. While breaking records as we do, With ninety in the shade. We love to cool our ardor with Ice cream and lemonade. Native runners in South Africa re ceive 60 cents a day. Canada's cultivated area in 1911 was 32,404,110 acres. Nine thousand Scotchmen went to Canada last year. Braised Sweetbreads. Use little individual baking dishes for these. In the bottom of each but tered dish put a little chopped car rot. celery, onion, a few green peas and dices of salt pork. Place a par boil«^ sweetbread on top of the veg etables. If the sweetbreads are large, half will be enough, if dish Is used as — an entree. Cover with good clear stock and bake slowly for from forty- Take Lydia E. Pinkham’» Veg five minutes to an hour. Before serv etable Compound and be ing baste the gravy and vegetables Restored to Health. over the sweetbreads to garnish. Using Lemon Rinds. Everyone will be glad to know of a way to save your lemon rinds after making lemonade. Remove as much as possible of the pith, cut the rinds in strips, with scissors, about one- quarter inch wide. Get one pint of pure grain alcohol and put In a glass jar; Into this drop the strips of lemon until you have used 15 lemons. They do not all have to be put in at the same time. The whole amount should stand a week. Then strain through fine muslin. That is all there is to it Tricatelli. and you have the pure article with no This calls for pork, although any coloring or flavoring and it is a A d other fresh meat may be used. Chop essence. one pound raw fresh pork very fine, add one teaspoonful salt, one salt Stuffed Corn Beef. spoonful pepper, teaspoonful onion This is a somewhat unusual way o. juice and one-half cupful sale bread cooking a familiar meat, and makes a crumbs. Beat two eggs and mix all pleasant variety. Select a lean, chunky thoroughly. Shape into small cakes, piece and after cooking or soaking ft pan. boil slowly to thoroughly cook. in fresh water, to remove the brine Serve with baked or fried potatoes, make several deep incisions in it. Fill and garnish with parsley and lemon. these cuts with bread stuffing highly seasoned with pepper and onion. Tie King's Jam. the stuffed meat tightly in a cloth, dip Four pounds of grapes, two pounds It In vinegar, and then simmer it In of sugar, three-quarters pound of rai belling water. Allow 20 minutes for sins. one-quarter pound of English each pound of meat. Drain before un walnut kernels, pulp of two oranges, tying the cloth. one-half pound of figs, seed grape*, cut nuts and flgs in small pieces, stir Rice and Apples. all together and cook until thick. One cupful of rice and five large Put away in glasses. This is a de cooking apples. Wash the rice well in licious conserve. several waters, pare and slice the apples; cover with water. When To Keep Celery Fresh. boiled sweeten to taste. Eat with To keep celery fresh and crisp, so cream. To make it look nice whip that it will last for days, treat it In the whites of two eggs, sweeten, the following manner and find It ex cover the dish, brown In the oven for cellent: Prepare it as you would for a minute, take out and put drops of the table, then wet an old piece of current jelly on top. clean linen in Ice-cold water, place the celery tn It and lay on the Ice. Orange Filling. One-half cup sugar, two level table Scotch Cakes. spoonfuls cornstarch, grated rind one- One pound dark brown sugar, half half orange, one-third cup orange pound butter and lard, two eggs, one juice, one tablespoonful lemon juice, tablespoonful soda dissolved in luke one egg beaten s'lghtly, one teaspoon warm water, one ounce cinnamon, one ful melted butter. pound flour. Roll out rather thin and Mix the Ingredients and cook in dou bake In a moderate oven. ble boiler for 12 minutes, stirring con stantly. Cool before using. Pineapple 8herbeL Grate two pineapples and mix two Cutting Hot Bread and Cake. quarts of water and a pint of sugar; When cutting hot cake or bread. If add the juice of two lemons and the the kntfe Is heated first it will prevent beaten white* of four eggs. Place In them crumbling. a freezer and freeze. MRS. WINN’S ADVICE TO WOMEN Kansas City, Mo. —“The doctors told me I would never be a mother. Every month the pains were so bad that I could not bear my weight on one foot. I began taking Ly dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and had not finished the first bot tle when I felt greatly relieved and [ took it until it made me sound and well, and I now have two fine baby girls. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound too highly for what it has done for me. I always speak a word in favor of your medicine to other women who suffer when I have an opportunity.’’— Mrs. H. T. W inn , 1225 Freemont Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Read What AnotlierWonian says: Cumming, Ga.—“I tell some suffer ing woman every day of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and what it has done for me. I could not eat or sleep, had a bad stomach and was in misery all the time. I could not do my housework or walk any distance without suffering great pain. I tried doctors’ medicines and different patent medi cines but failed to get relief. My hus band brought ht>me yourVegetable Com pound and in two weeks I could eat any thing, could sleep like a healthy baby, and walk a long distance without feeling tired. I can highly recommend your Vegetable Compound to women who suffer as I did, and }<>u are at liberty to use this letter.’’— Mrs. CHARLIE BAG- LEY, R. 3, Cumming, Ga. F. N. V. No. 2«, '14,