Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1919)
^BIG O PEN IN G SÄLE N O W ON A T TH E People’s Cash Store, Salem, Oregon Commenced SATURDAY morning, March First, and will continue at the J. L. Stockton store, 186- 194, North Commercial Street, Salem, Oregon, indefinitely from M O N D A Y , M A R C H 3rd, 1919. Prompt Delivery Free W ith $1 Order. Oar future program is to cut down the living prices to make every home comfortable and to get people out of debt. That is in your own hands, If you w ill start buying of the PEOPLE'S CASH STORE, this will bring you nearer to becoming the depositor of a bank, when you will do in one year business amounting to $500 you will find by the end of the year $125 on your Deposit Book, instead of getting a debit bill from your grocery man for the same amount. Also you will find your side-board nicely deco rated with high class pieces of glass and silverware, along with other pieces of finery received from your premium coupons that you have received FREE from us. OUR SPECIALS DURING THIS SALE ARE AS FOLLOWS Crown, Olympic and Snow flr ift flours................. $2.95 Fisher’s Snow Fall hard wheat flo u r .................. 2.75 V ery good valley flour.............................................. 2 .5 5 10 pounds corn floor, white and yellow ........ t ...... 66c 10 pounds pancake flo u r .............................. ........... 05e 10 pounds Graham flo u r ......................................... ‘ 60c 10 pounds Rolled O a ts .............................................. 70c Sugar, per sack...................................................... $9.65 Sugar, per pound in any qu an tity............................ 10c Royal Baking Powder, per pound .............. ............ 29c Raisins in bulk, per pound ..................................... 14c Raisins in 15 ounce packages............... .................. 13c Dried Italian prunes 2 pounds......... ....................... 25c Head Rice, 3 pounds.................................... ............... 30c W hite and Red Mexican beans, 2 pounds ................ 15c Coffee with premiums, tne Best Reliance $1.05 Coffee, per pound. Reliance................... ................... 35c Selected coffee in cans. 3 pounds................. .*.......... 95c 1 pound coffee in-cans.....*........................... ............ 32c The Best Economy coffee in bulk....... ...................... 27c 3 pounds o f Economy coffee.................. ................... 80c Cocoa in bulk, 2 pou n ds............................................. 45c Arm our’ s and L ib b y’ s very best milk, can ............ 15c Sweet corn, the v ery b e s t......................................... 15c Standard Tomatoes...*.................................................. 17c Table Pride Salmon, tall cans.................................... 17c 14 ounces Ripe O liv e s ........................................ ...... 13c Clams, flat c a n s ........................................ ............... K)e Clams, tall cans...,........... ..................................... *... 18c Standard Sauer K ra u t........... ..................................... 14c Peanut Butter ...*.................................... : ................... 18c No. 10 Dark K aro S yru p ............................................ 90c No. 5 Dark K a ro ............... v............... ..................... 46c N e t 5 pounds V e g e to le ......................................... . .. $1.39 6 pound can C r is c o ....... ........................................... $1.90 No. 5 compound.... .................................................. $1.15 I gallon Puritan cooking o il............... ........................ $1.95 I I bars o f W hite F ly e r soap................................ ...... 50c Brooms. $1.50 and $1.75 values a t .................. 70c and 80c VEGETABLES $36.00 Suits fo r ............................................................ $17.75 $5.0(1 B 'ueSerge Pants j 2.2'.» Khaki Pants .................. L19 $2.00 Heavy Flannel Shirts...................................... 98c A ll Kinds o f workitfg shirts. , — ......................... 78c A very Big Surprise Sale and a Big Redaction in line o f Wool Dress Goods, Silks. Fluids, Ginghams, Calico. Sample a few items: Double width Ginghams, ull colors. j>er y a rd .......... N ice Ginghams, per yard .............. A good selertion o f calicos, per ya rd ........................ the and 25c 19c 11c 50"t R E D U C T IO N IN SHOES and RU BBERS Good heavy M en’s work shoes ................................... $2.79 M en's dress shoes .................... $2.49 A big selection o f boys dress s h o e s ........................... $1.79 Selected Cabbage, per pound......................................... B ig Reduction in Ladies’ and Misses’ Shoes and,Rubbers. 3c v l i n s This X in s u p p u i t u n n y That ii Don't I Miss Opportunity Comes to You Once in a Century. L HERE IS A SAMPLE OF A FEW ITEMS Selected Onions, per sack, $1.50, per pound......... 1J c Burbank potatoes, per sack ............................... .....$1.50 Sweet Potatoes, per pound ........... ............................ 5Jc L J U ii i r Big size oranges, per d o z e q ..................................... 55c Medium size oranges........................................... . 30c O U R 50 P E R C E N T R E D U C TIO N IN C L O T H IN G Please Remember lemDer our Store a io r t is A lw iw ays a Selling at the Low est Prices « Y. W. C. A. OPENS WORJUN ITALY Tea and Club Rooms Opened for American Women. Miss Charlotte Niven, Director of Ital ian Work, Prepares for Influx of American Woman Students. Italy is now Included In the war work o f the American T. W. C. A. Miss Mabel Warner o f Salina, Kaa., and Chicago left Paris a few days ago for Rome, where she will be in charge o f a Hostess House for American girls employed there by the American Red Cross, the Embassy and the new Tu berculosis Commission. Miss Warner has been director of the Y. W. C. A. Hostess House at Brest, France. Miss Warner will open a tea room and club rooms where the American women can gather for social times. Rome is harboring a refuge population o f about 40,000 and accommodations are difficult to find. The work in Rome was started as a direct result of the appeal of Miss Charlotte Niven, one o f the National Y. W. C. A. secretaries in Italy, who is «pending a few months in France as advisor in the French work. Miss Niven's dreams of Y. W. C. A. work In Italy include the maintenance o f a residence for non-Italian women, who, she feels, will come to Italy in great numbers after the war to study music and art. " I believe at this time such a project Is particularly important because wo men from other countries should be encouraged to‘ come *o Italy to replace the great numbers o f German women who flooded Italy in the past, many of them i* id agents of their govern ment," Miss Niven said in discussing her plans. Miss Niven has asked the American Y. W. C. A. to aid the Italinn Associa tion in establishing a center, perhaps at Genoa, with two American secre taries, with physical and recreational training, to act as a training school for Italian women. In connection with It her plan would Include a Hostess House for girls passing,through the city or employed there. Such a center would become eventually the center for all Y. W. C. A. work in Italy, (with Italian and foreign. In her formal appeal for help for the tlnlone Chris*Inna D ell« Oios: al (the Italia., name for Young Women's (Christian Association) Miss Niven has ( emphasized two facts, the poverty of ! the Italian Association on the one hand and the need and opportunity on the other for an American program in Italy at the present time. Miss Niven's favorite way o f illus trating the friendliness o f the Italian i woman to America is by telling the story of the Italian mother who said she had taken down the picture of the Madonna which had hung for many years over her bed and was putting in its place one of President Wilson. "In our work in the Unlone we have lacked trained leadership as well as the material resources to give such training. We have had no means to buy modem equipment. Consequently we have not the visible results of American and British work. “ Feeble as our work may be. It Is not useless. Muny girls In all parts of Italy have toid us how much the Unlone meant In their lives. Italian girls are touchingly grateful for the smallest efforts. They respond eager ly #t » friendliness. “ There is no other agency doing In Italy what the Association is trying to do.” Miss Niven hps spent the past seven years In work with the Italian w/>- men, starting as director of a hostel, or boarding home, for Italian women stu dents at Florence. She is an Ameri can from New York, where she was one time head of the Christadora Set tlement House. WOMEN LEARNING MASSAGE. Germantown Y. W. C. A. Trains Wom en for Reconstruction Work £mong Soldiers. Educational course» to prepare wom en as aides in the rehabilitation of woended soldiers have been opened at the Germantown, Pa., Young Women’s Christian Association. A. reconstruction massage course, lectures in anatomy, physiology, mus cle work and remedial movement mas sage, theory and practice, electrother apy and hydrotherapy are given by doctors and nurses, who also super vise practical work at the Y. W. C. A. and at hospitals. The courses are rec ognized by the Surgeon General. Similar courses have also been open ed In the New York City Central Branch Y. W. C. A., where a specialty Is made of brush-making wIMi n view to training women .as teachers for re construction hospitals. The^Tadsnlan Y. \V. O. A. has re ceived permission to place a Y. W. O. A. secretary on every ship leaving Encíatid with 200 or more women and ; cid'dren on tin» puss* ngor list. '■'lie secretary fulfil!-» the same func- lion for the W! men ns the Y. M. C. A secretary has for men on transports. .4he plans entertainments and recrea tion for women and children and is a friend to whom they may come if they are in distress. . THE MAIL IS $1.50 A YEAR WOMEN BEGIN Y* W. C. A. FOREIGN TRADE COURSES Courses In New York City Prepare Girls for South Ameri can Joba. i / / Sensing a sudden call to Jobs for American women In South America, the New York City Y. W. C. A. has opened Foreign Trade courses, includ ing classes In shipping, tiling orders, trade acceptances, tars ’, consular In voices, document:!. I: ranee, mall or der trade and other lines o f Interna tional work hitherto left mostly to men. These classes are designed to meet after-war needs. South America Is receiving particu lar attention as the Y. W. C. A. is In formed o f new Job* tost are opening in the southern countries. Many girls in New York who combine a desire to see the world with a craving for finan cial Independence are ••dstering with the expectation or going there to get positions when their courses In train ing are completed. W 7/ ft fJV/2. M ,, W - '..•tv Inevitable Anarchy as the Result of Insufficient Supplies of Food for the People. By far the most terrible toH of the Russian winter will be taken in the peasant villages, the home o f nine- tenths of Russia’s 180,000,000. Oliver M. Sayler writes in the Saturday Eve ning Post The sullen and defiant muzhik, who lias planted for himself and only for himself, liusn't taken in to account the possibility that superior fbree from the city or from his own or a neighboring village may seize bis groin. When the calamity befalls, an endless train of disaster and lilisstshed and starvation will follow. In Its wuke. Reprisal on some weaker peasant will be the next step, and from that the llarne will spread to virulent bor der w arfare' with whole villages on the trail to plunder the grain blns’ of others or Intrenched to protect their own. In some districts, even before I left, this most cruel form o f ci.ll strife had broken out. I contemplated returning from Pet- rograd to Moscow by Hlelgh overland In case the German advance enveloped the rnllrotfd outlets. Careful Investiga tion. however, disclosed the fact that machine guns, brought home from the frpnt. were mounted on all the roads leading Into many villages and travel ers approached them lit their peril. !v h A Y , you’ll have a streak of smokeluck that'll T ut pep-in-your-smokemotor, all right, if you’ll ring-in with a jimmy pipe or cigarette papers and nail some Prince Albert for packing! S -"„y//,- j. r& Just between o u rs e lv e s , you never w ill wise-up to high-spot- smoke-joy until you can call a pipe by its first name, then, to hit the peak-of-pleasure you land square on that two-fisted-man-tobireco, Prince A lb e r t! W e ll, sir, you’ll be so all-fired happy you’ll want to get a photo graph o f yourself breezing up the pike with your smokethrottle wide open I T a lk about a m o k e -a p o rt! Quality makes Prince Albert so C o o y r lfM I t l t » J K w rno l T o b a c c o Co. b f appealing all along the smoke line. Men w ho never b e fo re could smoke a pipe and m en w ho’ve smoked pipes for years all testify to the delight it hands out! P. A. c a n ’t b ite o r p a rc h ! Both are cut out by our eaclusive patented process I Right now while the g oin g ’s good you get out your old jim m y pipe or the papers and land on some P. A . f o r what aila y o u r p a rticu la r am okeappetite / Y o u t , . y P r i n c e A l t a r i c e c c r u , t e n l o t a re » I r nW . T o r o * ro d t a g t , l t d * r o d l i n t , h a n d io m a p om n d a n d ‘ h a l f p o u n d tin h u m , d o , , a n d —t h a t d a i l y , p r o . I , c a l p o u n d e r u t t a i g i o i i t u m , d o r w i l t .p o n g a m a i . h o a r l o p th a t t u p . i t a to b a c c o in t a c t p e r i o d c o n d itio n . R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C *