Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1919)
c ■ï < f Salem’s Best Showing * $ of Easter Apparel 3 It Is a pleasure to Choose from Such a Great Collection of Suits, Dresses and Wraps % Women tell us so, a^ain and again. There is an excellent variety at each price, and prices range from the least expensive that it is advisable to buy to the most luxurious. You will find here good, wearable, con servative styles, and the highest novelties; and the values are unsurpassed ► >: ► O f tnen’s-wear Hcrfc an«l ga bardine, in tilai'k, navy blue and shade* of Ifrav; made In baited and semi, belted at) lea, embroidered and braid trimmed. Suits at $27.50 Suits at $32.50 ► all the vtrioua Veiled a (Tecta and some o f the cloae-fltting model* that flare abrubtly from the waiat line; alao aome with eoala in the new boa e f fects. O f men’a-wear aeriro and poplin, in black, navy blue and tan. Suits at $37.50 form panel* from the waiat-lme; other* gsth- ert*l and trimmed with black ailk braid ami button*. Suits at $39.50 T Z l l t i ► aerire auiU, in blark and navy Idue; belted model* ami looBly-girdcd box etTecla; aome with ailk Venice»* Suits at $42.50 S n ' S ' S ored line*, box effect* and belted styles, de velop*! o f serge %atui poplin in black an I navy blue. A lio auit* iir ahadea o f blue; brown and olive. ◄ KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL VICTOR Y.LOAN TEST OF PATRIOTISM— Wood Health Is Worth Saving and Some Slayton People Know Hew to Save It Major Oeneral Leonard Wood, who at Camp Punston trained ■imo d iv i sions of Americans for i/vtrsese servlcs, has asked the American people Id supqprt the Fifth txran. If* says; “ We have carried the war on suc cessfully so far and we must see It through. The Fifth I-oan, coming as It ^Joes after the armistice, wilt he a more severe test than the others, of the patriotism of our people. It Is just as Important as any loan we bare made, and It should he rarr<ed through Jflst as vigorously as the others It Is no time now to let up on our efforts.' Reorganization Is even more diffi cult and almost as Important as the period o f preparation Put It over, and good luck. We must have it.“ >. Many Htsyton people take their lives in their hands by neglectting the kid neys when they know that these organs need help. Week kidneys are respon sible for a va »t amount o f suffering arid ill health, but there ia no need to suf fer nor to remain in danger. Use Doan's Kidney Pills- a remedy that has helped thousands o f kidney sufferers. The following statement leaves no room for doubt. L. W. Mulvany, retired stock buyer, Nineteenth & Polk Sts., Corvallis, Ore. says: 8 We have used Doan’s Kidney Pills in our fam ily for year* and when anyone o f us need a kidney medicine, they never fail to do good work. P er sonally I have never found a better remedy fo r backache and when my back or kidneys g e t out o f fix. a few doses o f Doan’s Kidney pills Put them riffht.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’ t sim- ly ask fo r a kidney rem edy—get loan’s Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Mulvany had. Koster-Milkurn Co., Mfgra., Puffalo, N. Y. Tallow Dip* in Denmark. Denmark has a lighting problem so serious that the Danish government re cently purchased 400 tons o f tallow from which to make candles. Com mercial Agent Normal Anderson re ports from Copenhagen.- “There Is a scarcity o f keroaene also and electricity Is, of course, not avail able to the Isolated farmhouse," says Mr. Anderson, who quotes from the Ttdsskrlft for fndustrl, which. In dis cussing the possibilities o f acetylene and alco'hol Illumination, states; “ Acetylene may now legally be used and may be Included In Are Insurance risks. As a result the manufacture o f acetylene lamps has flourished great ly and at the end o f the year 180 types had been put on the market."— Exchange. Coats, Capes and Dolmans The very heat wrap* o f moderate price are to be found right here in abundance. Per haps the sum you have aet aaide ia a Between $15 and $32.50 Then you may choose a cape, a coa or a dol man of serge, poplin, gabardine, hnrelln or velour and so many amt so varied are the styles that it ia great fun to make a »elec tion. Navy and blark, as well as the gayer spring ahadea, are here. From $32.50 to $42.50 ◄ F A R M AND C IT Y DOANS I f you are paying a high rate o f in terest, why not refund your loan at a lower rate and more liberal terms. It is not good business to pay a higher rate of interest than the market demands, nor is it good busi- neas to keep your surplus lund* on time deposits at 3 to 4 perct. per an num when 6 per cent can readily be secured on first Farm" Mortagea. I f you have money to loan or wi»h to refund or securft a new one, call or write S. H. H E L T Z fL , Stay ton, j Oregon. St. M arys Church Services 2nd 4th and 5th Sun days at 8:30 a. in. Rev. Fr. Lainck. Pastor the showing is greatest. lit re are Wrap« o f serge, silvertone, tine suede velour and duvet de Nine, many o f which are lined throughout with pcau de cygne or figured ailk. o f bolivia, ail- verlone, velour and duvetyn are marked at $45 to SJV5. The material* are so soft and the linings so lovely that just to feel them is a pleasure. Many o f the models in rapes, coats and dolmans are individual and to be had in Salem at this store only. The Finer Things Easter Hats, Priced at $3.50 to $12.50 ln :X™:zZ«. turned up little atTiiifB with a touch o f Victory rod or vivid blue. Large hats of basket weave with tiny French colored flowers. So many styles all unusually chic another instance o f our new policy o f ‘‘selling the l*est for les»^“ M Old W h ite C-omer 'Building S a lem ’s G re a te s t W om en’s Apparel Store Bake More Save More I More and more, thoughtful women are de creasing the cost of living by increasing the variety of their home baking. T h ey have learned to bake the Royal w a y w ith few er eggs. T h ey have found that more baked foods mean less meat. T h ey have further discovered that their baking keeps fresh longer when made w ith n f W T A f B ak in g l \ U I J t% J u Powder . Absolutely Pure Easter-* Shoes f i r c7l4en Boy~s Your new sujt, or-the old one either, for that m atter, will not have the real “dressed up” ap pearance without a nice pair of Shoes or Oxfords. You should see those Stetson brown calf. English lace shoes a t ............ Stetson brown kid, straight last, bluchers at....... R. & B. brown calf, English. Neolin soles at ... R. & B. brown calf, round toe, bluchers at ..... Stetson blacks in English, Corndodger or straight lasts, splendid shoes, et ................. $ .11.60 to Stetson brown calf Oxfords, officer’s styfe, plain toe,' very swell, at .................. R, & B. black kid or calf shoes a t ............ $6.90 to $i:L0O 12.50 7.00 8.00 12.00 - 11.50 8.50 N F o r the Boys Brow n calf English, lace, sizes 1 to 2$..................... $4 50 Sizes 3 to 6 .......................................................... 4 75 . Brown calf, round toe, Blulucher, sizes 1 to 2$......... 4 35 Sizes 3 to 6 .......................................................... 4 65 Black calf, English, sizes 12 to 13$ ......................... 3 60 Sizes 1 to 2 $ ......................................................... 4 25 Sizes 2 to ¿5 ................................. ...................... 4 50 Black calf, English Neolin soles, 1 to 2$................... 3 50 Sizes 3 to 6 .......................... ................................ 3 75 Blaek calf, round toes, oak soles, sizes 10 to 13$...... 3 00 Sizes 1 to 2$........................................................ 3 70 Sizes 3 to 6 ........................................................... 3 95 This is just a few of many Come in and inspect them In m any recipes, only half as m any eggs are required, in some none at all, if an additional quantity o f R oyal B akin g P o w d e r is used, about a tea spoonful in place of each e g g omitted. , Try it with your favorite recipes Royal Contains No A lu m - Leaves No Bitter Taste Salem : : Oregon lu s r W HO ARE T H E P U B L IO Somthow Thsy Sstm Nsvsr to I s Prtssnt Whtn ths Term la (m - ploys*- Possibl* explanation. We hear much ulx>ut the public. It la seldom praised; often It Is beriited. The public will stand for anything, we are told. The public likes to b* duped, said f*. T. Hurnum years ago la explanation o f his suct-eas as a show- man. The public he damned, sold a corimrattoD head a generation ago. So ciety never advances, declared the philosopher Emerson. The public la a huge bessl, some one eloe has said. Almost anybody who talks about tho public or mutters pertaining to tho public will reiterate suen opinions to- duy. observes the Kansas City Star. And no offense Is taken; no Indigna tion meetings ore held and no resolu tions drawn up In condemnation of such Insulting language, ^pparenfly nobody feels Insulted. Who, then. Is the public? Nobody cuo tell us; always tbe thing eludes our search. But la not the public anybody hut you and me. or anybody except the persona talking about 111 Therefor«, the public can never be found, though one should Inquire all his days A l ways the thing Is further on. like tba rainbow's end. Ho there Is little use relying on the public to do anything, to take the Ini tiative. to start something, to rise up In rebellimi against wrong oppression. outrage. Injustice. There lias been much talk about re bellions, revolutions, w-hen public In dignation has reached the hotting p oin t; but there never was and likely never will be a public uprising o f any kind without a leader, without some Individual working alone or lu c o o p eration with n very few other Indi viduals to organize “ public sentiment," to give It form ami sulistunce, “ a local habitation and a came " Therefore all the abuse that has ever been heaped upon .the public might be gathered Into* one mass and •ooce more hurled ut the thing's bend and no'bing would ever be beard o f It and nobody hurt. What recourse can be had. then, when the people suffer, when a om- niunlty. a city. Is oppressed by bad government, selfish and soulless cor- poruthins or what not? None ut all by damning the public. It nil comes beck to you nnd mo who starte<l tbe discussion. You are • vita) part o f the public; I am. Yoe ywe It to yourself nnd the cause of _*usti«-e. us do I. to wait uot a moment In doing something, in going straight to a neighbor and with him to *"tne- bo<YV else, and on and on until aa army is raised and the outrage put down. I-et us realize our own Indl- vidun) responsibility to nn abstract public. The public will do its duty, when you and f act. A First Across Canada. The first white mail to cross this continent by a route north o f Mexico, was Sir Alexander Mackenzie, u Scots man who rose high In the service of I the old North n e t company which was amalgamated with the Hudson's Hvy company in 1821. Mackenzie was in j the fai West when he planned his trip , across country »0 the Purifle coast. ' In the aniuntu o f 1702 he led his purfy 1 .‘nr up the I ’eace river where they built a post and wintered. On May 9. 1793, the party set out, passing up the lb-ace rive:, through the Rocky moun tains. across to the Fraser river which was followed down stream for some distance, nnd then across country ! through nn unexplored region, unlit 1 the party came out 00 the Pacific j const. Mixing a quantity o f vermilion with melted grease, Mackenzie wrote on the Inland side o f u high rock ris ing from the shore these words 10 mark hR> visit; “ Alexander Macken zie from Canada by land, the twenty- second o f July, one thousand seven hundred ntid ninety-three. I .at. .12 e degrees, 20 minutes. 43 Seconds north." Mackenzie then retraced his course and returned to the East. Saved by Their Hor»es. An Australian Anxac writing home describes the sagacity o f Ids horse: “I t ’s wonderful how a horse knows danger In the firing line. During * recent push In Palestine my horse, for Instance, understood 'exactly the dif ference between a shell coming over and one likely to land anywhere near our lines. When the buzzing o f a Taube's engines has beeu heard In the distance I've known them to stampede and race for miles before they halted. Hut when the machine disappeared they turned hack. I've patrolled close to Turkish positions on dark nights, and although there has been no slg*. o f a hidden enemy my horse has sud denly reared, and~ the next second a shot from a nearby bush or cactus grove lias rang out. Many n Light Horseman owes his life to this strange Instinct amongst the hoofed Austra lians.” Too Busy Beavers. The C"t':id!an Pacific railway Is ex periencing difficulty at different places between White River and Cartier oa account o f beaver dams being erected ami flooding Its lands. At one place a dam was erected In the center of ft culvert, nnd part o f tlie tilling had ts be removed In order to do away with It. When this wn« done the beavers built another a little further down the stream, and this also had to he re moved on account o f the backwater. It seems to be the general opinion that tbe government should declnre si» open season for n year nnd give the Indlnns nnd settler« a chance to dlft- poee of the surplus beaver and otter.— ' Port Arthur corr-spnitdence Ottawa Citizen. 1 ,