Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1919)
=7 ATTENTION DAIRYMEN Calf food, calf meal and numesous other food? that have been advocated under these names have met with utter failure because they have had no purpose whatever. You will meet with the same failure if you try to sell ealf food or calf meal because it is a different food entirely froai Mutual Compound. THIS IS VERY. IMPORTANT Mutual Compound is a food prepared by scientists for raising calves and pigs. It is compounded for the purpose o f substituting the mother’s milk. The food contains the properties necessary to develop bone, tissue and fat and to develop It in the same way that whole milk will develop it As I understand Mutual Compound, it answers the same purpose for calves and pigs and other sucking animals as Mellen’s Baby Pood or other comi>ounded foods answer for the human life. Certainly there ean be no question about the ability of scientists to compound a food that will feed calves when scientists have already compounded foods to feed the human Infant An investigation on your part or on the part o f a dairy man will prove beyond a doubt that the compounded foods for human infants have proven successful and, therefore, we have no hesitancy in recommending a compound food for calves and pigs. Really we are enthusiastic over it and after explain ing it to the modern, up-to-date dairvmen, they have also become enthusiastic because they can see the immense sav ing it means to the dairymen of the Northwest. We have received our first shipment and are able |to All orders promptly and we are very anxious to have every dairyman try at leaat one pail. We prefer having them try two pails because they can make a better comparison by raiaing two calves than by raising one. We are exclusive agents for Slayton and vicinity • UNIVERSAL Hesters mind Ranges have been in use for over fsty Buy that heater now while the stock is very complete. sizes. Heater as illustrated made in three T h is heater is made oi the best material throughout. Full W ellsvitle polish, steel body, cast top bottom and linings. easy to care for. T h e nickle is very plain and W e w ill be glad to take your old stove as part payment and give you terms on the balance. Heaters priced from $ 2 .9 5 a n d U p . FOREST UNIVERSAL V ic tr o la ’s P a th e ’s a n d W in d s o r TALKING M ACH INES. See us for the newest ideas in House Furnishings Salem Albany Silverton Salem Albany Silverton STAYTON, ORE. H W. F. KLECKER, Wó mm M. mm m Mt. Pleasant Items L K ) O' Talk about adventures I M en in th e N a v y c o m e home r.’ith t h e k i n d o f th a t m ost chaps re e d o f only in th e books. Here’s your chance I Uncle Sam has, aa you know, • big Navy and give« red- toooclrd young fellow» like you an opportunity to etrp aboard and "»hove o ff". What will you get out o f it? Jutt this: A chance to m b elbow» with foreign folk» in »trange part» of the world. The chance for good hone»t work cn »hipboard—the kind of work that trachea you aomething real; the kind i f work that put» *7. beef on your ihouldera and hair on your cheat. You »rill get 30 care-free vaca tion day» a year, not counting »hoce leave in home or foreign porta. You will have the kind o f com- redeehip in travel that »adore know. You will have regular pay* over and above your meal», lodg ing and your firat uniform outfit — good »tuff all o f it. You can join for two yeara. When you get through you'll b* phyiically and mentally "tuned up" for the re»t o f your life. You’ll be ready through and through for SUCCESS. There's a Recruiting Station right near you. I f you don't know where It la, your Poet- master «rill be glad to tell you. 7a nay Fathmr mmj AfoCAer :— in fha A fsvr y o u r 6 o ? ' i fo o d . Somit h, mark a nd p ie y , und m or ml mulfuru mrm look ed s / f s r b y r s s p o n i i b /s s i p s r f s . Shove o f f Î - Join th e U. S. N avy The Misses Margaret and An- geline Ryan and Roxana Shank were Salem visitors Monday. ON THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON aoNoora a n d dkpartmin t » Th« r n ir m i t r torted«* ( b . CoHar* of Selene« and (be Arto, «a d th» eiw U l Aehoi.U of la w . M odici!». (» t Portland). ArcMtaetm» Jnomali« œ . Gota- maira, Kdoettioa »od Mone •«COIAI. PtATUPES A baaotlfol a m im i, faenltlea o f >pert«l- lat*. muli ni fmolliti«*, low coat, with nimny opportnaitlM for malt-help, "mthlette* for a terjb od r," t remlty demivmU mtmnaphai» — mod the fmmotu "Oregon Spirit.'' Por * rmUlnen«. IHaxrated bonkM or * w lf l « riform atim i, td d ra a : THE REGISTRAR, UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGF.NE, OP.EGON. Charles Lambert left Tuesday for Gates where he has employ- ; ment. Copyright Iti# by R. J. RsysoM i ToboœoCo. T R O L L IN G your own cigarettes with Prince Albert is just l \ about as joy’us a sideline as you ever carried around in your grip! For, take it at any angle, you never got such quality, flavor, fragrance and coolness in a makin’s cigarette in your life as every “P . A . home-made” will present you! Aw m M nf r o o f may-«*' r o a » I And toppy red huge, tidy red tine. Sends o i m pound end . S elf pound tin humidor*— * 9r'd— th a t cieaey, practical pound crystal ¿lee 3 humidor with sponge moistener top that keepe Prince A lbert in much perfect condition / R. J. Reynold* T obacco Company • The farmers in this vicinity are very busy Ailing silos. The 1 corn crop is much larger than last year. Wiamtoo-Salem. N. C. Prince Albert put* new smokenotions under your bonnet I It's eo delightful rolled into a cigarette—and, so easy to roll I And, you just take to it like you been doing it since away back I You" see, P. A. is crimp cut and a cinch to handle 1 It stays put— and you don’t lose a lo t when you start to hug the paper around the tobacco / You’ll like Prince Albert in a jimmy pipe as much as you do in a home- rolled cigarette, too! Bite and parch are cut out by our exclusive patented process. You know P. A. is the tobacco that has led three men to smoke pipes where one was smoked before. Yaa air, Prince Albert biased the way. And, me-o-my, what a wad of 1 G. H. Ray and Perry Wright spent several days sight seeing- in Albany, Corvallis and Eugene last week. Messrs Alex and Jake Hafner o f Sublimity, were seen Sunday motoring to the J. H. Kloer home. Several from this vacinity at tended the dance at Turner Sat urday evening. John Aegerter and Lewis Ray were Sublimity visitors Sunday. every time you fill up I Earnest Aegerter called on Miss Glady’s Downing Sunday. INTRODUCES DRUG IN LUNGS ¡M u d d y © m p l e x io n OUR COMPLEXION is muddy. i The Misses Glady’s Downing. Dora and Maude Smith and Fred Smith, motored to Albany Tues day. » the national joy smoke Read The Stayton Mail " -Y O U ft UNIVERSITY Perry Wright returned to Sa- ' lem Sunday after spending • week’s vacation at the G. H„ Ray home. m rollin g ’em w ith ¡»RINCE A lbert Wi Elmer Ray and wife and b o d motored to McMinnville Satur day, visiting over the week end at the Mrs. W. R. Ray home. L a y a b e t on — and from there we went to Japan e x p e r ie n c e s Mrs. Hurd and son Prank warn Jordan shoppers Friday. Mrs. Roy Crabtree motored to Stayton Friday to get her aoa Dusne who is attending high school thare. Mike Bilyu, Miss Evelyn Bel- yeu and their cousins, o f Illinois, who are visiting here, were guests o f Mrs, Hanna Shelton Thursday. Mr. Harve Shelton and w ife returned from the Thomas Creek berry patch Monday between showers. Mr. and Mrs. Baisiger who have been occupying the Shelton home during the owners absence, have gone to their home nt White Salmon, Wash. Mrs. W. D. Persons and chil dren of Pomona, Calif., and Miss Florence Lee of Walnut, Calif., are here visiting their sister, Mrs. Frank Comba. The Jordan Dairy Association cheese factory which haa been in operation the pas; Bummer, has suspended operations for the next few months. E. J. Pepperling, while gath ering apples on his farm Mon day. killed a fine large'bear. The animal having been trapped was making his get-away with trap and pole, when a few bul lets from a rifle changed his plans. Mr. Jake Wortman has pur chased a new drag saw and he and his assistant G. Phillips are proclaiming themselves the lead ing “ stove wood men” o f Jordan. HEATERS . five years. ■V Y You look hag gard and yellow. Your eyes are losing their lustre. T h e trouble is with your liver. Take Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. They will correct that. Then avoid meats, hot bread and hot cakes, take frequent baths and a long walk every day, and you will soon be as well and as beautiful as ever. Price 25 cents per bottle. Chamberlain’s Tablets P ran di Phyalelanfs Method o f Admim M orln g C hloroform Said to Be Pronounced S ucce a». A new method o f administering chloroform, brought out In France hy Dr. Galee», la described In the Scien ti*« American. The doctor no longer applies the drug hy the usual con» prosa or mask placed over the mouth, hot Introduces the chloroform vapor directly Into the lungs through a tube running Into the windpipe. TV* lube method has already been employed In several hundred cases, and with great success. Besides being very usefnl for operations to he performed on the henil and neck, it Is of great Interest because it never produces nausea. The effects of the new method will serve to explain the reasons why chlo roform operations always pro (hi ceil nausea when operating hy the former method, for It appears evident that the nausea was caused by a part o f the chloroform vapors being absorbed by the oesophagus and the stomach. Mr. Laux of Albany, is viait- ! ing at the H. Senz home. Miss Hazel Kriegg o f I,ebanon is teaching the Mt. Pleasant ¡school. The prospects for the coming year are verv bright, as the enrollment is larger than the past year. Wm. Ryan and “ Red" Croe- iant spent the week end at the M. F. Ryans. Both boys are at tending 0. A. C. John Lutz, of Salem, spent a few days visiting with his broth er Lyle. i There will be preaching at the Mt. Pleasant church Sunday, Oct. 12, both morning and evening