Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About Stayton standard. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1915-1917 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1916)
% .... r * i < £ USE QUAINT PHRASES For light, p. wholesome cakes, biscuits and pastry, use Ib; p K C BAKING POWDER Always safe and reliable. I f it* isn ’tail we claim your grocer will refund y ou r m on ey. JAQUES MPG. C O , C H IC A G O . . U. S. Government Homesteads COLVILLE, WASHINGTON, INDIAN RESERVATION. 1,000,000 ACRES In the Famous Columbia River Basin and Okanogan Valley. Fruit, * Dairy, Farm and Timber Land Map showing. Roads. Lakes, Riven. Creeks, Mountains, Indian Allotments and Mineral Land. Book of Description, shows How to Locate any Homestead of 160 Acres on the Reservation W IT H O U T T H E E X P E N S E O F A LOCATOR. P R I C E , P O S T P A I D , $ 1 .0 0 . OREGON HOMESEEKERS INFORMATION BUREAU, 504-5 McKay Building, PORTLAND. OREGON Clean Up Means Paint Up See Y our Dealer. AGENT W AN TED I i D o it N O W ! Business necessity — every Mer chant buys on sight. B ig profits. Exclusive territory. Free samples. Sells from $5 to $100. W rite quick for territory. Sayers. 637 Railway Exchange, Portland, Ore. Everyone Should Drink Hot W ater in the Morning P i a i B r a d o » B688. " «1 Wash aw ay all the stomach, liver, and bowel poisone before breakfast. B O N N E R Prompt Servie. & S O N Specialty Machine Works t o C M t a f . WeMin* MaeSine Shop Work. Cm b e im Ex parta. Maenetua leptiml. beta of all Kindt Made far Automobile* T o feel your best day in and day out to feél clean inside; no sour bile to M N .rn a lS l ParUaad. O n ».. coat your tongue and sicken your breath or dull your head; no cpnstlpa- tion, bilious attacks, sick headache, | colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid atom-, I acb, you must bathe on the Inside like' jyo u bathe outside. This is vastly more 11a m ir Automobile School on the Pa. (M e Comt maintaining a Cm Tractor ! important, because the skin pores do Drpc. Urine Holt Catterpillar. C. L. Bam ; not absorb impurities into the Mood, Tmeklarar and Wheal Tractera, both in the | while the bowel {lores do, says a well- aehmi and Operating field. known physician. M H artB araeA n , Porti a ad. Ore. T o keep these poisons and toxins well flushed from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before breakfast each day, a glass o f hot water with a teaspoonful o f limestone ^ 8 h ip ai^your^Cream. Eggs. Poultry, Dressed phosphaté In it. This w ill cleanse, purify and freshen the entire alimen PRO M PT RETURNS tary tract, before putting more food H azelw ood C o., Portland, O r. into the stomach. Tha ham. of the aatufied chipper. Get a quarter hound of limestone Tbs hotter the Cream, the better the Prim. phosphate from your pharmacist It Is inexpensive, and almost--.tasteless, Treatment and Prevention except a sourish twinge which is not B o o k s F r e e of Contariou* Abortion, Drink phosphated hot and Prevention of Calf Scours. Hoc unpleasant Poultry Diseases. Clip this ad and water every morning to rid your sys an X in front of books wanted. tem o f these vile poisons and toxins; >▲ BROS.. Dekaai Bide- Perils ad. O r * w also to prevent their formation. - , T o feel like young folks fee l; like Didn’t Take A Chance. you felt before your blood, nerves and , “ H ow is the cooking In that restau muscles became saturated with an ac rant 7” cumulation o f body poisons, begin this Gentleman with toothpick— “ Fine.” j treatment and above all, keep It up! “ And what did you have, may I As soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and purifying, Gentleman with toothpick— “ A doz- so limestone phosphate and hot water m raw oysters, some ice cream and before breakfast, act on the stomach, of milk.” liver, kidneys and bowels. * Ynnr P a l m « « « Spirited. HAWTHORNE AUTO SCHOOL Cash for Butterfat r Another Good One. Metal Grain Bins “ I see the Campfire Girls have an honor entitled the ‘firem aker degree/ * “ That ought to qualify them as good wives for lucky men. H ave they a dish washer degree?” — Louisville Cou rier-Journal. ________________________ ri,. l'ìwat. A H in t , troten- , r He— I see where the government wants women to save their rags. She— W ell, R the government only j takes a look at the clothes I have to ; wear, It can see one woman’s doing it. Spring Colds A re the W o rst m T PBOOF H A IT I P R O O F B U S T P ROOF r ,, W H IT E F O R P R IC E S A g e n ts W a n te d Coast Culvert & Flume Co. P O R T L A N D , [Kenton] OREGON They lead to catarrh and pneu monia, They weaken the entire system and leave it unable to resist the sudden changes. They inter fere with your digestion and lessen vour activity. Neglected they soon become that dread disease known as systemic catarrh. Don’t neglect them. I t ’s costly ss well as danger ous. PERÛNA Will Safeguard You Have a box o f Peruna Tablets with you for the sudden cold or expos ure. Tone your system up with a regular course o f the liquid Peruna, fo rtify it against colds, g e t your di gestion up to normal, take care o f yourself, and avoid danger. I f you are suffering now begin tha treat ment at once. Give Nature the help she needs to throw off the ca tarrhal inflammation, and again be come w ell. Peruna has been helping peo- pM fo r A4 years. Thousands o f 2 * ^ ®n 14 to r « K « * * , colds and indigestion. I t ’s à good fetale for tha weak, aa welL The Pa INDIAN SO VS W R IT ! HUMOROUS V S T PATHETIC LETTERS. y " *. Th e struggles o f Indian boys In the different schools with the English lan gnage are revealed In a batch o f let t e n In the poaaeaalon o f A. 8. W yly. a^ertntendent o f Indian schoola In Oklahoma. An Indian boy on a farm wrote: am not going to uae those mule team s any longer than 1 can help. They In jure my religion. I have to scold them and use bad words before I can get them a going on such speed as I want them. These facta are true, to be wit, by Qod.” ‘1 Just received your good sarsa parilla letter and your picture,” wrote another. “ I can feel that It la purify ing and enriching, the letter and the picture, acting gently on my liver and framer. _ W rits m e. I am i s lo x a with the truth." Another Indian boy placed on farm w ro te '« letter o f objectlon-to that kind o f labor, and a gentle complaint as to the wages he received. "M y honored school fsther and friend,” he wrote to Superintendent W yly, “ now I am going tp .write you this day and Inform you how I like my place. First o f all matters I would say earnestly I don’t like I t I think the trouble Is I am too big for him, be cause he told me right before my face, he said he rather have a email hoy, so he can give him $6 or $7 a month for his labor. This was when I first came to this place and ever since he has had same opinion. “ Another thing he can't g iv e me higher wages, he wouldn't do It for any man, and yet the tight wad wants' me to work on two farms and yet he Qnly give m e $10 a month, gracious life. A woman can get more as $10 a month keeping house. I would rather be a housekeeper than work on tw o farms at $10 s month.” An Indian boy from the Snake set tlement tries to tell the superinten dent he Is tired o f school and would rather go back to ths tepee. H e Is not the first boy who has "played sick” to get sw «7 from school, but no school boy ever voiced, it in such quaint lan guage. “ M y dear friend' school father," ha wrote. "Particularly I am endeavoring to assume a splendid opportunity to say Just concisely to you on this beau tiful morning. I suppqse you recog nize that I am sick in nfy giblets. I deem I am w ell again no more. I want you to let me go home as soon as this month. I f I stay here so long I can’t be entirely well, maybe so.” Germany’s Trained M % ty ---- Distinguished W ar Veteran. The Journal O ffic ii o f France con tains the follow ing: "Corporal 8urru gue (Charles) No. 9131, Ninth com pany, Sixth regiment o f engineers; veteran o f 1870; knight o f tbe Legion o f Honor; volunteered for tbe dura tion o f the war at the age o f seventy- six, asked to be sent to the front as a sapper, shares without any sign o f physical weakness all the work carried on by his company, both by day and by night, under the enemy’s fire; a most conscientious soldier o f discip line, energy and keenness.” In private life Surrugue la a civil engineer and regularly walks many miles to super intend the construction and upkeep o f the light railways In his district. A twenty-mile walk la mere child’s play to him. For tw elve years before the war he was the mayor o f his native town o f Auxerre, In Tonne, a place o f 17,000 Inhabitants. In the w ar o f 1870 Corporal Surrugue served with Gen eral Ffetdherbe. Called up as a civil engineer, he gained the rank o f cap tain. H e was tWlca mentioned in dis patches. A fte r the Honeymoon. Mrs. George Jay Gould .was defend ing, at a dinner In N ew York, a mar riage o f a rational rather than roman tic nature. "Th ese romantic and Improvident marriages are very fine in the begin ning,” aaid Mrs. GonM; "but later o n !” She shook her heed pensively. "L ove,” th e M id, “ laughs at lock smiths, hot later on the w o lf at the io o r does the m o m thing." fc * * 1 Nobody can Tell when you Darken Gray, Faded Hair with Sage Tea. One Complained That Mulaa "Injurat Hia Religion"— Low Wages and Hard W ork Has Embittered U fa o f Another. H ere Is the list In the logicai order which the Germans considered In mak ing w ar a science, remarks the En gineering Magas ine: (1 ) Investiga tion, finding ont what to do; ( ! ) or ganization, building the machine that would properly carry out what should be done; (3 ) records, gathering tecta and statistics to be used by thla or ganization in arriving at the right kind o f conclusione In carrying out what should be done; (4 ) planning, logically arranging and co-ordinating all details so that the various steps can be rapidly and efficiently carried o'fitj'TS) standardization, carrying out the steps determined or actually do ing the work in a proper manner; (6) incentives, the reenlta o f the success ful application o f the other five. In other words, the Germans real ized that to win the rewards o f war the actual work would have to be done properly by w ell trained men, after the most careful kind o f plan ning, based on and, as indicated by recorda, secured through an efficient organization, which thoroughly in ves tigated every possible feature In con nection with the task ahead o f i t HAVE DARK HAIR LOOK Yl Grandmother kept her hair beauti fully darkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was spplled with won derful effect. By asking at any drug store for “ W yeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound,” you will get a large bot tle of this old-time recipe, Improved by the addition of other Ingredients, all* ready tfl-use. fo r shout 60 cents. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beau ty to the hair. A well known downtown druggist says everybody uses W yeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been spplled— It's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one straud at a time. By morning tbe gray hair disappears; a fter another application or two. It Is restored to Its natural gplor and looks glossy, soft and beau- tlfuL Thla preparation Is a delightful toilet requisite. It-is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of dlseaae. . * • , Guessed. mma^-Honeit. Mature, aian’ty w r accept Jack's proposal laat night? Maude— Y-Y-Yes. But how did you guess?' ' ', ' ' *' Maine— Oh. the poor dear looked so worried this morning.— Penn State Froth. Heard On the Elevated. First Young Thing— I started read ing “ Les Misérables'' last night. It la very interesting. Second Young Thing— Isn’t It! I think It la V ictor Herbert’s m aster piece.— Boston Transcript Always. Thus. “ I understand they want to turn dis tilleries into munition factories.'’ “ It might help. If they do. But Its the old-story of the ultimate consumer getting the worst of i t ”— Washington Star. — ■ a r e H ealth y , S u m * , B s s s U t s l S jS t Oculista and Physician s need M urtas Kjre io U j assay years before Is wee off*rod se e D a n n ile Xye M edido*. Murine Is ilUU Com pounded by Our Physicians and guarna teed »y Usas ns a Reliable Reilsf for Eyes that Meed Carer Try It In your E je * ned In Baby * K jt e tto Hw» 1 -tlog— Juet Eye Comfort. Buy Marios of your D ruggist— accept aoSuhaUtate, and II La lerce led write tor Booh of tho By* Pres. It (J Ml MB B Y * R C M E D Y C O * C H IC A G O S ix fe e t t h r o u g h at base, 4 fe e t 6 in c h e s t h r o u g h at to p , fiv e f e e t a b o v e g ro u n d . G ia n t S t u m p in g P o w d e r d id a c le a n jo b , t a k in g o u t ro o ts and all w it h o u t t e a r in g a b i g h o le in th e g r o u n d . F a r m e r s w h o h a v e u sed th e m k n o w th at always save them money, time and work. I ”hey ta v e jB o n e y because they lift and heave a* w ell at »hatter, and go further than high explosives that merely split the stumps. T h e y save time, and work because they get out the stu m p s- b ig or little, green i deed— in a co nditio n easy m handle. .— I g f t b flt t l I t f u il* IfQl Giant Powders than from any other powder 1 have used, says A. E. Adkins, Woodburn, Ore. Bix— I wonder if Dr. Cook really thought he discovered the north pole? Dlx— Possibly! W e all »m ake mis takes. Why, when I married my w ife I thought I had discovered Paradise.— Boston Transcript Loans Seem to Weaken It. A (to man be has touched)— Thanks, old chap. But what is this little pam phlet you handed me? B— Oh, I always hand, one o f those out with a loan. It tells how to. strengthen the memory. — Boston Tran script Y e a C èa G e l AtteWe reet-Caae i m . W rite A lien s. Olmsted, U Roy. N. Y., fo r* Ire« sample o ( A llen’s Foot E ra * It cures sweating, hot swollen, aching feet. It makw nemor tight shoes easy. A certain cure for cerrhi. ingrowing nails and bunions. A ll drug- |Uls sell 1 Don’t accept any substitute. ■ Five Blasting Books FREE Better ways of removing stumps and boulders, making ditches, planting trees, and, breaking up the subsoil are described in our five illuitrsted books They were written for western farmers, to meet the conditions that yen have. -Writs us (or the book on the subject you are interested in. THE GIANT POWDER CO.^ Con •i oeircs Su Francisco , ” Everything fo r Bloating " In s til Offltw ■ SwHU. >*» » « « « . Portland. Ish Lsks CSSs. I * * » Doubla Tread, Puncture Proof Tires Made from your old one*. l-»»l Ion* ee Bren New Tire*. fif* ALSO M Y Tlkt.H Wepayae KUrh ee 10c per lb for euch es we ran use In Double Tread work, end th* Mr heel market Ship your. Ttree at once ur write ua. • j rauMwe a . ue •■***■ a. rwami a* Calling TWo Deluded S ou l* ........ Thtre are trfo Glam Farm Powdsr», both mads «specially for Pacific Coast farmer». "Kursks Stumping Powdsr it etoel economical foe dry work and Giant Stomping Powder save» monsv in slump blasting ia wet soil. Try «here two. Compere them with the powdsr you Hava been using, and you will slwsr» u»e Giant In future. Writs us and we will bavt our nearest dittribulortupply s trial csss si ths lows»! market pries. Uncle BLACK le OeSSw*» a lees Me £V*4 free|»^_r»IUM*^ LEG I» «et* I t e * Steri Ire PUM C 1«-«*** esse eteri>*e pmm et c ter tejerle*. . . . M . The s e ul ' « » J ■ yeete et •eerielutee aeertsllxtne le i*MUM eed orarne if *j*»re*te*>l* «Mer S i h m ** Getter's, e ~ J TM c u i m m i tABoaavoe v .iiririw . «a Down. . . f "W hen I was a youngster," remark ed Uncle Braggles, “ I was about the beet baseball player In this county." "W n àt did you plsy?" “ Pitcher, catcher, shortstop an’ all the rest o f ’em.” "Yes_un cle," spoke up little Willie, the champion bright c h ild .. “ But w e’re talking * about baseball, not amateur theatricals.’’— Washington Star. WEEKS’ BREAI-UP-ACOLD TX A guaranteed remedy for La'Grippe. Price 26c o f ygouri I t ’s good. Take nothing else. — Ì HIOES, PELTS, CASCAR« We went alt you hare. Write fer prière i •hlppine ue* THt ft. T NOWTOM CO. SJ North fr e e Part Äcw tc avoid Sense of Responsibility. "Is Bllgglns patriotic?’’ "Thoroughly.” "W ould he fight for his country?” " I don’t know about th a t But he hasn’t the slightest doubt that in an emergency somebody ought to."— Washington Star. Tim es Change. /. W hat? You need new clothes again? When I was a boy I wasn’t ashamed to wear garments that were patched.” "Yes, dad, but you know you didn’t associate with such refined people as I do." SALTS FINE FOR ACHING KIDNEYS These Three W om en Tell H ow Escaped the Dreadful O rdeal of| Surgical Operations. ■■ aw | 9 Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, b u t they I should be the last resort for women who suffer with ills| peculiar to their sex. Many letters on fiW in the Pinkham f aboratory at Lynn, Mass., prove that a great n u m b e r of women after they, have been recommended to s u b m it to an operation have been made well by L yd ia E. Pinkham’i Vegetable Compound. Here are three such le tte rs . A l l sick women should read them. Marinette, Win.—“I went to the doctor and he told me I must have an operation for a female trouble, and I hated to have it done as I bpd been married only a short time. I would have terribk pains and my hands, and feet were cold all tha I time. I took Lydia E. Pinkhara’s Vegetable Cbm- pound and was cured, ®nd I feel better in every * 8*Te you permission to publish my name because I am bo thankful that I feel well again.* —Mrs. Fum B kumkx , Marinette, Wla. I W e eat too much meat which Clogs Kidnevs, then the Back hurts. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clog ged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery In the kidney region, severe head aches, rheumatic twinges, terpld liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and. all aorta o f bladder disorders. Ton simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain In the kidney region, get about four ounces o f Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful In « glass of w ater before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys w ill then act fine Thla famous salts is made from the acid o f grapes and lemon Juice, com bined with llthla, and la harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also neu tralises the acids In the urine so It no longer Irritate», thua ending bladder disorders. ' Jad Salta la harmless; Inexpensive; make* a delightful effervescent llthla- w ater drink which everybody should taka now and then to keep their kid neys clean, thus avoiding serious com plications. A wall-known local druggist aaye ha M ils lots o f Jad Salts to folks who be tte r« In overcoming kidney trouble « fe ll« it ia only trouble. ' to w Alidu—“ When I first took Lydia J»f undergo an operation. I could hardly walk Pinkham’s Sanative W «h an* and * P **a *» of Lydia X B M Ì.™ A m - * ■ * K * » « , “ k*- aaamssi a Y Cal taking it ai S Ä W G K t o T O “ d„ Ä tonity to recommenÄt to a n v ntW .„¿Jî 1 0411 ïir iL io H r e , W23 l i « k . t t r e Ts Ä '« i the . r t S f a ffis i ft? " ' wmdd like spedai adda»- , r - • * * * * Ffc’ ^■¿ j *