Stayton standard. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1915-1917, May 31, 1916, Image 3

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    (ose Festival Visitors
are cordially Invi tad to visit
LINK’S BUSINESS COLLEGE
lUy« Fifth Floor. TUford Bldg., cor. Tenth and Morriaon Sta., during
atival, June 7, 8, 9. A ll will be welcome. School In aesaion ail'year.
L Better Barrel
Flour Cheaper’’
HOUSTON
OTEL
S ixth oad E v ere tt Streets
PO R TLA N D . OREGON
(4 block* from Uafae Statico)
Rara 50s, -78s, $1.00, <1.60
P IR N » ARK OOOO TO RAT.
• A Y U NIVERSITY JAPANESE
Considered Greet Delicacy PSy Nip­
ponese, Who Eat Fuget 'Sound
rOWN
- . Plant Like Asparagus.
University o f Washington. — The
common fern or brake that grows la
the Puget Bound country la good,to
Oat, according to University of Waah-
Jngton Japanese students.
Several
Japanese famWes bave been gather­
ing the stems.of the plant oa the cam­
pus recently. They are boiled and
eaten like "fukl,” the Nipponese rhu­
barb, or the American asparagus.
To take out the acid taste of the
fern, the sterna are boiled In water,
to which ashes are added. When near­
ly cooked the water and ashes are
poured off. Clean boiling water Is
then poured on an<L the cooking Is
called “ warabl" and la considered a
great delicacy. Warabl may be eaten
at once or It may be dried and stored
away for winter use. When mixed
with oysters It Is called "aho-yu,"
which means oyster sauce. The food
can be (nixed with most meats, shell­
fish and vegetables.
KOVERAlLS
The homelike «topping place
for those who appreciate the
dollar’s full worth.
HILL CONSTRUCTION CO.
e r Exchange, Portland, Or.
FREES
Eggs,
and Provisions.
It 1st o f V ast, H o ,* P - i ttrT , M J u k ,
*.. P.tta. b e . , to 3 C H M A L Z . If r u u
Sties«. Check malted you day sftar
larket informatldh, la ««, at« , promptly
lUwf hides. I I V lb., calf .kin«, ter lb
to try u. Wanted. S00 Veal
1000 Broiler* and Han* WKUT today
antlenlns till* paper.
F. H. Sekaaala
aid-up capital ftO.OOO.
Pertlaad. O r *
w
H a z e lw o o d , F o r tla n d
Tbs better tbs C R E A K tbs better the
Dignities of Office.
This story— which la perhapa true
and perhapa not— la being told In
many Italian mess rooms. On one of
bis roysl tours King Victor Emmanuel
spent the night In a small country
town, where the people ahowed them­
selves unusually eager In caring for
his comfort. Bo when he bad gone to
bed he was surprised to be wakened
by a servant who wanted to put clean
sheets on hla bed. However, be wait­
ed good-naturedly while It was done,
and wished the servant good night
He had doxed o ff to sleep when be
wks roused for the second time by A
rap on the door and the servant re­
appeared. asking to change the sheets
again.
Naturally the King asked why the
change was made so often. The ser­
vant answered reverently: "For one’s
self one changes the sheets every
week, for an honored friend every
day, hot for a king very hour."
Work of Euper«rogation.
"What do you think of tralplng girls
In military campaT"
"They doii’t need I t
Why, they
take to fighting aa Inatlnctlvely as a
duck takes to water. I know plenty ot
women who have never had a minute's
military training in their lives and yet
look at them tn the meetings of wo­
men's patriotic societies/'— Baltimore
American.
—
Must be provided when the
Appetite is Poor
Made since 1848— Hanford's »u i«a «i
n «w tk t. Said, Rentad and Repaired
W A L K E R El.tenue W O RKS
Burnside, cor. 10th.
Portland. Urn.
He Wae Wise.
I been calling on her twice a
six months, but had not pro­
le was a wise young man, and
ink It necessary.
” he aald, as they were tak-
oil one evening, “ I—er—era.
ask you an Important ques-
Cruel.
A young man who has theatrical as­
pirations loves to boast of hts connec­
tions with the stage business.
In company with some traveling per­
formers In the lounge of a hotel, not
long since, the young man carelessly
observed:
“Oh, yes, I took a ahpw out once."
But the wind was knocked out of
his sails when one of the actors asked
him:
- “ Who brought it back?"— Philadel­
phia Public Ledger.
If you can’t get Hanford's .Balsam of
Myrrh write: O. C. Hanford Mfg. Co.,
corge,” she exclaimed, "this Syracuse, N. T. Two sixes: 60o and
den. W h y, I ------” ' N
11.00. Adv.
I want to ask la thlaaf) he !n-
"What date havo^rou ami
ber decided upon for our wed-
Journeyman John Plane was having
Jetrolt Saturday Night.
a quiet smoke when the foreman hap
pened to pass.
atlnate sores use Hanford’s
Foreman—I say, Plane, why ain't
Adv.
you getting on with your Job?
J. P.— I don’t like this job, gaffer.
Ths Only Kind.
I’m a conscientious objector.
Foreman— What the deuce do you
me across a man who knows
mean by a conscientious objector?
anage his wife."
J. P.— 1 have a conscientious objec­
ne to him at once!’*
this Isn’t visiting day at bis tion to hanging doora.—London Ideas.
-Baltimore American.
A Flying Squadron.
"I wonder why they ordered us to
Newport," said the commodore.
’’What do you mean?" inquired the
flag lieutenant.
“ It’a out of season and nobody la giv­
ing a dance."— Kansas City Journal.
Dr. Bierce’s Favorite Prescription
makes weak women strong, sick women
well, no aloohol. Sold in tablets or liquid.
id Y. M. C. A. Auto School
1 nicht class««. Expart trainine
ns, driving and 'knachlna work.
fort », laths, shspsr. drill pros*,
«te. Tim* unlimited. COMPE-
4AU FFEU KH A N O M EG H AN-
PLIED.
W RITE US.
Tired.
"I'd like to aee that office boy of
mine 30 years from now."
"W hy ao?"
“ He ought to make a wonder aa a
tired business man.”— Louisville Cour­
ier-Journal.
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH
BITTERS
It is an excellent tonic, appe­
tizer and stomach medicine.
- Get The Genuine -
Leading Up.
Maude— What makes you think hla
Intentions are aerioua?.
Mabel— When he first began to call
he used to talk about the books 1 like
to read. •
Maude— And now.
Mabel— Now he talks about the
things he likes to ea t— Life.
Need Only Trust to Lydia EL
Pinlcham’s Vegetable Com­
pound, says Mrs. Kurtxweg.
H m rkr.^".vS
Buffalo, N .Y .— " My daughter, whose
picture la herewith, was much troubled
I
i f f - S fifll
month a n d t h e y
would sometimes be
so bad that it would
like acute in-
Lesson In Floriculture.
RET
(lam ination o f some
"Dad, what do they mean by peren­
P L iH ll
o r B * n - She
nial?’’
W g ig H J
your advertisement
"Continuing from year to year," an­
in the newspapers
swered pop.'
flfe i
and tried Lydia E.
"Lik e my hat,” Interposed me.
And then there was a daap, porten­ ¡ ^ » ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ « P i n k h a m ’s V e g e -
tous silence.—Louisville Courier-Jour- n K 9 m i t t b l e
Compound.
She pralsea.it highly as she hsn been
relieved o f nil these pains by its use.
A ll mothers should know o f this remedy,
and all young girls who suffer should
try it* '-M r s . M atilda K cbtxwbo , 629
Long and Narrow.
High SL, Buffslo, N. Y .
"Our friend with an eye to tha
chanoe has a long head."
Young women who are troubled with
"Yes." replied Miss Cayenne;
painful or irregular periods, backache,
Isn’t having too long a hand Ilk
make n man narro w-mlnded ?*’—'
tngton Star.
OF HISTORIC INTEREST
OP GORIZIA RESTING
PLACE OP ROYALTY.
Among Many Others, It Contains the
Tombe of Chartee X and "Henry V "
of France—Known aa "Aus-
Mentioned almost dally In the war
dispatches from the Italo-Austrlan
front, the little town o f Oorlsla has
gained considerable prominence o f
late.
...
Besides being the center o f Impor­
tant military operations, Oorlsla la of
Interest because of Its historic asso­
ciations. Lying between Venice and
Trieste, not far from the Adriatic. Go­
rilla baa a population of'abput 80,000.
The town has been an AoBtrisn pos­
session for more than live centuries,
and Its pleasant climate has earned It
the name o f "the Austrian Nice."
.In the outskirts on a hill Is a Fran­
ciscan monastery, the road to which is .
marked by the. 14-station way o f the
cross. From the esplanade In front
o f the monastery church an extensive
view of the surrounding country la ob­
tained.
Below spreads the town, with the
ancient chateau o f the counts o f Go­
rilla and the Villa-Boeckmann, once
the winter residence of the count de
Chambord, towering over the lees pre­
tentious houses. A little further off
one can trace the capricious course of
the Isonso river, the bed o f which is
said to the the burial place of Atllla,
the Hun chieftain.
In the distance lies the Carso lime­
stone plateau, sheltering the magnifi­
cent castles of Dulno, belonging to the
house of Hohenlowe, and Miramar,
which* used to be the favorite resi­
dence of Archduke Maximilian, later
emperor of Mexico.
The horizon Is bounded by Trieste,
a'ch ain of snow-covered Alp peaks,
the Venetian plain and the Adriatic.
In the little chapel of SL Louis, in
the right wing of the Franciscan
church, the bodies of King Charles X
of France, the duke and duchess d’An-
gouleme and the duchess o f Parma
bad their resting place until 1883,
when they were removed to a large
vault under the high altar.
In this vault there are six sarcoph­
agi, three on each side of a marble
crucifix, raised on a high pedestal.
Charles X has the duke d’Angouleme
on his right and the duchess on his
le ft
In the other group the sarcophagus
of King Henry V (the count de Cham­
bord) has been placed between those
of the countess de Chambord and the
duchess of Parma.
On a black marble slab behind the
sarcophagus of the count de Cham­
bord Is the following inscription:
"Here rests the high born and very
excellent Prince Henry, fifth o f the
name, by the grace o f God king of
France' and Navarre. Born in Paris,
September 89. 1880. Died at VYohs-
dorf August 84, 1888.”
Over his tomb Is raised aa Immense
white banner emblazoned with the
royal fleur de Us. in compliance with
the order given by the count In his
manifesto o f July 6, 1871. where he
expressed a wish "that the standard
of Henry IV, of Francis 1 and o f Joan
of Arc, which had floated over his
cradle, should also throw Its shadow
over his tomb."
Manhattan la Flat-Footed.
Little old Manhattan la flat-footed,
wears poof shoes and stands up at Its
work, according to figures compiled
by Capt. Frank IS. Evnne o f the re­
cruiting office ot the United States
Marine corps. Captain Evans la au­
thority for the statement that approxi­
mately 18 per cent of all applicants
who applied for enlistment In the
marine corps at Its Twenty-third
street office during the pest year, were
rejected for "pee planus,” dr flat-
foot. He puts the blame on the cheap­
ly constructed, poorly made shoes the
average toller wears at hla work tor
the epidemic ot falling arch, and on
u e fact that the majority o f victims
claimed they were forced to stand on
their feet for long stretches while at
their employment
Motormen,
conductors,
subway
guards, policemen, machinists, wait­
ers and clerks are the principal suf­
ferers from “ pea planus," Captain
Evans Bays. —New York Times.
I t t e lls y o u h o w t o s a v e m o n e y o n y o u r s t u m p b l a s t ­
in g .
I t s h o w s in 4 0 illu s t r a t i o n s t h e m o r t e f fe c t iv e w a y s
o f p r e p a r i n g c h a r g e s , l o a d i n g - a n d M a s t i n g stum ps w i t h
This valuable book was written especially to suit Western
conditions— by men who have blasted hundreds o f acres o f
stumps lik e yours. It contains many letters from Pacific Coast
farmers, telling why they prefer the Giant Farm Powders.
M ake Th is T e s t! Get s 2 5 - or 50-ib. esse o f cither o f the Giant Farm
Powder*—-Giant Stumping for wet work and Eureka Stumping, which coats lew,
for dry work (also used by careful Master* foe wet work). Get another case o f
eey otkrr powder. Blast with both and you will find that Giant Farm Powders
go further and therefore eo*t lea*.
Dealer* everywhere carry Giant Farm Powders in M ock, or ran secure them.
I f yours does not we will see that you are supplied.
F a w n * R n n l r * ^ -------W e issue five helpful hooks on Masting— Stump
r i T C D O C K » r r c e . Blasting. Boulder Blasting, Better Orchard
Tillage, Subsoil- Blasting and Ditch Blasting. • Choose the ones that you prefer
and write far them today, N O W , before you lay this aside. A post card will do.
THE GIANT POWDER CO , CON,
"
E very th in g fo r B U tiin g
¿XL Smn Fnracbco
”
KORINEK REMEDY CO.
In Doubt.
She-talked and talked and talked.
T ill he said to himself with a groan
" T e gods! have I married a woman.
Or la it a gramophone?"
Hub (feigning complaint)— It isn't
like what mother-----
W ife (Interrupting sharply)—Tom,
you know how that remark annoys
me! What len’t?
Hub—Why, la your houaecleaniag,
W hat to Do for
dear. Ton don’t make half the muaa
Your Itching Sirin and discomfort mother used to make.
Ecsema. ringworm and similar Itch­
ing. skin eruptions are so easily made
Rub It On and Rub It In.
worse by Improper treatment that one
For lame back and soreness, sprains
has to be very careful. There la one
method, however, that you need "not and strains, sore tkroat and stiff nock,
hesitate to use, even on s baby's ten­ you must rub on and rob In thorough­
der skin—that is, the resinol treat­ ly Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh. Re­
m ent Resinol la the prescription of member that one good application at
s Baltimore doctor, put up tn the form first la better than several light ones.
of resinol ointment and resinol soap. Adv.
This proved so remarkably successful,
Chance For a Hug.
that thousands of other physicians
have prescribed i t constantly for over
"Men have such queer slang. Now
20 years.
this article speaks continually of the
Resinol stops Itching Instantly, and main squeeze.
Doesn’t that sound
almost always heals the eruption nonsensical ?’’
quickly and at little cost
Resinol
“ Oh, I don’t know," aald the other
ointment and resinol soap can be girl. "Main aqueese sounds rather
bought at any drngglst’s, and are not nice to me. I think I’d like to meet
at all expensive.
one o f them."
•Illy Fellow.
The W ifely View.
"M y dear, what do you think I
"Yon are the only girl that can make
bought you? A nice oook book."
me happy.”
Ths Ex-MIntotsr.
" A assn buying a cook book? My
"A ra you aure?"
A member o f the corps o f the Brit­
‘ all tha others."— word, that canvasser must have been
"Yes, I have
ish legation said at a dinner in New Philadelphia R
a peach.”— Kansas City Journal.
York:
"Soroo funny stories come from the
front about our vblun’.eer army.
“Tw o young, swells in the uniform
of private soldiers were overheard by
A ll paopla In America and especially Instructed ns that la case of sickness,
an officer conversing In a trench. -
” 1 was Intended for the ministry,’ those who are past middle aga are r ^ o t t to Dr. Pierce’s dependable
the first swell sold. ’Believe me or prone to eat too much meat and in eon-
not. old chap, I was on tho point of sequence deposit limesalta In thetr ¡ ¡ ¡ j j " ^
¿ ¡ ¡ ^ m ^ d J d * aa
being ordalnod lost August*
arteries, veins and Joints. They often "cnrweUe," but only as superior rem-
“ ‘I say! And what stoppad you. sufter from twinges ot rheumatism or edies for certain common and easily-
then?’ Inquired the other.
lumbego, sometimes from gout, swol- recognised diseases. Had these modi-
’’ T h i s ----- war, o f course,' was tha len hands or fe e t Such people are Clnee been adapted to all classes and
not always able to exercise sufficient- -forms ot chronic diseases there would
ly In the Outdoor air or drink enough
pure water In order to sweat freely
' The Scoundrel.
Dr. Lyman Abbott, the famous and excreta Imparities thru tha akia.
Dr. Platee baa conducted experiments
“anti,” sold at s luncheon Is New tad thoroughly tasted a urlo acid M i ­
York:
rent at hla Invalids’ H otel and Surgí-
“ Some people think, because I op­ ja l institute which bo Is oeavlnoed Is
pose universal suffrage, that I am vary many timos moro potent than 11 this—
severe and harsh oa tho snbloot ot Jila he named "Anurie." I t can be had
at abaeot all drug stores by Staptar
aaklag fo r Dr. Pleroe’a Anurie for kid-
“These people liken me, In fa
HOT W ATER AND “ANURIC”
BEFORE MEALS— AND HEALTH
theimaa who was aakod:
*
“ D o you believe In alabe tor
toll*
'
“ ‘Suro I
I
do!*
*'/' " L-ÿ'/Nf
tho
man n