OREGON CITY COURIER, MAY 2, 1913 11 OF INTEREST TO LADIES Tested Receipes and Valuable Household Hints, Furnish ed by Those who have Tried Them. Cucumber Salad Pickles 100 small cucumbers, 1 cup olive oil one-third oz. white mustard, one third oz. of celery ' seed, 1 cup salt. Slice thin and salt over night, drain and cover with cold vinegar and oil. MRS. LAYTON SEBOLT Pop-overs 1 cup flour, 1 cup milk, one-fourth teaspoon salt, 2 eggs. Put flour in bowl. Make a well in the centre. Drop in the salt, then un beaten eggs. Add milk gradually and beat thoroughly. Bake in gem pans for 30 minutes. When cool open and fill with whipped cream or any other desired filling. CORDELIA WIEVE3IEK. Lemon Pie For two pies . Take 2 cups sugar, juice of 2 lemons, 3 tablespoons flour, yolks of 3 eggs, butter size of a wal nut. Stir and add boiling water to thicken. Bake crust first and fill, put back in oven a few seconds, then beat whites of eggs, add sugar and cover pies. Place in oven to brown slightly. MRS. F. FREESE Cocoanut Cake One and . a half cup sugar, three fourths cup butter. Cream together. One cup milk, two and a half cups flour and one teaspoonful of vanilla. Filling Boil together one and a half cups milk, three-fourths cups of sugar and one-half cup cocoanut. Add beaten whites of 2 eggs and heaping teaspoonful flour. Let boil five min utes, MRS: W. A. LONG Rocks, Cookies 1 cup sugar, 1 cup butter and lard, one-half each, one cup chopped nuts, 1 cup chopped raisins, 2 cups of flour, 2 cups rolled oatmeal, 2 eggs beaten light, 1 teaspoonful cinnamon, 1 teaspoonful vanila teaspoonful salt 1 teaspoonful soda, level full, one half cup hot water, poured in last, drop in tablespoonfuls. MRS. S. SEARS Ginger Cake (original) 1 cup molasses, 4 large tablespoons melted butter, one-half cup sugar, 1 heaping teaspoon ginger, cloves, cin namon, allspice and a little salt. 1 heaping teaspoon soda dissolved in hot water. Make very stiff with flour, too stiff to stir and then pour over it 1 cup of boiling water. Add no more flour and stir until smooth. Add one half nound of raisins. Bake slowly. I MRS. A. J. ROSS To Can Salmon Clean salmon thoroughly; cut up in pieces to fit jar, salt as for cooking. When jar is full sprinkle top with salt. Put on in boiler of cold water filled to neck of jars. Have lids on jars and if Mason jars are used, omit the rubbers until the fish are done. When water comes to boil, boil fish three hours; remove jars and seal. See that no water gets inside of the jar. MRS. F. FREESE Angel Cake Put into one tumbler of flour one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, then sift it five times. Sift also one glass and a half full of white powdered sugar. Beat to a stiff froth the whites of eleven eggs, stir the sugar into the eggs by degrees, very light ly and carefully, adding three tea spoonfuls of vanilla. After this add the flour, stirring quickly and lightly. Pour into a clean, bright tin dish, which should not be buttered or lin ed. Bake at once in a moderate oven about forty minutes. TTr MRS. RALPH J. EDDY. Preserving Children "Take one large grassy field, one v,oif ,Won pViiiHrpn. all sizes, three small dogs; one long, narrow strip of . .. I :.. -Uil broOK, peDDiy II possiuie. mm mo en"-. dren with the dogs and empty mem into the field, stirring continually. Sprinkle with field flowers, pour brook gently over pebbles; cover all with a deep blue sky and bake in a hot sun. When the children are well browned they may be removed. Will be found right and ready for setting away to cool in the bath tub. Selected by MRS. J. 0. STAATS Raw Food Salad Cabbage, beet, carrot, parsnip, tur nip, horse-radish and onion are the in gredients used. For six people take cup of cabbage chopped or ground fine, add one heaping tablespoon of the other vegetables mentioned, with the exception of the .onion and horse radish, using a heaping teaspoon of these chopped or ground fine. Toos to gether and arrange on, lettuce, dust with paprika and salt, spray with olive oil and finally dash with lemon juice. This may also be used with cream dressing or mayonnaise. MRS. BEAULIAU SPECIAL SALE p ring Hats AH the Newest Styles and Latest Creations in Fine Mill inery now on display at prices that are within the reach of all JOHNSTON & LINDQUIST Main and ?th Streets Cookies 2 cups sugar, 1 cup butter, three fourths cup sweet milk, 2 eggs, 5 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking pow der, grated rind or a lemon. Roll thin and baka quickly. Cookies One cup sugar, eight tablespoonfuls bututer, one egg, seven tablespoons sour milk, two heaping - teaspoons baking powder, one teaspoon soda add flour to make soft dough. Doughnuts 1 cup sour milk, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 cup sugar, butter size of walnut, 1 egg, spice to teste and flour to roll smooth. Potato Soup toes, butter size of .egg, salt and pep per. Have a quart of hot milk ready and put with potatoes and serve. Cucumber Pickles Wash small cucumbers and soak in strong salt water 2 days, then put in jars, pour hot vinegar over them. MRS. CATTO Burnt Leather Cake Cream two cups of sugar with two tablespoons butter, yolks of four eggs well beaten, two-thirds cup of milk, 4 cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons bak ing powder. Beat well and add two teaspoons caramel, add whites of eggs well beaten. Stir as little as possible Fresh Baking When cutting new . cake dip your knife in cold water before cutting each slice. To cut new bread heat the knife by dipping it in hot water and it will cut as smoothly as stale bread. Prune Cake 3 eggs, 1 cup sugar, three-fourths cup butter, 2 cups Hour, 1 cup chop ped prunes, 3 tablespoonfuls prune juice, with 1 teaspoon soda, nutmeg, cinnamon, allspice to taste. Put prunes in last. MRS. A. JONES Household Hold Hints First Aid for Nail Wounds Smoke with sugar on hot bed of coals until pain ceases. Then bind on fat bacon for a few days. Coal oil is fine for cleaning sinks and oil cloth. Try it, MRS. J. 0. STAATS Raisin Cream Pie. Bake under crust first. One and one half cups chopped raisins, 1 cup cold water, three-fourths cup BUgar, one tablespoon flour, mixed with water for thickening. Frost . with whipped cream. MRS. 0. A. PACE Banana Salad Peel ripe banannas and cut in half length-wise. Garnish individual salad plates with lettuce; place half ban ana on each plate, sprinkle with chopped nuts and serve with mayon naise dressing, Italian Macaroni Boil sufficient macaroni in salted water till done. Brown 2 lbs. of ground round setak and 1 onion in 3 tablespoons olive oil, add one can of tomatoes, one small pepper, and set on the back of the stove to simmer for one hour. Add little water occas ionally to keep from getting dry, and just before serving add one can of French mushrooms if desired. Put the cooked macaroni" on platter and pour the sauce over it and sprinkle it generously with grated eeS6' MRS. MAUD LONGLY Creamed Peas Cook peas until tender, using butter and salt and peper to taste. Add white sauce. White sauce cream one table spoon flour, one of butter, one-half teaspoon each of pepper and salt, add this to cup of hot milk and cook until thick. This is sufficient sauce for a pint of peas. Asparagus and potatoes may be prepared also in this manner. In pre paring potatoes, cut them in cubes and heat in milk before adding white sauce. Asparagus . should be cut m small pieces before the sauce is add ed. Banana Pie Take yolks of 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons cornstarch. Stir this in 1 cup boiling milk and cook to thick cream, add small lump of butter, take from fire and let cool. Flavor with vanilla. Bake a rich crust and let cool. Put layer of sliced bananas on lower crust, sprinkle with salt add custard and whites of 2 well beat en eggs and 2 teaspoonfuls sugar. Brown in quick oven. E. L. S. OREGON CITY, ORE. Oatmeal Cookies without Eggs 2 cups of oatmeal, 1 cup flour, three fourths cups sugar, three-fourths cup of . shortening (any kind) one-half teaspoon soda, buttermilk to wet. Work the sugar and oatmeal to gether with the hands. MRS. J. R. LANDSBOROUGH Nut Bread 1 egg, three-fourths cup brown su gar, 1 cup sweet milk, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 2 cups flour, one-half cup nut meats chopped not very fine. Let it rise twenty-five minutes and then bake forty-five minutes. MRS. J. R. LANDSBOROUGH Johnnie Cake 3 cups corn meal, 2 cups flour, one and one-half cups brown sugar, one cup drippings or butter melted in the pan in which the cake is baked, 3 eggs, 1 small taspoon soda dissolved in a cup of buttermilk. MRS. J. R. LANDSBOROUGH Chocolate Pie 1 tablespoonf ul grated chocolate, 1 pt. water, yolks of 2 eggs, 2 table spoons cornstarch, 6 tablespoons su gar, 1 tablespoon vanilla. Boil and pour in baked crust. Use whites of eggs for frosting, set in an oven and brown. E. L. S. Sea Foam 2 cups of extra C sugar (light brown) one-half cup water. 'Boil until it shreds, white of one egg beaten stiff. Pour hot syrup over the beaten white and beat until cold. When about half cooled add one-half cup chop ped peanuts. Flavor with vanilla. MRS. J. l; WALDRON Salad Dressing One-half cup rich milk, one-half cup vinegar, one-third cup sugar, two well beaten eggs, one-third teaspoon mustard, salt and pepper to taste. Mix and cook until thick when cold add whipped . cream or' one cup of sour cream. E. L. S. Plum Catsup To three pounds of fruit take one and three-fourths pound sugar, one tablespoon each of cloves, cinnamon, and pepper, and very little salt. Scald and put plums through the sieve, then add sugar and spices and boil to right consistency. Will keep without seal- mg' MRS. F. ERICKSON. French Mustard 3 tablespoons mustard, 1 table spoon sugar, have both well worked together then beat in one egg until smooth. Add 1 cup vinegar worked in smooth. Set mixture on stove and boil until creamy. Some people add corn starch if they prefer it not so strong, 2 tablespoonfuls vinegar and one of corn starch. ' MRS. CHAS. SURFUS Fair Loaf Cake One and one-fourth cups sugar, one half cup butter, one-half cup milk, one-half teaspoon soda, 4 eggs yolks and whites beaten sparately, 1 tea spoon cream of tartar added to beat en whites, cream butter and sugar add milk, and then add milk and then flour and beaten whites of eggs last. Flavor. Beat all for five minutes. Bake from 35 to 40 minutes. MRS. R. T. BEATTIE Oatmeal Cookies 2 cuns flour. 2 cups rolled oats. 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, one-half cup milk or water, 1 cup butter or lard, 1 cup chopped raisins, 1 teaspoon baking powder, one-half teaspoonful soda if you put in fruit, 1 teaspoon of cin namon, teaspoon of vanilla, flour to roll. Cut olt and bake in moderate oven. MRS. CHRISTIAN SCHUEBEL A Good Salad Dressing 2 eecrs well beaten, 8 tablespoons vinegar. Last, 2 of water if vinegar is too strong, 2 teaspoonfuls of sugar, one-third teaspoon mustard, dash of red pepper, small piece of butter. Cook over steam in teakettle or on stove until, thick. Leave out mustard if used on cabbage. Salt to taste. MKo. (J. SUKJJUS To remove ink stains from table linen soak in hot vinegar, change vin egar and repeat several times if necessary. Do not wash linen first. MKo. (J. SUK US Try This When mnkino' custard Dies, add one cupfull of finely ground hazelnuts or pecans. These rise to the top and when baked, form a delicious crust. MKo. r . K. ANUK1SWS Cabbage Salad Slice firm, new crisp cabbage, add a half cup sugar, dust with pepper and salt. Just before serving add one cup sweet cream, stir well through cab bage and add one tablespoon vinegar, stir well. This is delicious and easily prepared. MRS. BEALIAU Household Hints Use a cloth, cotton batting or the tips of your fingers, wet with essence of peppermint and apply to a burn. It will bring quick relief. To prevent icing from sticking to a knife when cutting cake, dip the knife into warm water. A Laundry Hint To preserve the color in colored linen dresses, laun der them in bran water. Take a half pailful of bran and pour scalding wat er over it, let stand for half an hour, drain the water off. and wash the lin en, usincr no soap. Rinse in two or three waters, in which is also a por tion of the bran, prepared as directed and do not starch. Treated in this wav. the earment will iron beautifully be of sufficient stiffness and look like Broom Bags Broom bags, made of Canton flannel, or of old, soft ' un derwear, will be found of great help in sweeping walls and ceilings, as well as hardwood floors. Made of ample size with draw strings tied securely about the handle of the broom, they are easily slipped on and off the broom, and are easily washed. Dustless Dusters To make dust- less dusters, purchase two and one half yards of cheesecloth (preferably black,) cut in equal parts. Saturate thoroughly in a solution made of one third of an ounce of paraffins oil, mix with one pint of kerosene. Wring dry and you will have an ex cellent dust cloth, harmless to any kind of furniture. Pour the remain ing oil in a bottle, cork securely, label and keep lor luture use. When poaching eggs put a little butter in the skillet before putting in the water. This will prevent the eggs from adhering to the skillet To keep cheese moist, wrap it in a soft cloth wrunir out of vineear and keep in an earthen jar with the cover slightly raised. MRS. C. SURFUS Shrimp Salad 2 cups Barataria Shrimps, equal am ount chopped walnuts, equal parts of orange broken in small pieces. Serve on lettuce leaves E. L. S. A Salad without Vinegar A small head of cabbage shredded one or more bananas diced, one or more oranges shredded, one hard boiled egg, juice of a lemon. Sweeten to taste. Steam Pudding One-half cup molasses, fill cup with hot water, one teaspoon soda, one cup flour, yolk of one egg. Add salt and steam, one hour and serve with boil ed sauce. MRS. FRANK MOORE Filling 2 cups brown sugar, one-half cup of milk, one-half clip butter. Boil fif teen minutes flavor and beat until cool. Mapleino makes a good flavor ing. MRS. LEON DESLARZES Fudge 1 cup brown sugar, 1 cup white su gar, 1 teaspoon butter, 1 cup cream or milk, 1 tablespoon chocolate, 5 cents' worth of walnuts. Boil 15 minutes over moderate fire. Beat until it starts to sugar. Add chopped nuts and vanilla. MRS. C. SURFUS Nouget 2 cups sugar one-half cup water one half cup corn syrup. Boil until it will crack in water. Re move from fire and add a little at a time, the beaten whites of 3 eggs. Add flavoring to taste. Beat until it is cold and then add 1 cup chopped nut meats. Put in buttered molds. MRS. J. WILSON Spanish Bun Cake 3 eggs, leaving out white of 1 for icing, 2 cups brown sugar, three fourths cup butter, 2 and a half cups flour, one-half cup sour milk, 2 tea spoons mixed spices, one-half tea spoon soda and 1 teaspoon baking powder and one cup chopped nut meats. Bake in loaf in a slow oven. HATTIE WILSON Brown Cake . One-half cup butter, one cup sugar, 2 eggs, one-half cup cocoa, one scant cup milk, 2 cups flour, 2 tea spoons baking powder. Cream butter, sugar and eggs to gether, and when frothy add cocoa, beating this into the mixture then stir in one scant cup milk and when well mixed add flour and baking powder, after having 'been sifted together. Three Hour Biscuit Take one compressed yeast cake and one cup of sweet milk. Make bat ter and let raise one hour. Add one cup sweet milk, one egg, one table spoon sugar and one teaspoon salt, mix well and let raise one hour. Roll out and spread with butter and cut with biscuit cutter, place one half up on the other and let raise one hour, and bake ten minutes. MRS. FRANK MOORE Potatoe Cake 2 cuds suerar. 1 cup butter, 2 eggs, 1 cup hot mashed potatoes, 3 table spoons chocolate in a little hot water, when dissolved nil cup witn muK. 3 cuds flour. 2 teaspoons bakine pow der, 1 teaspoon iennamon, one-half teaspoon cloves, one-half cup chop ped nuts, one-half cup chopped rais ins, mix with 2 tablespoons flour, bake in slow oven. MRS. FREESE Peanut Bread 4 cups flour. 6 teaspoons of bak ing powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup of nuts broken in quarters, 1 and a half cups of milk, 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar. Mix together the flour, baking powder- salt, sugar and nuts. Add the and eggs beaten together. Put into buttered pans and let stand twenty minutes. Bake one halt hour. This recipe makes two small loaves or one loaf and nine muffins. MRS. L. R. ANDREWS Blackberry Cake 1 cup sugar, one-half cup butter, 3 eggs well beaten, one and one-half cup flour, good measure, 1 cup black berry jam or jelly, 3 tablespoon sour milk, 1 teaspoon soda dissolved in milk, 1 teaspoon allspice, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon nutmeg. Stir all together bake in layer and put together with icing. Also makes good loal cake. Lemon Pie Line a pie tin with rich pie-paste and bake in quick oven. The filling is made as follows: Grated rind and juice of one lemon, three fourths cup sugar, one egg and yolk of another, pinch of salt, three-fourths cup cold water butter size ol a walnut, uook in double boiler until thick, and fill crust Beat white of egg with two tablespoons sugar for meringue. MKo. u. V. Potato Cake 12 large potatoes, one and a half lbs ham, one and a half lb. veal roast, one and a half round pork roast, 3 large dill pickles peeled, one large ap ple, the yolks of four eggs, sweet oil vineear. 1 tablespoon prepared mus tard. 3onions. 1 lartre slice of bacon cut and fried. The yolks of eggs, sweet oil and vinegar, together should amount to about a pint. SUSAN HUFFMAN Coffee Cake One cup brown sugar, cup of molas ses, half cup butter, cup strong coffee, one egg, four even cups of flour, heaping teaspoon soda in tne nour, tablespoon cinnamon, teaspoon cloves, two pounds of raisins, fourth of a lb. of citron. Soften the butter, beat with the sugar, add egg, spices, molasses coffee and flour, and fruit dredg ed with flour. Bake one hour. This may be made without the egg. MRS. F. ERICKSON Household Hints To hasten the baking of potatoes, let them stand a few minutes in hot water after washing them clean. Ham may be kept from getting hard and dry on the outside thus: take some tf the fat part of the ham and fry it out. Let it get hard, then spread it on the cut end of the ham, half an inch thick is not too much This excludes air. Hang in a cool place. When I want to slice ham I scrape off this fat, and afterwards I put it on again as before. Before trying to break a cocoanut put it in the oven to warm. When heated a slight blow will crack it and the shell will come off easily. MRS. C. SURFUS Icing: 2 cups sugar, one-fourth teaspoon cream tartar,, one cup hot water. MRS. A. SIMMON Date Pudding 1 cup each of dates, walnuts and sugar, one-third cup flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 2 eggs. Bake 40 min utes, and serve with whipped cream. Caramel 1 cup sugar put on stove and brown until intense smoke arises or the sugar is burned well. Add 1 cup boil ing water; boil until thick. This will keep for weeks. Icing 1 and one-half cups sugar, two thirds cup water. Boil until it be comes hard in water. Stir into whites of two eggs well beaten and add one teaspoonful caramel and small tea spoonful vanilla. HAZEL LANKINS Nut Cake 1 cup white sugar, 1 tablespoon but ter1 creamed, 1 egg, three-fourths cup sweet milk, 2 cups flour, 2 good teaspoons baking powder, 1 cup En glish walnuts. MRS. KUVTZ Jam Cake One-half cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 8 eggs, two-thirds cup thick, sour milk, two-thirds cup jam, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, one-half teaspoon cloves, 1 scant teaspoon soda, 2 cups flour. MRS. FUNK Lemon Pie Sift together 1 cup sugar and 1 and one-half tablespoon flour. Yolks of 3 eggs and white of one. Cream eggs, sugar and flour, add a piece of but ter size of an egg. Two cups boiling water. Cook until thick and put in baked crusts. Add frosting of two eggs and sugar and brown in oven. HAZEL LANKINS Devil's Food Cream one-halt cup butter with one and one-half cups white sugar, yolks of two eggs well beaten. One teaspoon soda dissolved in one-half cup of sour milk. Two cups sifted flour. Add whites of two eggs well beaten. Dis solve one cup grated chocolate in one half cup of boiling water and add to above ingredients. Chow Chow One gallon chopped green tomatoes, let stand in salt water over night. Drain and add following: 1 gallon chopped cabbage, 2 quarts chopped onions, 1 large cup grated horserad ish, small cup white mustard seed, 4 heaping teaspoons ground cinnamon, 1 of ground cloves, 1 gallon cider vin egar. Mix all together in a granite kettle, let boil one hour and seal in jars. Tapioca Cream Custard Soak 3 tablesDoons taDioca in a cup of water over night Place over the fire a cup of milk; let it come to aJ)oil and then stir in the tapioca, add a good pinch of salt and stir until it thickens, then add a cupful of sugar and the beaten yolks of three eggs. Stir it quickly and pour into a dish and stir gently into the mixture the whites beaten stilt, tnen tne iiavonng and then set away to cool. . Caramel Cake tv molra throo lnri7 lavers of car amel cake allow 1 cup of butter; 2 of sugar; X cup mini; a cups num, u ;,,Jiioa O. tpnsnnnns baking powder. Place the ingredients togeth er as lor plain layer cane, turning u . .. .1 1 I T1, in fti.au wnites oi tne eggs iusi. bum ii " ii K..ffavnH Una anti when done WC11 UUVm v...u spread between the layer caramel lining. T-nTT iwn MKO. OUVYtiAlli An Old Fashioned Garden TV. 1,5-1 nf o trorHan that WS love and the one which takes us back, in memory, to the pleasant days oi our childhood, is the one, half tame half wild, in which fruits, flowers and veg etables grow in abundance, none being too choice to be harmed by their neighbors; none esteemed to mean to be restricted in their natural profus ion, but which alas! nas long since ueeii uaiuouw n the old fashioned gardens of our grandmothers were iouna me tim ers, quaint but beautiful. Among them fiin lnr-V-Eniir nd sweet Wil liams, tall, pale evening primroses and hollyhocks, six or seven feet high many tinted, irom yenow vo reu oot i-iihir nnlnr. whilp for frani?rance. pinks, large cabbage roses and gilly tlowers, witn nere ana inero a uutm of rose mary or a hedge of sweet brier and tall honeysuckles grow in profusion. Mote you tne gardens oi louuy, ua- tiolltr nlantorl in QnmA flhsPUre COmer. the only thot being their utility, the oeauty oi tne apuv wnomcicu slightly, if at all. In the spring the soil is duly prepared for planting, and at the proper time the various vege tans aporia urn Rnwn in straight rows and for a short time during the spring it is a pleasants pot to lok upon but with the heat of summer the foliage becomes parched and presents a yel low, dried-up appearance and the eama nnnt Rithnr unrelieved bv srreen foliage or bright hued flowers, be comes desolate inueea. How different it would appear u, urhon in onrlv snrinc as the vegetable seeds are planted, there were placed in Detween tne rows, eeuua nvm which flowers, tho less useful, delight 4-Ua a.tA ..in nffnrA nlouniirA tit fill bile ejw u'iu - i' " look upon them and for this purpose there is no seed Better suited man me nasturtium, whose foliage is very luxuriant and conceals in a short tho iio-iv snots left where vege tables have been removed. Around the garden plant a nedge oi the kinds of flowers which delighted the hearts oi our grandmotners. -over the fence if perchance you have one with a rambling rose bush or morn ing glories and you will find the gar den, which was an ugly spot as soon as the spring is over, will be a bower of beauty through the entire summer. MKo. . J. a. Best Medicine for Colds When a druggist recommends a remedy for colds, throat and lung troubles, you can feel sure that he knows what he is talking about. C. Lower, druggist of Marion, Ohio, writes of Dr. King's New Discovery. "I know Dr. King's New Discovery is the best throat and lung medicine I sell. It cured my wife of a severe cold, after all other remedies failed." It will do the same for you if you are suffering with a cold or any bron chial, throat or lung cough. Keep a bottle on hand all the time for every one in the family to us. It is a home doctor. Price 50c and $1.00. Guaran teed by Huntley Bros. ltd WsmmsE IIOASfll ALCOHOL 3 PER npT AgetaWePreparalionrorAs similaliiig the Footf andRegula ting Hie Stomachs andDowclsi Promotes nifipshnnTipprfli ness and Rest.Contalns neither upiunuMorpliiue norMitieral Not Narcotic. mm jUxSenna . JkkUe<s JniaSni ftymmmt UittutomitiSiia ClariOnl Simr hSaapeeufimr. fm A norforl RpmpHv PnrfmKllna Hon, Sour Stoniach.Dlarrtea Worms ,ioiwuisims.i'evcrisn ncss andLoss ofSleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. r5 Exact Copy of Wrapper. - r:-?,,M"'-tya'ii,rwa Currant Pie 1 lb. currants (dried), cooked ten der, 2 tablespoons flour, heaping, yolks of 2 eggs, well beaten, butter size of an egg. Mix together and stir into currants until it thickens. Flavor with nutmeg and bake the crusts and then add currants. Beat the whites of four eggs stiff and add sugar and spread on pie and brown. This recipe makes two pies. MRS. A. SIMMONS Milwaukee Happenings Always Inter est Our Readers After reading of so many people in our town who have been cured by Doan's Kidney Pills, the question naturally arises: "Is this medicine equally successful in our neighboring towns?" The generous statement of this Milwaukee resident leaves no room for doubt on this point. Mrs. Clara E. Cook, R. F. D. No. 2, Box 105, Milwaukee, Ore., says: "For AT II . .tic ,;jCSf Lifi Lowest Cost ELECTRIC LIGHT h the most suitable for tomes, offices, shops and other places aeedmg light. Electric ity can be used in any quantity, large or small, thereby furnishing any re quired amount of light. Furthermore electric lamps can be located in any place, thus affording any desired dis tribution of light. No other lamps possess these qual ifications, therefore it is not surprising that electric lamps are rapidly replac ing all others in modern establish ments. Portland Railway, Light & Power Company MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH & ALDER. PORTLAND Phones Main 6688 and A. 6131 C. D. LATOURETTE, President THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of OREGON CITY. OREGON (Successor Commercial Bankl Transacts a Qeneral Banking But Iness . Open from 0 a. m. to 3 Office phones: Main 60, A50; Home B251, D251 WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE Office 612 Main Street Safe, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Plaster, Common Brick, Face Brick, Fire Brick PROMPT. SERVICE OREGON CITY, ORE For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought , Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years years I suffered from pain in my back much more severe if I over-taxed myself or caught the slightest cold. The kidney secretions were unnatural. . Doan's Kidney Pills proved to be just ' the remedy I needed. They gave me quick relief from all the troubles. A few times since then I have used Doan's Kidney Pills and they have al ways given the best of results.. You may continue publishing my former endorsement." For sale- by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. Continued on page 11. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO R 1 A THE F. J .MEYER, Cashier. Res. phones, M. 2524, 1751 J . IT m mm MA THB OINTAUn HHMNfi ! V SHU OIT.