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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1913)
nipper t ftlhie 2tt ate TSiat Seppoirts Yoo I H V iSy HOME INDUSTRY PAGE mmmr Make a Sponge Cake More Delicious! j -si , HOLLY tt Bake a layer sponge cake. Use Mother's recipe. Then cover it with whipped cream, made with Holly" Milk it Whl. It's easy to do. Cool a can thoroughly, beat it and you have whipped cream better than you ever tasted before. Most women buy "Holly". milk four cans at a time. It is great Xor every cooking' need. AU grocers. Save the Labels. Cash Prizes for Labels from Goods Advertised We are dependent upon each other for progress and growth. The money yon spend at home gives employment to your own and yonr neighbors' boys, and, in turn, the salaries that they draw and spend with you make your own business better, your own home more secure and enjoyments, more certain. Oregon is growing. A state so situated, in the garden spot of the United States, with all the advantages of a seaboard, natural harbors, unlimited water power and health-giving climate, cannot help but grow. To do this, it is to your interest to make this growth progress by leaps and bounds. It is imperative that you become acquainted with your City, and with the products of your home State. For this purpose The Oregonian has started the "Home Industry Page." The men who advertise here are known to you as men of their word. They are the men who co-operate with you in making your business profit able. Every article here stands on its own merits. All we ask is that you give them a trial, . and, as a special incentive for you to request these brands from your dealer, we are offering six cash prizes each month for the most labels or sales checks secured from articles advertised on this page. LABELS SHOULD BE BROUGHT TO THE OREGONIAN OFFICE, HOME INDUSTRY DE PARTMENT, NOT LATER THAN 6 P. M., ON THE LAST FRIDAY OF EACH MONTH, BEGIN NING WITH THE LAST FRIDAY IN OCTOBER, WINNERS WILL BE ANNOUNCED ON THE HOME INDUSTRY PAGE THE FOLLOWING MONDAY. Eft rVV" Delicious Ham Spicy the ham that makes you smack your Hps and praise its extreme good ness. For sand wlches it is supreme. Be sure to ask for it by name Columbia Brand, ana - De sure 10 save laDeis or sales-checks for Home In dustry votes. UNION M".T CO North To .and. Or, Pioneer Packers of tbe Pacific , $5. j9m fPnBTLANl For Baby's Sake Use It Milk is the most important 5 food you buy. Be certain of its purity. Know where it came from and who bottled it. Portland Pure Milk and Cream "Pioneers in Purity." Our products are protected from the cow to the bottle by every safeguard known. Noth ing Is overlooked to insure your milk. It is Pure. Pure, PURE. Be certain. Ask for Demand Portland Pure Milk. Yonr Save the caps grocer hns it. for prlaes. If It's Pure enough for Baby It's Pure enough for Tou. First Prize $10 in Gold Third Prize $2 in Silver Second Prize $5 in Gold Three Prizes of $1 Each And $120 for Best Essays on "Why Oregon People should do all their buying from Oregon manufacturers, everything else being equal" , This contest will he open to all boys and girls of Oregon, under 16 years of age. Cash prizes of $5, $2 and three prizes of $1 each will he given each month, or $120 daring the year. . Essays mnst not be over 200 words in length and should be brought to Home Industry Department, Oregonian, not later than 6 P. M. on last Friday of each month, beginning with the last Friday in October. In each essay the writers are asked to mention the things which are uned in their respective homes that are Made in Oregon. This especially pertains to the food articles, such as breakfast foods, canned goods, coffee, etc. Mention the brands by name. The writer's full name, with name, address and telephone number of their parents, must be plainly written on every essay. The essay must be written in own handwriting of the child submitting it, and only one side of the sheet utilised. For All-Around ) Goodness U If You cannot find better Butter If sE Butter 11 BRAND ' I J Our special odor-proof package j 1 II keeps it sweet and clean. it Vl UNION MEAT CO. JJ V N. Portland, Or. O- A Favorite With the Children! "Otter" Clams recall those happy vacation days on the beach, when ' all joined In the early morning clam search. "OTTER" CLAMS rrirOTltiprfMniTmimiirift Jll,illilUJIIilU!;;Ji;iilIljilllliIllJUiIII are preserved by a process which retains their natural flavor and dellciousness. Always keep "Otter" clams in the house for soups, c h o w d ers, broths! All grocers sell them m o s t housewives use them. Save the labels for Home In dustry prizes. iiinniiiiBiiiiiinuiiiiiHil Every Corner of Our Packing Room is searched by the sun. In this clean, sweet room 8000 oackases of deli cious, iiay Haradon's "Supreme Biscuits are packed daily by dainty, white-dressed girls. Tou get them fresh and crisp every day. Insist tnat your grocer you the crackers made by Haradon & Son. Save the labels .for prizes in the Home Industry Contest. Put your dainty, lacy lingerie and filmy -waists in a kettle of cold water with a liberal amount of , "Van Hoeter's" Bleaching Soap and let them come to a boil. Rinse and press wHfle damp. They will be as crisply white and daintily fragrant as the finest laundry work. Ask for the soaps made by the MT. HOOD SOAP CO., and save the labels for prizes. EightThirty ! but that's all right; I'll have buckwheat cakes for break fast in three minutes. . You see, we use 1 ' 1 few B Albers' "Peacock1 Buckwheat FJour and wheat flour mixture. Guaranteed self-rising. A dish for an epicure. A child can't fail in making them. Save the labels from all Albers' c e r e a Is for prizes in the Home Indus- try Contest. Any Npw Rrnnm . Sweeps Clean For forty years we have been making better brooms. The best broom corn is carefully selected. The most improved machines are used for stitching. The handles are care fully enameled. For the best brooms made today, ask your grocer for "Zan's Sunset Brooms" AXD SAVE THE TRADF-MARKS ON THE WRAP PERS FOR PRIZES. m aVAWA It i mm M1 F 1 am SB The Proof of the Pickle is in the Eating Made from the most carefully se lected Oregon cucumbers, picked while the dew Is still on the vines, cured by our" own process, with all their fresh crlspness preserved. plAMONjj o Dill Pickles A better pickle, a larger pack age, for the same money. Asp your grocer for the Screw-top. V wide-mouthed jars from Wad- hams & Co. Soak the labels off and save them for prizes In the Home In i lustry Contest. Mammy's Southern Tea- Biscuits WY ,-4 SSr-V "Just a tiny pinch of soda, and then a bit of baking pow der,, enough flour and milk and some butter and most anything tasty yon happen tohave handy." Yes, it is a success, because I nse Olympic Flour It contains all the nourish-. nient of the Golden Wheat. Ask your Grocer to specify Olympic on the Sales Check, and save them for prizes. Sorting the Coffee Only the perfect berries can be used. Under the tropical skies it is carefully sorted and packed. uoiaen West" Coffee is the better Coffee, at the lower price. Insist that your grocer supply you with "Golden West"! Save the labels from all Clossett & De vers Coffees, Teas and Extracts for votes in the Home Industry Contest. lift ySfe3' SANDY FAIR IS SUCCESS PARADE AVD EXHIBITS NOT ABLE FEATURES. Fine Stock and Creditable Products of School Children Attract Attention. SANDY, Or. Oct 6. (Special.) The Sandy District Grange Fair closed Its two days' session yesterday,' and was a great success in point of attendance, interest and the variety of exhibits in the adult and juvenile departments. About 2000 persons attended. In the parade the Sandy school district won the first prize of Jo for the best float. , It was a unique arrangement and at tracted much attention. The other school floats were creditable. The bust, ness men's prize of $5 was won by Fox & Co., and consisted of a dog team. Yesterday the main attractions were the horse and foot races held on Main street.- A fine exhibition of bronco bustlne was Eiven bv "Haedv Jaclc" I from Pendleton, who rode a lively ani mal rrom tne ttoundup. The exhibits In the juvenile depart ment would have been a credit any where, and represented the product of the boys and girls of the school dis tricts or tne sandy Valley including all Kinds or larm produce. Domestic science was well repre sented. Some fine specimens of sewing were shown. Bread baked by the girls was exhibited. Also there were cakes, jelly, canned fruits and vegetables. In the livestock department some fine animals were shown. Camas Payroll Is Big. CAMAS, Wash.. Oct. 5. (Special). Camas can boast of being- the only city In the State of Washington with a daily payroll averaging more than $1 a day for each inhabitant, man, woman and child. More than J2000 is being paid out dally, while the population is about 2000 inhabitants. The payroll of the Crown Columbia Paper Company is the largest here. Saw mills, a creamery and a number of smaller firms contribute their share. It will cost $18 a minute to talk by telephone from New York to San Francisco. NEW LINE TO BEGIN SOON MILWAUKEE WILL RUSH WORK OX OLYMPIA & SOUTHERN. Operation of Trains to Centralla by First of January Is Forecast.' CENTRALIA, Wash'., Oct 6. (Spec lai) It was reported yesterday that within two weeks there will be 500 men and teams in Centralla to begin work on the first lap of the Olympia & Southern, a branch of the Milwaukee, from Maytown to Centralis, Maytown is located about three miles south of Rainier on the present main line of the Milwaukee. The logging roads of the Johnson Creek Lumber Company and the Blumaer Lumber Company of Tenino will be utilized as part of the extension. It Is now generally conceded that both the passenger and freight depots of the H&w road wil? ba vv-on I W.est Main Street on a site recently purchased by the road from Clayton Troth, the passenger station to be on the north of the street and frelgat depot and sheds on the south side. it nas been asserted by those in a position to know that Milwaukee trains will be running Into Centralla from the north by January 1. The vast area to the East of Cen tralla is still unopened to railroad facilities, and by running a line across the Northern end of Lewis County to connect with the Tacoma & Eastern, another Milwaukee branch, the big system would hold undisputed sway in one of the richest districts of the Btate. J. Stoddard Johnston Dead. ST. LOUIS, Oct 6. J. Stoddard John ston, former associate editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, died last night at the home of his son, Harris H. Johnston in Clayton, Mo. Death was due to hardening of " arteries. Mr. Johnston was a nephew of Oeneral Al bert Sidney Johnston. He was the Democratic nominee for Governor of Kentucky in 1875, but was defeated. He was Secretary of State of Kentucky I (r"i 1S15 lo 179. 1 LANE OPPOSES SPOILS SENATOR WROTH AT LETTING CIVIL SERVICE BARS DOWN. Democrats Declared to Have Blun dered in Deputy Collector and Marshal Amendment. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash lngton, Oct 6. Senator Lane, of Ore gon, Is unusually emphatic in his oppo sition to the amendment to the defi ciency bill, which removes Deputy Mar shals and Deputy Collectors of Inter nal Revenue from the civil service. The Senator declared today that the Demo crats of the Senate made a serious blunder In adopting such spoils legis lation. Senator Lane voted against this amendment and opposed it on the floor. I believe the civil-service system, properly administered, to be preferable to the spoils system," he said, "but I believe also that It has not been and is - telng administered in the Interests of the people-at-large. The law gov erning the regulations and the manner of administration should be remedied soon. "At the same time I prefer, even as it exists now, the civll-servlce system to any return to the spoils system. I am. as a Democrat a bit jealous of any effort made to break up the system piecemeal. I think It Is poor policy for the party. I believe there Is a system of sabotage, if you please, be ing practiced upon the party now in power by many persons employed under the civil service, who are protected by these regulations from treatment which they properly deserve, but I am against tnis amendment on principle. I believe It to be a wrong method of correcting the evil. "In my opinion, the law should be changed so as to give to all executive officers the power to remove any ap pointee who does not do his full duty: nothing short of that will remedy the conditions that exist." benator Chamberlain was paired and did not vote on the amendment which was supported entirely by Democratic Senators. continuously for nine years a Justice ft (ha n T J n A I - . County, resigned yesterday because of 111 hootlh n ' V. "..... . . . -!.... iuo Luuuiy voun nas ac- cepieu nis resignation, but has named a successor yet. not Auto Insurance Is United. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Oct 6 The State Superintendent of Insurance has ruled that regular fire Insurance com panies cannot write Insurance on auto mobiles. This class of Insurance is con fined to companies that write automo bile Insurance only. Linn Peace Justice Resigns. ALBANY, Or., Oct 6. (Special.) O. T. Porter, of this city, who has served MELANCHOLY, DESPONDENT WOMEN are always afraid "something Is going to happen," and will naturally see the dark side of everything when torment ed by headaches, backache, dizziness nervousness, the tortures of a displace ment, or an urnHv. . - - -" i iii.iniiiuiBlUI T Condition. Surh wntnon d V 1 i - oiwum iBJiiem- ter that for more than thirty years - miKnams vegetable Com pound has been the safeguard of woman's health and restored more women to health and happiness than ' iciueuy, ana wnere there Is health there la no melancholy. Adv.