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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1907)
1607, THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. 'PORTLAND, FRIDAY s EVENING. DECEMBER 6. IS If ?I m Vegetable ar till quit plentiful In th Qocal retail market despite th fact that this la well Into tha wintry season. Bum few of the summer var letle ara missing from tha displays feat taken a , whola your table can be quit well supplied from tha mar ket at thle time. Bupplle of aplnach ara limited but ao me of the larger marketa hare aoma. Try thla In preparing !:: To four quanta or tha avertable pro vide one tableapoon 'of cream, an oance of butter, three or four eggs, i tuiDMn of lemon Julo. a a-ratn of cry enne, a tableapoon of aalt aud pepper to ault. Now eoak the aplnach thoroughly, waahlng It In several waters, then pick the 'stalks off. When washed It should be Disced Into a dry aaucepun and af tr snrlnkllna- it with aalt. place It on tha range. Enough liquor will he drawn from the aplnach by the aalt i -J The Lunch Counter It tha Cause of Dyspepsia and Indi gestion. Catarrh of the Stomach and Heart Disease. Vlae-Teatha of Taoae W Zat Tnr Bolt Down Their rood. v Tha next time you eat at a lunch counter Juat you watch the people op poalte. Look down the whole line and notice how trier bolt down their food, waahing It dor-n with hot coffee or cold water- First, they take a large bite then a drink, a bite an.l a drink. Hurry ing through their meal In five or ten minutes Many of them don't know the correct way to eat, while othera are ao Intent on money-making that they will not take the time to eat properly. Tha lunch-counter create a great da-1 mand for Btuarf l)ypepla Tablet, for-j every one now knowa that they aaslst I the etomach In digesting the food that ha been suddenly forced down Into It. Health ahould be the first thing Bought for In the battle for existence. With a Bound body all thing are pos alhle to man; while ill-health handicap him. The dyipeptlc la usually grouchy and cannot meet hi fellow-man In the proper aplrlt to win hia confidence and esteem. Many a fine proposition ha fnlled became a dyapeptlo waa back of It Your brain doea not work right where dyspeptic condition prevail, neither doe any organ of the body. Get your digestive apparatua In per fect condition flrat and all will go well wkh you. Take Stuart's Dyspepsia Tableta until you cure yourself of indigestion, catarrh of the stomach and dyspepsia, and your heart, liver, brain and all the organs of the body will perform their function properly and you will be In Bound i health. Pon t ive up In despair, out get right and all thing will come your way and fortune will again ml)e upon you. You can purchase Stuart' Iysptpsla Tableta anywhere on earth. They have become a family necessity everywhere. They are 60 cent per package. Sena u your name and address to day and we will ai once send you by mall a sample package free. Address F. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart bldg., Marshall, Michigan. and pepper to boll It "When boiled for 10 minute Jt Is ready to be drained of tha liquid. Then It should either be .chopped or paaaed through a coarse sieve. Then Into a uce;an put the butter and cream and placing It upon th fir allow It to boll. Then atlr the splnaclt Into the pan and let the mixture get very hot hut do not allow It to boil, The spinach Is now ready for th cay enne and pepper. Allow thla to coot until the ecus are prepared. Now break the tin Into a cud and drop It Into the saucepan, the water in which must continue to holL and aa soon th form of th first egg seta. break and dron another until th egg are In th pan, permitting ach to remain three or four minute. When the egg are don remov th spinach from ita pan ana pile it nign In the center of a vegetable dish; smoothing th edge and th top with a knir blade. Now take th egg rrom th water and arrange them upon the top or the apinacn. Under the Oregon atate game law It I unlawful to sell most wild blrdi but geese and snipe can atlll be ae- oured. Hflh of these are now in in market Snipe are aHllng at 60c each. or tl a pair. Thla la the way to prv- oare the anlne: Klrat get your snip, two ounce of butter, one teaapoon of sail ana an other of Denter. Pluck th birds and after alnvelng them, they ahould be drawn. Season with pepper and aalt by rubbing Inside; rub over the breast of each bird a part of th butter, and broil over an open fir for 20 minutes. The liver should now be boiled for a few minute; latter pounded In a mortar or chopper fine. Spread this past over two slice of toaat. Plac the toast on a platter, serving the birds from this platter. Tukeys are quite scarce In the mar ket; the demand for them during Thanksgiving week being the largest In the .ustory of 1'ortland. Prices are therefore hlaher and today a good. lrscd bird cannot be obtained under 25c n pound. Chicken are plentiful, however, but are not cheaper. In the retail mar ket tuey are aelllng at 17 and 18c a pound. you re a lucky person indeed if you can secure strictly fresh local eggs n the market because they are ro carce. The price at retail rangea rrom 4.1c to 50c a dosen. Eaatern eggs are now mostly used and are in large aup- ply. Some of them are of such good quality that they can scarcely be told from the product of the local farm. These range at retail from I"Hc :o 35c a dozen according to quality. Why Suffer? If you suffer pain from any cause, Dr. Miles' Anti Pain Pills wiu relieve ,it and leave no bad after effects. That's the impor tant thing. Neither do they create a habit Moro often tho attacks become less frequent, or disappear altogether. ' Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills have no otJicr effect except to re lieve pain and quiet nerv ous irritation. W ar never avlthout Dr. Mil Anti-Pain nil. My husband and on, aged It were always subject to Ick beadaoh until we began using the PlUa, and they nave broken them up entirely. Don't think they rave had to us them foe six month, recommend them to every on. A few weak ago 1 heard an old lady friend was sick. ! went to Be her. She was down with lOrlppe, and nearly orasy with awful backache. I gav her on of th AnU-Paln PlUa and left another for her to take In a abort time. They helped her light away, and she eaya she will never be without them again. I At winter my husband waa taken with plueriay on both sides, and I know he would hav died If It hadn't been for the Pill. In lee than half an hour he waa weatlng, and went to bed and slept" MKS. O H. WBRB. AuHtlnburg. Ohio. Your druggist ll Dr. Miles' Antl Pain FMIU, and w authorl him to return th prio of first package (only) If It fall to benefit you. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart. Ind RESIDENCE BUYING COmUES ACTIVE Homos in Various Tarts of City Find Ready Jlarket. Fig and date are now quite plenti ful in the marketa and It'a a fact that both are of better quality than usual. A new way to prepare dates la shown In the following reclp for date pud ding. It Is well worth trying aa it .' said to make a delicious, healthful and economical deert: Mix In suitable bowl, two breakfast cup or bread crumn. one or flour, one and a half of suet, chopped finely, two of datea chopped roughly and a half cup of sugar. Add a liberal pinch jf snlt and two teaspoon of baking powder. Moisten with two eggs beaten In a little milk. Put Into well buttered bowl, took by steaming from S to 8 hour. Serve hot with cream or other sweet sauce. 20-year case, IS else watch, Elgin or Waltham movement, $9.75, at Metzger's, 342 Washington street Senator Klttredge of South Dakota says that If the Republican national convention was to be held now his state would send a solid Taft delegation and that In his opinion the secretary of war would undoubtedly be nominated. K. 8. Jackson ties sold his Qulmby street residence to Harry E. Coleman. Th property consists of a 26-foot lot occupied by a two-story frame resi dence. It It situated on the west side of Qulmby street, between Twenty-first and Twenty-second streets, and waa sold for J4.500. Henry P. Work has purchased the handsome new residence of Paul . Beckman at Laurel wood The realdence occuplea a quarter-block, and sold for I2.JS0. John W. Fink ha sold to Edward Carlisle a house and lot In Rochelle ad dition. Consideration 12,050. Joseph J. Ureene hns purchased a building site at the corner of Itralnard street and Missouri avenue. Upper Al bino. The property belonged to Frank Geo r dan and waa sold for 11.300. Arthur C. Oberlln ha secured a quarter-block dwelling site In Oak park addition to St. Johns. The property was purchased from E. L. Loy for SI. 100. Henry Wel-ant has purchased a halfi lot and small cottage on Heach street, between Hendricks and Mallory streets, I from John Kos. Consideration 1900. A healthy man Is a king In hi own right; an unhealthy man la an unhappy slave. Hurdock mood Hitters builds up Bound health Keeps you well. (MJTT AQ-G a Of the JOHN DELLAR STORE, first and Yamhill It is our intention to CLOSE OUT EVERY ARTICLE of WOMEN'S WEAR in the store. This was Mr. Dellar's first and only season in Ladies' Goods, so that every article is new and fresh this season not an old item in the lot. COME AND BUY where you have the choice of NEW GOODS, at marvelously LOW PRICES: ' . Ladies' Dresses JUST HALF-PRICE $50 LADIES' C?r AA DRESSES. $LU.JJ $45 LADIES CIO CA DRESSES . &LL0f $35 LADIES' n CA DRESSES. 4)1 I.UV $30 LADIES DRESSES. . $15.00 Ladies' Suits $30 LADIES' M A QC suits.... My.00 $25 LADIES' C I Z QC SUITS ... J) 10.00 $20 LADIES' C J Or SUITS rMd.Od $15 LADIES' C A QC suits rj) y.oo Ladies' Tan Coats $30cS$15.00 $25 TAN CI 1 Qh COATS .)1 aWaOU "csauio.00 A Nice Line of Furs EXACTLY HALF-PRICE IT WILL PAY YOU TO CALL AND EXAMINE THIS STOCK OF WOMEN'S WEAR. EVERYTHING ONE THIRD TO ONE HALF LESS MOV BR FIRST & YAMHILL FORMERLY JOHN DELLAR'S Fine Beth Thomas clock ger's. S42 Washington street. at Met etIEicfaradk Walling'ford said: "It always helps some to remember that in this big United States people have been saving up money for years, just waiting for me to come and get it." .Which led to this reflection: "I've never taken a fall out of the insurance game, and it sounds gooTd. Ten cents seems like a piker game, but when we've got 250,000 members, that trifling ante amounts to $25,000 a month." , The conclusion is a live-wire story of credulous savers and an unscrupulous spender; it is the second story in MR. GEORGE RANDOLPH CHESTER'S Get'Rich-uick series ; it is called MIL on DEATH BED Dapper Lawyer Transformed Into Old Man by Disease Which Will Forbid His Leaving Blackwell Island Prison Alive. the Profitable enevoleace and it appears in the Christmas Number of THE SJlTUIipjlY EVENING POST 5a pagesi of all newsdealers, at five cents the copy; '" 11.50 the year by mail. The Curtis Publishing Company Philadelphia Penna. (Biwelil DtSDStcb to Th. J.tnuV) New York, Dec. 4. Ab Hummel, lawyer, first nlghter and at one time the best-known figure on Broadway convicted of conspiracy In the Dodge Mora divorce scandal, 1 dying In the Blackwell's Island penitentiary. He will not survlv 111 term of Ira prlsonment, which ends In March. He is In the grip of a fatal disease and his oeam may occur at any moment. Dr. Phillip H. Matz. resident physi cian at th prison, said today: "Hummel will not live to leave the penitentiary. He has been In bed for two months. He may live weeks or he may die at any moment, but there Is no power known to medical science by wnicn nis me can D saved. He Is suf fering from Intestinal nephritis, a kid' ney disease which has spread to his heart. It is In such an aavanced stage inai it is impossiDie even to check Its ravages, it would not surprise any of tne pnysicians wno nave visited Hum mel to have him droD dead anv dnv. "He would not be recognized bv the old friends who knew him when he was tne aapper, smiling:, alert lawyer on Broadway. He has shrunken terribly. He has lost 30 pounds In weight. His cneexs are inin ana tne loosened mus cles sag. Hia eye are lack-luster and there are great puffs under them. He is so wobk tnat he cannot now stand atone. Hummel' Offn. Abe Hummel waa convicted on De cember 20, 1305, of conspiring with his partner, uenjamin Bteinhardt, and Charles P. Dodge to Invalidate the mar riage of Mrs. Dodge ana Charles W. Morse, the banker and ice trust mag nate. Dodge- turned state's evidence, after being caught In Texas and brought back to New York. District Attorney Jerome, In a denun ciation of Hummel in open court, said: "This man and hi firm have been a menace to the community for 20 years." It was a noted and notable firm that the district attorney thus branded. William F. Howe was the senior part ner, who died before disgrace came upon them. He was a famous criminal law yer, eloquent, impressive, large and gen erous. He was the court lawver. tha pleader of the firm. Hummel was the shrewd, crafty office man. who worked on the inside and prepared the cases in which they succeeded more often than they failed. Every tricic or' tne trade was known to him. Born in Boston 69 years aio. educated in the New York public schools, he served as an office boy for Howe, and was admitted to the bar when he was is year oidl. H became a member of the rirm In 1869, and his Influence grew rapidly, p that long be- tore me aeam or Mowe. Hummel wa the more widely known of the two. He was lavish with his money. His enter tainment, at his home "-or along Broad way, accerdlng to th character of hia guests, wa sumptuous. He mad an I enormous income, ana ne spent large part of It (ratifying him lev et pla , But even that money was well ur. view, for it was from Broadway, in th lower walks of life, that Hummel drew hi paying clientele. They were men and women with 'past.-' They wanted divorce, or to be kept out of the clutches of the law, and to Hummel they went for th on thing or the other. Modal TTUontt. Since his Imprisonment, Hummel ha heen a model prisoners no naa com plied with every prison rule. He wears the coarse prison gam or stripes tne same as anv other convict, ine stories that he 1 dressed In soft, silken under varments is not true. He is allowed nothing that Is withheld from any other or doner, and he has asueci ror notning, Hummel nas completely iosi nis apr petlte. The prison fare, which Is all he can get Is not alluring to a man who ha lived for year on the choicest dol- Icac ea obtainable. He l aiiowea mi in. eggs and bread for breakfast, meat, veg etables, tea or corree ana puaaing ror dinner and a soup and vegetables for suDDer. The mammy to eat naa contriDiiiea to his weakness. lie is now as neipiess as a baby. SENTENCED TO FIFTY YEARS FOR ROBBERY (Cnltrd. PreM Leased Wire.) San Frinclsco, Dec. 6. William Ho gan. Thomas Conwell, William Mc Laughlin and James Purcell were each sentenced to 60 years' Imprisonment In the penitentiary yestprday. These four thues were convicted of highway rob bery. Two months ngo they met Oeorge Felphes. a waiter on the steamer So noma, one night In the burnt district. He asked thm to direct him to a ho tel. Instead they struck him down with the butt end of a pistol and re lieved him of $15 in gold. Eats Gas. (rnltwJ Pr Leased Wire.) Ios Angeles. Cal.. Dec. 6 Despondent and feeling she had been cast aside by her husband for another woman. Mrs. Ida C. Wulst committed suicide last night bv Inhaling Illuminating gas. Near the body were found the fragments of a note which he had written to her husband, who is the proprietor of a lith ographing establishment. Gold-headed canes at Metzger's. ADRIFT IN BAY FOR THREE DAYS Fishermen in Crazy Skiff Tossed About by Storm Try to Make Shore. Without food or drink for 72 consecu tive hours and bearing evidence of having been buffeted by storm, Charles Loaee and George Ooff, amateur fisher men, arrived at their home In Fort Hamilton, says the New York Ameri can. They told how a little boat In which they went adrift wa passed by several fishing smacks, although the two endangered men signaled wildly for help. Losee, who lives at Ninety-third street and Fifth avenue, and Ooff, who resides at ivinety-secona street ana Battery place, left Fort Hamilton Sat urday morning In a skiff rigged with what seemed to be a stout sail. This skiff was known as a "hard luck" craft, for It had capsized twice last summer. But the men intended to go out beyond Sandy Hook to fish and Ignored all superstition when they sailed away. They had no trduble until they reached the Hook and there they bobbed around, getting many fish. Early Saturday afternoon they start ed back for Fort Hamilton. A they got to the mouth of the Narrows th Big storm of that night struck them. The sail of the skiff waa rent a if It were tissue paper. The mast cracked and fell overboard, tipping the 'vessel until the men believed they would be drowned. The storm not only destroyed sail and mast, but even ripped the rud der loose, so that it was useless. Loee and Gof f were helpless. The had taken along only enough water and food to last until late in the afternoon and as the night wore on and th gal swept them hither and thither. In the cold and darkness, they began to suffer from thirst. As the morning broke the storm In creased In fury nnd the fishermen had! no Idea where they war. Rain d cendd In such volume and wa driven with such vapor-like cloud that they could not even see th shor. A sailing vessel, struggling with tha choppy ea, passed close to th aklff. Lose and Ooff shouted wildly and waved plecer of the tattered salL But th craft went lurching on her way, the captain paying no attention to tha yells for Jelp. Paaaed by Ot&ar Tl Later another vessel, a big flsWng mack, hove In sight, and th crle were renewed, but again they were Ignored. Several other vessel .sailed past th seemingly doomed mn and they aban doned hop. Meanwhile th nolle had Issued a general alarm for them and all th life saving stations along th New Jersey coast were notified. Crew of outgoing fishing vessels were requested to keep a lookout for th missing pair, but no word waa received from them until lata yesterday. At 7 o'clock last night they appeared at their home. They had drifted Into Point Cltv cove, about eight mile from Atlantlo Highlands, and had managed so aa to maneuver the boat a to permit of land ing. The two were bedraggled ' and haggard from exposure and lack of u tenance. They won't go out In th aklff again. v SIGH HEADACHE PosltlTelrcww! tr M6N MMU9 rUU. Ther is tenet) Dk txMS from Dyspepsia in-, digestion an a. Too Hearty ldtlTig; A perfect fu dyftvItatasmKnaaa, Drowsiness. Bad Taste la tti Hoot, Cbatad. Tonga. Pain In On adew TOSFIB 1X7X8. TJl regnlato tto BoweH. Furely YejotaW., , siuu.piil: siaiitosE amp-ui CARTERS IflVER CARTERS IflVER JJPILL8. Genuira Must Bear Fsc-Simfla Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. DON'T FAIL TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL Everything in Metfs Wear- Mefl)iifi Sale One quarter off on Suits, Cravenettes khd Overcoats; enough savings to buy your furnishings for the entire winter. Read these prices : SlO.OQ Snits Cravenettes. Overcoats $ 7.50 SiiSO Sails .ftavenettes, Overcoats $ 9.0 $15.00 Suits, Cravenettes, Overcoats $1U5 KOM ! - - - 'i , , L ,.i -i 1 iri. . i II i ' . . in i i ii ii i i i " "' MM i 208 MORUir.ON ' r., ":!. I ; a