Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1914)
Hotel Washington FOUR SPECIAL DISHES «••»• Hato« f.t < >M «r Tw« ranaaa ta a Hit» W..klaa«»a S um . < anw, af Ta.lflk. < MA* II. HOWI.KY. Maaa«a, MU». *1S* U N l'w Dar WMb lfa<k Ert.lte«« n N. t> « aa4 » W rw Ita, » Ilk PH.ata w y* ***• y “***«"* Hu. |M «rvl fruton train« WMhmgUwi Mí. and lr*n«f»r wt uf al Miro»! Ftoaiwwf Uulklln«. RMalarn and rlaan In eaar, .«apart. I tal«t»HH«aa m «wy r.aw, Mínala <w .lauhla Mwau. I Portland, Oregon. • ELECTED RECIPE« THAT ARE OP MERIT. Mushrooms With Eggs Always Appre ciated— Salmi of Lamb a General Favorite—•tewed Plums Excellent Dessert. nt n.'Mt rew Bad Wal«, Meerlu* It on head ceastaaUy. Price of Bests. "Eighty thousand dollars for a east on the New York stock exchange." "Just for a rhanca to speculate, eb?" "Mure. Why, for that money you could buy a seat*In the senate and play a sure thing." New Spades. "What's the matter with BHggtns? He’s wearing a last year's bat, a cheap suit of clothes and a tin watch. Has be bad hard luck?" "No. He's getting ready to dodge the income tax.'*—Washington Star. TO KEEP YOUTH n [ and beauty—to prevent wrinkles and “crow’s feet” and deep black circle« under the eye«— nothing is as good as Give it a fair trial for banishing those distressing pains or Pierce'« FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION drains on one’s vitality. This prescription of Dr. Pierce's regulates all th« Womanly functions. It eradicate« and destroys "Female Complaints’* and weaknesses that make women miserable and oki before their time. Every girl needs it before womanhood. Every mother needs it. It is an invigorating tonia for the female system. All medicine dealers have sold it with satisfaction, to customers for the past 40 years. It is now obtainable in liquid or tablet form at drug store«—or send 60 one*cei it stamps for trial box, to K.V. Pierce, Buffalo. Mushroom« With Eggs—Brock a doten fresh mushroom* and put them Into a stew pan with a tablespoonful of butter, one-quarter of a teaspoonful of salt, pepper to taste and a few drops of lotnon juice. Cover the pan and simmer slowly for ten minute«. Then add one cupful of cream and a little chicken or veal stock, and cook slowly until the mixture begins to thicken a little. Then stir In «ix eggs well beaten and stir until the whole is of the consistency of scrambled eggs Serve on well browned toast. Salmi of Lamb—Cook one table spoonful of butter with one-half table spoonful of finely chopped onion Ove minutes. Add 1*4 tablespoonful« of Sour and cook until well browned. Pour on gradually one cupful of stock and season with one-fourth of a tea spoonful of pepper and one teaapoonful of walnut catchup. Reheat slice« of oold roast lamb In sauce, arrange on a hot platter, having slices overlap .one, another, and pour sane« over meat. Union Cake—Two cup« sugar, one sup of sweet milk, one cup of butter, three cup« of Sour, one-half cup of cornstarch, four eggs, three level tea spoonfuls of baking powder, one-half teaspoonful of ground mace. Rub but ter, sugar and eggs together, rubbing one egg In at a time; sift in the corn starch and one cup of Sour and the milk alternately. Lastly the two cups of Sour and the baking powder. Bake tn a large pan in a moderate oven, with a paper cap over the top till it’s half done. Stewed Plums—Wipe each plum with a soft, damp cloth and prick It with a fork to prevent bursting. Have the water In the preserving kettle a Uttle more than lukewarm and gently lay the fruit In it Bring to a gentle boll; cook just long enough for the plums to become tender, but not long enough for the skins to crack. They must be watched carefully. Remove to a deep dish, add a cup of granulated sugar to every quart of liquor, boll to a syrup and pour over the plums. GOOD HOME-MADE IMPLEMENT Oreg, When Property Weighted, A» •were for Roller and Harrow Puts Soil in Fine Conditio«. <By J. W GRIFFIN ) This is one of the best home-made Implements; not the best made, but the beat implement that I ever saw. I have been a close observer, and Lav« given th« greater part of my time la the last thirty years, to the study of faro, labor. Improvements, and short cuts in practical farming. Under all conditions, when advisable to use the harrow, -.his implement come« la at first place. It has been some twelve or thirteen years since I first called attention to the draw and harrow coo- clned At first I made several with a roller attachment. The roller was hitched to the harrow. But after using this one season. I come to th« conclusion that the drag, when proper ly weighted, answered for the roller. R SLOANS LINIMENT Al an Dealer». Prise IS«.. K a and >1.00 Slo-n'. Instructive Book on hones, cattle, poultry and hog*, sent free. Address. DR. EARL S. SLOAN, I ml , BOSTON, MASS. à à COLD’lüHEAD CATARRH Airis I Try It I Hair gets soft, fluffy and beautiful—Get a 25 oent bottle of Dandarln«. Drag and Harrow. Lumbago-Sciatica Sprains Spanned AnMa Chiropractor THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF 1 MAa s near of your liniment for the left li yaora! can any It la on oof the beat on Iha fnuket Fifteen yean a«o 1 sprained my ankle and had to use crutch*«, and the dorlon Midi would alway* bo lama. A friend advieed me to try your Unlment and after nd ng It night and mornln« for threa month* 1 could walk witbont a cana and run nagood a* any of the other firemen In my department., I have never bean without a buttle aluce that time."—■*"- IFdii«m If. Bruwa CeMruf ItUpt M X. SECOND-HAND MACHINERY rwuivuuffiTi»" IS CURABLE Inatant Relief from Sciatica • 1 wa* kept In bed with sciatica since the flrat of February, but I had almoat In- Pearson-Page Co. DR MARSHALL’S CATARRH SNUFF »? zu. tate itcstsM mm rat RUPTURE Here'« P roo f. "I had my back hurt in the Boer War and two year* ««<> I was bit by a etreet car. I tried all klntla of dope without enccee*. 1 saw your Liniment In a drug •tore and got a bottle to try. The flrat application canaed Inatant relief, and now except fny a little ellATne««. I am almoat well.leader Aoraaaa. rkunw, CokJ. I W I85TANTLY Btlltl/ÉB 8Y THt IB J Then the sharp teeth of the harrow left the soil tn the finest condition possible. With the accompanying pen draw ing. it will hardly be necessary to go Into details in regard to making one of these. Although I will give the di mensions of the timbers. For ordi nary use, a width of six feet Is suffl cienL But, on perfectly level or land that 1« practically free of trash and stumps or stone«, one as long as eight feet can be used to an advantage. •OUR, ACID STOMACHS, latest reports show that more than Material required: GASES OR INDIGE8TION 40,000 men are employed as coal min Six pieces lxlO-tnch plank, 4 feet ers In the Pacific northwest long, planker. Each "Paps's Olapspsln" Digests >000 Two pieces 3x3-inch hard wood, 4 grains food, ending all stomach Within the last two years agricul feet long, beams for barrow. misery In fivs minutes. tural wages in Scotland have risen at Two pieces 2x4-lnch cross beam for least >30 a year. harrow, to planker. Time It! In five minutes all stom Two pieces 2x6-inch cleats to which ach distress will go. .*4« indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of planker is made. gas. acid, or eructations of undigested Twenty-three pieces five-eighths- rood, no dixzineea. bloating, foul inch square harrow teeth. 12 InChe« breath or headache. Venison Steaks and Hash. long. I’ape'a Dinpepsin la noted for Its To hash cold venison, cut the meat Eight one-half Inch bolts, 10 inches ape,-d In regulating upset stomachs. tn nice, small slices and put the long. It Is the surest, quickest stomach rem trimmings and bones Into a saucepan Two one-half-inch bolts 5 inches edy In the whole world and besides It with barely water enough to cover bug. is harmless, i’ut an end to stomach th«m. Let them stew for an hour, Two one-half-inch bolts 7 inches long. trouble forever by getting a large ftftycent case of I’ape'a Dlapepsln then strain tn liquid into a stew ran. Two 4-lnch devices. from any drug store. You realise In add to It some bits of butter, rolled Two pounds 10 penny nails. five minutes bow needless It Is to suf in flour, and whatever gravy was left The beams that connect the harrow fer from Indigestion, dyspepsia or any of the venison the day before. Stir with the planker is worked on a bolt stomach disorder. It's the quickest, tn some currant jelly and let It boll at (x. x.) which permits the harrow surest and most harmless stomach up. then put in the meat and keep it being raised to remove trash. doctor In the world. over the fire just long enough to I warm through, but do not allow it to WATER FOR THE DAIRY COW Ths Laconic Senator. boll, as it has been once cooked al Not for the multitude, but for the ready fewness of his words. Is Senator Idtne Good Tank Heater or Some Other De Venison Steaks—Cut them from the of Oregon likely to become famous. vice Should Be Used During neck or haunch. Season them with Aski-d to contribute a sketch of him Winter—Helpe Milk Yield. selt to that annual of shrinking mod pepper and salt. When the gridiron esty. the Congressional Directory, Mr. has been well heated over a bed of It is very Important that the water By wmriiur a SEELEY 8PEXMAT1C Lane wrote: bright coals, grease the bars and lay drunk by the cows giving three or 8HI»:tJ) TBI 88. No worryin« or dee- "Harry Un», democrat, of Oregon, S«r of an operation. Rupture U no* a tear the steaks upon !L Broil them well, more gallons of milk daily be warmed term expires March 3. ISIS." or br ea c h, m roaunonly euppoeed. but I* turn them once and take care to save to about 40 degrees FahrenheiL Other Whm asked how be liked bls sen the etretehinr. or dilation, of a natural as much of the gravy as possible. wise the cows will not drink as much O otwnlna. Tbte SEELEY SPERMATIC ate job. he replied: Serve them with some currant jelly as they need to keep up a good milk SHIELD appliance c l o n e thia openins la "1 feel perfectly at home here. I 10 dare In mint canoe if you can't coma, laid on each steak. Have your plates flow. It does not take much ice water was superintendent of the Oregon In write for moMurlns blank and literature. warm. sane Asylum before I was sent here." to chill a thin-fleshed dairy cow SuM only by —"The Office Window" in the New through and through on a cold winter York Mall. LAUE-DAVIS DRUG CO. Baked Onions In Ramekin*. day, especially when she is compelled Peel and parboil 12 medium-sized to walk some distance through the Third and Y amhill. Portland, Or. Uruguay's Imports from the United onions; drain; chop. Melt two table enow or a cutting wind to get to the Who are True« Hi pert« ami Exclusive States for the first 11 months of 1912 State Ar.nl. tot thia «ppilance. spoons butter; add two tablespoons tank or pond. reached the record sum of >4,774.000, flour, one-quarter teaspoon salL one Experiments made at the Missouri while the previoua year they totaled and one-quarter cups cream, four station show that drinking water la only >5.963,313, also a record year. tablespoons soft bread crumbs, one needed In proportion to the milk yield. No. 1, *14. F. N. U tablespoon chopped parsley. Boll five That Is, a cow giving six gallons of Lsst year there were 1,852,241 work minutes, add one egg slightly beaten milk a day needs about twice as much ers employed In factories in Oreat Britain, 890,834 of whom were engag and the chopped onions. Cool slight water as a cow giving three gallons ■ ed In the textile trades. ly. add whites of two eggs, beaten day. If the water is too cold to be I stiff—more seasoning If needed. Bake comfortable If drunk in large quanti tn buttered ramekins 20 minutes. ties, the cow will not drink enough, Serve Immediately. and as a result will drop considerably In her milk yield. How to Cook Dried Peas. When Missouri Chief Josephine was Place a lump of soda the size of a giving about 100 pounds of milk each walnut tn a saucepan of cold water, day last winter she drunk daily about add the peas to this and bring to the 31 gallons of water. Imagine how she boll; allow them to boll for 40 minutes. would have suffered if that had been They will then be beautifully soft and Ice water. It was warmed, however, well cooked. If for soup, add to the and Josephine did not chill after drink stock, otherwise they should be drain ing. "Thedirection* seys, it* good for ed In a colander, buttered and pep A good tank heater, or some other lumbago too,— Sloan’s cured my pered. and set aside for a few seo- device should be used this winter to rheumatism | I’ve used it and I onds for the butter to melt well into warm the water for the cowl It will them. know.” Do you use Sloan’s? pay. R Practical Papa. The talk at a recent smokefest w*a about th« practical side of things. "Remind* me." smilingly remarked all kind« wanted. Write far eer Congressman Joseph A. Goulder of CASH OFFER New Tork. "of a certain suffragettes not one of the antique specie«, but ■ soft, tender little thing who has Just joined the jubilee and is correspond ingly enthusiastic. "One evening she returned hom« and rushed up to the old man, who was comfortably reading In a big arm Bought. *>>M and esrh«a«wd »a*r h»««. >■«■*. chair. sawmill*, ate. Kwnrt tot Stack Liat and Film. " 'Oh. papa.’ she exclaimed, 'you THk J. E. MASTIN CO- M 1st St- FertJaad. Or. should have been with me tonight! We are preparing to sweep the coon- try!’ “ Sweep the country?" responded th« old man. with a puzzled expres DR. JOSEPH ROANE sion. 'Who» preparing to sweep the country?’ “ 'Why, the suffragette«, of couro«.’ SPINAL ADJUSTMENTS came the proud rejoinder of the pretty Seteottfte «f al! Acut» and Chronic one. I frict tiowr Suite " 'Oh. I see,’ was the cold, hard reply of practical papa, 'it is a commend able Impulse. You might begin with the dining room and parlor.' ’’—New Orleans States. POULTRY —l and Dairy Produce FIns-Qralned Cake. EGGS EXTREMELY NUTRITIOUS I use It for Washington pie or whipped cream pie. One cup sugar, Contain All the Elements Required for one-half cup butter, one egg, one and Building Up and Support of the ona-half cups flour, one-half cup milk, Human Body. one and one-half teaspoon baking pow der, flavor. Bake In round tins, put Hens' eggs contain 50 per cent together with jelly. Frost with one water, 14 per cent protein, 33 per tablespoon of butter, one cup pow cent fat dered sugar, little milk and flavor.— Ducks' eggs, 44 per cent water, 17 Exchange. per cent protein, 34 per cent, fat Goose eggs, 44 pe* ornt water, 19 Jellied Meat per cent protein, 34 per cent, fat One cup of beef which has been Turkeys’ eggs, 48 per cent water. cooked and put through food chopper, 18 per cent protein, 33 per cent fat half cup bread crumbs, salt and pepper Protein, as is generally known, is to taste, mix well. Stir Into this two thirds cup of boiling water which has the substance that goes to make mus had one-half an envelope of gelatin cle and blood. Fat, of course. Is fuel dissolved in It. Pack In a tin and for running the body-machine. Thus, set In a cool place, after which it can it will be seen, eggs, though half or nearly half water, are extremely 1 be sliced. nutritious, containing all the elements required for the building up and sup How to Cook Beets. Fill a pall as large as will hold as port of the human body. many as you want to cook. Don't cut Dairy Calf Often Overlooked. them, as that makes them bleed. Cov Many dairymen and farmers fall to er with cold water, cover up tight, put In hot oven and let bake. This time appreciate the great importance of of the year I put them In early so as spending thought and feed in the de to have them done for dinner. They velopment of the dairy calf during th« first six months of its llf< If you care for heavy hair that glis tens with beauty and is radiant with Ilf«; has an Incomparable softness and is fluffy and lustrous, try Dandertne. Just one application doubles th« baauty of your hair, besides it imme diately dissolves every partid« of dandruff. You can not Lav« nice heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre. Its strength and its very life, and If not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of th« scalp; the hair roots famish, loos en and die; then the hair falls out teat Surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderlne from any drug store and just try it Undisturbed. On currency they raise a din. The farmer feels no flurry. He simply puts his money in And lets the old bank worry. —Washington Star. Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain the hands. Free to Owr Readers Writ« Marine Eye K-mvIy Co., Cblcif», far W-p*^« IhiuirnleU Ey« Book Eree Writ* «11 «boat To*r Ey« Trouble «nd Ihry *U1 *drt*e •• to th« Proper Applicsiloa of the Murtae E/e BeMdlee la Yuar apeelal Caee. Your Druggt«! will tell you that Morin« Krllev«« •ore Eye«. Hlren<th«t:« Weak By«« D om *Y Smart, South«« Kye P«lu. sod eella io* Mw Try It 1« Your By«« «nd 1« Baby'« By«« tar Sealy Eyelid« and OranulaUua. Its Conduct "That flag you gave me to hang out la not the kind to wave o’er the heart« of the brave." "Why not?" "Because the first time I tried to wash it the colors ran. And that wasn't the worst of it for they all ran together.” Heard at the Station. Townley—You say that the mornin* trains in from your station have been given nicknames. Subbubs—Yes. At 4:10 there's "Th« works,” at 7:20 "The clerks." and at 8:30 "The shirks.” Mother* Wtn fini Mrv. winnow* Sootniag Syrup th« b<-*t reniedv to u*e iur lAaiz cklldasm flunag th« le«Uim< period. in the Same Business. "It seems strange that he could plunder a great corporation like that for years without being found out" “Well, you see, the corporation was pretty busy itself."—Chicago Journal. Too Common. The consultation—Patient refus«« The first temperance society in Eng land was formed in Bradford in Feb to admit she has' appendicitis. "Well?” ruary, 1830. • "Says it's passe. Wants somethin* newer and more exclusive."—Life. A FRIEND TO THE WORKINGMAN 10 CENT “CASCARETS" IF BILIOUS OR COSTIVe For Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Sluggish Liver and Bowels—They Five years ago I was so troubled work while you sleep. with kidney trouble and inflammation of the bladder that I had to lease Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges working my farm. Life looked dark to me until I heard of Dr. Kilmer’s tion. Sallow Skin and Miserable Head Swamp-Root through a cured friend. aches come from a torpid liver and I tried a bottle and began to feel bet clogged bowels, which cause your ter at once. After using five or six stomach to become filled with undi bottles I felt fine and have continued gested food, which sours and ferment« to work as I had before my affliction. like garbage in a swill barrel That'« I want to state that Dr. Kilmer’s ■wamp-Root is a kidney medicine that the first step to untold misery—indi will cure and I owe my good work dur gestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that 1« ing the past five or six years to 1L horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret Yours vrey truly, tonight will give your constipated C. W. MORRIS. bowels a thorough cleansing and PrescotL Ark. Subscribed and sworn to before me. straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep—a 10-cent box this 27th day of March, 1912. from your druggist will keep you feel O. B. GORDON, ing good for months. Notary Public. This la to certify that Mr. C. W. Seven books sold for a total of Morris has bought Swamp-Root at this >227,200 at the recent Hoe library store in the past Adam Guthrie, Jr„ sale. Two of these books were Bible*, Druggist one of which, a Gutenberg Bible, print ed on vellum, brought the highest Letter to price ever paid for a book—>50,000. Dr. Kilmer A Co- Binghamton, N.Y. Brass farthings were authorised by They Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., were suppressed as worthless about Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size 40 years later. bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable Lions and tigers are too weak in information, telling about the kidneys lung power to run more than half a and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles More than 3.000,000 gross of pencil« for sale at all drug stores. are annually made in Philadelphia. Prove What Swamp-Root WM Do Tor You English law in the year 1418. Tackle Catarrh Now Be Free All Winter Avoid Colds, Still Pneumonia, Keep Your loss Clear and Your Throat Free. Don’t Wait TUI You’ro AD Bunged Up. Use S. S. S. Now. Xf you will go Into eny first cla«* store and get a battle of S. S. 8. you ar« on the way to getting rid of Catarrh. But don't let anyone work oft that old trick of something "Just a* good." 8. B. 8. la taken Into the blood just as naturally aa th« moat nourishing food. It spread* it* influence over every organ in the body, comr* through all th« vein* and arteries, enable* all mucous surface« to exchange inflammatory acid* and other irritating *ub*tances for arterial elements that effectually clean*« the system and thus put an end to all catarrhal pollution. 8. • 8. deans out the stomach of muoous accumulation*, enables only pure, blood- making materials to enter the intestines, combine« with these food elements to enter the circulation, and In leas than aa hour la at work throughout the body in the process of purification. The medicinal components of B. B. B. «aa relatively juat aa essential to >«U* balanced health as the nutritive proper* ties of the grains, meat« sugar*, and fato of foods Any local Irritating Influeno« In th* blood Is rejected by th* tissue cell« and eliminated by reason of the stimuli ting Influence of 8. S. S. Tou will soon realise Its wonderful In fluence by the absence of headache, a d«> elded clearing of the air passages, ■ steadily Improved nasal condition, and fa sense of bodily relief that proves how completely catarrh often infest« th« «t>- tlre system. Tou will And 8. 8. 8. on sale at all dm* stores. It is a remarkable remedy for any and all blood affections, such a« eczema, rash, lupus, tetter, psoriasis, bolls, and all other diseased condition* of the blood. For special advice on any blood disease write to The Swift Speclfi* Co., XOX Swift Bldg. Atlanta, Oa. Do not trifle with substitutes. Imita tion« or any of th« horde of "Juat •* good" Counterfeit* of 8. 8. 8.