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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1915)
POLYFON' AGENTS WANTED IVk-phon InUnaiflw, First M In tetophon trou bUtn. InillHpenaable to tl.;phon uwn. Quick rVllnra, Writ for Information and jrt trrltory, UANHON UltOS,, 410' MarriMi it, PUKTUND, ML WEEKS' BRE.K-UP-A-COLD TABLETS A puaranteed remedy for Colds and La Grippe. Price 25c of your druggist. It's good. Take nothing else. Adv. LEARN AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING AND DRIVING ill the bent equipped, mort up-to-date and only trartical Automobile School in the Northwent, . & M. Auto Hepmir Co., 3tt HiwtWat An.. Ptrtlud, Or MOTORCYCLES and BICYCLES New and Second-hand Air en It forThorand Excel sior. Write for CntalofrueK and Second-hand price LiHU. AFEX BICYUI Ul., U-U& 121b TL, fmtiui, OretM i SAVE YOUR TEETH tVirflP Tfl and have your mouth examined, vuiuc an j UH th, V8ry atMt ,cienlili0 painless methods. IHt. A. W. KKENE, 8:l'4 Wsshlngton Hl Portland. PORTLAND BARBER COLLEGpi Tcachos the Trade g Weeks. Scalp, J-i Face Masswe Specialty. Toola Free. Positions Guaranteed. PAY while LEARNING. 293 Madlaon 8L, Portland, Oregon. BICYCLE BARGAINS ALL MAKES The only strictly Bicycle Ralenroom and Re pair Shop in Portland. Price lint on applica tion. Write 108 13th St., Corner WimhinKton, SCOVILL'S CYCLERY River Names. Nansemond, the name of a river In Virginia, Is from the Indian word Nawnschlmiind, "the place from which we were driven away." The Flint, in Michigan, was called by the Indians Perwonlgo, "the river of the flint," from the abundance of this stone on Its banks. Humboldt river, In Nevada, was named by Fremont in honor of Baron Humboldt. Early Marriage Arrangement. Sometimes at the birth of a Japa nese baby a tree is planted which must remain untouched until the marriage of the child. When the nuptial hour arrives the tree is cut down and a skilled cabinet maker transforms the wood Into furniture for the house o( the young people. MONAMOBILE Oils and Greases are the goods of QUALITY. Oils and Greasei for AUTOMOBILES. Oils ml Cream for TRACTION toil HARVESTERS Oils tad Groses for STEAM ENGINES. Oil cornea In 1, 5, 15, 32 and 56 pkgs. Greaae comes in 1, 2 Mi, 5, 10, 15, 2Mb. and up Write us for prices and particulars. PORTLAND AUTO OIL Co. Pkooi HmUl 1216. 68 Foots Si, Portal Or. EAST OREGON JACK FARM B. F. SWAGGART, Prop. "John L. Sullivan" a 3-yar-old Jack rimed on this farm. Brooders of Jackal Thoroughbred Saddle, Relay and Running Horses; Berkshire Hog. - Lexington. Oregon. DAMAGED WHEAT BARLEY AND OATS FOR HOG FEED $17.50 Per Ton f. o. b. Warehouse Full information furnished upon application. WALTER A. GOSS, 418 Corbett Bldg., Phone East 6912. Portland, Or. TWO CARLOADS OF IYER JOHNSON BICYCLES To be closed out at Actual Cost W are troinir out of the Bicycle Bunt mvw ami will ne at Retail nil out Hhjh C'rudV I twr Johnson Wheels At the follow ing prices: Ladies' Roadster, Model UST-L, complete with Coaster Rrake, Mudgunnis and Tire, Regular $35 Wheels, at $25.00. Mens Roadster, Model 1487, equipped as above, regular $35, at $25.00. HtOi V Servlet Wheel. Model 1488-S. fully guiptwd. Tht Fimst M AW in Amtrk. regular $50, Special, $40.00. This will he your only opportunity t get the Highest Uradt Wheel manufactured at actual coat. All wheels fully guaranteed, M. T. HUDSON ARMS CO. 110 Third SU, Portland, Or. F. N. U. No. 18, 115 WHEN writing to adrerUMra, situs mm- Akl. 1b Fundamental I Princinles of ai - By ALBERT S. GRAY, M. D. (Copyright, 1914, by A. S. Gray) RIGG'3 DISEA8E AND VITALITY. Next In frequency to the most prev alent human disease, carles, or tooth decay, comes one very closely asso ciated with it, known in dental liter ature as periodontitis, better known as pyorrhoea alveolorals, or Rlgg's dis ease. This disease, characterized by a more or less general infection of the membranes within the tooth sock et, Is Indicated by a slight tenderness during mastication, looseness of the teeth and pulp sensitiveness, or even pain on the ingestion of hot or cold drinks because of the exposure of the cementum, the external shell of the root. The gum is swollen and soft, the tooth may be raised in Its socket, and pressure brings relief. There Is a discharge of pus from between the tooth and gum on pressure, the teeth become loose, and, in course of time as the disease progresses and the al veolar process (the tooth socket) Is destroyed, they fall out. Efficient mastication Is, of course, Impossible; hence not only is food bolted partly chewed and more or less mixed with pus, but the tissues In and around the teeth are deprived of exercise necessary to give them an adequate blood supply and they are thereby rendered less resistant to at tack. Tooth after tooth Is involved and there is established another of those numerous vicious cycles that continually operate to drag us down. As In so many diseases there Is a great diversity of opinion as to Its cause. It sometimes follows severe fever and many consider It the result of low vitality and feeble circulation, the result of a gouty diathesis (phy sical habit), or of chronic rheumatism; but the majority opinion appears to Be that the Immediate cause of the disease is the accumulation of Irritant material In the pocket around the tooth. The general bacteriology of the dis ease is by no means confined to one group of organisms, and so far as is known no specific micro-organism has been Isolated; the streptococcus, pneu mococcus, staphlycoccus and others of the baclllary type predominate. ' Pyorrhoea Is not a new disease; It was recognized by the early investi gators, but It has become more prev alent during the last 60 years and it Is the rule rather than the exception to And patients with more or less perio dontitis. The disease Is not confined to man, but is also extremely preva lent among domestic animals. A class of serious disorders has long been known in which failure of nu trition could be named as the imme diate antecedent in the case and in which it has vaguely been assumed that the diet must be at fault. Prob ably the most generally familiar of these diseases is scurvy. Victims of scurvy Buffer from severe physical exhaustion, soreness of the gums and looseness of the teeth, and, of course, this opens the way to bacte rial Invasion and periodontitis. When we note that, as all observers agree, Improvement or intensification of the mouth diseases synchronizes with the rise and fall of general health in the Individual, it Is reasonable to suspect that the disease is not a strictly local infection resulting from local Irrita tion or Injury. It does not come from Injuries received In chewing grit and sand or from soft food accumulating about the teeth; It comes as the re sult of lowered vitality from the lack of those organic compounds other than the proteins which Caslmlr Funk and other Investigators prove to be pres ent in fresh vegetables and In lime and other juices, small quantities of which are absolutely essential to nor mal growth and continued health. The name given these compounds by Funk is well chosen In view of its root meaning: Vltamlnes. An "amine" is a nitrogenous compound of a certain type, and a vitamins is obviously such a nitrogenous compound absolutely necessary to vitality. The principles of evolution are uni versal and constantly at work, even in the minds of men, and we are slow ly evolving out of the old Idea of "cause" and "cure." The investiga tions of Soddy in the chemistry of the radio-elements, of Twort, Penfold, Mme. Henri and others in the muta tions of bacteria, make it quite clear that If medicine ever takes a place among the sciences It can come only as the result of a general habit of mind such as It found in the advanced sciences. We know, for example, that sun beams are the ultimate cause of the revolving of a windmill, but no man can state the origin of the particular puff of air that causes a wheel to re volve at a certain speed at a certain time. Neither Is It possible to put one's finger on the exact point at which we enter or leave the vital cur rent of life. The wise man take no chances and simply sticks close to nature. This means eating simple, properly prepared, unprocessed food. GOOD . USES FOR KEROSENE Excellent for Cleaning Glassware Will Remove Rust From Kitchen 8tove For the Refrigerator. A little kerosene added to very hoi water will make windows, looking glasses and picture glasses bright and clear. Use a small, clean cloth, wring it dry and rub it over the glass, after wiping down the framework with an oiled cloth. Then proceed to the next window and treat it similarly on both sides. After that go back to the first one and wipe it dry with a large clean cloth. No real polishing is required and the window or glass will look clear and shiny. Kerosene will clean your hands bet ter than anything else after blacking a range or stove. Pour a little in the water, waBh your hands in It, then wash them In tepid water, and finally with plenty of soap and a stiff brush in hot water. If possible finish up by rubbing the hands with lemon and rosewater and glycerin. When your kitchen sink Is rusty rub It over with kerosene. Squeaks In shoes may sometimes be prevented by dipping the soles in kero sene. The white spots appearing in the spring on the lining of your refrigera tor will disappear If you rub the zinc with kerosene. Leave the refrigerator open several hours, then wash with water, soap and ammonia. The re frigerator will then be clean and sweet and all spots will have disap peared. To clean painted walls wipe them first with a cloth wet in kerosene and let stand 15 minutes. Then wash the walls with good warm soapsuds, but do not rub soap on the cloth, or the paint will be streaked. Rub spots o( tar or pine pitch on clothing In kero sene before washing them. MANY WAYS TO SERVE EGGS Albumen Water, for One Thing, I Palatable and Highly Beneficial for ChlldrSh. After a bilious attack or any other kind of stomach trouble when a child cannot digest the yolk of the egg, it is possible to make the needed albu men more palatable by poaching Just the white, removing the yolk before the white is dropped into the poacher. Of course this can only be done In the transition period after the albu men water (raw white shaken up in water) Is no longer strong enough. Those who have babies generally know how to make albumen water, but for the benefit of those who do not know, the proportion depends upon the age of the child. The usual formula for older chil dren is the white of one egg shaken up In a glass of water, put on Ice or served with ice chopped with a little orange Juice for flavoring, If the doe tor will allow It. A refreshing drink for a sick person Is the white of egg shaken up In two thirds of a glass of water, mixed with the juice of a whole orange and half a lemon, with a little cracked ice. The acid cuts the albumen and pre vents the strlnginess besides adding a delicious flavor, cooling to a fevered throat Beefsteak Pie. Have butcher cut 1 pounds of round steak into small squares. Put meat, with one small onion chopped fine, in frying pan with two table spoonfuls of butter and simmer for a few minutes. Cover with boiling water and boil not too rapidly until tender. Add four potatoes, cut into small cubes the last 15 minutes. Make pie crust and line baking pan. Prick and place in oven until dry but not brown. Put stew Into this, adding gne-half teaspoonful of chopped pars ley, one-quarter teaspoonful of black pepper and one-half teaspoonful of salt. Put on top crust and brown in oven. Serve from baking dish. Mush rooms may be added with potatoes if desired. Fruit Sherbet. The Juice of two oranges, two lem ons, a pint of cream and a cupful of sugar sirup (or less, depending upon the fruit). Strain the juice and add the cream and sirup, then freeze. The proportion of ice and salt for Ice cream is one part salt to three of ice. For Ices and sherbets use one part Bait to four parts of ice. For packing use one part of salt to four parts of ice. Use a gtmnysack and a heavy mallet to crush the ice. Lentil Croquettes. Take one pint of lentil pulp, one-half pint of bread crumbs (entire wheat preferred), three beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of grated onions, one quarter cupful of butter. Salt and pep per to taste. Mix ingredients together, cook In double boiler or steam until eggs are Bet Chill, then form in cro quettes. Dip in egg, roll in crumbs and fry in deep fat. To add one-half cupful of shredded English walnuts or pecans imparts a rich, delicate fla vor. Tongue Sandwiches. Mince cold boiled tongue and mix it with half as much finely diced cel ery. Moisten with mayonnaise and to a cupful add a tablespoonful of good tomato catchup. Spread between white bread and butter. Macedolne Salad. Take an even quantity ot cold, cooked vegetables pean, turnips, beets and potatoes, cut floe. Add a little minced onion. Cover with salad dressing, mix lightly and aerve cold. BEST OF APHORISMS AMERICAN HAS GATHERED SEN TENCES THAT ARE ALIVE Have Epigrammatic- Quality Surpris ingly High For Instance, "Never Great Saint That Licked a Sense of Humor." The successful aphorist is about ten thousand times scarcer than the successful essayist or story teller or Assyriologlst, remarks the New York Sun. The man who without borrow ing directly from the few really great maxim makers of the world's litera ture, or without appropriating the letter or the spirit of those folk proverbs which contain the quint essence of human wisdom, can put in to eight hitherto uncomblned words the entire pathology of human hypoc risy and cant merits especial notice and more or leBs gratitude of man kind; "In the truly good all gout is rheu matism." We commend to the discerning everywhere the small and perhaps not very happily named book, "Keystones of Thought," in which Dr. AuBtln O'Malley of Pennsylvania has gath ered from fifteen hundred to two thousand of these "conclusions which spare you the labor of tramping in moist relentment thought's syllogis tic mazes." This small army of aphor isms are not all so good as those which we now proceed to exhibit as examples; but the average of epi grammatic quality is surprisingly high: Autumn is a hint from God to Old Age. A fallen lighthouse Is more dan gerous than a reef. We are plated with piety, not al loyed with it. Style Is not the setting of the dia mond thought; it Is the glitter Itself of the diamond. Atheism is a disease of the mind caused by eating underdone philoso phy. It Is a long snake that has no tail. If you snub conscience a few times she will cut your acquaintance. Memory is a crazy woman that hoards colored rags and throws away food. Writers on the spiritual life are constantly mistaking the liver for the devil. Possess your soul without fussing; your guardian angel does not lose half the sleep over you you think he does. It is as easy to give advice to your self as to others, and as useless. Cunning Is a short blanket; If you pull it over your face you expose your feet. Te new is what has been forgot ten. In holding an eel a gentle grip Is foolishness. Distance lends amity to cousins. The most dangerous savages live In cities. What is called a weak will Is com monly a flabby intellect. There never was a great saint that lacked a sense of. humor. A gentleman never heard a story before. Many social visits you think paid to yourself are paid to your bottles. Most women wear their looks like trousers. A college can bluff like any poker player. Humor without effort, wit without bitterness, philosophy without preten sion; Doctor O'Malley has printed a book that is worth possessing. Lights From the Drug Store. The general darkening of the lights of London has nearly quenched the rich glow from chemists windows that used to appeal so strongly to one of Robert Louis Stevenson's friends. "Walter Ferrier," records Stevenson, "had a romantic affection for all phar macies, and the bottles In the window were for him a poem. He said once that he knew no pleasure like driving through a lamp-lit city waiting for the chemists to go by." The reigning sultan of Morocco ap parently possesses similar tastes. When Muley Yussef last visited Cas ablanca he departed with an assort ment of green, blue and red jars, pur chased from chemists. These caught his eye as he passed through the streets, and were promptly purchased to adorn his residence. Pall Mall Ga zette. Says Cat Caused Wreck. Capt. Roland F. Quillan, whose three masted schooner William J. Quillan, was sunk off Cape Hatteras after a col lision with the Norwegian steamship Laly, never again will take a cat to sea. He attributes the accident which nearly cost his life and the lives of his crew, to a gray cat which he had aboard. "I've shipped for 25 years and al ways have taken along dogs," Captain Quillan said. "Just before I started from Baltimore for Mayport, Fla., somebody stole my dog, so I got a cat a gray cat. Cats are bad luck, 1 guess. This was my first accident The cat was lost." The Laly, which brought the Qull lan'a crew to Newport News, is under going repairs, due to the collision, be fore resuming her voyage. Confuting. "I should like to look at some As trakhan," said the lady In the depart ment store. "Are you looking for fur or caviare, madam?" asked the polite floorwalker. "The Most Accessible Car in the World" THE NEW 1915 REO REO THE FIFTH THE REO SIX "The Incomparable Four" "The Six of Sixty Superiorities" $1050 F. O. B. Factory $1385 F. 0. B. Factory Reo Road Service, Rco Simplicity and Reo Accessibility make it pre-eminently the Car for the country. See the nearest Reo Dealer or write to us for Free Booklets. Limited territory open for reliable agents. "REO SERVICE ALL ALONG THE WAY." NORTHWEST AUTO CO., Distributor for Pacific Northwest. F. W. VOGLER, President Broadway at Couch St., Portland, Oregon. New Version of Old Song. Grandpa was showing little Helen the pictures in a popular magazine. Coming to a page which advertised men's wearing apparel, he called cer tain garments "breeches." Whereupon the little three-year-old, hearing a fa miliar sound that carried suggestions, began to sing "London breeches fall ing down!" HOWARD E. FTTRTUN - Amjer ana Cnemlst, Leadville, Colorado. Spemtnou prices! Uold, Silver. Lend. tl. Qold, Silver, 16o: Gold 60o: iiino or Copper. Si. Mailing envelopes a id full price list sent on application. Control and Umpire works Uoited. iieferenoei Carbonate National Hank. Had Run Out of Kisses. Little Irene while away visiting had grown weary of the caresses showered upon her by adoring relatives and friends. So when one demonstrative young lady begged. "Won't you give me just one kiss?" she shook her curly head and lisped: "No; I haven't any kisses left only bites." YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Bye Keineuy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyea and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting lusbEye Comfort. Write for Book of the Eye by mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Best Wood for Furniture. . The latest use for locust wood is in the manufacture of fine furniture and Interior finishing of fine residences. The wood has a grain and color not found in any other timber. ervous Women Are troubled with the "blues" anxiety-sleeplessness and warnings or pain and distress are sent by the nerves like flying messengers throughout body and limbs. Such feeling may or may not be accompanied by backache or headache or bearing down. The local disorders and inflammation, if there is any, should be treated with Dr. Pierce'; Lotion Tablets. Then the nervous system and the entire womanly make-up feels the tonic effect of DR. PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription Take this In liquid or tablet form and be a well woman 1 Sr., ' y"'A'sv? olv iinaca, n. i., says, i nave oeen in a run-down con OKI 'or vCTaJ years. Suffered from nervousness and a great deal of pain at certain your Favorite Prescription' has given the most relief of any thing I have ever tried. Am very much better than I have been in some time. I gladly recommend this remedy to any woman in need of a tonic" Writs Dr.V. M. Plans, luraua, IL T. Dp. Plonoe'a Pleasant Pellets regulate stomach, liver, bowel All Blood Disorders Quickly Driven Away AthuJtkg fiessilis With tbe Greatest Blood Purifier Ever Discovered. Strength, Power, Accomplishment are all Typified in S. S. S. Some blood rltanrAr hMwm. ...1. rooted In the gland and tissues, and th mistake Is made ot resorting to drastic drugs. These only aggravate by causing other and worse trouble. A host of peo ple know this to be true. They know from painful experience. To get right down into where th blood Is vitiated require S. S. 8. th greatest blood purifier ver discovered. This remarkable remedy contain one Ingredient, the ctiv purpose of which i to stimulate th tissue to th healthy selection of Its own essential nutriment and the medicinal element of this match less blood purifier ar Just as essential to well balanced health as th nutritious element of the meats, groins, fata and sugars of our dally food. Not only this, but if from th presence of om disturbing poison there is local or general Interference of nutrition to cause boll, carbuncles, abscesses and kindred troubles, 8. 8. 8. o direct th local cell that this poison la rejected and Watch Your Colts For Coughs, Colds and Distemper, and at the first symptoms of any Buth uilment, give simill doses of that wonderful remedy, now the most used In existence SPOHN'S DISTEMPER COMPOUND 60 cents and Jl a bottle; $6 and $10 the dozen, of any drug gist, harness dealer, or delivered by SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U. S. A, OVERALLS') Keep Kids Kleen The mort practical, healthful, playtime farmenta ever Invented for children 1 to 8 years of age. Made in one piece witD drop back. tasily lipped on or off. fca.ily was bed. No tight elastic bands to slop circulation. Made in blue denim, and blue and white hickory wipea for all the year round. Also lighter weight material for iu miner wear. All garment! trimmed with fast red or blue galatea. Made in Dutch neck with elbow sleeves and high neck and long ileevea, 75c the suit If your dealer cannot supply you, we will ic-ml thrm, charge! prepaid on receipt of price, 75c each. A New rnrr If They suit rivix b I Mad. By lvi Straus & Co., San Franciscoy , American Historians. The most eminent living historian of American history include Jame Ford Rhodes, Henry Adams, Frederic J. Turner, Herbert L. Osgood, William A. Dunning, Albert Bushnell Hart, John Bach McMaster, J, W. Burgess, James Schouler, and Charles A. Beard. 7r In Girlhood Womanhood Motherhood eliminated from their presence. Then, too, S. S. 8. ha such speclflt timulatiorr on these local cells as to pr serve their mutual welfare and a pro pes relative assistance to each other. In a very brief time 8. 8. 8. has th reconstructive process so under control that remarkable change re ob-'eved. AB eruptive places heal, mysterious pains and ache have disappeared, and from head t) foot there la a conscious sensation of r Dewed health. From th fact that S. 8. S. 1 purel a botanical preparation. It 1 accepted b) the weakest stomach and has great tonli Influence. Not one drop of drug oi minerals Is used in Its preparation. Ask for S. S. S. and Insist upon having it And If you desire skillful advice upon any matter concerning the blood and sKli write to The Swift Speciflo Co., 10S Slf Bldg, Atlanta, Ga. Do not allow son, sealous cleric to larrup the atmosphere li eloquence over something "Just as good' a 6. 8, By Beware of all counterfeit r S-Sa I