/ POULTRY — and Dairy Produce » Costly Hangings. “ I hear the duke’s American wife if refitting the castle.” “ In fine style. It’s a case of hang the paintings, hang the tapestries hang the expense.”—Louisville (Jour i ier-Journal. PLEA NOT HEEDED End o f Colorado Strike Is Not Yet in Sight Denver—Definite settlement of the strike in the Colorado coal fields, CASH OFFER where the miners have been out since Pearson-Page Co. September 23, 1913, and where 1707 United States troops are now guarding Like King Alfred. the mining properties, apparently are Mrs. Comeup—1 like our minister no nearer realization than they were I because he talks right out iu good old i weeks ago, according to statements ! Angular Saxon. Pought, told ami exchanged: engine«. boilers. Cynlcus—That probably accounts j by both unoin officials and mine opera­ tawmillH, etc*. Sen«! for Stork List h im ! Price«. for his lack of rounded periods.—Dal tors. I H t J. K. MAlt 1 IN CO., feo 1st St.. Portland. Or. timore American. Sixty-six persons are known to have St. Lawrence Disaster Under In­ been killed in the disorders and the vestigation Danish Ship*s DAISY FLY KILLER Crrî“ 7ir.?.-îi; F r e e to O u r llr a d e ia known wounded list totals 48. Classi­ fl.es. Neat, tic, W r ite Murine Eye Remedy : <« C hicago, for Hiiix-nul, convenient, Captain Blamed . fied!, the death list as a result of the 48-p.ige Him*!rated E ye iiouk F i ••«•. W rite tall «le a p . L a a t a a l l « n o n . M-.le ot strike since last September shows 18 ab ou t Y ou r E ye T rou b le uud tb«*y will ad vise m elai, c a n 'tsp u l <>r tip strikers, 10 mine guards, 19 mine over ; will n t » >il or u. to the Proper A p p lication o f the M urine E ye Rem edies in Y o u r S pecial C ase. Y o u r Ini ure anyth ing. D ru ggist will tell you that Murine Relieves O ia ra ateeri rff-rtlv e. Rimouski, Quebec— While final tab­ employes, two militiamen, three male Fold by «balera, or Sore E yes, Strengthen,s W e ak E ye«. D o e sn ’t 6 ‘ -üt 1 y eaprck.»AS0SE>SE££G E S ‘Q3aFK3S50 8 a S 0 tainly have resulted. public assemblage.” Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not Two patrolmen who were the first stain the kettle. to arrive at the fire, think it of Munition Vessels Are Held. incendiary origin. They were a dis­ Vera Cruz—The Hamburg-American A report of the interstate commerce tance of only a few blocks away when IS C U R A B LE commission gives 1,699,213 as the total it started. When they reached the steamer Ypiranga was still at her dock number of men and women employed scene the entire building was burning. Monday, the collector of customs hav­ Py wearine n S E E L E Y SPERMATIC SHIELD TRUSS. N o worrying: or dan­ by the steam railways of the United The Califonia building was one of ing refused to accept the bond for the ger of an operation. Rupture is not a tear ItitM . the notable landmarks of the Lewis vessel and the Bavaria because it was or breach, as commonly suppose«!, but is The Ypiranga the stretching. Or dilation, o f a natural It was con­ drawn on Sunday. Wooden pails are being displaced by and Clark exposition. openinr. This SEELEY' SPERMATIC probably will sail for Havana. The structed along mission architectural i steel receptacles, says the American SHIELD appliance closes this oijeping in fines levied by Collector Stickney on I Machinist. For the paint trade alone lines. 1<) days in most cases. If you caiFf come,* one plant turns out every year 4,000,- write for measuring blank and literature. Carrying out the mission idea still the vessels amount to more than 1,- Sold only by 000 steel pails to hold white lead. further, three small belfry towers, 000,000 pesos. Consul Canada was ex­ each containing a chime bell, were , pecting the arrival from the capital of LAU E-DAVIS DRUG CO. No S w im m er . on the front end of the building. As ! the Filipino boy of the battleship Flor­ Third and Yamhill, Portland, Or. ida, having received assurances from Edna—Did she sink in the social the walls fell, the tumbling chimes Huerta that the boy had been released. W ho are Truss Experts and Exclusive tolled as they dropped to the ground. sea? * State Agents for this appliance. Winifred—Yes; she went beyond her depth.—Judge. “ Death March" Ignored. Men Die to Save Girls. Chicago—A “ death march” of boys, Philadelphia — Three young men jumped from a leaking rowboat sink­ organized by Upton Sinclair, who ing in the Delaware river late Sunday marched up and down past the Stand­ and were^drowned. Their four com­ ard Oil Company’s offices here proved panions, rescued by a motorboat after a failure. The boys were pledged to their own craft had capsized, said that silence and on the arm of each was the trio, none o f whom could swim, crepe in memory of the strikers killed took to the water, hoping the lightened in the Colorado mining struggle. Sinclair arrived here Sunday and in boat could reach shore. Raymond Tin- ney was the first to jump. His fiancee. announcing the plan said that “ some­ Sarah German, was one of the girls I thing must be done to keep the Colo­ rescued. The others who jumped with rado situation before the public.” The police ignored the demonstra­ Tinney were John Mouchoch and John tion. Murphy. of all kinds wanted. W rite for our Danish Collier Backs Off and Lets Stricken Steamer Sink. SECOND-HAND MACHINERY BLACK LEG G MADE O TO O ORDER D S U IT Tobacco Habit Easily Conquered RUPTURE Blood Troubles Are Often Hard to Locate Catarrh, for Example May Be the Cause of Very Serious Illness. Four Disasters Greater. A S lig h t T r o u b le O ft e n B r in c e S e r io u s B lo o d A chrenic cold m eans som eth ing w rong c onstitu tio nally. I ’imples m ean had blood. Rheum atism m eans fa u lty elim ination. These and a hundred other sym p tom s are easily recognised, hut where !a the trouble. W h ere is It located ? W h a t la w ron r with the bodily m achine? If you w ill go Into an y first c la ss Store •nd get a bottle o f H. 8. 8. yon are on the w a r to getting rid o f those conditions that cause sickness and disease. Rut don't let anyone work off th at old trick o f Something “ Just as good.” 8. 8 . 8 . is taken into the Mood Just as n atu rally as the m oat nourishing food. It spreads Its influence over every organ In the body, comes through all the veins and arteries, enables all m ucous su rfaces to exchange Inflam m atory acids and other Irrfta tln r substance* fo r arterial elements that effectually clean«? the system and thus put an end to all pollution. 8 . 8 . 8. Gleans out the stom ach o f m ucous accum u­ D is o r d e r * . lations. enables only pure, blood-making m aterials to enter the intestines, com bine! with these food elem ents to «-nter the clr culatlon . and In Je*» than an hour Is at work throughout the body In the pro««‘aa oi purification. You w ill soon realize Its w onderful In­ fluence by the absence o f headache, & stead­ ily Improved condition o f the skin, and a sense of bodily relief that prove* h,,w com ­ pletely the entire system w as loG’ied with Im purities. You w ill And 8 . 8 . 8. on sale at a ll drug stores. It Is a rem arkable remedy for a o 7 and all blood affections, such as eczema, rash, lupus, tetter, psoriasis, bolls, and all other diseased conditions o f the blood. Foi special ad vice on arty blood disease w rits to The S w ift Specific C o., 2 2 3 S w ift B ld g - A tla n ta , fia. I»o n ot trifle with su bstitu tes. Im1ta> tlon s or anv <>f the horde c f "J u s t ai g o o d " C oun terfeits v f S. ¡J, Only four marine disasters in the last century have equaled or exceeded in number of lives lost that of the Empress of Ireland. They are: Loss of Rhone, Wye and other ves­ sels at St. Thomas, in the hurricane of October 29, 1867; 1000 perished. Burning of excusrion boat General Slocum in East river. New York, June 15, 1904; 1031 lost. Sinking o f Titanic, April 14, 1912; loss 1490. Loss o f Kicke Maru, off Japanese coast, September 28, 1912; loss 1000. Ship On High Seas Hunted. Washington, D. C. — Captain Wil­ liam S. Sims, commanding the torpedo flotilla, returning north from Vera Cruz, has been ordered by the Navy department to search for the missing steamer F. J. Luckenbach. The nine destroyers and the tenders Birmingham and Dixie will form in an extended line about 7o miles long as they pro­ ceed northward to search for the miss­ ing ship. Women Disturb Churches. London— A suffragette, evading the officials in St. Paul’s Cathedral, mount­ ed the steps of the lectern at the morn­ ing services Sunday and harrangued the astonished worshippers upon the “ wrongs of women,” despite the ef­ forts of ushers to dislodge her. She was finally carried bodily from the Cathedral. Other suffragettes then began praying for “ martyred women.” They were also ejected. In the Birm­ ingham Cathedral women rose in their seats and shouted, “ In the name of Christ, stop forcible feeding.” Radium Cures One Man. THREE SWEET DISHES h o u sew o rk RECOMM ENDED T o o Many Go at It the W ron g W a y and Consequently Cause III Health and Suffering. TO TH OSE WHO ARE FOND OF BANANAS. Puree Flavored W ith Vanilla Is Excel­ lent— Recipe for Banana Sponge— Good Mixed W ith Other Fruit and Frozen. Peal as many bananas as desired and rub them through a lino sieve Into a basin. Mix with this fruit puree a pint o ” thick cream ilavored with va­ nilla, then pass tho whole once more through the lino sieve. Turn into a freezer and leave till thickened, then beat three-fourths of a pint more of cream till thick, sweetening to taste, and mix with the frozen cream; add­ ing also one wineglassful of wine. Ar­ range the cream, rock-shape, on a fold­ ed napkin or dish and serve. Or you may like banana sponge: Dissolve three-fourths of an ounce of powdered gelatin in a gill of boiling water. Make a boiled custard of on 3 pint of flour, four eggs, oue-half pound of sugar and a pinch of salt. Add the dissolved gelatin. Strain and set aside until cold and beginning to thicken. Stir In two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and eight bananas rubbed through a sieve. Now add a pint of whipped cream and pour into a wet mold, decorated with bananas, cut In rings and set in a cold place to be­ come firm. Banana surprise is also an excellent dessert. Scald a quart of cream with the yellow rind of a lemon and have a pound of sugar. Allow to cool and par­ tially freeze; then add three-quarters of a pint of banana pulp mixed with a sirup mixture of candied fruit, cher­ ries, pineapple, greengage®, etc., and the strained juice of hali a lemon. Now finish the freezing. Have ready chilled, fresh-looking banana skins, in­ jured as little as possible In remov­ ing the pulp. Fill these with the frozen mixture, putting one tablespoonful of the fruit mixture in the center of each. Press the strip of skin burled in equal parts of salt and ice for an hour and a quarter. For the fruit mixture cut the fruit In very small dice and mix with a little thick sirup flavored to taste. When serving tie each banana with a bow of narrow ribbon. Braised Tongue. aid to b e a u t y 1 Housework Is either a very great menace or equally an aid to heaith. beauty and happiness. If the housekeeper approaches her work with strained nerves, a scowl upon her face, and her temper at white heat, or if she approaches It grudg­ ingly, hating it, or resignedly, with a look of the martyr In her eyes and a determination to do It because she must, plainly shown In the straight, hard line of her mouth, then house­ work isn’t going to bring her much benefit beyond cleanliness. If, on the other hand, she takes the same interest in dusting the furniture, wielding the broom and polishing the brasses as she does In learning the steps of the latest taugo or playing a game of tennis, which is every bit as strenuous, she will soon cease to find that housework is drudgery Housework, rightly approached and rightly pursued, brings splendid re­ sults. It Is the best series of physi­ cal culture exercise there is, because, flrst, it has a definite purpose; second­ ly. it helps keep the blood circulating, the muscles pliable and the body and mind working in unison, and, thirdly, it helps to educate. Housework involves brain work. By inducing the mental faculties to direct the movements of the body the mind becomes more alert. In performing each and all the duties of housework she will not allow her body to slouch any more than she would at the dancing lesson. She will take frequent long draughts of fresh air, beside breathing regularly and deeply all the time, and she will on no occasion allow herself to become over- fatigued, for she snatches periods of rest between duties. j SPECIAL $900 RUSSELL OUTFIT! Such a rig for the money has never been offer«l before in the Northv. « .it! The cele­ brated Russell Fngrino ami 8e r»: ? :>r. Ev­ ery Farmer in the North we about thia special offer. W rit* me tort 2 y, personally, for full particulars and des­ cription. I a lso ha ve a copy o f th e nev' 1 9 1 i FRF .F R u ssell Threshing Machine B oo k all -c !y t o m a il y o u ! Drop m e a postal A O U 7 i ’ll sen d Y O U R c o p y by return mail. A. II. AVERILL, Pres'.dent. Wonders of Electricity. Here is one that was told by Con­ gressman Claude Weaver ot Oklaho­ ma the other night, and is reported in the Philadelphia Telegraph. Some time ago a young farmer who had joined the army and gone to the Philippines sent a cablegram to his father. The hay after the arrival of the message the father was speaking about it to a farmer friend. “Great thing is that telegraf, .Tosh,” remarked the father. "Jes' think 0 ’ that message coinin’ all them ihou sand miles!” “ Yes,” was the hearty response of Josh, “an' so thunderin' quick, too." “Thunderin’ quick!” cxelur ,rid the father. “ Well, 1 should say so!'W hen I got that message the mucilage on the envellup wasn’t dry yet.” KEEP‘IN FORM’ Lemon Butter Served at Luncheon Will Please the Guests— Sour Oranges Also Fine. JLSk nitfirif 12559 Old-fashioned lemon butter Is a prime favorite for luncheon. Here Is a good recipe: Wash, dry, then grate the yellow rind from one fine lemon Into a small agate saucepan. To It add half a pint of flue granulated sugar, one fresh egg. a pinch of salt and a dessertspoonful of butter, five tablespoonfuls of cold water and the strained juice of one lemon. Over a slow fire dissolve these In­ gredients, then simmer the mixture until as thick as molasses. Stir con­ stantly. Remove the pan from the fire when the right consistency is attained. Pour into a glass dish or large tum­ bler. It is ready to serve soon as cold, with plain uniced cake, bread or crack­ ers. Sour oranges may be used in exactly the same way with satisfactory re­ sults, but sweet ones will not answei Ekt all. Mexican Dish. Mix and sift two cupfuls of^fiour with two teaspoonfuls of bakflng'pow- der. rub In two tablespoonfuls butter or lard. Make a stiff dough by .adding milk. Roll thin, about twice &&> long as the dough Is wide Brush overfwlth melted butter, spread evenly with chopped apple and add sugar and cin­ namon to taste. Roll like Jelly roll, cut In slices an inch thick and ’lay cat side up on a greased baking pan Bake In a moderate oven about half an hour and serve hot with su*;ar and cream. I THIS ONE AN OLD FAVORITE Wash three pounds fresh tongue, cover with boiling water and cook slowly two hours. Remove from wa­ ter, blanche In cold water and remove skin and roots. Cook one-fourth cup each of diced carrots, turnips and onions In butter five minutes and re­ move them to a deep braising pan. Brown tongue in fat and placo on veg­ etables in pan. If desired adld clove, cinnamon and sweet herbs, salt and pepper, one clove, bit cinnamon, bou­ quet of sweet herbs, one teaepoonful salt, one-fourth teaspoonfnl pepper. Cover tongue one-half way with stock and bake in covered pan two hours. At the last half hour tho juice of a lemon may be added. When tender Jelly Omelet. remove to a hot platter. Thicken Break fresh eggs luto a bowl and stock for gravy and pour’ around beat lightly with a fork. Add salt and tongue on hot dish. hot water and as soon ae blended pour Into a smooth pan in which half of the Delicious Cocoa Cruller aJ butter has heated, but not browned. Beat two eggs and two-thirds cupful Shake the pan as eggs begin to thick­ of sugar till light; then add two ta- en and as soon as partly cooked lay a blespoonfula melted butter aiud one plate over pan and invert It. Place cupful of milk. Sift together three pan back on stove, add tho remaining cupfuls pastry flour, one heaping ta­ butter and slide in the eggs. Place a blespoonful dry cocoa, one-hatf tea­ cover over and cook a few seconds, or spoonful salt, two rounding teaapoon- until a tootplck comes out clean. Now fuls baking powder and one teaspoon-* slide on to hot plate, spread Jelly over ful of cinnamon. Combine the liquid quickly, fold over and sift well with and dry Ingredients and acid flour to powdered sugar. All this must be roll out. Cut In strips and twist slight­ done quickly and served at once. This ly. Fry In hot lard and when cold roll Is a fine breakfast dish served with in powered sugar. They can be cut delicately toasted milk biscuits or hot In rings, but the workod-over trim­ rolls. mings are apt to be tough. Roll and cut all the crullers; then fry In the W h ey Bread. order of cutting. Put a pint of clabbered milk on the stove. When the curds separate strain and boll two quarts of the whey brisk­ Pickle Lime Chowchow. One dozen thin-skinned pickle^llmes ly for ten minutes. Strain again, and soaked for 24 hours In cold water, to the clear whey add two tablespoon­ changing the water two or threcrtlmes. fuls of butter, two tablespoonfuls of Put over the fire In a saucepan o f cold sugar, one of salt, one yeast cake dis­ water and boil till a straw can*, «pene­ solved in warm water, and flour trate easily. Let cool, remove» (seeds enough to make a stiff batter. I-et and put through the food c’fioi'per. stand in a warm place until light. Add Make a sirup of one and one-h.tif »cup­ flour enough to knead into a fairly ful of sugar, one cupful vinegar*and stiff daugh. Put into well-greased one-half cupful water to which has pans, and when doubled In hulk bake been added a little bag of sprioes. in a moderately hot oven until a gold­ Cook 15 minutes. Add the chopped en brown. This will keep fresh and limes and cook about five mirantes. sweet longer than bread made with Excellent with fried or escallopod' oys­ water or milk and water. ters. Apple Roll. ! j Wash one cupful of rice and fry brown In a skillet with one tablespoon- ful of lard (or any fat); cover with hot water or broth and add one pint of tomatoes, two small onions cut fine, one cupful of any kind of meat, either cooked or raw, cut In small pieces, and season rather highly with salt and pepper. Let boll for 20 minutes, then set back on the stove for the rice to dry and swell. A very appetizing cold weather dish. Coffee Cookies. One-half cupful butter (or butter and lard mixed), two cupfuls brown sugar (light brown), one-half cupful T o Horn Napkin*. In hemming napkins put 'the^hem- coffee, one-half teaspoonful Halt, two mer attachment on the macfiltit-v but 1 teaspoonfuls (even) cream tartar, one lo not thread; run the good« through of soda, pastry flour to roll thin. Of the hemmer. turning on cren hem, course the flavor depends on the then hem afterward by hand, foIR'W- strenght and flavor of the coffee. Ing the line of accurate perforatim is. j in hemstitching, draw the threads aa id ! Stuffed Eggs. baste the hem neatly; with the sewing Cut four hard-boiled eggs In halves, machine, regulated to tho stttch <**- remove yolks, mash and add two ta- sired, without thread, stitch close to blospoonfuls of grated cheese, one the edge as In ordinary henxmlngs. teaspoonful vinegar, one-quarter tea­ ■— ------------------------ ! spoonful mustard, salt and pepper to Mexican Codfish. taste; fill in the whites of eggs and Saute a small onion chopped ftneHn f pres* together. three tablespoonfuls of butter, th*en , fcdd two tablespoonfuls of flour, half j T o Remove Old Varnish. Having discovered an excellent a green pepper minced and a cupful of stewed and strained tomato. When method for removing old varnish from the sauce reaches the boiling point i my furniture I pass It on to others half a pound of flake«l codfish that Take three tablespoonfuls of baking has been freshened In cold water amd soda, put In a quart of water and ap­ parboiled. Simmer slowly for hen | ply with a rough cloth.—New York Press. minutes and serve very hot. This rca ly means k e e p ­ ing the digestion gcoJ, the liver active and t! c bowels free from con­ stipation. You arc then ready to “play th e game” to win. For any disturbance in the di­ gestive functions HOSTETTEIUS Stomach Bitters has been proven very helpful. You should try it, but insist on getting HOSTETTER’ S. W h a t He Left. Residing in a little village is a law­ yer, who, according to Ladies’ Home Journal, is famous for drawing wills, In which branch of business he has long enjoyed a monopoly of the coun­ try for miles around. A few months since a wealthy man died. There was much speculation as to the value of the property and the town gossip set about to find out the facts. He hunted lip tho lawyer and after a few preliminary remarks about the deceased he said rather bluntly: ’ I suppose you made Brown’s will?” "1 • “ Then you probably know how much he left. Would you mind telling me?” “ Not at all,” the lawyer answered, as he resumed his writing. “ He left everything he had.” More than one-half of the fuller’s earth produced In the United States comes from Florida. MRS. LYON’S ACHES AND PAINS H a v e AH G o n e S in ce Tak in g L y d ia E . P in k h am ’s V e g ­ e ta b le C o r 'p o u n d . T pitp Hill, P«.—“ Kindly permit me to giv« you my testimonial in favor of Lydia E. Pinkham’n V e g e t a b l e Com­ pound. When I first began taking it 1 was suffering from female troubles for some time and had almost all kinds of aches—pains in low­ er part of back and in sides, and press­ ing down pains. I could not sleep and had no appetite. Since I have taken | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com­ pound the aches and pains aro all gone and I feel like a new woman. I cannot praise yourmedieine too highly. Mrs. A ugustus L yon , Terra Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman’s work has produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the world has ever known. From the r o o t s and herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has provpd more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever com pounded, and today Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is r c o g n i z e I from coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman’s Ills. ' In the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, j Mass., am files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seek­ j ing health — many of them openly state over theirown signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable C o m p o u n d ; and in some cases that it has saved them from surgical operations. Baltimore—It was announced here that radium had effected a complete cure of cancer of the throat, for which A. L. Glass, a railroad official of Cainsville, Fla., came here for treat­ Kid Glove Hint. T o R em ov t Coffee 6tatna. ment two months ago. Last January To make new kid gloves easier to Coffee stains may b»» removed from ! Mr. Class experienced an irritation of the throat which gradually grew ■Up on. and also. In the oase of cnl , tho table linen by rubbing them with worse. After an unsuccessful opera­ ored kid, to prevent them from stain i pure glycerin and rinsing afterward tion the trouble was pronounced to be lng the hand It is best to ponwW the In lukewarm water This is also good i n s i d e of them before putting ton. [ prben cream Is in the roffew. an incurable case of cancer. r. N. ’J. No. 2.’ , ’I«. V y i l k V w ritin g t* advertiser», pleaae m en­ tin a tilla papar.