Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, February 25, 1911, Second Section, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 12

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    .V... i-'
COMM
The "SUNKIST" Special, Moving at Express Train Speed, is Bringing
TWENTY THOUSAND Boxes of Famous "SUNKIST" Oranges
pecial Sale of "SUUEUST" Oranges lili llext Heek
SUNKIST Premiums
I AM?
i V WZJf V f X these o
A rtUr KJnr e-j1 nf "Snnlrlct" riranerPQ
will begin Monday next, continuing till
the close of the week.
These special sales, which are held from
time to time,are proving immenselypopular.
Nearly everybody now knows the excel
lence of Sunkist"oranges and they look for
ward with great interest to thesr announce
ments. If you and your people have never
eaten "Sunkist" oranges, please try them.
Until vou do so, you can not imagine the
delicious taste of fresh picked, tree-
ripened oranges.
Special "Sunkbt" Train
Two giant locomotives, polling
48 refrigerator cars laden with fresh-piclted.tree-ripened
oranges the se
lect crop of 5.1XJ0 groves-will
soon arrive from California.
So carefully have
ranges
Keep the
Dates in
Mind Week
Beginning
Monday, Feb. 27
been picked; so rigidly were they inspected
and graded; so rapidly are they being trans
ported, that the people of thi3 vicinity will '
be able to secure oranges as fresh, sweet
and wholesome as can be bought in Los
Angeles or San Francisco.
Your dealer and all other local dealers
will be supplied with "Sunkist" oranges
from the "Sunkist" Special Train.
"Sunkist" is the Perfect
Orange
"Sunkist" is not a species or variety of
oranges it is a certain grade or quality,
the choicest of each of five thousand Cali
fornia Orange Farmers, who produce CC of
the state's entire crop. They pack all their
per feet oranges under the one name, "Sun
kist," and ship them East by special fatt
freight.
Every "Sunkist" orange is firm, solid
and sound. It is picked by a gloved hand.
No orange that falls to the ground or be
comes bruised or damaged in any other
way, ever bears the "Sunkist" name.
Cheapest You Can Buy
"Sunkist" oranges are not only the finest
flavored, freshest and most healthful of all
oranges, buttheyare actually the least costly
you can buy. Being seedless,
fibreless and thin-skinned, the
percentage of waste is ex
tremely small. The tender,
luscious pulp comprises 98
of the orange.
So it means economy to
buy "Sunkist" oranges.
Buy "Sunkist" by the
box. You can obtain a
worth-while reduction on a
box from your dealer. Because of their
excellent condition "Sunkist" oranges
keep better than other.
Many Ways to Serve Them
Oranges are the most appetizing and nourish
ing foods one can Rerve at breakfast in the sick
room between meals in salads, ices, sherbets
and puddings.
There is no limit to the number of excellent
dishes of which "Sunkist" oranges form the basis.
Doctors Recommend Them
It is very unusual to find a food that people
like and can safely eat as much of as thev please.
Leading physicians say that to counteract the
meats and other heavy foods we eat, one should
eat oranges liberally. It is a universally known
fact that orange juice is an excellent food for the
brain cellsandatonic forrtin-down nerves. io bet
ter laxative than sound, ripe oranges can be found.
There Are "Sunkist" Lemons
w
The better grade of lem-onsarenowpackedin"Sun-kist"
wrappers. By calling
for "Sunkist" lemons, you
avoid the kind that are
t'.iick-skhined, pithyand in
sipid. The "Stiukist" lem
on contains 50 more juice
than any other lemon.
Save Ycur "Sunkist"Wrappers
By saving your "Sunkist" orange and lemon
wrappers you can easiiysecnreaff.il set of genuir.e
Rogers orange spoons, dessert spoons and fruit
knives. The patterns shown are new 1911
styles, designed exclusively for us. They are as
attractive and stylish as money can buy. All are
Rogers quality, standard A-No, 1 plate and are
fully guaranteed by the maker. No advertising
appears on auy of our premiums.
Read on the right the description of these
valuable premium and how to git them.
The California Fruit Growers' Exchange
34 Hark Street, imwvuu, ila. aw.
Rogers Orange
Spoon Free
The picture
shows our new
1911 design,
"Sunkist" Or
ange Spoon, ac
tual size; being
a genuine Rog
ers product and
of the latest
style. This
spoon will be
sent you, charg
es, packing,
etc., prepaid,
on receipt of
12 "Sunkist"
wrappers and
Uc. foreacn
additional
spoon send l
''Sunkist"
wrappers and
12 cents.
Notice!
Valuable Dessert
Spool Free
The picture
showsour new 1911
design, Dessert
Spoon, actual size.
It is of the tame
excellent quality
and beautiful de
sign as the orange
spoon, but being
larger and heavier
is more valuable.
Sent to you on re
ceipt of 24 "Sun
kist" wrappers
and 20c additional.
For each addition
al dessert spoon
.send 21 "Sunkist"
(wrappers and
I 20 cents.
Tku Fruit
Kiife Free
Our 1911
"Sunkisf'Frult
Knife is shown
here, actual sixe.
It is made of
special tem
pered steel heav
ily silver-plated.
Fully guaran
teed by manu
facturers, Wm.
Rogers Sc Son.
Sent to you on
receipt of 24
"Sunkist"
wrappers and
20c. For each
additional knife
send 24 "Sun
kist" wrappers
and 20 cents.
ll!Ki
Oa n'l re
mittances up I
to 2 Ic please VI s i
send one-cent
stamps, on
amounts above 24c, send post office money
order, express money order or bank draft.
Do not send cash. Make your money order
or draft payable to The California Fruit
Growers' Exchange, and address yonr let
ters to The California Fruit Growers' Ex
change, 34 Clark Street, Chicago, 111.
Vou can secure these premiums with San
kist" orange wrappers, "Sunkist" lemon
wrappers, "Red Ball" orange wrappers, or I
Kea Ball lemon wrappers, it you will
make it a point to buy only "Sunkist" and
"Red BaU"oranges and lemons, you will not
only (?et the finest fruits that crow, eco
nomically priced, but you will soon have enough wrappers to secure a
complete set of the beautiful spoons and knives here shown.
UNDER THE SHADE OF THE
CUCUMBER TREE
The Spring season is upon us and
every home receives the seedsman's
catalog. First to arrive is the D. M.
Ferry & Co., Detroit, Mich., with a
pretty cover page design of a maiden
sitting on a bench In the gnrdon.
Have you planned a gar dun? Are
you growing flowers? Will It not
belp cool your brain, steady your
nerves and aid your digestion to
make a garden. In these days of
talk about high cost of living, the
vegetable garden will help out amaz
ingly. "The Hoses of New Castle," by
Holler Bros., New Castle, Ind., will
interest Orcgonlans. This firm make
a specialty of American Beauty
rosea, and the famous Blue Rose,
(Vellchenblau) violet blue. These,
are only starters and their whole
book is full of surprises to rose
lovers. ,'
...
' The Routlcdgo Seed and Floral Co.,
rortland, have an Interesting all
around catalog. They keep every
thing from the latest Geisha dahlias
to canary birds and Scotch Collies to
amuso and protect the baby. When
at Portland, visit their store, at 169
Second street.
Wm. Klllott St Sons, (42 Vesey St.,
New York.) have a large square cat
alog, with plenty of room, for pic
tures and information. They carry
everything from flowers to fertilizers,
the latest Importation and Insecti
cides, Kelway & Sons. Uingport, Kngland,
aave sent us a copy of their "Gar
dens of Delight," a large square
booklet, price, six-pence. It is a sup
plement to their manunt of horticul
ture, and gives one some fine impres
sions of the stately gardens of Old
England. Western Oregon has much
the tame climate as a large part of
England and the flowers to corres
pond. Kelway & Sons make plans
for borders and beds, and furnish
plants to beautify same. They so
licit correspondence on the subject
nd persons having fine ground, will
do well to address them.
The congressional garden seeds
re now scattered far and wide and
if the pople will plant and cultivate
a congressman's salary can easily
be earned back to his dlatrfct
The "Man Under the Cucumber
Tree" has only one disquieting
thought. As he sits in the shade of
the tree that grows pickles, he often
looks up from his hook and at the
serene depths of sky so blue and the
lazy, drifting clouds bo white, and
wonders when the first airship will
go sailing over. What a thrill It will
give him and how he will cry out to
his wife: , "Look Dear!"
m
I often wonder as I sit In my re
treat and watch the robins drink and
an occasional Chinese pheasant come
Into the garden, whether such maga
zines as Outing really protect wild
animals or hasten their extinction.
The Outing for March has alluring
stories of hunting great game. So
long as game wardens and their
work are made part of the political
game the game will go to the dogs.
'
The Columbia Mnngzlne (1 Madi
son Ave., New York,) publishes Car
dinal Gibbon's reply to Thomas A.
Edison's denial of Immortality. It is
natural that Edison, the wkard of
so-called physical sciences, should be
a muterlallHt, hut the cardinal's re
ply Is comprehensive and convincing
to any mind that has not accepted the
dogmas of mutter. 1 also enjoyed
reading the reply of the Eight Rev.
David H. Greer, Protestant Episcopal
Bishop of New York. The Columbian
Magazine should be In every library.
In my abundant leisure I have re
read "The Shogun's Daughter," a
book on Japan "as she was" when
Commodore Perry forced western
civilization upon the- kingdom of the
Mikado, and I ha to recommended It
to the city library. It Is strong,
clean, wholesome and paints an In
delible picture.
That was old Japan. On top of
that I have read and can recommend
"Behind the Screens In Japan," an
English woman's Impressions, by
Kvelyn Adam, published by George P.
Putnam's Sons, Sew York. It can
hardly be said that the book Is fair
to new Japan, bat there Is not dull
page in It. The writer has , broad
sense of humor and the Japanese
must have an equally strong concep
tion of fun to not feel the lash of her
ridicule. She depicts the new Japan
ese civilization as striving to be up-to-date
at th e risk of destroying all
that was quaint and lovable of the
old Japan.
The Oriental International sign
writer armed with three dictionaries
and two grammars will advertise
your bouts "for lent." and asked If
that is correct, will grandly say:
"That Is my suppose." The same Jap
will solemnly tell you: "Germany is
my secondary language."
Learning English from the guides
to conversation, English acquired
while working a hotel elevator, has
Its peculiarities and it Is not Infre
quent to have one of these short-cut
to our foreign tongues address you:
"Sir or lady as the case may be."
A placard Is posted in the 'coaches
of one railroad: "Passengers are
requested not to put arms or legs
out of the windows for fear of injur
ing passers-by." A barber has a
sign out: "Hairs shaved here. Por
polHs, (paupers) need not apply."
The waitress at the hotel bids you
"the honorable morning meal nuguBt
ly condescend to receive." That Is
hot off the bnt from the English
Japan Ollendorf. ,
They bid you an "honorable" good
morning or call out "it is honorably
early."
The Japanese business man calls
his wife the "honorable Interior." A
sign says: "Passengers who have
the "honorable" Instruction to alight,
will do so while the train Is not in
motion.'
"Honorably be kind enough to
bring me a flower," says the Japan
ese coolie when offered his choice
between a -packet of cigarettes or a
chrysanthemum. Is it civilization or
second childhood? At the worst the
W. ,C T. 1. would applaud the Jap
coolie.
Fighting for his emperor against
Russia, Htandlng halt-naked In the
trenches, fed on a handful of rice per
day, a private soldier wrote a friend
an English postal card during the
siege of Port Arthur: "At last we
are victory."
Popular Mechanics Magazine for
March
Facts which, in the mere stating,
are unimpressive, take on life and
color under skillful or original
handling, losing nothing of veracity
because of our pleasure in them
It was the austere garb of mechan
ics and science notch, tor bo majiy
years, kept the masses at a distance.
Few realized, that a wonderful
game of progress was playing, with
human welfare and a higher type of
rivllliatlon as the stakes. Since
the Inception, some years ago, of
Popular Mechanics Magazine, with
Its graphic, concise accounts of In.
ventlons. d'seoverles and develop
ments, and Its unusual and con
vincing Illustrations, Interest in
this game has Increased rapidly,
and now the spectators and partic
ipants are practically Innumerable.
About 1,175,000 of them secure
their Information each month from
this sourc. the circulation of the
magazine for March being 255,000,
and an average of five persons read
ing each copy. The March number
contains 295 articles and 309 Illus
trations, all so live and Interesting
thiiit It is almost Impossible to
choose "features" for mention.
In marine affairs, there are ac
counts of the raising of the
"Maine," now under way, by Col.
Wm. M. Black, who is In charge of
the salvage operations; the outwit
ting of an Arctic winter by a mar
iner who was beached on the Alas,
kan coast, but improvised a steam
shovel and dug his way out; the
launching of the new U. S. battle
ship "Arkansas;" tho raising of a
sunken submarine by the German
rescue ship "Vulcan"; and a de
scription of two remarkable new
motor boats. Contrary to the tend
ency of many publications, H. H.
Windsor comes out In strong editor
ial denouncing muckraking. Ack
nowledging the element of good, he
points out, with startling emphasis,
the evils of catering to a perverted
public taste for sensationalism,, and
tho consequences now being reaped
by publishers who have thus In
dulged. In aeronautics, the most Impor
tant article treats of Ely's flight
froYn shore to the deck of the
"Pennsylvania"; illustrations show
the fall that killed Hoxsey; Mc
Curdy's oversea flight and several
new types of machines. Two pages
of Illustrations show the effects of
the recent 23.ton dynamite explo
sions at Jersey City. Develop
ments In electricity comprise the
multiplex telephone and telegraph
systems; startling experiments, re
sembling magic, with wireless; a
recording target; and other, devices.
One Is inclined to mention the long
er articles; however, a great num
ber of the shorter ones embody
Ideas of equal Interest and Ingenui
ty. The Shop Notes department is re
plete with helpful "klnks" and
Amateur Mechanics Is especially
noteworthy for the variety of de
vices described. The whole, maga
zine Is "written so you can under.
stand It"
rj
IT'S YOVU KIDNEYS.
Don't Mistake the Cans of Your
Trouble. A SaIciii Citisen Shows
' How to Cum Them.
best remedy to use is Doan's Kidney
Pills. It acts on weak or diseased kid
neys. Salem people tell of Its merits.
E. Woods, 22 North 5th St., Sa
lem, Ore., says: "It gives me pleas
ure to recommend Doan's Kidney
Pills. Althougvh I have never used
this remery myself, it hae been taken
by other members of my family for
kidney and bladder trouble with
good results."
For sale by all druggists. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co.,' Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
states.
Remember tWe name Doan's
and take no other.
Try a Journal want ad.
YOU CHOOSE THE CUT
And we'll do the rest. We want
to suggst an idea that may not have
occurred to you. It is that the cheap
huts of choice meats are far better
than the best cuts of poor meat. We
handle the choicest meats we can ob
tain. So even our cheapest cuts are
better than the best of inferior grades
E. C CROSS & SON
Phone 1880
T7
1
La
AND BUILDING MATERIALS
INCLUDING
Lath
Shingles
Lime
Cement
Plaster
Sand
Gravel
Doors
Common Brick
Fire Brick
Face Brick
Fire Clay
Roofing Paper
Building Paper
Sash Cord
Sash Weights
Windows
Mouldings
Sash Pulleys
Cedar Posts
Sewer Pipe Drain Tile
Special Prices offered to prospective Builders at
this time.
We will gladlj give you an estimate on your
requirements.
Inside Mill Wood for immediate delivery
LAND PLASTER
0
XI
'pa
ILs
Many people never suspect their
kUneys. If suffering from a lame,
weak or aching back they think that
It ia only a muscular weakness; when
urinary trouble sets In thy think it
will toon correct Itself. And so It If
w'th all the other symptoms of kid
ney disorders. That it Just where
the danger Ilea. , You most cur
thee troubles or they mxf Is to
dlatHa or Brlgtt't disMuts. Tfct
The Chas. K. Spaulding Logging, Go.
Office Front and Ferry
Phone 1830
ESaQBt