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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1914)
DAILY CAPITAL JOUENAL, 8AXEM, OBEOON, FRIDAY, MAE OH 20, 1911. MISSES and CHILDREN'S KNIT SUMMER VESTS Values now 15c WOMEN'S SUMMER KNIT VESTS 15c Vests now 8c 25c Vests ...14c 30c Vests ....19c WOMEN'S SUMMER KNIT PANTS 30c Pants 25c Pants ...19c ...14c THE SUMMER UNDER WEAR ON SALE IS a broken line and is offered at these ridiculous ly low prices, because they are no part of the regular stock, although they are good in every respect. LINGERIE WAISTS VALUES $1.00 49c $1.75 84c SEE OUR 30c COLORED POPLINS AT 19c YARD A FINE LINE OF WAISTS FOR BOYS ONLY 25c EA SATURDAY Special 10c Percales 7 PerYard Limited 15 yards to a customer. Sale begins at 9 a.m. 7 cents a yard inconsiderably less than the cost of handling TAKE ADVANTAGE This may be the last of the percale sales this season. Recipe Department By BETSY WADE. . I ' r ?y If fin 1 Caramel Custard. 1 cup sugar. 1 pint milk. V-i cup butter. 2 tablespoonfula cam starch. 1 l'j teaspoonfuls Mapleine. Put milk in double boiler and thicken with the corn starch dissolved in a little water. Tut sugar and butter in sauce pan, Btir until sugar is melted, then gradually stir them together and add the Mapleine. Strain U necessary, cool and serve with Mapleine whipped cream E Portland Woman Admits She Sought to Slay Stepchildren and Came Near Killing Many People. SHE HAS NO USE FOB ANY MEMBER OF HUSBAND'S FAMILY Tells How She Placed Poison in Candy and Mailed It to Persons She Wished to Get Away With. she had prepared the poisoned candy and sent it, in the hope of killing hor stopchildren. "I don't like them," she said in a nonchalant sort of way, which no amount of questioning could break down. "I just haven't any use for the whole family. I saved enough of th'i poison for myself to tuke if it killed anv of them." She told how she had taken bichlo ride of mercury tablets and crushed them, She went on to relate that sho had removed the bottoms from choco late creams, put in the powdorod bi who opened it before a crowd of Mr schoolmates. Twelve luscious-looking chocolates were inside. The other boys immediately clamored for a share. Mr. Ball himself laughing ly advi'scd Stanley to "divide up," with them. The youngster, all his suspicion Btirred by the fact that this, box also had the penciled message, "To my Val entine," sturdily refused. He wouldn't tell why, but he wrapped up the box and took it home, Chemist Calloway told the dotectivos, Swennes and Moloney, yosterday that if the boy had divided the candy every Crescent Nut Bread. 2 cups milk. cup sugar. 1 teaspoon Mapleine. 1 rounding teaspoon salt. '2 cups Graham flour. 2 cups flour. 4 teaspoons Crescent baking powder. 1 chopped walnuts. Let the batter stand in bake-pan half an hour, then bake in a moderate oven ue hour. Orescent Health Bread. IVi cups sweet milk. 1 cup flour. 1 2 cups Graham flour. 1 teaspoon salt. ' 1 tablespoon Mapleine syrup. 3 teaspoons Crescent baking powder. Let stand one hour. This makes One loaf of delicious bread. Mapleine Hot Cakes. 2 cups sour milk. 2 teaspoons Crescent baking powder. 1 egg; 1 pinch' salt. ' Flour enough to make thin batter. Vj teaspoon Mapleine. Mix tho Mapleine with tho milk be fore making batter. Have griddle smok ing hot. ful Mapleine. Put in bake-pan in alter nate layers of spoonfuls of dark and i white batter. This will make one small loaf. ' Mapeline Three Layer Oaks. 1 piece butter size of an egg. IVi cups granulated sugar. 1 whole egg and two yolks. 2Vj cups flour. 2 teaspoons Crescent baking powder. 1 cup milk. Vi teaspoon Majleine. Cream mutter and sugar, add well beaten eggs. Put baking powder into flour and add alternately with milk. Add flavoring last. Enke in moderate oven; Use Mapleine filling. Portland, March 20. By tho eonfes sion at police hcad-.uartcrs last night of Mrs. Edith Kdna Hawley, of 5521 Seventieth street South Feast, the my?- lory of nix boxes of poisoned candy, 11 0 said after his analysis that any one hloride of mercury, and then replaced youngster who ate it would have died. tho bottoms of the cieams, ufter which It was in tasting one of the 12 pieces sho packed them carefully in their box- of cundy from this box that the chomist n n.i nmilBrl tlinm nut. : himself was poisoned. He said each Chemist Narrowly Escapes. i piece apparently had three or four tab Sho filled the cai.dy so full of the lets of bichloride of mercury dissolved poison that E. C. Galloway, city ebon- ( in it ist, who analyzed it for the detectives, j had to take a quick antidote yesterday after having merely tasted one of the , chocolates. Ho was nearly overcome, sent through the mails, which came near poisoning a whole neighborhood in tho Mount Scott district, wns cleared up. of the piceeB of candy contained enough poison to have killed sevoral persons. That there were no deaths from her Three of tho boxes of candy had been wholesale distribution of tho poisoned sent to her two little step children, Stall sweets was due to a combination of ley Howley, aged 11, who got two of lucky circumstanfos. the boxes, and Margaret Hawley, u years old. who got one. Other Members Got Candy. Another came by mail to an older step-son, Roy Baxter, of C01 Bidwell avenue. I Still another arrived in yeaterdav morning's mail for Mrs. Alico Bcwlay, of 7006 Fifty-fifth avenuo Southeast, at whose home Mrs. llawley's husband. Kobert H. Hawley, and Stanley Haw ley, have lived since a quarrel three months ago which lcil to the separation of husband and wife The sixth box' of deadly sweets was found on a bureau in Mrs. llawley's home yesterday afternoon, when De tective Swennes and Moloney went there to put her under arrest. It was addressed to little Stanley Hawley, the step-son, who had alread' received two of the poisoned package?. Woman is Nonchalant. Boy Tokos Poison. M P 25-lb box 9 i Mapleine Ribbon Cake, cup sugar. ' 'a cup butter. 2 cups milk. 3Vi cups flour. 1 teaspoon Crescent baking powder. Juice of half a lemon. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Cream buttor and sugar, add brad ually lemon juice and vanilla. Beat five minutes. Stir sifted flour, baking powder and milk into a batter,, add to butter and sugar. Mix well,, and separate in two battere. Flavor one with Maoleine. Bake in layers, fill and cover with white icing. Get a Frantz Premier Electric Suction Cleaner, sold on easy terms: $10 Down-$5 a Month DON'T CLEAN HOUSE TWICE A YEAR Do it every day in a single hour with the Frantz Pre mier. Gets all the dirt out of the house. Cleans wher ever dust gathers. Weighs but nine pounds. Priced for the smallest home. Fully guaranteed. Demonstration ji your own home Free. Sold by Buren & Hamilton, Salem, Or 1 7? ft) Jf J mtr tlm iiiinliiiiMlli HI n" Mapleine Hot Biscuits. 1 quart flour. 2 heaping teaspoons Crescent baking powder. 1 pinch salt. 1 tabl (spoon butter. 1 tablespoon lard. 1 scant teaspoon Mapleine. Sift tho flour, baking powder and salt together, rub in tho butter and lard and use enough swtet milk with the Mapeline added to mako a very sofe dought. Roll gently to about one inch thickness, cut in small biscuits, crowd them togother in pans and bake in a quick oven. Italian Prunes 75c The first package of the candy was , Large, can new , pack litle neck received by Stanley Hawley on St. clams ....15c Valentine's day last February H. j Good seasoning bacon 14c Wrapped in plain brown paper, the Tjest sugar curod hams, lb 20c address was typewritten. On the box I jj0Ht sugar cured pick nick 14c inside was printed crudely with load BcBt sugar cured backs, lb 20c Mapleine Cookies. 1 cup sugar. 1 small cup butter. Yolks of 4 eggs. Vj cup sweot milk. 2 teaspoons Crescent baking powder sifted with a little froul. 1 small teaspoon Crescent Mnploine Mix with enough- flour to make a stiff dough, roll thin and bake in mod erately hot oven. Mapleine Doughnuts, i cup sugar. 1 cup Mapleine syrup. 1 cup thick sour milk. 2 eggs. 2 teaspoons soda (sift in.) 1 cup flour. 1 teaspoon Bait. 1 teaspoon ginger, i... tuuspoon cinnamon. Flour to make a soft dough. ij pencil, "To My Valentine." All unsuspectingly tho ll-veBr o'd. boy bit into one of tho chocolates. Almost instantly ho spat it out and rushed to the kitchen for wnter to rinse bis mouth. "Ugh, but it's bitter!" ho cried. After that his father forbade him to eat any more of the candy, and Mr. and Mrs. Bewlay would not let their .own children eat it. All feared that it I wns poisoned, though none of them sus pected Mrsi Huwloy. j Two days later two more of tho pack ages arrived. One wns addressed to I liov, Stanley, In care of S. F. Hall. Mapleine Marble Cake. 1 cup Bugar. 'j cup butter. Vj cup milk. 2 eggs, well beaten. 1 3-4 cups flour. 2 teaspoons Crescent baking powder. To half tho batter add one teaspoon- Mapleine Luncheon Cake, '.j cup butter. 2 cups sugar, K 4 Cup sweet milk. 3 cups flour, 2 teaspoons Crescent baking powder. :i eggs (whites.) 'i teaspoon Mapleine. Cream butter and sugar thoroughly: Rdd, alternately, milk and flour sifted with baking powder. Fold in beaten egg whites. Add Mapleine, Bnko in nn.vo njiMopnui To Detectives Swennes and Moloney principal of the Arleta school. The last night Mr Hawley confessed that prneipal delivered the box to the lad A $4.25 Electric Iron, Special at . . FOR MONDAY ONLY The famous "General Elec tric." Best made. Everyone new. Everyone perfect. Ev eryone backed by the guaran tee of the largest electrical manufacturers in the world. Price cut to close them out. Only a few left. Phone orders delivered promptly. Geo. Pettingell ELECTRICIAN 135 N. Liberty St. Phone. Main 187 Best streaked heavy bacon, lb 20c Dalles Patent (best flour) $1.30 Perfection - $1.10 3 cans Aster milk 25c 4 pkg. Arm & Hammer soda 25c 1 gal. extra choice peaches . 35c 1 gal. extra choice apples 30c 1 gal. extra choico pears 35c 2 pkgs fresh raisins 15c 1 pkg fresh currants . 10c 3 cans fine tomatoes 25c 3 cans fine corn - 25c 1 can extra fine pineapple 15c 5 cans Clearbrook peaches 50c 2 cans Clearbrook apricots 25p 2 cans Early June peas 2;c 2 cans Libby sauerkraut 25c 2 cans prepared hominy 25c 5 cans Atlantic clams (very best) 50c 3 cans largo, fnt oysters 25c 3 cans pink salmon 25c 2 cans Columbia river red salmon ....25c 1 can nice asparagus 15c Vn R keir nickloi 0c0 .1 lbs dried peaches X Xtim choice dried nrunes " c V, gallon choice syrup 25c No. 10 puro lard 1-40 No. 5 pure lard 75c No. 5 Pnow Cap compound 65o Columbia oats Columbia wheat - 30c 51b box maccaronl 30c 3 pkgs Tost Tosties 21c 2 pkgs Krinlilo Corn Flakes 15c 6 bars Royal White Soap 25c 6 bars Morris Bent 25c l 10 bars Elk Pavon soap '.25i j 100-lT. sack molassas alfalfa meal 11.30 I 100 Tb sack plain alfalfa meal .1 i fitiflc hmn 75 ! Pack shorts 1-1 ) Ttf r.illp.1 nnts. sack R0c Bring this ad with you. R. N. MORRIS, Corner Morris Avenue and Fairground Road. Phone Main 1197. I r 1 1 ' i I personal Mention Attorney Henry T. Turner was in Portland tho past two days attending to legal matters. Several of tho business men of the metropolis reported business conditions as being much improved. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Moorcs have re turned to t loir homo in Portland after visiting Salem for a short tunc. Architect Fred Iegg and wife mo tored over to Silvorton yesterday. Miss Alma Samuels, of Falls City, was a Salem visitor yeutentay. Misses Ruth Young nnd Muriel Sleeves huvo gone to fortland to visit friends for a short, tiiuo. Mayor Booth, of Turner, was in the city for nfew hours yestrday. A. N. Moorcs returned to Salem this afternoon, after transacting business in Portland. Nick Daniels, of Independence, is in the city today. P. W. Bowler, of Astorin, is regis tered at the Bligh. .1. C. McFarlano went to Portland this morning on business. J. 1 Blair, a farmer of Brooks is pending the day in tho city. H. A. Fnnuington, of Portland, is transacting business here today. Attorney Oco. I'. Matthews, of Port land, was in Sulem tins morning on business. A. S. Bean, of Tillamook, is visiting friends and looking after business mat ters here today. Mrs. Leo Me.Cormiek and daughted fur (lovernor West 's re Olive of Quinahy are spending the day to Washington, 1). C, ith friends in tho city. j Dr. T. B. Franklin left for, Port- land this morning, whero he will trans- ' act business for a few clays. Mrs. Thomas liirsen, who with h-r family is spending the suinmei on farm in South Bottom, is spending the day in tho city. After visiting here for s number of weeks with hor sister, Mrs. F. S. Holt, Miss Margaret Solby returned to Min nesota this morning. Mr. and Mrs. lieorge Kemp have ar rived from T.a (Irnnde, anil will make their homo in Salem. Mr. Kemp has been engaged in the furniture business, Frank W. Waters, of Portland, was at the court house today, shaking hands with old friends. Mr. Waters wns for merly a resident of Salem, but now re sides in tho Rose City. t A Significant Addition To , food flavors in "v. i i recent years, is ... I'M f lilW MAPLEINE which imparts a dcliciously dlfforont taste to desserts, dainties, home-made candy and particularly to home-made sugar syrup. Grocers sell it. If yours doesn't, we will supply you. Send 2 cent stamp for "Mapleiue Dainties " recipe book. Crescent Mfg. Co. Seattle, Wash. With the beautiful spring weather our interest in out-door world revives. Tho children at tho library will cele brate it with stories of animals, They will bo glnd to hear that Miss Clarke, whom they heard at tho playground, last year will tell Bomo of the storis. The younger group will listen to "Tar Baby," " Elephant's Child" and "ling gylug." The older ones will begin with tho cut and her cousins: their stories will include "Tho Cut that Walks Bv Ulimsclf," "Upwcepio, tho Shadow." Doors will open at 0:25 and closo for tho stories at 0:35 Saturday morning. ENGLEWOOD WINS. , Englewood defeated Yew Park for the second time this season Thursday evoning by the icore of 21-9. Several errors were mode on each side but Englewood excelled in batting, and base running. The batteries for Tew Park were Fruitt snd Eggleston and for tha Englewood school, Anderson and Swarts Turkeys are innocent birds; almost any woman can stuff them. Special Bargains The grand jury is still grinding away today. County Attorney ltingo stated this illuming that there were no very important cases originating in Salem on blind but that thero wero several boot legging cases from Silverton, All that It cost the state of Oregon nt official visir was the paltry sum of 1(1.50, for the governor today in filing his expense uccoiint with Sec retary of Stnto Olcott contributed the rest, $375, which ho earned in making a speech in New York City, The 1.50 which tho state will huvo to pay, wns expended by tho executive in going from hern to Portland. Tho '175 con tributed covers covers the expenses of tho trip from Portlnnd to Washington, D. C, and to Now York. Bee the new shapes In Easter millin ery lit tho Bon Ton, tomorrow, Satur day. Second floor, Hubbard building. FUR SAIjK A good plastered house; must bo moved at mice, Inquire at 47N North Cottage street, or phono Main 1102. IMiWN' KTAIRS verv close In. -Housekeeping Phono .":!; I . OBITUARY Hi acros river bottom lands, $0000. !I0 acres, 17 ncros prunes, $128 acre. 33 acres improved, $.'1800, snap buy. Largo lot and house, close in, $1)000. 2(1 'i acres bearing fruit, improved, $10,000. 10 acres bearing fruit, improved $3500 17 acres, closo in, improvod, $1000, Several good buys In berry tracts. Hop, prune and stock ranches, right prices. List your bargains and trades with us. We are agents for Canadian Pacific lands, $11 per acre up, 20 years to pay. Close in hotel, 30 rooms, $1500, snnp. Several good business chances and trades. We sell insurance of all kinds. Houses li i id furnished rooms to rent. City lots, all parts of Snlem. ACME Investment Company A. B. Cook, Manager Phone: Office, Main 477. Opposite Court House. 840 State St EMPLOYMENT BUEEATJ IN CONNECTION. A memorial service will be hold for Hila Itnlston. tho little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Unlston, at th United Evangelical church, North Cot tage street, near Center, Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m., conducted by tho pastor, Rev. A. A. Winter. A privato service was held in January at the time of tho little girl death. IIAOEY. At the residence of her son in law, T. C. .luiues, 410 South Cottage street, Sa lem, Or., March 10, 1011, Sarah Ann Hagey, aged 00 years. Sho is survived by two daughters and one sun, Tho funeral was held from tho Terwilliger Cottago parlors toduy at 4 p. m. Rev. II. E. Marshall offi ciated. Tho burial will tuko place at Oregon City on Saturday. Except for lus big ears, u donkey , To buy, sell or exchange real cstnio, get Out of the Rut" Room 11, Bush Bank Bldg., brings the buyor snd seller to gether without commission, Reaching the Richt Person is not so difficult as it used to be before tho Want Ads be came tho great me d.iiin of exchange The Want Ads Are For You!