Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, July 03, 1914, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    TUB 4ATLT CAPI TAX JOURNAL, BALEM, OREGON, ITUDAT. JULY S, 1914.
PAGE JTVB
BOYS WILL HAVE BIG
TIME ON THE FOURTH
The Fourth of July' m ill be celebrated
sit the State Industrial School for boys,
aays Superintendent W. T. Hale. Early
in the morning they will begin having
a big time. There will be regular ath
letie field meet and a baaeball game.
At noon a picnic dinner will be nerved
to the 100 boya and the visiting par
ents. Besides the foot races, sack
races and the good old-time picnic
sports, the boys will have a carnival
feature. To test their sure-shot ability,
they will throw balls at puppet dolls,
and every time they hit the nigger ba
by they will get a stick of candy. In
the evening, fireworks will form the
entertainment. "
- ALBANY CAE NIVAL IS ON.
Albany, Ore., July 3. Albany's four
day carnival and celebration open'e)l
Thursday in full swing. Big crowds
filled the streets last night.
The coronation of Miss Mable Blount
as queen of the carnival and eoddess
of liberty for the celebration will take
place tomorrow. Aside from tlSs fea
ture and the coronation parade the pro
gram for the first tiiree days will con
sist of attractions furnished by a car
nival company. Many special events
are planned for Saturday, the conclud
ing day of the celebration. Streets and
business houses are decorated. -
Mt
The Markets
LOCAL WHOLESALE MARKETS.
flay, timothy $14.00
Clover, per ton .. $8
Oats and retch $11
Wheat, per bushel . U(le
Bran, per ton $27.00
Shorts, per ton . $2J.OO
Oats, per bushel .32c
Chittira bark, per lb
Cheat, per ton ..
4050c j
23e:
Potatoes, per cwt.
Butter and Eggs.
Butterfat, per lb., f.o.b. Salem
Creamery butter, per lo. .
...27 V4e
Eggs ..... - 21c
- Poultry. s
wens, per to .- uv ,
Boosters, per lb. .
Steers,
Steers .-.
Cows, per cwt .
Hogs, fat, per lb............
Stock hogs, per lb .
Ewes, per lb.
Spring lambs, per lb
Veal, according to quality
Felts.
oc
!
,.78c
5(ffi6c
78c
Gk7e
.8c
tic
ll12Mic
8c
Dry, per lb.-
Salted country pelts, each C5c$l
Lamb pelts, each ........ .25c
PORTLAND MASEETS.
'.. Portland, Ore., July 3. Wheat Club
new, 78c; old, 86c,. . -
T-'Oats-No. 1, white feed, $22.S0. "
Hogs Best live, $8.05. ;
Prime steers, $7.70; fancy cows, $6.
Spring lambs, $5.90."
'Butter City creamery, 25c
Eggs Selected, local, extras, 25c.
Hens, 14c; broilers, 18c; geese, lie.
SEATTLE MARKETS.
Seattle, July 3. Eggs,
27c; Orinentals 18c.
fresh ranch
Butter, country creamery cubes 26c;
bricks 27c; city creamery cubes 28c;
bricks 2ic; Oregon subes JUc; bricks
24-
Cheese, limbnrgcr 19c; Wisconsin 18
wuc; &W1BS i w; uregon "(fi'ioc,
Onions, green W&1'c
per doz.:
Sacramento Rocks $1.25(ii$l.uO; Aus
tralian 5c(a6c per pound.
Potatoes, local 14('.tl0; eastern
Washington $17(a$20; new 2c(a212c
per pound.
SAtf FRANCISCO MARKETS.
San Francisco, July 3. ygs. extras
24'.c; firsts 22Vc; selected pullets 21c.
Butter, extras 24 'jc; prime
firsts
23s; firsts 23c
ci, f.iifn.nin fnjv ii..- firf
12c; seco'nds 10c. ' " "'
FOURTH OF JULY
EXCURSION RATES
FROM SALEM FOR THE
Electrical
Graphically portraying the prog- "
ress of Oregon from the dawn of
history to the present day, will be
reproduced Saturday evening, July
4th, in the streets of Portland.
. $2.00 Round Trip
Tickets sold July 3rd and 4th with .
return limit July 6th.
Trains for Portland: 6:30, 8:00, 9:45, 11:20 a. m.
1:50,4:00,4:15,5:50,7:50 p.m.
J. W. RITCHIE, Agent,
Salem, Oregon.
CLATSOP BEACH WEEK-END ROUND TRIPS
SWIPED AFFECTIONS
COST THEM $25,000
The Baywarda Make Their Son Aban
don His Bride and the Jury Says
Mutt Pay for Their Fun.
Los Angeles. July 3. Twentv-five
thousand dollars, the heaviest financial
recompense for alienated affections
ever awarded by a California court, is
; the amount alllowed today . to Mr
Louis A. Hay ward, for whom a jury
found in a suit for (100,000 damages
she brought against Henderson Hay
ward, her father-in-law; Thomas Hay
ward, his son, and Miss Laura Hay
ward,' his daughter.
Mrs. Hayward charged that the
family had turned from her the affec
tions of Lester Uayward, a son and
brother, whom she married a year ago
in Virginia. Her suit alleged that,
when she came here with her husband
on her honeymoon, his family caused
him to pack his bags and leave for
parts unknown to her.
They ilaywards, who are wealthv,
will appeal tho case.
V
Over athousand feet of hose was laid
at the fire Wednesday morning. It has
taken the fire boys tho balance of this
week to clain up Hie engines and get
the dirt nnrl nnhea frnm tho hnaa T.ini-a
was enough hose left to lay another
line if it had been needed.
CO-OPERATION AMONG
NORTHWEST FRUITGROWERS
Spokane, Wash., July 3. The Sev
enth National Apple Show in Spokane,
November 10-21, promises to bring
forth another great o-opcrative organ-
I iiiation in the interet of the producers
' the ' Pacific NortKwest.
On September 10 at Portland to the
fruit and vegetable growers of Oregon,
Washington, Idaho and Montana will
be submitted plans for a co-operative
organization for the handling -of their
by-products. The by-products commit
tee appointed by the Sixth National
Auule Show held a two dnvs' confer-
jence here during the past week and
decided upon a tentative form of or
ganization of the industry. A centra
selling agency to facilitate the market
ing of manufactured by-products, pat
terned after the North Pacific Fruit
Distributors, was decided upon and the
plan will be presented to the growers
at the September meeting.
It was work of this character that
brought into existence tho Distributors
which recently issued its first annual
report, showing a remarkable success.
The by-products industry will be
launched with the experience gained by
the Distributors as an initial asset.
The reports miftle at tkeTCcent meet
ing show astounding conditions in the
by-products industry. The Facific
Northwest is growing fruit, sending it
elsewhere to be canned, and then is
buying the canned product in large
quantities. Figures from each state
will be submitted at the Portland niect-
Those in attendance at the past
week's meeting were: H. C. Sampson,
Spokane, chairman; J. F. Batchelder,
Hood River, secretary:
P. H. Wev-
rauch, Walla Walla; D. D. Olds, We
atchee; W. S. Brq,wn, Corvallis, Ore.;
!C. J. Davies, North Yakima; H. M.
,Si0lln yior(,,in(.e Mont., an Robert E.
Btrnhorn, Portland.
What is regarded as the record north
western revenue for one acre of cher-
ries is reported by Wilmer Bieg, sales
manager of the
North Pacific Fruit
Distributors, at Hood River. Royal
Anne cherries was the Variety and net
ted the owner of the orchard $1300 this
seasog.
The acre was part of the orchard of
J. E. Nunnemaker, a Hood River grow-
' r" mnrlreted his friut through the
! North Pacific Fruit Distributors, and
alter an marketing ana suo-centrai ex-
Ipenscs hnd been paid he recived $1300.
Pageant
X Iowa I
jVOMEN WHO ARE
ALWAYS TIRED
My Find Help in ThU
Letter.
.
Swan Crook, Micn.-"1 cannot speaK
too highly of your medicine. When
throngb neglect or
overwork I get ran
down and my appe
tite is 'poor and I
have that weak, lan
guid, alwayi tired
feeling, I get a bot
tle of Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound, and it
builds me up, gives
me strength, and re
stores me to perfect
health again. It li truly a great bless
ing to women, and I cannot speak too
highly of it. I take pleasure in recom
mending it to others." Mrs. Annib
Cameron, R.F.D., No. 1, Swan Creek,
Michigan.
Another Sufferer Relieved.
Hebron, Me. "Before taking your
remedies I was all run down, discour-
aged and had female weakness. I took
Lydia E. Pinkhsmi's Vegetable Com
pound and used the Sanative Wash, and
find today that i am an entirely new
woman, ready and willing to do my
housework now, where before taking
your medicine it was a dread. I try to
impress upon the minds of all ailing
women I meet the benefits they can
derive from your medicines." Mrs.
Charles Rows, R. F. D., No. 1,
Hebron, Maine.
If you want special advice
write to Lydia E. Plnkham Med
icine Co (confidential) Lynn,
Mass. Your letter wil be opened.
read and anirwered by a woman
and held In Strict confidence.
i; late Yesterday ;i
Paris. The French war office gave
Elmer Sperry, American, a $50,000 prize
for an aeroplane stabilizer.
Paris. Edmund Thery, the economist,
said French investors have lost $111,
200,000 in the past half year.
New York. Associated Secretary
Guy Phillips of the Missouri Pacific
railway despondent, shot and killed
himself in his office.
Oakland, Cal.r-C'eeilia Piatt, tele
phone operator, 18 years old, sued
Walter Reynolds, 23, a rich broker's
son, for $o0W charging breach of
promise. i .
. Kalgan, China. Government soldiers
beheaded in one batch. -150 captured
bandits who recently helped to loot
Kalgan. ,
San Francisco. Dr. George A. Siof
ert, a rich retired physician of San Jose,
was found dead of heart disease in his
room at the Palace Hotel.
Topeta, Kas. The state public utili
ties commission cut merchandise ex
press rates 17 per cent and abolished
two-line and special rates.
San Francisco. Two masked, armed
men held up the Pioneer aloon, emptied
the cash register and started to rob a
dozen customers, when something
frightened them and they fled.
BOYS ABE ACCUSED
OF SEVEN BOBBERIES
Pasadena, C'al., July 3. Accused of
seven robberies, Elwyn Sharon, a 17
years old ami Albert Mauzy, aged Jo,
were nem iimuy iur irmi iu e
court. Police officers say the boys
have stolen innumerable article to use
in fitting up a house in a tree at the
home of one of the boys. Rugs, furnt -
tore, revolvers, curios and a large col-
lecnuu im uuict t' s
in the "crows nes. The boys con -
fessed 111 police court today.
MANY RECOVERIES
PBOM LUNG TROUBLE
A medicine for Throat and Lung
Troubles which has been thoroughly
tested for many years, and which has
been instrumental in restoring com
plete heahn to a largs number of suf
ferers, should be thoroughly investigat
ed by everyone. While no undue
claims ore made for it, nor any guar
antee that its use will restore health,
Eckman's Alterative has been given
the full credit in.saving lives in many
cases. Read this case:
Wilmington, Del.
"Gentlemen: In January, 1908, I
was taken with hemorrhages of the
lungs. My physician, one of the lead
ing practitioners of Wilmington, Del.,
said that it was lung trouble. I took
eggs and milk in quantities, but I got
very weak. Mr. C. A. Lippincott, of
Lippincott Co. Department Store, 306
to 3-4 Msrket street, Wilmington, Del,
recommended to me Eckman's Alter
ative, that hull done great good, and
upon 'his suggestion I began taking it
. ! -r??. i ., i.. ,uno
I continued faithfully, using no other
remedy, and finally noticed the clear-
ing of he lungs. I now have no trou-
Me with my lungs. I firmly believe
r.CK.uuu Aiiviuuta suieu uiy me.
(Affidavit) JAS. fcvel'IRES.
(Above abbreviated; more on re-
quV ... , v I WAS OUT OP HER CLASS
Kckman's Alterative has been proven j 0N wrNDOW-WASHINCr JOB
by many years' test to be most effica-1
cious for severe Throat and Lung Af- j San Francisco, July 3. A fall of less
fections. Bronchitis, Bronchial Asthma, I tnan 20 feet resulted today in the
Stubborn Colds and in upbuilding the I ,i.ath of Mrs. Anna Borrmsnn, San
system. Contains no narcotics, poi- j Francisco's largest woman. Mrs. Borr
sons or habit-forming drugs. Ask for maun, a native of California, weighed
booklet, telling of recoveries, and write about 409 poun ls. ; While washing the
to .ckmaii Laboratory, Philadelphia, ; windows of the second story of her
I'n.,
for evidence. For sale by all
leading druggists.
THE GRAFT SCANDALS !
STILL SHAKE JAPAN
InMatlffatian Bhawa YTlffhw-TTn in All
Branches of the Government Art Im
plicated In Thefts. .
Yokohama, July 3. Discovery that
the government's naval steel foundry
management 'was involved in the graft
scandal affecting the Japanese marine
department threatened fresh trouble
tbrooghout the country today.
At the outset it was supposed only a
few officers responsible for buying
electrical appliances had oeen corrupt
ed. As the investigation broadened,
the names of more and more, including
a number of admirals, were, dragged in.
Incensed to find that the enormous
taxes squeezed out of them for naval
purposes were, to a considerable extent,
being pockoted by dishonest officials,
the masses of Japanese have repeated
ly shown alarming sigus of their dis
satisfaction with c government which
nas permitted them te be so groesly
swindled. -
With each succeeding revolution there
demonstrations of popular diseottcnt
have been more emphatic. The upris
ing of a number of weeks ago, t,hen
the parliament houses were stormed,
several lawmakers were mobbed,
crowds rioted in tho streets and the
Yamamoto ministry was finally driven
from office, though immediately due to
the general objection to still higher
tsxes for naval purposes, certainly nev
er would have occurred but for tho
graft scandal.
Worried by these outbreaks, the gov
ernment has been doing its latest inves
tigating as" secretly as possible and try
ing to suppress news of its discoveries.
The belief is widespread, however, that
enormous peculations have been discov
ered. That the steel foundry management
has been found to have shared in tho
loot probably would never havo been
known to the public but for the at
tempt made at suicide by Vice Admir
al Baron Masuji Yamanouchl, who was
closely identified with it.
Don't Stay Gray Nobody Can Tell
When You Darken1 Gray, Faded Hair
With Sage Tea and dulphur.
Grandmother kept her hair beauti
fully darkened, glossy and abundant
with a brew of cage Tea and sulpnur.
Whenever her hair fell out or took on
that dull, faded or streaked appearance,
this tumple mixture was applied with
wonderful effect. .By asking at any
drug store for "Wyeth's Snge and Sul
phur Hair kemedy " you will get a
large bottle of this- old-time recipe,
ready to use, for about SO eents. This
simple mixture can, be depended upon
to restore natural 6er and beauty to
the hair and is splendid for dandruff,
dry, itchy scalp and falling hair..
A well-known dwntown druggist
says everybody uses Wyeth 's Sage and
Sulphur, beesuse it darkens so natur
ally and evenly that nobody can tell It
has been applied it's so easy to use,
too. You simply dampen a sponge
or soft brush and draw it through your
hair, taking one strand at a time. By
morning the gray hair disappears; after
another application or two, it is re
stored to its natural color and looks
glossy, soft and abundant.
AGED WOMAN TRIES
TO BEAT A LAWYER
Miss Mary Shuff, Aged 65, Robbed by
Land Sharks ..at ..Los Angeles, At
tempts Blackmail.
Log Angeles, July 3. A pitiful ef-
0rt of Miss Mary Hbuff, aged 05, a
Sj,infter, to raise money, betrayed her
into tne ,,,, of the pok,C( who have
ncr in rmtoAy to(ayj pending a further
1 investigation of an attempt to extort
j mQ from M- M jeyer9) an attorney
to which they say she has confessed,
1 A,,col.,,in(? to the 9tory the poli(.0 (av
n. Shuff toll, .lie staverl awav from
prayer meeting last Wednesday night
for the first time in a quarter of a
century to complete her plan. Finally,
tney say, she wrote an anonymous note
to Meyers threatening to burn his
house unless he left $300 in a can in
an alley behind their homes.
Meyers went to the police and a trap
was laid. When Miss fhiiff went for
the money, the officers say, she found
five men waiting with sawed off shot
guns. She fled into her home, where
the officers found her kneeling in pray
er. Satan, she told them has porsessed
her, and forced her to act as she did.
Miss Shuff was robbed of her fortune
by land sharks, her friends say and is
almost penniless. Meyers was not ex
pected to prosecute her.
SELLERS DEMAND
TEN DOLLARS
'OB DEATH'
Pasadena, Ca!., July 3. A red hand
letter and a black hand letter provided
Chief of Police Melntyre with diver
sion todav. The red hand, letter de
manded .(500 of John Holloway, a
! merchant, under penalty of death. The
! sender of the black hand letter was
?r ""ft; "hZ. ULtl
Kln."k- .I5o,h. .wr8 . 'ThJv
'', "' ,PLbcl
j ornain(,n(c,i with
boys. One was
the conventional
black hand", the other with a large
hand drawn in red pencil.
J home, she lost her balance, fell to the
sidewalk and died in a few minutes.
HAVE DM Hi
AND LOOK YOUNG
Recipe Department
By BETSY
'"'vwri
V
Tapioca Pudding 1 cup tapioca; 1
egg yolks; 1 small piece butter; 2 ta
P'POn granuiatea sugar; l cup milk;
1 teaspoon -uapieine.
Have the tapioca soaked in wntor or
milk and cook till bluish in color, then
add the milk, eggs, sugar and Maplcine.
Mapleine Frango. 3 eggs; 1 cup Ma
plcine syrup made by dissolving .j cup
of sugar in sufficient hot water to fill
up the cup and adding 1 teaspoon of
Mapleine.
Put the syrup in the top of a doulilo
boiler, let simmer two minutes, then stir
in ths eggs (well beaten). Cook until
iTj
l
IS
mixture thickens, stirring constantly ; ! blospoiHi cornstarch; lVj cups gritiitilnt
cool. When cool, fold in one and one-led sitgni ; 1 pinch salt; !j teaspoon Ma-
nan pints or wnipped cream, rack in;
ice and suit (same as ice cream is
packed) and let stand three hours be
fore serving.
Mapleine Jelly Vj box gelatine, 1
scant cup cold water; 1 pint boiling
water; 1 cup sugar; 1 teaspoon Maplo-
ine.
Soak the gelatine in the cold water
until soft, then add the boiling water,
sugar and Mapleine. Do not let tho
mixture boil. When well dissolved
strain through a flannel bag.
Mapleine Pumpkin Pie. 4 eggs; 1
cup granulated sugar; 1 cup milk; 1
teaspoon butter; 1 teaspoon cornstarch;
1 pinch salt; 1 pint stewed and strain-
HOUSEHOLD RECIPES
FOR JOURNAL READERS
TRIED BECIPES.
Pork Cutlets.
Cut them about half an inch thick
from a delicate loin of pork, trim into
neat form, take off part of the fat or
the whole of it, when it is not liked;
dredge a little pepper or cayenne upon
them and broil or fry over a clear and
moderate fire from 15 to 18 minutes.
Sprinkle a little fine salt upon thorn
just before they are dished. They may
be tipped into egg and then into bread
crumbs mixed with minced sage, then
finished in the usual way. When fried,
flour them well and season with salt
and pepper. Serve with gravy made in
pah.
Vnerry mimpnngs.
Into a pint of prepared flour chop a
heaping tnblespoonful of buttor, stir in!
a cupful of milk and work into a dough.
Roll into a sheet and cut into squares
about four inches across. In the center
of each sqare put a great spoonful of sometimes very painful, this ts really
stoned and sugared cherries, pinch t'.ie ono of the most simple ailments to over
four corners of the pastry together in' come. Oct about four ounces of Jnd
the middle over the cherries and lay the
dumplings, joined sides down, in a flour -
ed baking pan. Hake and cat hot with
hard sauce.
Cherry Ice
Stem and stone a quart of cherries
cVush and cover them with two cnpfuls
of sugar. At the end of an hour squeeze
tho cherries through a vegetable press
and extract all the juice. To this add
the juice of a lemon, a pint of water
and the unbeaten whites of thrco eggs.
Turn all into a freezer and grind until
you have a firm, light ice. Pack the
freezer in ice and salt for an hour after
the dasher is removed.
uneny rnucrs.
Two cups of scalded milk, one quarter
cup of cornstarch, one qunrter cup of,
flour, one half' cup of cold wattr, yolks!
of three eggs, one-half cup of cherries I
cut in halves. Mix the cornstarch, flour, i
sugar and the salt. Dilute with cold
milk and add the beaten yolks; then
add gradually to the scuMed milk ami1
cook 15 minutes in a double boiler. Add
the cherries, pour into a buttered shal-1
low tin and cool. Turn on a boardcut :
in squares, dip in flour, egg and crumbs,
fry in deep hot fat and drain. Serve
with sauce. Janesville Gazette.
Cherry Conserve.
Cherry conserve is delicious:
Add to
two quarts of fresh cherries the juice j
and thin yellow rind of four oranges ;
and four pounds of sugar, and cook to-1
gether until thick and tender; just bo
fore removing from the fire add one
half pound English walnut meats. Can- j
ned cherries may be used for this rocipe. 1
in this case use one quart of chorrics. j
Xew Haven Journal-Courier.
A POLITICIAN QUITS.
Seattle, Wash.. Julv 3. Former State j
Senator Cyrus F. Clapp, prosidou'; of j
the Cyrus . Clapp Investment com- I
piny and for 40 years a residont of the j
state of Washington, died at 9 o'clock :
last night, following a seizure upon n
Mount Baker park car. j
Clapp, who was 113 years of age, had
been suffering for five years from j
acute indigestion and rheumatic gout.
He was taken ill in a Mount Baker car,
while on a pleasure trip.
H. W. LEACH TRIES TO QUIT.
Portland, July 3. Suffering from
cuts on the wrists and slashes on the
throat, self inflicted with a safety
razor blade. 11. W. Leach, a Los
Angeles business man is in the Good
Samaritan hospital today with a chance
of recovery.
Leach was in Portland being treated
for nervous prostration.
WADE,
r
ed numnkin: 1 teaspoon Dinner: nutmec
or cinnamon if desired; 'j teaspoon ii
Mapleine.
I'se regular pie crust and bake in
moderate oven. Enough for two pies.
Mapleine Pie. 1 egg yolks; 1 cup1
granulated sugar; 3 4 cup butler; 3 ,
heaping teaspoons cornstarch; 1 tea
spoon ginger; 1 cup Mapleine syrup. ;
Make regular pie crust and bake in a
quick oven. Use tho whites of the eggs
for meringue. Enough for two pies.
Caramel Ice
Cream 1 quart fresh
cream; 1 egg;
cups sweet milk; 1 ta-
picnic.
Put Mipur in saucepan, stir constantly
until melted, and of light brown color,
scald milk and thicken with cornstarch,
ndd th salt and the egg slightly beat
en, stiiring gradually. Cook over hot
water fifteen minutes and strain, it
necMury. When cool add cream and
Mapleine and freeze.
isrr ii sb. n m
Maplolno Parfait 1 cup sugar; 4 j Sift together thoroughly flour, suit,
eggs; cup hot water; 1 pint thick sugar aud baking powder, rub in the po
eiei.111; I .j teaspoons Mapleine. tato, add sufficient water to mix
Put sugar and water in top of a smoothly and rapidly into a stiff dough,
double moiler, let simmer two minutes, Fill greased pan half full. Let stand
then stir in eges, which have been beat-1 fifteen to twenty-five minutes, bake
en, co.ik until the mixturo thickens, i forty-five minutes, placing paper over'
stirring constantly, cool. When cold top first fifteen minutes to prevent,
add tlic cream, beaten stiff, and Maple-1 crusting too soon.
IFK
Take a glass of Salts to Flush out Your
Kidneys and Neutralize Irri
tating Acids.
Kidney and Bladder weakness result
from uric acid, says a noted authority.
Tho kidneys filter this acid from tho
blood aiid puss it on to the bladder,
whore it often remains to irritate and
inflame causing a burning, scalding
sensation, or settinif ho an irritation at
the I'H'k of the bladder, obliging you
to seek relief two or three times during
the night. Tho sufferer is in constant
dread, the water pusses sometimes with
i a scnliling scnsatio and is very pro-
I fuse; again, thcr is difficulty in
avoiding it.
Bladder weakness, most folks csll it,
because they can't control urination.
While it is extremely annoying and
""" your pharmacist and take a
1 tublespoonful in u glass of water before,
brenkfast, continue this for two or
i three dnyB. This will neutralize the
l nc.iri m the urinn so it no longer is a
! sourco of irritation to the bladder mid
urinary organs
which then act norm-
ally iigsun.
Jail Salts is inexpensive, harmless,
and is mailt! from tho acid of grapes
nnd lemon juice, combined with lithiii,
and is used by thousands of folks who
are subject to urinary disorders caused
by uric, acid irritation. Jnd Suits is
splendid for kidneys and causes no bnd
effects whatever.
Here you huvo a plensnnt, efferves
cent lithia-wutcr drink, which quickly
relieves hlttdder troulile.
The Glorious Fourth
will bo cclcbrutcd in various
towns ill Oregon, and the
fVJf sunset Xa1!
I (OOOtNiSHASTAl I
The Exposition Lino 1915
Low Round Trip Fares
betweea '
Salem and Portland S2.00
Salem and Eugene S2.80
Salem and Junction City $2.30
Salem and Silverton (via Pratum) . .60
' with corresponding low fares' between all other points
(where the one-way fare does not exceed 0.00) will cnnblo
everyone to spend the Fourth where desired. Tickets on
sule July 3rd and 4th good for return until July 6th.
Special Train From Silverton
On tho evening of July 4th a special train will leave Silver
i ton, stopping at all intermediate points ns follows:
Leave Silverton 7:15 P- m.
Pratum 7:35 p. a.
Arrive Salem 8:15 p. si.
Call -on nearest S. T. Agent for full particulars as to fares,
train service, etc.
JOHNM. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent,
Portland, Oregon
inc mold. Pack in ice and salt, as
; ire cream is packed, and l't stand thru
it i
nours pciure serving.
Mapleine Blanc Mange 1 quurt sweet
milk; 4 heaping tcaspoous cornMnreli;
a cup granulated sugar; 3 rggs (beat
en whites); 'i teaspoon Maplrine.
Heat one pint of the milk; in the
other dissolve the cornstarch, suf;ar rih!
Government Tests
Recent govern
ment tests of
baking powders
disclose the fact
that Aluminum
Compounds as
used in
BAKING
POWDERS
ALL GROCERS
aro more wholesome than Cream of
Tartar or Tartaric Acid used in the
old-time Trust powders.
Write us for copy of U. S. Bu'lotin
No. 103 Dept. of Agriculture.
Always one price, 2oc pound
CRESCENT MFO. CO, Seattle, Wn.
Mapleine. Mix, stir well, take from
firo and add the egg whites.
Baking Powder Broad 1 quart flour;
n, teaspoon suesr; 1 teaspoon salt; 2
teaspoons (heaping) Crescent baking
: powdor; Vj medium sized cold boilod
potato and water; ',i cup brokou nnt'i.
There's No Corn That
. GETS-IT Won't Get
No Mora Fussing, Plasters, Balves and
Corn Pains. Try the New Way.
"Just look at the way that corn
comes off!" That's what you'll soy
when you try wonderful "GETS-PI" ' on
that corn you 've tried so long to pry of
McUm. For Those Corn That Mk Yo Jjmy
VttlOl IWJWWi '9 - - - - - -
of your toe. It's easy to ' apply
"GET8-1T" one, two, three, and it's
donel The corn begins to shrivel, away
sho goes, surely, absolutely. A fe
drops will do it. "OETS1T" never
makes toes red and raw. Corn pain
gol It means the end of cutting ancj
gouging of corns, the end of sticky
plasters that don't work anyhow, th
irtd of salves that eat tip your toes, no
more "harness" or fussing. Try
"GETS IT," the new, sure way, for
corns and cnllonses.
"OETS-1T" is sold by all drugpistn,
2.1c a bottle, or sent direct by E. Law
rence & Co., Chicago.