Vm tortile ralleys of Oregon help to
—pty the table* of America. This la
pOSHlUie UlXOUgU uio
magic of the hum
ble tin can.
In one of the can
ning establish
ments, Julia
Schmidt was em
ployed. It was com
plicated work be
cause she did seal
ing and other parts
of the work. It was
strenuous work and
she was not a strong
mien sne lorcea nerseu to wont
> -when she was hardly able to Bit at her
Machine. At times she would hare to
stay at home for she Was so weak she
could hardly walk. For five years she
was in this weakened condition.
She tried various medicines. At last,
* friend of hers spoke of Lydia E.
Pinkbam’s Vegetable. Compound and
•he gave it a trial.
"Everyone says I am a healthier and
stronger girl,” she writes. “I am. rec
ommending tho Vegetable Compound to
all my friends who tell me how they
enffer and l am willing to answer let
ters from women asking about it,”
Julia Schmidt’s address is 652 North
Front St, Salem, Oregon.
Girls who work In factories' know
Just how Miss Schmidt felt. Perhaps
they, too, will find batter health by
taking the Vegetable Compound. ,
—
Baby’s Crying Is
Nature’s Warning
To Careful Mothers
When Baby is fretful and cross. It
<■ nearly always Nature's warning
Shat something Is wrong with the little
Stomach, liver or bowels.^ Dangerous
illness Is often prevented when careful
■■others give Teethlna. without delay.
Teethlna Is a Baby Doctor's prescrip*
Hon—mild, efficient and harmless. It
gently cleanses, regulates and tones the
little stomach, Uver and bowels. It
costa only 80c a package, yet mo&ey
can buy no finer remedy for coUoAcon
.—-f CUpatton, diarrhoea and such Baby Ula
t'l) trur SEND FOR USEFUL
rivcll! Booklet About Babies.
C. J. MOFFETT CO, COLUMBIA, OA.
TEETH INA
Builds Better Babies
.vsff*---i
iKsnsinooanncmtsasstsasssscxsaatsci
A MEDICINE
THAT DOES WHAT
IT SAYS
PERKINS’ NATIONAL HERBS
U you are troubled with any ol the fol
lowing ailments, without the slightest
doubt Perkins’ National Herbs will help you.
Do you suffer from Constipation. Rheu
matism, Stomach Troubles, Headaches, Kid
ney and Liver Complaints. Nervousness, La
CHppe. Malaria or general rundown condi
tion? If you do—we mean what we say—
Perkins' National Herbs is the medicine for
you. It has been sold for 30 years. It is
made of the choicest roots, barks an3 herbs.
T. N. H. is pure, easy to take and will help
/boo* and old. Get well. Try P. N. H.
Tour most reliable druggist carries it, or
write to us and we will mail you a box
Krssh from our laboratories, postage pro- '
paid. Only 91-25 for 200 tablets of this ex
cellent medicine fdod. You will be helped
by Perkins*.
THE NATIONAL HERB CO., INC„
220 B Street S.E.
Washington, D. C.
For over 50
yearsit has been
the household
remedy for all
forms of JP
ft is a Reliable,
General Invig
orating Tonic.
Malaria
Chills
and
Fever
Dengue
HOW HE CURED HER
"I never see.Brown’a wife In knick
ers any more, and my wife says she
never meets her In the barber shop
these days, either. What’s happened?"
“She’s reverted to the feminine
type. Brown Is pretty bull-headed and
he told her If she was going to be a
man she was going to change the
tires, earn the money for the gas and
look after the furnace In winter.”—
Cincinnati Enquirer.
Obeying Orders
“Just think. Bill, if your absent
Wife knew you spent the evening
pi lying poker I”
“That’s all right. Her very last
wi >rds before going were, ’Don’t forget
to feed the kitty’.”
OTHERS AHEAD
Bride (sobbing)—Look how it’s
raining on my wedding day I _
Bridesmaid—Don’t cry, dear—next
time it will probably be bright and
dear.
G*ta It Quicker
“(Sometimes things come to those who
wait, r
But here te^somethinff slicker—
The one wh* goes for what he IT"
Geta It a blamed sight quicker.**
i—■---n|- ■_ ■* .
He Put It Aside
Alice—What happened when your
father told your fiance he ought to
put soraethlrg aside for a rainy day?
Annie—A little later dad missed
his raincoat
Fore-Armed
Jack—So Ruth is going to marry
him, eh? Ton know he’s a tough egg.
Jean—Don’t worry. She knows how
to use an egg beater.
Motion Carried
Senator’s Wife—What is your pleas
ure in regard to the dinner, my dear?
Senator (just returned from session)
—I move that it be laid on the table.
AN OSTRICH'S APPETITE
Monk—Let’s go have a little lunch.
Ostrich—I’m not hungry, I Just at*
a couple of kegs of nails!
Of Course
“Money talks." said some old chap.
(This Joke 1* Just a bare go.)
I guess then, that It says “Olddapf*
When money makes the mar* go.
Bawled Him Oat
“I was down te the butcher's to
day.1’
“What did he have to ssyr
“He gave me an awful roast’*
The Wrong Spot
Asker—What happened to that ralet
of yours? c.
Teller—I feed him for removing a
spot from one of my suits.
Asker—But Isn’t he supposed «e do
that?
Teller—leg, hut this was a 10-spot
—Pathfinder.
(«.... w-t.rn N.-.piW
Are these the choice dishes the doc
tor has aent list
la this the «reat poet whose worts
V ao content usT
This Goldsmith's flue feaeW- who. .
baa written fine hooka? ■
Heaven sends us good meat but
the devil sends cooks.
—David Garrick- ..
80 GOOD
. When serving wild dock, garnish
with slices of orange unpeeled 'and
garnished with sprigs of
parsley, xiie migmij ta-m
fruit adds to the flavor
of the duclt. As a salad
to serve with duck, or
>t««ges are especially
good;-serve with French
dressing.
Orange and Rhubarb
Ice.—Combine one cup
ful of orange Juice with
niree, nnn one-nan cuprum oi cwra
sifted rhubarb. onp tablespoonful of
lemon .inlet*, (lie gritted rind of an or
apge «u.(f one and three quarters cup
fuls of sU'oar. Stir until well dis
solve.-!. then freeze as usual..
AppJ*->£ritters.—Mix and sift to
gether file and -one-third cupfuls of
floor, tw i teaspoonfulsrof baking pow
der, one-fourth tenspoonful of salt,
add one well-beaten- egg and two
thirds of a cupful of milk; mix air to
gether. Cut two medium-sized apples
into eiglt
be, stir into the batter. Drop
by spoon 'uls into hot fat and fry un
til brown
serve wit i meat at dinner.
Swiss
Roll In powdered sugar and
Cheese Savory.—Dip round
slices of tread In melted butter, sprin
kle with salt and pepper and a little
lemon juice. Put one-half pound of
swlss cheese through, the meat grind
er, add one tnblespoonful of chopped
parsley and the same of pimento, two
tablespoonfuls of creamed butter, four
tablespoonfttls of cream with salt aad
pepper to taste. Pipe through a pas
try tube over the bread, sprinkle with
paprika andtjut Into the. oven to heat
hot
Jellied Apples.—Pare, core and slice
one quart of apples. Butter a baking
dish *tmjm
.■with a lays*,
alb the
cupful- of
three hou
M j*
cold water
of a cupful of
fully through the
nse^ Add one-half
cover and hake
ope-half cupful of
rein, one-quarter
water. Mix care
apples, turn into
a mold and when chilled serve with
cream.
Egg Sauce—Beat well two eggs,
separating the yolk* and whites. To
the yolks add one cupful of powdered
sugar, one-fourth cupful of hot milk
and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Fold la
the beaten whites and serve at once.
Ways With Meats.
Some of the following dishes may
be prepared from left-over ’meats;
these are but sugges
tions which may be va
ried to suit the occasion:
Chtli$tew.—Take one
and one-halt pounds of
round steak, one and
one-6alf tablespoonfuls
of better, one . and one
half l tablespoonfuls of
olivo; oil, six tablespoon
fuls jof diopped onion,
four; cloves of garlic.
one and one-half tablespoonfuls of
Worcestershire sauce, three teaspoon
fuls of chili powder, two teaspoonfuls
of salt, three cupfuls of canned toma
toes, one and oncsthalf- tablespoonfuls
of flour. Grind the Steak or cut in
small bits, melt the butter,-add the oil;
In a deep frying pan, add onion," gar
lic and fry until a light brown. While
frying, add the worcwrtershire sauce
and chili powder, stir until well blend
ed. Pour in enough water to Just
cover the bottom of,tbe pan, add the
meat and almost cover, with water.
Cook slowly for fifteen minute^ then
add the tomato and salt Blend the
flonr with a little topato Juice and
add to the stew, thenplace in a fire
proof dish and butte in the oven for
an bonr. Serve with rice or noodles;
Chill Con Carol.—Take a half pound
of lean and fat pork (fireeh). add one
and one-half pounds of round steak;
pnt the meat throngh the meat grinder.
Brown three good-abed, alfcod onions,
add the meat one dried- $>U1 pepper,
two quarts of tomato, salt pepper to
taste, three tableapoonfulg of <hi>i
powder and cook aldwli titrea hours,
then add two cans of kidney beau
and let the whole stand to cook an
other half hour. Serve hot, „
Veal frle.—Cook a piece of veal from
the net* or «ty cheap; cut, nn«( -im
der, with small (dec.
add cream np^MI
rich Wacslt emit
brown.
up children
trouble, cold
Constipation, Colds, Coughs,
One dose and mother’s anxiety is lifted. The sickest
stomach craves the taste of Syrup Pepsin, rrom
infancy to old age the result is certain. Droopy, list
less, feverish children respond as if to magic. Head
ache, stomachache, biliousness, coated tongue, con
stipation—these are the daily perils for whieh a host
of mothers say Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsm Bthesrfe
guard. Sold and recommended by all druggists,
For a free trial botde send aame.and address t>
Fetain Synp Company, MontxceUo, IUinouiy
Proof,
"Bat, young man, do yon think you
can make 'my daughter happy?”
“Do X? I wish you could have seen
her when ' I proposed.”—Pathfinder
'Magazine.
Unrecorded. Retort
“Lord Cassius has a lean and hun
gry look,” remarked Julius Caesar,
“I’ve lost a lot of sleep lately,” ex
plained Cassius, “sitting up to watch
my calories.”
SAY “BAYER ’ASPIRIN”- <ymm
Unlessyou see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are not
getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physi
cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia [Toothache Rheumatism
. Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains-proven directions.
Handy “Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets.
Also bottles of 2d and 100—Druggists,
ig the tfida igark of Boyer Manufacture of Moaoacetleeoidaoter of SoucjUcacfd .
Sounded Great
Dealer—A violin for your wife?
One with a chin rest? .
Jenkins—Yea, and make It a detach
able chin rest, so rite can use It when
■hers not playing the violin.
Good Newt /;%>
“Do yon think Alice likes met*
“Sure; her folks are knocking -ym
all the tQhe.” - i. - ?
Prevention Is the best bridle.
Children Cry i-or
rf.-v.3dko.
*\H pn
f 1 1 I SSI HI