The evening news. (Roseburg, Douglas County, Or.) 1909-1920, October 10, 1915, Page 4, Image 4

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    ! I
'1 HE EVENING NEWS
Wil.JU.S' J. HIIOrC.MAKlOll
CAUL I). SIIOKMAKKK
SAM J. HIIOlCMAKICIt
Kdlfors anil Publishers.
ISSCiCIl DAILY KXCHI'T SUNDAY
Per year, by mall. . . $3.0
Per month, delivered ,60
Hcinl-Wockly.
Per year . . . '. $2.00
Hlx mnntha 1.00
Entered an pecond-class matter
November 6, 1009, at Roseburg, Ore.
under act of March 3. 1879.
MONDAY, JA.NTAHV JO, 101(1,
In Confidence
I would not speak In bitter tone.
But Brown la such a stupid pup!
Ills collar-button's made of bone.
And so Is be, from that place up.
BY WILLIAM BRADY, M.D
l&in I Health Talks I &toons Of TheDay
Flmiigln I-'ilosofy
Ivery year we live knocks another
prop fr'm under something we was
mighty Bure av whin wo were twinty
or less.
TH
wi
a
Sanitation Of The Swimming Pool
('LID
Ho Had
"What has become of that pirate
who ran that bum restaurant In your
town?"
"He's pulled up his steaks and
gone."
COMMIilcri.il
In view of the fact that tho Roan
burg Commercial Club will hold Its
annual meeting tomorrow night, and
the furthor fact that It will he
most important one, tho following
article from a well known lecturer
on the subject would seam timely
The News belluvos there will be big
things doing In Hosehurg and Doug
las county this year, It believes that
a strong, well orgnnlzod and equip
ped Commercial Club will he of vast
help in this movement,1 and it also
bolievcB there are some suggestions
in this article which might be he
adopted with honeflt.
"It is difficult to keep a Com
mercial Club alive in a town of from
one ,to five thousand .Inhabitants.
After the organization, or reorgani
zation, there Is usunlly hold a moot
ing or two, a luncheon or small ban
quot given, and thon the club begins
to die a slow and lingering death'.
"The common cause of the pass-j
Ing of the small-town Commercial
Modernity
"Mother," asked the flve-ycar-old
girl anxiously, "do you suppose that,
since we have our six, I'd better go
rigm on piay:ng with the children
of those four-cylinder Joneses?"
In Days Of SuirrngiMn
Time, 1925.
"I Bee Molly Brlckley Is being
groomed for the presidency."
"My dear! What out-of-date ex
pressions you use! You mean sho is
being brided for the presidency."
Not The Only .
The two foolish persons, from tho
North and the South respectively,
were trying to open an old sore.
They had readied the stnge where
the southern man asked;,
"What about the first battle of
Hull nun?"
"Well, there was some bully run
ning done after that, also."
When a woman under forty Isn't
thinking "Whnt'll I wear?" she Is
thinking "What does he think of
aio?"
HE1 OnlV hmnil nf lin,1aitiiial.
wo can truly term hygienic is
a Clean. heallliv alrln Th ....ti
ne swimming pool, the swimming
school, the public bath and the old
swimming hole In swimming season
are all hygienic factors. Yet, like
the common drinking cup, the com
mon bath Is open to disease germs
every day In the year, and hence a
possible source of Infection.
Typhoid fever has certainly been
transmitted from carrier to victim'
in the swimming pool, no matter
whether the pool be owned by club
school, city, private individual,
steamship or religious organization.
The water oi the pool should be ex
amined at -'efiniu Intervals fo. colon
bacilli Just In the control of a
source of drinking water.
numors snouia be required to fur
nish a certificate from their physi
cian, stating that they are free from
contagious disease. Furthermore,
although it Bcems a paradox, bathers
should be compelled to bathe before
entering the pool, for the same rea
son that a cook should wash her
hands before she hulls tho straw-
berries.
Frequent refilling and dilution of
the water in the tank will tend to
keep it pure. Retlltratlon of the
water Is economical and efficient
when combined with chemical disin
fection of the water.
Venereal disease may be trans
mitted through the swimming pool.
Conjunctivitis and car Inflammation
may likewise be acquired from the
infected water.
The larger the pool the more sani
tary It will be. The smaller the
number of person- using it the more
sanitary tho pool.
The most efficacious chemical dis
infectant for the water of the swim
ming pool is calcium bypochlorlde,
In Morrlo New England
Young Man Fine morning.
Old Man (Silence).
Y. M. I Bay It's a fine morning.
O. M. (Ditto.)
Y. M. I say, sir, It's a fine morn
ing! O. M. Well, be ye wnntl'n' t' git
Inta a argument about It?
added In sufficient quantity to make
a proportion of one part of chloride
to one million of water and added
to the water often enough to keep
the proportion at that ratio.
QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS
The Common Cigar Cutter
What complaints have been made
against the common cigar cutter at
u transmitter of dlseascf
Answer The samo complaint aa
has been made against the common
drinking cup and the still more com
mon towel. A good many men mois
ten a cigar first, and cut It after
. ward. That contaminates the cutter
with saliva, and common saliva is a
pretty dangerous medium of ex
change. Baby Holding nis Breath
How long Is it possible for d baby
to hold his brcalhf a worried
mother inquires. Our little boy, five
months old. sometimes alarms us
when he shows his temper that way.
Answer A minute easily, perhaps
two minutes without much effort.
You need have no fear he'll begin
breathing again when ho gets ready.
If you wish to do something. Just
sprinkle some very cold water upon
his face.
Olive Oil
Please advise if olive otl will clear
a complexion.
Answer Yes, sometimes, if taken,
say. In tablespoonful doses an hour
after meals.
Second Attack Of Whooping Cough
Com a child catch whooping cough
the second timer
Answer Pnsalhlv . vnf if 1.4
he doubtful. Hotter have the child
thoroughly examined at once.
1 uSsi ' ''
XJU profits .:
AH ENGLISH GIBE AT NEUTRAL A.MERICA
Uncle Samuels; "It pays to be neutral"
Passing Show (London).
Vest Pocket Essays
BY nF.ORHR PITftT
People's Legal Friend
BY E. R. BRANSON
al
Shameless Confession
We're bound to own the truth,
though
It make our pride rise up and
fret:
We've knocked nbout a lot, and no
Woman has tried to steal us yet
Wi
WHISKERS
ThMH nn.ll.nn. 1- .
1 ,1 . I I'utiiauiio mi uiiiBrcBH must
Llllb 18, that it Starts out with the . watch nut H.,.t ,ml,.i., j ...
of: doing somo big stunt ( Kin to refer to them as Democrat-
Americans or Ropuhlican-Amerlcan
f, intontion
,') It tries to run before It can walk.
sj "In a towrt whoro 1 onco lectured
' I wa" waited upon by a committee
asking my advico upon the work of
5 tho Commercial Club. I asked the
J gontlomon what they had In mind
J what they wore trying to do. They
I stated thoy were ondeavorlng to se
!i cure tho location of a factory or
1 umer large Industries. Well,' 1
j aid, 'If you are going to Invito com-
g Pany to see you, I would ndvlao a
I good house cleaning. Why don't you
8 start an Improvement cnmnalirn?'
V "Arouse the people to tho Idea of
f. me town beautiful. Urge everybody
j; to take iirlde In their yards, their
stores, their ofdees. Clear ' your
.; streets of all woods and trash. Cloaii
up the alleys. Distribute flower
-J soods In tho spring, advocate the
;f. use of tho paint pt. Tnko up one
thing at a time and pursue It to n
successful finish. Center your rire
) and do not scattor your Bhot.
f "Every man should look upon his
i membership ns n means of helping
two people nil tho tlmo, and not
I as an Instrument to bo used in fur
I thorlug his own Individual Interests
Thore is an honor In'hiiHlnnaa thai
i iB tho fine gold of It, that places high
s above 'prlvnto gain and profit, a
i square deal and JiiBllce.
! Every man n town should belong
; to tho Commercial Club, and all the
: farmers living near should become
members. All should tako nn tn
. torest in tho Home Town anil be
",,,,. 10 neip in the schemes ,!
plana Tor town betlermon. The dues
should he graduated, because the bin.
merchant and the banker can nfford
to pny more than the professional
man and the small shop-keeper.
"The club should promote nolgh
borllness. ami stand sponsor for ev
erything that Is good and ulevntlng
It can wall 'afford to preach the 1100,1
f playgrounds, of parks, of proper
amusements, of a higher social life
for the young folks of tho town. It
should never compromise with I:1W
breaklng or wrong doing; for In life
end, tho town with t Do elastic cm
sclonee will have a rubber backbone.
' Tho Commercial Club should cn
leavor fo eliminate all factional
Ighls; should work on the knock
rs and make them boosters, tench
, ng for the dally motto lllessed Is
he tongue that commends an. I the
AT fhht is deaf t; slander."
And our friend,
just now.
Hyphen, Is In bad,
Why A Bachelor Is
"Why did you never marry?"
"Well, you sec, whenever I bought
anything I always snw something I
liked better, right afterward, r was
afraid it would be that way In mar
riage, so I Just didn't."
get
Hung, N'othin'I
"Did young Daubslelgli ever
any of his paintings hung?"
Hung? I should say bo. HIb
clgnretto advertisements are hanging
In every tobacconist's In the coun-try."
He Wanted To Know
"Paw?"
"Yes, Gorvaso."
"Is having a crick In your back
anything like having a stream-lined
body?"
Tho Week Of Prnver
And It Is also the week' when, the
holiday relaxation having pnllcd, tho
money-shark will start In vigorously
preying again.
HISKERS are or Is a ques
tion Or nUCatinna Whleh nan
nPVPr lin atlHrnl..
mg to the vast gulf between the
opinions of men who can't raise tliern
and men who are so homelv that
they are afraid to shave them off
Whiskers have existed In the world
as long as man has. Prehistoric
householders ofton mislaid useful
utensils, such as stone hatchets and
fox skins In their wildernesses of
beards and had to rake diligently for
uie. umur on, in oioiieal times, a
man s aire could be told quite ac
curately by the length and whiteness
of his beard and patrlnrchs who had
practised for 700 to 900 years pro
duced some beautiful effects in whig,
kors. When razors were invented
however, men began gradually to
emancipate their chins, until to-day
whiskers are only used by men who
wish to do landscape gardening on
their faces instead of in their back
yards.
There are many vnrletics of wills-'
Iters, including the full beard, the
chinchilla upholstery, the stun's'l side
whiskers, the scrubbing-brush, the
broomstraw or straight line effect,
Die formal garden design, the Herr
Most explosive type, the deep tangled
wlldwood effect, the chin beard with
the upper Hp left in the altogether,
the svelte and slender goatee, the "
hens nest style, tho throat warmer
and the intellectual hoe point.
Wlliskera nr nint-a w
rope than In America, owing to the
primitive methods used by European
barbers. Forty years ago, most
Americans wore beards and the laun
dry men had a hnrd time to keep
soul and body together, while the
necktie business was entirely dead
In Russia, whiskers are used as a
substitute for mufflers, while In
America many young doctors use
them ns a substitute for experience.
Otherwise, they are practically with
out value. The finest whiskers aro
Pudding A Note
. ?' ,If "J vart tivcs another a
note for a mule and after the note
is delivered the party to whom the
In?, 'J "' adds to the note these
mule such words being added with
out the consent or knowledge of the
maker, could the party collect if the
the utle hold goodt Does any
change , a note after dcK
out the consent of the maker invali
date the notcf
.Tllf llolder can collect the
note, Just as he could any ordinary
note. The title, however, passed to
the maker of the note and he will
ti.ori . lll'e unless
a tunnel mortgage,
note Is not invalidated.
The
The Scientific Farmer
"Mary yoirvo simply got to keep
our children lu better health or not
let them play around my sanitary
dairy barns!"
Men who wish to do landscape gar-
ucuny on ineir faces
grown in Frnnce, but the sturdiest
und most deeply rooted variety
sprang up In Kansas In the early
nineties and spread over the state
like the Canada thistle, being up
rooted only after a terrific struggle
In tho campaign of 1S9G.
Of all the presidents of the United
States only six have worn beards in
cluding Lincoln, who wore his by
request. This would indicate that it
Is a great feat to raise both a beard
and a presidential boom at the Bame
time and that the wise man will con
flue himself to one or the other.
An Agreement Understood
0. I rented a furnished house and
paid my rent two months in advance
After two weeks' possession, the
agent informed me he would sell the
Piano that was in the house when !
took possession. Can he remove it
n,nn, Pa'a, rent on U the as
any other piece of furniturct
... , "lero was 110 agreement or
stipu atlon, at the time of renting
the house, with reference to the
uThym ,"ati riBht t0 asn
that the piano was a part of the
furniture to the use of which you
were entitled. Under such clrcum"
stances, the landlord or his agent
has no right to remove It.
Ach du (vers) Ubret
Almost every stnte In the Union
has had a Iowor-cnse Idea, now and
then, but Wisconsin and Iowa are
the only ones who have credit for
them with capitals.
Theoung Lady
AcrossThe Way
Views Of The Press
THE !"'rategy of the forces that
ITKAMSIIli
MISSED
POOL CASE
DY SfPKKMI.:
DIS.
COlltT
1
Mil. . I
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 The sti-
ronie court hus dismissed tho Trnna-
. tlnntlc steamship pool esse dec! .1--
ig that tho war had already broken Wverament n"'...'
1 i the pool. could get money It
Wfl HflVArf , . .
the wv '"""5. Ian'r "-oe
dm. i,. . " ."' ." ruture
, . ui luu forces mat
landed at Salonika I nn,
narenl ln.tn.j .. . v
- .".jn.uu ui urivmg re-
enforcements to the Servians, they
Just wait for the Germans to drive
the Servians back to the re-en-forccments.
PAifodcIpnio Xorth
American.
Mr. Bryan Is no warrior, but It
Isnt because he can't charge.
Columbia mate.
It is more difficult to take a shine
TO a lirnnlr 1 1. n n ... .
i,i , ; '""" ,u ll,Ko one rroin
mm. Boston Transcript,
No doubt the ablest peace advo
cato In tho world would fall as a
maker of automobiles. .Ycio York
Herald,
Italian soldiers get a little wine
ench day Hut we seem to miss tho
oldtln,8 Koman punch. Celwnoio
onife.
At his wedding President Wilson
may have realised how It feels to
bo as unlmportnnt as a Vice-President
Chicago Xcws.
"Our Idea of a sinecure: lock
tender on the Panama Canal." n n
Sfrrrt Journal, ours Is stoker on a
German liner. Col.m&ia Sfafo.
It certainly Is pathetic, the way
nordea of German-Americans who
always voted the Republican ticket
are falling away from the President
Columbia State.
The Italian Arm. -u v.
make more progress In the trench
warfare If It would let military tra
dltlona slide and call the genorala
foremen. Boston Transcript.
Tho stockholders of the Du Pont
Powder Company, who arc to re
ceivo an extra dividend of 2SU, per
cent., no doubt feel that General
bhorman indulged in gross exaggera
tion when he defined war. Indian
apolis News.
Peace-ships rush In where dread
Po"f fear t0 trea Washington
"Fay reads Bible, gets new law
yer. Nothing llko playing both
sides. Colm6io State.
Whore do the Belgians get nil tho
money the Germans take away from
them? .Yew l'orfc World.
What makes war, Mr. Ford. Is that
everybody wants peace on his own
ji ui3. c.prinovie(j Kcpublican.
And the next thing the poor Mexl
cans are faclne is a cnnaiitinn.i
convention! Cincinnati Commercial
Triomie.
t
The New Tork physician who
presented a 199,000 bill to the execu
tors of a J130.000 estate was selfish.
How about the poor lawyers? Xew
York World.
Wonder whether Sir Thomas Lip.
ton will accuse Ford of Bending a
ship across the Atlantic Just for ad
vertising purposes? Philadelphia
Aorth American.
In time some obscure American
ill gain world-wide notoriety by
publicly confessing that he does nst
Know how to make peace in Europe.
Yew York World,
Branson, care o( tut. newspaper. R
The Sllenco Cure
Two Minneapolis boys were re
cently ordered by a prominent Judge
in municipal court not to speak to
each other tar o t- ... . u
mfnH8 .he e,Urt Probab"y had in
mind the admonition that "evil
communications corrupt good man-
The boys were under arrest
charged with disorderly conduct
The probation officer told the Judge
that he had received complaints
about their conduct. After listening
tenced the boys to sixty days in the
I" Hk"0.u.s?' He ""spendod sentence,
and put them on the most rigid term
of probation ever laid down in that
county. 1
Pepper Talks
By Gborcb Matthew Adams
The Right Tiling
t.T1'6. Vay tn do Tno RlK'it Thing
f iht "TnT T6 Wron Thing. ThI
Thing ?sn,hTR Peopl6 an1
nichV i, becaus we see thorn.
vi ?".d Wrong haT0 have a
the.r?,rsToi6
Ho Th e Right Thing-First
tor Just as soon as you Begin to
Thl?lailIShtwThlng- Th ' 5
nf, walk of- It is inspiring to
Brain l7 a bJg- ""-"'ul man's
lem ?a kA." '"Pwtant Prob-
alev i,rd .bcfore h,m- Immedl-
the thinJ ""l80" to e Heart of
Th n. declds "Jo what
The Right Thing to do Is he doesn't
Do The Rlght Thing-Fir,,,
For if you do The Right Thine
Jlrrt .there will be no need to do ,155
?. fLnjr other " 0n " the
truest reasons why we do not always
n0Urrt'"' 18 Uat we are afraid V,
will do our vorst. whereas the
moment we decide that the . hit
be no icortf. we do our best. Put it
Co The Right Thlng-Firet.
ande,ao7,orLndTtdvalbnftraher0iRra
must content herself I ,h woman
toii?'" woman
mifch of rll" .Isn'' considered
duce some n7h I0'6?9 ne i
the work fn; i"iu.r m.an to do
paid. ' was hired and
-rf r hZT;n
works harder and stays longer. '
ng mat the cream does the worli
In-
do
Current Poetry
My Whh
I have lived hoping
As year followed year
To see at the dawn
Paled out in the west
To see not a sail
On the water's blue breast!
I have lived hoping
To .J'0.',"' rolltol hour
lo see the gay tulips
And daffodils flower;
Cl, $,W'n,er's rude hand
Clutches meadow and stream
And the summer Is civ m
A far-away dream!
1 Shi? hop,n(?
I hat many or few
ndhahfo:
Would be lettered by flme
On the tablet, of. ' tom
Let me die hoping
That somewhere again
TV0" f. U,e nmU
The musle of rain
Will gladden mloul7
When It wakes and the
ThUV110" Sm?
That have faded at last I
-Arthur OoodenougK
The judge told the boyfl that ,hev
must not speak to each other dur
ing the period of probation; that
they must stay home nights, keen
away from pool rooms and saloons
and attend night school. aal00U3'
tlI"l,VeW.Yo''k SuPr Court Jus
t ee w,,0 lssued au , J s
strain rig a farmer from speaking to
his wife for thirty days, pending a
aliamrnnSvnihe Wife'3 aPP''eation!'or
alimony and counsel fees in her suit
for separation, doubtless proceeded
on a different theory. He may ,nve
had 1 mind the lover's philoU' ,V!
ronuer 06 mak!3 tlle heart
The defendant, accompanied bv
his counsel, visited the domicile of
wh.,WlM an.d daUBhter several limes
while the Injunction order wZ n
force, and ate meals with them but
the rule of "silence" was rigi w
obeyed.-Birminjrtam News, Eng
t
r