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About The evening news. (Roseburg, Douglas County, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1916)
J THE EVENING NRWS WILTON J. SHOEMAKEK CARL I). SHOEMAKER BAM J. SHOEMAKER Editor! and rulilWiern. iHCUEl) DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY 8ul)8cri)llon Rated Dally Per year, by mail 2.0r Fer month, delivered .n Semi-Weekly. Far year 2.00 fHx mrnil 1.00 Entered as second-clasB matter November 5, 1919, at Roseburg, Ore. nnrtr net nr March 3. 1879. WEDNESDAY, AI'llID Vi, 1010. JMf(il.A:l COUNTY CANDIDATES, According to the returns of the clerk's office here, twenty three nomination petitions of candidates for local county offices have been riled, a list of whom will be round below. Besides those mentioned there are three candidates from the county Tor circuit Judge, these being W. W. Cardwell, J. A. Buchanan, He- publicans, and J. W. Hamilton, Dem ocrat. For senator, 13. L. Eddy, He publican. For district attorney, Geo. Neuner, Jr., and Ira 11. Illddlo, Re publicans. For. representatives, Ora II. Porter, Chas. A. Brand and Hoy Griggs, Republicans, and J. L. Chan ey, of Myrtle Creek, Democrat. For Joint representative, Simon Caro, Re publican, There are two candidates from tho county for delegates to .the national conventions, A. Abniham, Republican, and R. R. Turner, Dem ocrat, and O. P, uoshow will be the Democrat candidate as presidential elector. Besides the cundldaton men tioned below, who have not yet filed their petitions, John Busenburk Is a candidate for co'nmlssloner on the Republican ticket, Frank Baragar, for sheriff on the Republican ticket; O. C. Brown, county school super intendent, Republican; Chap.' F. Hop kins and R, H. Grinsted, justice of tho peace, Republicans, and Howar'd Church, constablo, on tho republi can ticket. As the time for filing nominations explros April 14th, It Ib not probable that any other candi dates will mnko their appouruueo, and the lists as published here will comprise all those whose numos will 1 appear on the ballot. Tho list of ' nainos on file is as follows: County Commissioner A. Ilen ! rlckson, Oakland, Republican; J. T. llrldgus, Oakland, Hopubliciin; A. 10. j Perkins, Gardiner, Republican; W. I K. St, John, Stit lioill ii, Uoimhltciin: j A. K. Stocker. Drain. Republican; It. j f. Long, Yoncalla, Democrat. Sheriff Sni, Stunner, Knsohurg, Itopubllcan, tiooge Quilio, lloselmrg, I Hnpubllciin; Harry l'earco, Roho i burg, Democrat. County Clerk E. 11. Lenox, ltoso- i burg. Democrat; C. V. Clark, Hobo . burg, Republican. County Assessor Guy Cordon, ; IlOBohurg, Republican; D, p. McKuy, Wilbur, Republican; A. A. Bellows, Itoneburg, Republican; R. T. Ash-1 worth, HoBChurg. Democrat; H. V. ' Jones, Myrtlo Creek, Republican;! Charles Roberts, Rusi'liurg, Ropub , Dean, Surveyor Frank Cain, Hosebuig, .Republican; M. 11. lloiiiioud, Itose tiurg. Republican. Treasurer James Sr. vers, Kose burg, Republican; .Mrs. m- Miller. Wilbur, Repiibllcuu. Coroner N. T. Jewell, Kimcbutg, Republican; C. II. Wade. Itiisehurg, Republican; George Phillips, Oak land, Republican. I A PRESIDKMTW. POSSIBILITY. ; According to word received here, which will lie confirmed wtih more oxnclncsB later, Theodore II. Burton, former I'nlled States senator fiom Ohio, and at present a potential fac tor In the presidential nominal ion race, will he lu Itoschurg on t lie aft ernoon of April I Nth, and an effntt will be made to have bl in 'deliver an address during the time tho train tops hero to change engines. A committee of prominent Republican have already inado arrangement to meet (he distinguished riilaen at Myrtle Creek, and accompany him to "Ii.'b city. Senator Burton Is one of the three strongest eandidatea for this exalted offiro now before the public, and his nomination Is not an improbability. Aside 'from this, he Is jne of the ablest speakers, and best posted men on national rrceds and Etues In the country, and a proper greeting to him as he passes through our city Is fitting. When fuller de tails of his Itinerary are available, they will he given sufficient public ly, that all who desire .may be able .o h?ar and see him. WILBUR NEWS Rev. Vr.n Fossen, district super intendent of the M. E. church, gave a very Interesting address to tlio young people oa "Wasting Time". The high school play, "Which one Won," was given on Friday evening to u large audience. The pupils did credit to themselves, and showed tile good training given them by tiie principal, .Mrs. Miller. Between acta n vocal solo wha rendered by Mae Kargi. Bass solo, by Floyd Chap man. Several people motored to Win chester on Sunday. MK anu Mrs. Foulk, of Superior, Neb., are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. Balrd. They are looking f a suitable location in . Oregon. I Tho goat shearing season Is on. I There are many thousands of dol lars worth of mohair sold In Doug-' ' las county and the animals are not subject to foot rot, which Is prev alent in the Willamette valley, ow ing to b much lowland. H. B. Dixon and son, James, of Dixonvlllo, motored down on Thurs day pi business. They wero ac companied by Mrs. Culp and Miss Cunningham. Mrs. Warren Ashcr and small son. Glen, have returned from Cottage Grove, after an extended visit. Ernest and Stnnley Short motorou' to Dillard on a business trip. Harvey Wells and Harry Balrd are In the wood business at present. Mrs. Miller and MrB. La Rant, had a pleasant visit at Drain through the week end. , Mrs. Helen Harford gave a fine address on Wednesday evening at the Mtildlng. A vocal solo was rendorod by Mrs. Stanley Corvalho and a male quartette composed of Messrs. Abel, Chapman, Balrd and Grubbe, gave a song. CAMAS VALLEY The school' board of district No. No. 21, re-elected Prof. Street as principal of Camas valley school for a period of two years. STissMIoffley was re-elected for tho coming year as primary toacher. Miss Hoff ley's sister, Mrs. Fred Smith, of Monmouth, Is visiting her t present. School Supervisor Murphy paid an official visit to the Camas .Valley schoolH last week. Ho reports work progressing satisfactorily In all the rooms. Murray and Aumteln havo taken the contrart to pack ore from Mr. Joe Thompson's copper mine on Cow creek to t Kork station. They arc to piif ten pack horses In I ho train to hegln with. Fruit Inspector Strang spent sev-1 eral days Inspecting the orchards of Camas Valley recently. Mr. Mutchasnn, tho insurance ui from Uoselnii'ff, was .looking after husinesH here last week. 8. n. Croy Is away rrom tho val ley most of tho time with Ills Per rheron horse. He has stations at Melrose. Ten Mile, Looking Class and Rosehurg. Everyday Wisdom By DON M K KOI D ii,'.:-y- isaus(ui m ' 1 An olil golf bag nuikt lunlse for a dailisliund. fl a fine dog From Mini, rn Society Novel: "I! ; turned a deaf cur to lier consomme." Keep (lie children nwny from the penny slot machines unless you waul them to get Hie gambling Instinct WHY NOT HE ONE? Life savers bave lota of leisure. A London professor has Invented a machine that will tonst loo.iHio.ec.i siloes of bread in etslil hours. We did not know that there were th.it many slices of bread. A sock full of burned-out eloetr'c light bulbs under each arm will bo of great service lo any one learning to swim. Health Talks BY WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. The Dangers Heady-made arch supporters of vari ous kinds are urged upon customers by unscrupulous shoe dealers, not te cau.'J the dealers have the necessary skill to advho treatment for foot troubles, but ueeoi'se ;ie tre.;fic is bo very profitable. One v,ou!d not per mit a clothing merchant to advlso one te wear a silnal brace. yt the tni!o knows fully as rmicu about tho treatment of spiny I troubles as tho Bhoc dealer knows about the treat ment ot foot troubles. In one aggres ivc store an "crthopraetie" special IhI If. employed, and his employer an nounces that the young gentleman is r. "g-arhiate." The young gentleman recently showed us his "diploma. 11c fllso showed ub his "course of study" which consisted of six 4,lec flons." or rather six lectures, all of which could be rad in, say, an hour. Think of that for a while before you fjubmft to shoe-store '"treatment" for "our arch trouble. Alluring statements relative to "painful foet," "weak ankles,' "broken arches," "fallen arches." etc., are p.aced before the public to attract customers for these expensive ap pliances. Customers In some shoe stores are grnphlcaMy told of the mar velous cures effected by the particu lar prop or appliance the dealer wishes to sell, and perhaps warned of the disastrous effects of neglect of n imaginary falling o- the arch. Hut perhaps we speak with bad grace of this kind of fraud. Some physicians vhen consulted by patients suffering with foot trouble confess themselves Incompetent by saying: "Get a pair of arch supporters." Patients are constantly applying for treatment who have worn arch Drops for years, trying all the modi fications the shoe clerk could think of, and suffering all the time. The -ason they have been so long de lelved b that the prop or support seemed to offer considerable relief when first applied. But this relief was always temporary, and soon the old trouble was as bad or worse than The Short-Stemmed Johnny-jump-Up ' "Good morning to you atx!" snid a under the dead brown leaves they cheerful little voice In the middle of epied a tiny little violet bloom so the forest short-stemmed and modest that they No answer. could hardly find it; but so blue and Not a Bound was to be heard, except cheerful-looking that they wondered the murmur of the winds in the trees, that they missed It "I said, 'Good morning to you oil . repeated the cheerful voice. No answer. "I sny, everybody! Good morning to you all!" repeated the voice, as though determined to be heard and answered. "What's thnt?" asked Jack Frost, who had been napping under a big pine tree. "Who's there?" demanded Mr. East Wind, who was taking a little walk through the woods. "What did you say?" asked a spar row In the tree overhead. "What Bay? What sny?" "1 say. 'Good morning to you all!,: Bnid the same cheerful voice; "that's what I say!" "Put who are you?" asked Jack Frost. "And uhrrn nre you?" demanded the wind coldly. "And what are you doing?" chirped tho sparrow. How the cheerful voice did laugh! "i've heard about folks who couldn't see under their noses, but I never saw any before! I'm a Johnny Jump-up, and I llvo right under the oak tree. See?" Jack Frost and tho East Wind asd the sparrow looked under the nearest oak tree, but not a sign of a Johnny-jump-up did they see. Not a thing Was there but a lot of dead leaves, nnd of course those are not interest ing anybody cnn see dead leaves la tho woods In early spring time! There Isn't much else to see! "You're joking," said Jack Frost. Bternly. "Don't try to fool me," said tho east w4fd,."or I'll blow up a storm!" "We're too sharp for you," twittered the sparrow. "Hettor tell ua whore you are hiding!" "I'm not hiding," laughed tho Johnny-jump-up. "I'm living right here under tho edge of the leaves." Ther how those three folks did look. And uro enough! Suug down AKVAVt'K MAX TKI.LS OK SHOWS J j An advance nmn or John ltohln- son's Ton n; shows, which, on the .fi-rnoon .nil evening of May 23. will appear In Uoselniril.i was seat-, cd in the. lobby of a loca ll.'olel. lie I was lolling a group of traveling men j of some of the funny things he has seen v.,io working Willi circuses, j ...... u.e ii.osi Miu.orous en , , , " li.m lii a little Michigan town. I! wan Just be!ore the matinee .per formance. Th day :is unusually warm ami pleasant and the fiiov lot was crowded. I was on mv wav around the h-r, tp f-e-i ors' tent to the I'c ' wagon. As I n a'red the hit:." . 1 happolie.l to glance In the iliicct'.on of a group of caiivasmcn who were iuo.r;g a cage. The tongue of the cago ha,t a sort of crook at the end. similar to the bend in a shepherd's rod, end. Of Arch Props before. Of course the support weak cnod the muscles and ligaments, when worn for several months, auu the original weakness was only ax Rggerated, so that the victim becama a steady customer, a slave to (he prop. In the great mijorily of cas: ol actual arch weakness or fiat foot or pronntcd foot (the earliest 3tiire of Hat foot), arch supports are uuiieo eswary and injurious. The patien re fiUiies general treatment, and scion tine advice about the toning up and development of tho weakened mus cles and ligaments. Masea'?, certain, exercises, and above all, the adoption of proper shoes, will give permanent relief if anything can. In pronounred cases nothing less tfian surgury can effect a cure. ( To wear an arch prop, of anv !(ind or material whatever, for a prolonged period. Is as wrong as it would be -:o bind a weak arm in splints iO- an, indefinite time and as disastrous. Qt-KSTIOXS AXD ASVEKI4 Proper Diet Tor Typhoid Fever I'lftmc tell vie whethrr it f Hitfe ?'r a tijjihotd fevtr p'ltirut, temperature '.fl uVyrrca, to haw other food than milk. Anticcr Vn. by all m-an. llfrf tr the article.1 u lie wed In tlif .Iamath-ic 'V (jcntral Ilonjiital : Soft toast, m)(t-hoili-4 ckkh. any form of soup or broth. fln.ly cJiopjied or Mumped beef, or chicken, o mitt ton, the soft part of a baked appl"1, Ice-cram, cutnri, hlnnc miinfre. and virions other fond which require lltl mamlcatlon and yet arw fairly easily dl Kt'strd. Patlrnts ore fed six tlmoa a dny. The milk mid "hIops" diet la a feneration behind the ttme. and does almost a much Oaim in uooift cases as the fever Itself. Fistula 7 have had for the pnnt year a rertnl fistula. Cnn it be cured without opera tion t la the disease danreroun if allowed to fjo onf la the operation danaerou f What will remove the lump ichere the fi3tuia openit Answer It ia rareb possible to heal ft rectal fistula without surgical treatment. The dlaeane la dangerous If neglected favors tuberculosis. The operation Is tdm ple and abnolutety snfe, and It In the only treatment which trill remove the lump. "you're joktntr." said Jack Frost, sternly "Why don't you have a loncer stoni?" aBked tils spnrrow curiously. "And why do you bloom so eurlv?" questioned the east wind. "Aren't you afraid of the cold?" "Why stay under the leaves?" asked Jack Frost. "I cannot even nre you to freeze you when you'rt way under there!" Then how that little Johnny-jump-up did lniiKh! "That's Just why J hide under the leaves; and make only short stems! I like to bloom early; I like to be the first to sny. Spring's comiiiR! But I don't wnnt to b& froaen!" And tho little flower snungled down under the sheltering leaves. And if ever you spy a violet, hiding down under some leaves, you will know Just why It's Gliding, and why it has such a short Btcra. To-morroin Tommy Tittle-Mouse Wants To ".ove In some milliner, the tonKue slipped! and the crooked end was thrust right between tho legs of a fellow of about i 4n years of age. who was standing j , ; K ;,m 'i,,K t,ovv" Bt "okM tongue j 'he man bounded about four, foot in (he air. cried out, 'Help! help! j The elenh,.nf n.i me' Th. 'tie- pi.anfs got me! and started wildly to run away, instantly every ob- ; servant bystander gave t lie man a 1 merry ha, ha. and, after he had put several yards between himself ! and the 'elephant' ( ? I he looked ov er his shoulder, saw that the pachy derm was none oth'T than a big tivuv.io. a'ld u V:v .vny Into the crowd which surrounded the main entrance. John Alexander and John SJirum, of (Hide, were In the city loday at tending to business matters. m EDNA U'CNT FORBES Do You s,oE? There are few habits inoying to others, and none Do YOU SXOItF.? more anaojiui; iu umco, . it which the possessor is less con- scions. Hut if you do. or even if you tleep una breame mruuhu tlppn and breathe tlirougn ino mouth without doing it noisn don't vou vant to slop It. There are various ways of over- coming the snoring habit, of course, If you snore, your sleep is Before going to bed. clear your i head and throat thoroughly by snir- flng water to which a few drops of neroxide of hydrogen havo been : added. Or, use an atomizer with any well-recommended throat an- ' tiseptic. Be sure the air passages ... l. ore so cieau mac you cool air all along tne nose anu throat before you get Into bed. Don't lie on the back, as this will Induce the mucous matter into the top of the passage through the nose, Clogging that SO the breath cannot easily pass. When this happens, you Unconsciously start breathing through the mouth, and as the passage becomes more clogged and extends to the throat Where the air passages from the nose go into th. M curious gurgling noises result. This Is the air -passing, or attempt- Inir to nasi Into the lungs. ing to pass, into me 1UUB. : LJe on the face or on the side this Will leave those air passages r- t. K&.1 1 v talrn clear. Or, if you snore badly, take a long, soft handkerchief folded Af,L LAUNDItY RKCKIVKI) . A " VJ all. . ; Xtplfi 1 WILL UK DKI.1VK1IKI) SATURDAY 1 ROSEBURG STEAM LAUNDRY ASK US AIIOUT OUR PRICES OX ROUGH DRY FAMILY WASHING Fhone 79 and Our Autos WillCall -SI When you want the very best Remember "Diamond W Canned Fruits Will satisfy. Our stock of these Is very complete. Price ilfiSi-K a"d 1uallty satisfy. THE CASH STORE WE SAVE YOU MONEY THAT French TRY I IK YOU IIOUIIT ROYAL BAKERY 1-. I ll-.-IT, Phone 221 Snore? bias "J" 2tTy linen, a." Rrmm(1 t,e head. . . b ,mmnge must be tight enougE. The haiumgo opening i,.en This will, of course. " , ,...,, wm n. ennrse. mouth-breathing though V , ht or s0 t0 get it ma i used to the bandage. anything but rvrcshutg Practise deep breathing exer-. breathing cises uunng ui ua,, ueu ...., best care o your throat to prevent colds and the resulting Increase la mucous matter, ni.etlnn aml Answers Questions and Answers rn now rrrommrntt a flood race 0fll. ? J.i, lit. to 'wash the dirt , . ,. ,,, . ,f:l,. , ni,.t ,vi. ,oap and maiir. It U not harmul, to iir M Jff- "a? UJ d0M iu tJat c,, Punj Castile la in- expensive and rt-liable. as It la made from olive oil. Rinse with severnl watera after tlV-!" !- t Qm cornr and hav9 them removed by a chiropodist every two month, yet they return. I there a cura '"xcZU boa,d care Md. ' ,h. mra. yoa ,bonu ney have a pressure on the places, for .that i m UD n"w srowth at any time, i-reouenllv. corns dlsaDDear themse ve Dy moreiy removing the pressure, which. , after all, wan the cause. Wear a felt pai arountl eacn corn, ana nfmSM lB good ' TneJ entirely with thia care. OX FKJDAY BY 0 A. M. XOTK HIK 1IXE COLOR of our hams and bacon. Thnt denotes first that they come from young, tender pig3 and next thnt they have been properly cured. All our hams and bacon are cane sugar cured and hickory smoked. They have a flavor of their own which once tasted you'll always prefer. Try some for breakfast tomorrow. CASS STliKKT MARKET & Vegetables I-" CASS STREET WE MAKE THE REST Bread IT! I'rtui Roseburorefjon V t i , t, I. i