The evening news. (Roseburg, Douglas County, Or.) 1909-1920, August 12, 1919, Page 3, Image 3

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    Wia BWEXt.HOHJlWS ITKSDAti : AtWSf 19, lPlt.
I
r'O
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
THERE IS NO
ARGUMENT
As to the strength and durability of
FORD Automobiles. For business or pleas
ure they have proven their true worth.
The FORD plant has increased its pro
duction and our allotment has been in
creased. We are now able to make early
deliveries on Sedan, Coupe, Roadsters and
Truck Models.
Complete1 Stock of Fabric and Cord
Hi
if
I
i
I
II
Ford Sales Service l
Oak & Rose Sts. V
Power
Farming
Has
Come
To
Stay
FARM TRACTORS!
C 31
Xr
Tires. Heavy Tourist and
Regular Tubes
Ask
The
Man
Who
Owns
One
We have two car loads of Tractors in transit tor take care of our August deliveries
if. you are figuring on buying a Fordson this fall you sho'uld place your order now. The factory is 19,000 orders behind, and distributors
will not forward Tractors without signed orders. Da not put it off and be disappointed on deliveries, but take deliveries now and be
come familiar with it before time for fall work. - , J
A. BU
Fordson Tractors & Trucks
Roseburg, Oregon
E. L. PERKINS
I! C -v P
) I J !
j 1 fx: j
I r 'f '
i
Tennis 300 Years Old.
Tt may be claimed that lawn tennis
Is nt least three centuries old, having
bepn played In 151H when Queen KUja
both was entertained nt IClvetham, In
Hampshire, by the enrl of Hertford.
Strutt, quoting from Nlehol's "Progress
of Queen Kllzaheth," tells us that
"after dinner, about 8 o'clock, ten of
his Inrdsblii's servant?, nil Somerset
shire nii'ii, In a square green court, be
fore her majesty's window, did bang
up lines, squaring out the form of u
tennis court and making a cross lino
In the middle. In this square they, be
ing stripped of their doublets, played,
live to five, with handball to the great
liking of her highness."
PLANT
Thought Had Fled.
Robert was on the program for Chil
dren's day. When he got up on Ihe
platform he grew red In the face, gnvo
one look at the crowded pews, find
stood there. Finally he walked off the
pint form without uttering n sound.
When he got home I nsked him what
made him do that, when be knew his
piece perfectly. "But, mother," be
protested, "I looked at all those peo
ple and I just got empty of thought"
Exchange.
OH was discovered on the little farm
In Texas belonging to E. L. Perkins,
coal stoker of the U. S. S. Imperator.
Perkins' Income is now $40,000 a
year, and may reach (1,000,000 If the
Well increases its outnut. Perkins
says he will not seek d "charge from
the navy. He says he will use the
money for the benefit of the world
and Christianity.
Fatigue Cause of Accidents.
A man who make too many mo
tions In performing his work, or who
tnkes extra st-p vhich might be elim
inated from bis task, who -moves more
weight than Is really neeeary In hau
dllng materials, or otherwise does ei
tra "labor that tlr's tiliti. may be creat
ing in himself a physical ir uervnin
tension and'struln which some day will
precipitate an accident. I'erhaps It
will be the loss of a finger. )h uf a
limb, or" a los of eyesight. It may be
a trivial hurt, or It may be n futnl ac
cident. The clrcnnisinnres of ih mo
ment that cause the accident n"Uld not
occur, except for the fatigue (ndm-ed
by uuneressnry movements In ( erforui
llif work. fc'xeharige.
ARTHUR VEATCH "TT;
L !
MRS. MORTON F
- .'ib. i
I 1
Cure for Alr-Slckness.
After reaching n certnln height fly
ing men suffer considerably, from air
sickness. It Is now suggested that na
ture has provided n remedy for this,
for In the Cordilleras mountains of
South America grow two herbs which
Instantly aboe mountain sickness,
vertigo, and breathlessness. They tiro
known as cha-cha-coma and poten-pix-pita,
and grow as leafless, Juicy shoots
on n dwarf tree. The shoots urn full
of a hot nromntic wnter with a pep
pery llavor. Scientifically developed,
It Is possible that an alkaloid may be
extracted from them which will en
able men to climb to heights undreamt
of.
Handicapped.
"Do you think you will win this
Cflfse?" "No." said the lawyer for the
more or less fair plaintiff. "What's the
trouble?" "There will be no necessity
for building a fence around my client
when I put her on the witness stand."
Birmingham Age-Herald.
MAJ. GEN. CHARLES H. MUIR
r
Mn, Morton F. Plant, an active Red
Cross worker who was married to
Col. William Hayward, commander of
the Fifteenth infantry, the famous ne
gro regiment.
Statesmen Past and Present.
Com pn red with the statesmen of the
eighteenth century we have more
righteous men. Our petty scandals can
never achieve tlrelr unparalleled Ideal
f corruption; our Ihtle llrense Is but
a drop in the ocenn of their lewdness.
Jtut those three-bottle men could rise
to an occasion from their drinking, and
tine Issues touched them finely. Tre
velan's early history of Charles James
Fox spares us nothing of the current
depravity, yet leaves a sense of quality
In public life which Is lacking today.
(Hunts of debauchery those statesmen
often were, but still giants; and vul
garity Is not of glnnts. From Nation,
JxhhJod.
J
. Arthur Veatch. chief geologist of the
Lord Cowdray oil syndicate which dis
covered oil in England. Veatch is a
Yankee, hailing from Evansville, Ind
and a graduate of Indiana university.
He held the position of state geolo- j
gist of Indiana and afterward was en.'
gaged in making analysis of Vene
zuelan asphalt cfepoilts. He is now
with the Pearsons syndicate, and to
him befell the distinction of being the
first man to locate oil In England.
Author-Diplomats.
Several American authors "Tinve
strved as ministers not ambassadors,
art that title had not then been ere
n ted to more tlwn one foreign coun
try. John I.ulhrop Motley and John
liny each served as Culled States min
ister to Austria and to tlreat Britain;
tieorge Bancroft ns minister to Prus
sia and to tlreot Britain; Washington
Irving as minister to flreat Britain and
to Spain; James Bctell Iowell ft
minister to Spain and to Great Brit
ain, and Oen. Lew Wallace as minis
ter I" UtVJim onrt i Tut-lV'
S , " , ill
Success and Failure.
The si'ciul nf mil mm-mt Is this:
If you lime lived siilIi a llf Dint you
cnu s:iy : "I Imve never dnuu any mini
nn Injury." If you emi siiy of your
eni'iiiles: "J fiwly forclvu llicm of thu
liijiirlcs iliey have done me, mill ilty
tliem for InivlMu done ho." mid if you
ran rejoice In Hie fuel Unit you lire
not like l hem; If you cnu sleep nil
nlKht the Kolind tlecp ot ll elenr 11111
Kelence. uml rejolre in the know U'de.e
Hint you possess ti eo-.iseience ; If yon
pos.sess ii tender heart lluil eiin move
you to Iciirs of gyinpnlliy for Hie slrli'k
en one mid a niiture iveu to Irndlui;
of n helping htind to such strlekeii
one. find If. when you eoine to llnil
time when '"I'lie cruel minder denlh
Henls the eyes mid Meals thy lifeolli."
liud cnu enluily fuce tlllll moment ivllh
oill fenr, ullh a full knowledge of ll
'well ilMiie nl Ihe 1'iid. then you lire
a success, otherwise, no mutter whul
your siiiilou In life niny he you ure
e fuiiute.
Reading for the Blind.
Onlt, tlie Seotehniuii, vastly ItnproT
ed the system of books fur the blind,
ushiK a moillni'd Itoniuu letter, nnd
coutlnluK himself tu lower case In pref.
erence to cupliiils, the Detrnlt News
recalls, tn 18:14 tialt Issued the ttospel
of St. .lolin, the (list hook of the lllble
ever printed for the blind. The work
was taken up in America by Doctor
Howe, the hllshniul of .Tulln Ward
Howe, then In cluire of Ihe I'erklns
Instliule in Itoston, wlio printed the
entire New Tesliiineul ill 1S.'W. Hoc
lor llouo Issued the entire lllble In
raised characters In 18-13, and a sim
ilar work was Issued In GhiSKow a few
years Inter. The first innitiizlne for
Ihe blind wns established In Kuuland
In lWifi by the Itev. V. Taylor, who
level imI HI years of bis life to the
eiluenllon of the sightless. A eil'culat
hit; library for the blind was founded
In tKSJ at the I'erklns Instllutn In Hus
ton, and libraries of this kind have
since been established tn nearly all
InrKe elites.
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Conflicting Thoughts
A new photograph of MiJ. Qen.
Charles H. Mulr, who has been as
signed to temporary duty with the
chief of staff In Washington before
going to Fort Leavenworth, Kan., as
commandant of the general service
choois. Oenorfll Mulr formerly com- j
manded th Twenty-eighth division In
Franc.
J 'WMmmm plav wifh i
THE 0OY J.
11. .
9