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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1914)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1914. 10 M RS. FREDERICK A. AUSTEN will entertain todny at a small bridge party and again on Saturday will preside at a similar affair. Both festivi ties will be given for the pleasure of charming visitors who are passing the Summer in Portland. Today Miss Kath arine Jackson, of Chicago, a sister of Mrs. H. T. Burntrager. and Miss Mc Chesney. a sister of Mrs. John Scott, will be the guests of honor. At Satur day's bridge Mrs. Willard Bond, of Pendleton, who is the house guest of Mrs. Robert Townsend, will be the in BDiration. Tomorrow's social calendar heralds a bridge afternoon for Miss Jackson with Mrs. John C. McCue as hostess. On Monday Mrs. Thomas Bayles will give a smart party for Sliss JacKson. t,very day of next week will witness some social compliment planned for the Inter esting young woman who is passing the Summer with Mrs. Burntrager. Nearly all the gatherings are small, however, with only the most intimate friends of the hostess asked to meet the visitor. Mrs. N. A. Loucks and little son. Ken neth, left recently for a Summer out ing at Ocean Park. Mrs. Frederick Behrends, who a few weeks ago went to Alaska, has re turned to her Riverside home after a delightful trip in the .North. Mrs. Ross Plummer Is among the Portlanders who left last week for the seashore. She Is stopping at Tioga, Wash. Miss M. Aleshlre, of Washington. t. C, a daughter of Major-General Aleshire, is a visitor In Portland, regis tered at Hotel Multnomah. The members of the Woodlawn Parent-Teacher Association have decided to brighten the social aspect of the Summertime by holding a get-together meeting In the form of a picnic, which thev will give on Friday at Peninsula Park. Members and those interested will assemble with basket lunches in the picnic grounds at noon. After lunch there will be a short business session at which the new officers for the year will be elected. Mrs. Richard W. Hall, who has been visitinar her mother. Mrs. Rosa B. Sut ton. 784 Hovt street, left on the Bear yesterday for Ocean Grove, Cal. Mrs. Hall's home is in Phoenix, Ariz. POPULAR YOUNG MATRON ACTIVE IN SOCIAL AFFAIRS. The "community sing," in which the people of Portland are invited to par ticipate, will be given Tuesday, August 18. from 7 until 9 P. M., at the Mult nomah Club field. W. H. Boyer, direc tor of the Apollo Club, will be leader. Music will be furnished by a first-class band. Patriotic songs. National airs and old hymns and songs will be sung. Mrs. Chester Deering, of the Monday Musical Club, is chairman of the com mittee of arrangements. Mrs. G. J. Frankel, Mrs. Russell Dorr, Mrs. J. Coulsen Hare and Mrs. Frederick E. Harlow are among her assistants. Mrs. Edward Rosenbaum, of Salt Lake, is spending a fortnight with her mother, Mrs. A. Friendly. A pretty wedding took place in the White Temple last night, when Miss Mabel Stout became the bride of Thomas Ellsworth Spiers. Artistic dec orations of cut flowers and palms and appropriate music added to the beauty of the ceremony. The marriage service was read by the Rev. Dr. Wright, field missionary for Oregon. A large com pany of friends wJflfc assembled to wit ness the marriaJssF of the charming Portland girl and the young business man. The bride was lovely in her robe of white charmeuse, which was elab orated with Princess lace. She wore the conventional veil and carried a shower of white sweet peas and lilies of the valley. She was attended by Miss Margaret Brehaut, who wore a modish gown of lace and silk. H. B. Blough was the best man. Mrs. Ellen Stout, of Sacramento, mother of the bride, was attired in blue silk of be coming shade. After a wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Spiers will reside in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Lundquist and Miss Mabelle Lundquist will motor from their country place near Dundee to Mount Hood for the week-end. J. D. Kennedy and daughters. Miss Agnes and Miss Mildred Kennedy, left on the Bear for a three-weeks' visit to San Francisco and Los Angeles. Complimenting Mrs. William Kirke. of Ios Angeles. Miss Elizabeth Hoben, daughter of Captain Andrew Hoben, will entertain tonight with a large party at her home on Iarrabee street. Mrs. Kirke, before her mai riage, was Miss Lilian Eisen. daghter of Dr. Wil liam Eisen. of this city, and was well and favorably known in musical cir cles, having sung at the opening of the Lewis and Clark Exposition in 1905. Mrs. Alice Weister has as house guests at the clublvouse of the Psychol ogy Club at Nehalem Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stillman. Mrs. A. H. Russell, Mrs. A. L. Carpenter and Miss Margaret Monroe. On a recent occasion Mrs. Stillman entertained at the clubhouse. She gave several delightful readings. Mr. Stillman contributed musical num bers and original stories were told by Mrs. Weister and Miss Monroe. Toasted rnarshmallows and popcorn, prepared before the large open fireplace were enjoyed. Among the Summer visitors from Cleveland, O.. are Mrs. Koercher, Miss Holt and Miss Ward. Mrs. Koercher came to visit her cousin. Mrs. J. Pauley, who has entertained delightfully for the Ohio guests. Among the prominent young matrons remaining in town this month is Mrs. R. E. Watkins, who is a prominent member of the Psychology Club and shares in the festivities planned by that organization. DrFrederiekN.RossJter. J Summer Inlestinnl Trimble. ACUTE diarrhoea is most common in the warm months of Summer, and a few hot days in succession seem to multiply cases rapidly. This acute intestinal trouble is most seri ous when occurring during the first and second Summers of a child's life. The question naturally arises: What relation is there between hot weather and Intestinal troubles? The relation is largely one of cause and effect. Breast fed babies have few Intestinal disturbances, even in hot weather. Ba bies and young children fed on milk that is pure and that has been kept cold have very little intestinal trouble. Hot weather tends to encourage fer mentation and putrefaction in all food stuffs, and no food used for young children is affected so quickly by warm weather as milk. Under the best of circumstances and methods of hand ling, milk contains a certain number of germs, but when the milk is care lessly and negligently handled and Is not properly cooled and kept cold after being delivered to the home, it is a most favorable food ror the growth of germs. These germs and their poisons set up fermentation in the susceptible Intestine and as a result the child is acutely poisoned and has simple diar rhoea, or if the poisoning is severe, cholera infantum may result, or the latter may follow the Bimple type of disturbance. So we are safe in saying that there would be very few intestinal troubles among children, or adults for that mat ter, if the food supply were always pure and uncontaminated. Acute intestinal trouble indicated by diarrhoea in a child during its first or second Summer, should be a warning to every mother that there is some thing the matter with the food, and the food usually at fault is the milk. A loose green stool should be accepted as a danger signal. Cutting teeth is not a cause of diarrhoea. Therefore the first thing to do when a child has diarrhoea, or diarrhoea and vomiting, is to stop all food for 24 hours at least, possibly longer; depend ing upon the condition of the child. If milk constitutes the food. It is Impera tive that no more should be given until conditions have improved so that it is safe to give it again. Serious mistake is often made in putting the baby back on a milk diet too soon. At the very beginning of acute diar rhoea, in addition immediately to with drawing the food, the child should be given a dose of castor oil a teaspoon ful for 6 months of age, two for 1 year, a dessert spoonful for 2 years old. Delay in attending to diarrhoea in a baby often means a serious sick ness. The more promptly the matter Is attended to the quicker is the re covery. The best place for a child with diar rhoea is in bed and quiet. Moving about or being carried much or han dled, makes the trouble worse. Do not give the child ice water to drink, or even ery cold water. Warm water is tne uest, ana give plenty oi n. joia water stimulates intestinal movements If there is vomiting cold water irri tates the stomach. As soon as the castor oil begins to act give the child a thorough enema using warm water in a fountain syringe. Place the syringe not over a foot above the hips so that there will not be much force. A young child will only take a small amount of water, and then forde it out. In such in stances it is well to repeat the injec tion until the water comes away clear. An enema should be given at least twice a day. Keep the child in the coolest room of the house, and if there is fever bathe with tepid water two or three times during the day. If at the end of 24 or 36 hours the child does not show marked Improve ment a good physician should be called. The first food should be a thin bar ley or rice gruel, or a carbohydrate food and no milk. good-looking frock of jet spangles done in fine patterns on black silk net, with a wide jet belt wrapped round the hips. The Jet hat is not in evi dence, but jetted slippers are worn for dancing with low flat heels and strapped round the ankle with tiny strands of jet. SUMMER CARE OF THE HAIR. The girl with the oily hair must be especially painstaking about keeping it clean in hot weather. It should be sjiampooed at least once a week, and right here a word against the inordi nate use of ammonia, borax and wash ing soda for shampooing is appropri ate. To a basin of warm water soda or borax the size of a pea is sufficient, and a dozen drops of toilet, not house hold, ammonia To this should be added enough finely shaved white soap to make a thick lather. Many girls use a teaspoon of borax to a bowl of water, thinking they can thus prevent a fu ture accumulation of oil in the scalp. The remedy is futile. The oil will come back, oozing from the pores, and borax, soda or ammonia is useful only to "cut" the oil if the water is hard, not to effect a cure. A raw egg beaten lightly with a pint of tepid water and a good white soap will clean the scalp and do the hair less harm than the excessive use of the above mentioned remedies. watched them at tennis, or seated tete-a-tete on the veranda or strolling to gether on the green, Marian could not help regarding them with a certain envy. Nor could she help contrasting their honeymoon, amid these pleasant surroundings, with her own post-nuptial plunge into a crowded apartment house in a strange city, made wretched by financial woes and utter dissatis faction. Marian saw considerable of Mrs. Dale, the bride. She was a slim young crea ture, with a pretty face, large blue eyes, and pensive moods that alternat ed with blithe and merry ones. She had been a teacher in the grade school of a small Ohio town. Her husband, a plump young fellow, on the swift road to early baldness, boastful of his New England ancestry, given to talking much and saying comparatively little, was a Toledo bank clerk. Neither interested Marian particular ly. The young woman struck her as rather insipid, and the man as wholly ordinary. One day, however, she caught a glimpse of a familiar sorority badge on the other's waist. A closer look re vealed the fact that it was the pin of the college sorority to which she her self belonged. Thereafter she saw much of Mrs. Dale, the bride, and, while they had gone to different colleges, they had quite a number of mutual friends, which furnished food for interesting gossip by the hour. On the strength. of their bonds, the one soon exclaimed: "Thank heaven, there's . someone here whom I can ask not to call me Mrs. Dale! I'm going to ask you to call me Louise, and I'm going to call you Ma rian." "It's agreed," returned Marian with satisfaction. "The 'Mrs. Dale' still sounds a trifle strange to you, does It?" she inquired pleasantly. "It scares me," said the newly mar ried woman. "Scares you? How's that?" "Yes, it actually does. I'm going to tell you something that perhaps I oughtn't to say. I love my husband dearly and all that, but I sometime feel operpowered by a horrible sense of having lost my identity. My old self sometimes seems to be swallowed in the new. It seems so stranse and ab surd to hear peojhe calling me Mrs. Dale, that at times I feel like scream ing. Can you understand what I'm driving at? Or does it all sound like gibberish?" she asked plaintively, struggling to make her feelings under stood. "I understand," said Marian. "It's the feeling that probably comes to every married woman at first. It brings up the question of why women should change their names simply because they're married. I admire the attitude of the Wisconsin Senator's daughter who calls herself Miss La Follette, wife of Mr. So and So." "So do I," exclaimed the bride. "Some day I hope custom will sanc tion the plan and make it universal. wish I had the courage to do the same, for it certainly takes loads of courage to get out of the beaten track. How admire the courage of a woman content to remain unmarried and make her own way, rather than to marry any but the right man, knowing absolutely that it's the right man." Back of this impulsive and unpremed itated statement which had leaped to her companion's lips, Marian the drab background of wavering discontent with herself and her marriage which like an evil cloud, invades and darkens multitudes of American honeymoons, It had been Marian's experience. It is the experience of countless brides. Tomorrow The Girl Who Married Stranger. X "WHAT JHOUSE PARIS, July 16. Four months ago the gown of pallletes would have been considered quite old-fashioned, although the best looking woman I saw in Monte Carlo "in March wore such a frock in the Sporting Club; yet today it bears the highest mark of fashion. There Is no doubt that sequins and jet and pallletes are again to be worn. The very best dressmakers are offering them, and well-dressed women are wearing them. At a dance last night there was a pailleted gown that created a great deal of admiration made with four flounces of close glittering sequins mounted on white net. These flounces were not heavy because the pallletes were made of that new composition that has prac tically no weight. The bodice looked more old-fashioned than the skirt as it was tight-fitting, entirely covered with sequins, sleeve less and with pink roses on one shoul der. It looked like the picture of. a gown in an old album. It suited the wearer's type exceedingly well for she had auburn hair, a milky skin and deep brown eyes with long black lashes. We were amused at the admiration she had for herself, which was plainly visible as she never took her eyes from the glass mirrors that lined the walls while she danced. It is not entirely new to have a gown made of ropes of jet, but the idea has never been quite popular because a woman does not wish to make her self look like a portiere. However, these frocks are now in fashion. Skirts are made of flounces of white tulle over which swing ropes of white jet. Bodices consist of strands of white jet pulled up from the waist to the shoulders' over a loose band of white tulle that goes round the figure under the arms. Never, never have I seen such negligible bodices. They are mere nothings, and yet, in direct contrast a woman can come out in a white satin bodice with high neck at the back and sleeves to trie wrists. So far women are not wearing many black jet gowns, but there are orna ments of this composition on all kinds of gowns and hats and wraps. Now and then one sees an Immensely The girl who bathes at seaside or in land resort should be very careful about freeing her hair from ocean or river water. Rinse it thoroughly if you get it wet during your plunge and dry it In tho sun. Never lie down, night or day, with your hair wet. Shake and ventilate it in the sun. And between shampoos, if the hair is very oily, rub your brush into finely powdered orris root. This will remove some of the oil from the hair and insure a fra grant odor. Copyright, -914, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate. DivorceeLife felenJfessanpfUessc. CopyrlRht The Adams Newspaper Service. Marian Meets a Sorority Sister. AMONG the guests at Placid Inn were a bride and groom of perhaps a fortnight. More than once, as she 1b-NlGHT J Peter nnd the Mountain Part II. of Gold. life Pale Bine Taffeta, With a Chiffon Tunic, Fringes of Silver S equina and Trimmings of Small Pink Rosea, E will tell you what to do and help you to do it also," said the little brown man. "We are the gnomes and we know what to do. If you can do what we ask you will help us, and at the same time you will be paid for what you do by having the finest farm anywhere around, for back of the old giant cave is a beautiful garden filled with vegetables that grow larger than any in this part of the country." As the Gnome spoke he clapped his hands and the side of the mountain opened, for they were inside it, you remember, and Peter saw the largest horse he had ever seen, saddled and waiting. "Get on," said the Gnome, who did all the talking. Peter did as he was told. As quick as a flash all the ittle men sprang up after him. They perched on the head of the horse and clung to his mane and hung to his legs; in fact, Peter could not see the horse at all. The little men were as thick as flies. Away flew the horse, for he did not walk, as Peter soon discovered, and looking down he saw a tiny pair of wings on each of its feet. They landed on the top of a moun tain and the Gnomo told Peter to dis mount "You must go to that cave you see just below," said the Gnome, "and there you will find the giant. You must find some way to get his boots." Peter ran down the mountain to the door of the cave without thinking what he should do when he got there. "What Is that I hear?" asked a voice which sounded to Peter like thunder. "Please, sir, I want a drink of water," said Peter, not knowing what else to say. "Where did you come from?" asked the giant. "I came up the mountain to see you," said Peter. "Well, what do you think of me, now you have seen me?" asked the giant. "I think you are the biggest man I ever saw, and I did not think any one could grow to be so large. I wish I could grow to be as big as you are." "Do you?" asked the giant. "Well, that gives me an idea. Come in here." The giant led the way into his cave, which was the whole inside of the mountain, and so high that Peter could not see the top. The giant went to a kettle that was simmering in, the middle of the cave, gave Peter a drink from a ladle that almost burned his mouth, took a drink himself, and gave Peter another drink. "Now we will wait a while," said the giant. "This will make you half as large as I am and the third drink will make you as lare as I want you to grow, but I will go to sleep while you are growing and you can do the same." But Peter did not sleep. He kept awake and as soon as the giant snored he took another drink from the cup. This made him almpst as large as the giant. Peter ent to the kettle. He was so big now he could reach it easily, and this time he took a good big drink. By the time he had finished he was as big again as the giant, and Peter saw a way to get the boots. He aweke the sleeping giant, who sat up, rubbed his eyes and looked at Peter first with astonishment and then with fear. "Take off your boots," said Peter. And the giant obeyed. Peter put them outside the door of the cave. Then he thought of something. He did not want to be as large as he was all the time, so he asked the giant, who sat trem bling on the floor, how he could be come small again. The giant told him in a hurry, for he thought he could get his boots back when Peter was small again. He ran to his cupboard and took from It a jug and poured some liquid into a bowl. "Drink this," he said, holding It toward Peter. "No." said Peter, "you drink first." The giant began to tremble and step away from Peter. But Peter followed him and told him to drink. He looked go big and strong- the frightened giant obeyed, and Peter, as he watched him grow small, made him drink and drink until at last he was smaller than Peter had been. "Drink more," said Peter, as the giant or what had been the giant stopped drinking. He took one more swallow and gave a queer scream, and Peter saw running through the door way of the cave a rabbit, which soon was lost to sight in the bushes. Then Peter drank some of the liquid from the Jug, but he stopped when he was the size of a m'an, for he thought he could get qn better in the world if he did not "have to wait to grow up. He went to the door of the cave to get the boots, but all he found were two stones. While he stood there wondering what had become of the boots he saw the little brown men running toward him. "Where have you been for all this while?" they asked. "I've been drinking with the giant," said Peter, "and now there is no giant and no boots," and he went on and explained what had happened to the delighted Gnomes. Snapshots ; Barbara Boyd. Interesting Every-Day People The Man of All Work. HE WAS a small, elderly man, short, slight and a bit shaky. His hands trembled just a trifle, a little more if you noticed it. His walk wasn't quite firm. But he bustled about his work earnestly, cheerily, as though eager to show he could do as much and do it as well as a younger person. He was a man of all work for a fam ily in a little village. He took care of the horse, mowed the lawn, did the gardening, and occasionally took the white-haired mistress of the house out for a drive. On such occasions he wore rhis best clothes, his big felt hat and was very dignified and gentlemanly. At all times he was gentle, courteous, good-natured, a man of few words; his chief ambition seemingly being to dem onstrate his ability to do carefully and thoroughly the work he had been en gaged to perform. If you paused sometimes to admire the lawn and garden and to praise his complete banishment of weeds and un sightly sticks and stones or to speak of the good care he gave the horse as shown In his shining coat, his eyes would glow with pleasure; and you probably would stroll on, thinking his life entirely filled with his round of humdrum duties. But if gradually for it took time you won his confi dence, so that when he saw you com ing, he waited by the fence for a few WHY FAMOUS PASTRY COOKS USE MM moments' chat, you eventually found a very different man under that quiet exterior. He had been a soldier in the Civil War and his memory was filled with the events of those stirring times. As you listened to him, the whole terrible tragedy was enacted before you. You were on picket duty through dark nerve-racking nights, when every rustle of a leaf, every cracKle of a twig was magnified into the stealthy oncom ing of the foe. You marched with him in dust and heat through interminable hours, ready to drop, ready to give up life itself, from sheer fatigue and dis couragement. You were with him in the roar and rush of battle, stumbling forward over dead bodies, seeing your comrades drop by your side. All was as vivid in his memory as the day it happened. Though outwardly he was weeding and hoeing and caring for a little home in a little village, the real man was tramping the dusty roads of Virginia, marching with Sherman to the sea, fighting, struggling to preserve the Union he very sincerely loved. At other times he would show an other side of his character. He would tell of a little house he built for his wife, now passed on. He built it with his own hands, and every nook and corner of it was dear to him. He de scribed the little porch, the window where she sat, the pear tree in the front yard, the lilac bush at the corner of the house, the little border of spice pinks by the path to the gate. He would tell gently of the gradual in validism of the wife, of the selling of the home, of their removal to "rooms," of his venture into the housekeeping, and of the many good laughs the two had over his clumsiness and funny mis takes. But one could imagine that with the wife, tears must have been Just around the corner from the laugh. Then he told of how, to please his wife, who had little to occupy her time as she sat all day in her chair or lay on her couch, he began writing a genealogical book of her family. For several years in spare hours, he hunted the rooms of the Historical Society of the big city in wnich they lived, gather ing data. The facts he tnus brought home to her were the interesting spots of her monotonous life, thought over And followed into all sorts of romantic byways in the lHng hours she was alone. He bought a second-hand typewriter and typed the book Just for her pleas ure. And then she went on to the other life and now he pulls up weeds and curries the horse and keeps everything about the place in his charge immacu lately neat. He works eagerly as If to prove he Is as good as a younger man, though his hands may shake a bit with palsy. He is quiet, good-natured, a man of few words. But within is a memory life of stirring action, of trong love, of unfailing devotion. Casually he seems a man with little to interest any one. In reality, he is more interesting than the hero of the best seller. For his life has been lived, not merely printed on paper. Baking Powder The patrons of our fhst class hotels and restaurants are exact ingthey demand the best Women go where the pastry and cakes are noted for their excellence. Men are attracted by hot bread and biscuits when fresh and moist and light The pastry cook with a reputation uses K C Baking Powder because he knows that results are certain; every time everything is as good as his best Then, too, with K C Baking Powder he can mix the various kinds of batter before the rush of the meal begins and bake as needed so that every order goes to the table fresh and hot yet the last he bakes are just as good as the first The reasons behind these reasons is that K C is really a blend of two baking powders. One commences to give off leavening gas as soon as moistened. The other requires both moisture and heat to make it active. Dough or batter will remain in a partially leavened condition for hours, and when put in the oven, will come up as light as if mixed a moment before. For cookies, pancakes, doughnuts and the like, which cannot all be baked at once, K C is indispensa ble. For all baking thedoubleraise makes doubly certain. 53 Follow the example of the professional cook and your baking will be equal to his. keep his books on the top of a barrel, but successful men don't. Disconnection is one of the great causes of failure. Would you hire a carpetlayer to put down a breadth of carpet a day? Excess fares are charged on the trains whlch make but a few stops. The boy, as well as the man. of prom ise works and plays under the direc tion of some sort of continuous policy, crude though it may be. Broken work is hard work, for it takes time to connect the several edges. When you have made up your mind to do a thing, finish it. Keep It In mind until It is done. Don't try to do two important things at once. You can't. Either you will do one well and the other poorly, or fail In both. Keep moving, and move in the same direction, until you have gono as far as you should. Don't turn, twist and run in circles. If you are trying to get somewhere. Fix your eyes on your distant goal, and walk in a straight direction if you would reach it early. Avoid by paths: the turnpike leading to accom plishment usually runs straight; it's safer, and free from landslides. Don't loiter; keep moving; It may rain tomorrow. Connect your ideas and your work. Run your thought in a continuous train. Couple up. yfriome K. Gekas against John Marandas ami Thomas Dooney. The court declined to grant the re ceivership, but said he would allow un injunction to keep Gekas away from the construction camp. Vancouver Scltool Day Sol. VANCOUVER. Wash.. Aug. 5. (Spe cial.) The city schools of Vancouver will open September 14. this having been decided at a meeting of the School Board and C. W. Shumway. City Superintendent. If MB i m State Fair Primes Income Sourer. PORTLAND, Aug. 5 A friend of mine, a dear old lady of 70 years or more, makes beautiful pieces of em broidery and tatting during her leis ure time. She loves to do it and is al ways making something for her chil dren, grandchildren and friends. Then in tho Fall she collects a number of her nicest pieces and exhibits them at the State Fair. She gets in premiums from $10 to 25 each year. What she is doing many more could do. E. F. W. Getting A Start Nathaniel C Fowler Jr. Lavender Provides Pin Money. PORTLAND. Aug. 6. I know a woman who makes about $00 each sea son out of English lavender that grows in her garden. She is always on the lookout, in the stores, for odds and ends of ribbon or silk pieces, which she ujs in making up her lavender sticks, coat-hangers and other articles. While working with the lavender a great many blossoms fall off. These she carefully saves and. later, makes them into dainty little sachets. She also sells the lavender to any who want it at two stems for a penny. S. S. BATTLE FORECAST TICKLES Court Smiles and Suggests Calling Out Greek Army. Boyden Shoes Hanan Shoes Grand Special Sale In order to close out our Men's, Women's and Chil dren's Low -Cut Shoes, Colonials and Pumps, we will sell them at a reduc tion of io On top double of this we friv S. & H. Green Trading Stamps with each cash purchase on these Low-Cuts. An Unbroken Assortment to Choose From ROSENTHAL'S i Continuity. I Copyright. 1914. the McClure News paper Syndicate.) N continuity is strength. Disconnection stands for weakness. The strength of nature is in the con tinuousness of her forces. The biggest fish are In the brook that runs on forever. The stream that dries up this month and is a torrent next month is unsight ly, unhealthy and useless, and is but a transient drainpipe. The strength and the good of its current are offset by its periodical dryness. The man who feeds his horse on Mon day and gives him nothing to eat on Tuesday wiU have a weak horse on Wednesday, a half-dead horse on Thursday and a dead horse on Friday. The boy who goes to school on Mon day, skips Tuesday and attempts to connect the end of Monday s lessons with the beginning of Wednesday's studies, is traveling along a crooked road which probably will not lead to education. If some imbecile should come out of the unthawed North to preach and teach the doctrine of continuous change of business base, the progressive mer chants would take him gently by the hand and maroon him in a wilderness. This world is training workers, that they may be no shirkers in the con tinuous by-and-by. The fact that some of the world's greatest apparent accomplishes appear to violate the principles of success making does not disprove the advan tages of continuity. Some men jump off a high bridge and don't get killed, but life Insurance underwriters fight shy of that kind. Direct connection may be broken, and the breaker continue to succeed. It Is also a fact that the merchant can Prediction of a pitched battle in a construction camp on the line of the Columbia Highway in the vicinity of Clatskanie .unless the petition was granted that a receiver bo appointed to handle the affairs of certain con tractors, brought a smile to the face of Judge McGinn, before whom the case was being heard. The case Is between Greek subcontractors. "Blood will be shed there unless we can have relief in this court." said counsel for the plaintiff. "Threats are constantly being made and there Is danger of a conflict at any moment." "It would be a good thing to call out the Greek army, or at least to put the matter before the Greek Consul," said the court. The action was another phase of a row that has continued for a long time in the courts. The latest action was T. How Often to Shampoo in Hot Weather The heat alone would hardly In crease the need for extra shampooing, though perspiration leaves more Im purities on the skin of both body and scalp, but in the warm weather we indulge in mope out-of-door life, which brings dust and dirt in greater quan tities. Frequency of shampoos must be finally decided by the individual and the best rule is "Keep the scalp and hair clean." To keep the hair bright, clean and fluffy In warm weather shampoo with canthrox. which is not a makeshift but made for sham pooing only. The scalp and hair will not only be cleansed from dandruff and excess oil, but a wholesome, healthy condition will follow. A tea- spoonful of canthrox, a package of which costs little at any drug store, dissolved In a cup' hot water Is ample for the thickest growth of hair. These exhilarating canthrox shampoos make the head feel good, require little time or labor and give to any hair a soft fluff, beautiful gloss and rich, even color. Adv. ) 129 Tenth St. Bet. Wash. & Aldor m Hi America Is Noted For Fat Women Not because we are ly nation, nor because as a peoplo we est too mueh or too carelessly, nor becaune we are naturally given to overweight, have wo attained the reputation of being a race of fat women. The reason is because we do not gtvo our anatomy the attention necessary to keep flesh down. Women of other nations con stantly fight the approach of over weight by every scientific means and in France, a nation of graceful women, this fight against flefh Is especially strong. Wo have found the following reclpo for flesh reduction Is one of the most effective and economical treatments. It Is easily made at home by mixing 4 ounces parnotls (all good druggists carry this) with IS pints hot water. When cool strain and take 1 tablespoonful before meals until weight Is Just where you want It. This is a safe, harmless method of fat reduction and does not depend on dieting or unusual exercising. Adv. a sskin or eauTV le joy rowevgw Dr. T. FELIX Oriental OR MAGICAL S " - si r GOURAUD'S Cream BEAUTIF1ER Rimotii Tan. PimrUa, Fracklaa. Moth r'-h. Kau :-. n Dimum, aad T blMlth OB haauty and daOaa da taotloo It hu atood tba taat nf ft yaara. and la ao harm loaa wa last a It to ba air It la pro parlr mada. Arrapt no cooatarfait of aimilar aim1 Dr. I. A Sayra Mid to a lad j of tha hanttoQ (a patiant ) ' Aa yo lfrdlaa will uao thatn, 1 roroDitnaad Gourtud'i Croana' an tho iMAt harmful of a't tha afco praparatioaa." At Pracclata an-t LpRrtmantaiooa Fern T. Hopkins 4 Son. Prspi., 37 6rtit Jnes St, HI. C. ft